Travel features
You are looking at: Home : Travel features

Trekking Annapurna!

Shameless holiday snaps special direct from the Annapurna Circuit and Annapurna Sanctuary treks in deepest, darkest Nepal, complete with live avalanche...


Posted: 15 December 2003
by Jon

We've just got back from trekking the Annapurna Circuit and Sanctuary in Nepal and it was awesome. Of course we could go on and on about mountains and Maoists, and avalanches and lower Mustang and astonishing scenery and great company, but really, for now, it seems to make more sense to pick out some of the better photos and let you get and idea of what it looks like.

Briefly, the Annapurna Circuit is a two-week odd walk around the outside of the Annapurna range and crosses a 5,416 metre pass, the Thorung La before dropping back down through the astonishing scenery of lower Mustang.

The Annapurna Sancturat Trek, meanwhile, heads up a steeply climbing gorge into a high valley surrounded by massive peaks including Annapurna 1 and Machupucharre, the 'fishtail mountain'. Check the photos and you'll see why.

Combind the two and you get one of the best mountain treks in the world with the distant views of the Circuit being complemented by the up close and personal proximity of the mountains up at base camp. Enjoy...

Click on the pics for a bigger version.


 

The trek begins at the roadhead town of Besisahar, at just 760 metres before climbing slowly through lush green scenery above the Marsyangdi River, which it follows almost until the Thorung La pass is crossed.


 

The joy of tea house trekking is that you need carry only a sleeping bag, clothes and a few essentials. A bed for the night is as little as 50 pence and you can buy everything you need to live in relatively idle luxury. Very mellow.


 

As the trail climbs, the scenery changes with the land becoming more barren and big mountains hoving into view. This is Annapurna IV - 7,525 metres - viewed from the small village of Ghyaru - 3,670 metres - near Pisang, one of the most stunning parts of the trek.


 

Small towns and villages clinging to the bare hillsides have an almost medieval feel. This, we think, is Ghyaru perched below Pisang Peak and beguilingly bleak.


 

Manang, a big town by cicuit standards and home of some of the best lodges and food on the trip, which makes it a great place for a rest and acclimatisation stay of two nights. The town's dominated by views of Gangapurna with its glacier and glacial lake. At only 7,454 metres, it's out-gunned by the various Annapurnas, but still a beautiful-looking mountain in our book.


 

Up close and personal with the Gangapurna glacier during an acclimatisation hike along the morraines...


 

Big scenery as the altitude starts to bite at over 4,000 metres. The wide open, barren area above Manang is often compared to the high altitude plateau of Tibet or Bolivia. The 5,000-metre plus Thorung pass lies at the top of the valley below the snow-capped peak.


 

Not a bad view from the toilet window of a handy tea house somewhere between Manang and the interestingly named Yak Kharka. The mountain, we think, is Tarke Kang, but maybe not. One of the best loo window views we've ever seen anyway....


 

Crazy cliff scenery from the base of the Thorung La at around 4,100 metres. From here it's a pre-dawn start to climb to the 5,416-metre summit of the pass where there's often snow lying and, from noon onwards, a fierce wind sweep down. For most trekkers it's the highlight of the walk and the lack of oxygen at 5,000 metres plus is a real shock for anyone who hasn't been to altitude before...


 

A tired and happy OM editor at the summit of the Thorung La after a stupidly fast ascent aimed at spending as little time up high as possible. A good idea but somewhat negated by a 30-minute wait at the top for a French friend. Nice run down the other side though with headache and nausea providing the spur.


 

And the view from the pass with big, snowy mountains in touching range. This one is just over 6,000 metres and if you think it looks enticingly accessible, well, apparently the odd mountaineer has just popped up to the summit on a whim before now. Not that we'd condone such behaviour, oh no....


 

On the other side of the Thorung La, the scenery changes again to the massive dried river beds of Lower Mustang, much of the next few days trekking is actually along the dramatic river bed and generally into a stiff headwind blowing powder into your eyes. Absolutely brilliant....


 

Check the suspension bridge complete with loaded donkeys to get an idea of the scale of the river bed....


 

The classic dawn view from Poon Hill above Ghorepani. Reaching the view point means getting up at 5 am and walking uphill for 45 minutes or so, but the effort's well worth it with stunning views as the sun lights up the entire Annapurna and Dhaulagiri ranges. Awesome.


 

And this is 6,993 metre Machhapuchhre, the so-called fish tail mountain - take a look - that stands at the entrance to the Annapurna Sanctuary. Beautiful.


 

And fast forward to lunch in the Sanctuary with stunning views up towards Annapurna 1 on the right and Annapurna South to the left. Nice....


 

And then, for dessert, a big serac high on Annapurna South collapsed, triggering a scenic avalanche as tons of snow cascaded down the mountain side. Sobering as both Ian Clough and more recently, Andre Boukreev have died in avalanches in the area.


 

And wow, from Annapurna Base Camp itself, the highest point on the sancturay trek, the view is even more stunning.


 

Machhapuchhre from Annapurna Base Camp as the sun sets. One of those total wow moments when you can't tear your gaze away from the mountains. If you have a to do list, add sun-set at Annapurna Base Camp to it now. You won't be disappointed. Promise.


 

And finally it's good by to all that. Looking back at the mountains from the walk out towards Pokhara with a haze of clouds on the top creating a weird halo effect.


The end for now. If you're planning a trip to the Annapurna region, we totally recommend it. The best guidebook we used was Bryn Thomas's 'Trekking In The Annapurna Region' - published by Trailblazer - which has excellent detailed route maps, masses of useful information and can be bought easily in Kathmandu or Pokhara.


Previous article
Saddam's Bivvy Secrets Revealed!!!!
Next article
Macpac Clothing Scoop!


TwitterStumbleUponFacebookDiggRedditGoogle


Discuss this story

Baaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaastarrrrdddddddddd!

Great pics mate. Not jealous. Ohhhhhhh no.

Now can anyone lend me £2000 and a month of their holiday entitlement?

Posted: 15/12/2003 at 21:12

Im planing something nice for 2005 but looking at these I dont want to wait that long.

Posted: 15/12/2003 at 21:41

The thing is I can't decide which one to use as my wallpaper on this here PC.

Posted: 15/12/2003 at 23:13

See more comments...
Talkback: Trekking Annapurna!

First Name:
Last Name:
Nickname:
Email:
Security Image:
Enter the code shown:

I agree to the site's Terms and Conditions & Code of Conduct:


Latest posts