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Persional experince in Hikking, Trekking, Ice skiing and light Mountaneering

All the meterial and photographs in this site are persionaly discovered by my onw.




Short information about Pakistani highest mountains, pases, valleies and some well known Glaciers:

Most mountains have several peaks, some of which are numbered, not maned, some of them are still unconcured.
In pakistan there are five peaks over 8,000 meters, 29 over 7,500 meters and 101 over 7,000 meters high.

Askole to Korophon

Askole to the Biafo Glacier is an easy two to three hours across waste land, with a rest stop beside a stream just before the green grass of Kiser's Polo Ground. Across the river to the south, Testa, the last village of the valley, guards the entrance to the gorge leading to the Skoro Pass. The Biafo Glacier ( biafo meaning 'rooster' in Balti ), a tortured ocean of moving boulders and crevasses two kilometres wide, takes about 90 minutes to cross. ( For the open zone 13-day trek up Biafo Glacier, across the Hispar Pass and down to Nagar and Hunza on the Karakoram Highway). Once off the glacier, it is about ten minutes to Korophon, a green campsite with sandy river water beside willow trees and thorn bushes at about 3,100 metres. The big stone that gives its name to Korophon ( koro meaning' cup 'in Balti ) is about 20 minutes further on. Shepherds have built a shelter against the stone, but there is little shade or water. Trekking companies often do a double stage here and continue to Jola.

Korophon to Jola

Three to four hours. From mid-June to the end of August the Dumordo River, draining from the Panmah Glacier, is too swollen to wade, so you must trek about a kilometre upriver to Jola Bridge, a pulley with a toll of Rs10per person and Rs5 per bag. The route is a vertiginous' path' across the cliff face with a death drop into the swirling river below. At the bridge you may have to queue, as the crossing is slow. Jola is a rather dusty camp surrounded by a few bushes about 20 minutes beyond the bridge, with a silted side stream for water.
Many of the sheep, goat, cattle and yak herds of the Braldu Valley spend the summer in pastures along the Panmah Glacier. There are several treks up this glacier, some peeling off west to loop back to Snow Lake, the Biafo Glacier and the Hispar Pass, and others turning east to the New Mustagh Pass ( 5, 370 metres), once a trading route to Xinjiang. Eric Shipton was first to explore and map this area in 1937, though Henry Haversham Godwin -Austen had been there before him in 1861 and 1887. This is a restricted one, requiring permits.

Jola to Bardumal

Three to four hours. The trail here is comparatively easy, wuth occasional exposed scrambles across the rock. The first good water is a thin waterfall after about two hours. There are several campsites called Bardumal along a two-kilometre stretch of sandy river beach scattered with thorn bushes and tamarisk. The altitude is about 3,200 metres. Mouse-hares or pika (Latin name Ochotona), charming little rabbits with mouse ears, scamper in the in the rocks. Just beyond Bardumal at Phurblok is the grave of a young porter who died in 1987, where the porters stop to pray. Nearby is a large cave, providing good shelter for portes in bad weather. Water is fetched from side streams.
Opposite Bardumal, the Ching Kang River offers a possible route Aling Glacier and Hushe, but we have met no one who has done it. This route is for fully equipped mountaineers only. To cross the Braldu River, use the Baltoro Glacier above Paiyu. Most trekking companies do a double stage from Jola to Paiyu.

Bardumal to Paiyu

Two to four hours. This is au undulating walk, difficult at times, with the first views of dramatic mountains ahead. There is a rest stop by some tamarisk trees beside the stream flowing down from Paiyu Peak, where we saw ibex tracks and for spore. The trail climbs to a vantage point from which you see the snout of Baltoro Glacier and, in the far distance, a magnificent panorama of the Cathedral Towers and, left of them, the unmistakable triangle of K2. The last hour involves an exposed cliff walk followed by a paddle along the river's edge. Paiyu, at about 3,600 metres, was disgustingly polluted in 1990, but many expeditions still chose this camp for their rest day. Empty cans are scattered everywhere, and piles of excrement greet you in every direction. A spring gives rise to a now-polluted stream that runs steeply down through a grove of mature willow and poplar trees. Tent platforms are cut beneath the. Trees beside the stream The site is always crowded, theft is a problem, and the place is a real health hazard. Probably the best bet is to camp higher up, away from shade and water, on a flat shoulder with panoramic views up and down the valley. There are a couple of shepherds' huts at Paiyu; some of the Askole herds winter here, as it is sheltered and there is less snow here than in the village. The porters use their rest day here to kill a goat, driven from Askole, and sing and dance through most of the village.

Paiyu to Liligo or Khobutsi

Five to eight hours. After 90 minutes, the path divides at the snout of the Baltoro Glacier. The left branch goes to the camp of Trango Towers and the Sarpo Lago Pass, which was discovered by Ardito Desio in 1929 and crossed by Eric Shipton and Harpld Tilman in 1937. The right branch drops down past some tamarisk trees before climbing up onto the glacier, where the Braldu River roars out of a black hole as from a sluice gate. the glacier stretches up the valley as far as the eye can see-a vast turbulent sea of rocks and gravel two kilometres wide and 62 kilometres long. The porters stip and chant a hymn before crossing the glacier: 'Oh God, peace be upon the holy Prophet and all his family'-repeated over and over.
You walk across the boulder-strewn ice, up and down great slag heaps, climbing steadily for two to three hours on a long diagonal to the other side. Then you follow the southern edge of the glacier across sand and rock for 60 minutes to Liligo or Liliwa (both names are in use), the traditional campsite and pay stage. From the glacier are spectacular views across to the white, vertically striated pyramid of Paiyu Peak (6,600 metres) and north up the glimmering Trango Glacier to the jagged granite needles and blocks of Trango Towers, one of which, Nameless Tower, soars to 6,239 metres. The usual campsite has been wiped out by a landslide, and people now camp 15 minutes further along, on a flat, sandy area of the lateral moraine, beside a roaring, silted glacial melt river. Clearer water is ten minutes back along the track towards Liligo. If camping here, pitch your tent near the water, out of danger of the sliding cliff.
It may be better to continue for another 90 minutes to Khobutsi, a lovely walk on a yak track built by the yak handlers to carry goods up to supply the army camps at Goro One and Concordia. Khobutsi campsite is the other side of the rier flowing from the Liligo Glacier. The river is usually too deep to wade, and the easiest way across is to detour out onto the Baltoro Glacier. Do not camp immediately, but continue for another 300 to 400 metres to a higher, nicer campsite at about 4,000 metres, with shade under rocks, a small, clean stream and delicious waterfalls.

Khobutsi to Urdukas

Two to three hours. This is a lovely walk mostly along the crest of the lateral moraine, but with one river and a side glacier to cross. There are stunning views across the Biale to the serried teeth of Paiyu, Chorich, Uli Biaho, Trango Towers, Cathedral and Biale. Urdukas, one of the most magnificent campsites of the trek, is set at 4,200 meters, about 100 meters above the lateral moraine. The tent platforms here were cut in 1909 by the duke of Abruzzi, and there are natural rock shelters for the porters (urdwaa-kas means' a stone with cracks'). Covered in grass and flowers, it faces the panorama of the Baltoro Glacier flowing in front of a continuous wall of granite needles and towers that rise sheer to oer 6,500 metres.
Like Paiy, this site is over-used and horribly polluted , with cans and excrement everywhere. The main health hazard here is the swarm of flies that live and breed on the excrement and crawl in a thick layer over everything. An Australian cork hat would be appreciated. We devised a sort of bee-keeper's outfit, placing gauze veils over our hats and tucking them into our shirts. Check to see where your cook is getting water, as the supply is poor. There is a dirty well to the east of the camp and a tiny, cleaner trickle of a stream a ten-minute climb up the mountain to the west . At the east end of the campsite, to the left of the path, is an inconspicuous porters' graveyard.
Urdukas was the highest point reached by Colonel Godwin - Austen in 1861. He climbed 600 metres above the camp and saw the gigantic silhouette of K2. The peak was first sighted in 1856 by T G Montgomerie, who noted a cluster of high peaks from a survey point 219 kilometres away and named them K1, K2, K3, K4 and so on, with K standing for Karakoram.
He recognised K2 as the highest and measured it to be 8,619 metres, only three metres more than its new (1988) official height of 8,616 metres , as measured by Profrssor Ardito Desio of Italy (though most sources still say 8,611 metres). The British usually used local names for mountains: K1 is Masherbrum, and K3, K4, K5 are the Gasherbrum Peaks.K2 's local name is Chogori (meaning 'big peak') ,and it os often known as Mount Godwin Austen( a name never recognised by the Survey of India ), yet it is still commonly called K2. In 1887. Francis Younghusband visited this part of the Batoro Glacier, arriving from China across the Old (East) Mustagh Pass (5,422 metres), which was a trade route until it was blocked by ice in the middle of the nineteenth century. He walked down to Askole in three days wearing sheepskin slippers. He had no previous mountaineering experience; in fact, this was the first time he had seen a glacier ( see Younghusband, Heart of a Continent).

Urdukas to Goro II

Six to eight hours. From Urdukas on you walk on the glacier all the way and may need to wear gaiters early or late in the season. The first hour is across difficult side crevasses; once out in the centre, the way is smoother and the going easier, but you walk on stones all the way, with only a rare glimpse of white ice. Two to three hours from camp, you are opposite the Yermanendu Glacier, which flows down from the Masherbrum Pass (5,364 metres). For the difficult, technical hike out over this pass see below. This point is known as Goro One (old name Biango), a pay stage and the traditional lunch stop. Few people camp here, but if you have plenty of time and can persuade your porters, it is worthwhile spending the night here for the clear morning views of Masherbrum, the snowy triangle to the south. At 7,821 meters, it is the 24th-highest peak in the world, first climbed by the Americans in 1960.
For the next three to four hours to Goro Two, you walk east up the Baltoro Glacier, following the telephone wire from the army headquarters at Goro I, straight towards Gasherbrum IV (the name derived from gashay, meaning 'beautiful'). At 7,929 metres, this is the 17 th-highest peak in the world, a sheer - sided pyramid with a flattened top. Over its right shoulder peeps the soaring point of Gasherbrum II (8,035 metres), ranked number 14.
Goro Two Camp, at about 4,500 meters, is pitched on the rough stones and ice in the center of the glacier, with water from glacial melt. It is impossible to dig a toilet pit here, and it is all too easy to contaminate your drinking supply.

Goro II to Concordia

Four to six hours. Excitement mounts on the last day. The walking is slightly easier, and soon after Goro II you get the famous view north to Mustagh Tower (7,284 metres), seen from here as a, gigantic stone axe-apparently sheer sided and unclimbable -at the head of Biango Glacier. It was first climbed from the west by the British in 1956, who made it to the top only five days ahead of the French, who were approaching from the east. Ahead up the Baltoro, you still see Gasherbrum IV, but Gasherbrum II has disappeared. On the southern side, overshadowing Concordia, is the cleft top of Mitre Peak (6,010metres).
A domed army hut signals your arrival at Concordia, at about 4,700 metres. About ten minutes further on, K2 finally appears on the left, 12 kilometres away. Your porters will want to camp here, where there are stone circles built on the glacier. But, if you can coax them to continue another 20 minutes, you come to a less-polluted site with a better view of K2, which is seen as a near-perfect cone with granite precipices jutting through the glaciers and snow. It stands isolated from its neighbours, rising 3,600 metres straight from Godwin Austen Glacier. K2 was first climbed in 1954 by the Italians.
Concordia, the joining of five glaciers so named in 1892 by Martin Conway after the Place de la Concorde in Paris, is an immense sea of ice covered in stones. Glacial fingers reach up to clasp at the surrounding giants. In every direction the views are stunning. To the right of K2, the notched dome of Broad Peak (local name Falcon Congri) crests at 8,060 metres (old measurement 8,051 metres)-a first for Herman Buhl with Kurt Diemberger in 1957. Next is Gasherbrum IV, decorated with a vertical vein of rose-coloured marble, conquered In 1958 by the Italians Walter Bonatti and Carlo Mauri. In the southeast, the shining, glaciated Baltoro Kangri, or Golden Throne, is a giant armchair soaring to 7,312 metres at the and of Abruzi Glacier. The Swiss Andre Roch and Jimmy Belaieff made the first ascent of the southeast peak of Baltoro Kangri in 1934 and then skied down from about 7,000 metres, creating a world altitude record on skis.
To the right of Baltoro Kangri, the smooth white slopes of Kondus are topped by a perfect nipple. Nearer to camp, in the southwest, one of the slender twin peaks of the Mitre ( 6,025 metres) towers over head. Due west is the view down the Baltoro Glacier to Paiyu Peak. On the north side of the Baltoro Glacier at Concordia is the sharp ice point of Crystal Peak (6,252 metres) glinting like cut glass beside Marble Peak, which occupies the Godwin Austen-Baltoro corner. Coming full circle you see the smooth white wedge of Angel Peak thrusting above the left shoulder of K2. Hidden from view are the 8,068-metre Hidden Peak (Gasherbrum I), which was first climbed by the Americans Andy Kauffman and Pete Schoeningin 1958, the 8,035-metre Gasherbrum II, which was taken in 1956 by the Austrians, and the 7,952-metre Gasherbrum III, which was conquered by the Polish women's team led by Wanda Rutkeiwicz in 1975.

Within a radius of 15 kilometres are 41 peaks higher than 6,500 metres, many of them unnamed.
Marti Conway was, in 1892, the first person to explore Concordia. He made an attempt on Baltoro Kangri, reaching the top of a spur on the north side, which he called Pioneer Peak.

Concordia to K2 Base Camp

Five to six hours. The first few kilometres from Concordia is across difficult crevasses and glacial rivers. You will save hours by hiring a porter who knows the way to lead you across the snow bridges. Follow a medial moraine north up the Godwin Austen Glacier, with magnificent views back to Chogolisa or Bride Peak (7,668 metres). This is the snowy tomb of Herman Buhl, who fell through a cornice in 1957; the peak was finally conquered in 1975 by summit in 1909. As you approach the K2, you look back to Concordia and see the zebra-striped glaciers sweeping round the corner and disappearing down the Baltoro. The striped effect is from the lateral moraines of side glaciers that, as they join the main ice flow, are squeezed into long, parallel ridges of ice bordered by lines of rock and gravel. The lateral moraines having become medical moraines, they sweep dramatically round at Concordia, accentuating the flow of the ice. The easiest walking is on the ice. Stop for lunch at Broad Peak Base Camp. Camp at about 5,000 meters. The memorials to those killed on K2 are about 20 minutes north of K2 Base Camp, on the rock face above the junction of the Savoia and Godwin Austen glaciers. Walk to the foot of the rock, then scramble up about 30 vertical meters on a rocky path to the memorials, a collection saucepan lids with the climbers' names and dates hammered onto them. Return by scrambling down the other side of the ridge to the Savoia Glacier. By 1990, 55 people had climbed K2, and 25 had died on the mountain. The worst year was 1986, when five separate expeditions were on K2 in early august. Sixteen climbers reached the summit, but 13 died (two British, two American, two french, three polish, two Austrian, an Italian and a Pakistani), most caught in a storm above 8,000 meters. The first memorial, placed in 1953, was for the American Art Gilkey. Suffering from flebitis in his leg, Gilkey was being dragged down the mountain by Pete Schoening and others, who left him anchored to an ice axe on a steep slope while they prepared the route head. When Schoening went back to fetch Gilkey, he was gone, carried off by an avalanche. Tours usually allow several nights at Concordia, a veritable tent city, to gie people time to explore. It is well worth hiking southeast up the Abruaai Glacier for view of the hidden Gasherbrum Peaks I, II and III. Another option is to climb a little way up the dividing ridge between the Baltoro and Godwin Austen glaciers for magnificent panoramic photos of the joining glaciers.

Concordia over Mashermrum Pass to Hushe

An alternative to returning from Concordia down the Baltoro Glacier is to exit via the Masherbrum Pass (5,364 meters). This technical trek requires crampons, ice axe, climbing harness, rope, gaiters and perhaps short ice-climbing axes and ice screws. You also need a good guide and fully equipped high-altitude porters. Do not attempt this pass unless you have ice climbing experience. This Pass was first crossed in 1974 by the American Nick Clinch, much to the surprise of the villagers of Hushe, who thought their valley impregnable from the north. They remembered Clinch from 1960, however, when he led the successful ascent of Masherbrum Peak from Hushe, and gave him a warm wellcome.

Concordia to Yermanendu Glacier

Descend to Goro Two and continue a further couple of hours to the junction of the trail south to the Yermanendu Glacier, which is marked with a small inanimate stone. After a short and gradual descent, mount the end of the Yermanendu Glacier and continue for two hours, heading towards the closest ridge that runs down to the east side of the Glacier. A 30-meter climb over the lateral moraine brings you to the campsite, which consists of four small tents platforms cut into the grassy hillside.

Masherbrum Pass Base Camp

Descend to the glacier and rope up, as break, especially in the flatter portion, are aften hidden. Crampons are not necessary. Thread your way up the glacier, alternating between the glacier proper and both edges. Where the glacier steepens and you have to climb along the eastern lateral moraine, finding the route is a little tricky. Head for the north face of the long eastern ridge of Masherbrum, which arises from the Masherbrum Pass, then gradually turn eastwards with the glacier until you can see the pass ahead. Camp on a flat snow-rock area near the north side. Melt snow for water.

Across the Masherbrum Pass

Prepare for a long day, rope up and, keeping to the north side of the glacier, head toward the lowest point of the pass, which is to for left. Finding the route through the crevasses on this side of the pass is challenging but not as laborious as on the south side. From the top of the icefall, the final ascent to the pass is a gradual slog up a flattish snowfield about two kilometers long -hot and exhausting at this altitude. Descend fairly easily for two hours, dropping about 200 vertical meters to the icefall. Camp on the glacier at about 5,200 metres. Melt snow for water.

Down the icefall

A laborious and tedious day. Finding the route down the icefall is difficult; it entails climbing and abseiling. Head first to the east (left) side of the glacier, then , using crampons, climb generally down the centre of the icefall. Camp on uncomfortable rocks at the base of a ridge, near the bottom of the icefall,on the right side. Melt snow for water.

Dalsangpa Lake

Zigzag down the icefall and cross to left lateral moraine below the junction with Gondoghoro Glacier. Just outside the lateral moraine is a lone shepherds ' hut that is occupied from July to September. At a slightly higher level, Dalsangpa Lake reflects stunning views of the Masherbrum Pass and Masherbrum Mountain. It is an idyllic campsite. From here it is one or two days down to Hushe.

Some of Pakistan most highest Monutains and their rank in the world

Mountain:

Hight,m (ft):

Range:

World rank :

K-2 Godwin Austen

8616 (28,268)

Krakuram

2

Nanga parbat

8125 (26,656)

Himalaya

9

Gasherbrum I

8068 (26,470)

Krakuram

11

Broad Peak

8060 (26,444)

Krakuram

12

Gasherbrum II

8035 (26,362)

Krakuram

14

Gasherbrum III

7952 (26,089)

Krakuram

15

Gasherbrum IV

7929 (26,014)

Krakuram

17

Disteghil Sar

7885 (25,869)

Krakuram

20

Kunyang kish

7852 (25,761)

Krakuram

22

Mesherbrum NE

7821 (25,660)

Krakuram

24

Rakaposhi

7788 (25,550)

Krakuram

27

Batura I

7785 (25,541)

Krakuram

28

Kanjut sar

7760 (25,460)

Krakuram

29

Saltoro kangri I

7742 (25,400)

Krakuram

33

Trivor

7720 (25,330)

Krakuram

36

Trich Mir

7708 (25,289)

Hindu Kush

41

Chogolisa I

7654 (25,111)

Krakuram

46

Shishpar (Batura)

7611 (24,970)

Krakuram

49

Skyang kangri

7544 (24,750)

Krakuram

58

Pumari Kish W

7492 (24,580)

Krakuram

67

Noshaq

7492 (24,580)

Hindu Kush

68

Trich Mir NW

7487 (24,563)

Hindu Kush

69

K-12

7468 (24,500)

Krakuram

73

Teram Kangri

7463 (24,485)

Krakuram

74

Malubiting W

7452 (24,448)

Krakuram

76

Sai Kangri

7422 (24,350)

Krakuram

79

Skill Brum

7420 (24,344)

Krakuram

80

Teram kangri II

7406 (24,298)

Krakuram

82

Haramosh

7406 (24,298)

Krakuram

84

Istoro Nal

7403 (24,288)

Hindu Kush

85

Mount Ghent

7400 (24,278)

Krakoram

86

Yakshin Gardan

7400 (24,278)

Krakoram

87


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