Jeep Tour K2 Trek Snow Capped High Mountains Valley Travel
Friday August 15: Tarashing Skardu Deosai Plateaus
The Deosi is a beautiful wide open plateau surrounded by even higher hills. There are brown bears, but these are in a sanctuary area some 30km distant; we did however see Marmots, which are surprisingly big, and which move around a bit like a carpet fluttering along the ground. The ground is covered in small red, blue and yellow flowers. Part of the track fords a stream, and then a couple of kilometres further on we got to the bridge that appears in all the photographs yes, it is very photogenic.
We met a group of lawyers from Lahore all men who were most keen to discover our views on Pakistan. It was their first trip to northern Pakistan too. In fact there were quite a lot of people by the bridge as it is a (longish) day trip from Skardu. We had been scheduled to camp there, and indeed there is a permanent summer cooking tent there that was cooking lunches for people; we had vegetable soup, onion and tomato salad, fried chicken, chips and chapatti. However, it was very windy and was clearly going to be very cold at night, so we unanimously decided to push on to Skardu. I think Ehsan was quite pleased.
A new fibre optic cable is being laid across the Deosi to link up Skardu and Astor. This involves digging a 3ft deep trench some 50km over the Deosi, through very rocky terrain. Now, in the UK we would get a JCB on the job, but it would still be quite a task. Here, the ditch is being entirely dug by hand, and each pickaxe-full or shovel-full will be largely rocks, which with a bit of luck will be loose rather than solid rock, all done at over 13,000ft. You try it!!!
The road, well, unmade track, down from the Deosi to Skardu is seriously spectacular, and it clings to a cliff with the river far below. Towards the bottom the valley opens out with a lake and irrigated fields and then narrows again at a point where a large new hydro-electric dam is being built. All this work is being done by modern equipment. Some of the spillways are completed, but there is clearly a lot of work still to be done, and the dam is not due to be completed till 2011.
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