To The Base Camp of Chomolhari and Jitchu Drake
Rigorous trekking: 14 days
Chomolhari is Bhutan's deeply venerated guardian peak. It rises on
the Tibet-Bhutan border near the major trade route from India into
Tibet's Phari Valley. In 1939, from a pass above Phari, F. Spencer
Chapman, the mountain's first climber, saw Chomolhari and its
companion peak, magnificent Jitchu Drake. "Chomolhari gives a
greater impression of sheer height and inaccessibility than any
other mountain I know,'' he wrote in Living Dangerously. "It drops
in a series of almost vertical rock precipices to the foothills
beneath. It is thought by many to be the most beautiful mountain
in the whole length of the Himalaya.''
Unlike Chapman--who could only dream of visiting Bhutan, and
approached the peak from the north--you'll hike to Chomolhari and
Jitchu Drake through Bhutan's little-visited villages, rich
valleys, and untroubled forests, with good chances of seeing blue
sheep, takin, and a huge variety of bird life, including Himalayan
pheasant. We offer this trek route three times a year, once in
spring and twice in fall. The spring trek is a botanist's fantasy:
rhododendrons, azaleas, and masses of wildflower carpet the high
meadows, and pear and apple trees blossom in the valleys. In the
fall, rice paddies ripen to a golden brown, and yak herders bring
their charges down from high summer pastures.