Photographer's Note
One of my good friends was on his way to k2 base camp from the chinese side, when he captured this moment. this place is shaksgam valley.
Approaching K2 from the Chinese side is a huge logistical challenge. From Kashgar, in the "wild west" Xinjiang province of China, there is a 2 day bus ride, followed by a 2 day off-road jeep ride through the Tashkurgan Desert (which, literally translated, means "If you go in, you will not come back") to an oasis called "Ilik" where you rendezvous with the camels who will transport your gear to Base Camp. The 8-day trek with the camels takes you through the prehistoric canyons of the Shaksgam Valley, across rivers which are frequently so deep that you have to ride the camels, to the base of the Qogori (K2) Glacier.
At the base of the glacier, the camels can go no further, but you are still 2,000 feet below and 10 miles away from the base of the mountain. At this point your 3 months of food and climbing gear (often weighing as much as 15,000 pounds) must be extremely well organized so that you know which loads to carry up first. After a week or so of carrying heavy loads on loose scree for 10-12 hours per day, you may have enough gear to start climbing. Many expeditions choose to hire porters from Pakistan to help with ongoing task of carrying equipment from the camel dump to the base of the mountain throughout the season.
As if this month-long approach weren’t challenge enough, there is the added element of seasonal flooding in the Shaksgam Valley. Once the rivers flood in late June, even the camels cannot cross them. It is effectively impossible to trek back out, and helicopter rescue or supply drops are not an option. (Chinese airstrips are too far away, and Pakistani helicopters cannot enter Chinese air space.) Your team will be completely isolated until the rivers recede in early to mid-August.
The Chinese side of the mountain is the less frequently visited side, and there are usually no climbers on this side of the mountain. Historically, teams on this side of the team have either been very large, or loose-knit groups of smaller international teams working together.
plz share ur views on this pic
happy viewing :)
flavian ha puntuado esta nota como útil.
Critiques | Translate
muscovado
(1572) 2007-02-18 22:55
Hi Sabyasachi,
The camels in the foreground gives life to the desolate mountain. Color and sharpness is good. TFS
Czaldy
flavian
(779) 2007-02-18 23:08
snow and camels--not normally seen together--this is a great shot!
thanks for the useful info too
cheers eh
Caressa
(2) 2007-02-19 3:16
Very good composition and POV. The camels' shadows are interesting as well.
prumod
(8300) 2007-03-29 15:52
your shots are good sabya....
beautiful loation location...
in this one i like more the highlights at the top of mountains and the shadows of camels...
nice exposure...
regards...
pramod
japiey
(10163) 2007-03-30 3:06
This is fantastic. Great combination of the space and the subject. Lights and shade have made it very special too.
regards.
jean paul.
partha
(14023) 2007-04-01 3:55
Hi sabyasachi,
This is also a brilliant one. The animals add nice dynamism. Wonderful composition and great atmosphere.
Regards.
partha
christian_v
(846) 2007-04-07 17:25
Hi Sabyasachi,
A very nice image....
This invite us to travel and make an unreal dream to visit this place...
Congratulation for this shot
regards
christian
Photo Information
-
Copyright: sabyasachi dasgupta (sabyasachi_d)
(415)
- Genre: Lugares
- Medium: Color
- Date Taken: 2004-10-00
- Categories: Naturaleza
- Versión de la foto: Versión original
- Date Submitted: 2007-02-18 21:29