The Langtang Trek can be done in as little
as a week, but day hikes in the upper valley are sure to detain
you for another two or three days. It takes about a day to
get interesting, first following the continuation of the Dhunche
road (a spectacularly destructive feat of engineering, built
to reach a lead and zinc mine in the Ganesh Himal) up the
unpromising valley of the Trisuli River before leaving the
road and rounding a bend to Syabru in the Langtang Valley.
The next two days are spent climbing briskly up the gorge
like lower valley, where oaks and rhododendron give way to
peaceful hemlock and larch forest; after ascending an old
moraine, snowy peaks suddenly loom ahead and the gorge opens
into a U-shaped glacial valley. Springtime is excellent for
flowers here, and in autumn the berberis bushes turn a deep
rust color.
Two Bhotiya villages occupy the upper valley: Langtang (3.300m),
the bigger of the two, makes a good place to spend a night
and acclimatize, while Kyangjin (3.750m) boasts a small gompa,
a cheese "factory" (fabulous yogurt) and an attractive
chalet-lodge. The Langtang Glacier is a full day's walk further
up the valley. You'll want to spend at least a couple of nights
in the upper valley to explore the glaciers and ascend the
5.033 metre Yala Peak (Tsergo Ri), from which you can view
an awesome white wilderness of peaks, including 8.013-metre
Shisha Pangma.
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