

I visited Nepal in September 2006 for the purpose of trekking in the Annapurna Sanctuary area. I was introduced to Clan Treks and Bishwa Chapagain by a mutual friend from the United Kingdom.
The level of service I received from Clan Treks was second to none, in fact a close friendship has developed as a result of the 10 days we spend trekking in the Sanctuary...
Ian Harries Grantham,
Lincolnshire , UK
Mt. Kailash (6714m), which is also known by the name of Tise, Kailash or Kang Rinpoche (Jewel of the Snows), Asia’s most sacred mountain, is located in a high and isolated enclave of West Tibet. It is one of three pilgrimage sites in the area, known collectively as Kangri Tsosum: the other two are Ponri Ngaden and Lake Manasarovar. All are said to be at the heart of the ancient shangshung Kingdom, the supposed land of origin of the pre-Buddhist Bonpos. Mt. Kailash is their soul mountain (Lari), which they also call Yangdrung Gu Tse, the Nine-story Swastika Mountain. This is the very place where the sect’s legendary founder, Tonpa Shenrab descended from heaven to earth.
Mt. Kailash is sacred to the Hindus, the Buddhists, the Jains, & the Bonpos, taken as the center of the physical & metaphysical universe. To Buddhist believers, it is the abode of Demchok, the wrathful manifestation of Buddha Sakyamuni. For Hindus, Kailash is the dwelling of Lord Shiva the Destroyer and, according to Sanskrit tradition of Vishnu Purana, it is a representation of Mt. Sumeru, cosmic mountain at the centre of the universe. For the devout pilgrim a visit to Mt. Kailash & Lake Manasarovar forms the ultimate realization of their spiritual pursuit. The May tour to Kailash during the annual gives the opportunity to face Buddhist festival of Saga Dawa while most of the other trips are planned to arrive at Mt. Kailash during the full moon period to give all participants a rare experience. A journey can truly called as `once-in-a-lifetime.
Leaving aside the mythological and devotional aspects, Mt. Kailash is by any measure a stunning beautiful mountain that stands completely alone in all its glory, with no other peaks near it. Its rounded cone is symmetrical; its distinctive horizontal and vertical striations give it the name Swastika Mountain (the swastika is a Buddhist symbol signifying spiritual strength). Deep valleys along its base allow pilgrims to circumambulate the entire mountain in one long day, a rare possibility in Tibet’s high mountain world. The circuit around Mt. Everest, by comparison, takes three weeks. Many Tibetian pilgrims attempt more than one round and most do three. Conventional wisdom says a single circuit wipes out the sins of a lifetime, 108 guarantees enlightenment!
| Days | Itinerary | Altitude | Time | |
| Day 01 | Arrive Kathmandu | 1300m | ||
| Day 02 | Kathmandu | |||
| Day 03 | Nyalam | 3750m | 8 hrs | |
| Day 04 | Nyalam | |||
| Day 05 | Saga | 4600m | 8 hrs | |
| Day 06 | Paryang | 4750m | 8 hrs | |
| Day 07 | Manasarovar | 4560m | 3 hrs | |
| Day 08 | Darchen | 4675m | 2 hrs | |
| Day 09 | Trek Dira Phuk | 5210m | 5 hrs | |
| Day 10 | Trek Drolma-La | 5636m | ||
| Day 11 | Trek Zutrukphuk | 4810m | 9 hrs | |
| Day 12 | Trek Darchen Drive Manasarovar |
4675m 4560m |
3 hrs ½ hr |
|
| Day 13 | Paryang | 4750m | 7 hrs | |
| Day 14 | Saga | 4600m | 8 hrs | |
| Day 15 | Lao Tingri | 4390m | 8 hrs | |
| Day 16 | Rhongphu-Base Camp Lao Tingri |
5200m 4390m |
4 hrs 3 hrs |
|
| Day 17 | Zhangmu | 2300m | 6 hrs | |
| Day 18 | Kathmandu | 1300m | 6 hrs | |
| Day 19 | Depart |