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About 20 kms.
South of Rangdum stands the Pazila watershed across which lies Zanskar,
the most isolated of all the trans Himalayan Valleys. The Panzila
Top (4401 m) is the picturesque tableland adorned with two small
alpine lakes and surrounded by snow covered peaks. As the Zanskar
road winds down the steep slopes of the watershed to the head of
the Stod Valley, one of Zanskar's main tributary valleys, the majestic "Drang-Drung" glacier looms into full view. A long and winding river
of ice and snow, the Drang-Drung" is perhaps the largest glacier
in Ladakh, outside the Siachen formation. It is from the cliff-like
snout of this extensive glacier that the Stod or Doda River, the
main tributary of river Zanskar,rises. Zanskar comprises a tri-armed valley system lying
between the Great Himalayan Range and the Zanskar mountain; The
three arms radiate star-like towards the west, north and south from
a wide central expanse where the region's two principal drainage's
meet to form the main Zanskar River. It is mainly along the course
of this valley system that the region's 10,000 strong, mainly Buddhists
population lives. Spread over an estimated geographical area of
5000 sq. kms. High rise, mountains and deep gorges surround Zanskar.
The area remains inaccessible for nearly 8 months a year due to
heavy snowfall resulting in closure of all the access passes, including
the Penzi-la.
Today, Zanskar has the distinction of being the least
interfered with microcosms of Ladakh, and one of the last few surviving
cultural satellites of Tibet. Within the mountain ramparts of this
lost Shangrila stand a number of ancient yet active monastic establishments.
Some of these religious foundations have evolved around remote meditation
caves believed to have been used by a succession of famous Buddhist
saints for prolonged meditation in pursuit of knowledge and enlightenment.
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