Pakistanの祭り — Kalash、Shandurポロほか | Go With Guide
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Kalash Valley festival celebrations

Festivals of Pakistan

Kalash spring rites, Shandur polo and Silk Road celebrations in the mountains

The mountain north keeps a festival calendar unlike anywhere else in Pakistan, and timing a trip to land on one turns a good tour into a great one. The headline events are the rites of the Kalash, the small non-Muslim community of three valleys in Chitral, whose spring, summer and winter festivals are working religious ceremonies rather than shows staged for visitors.

Beyond the Kalash, the calendar runs from the freestyle polo tournament on the Shandur plateau in July, the highest polo ground on earth, to the harvest and Silk Road celebrations of Hunza and Gilgit in autumn, to the Persian new year of Navroz that the Ismaili communities mark each March. Each one is a window into a culture that the scenery alone can only hint at.

Most of these dates move year to year, set by lunar reckoning, sun-watching elders or provincial scheduling, so the single most useful thing we do is confirm them before you commit. The festival calendar below lays out what falls when, and the tours beneath it are timed to put you in the right valley on the right day.

Festival Tours

Chilam Joshi FestivalEasy
5–7 days

Chilam Joshi Festival

The Kalash spring festival in mid-May: four days of flower rites, milk libations and massed dancing in the valleys of Chitral.

Kalash Festivals of ChitralEasy-Moderate
7-10 days

Kalash Festivals of Chitral

One tour, all three Kalash festivals: spring Chilam Joshi, summer Uchal and the winter solstice Choimus, with Kalash hosts.

Kalash Valley Cultural ExperienceEasy
6–8 days

Kalash Valley Cultural Experience

The Kalash valleys away from festival crowds: homestays, clan temples and daily life with South Asia's last polytheist community.

Shandur Polo FestivalModerate
5–7 days

Shandur Polo Festival

The freestyle polo tournament on the 3,700 m Shandur plateau each July, Chitral against Gilgit, in a tented village at the top of the world.

Silk Route Festival & Hunza AutumnEasy–Moderate
6–8 days

Silk Route Festival & Hunza Autumn

A Hunza autumn tour timed to the Silk Route Festival when it runs, with golden orchards, forts and artisan bazaars on the Karakoram Highway.

The Kalash Festivals

The Kalash hold three festivals a year. Chilam Joshi in mid-May welcomes spring with flower rites and the year's biggest dancing; Uchal in late August gives thanks for the harvest; and Choimus, around the December solstice, is the holiest, a two-week new year rite for the god Balimain whose first week is closed to outsiders. All three happen in the valleys of Bumburet, Rumbur and Birir.

We run a dedicated Chilam Joshi tour for the spring festival, a combined Kalash festivals tour that can target any of the three, and a quieter cultural experience for travellers who would rather see the valleys without the festival crowds.

Shandur: Polo at the Top of the World

Each July the Shandur plateau, 3,700 m up between Gilgit and Chitral, hosts a polo tournament that has run since the 1930s. This is freestyle polo with almost no rules, played hard between the teams of Chitral and Gilgit-Baltistan, watched from a tented village pitched on the grass at the top of the pass. The exact dates shift each year, so we confirm them before fixing the trip; our Shandur polo tour covers the festival and the long, spectacular drive to reach it.

The Pakistan Festival Calendar

March brings Navroz, the Persian new year, marked across the Ismaili north. May is Chilam Joshi, the Kalash spring festival and the most visited of all. July is Shandur, the high polo tournament. August is Uchal, the Kalash harvest rite. Autumn, late September into October, is harvest and Silk Road season in Hunza, the best light of the year. December closes the calendar with Choimus, the Kalash winter solstice. We confirm each year's exact dates before you book.

Frequently Asked Questions

What festivals can tourists attend in Pakistan?

In the mountain north, the Kalash festivals of Chitral (Chilam Joshi in May, Uchal in August, Choimus in December), the Shandur polo tournament in July, and the harvest and Silk Road celebrations of Hunza in autumn. All welcome respectful visitors, with a few Kalash rites reserved for the community.

When is the Chilam Joshi festival?

Chilam Joshi runs in mid-May, usually around the 13th to 16th, set by the Kalash solar calendar. Dates can shift by a day or two at the elders' word, so we reconfirm with the valleys before departure.

Can tourists attend the Kalash festivals?

Yes. The dancing grounds are open and the Kalash are practised, welcoming hosts. The one firm limit is the first week of the December Choimus festival, which is closed to outsiders. Your guide will tell you which rites are open.

When is the Shandur polo festival?

Early to mid-July, on the Shandur plateau between Gilgit and Chitral. The exact dates are set each year and have shifted in recent seasons, so we confirm them before fixing your trip.

Where is the Kalash valley?

In Chitral district of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, in three side valleys, Bumburet, Rumbur and Birir, reached by jeep from Chitral town. Bumburet is the largest and most accessible.

Which is the biggest festival to visit?

Chilam Joshi draws the largest crowds and the most colour, and is the easiest first festival. Shandur is the most dramatic setting. Choimus matters most to the Kalash themselves but is partly closed to visitors.

Do I need a permit for the festivals?

No NOC is required for the Kalash valleys, Chitral or Shandur on a tourist visa. You register your passport at checkpoints and, for the Kalash valleys, pay a small community entry fee, both handled within the tour.

What is the best time of year for festivals?

May for the Kalash spring colour, July for Shandur polo, and autumn for the Hunza harvest and Silk Road events with the year's clearest skies. Tell us which appeals and we will build the trip around its dates.

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