Shimshal Yak Safari — Pamir 驼队徒步 | Go With Guide
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A Wakhi yak caravan carrying loads on the trek to the Shimshal Pamir
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Trekking Gilgit-Baltistan

Shimshal Yak Safari

The Pamir with a Wakhi yak caravan carrying the loads

Brown yak grazing on the Shimshal Pamir plateau at 4,735 m
Yak on the high summer pasture above Shimshal village
Domestic yak with Karakoram peaks behind on the Shimshal Pamir
Pack yak resting on the misty Shimshal Pamir during the safari
Wakhi herder with a yak at a Shimshal Pamir summer camp

Duration

8–10 Days

Difficulty

Moderate-Strenuous

Group Size

4–10 Campers

Best Season

Jul–Sep

About This Tour

The Shimshal Yak Safari takes the herders' own road out of Shimshal, a village sitting near 3,100 m and the loftiest in Hunza, climbing to the Pamir plateau at 4,735 m, but it travels the old way: behind a yak caravan. The yaks carry the loads and ferry people and gear across the Pamir rivers, the same way Wakhi families have moved their stock for generations. It reaches the same plateau as our pass trek, ringed by Distighil Sar (7,885 m) and Kunyang Chhish (7,852 m), but the pace is slower and the focus is the herding life rather than the summit of effort.

What makes this trip special is the caravan itself and the timing. We aim to run it alongside the Shimshal Pamir migration, the Kuch, when the village drives its herds up to the summer pastures, so you are travelling with the herders rather than past them. The genuine draw is watching, and sometimes relying on, the yaks at the river crossings, where in high water the animals are roped and pulled across with the loads on their backs. This is the real, working tradition, not a staged show.

Let us be honest about the yak riding, because operators oversell it. Riding a yak is part of the experience, but it is intermittent and short, over rough ground, and it is offered as a cultural and assistance experience rather than a comfortable mount you sit on the whole way. You still walk most of this trek, on the same challenging terrain as the standard pass route: steep gorge and scree, big height gain and real altitude to 4,735 m. The yaks ease the load-carrying and the river crossings; they do not carry you to the Pamir.

Our safari runs 10 days from Islamabad and back, with a homestay in Shimshal at each end and several days walking with the caravan to the plateau and out. A licensed Shimshali guide leads, and the yaks and herders are arranged through the community. If you want the faster, more strenuous version without the caravan, where porters carry the loads and you move quicker, see our Shimshal Pass Trek.

Travelling with the Yak Caravan

The yaks do the heavy work. They carry the camp and gear up the gorge to the Pamir, and at the river crossings they ferry loads and, where needed, people across water that runs fast and cold off the glaciers. Those crossings are the riskiest and most memorable part of the trip, and the herders manage them with techniques handed down through the village.

You walk with the caravan rather than ahead of it, which sets a slower, more social pace than a porter-supported trek. There is time to sit with the herders at the summer camps, watch the yaks settle for the night, and learn how a Wakhi family runs a season on the high pastures. The trade-off is honest: this is a cultural journey on foot with animal support, not a ride to the plateau.

Day-by-Day Itinerary

1

Islamabad to Karimabad

Reach Gilgit by air, or take the Karakoram Highway by road, and carry on to Karimabad in Hunza for a hotel night.
2

Karimabad to Shimshal Village

Past Passu and onto the narrow Shimshal track that clings above the gorge, arriving at the village near 3,100 m. The afternoon is for meeting your hosts and walking down to where the families are loading and readying the yaks for the days ahead.
3

Shimshal to Zardgarben

Set off up the Shimshal gorge with the yak caravan, the animals carrying the loads. Follow the river and steep, exposed trail to camp around Zardgarben, about 3,810 m.
4

Zardgarben to Purien-e-ben

Continue through the gorge with the caravan to Purien-e-ben, around 3,322 m, crossing fast meltwater channels where the yaks ferry loads across. Glaciers and high peaks open up at the valley heads.
5

Purien-e-ben to Shujerab

Climb to the summer herding settlement of Shujerab, about 4,080 m, where shepherds live with their yaks through the grazing season. Afternoon acclimatisation walk to adjust to the altitude.
6

Shujerab to the Shimshal Pamir

Over the high ground and onto the plateau itself, 4,735 m, where the view opens out to Distighil Sar and Kunyang Chhish. We camp at Shuwert among the grazing herds and the Wakhi stone huts.
7

Rest Day on the Pamir

A full day with the herders on the plateau. Watch the yaks graze, sit in on the work of a summer camp, try a short stretch of yak riding over the rough ground, and take in the open landscape.
8

Return over the High Ground to Shujerab

Travel back off the Pamir with the caravan, descending the route to camp at Shujerab or lower in the gorge.
9

Descent to Shimshal Village

Walk the last of the gorge down alongside the caravan and its drivers into Shimshal village. The herders mark the return with the community, and you sleep a final night in the homestay.
10

Shimshal to Karimabad and Onward

Retrace the Shimshal track and rejoin the highway for Karimabad, with the chance to pause at Attabad Lake on the way. From there it is onward travel or a flight home out of Gilgit. The trek ends.

Best Time and the Kuch Migration

June to September is the season, and we try to line the trip up with the Shimshal Pamir migration, the Kuch, when the village moves its livestock up to the summer grazing. Going at that time means real caravans of yaks on the move and the herding camps in full swing, which is the spectacle this trek is built around. Earlier in summer the gorge rivers run high, which makes the crossings harder; later the plateau nights turn bitterly cold.

Permits, Fees and Yak Hire

Because the valley falls in the Open Zone, you skip the restricted-area paperwork and the CKNP charge entirely. What remains is a Nature Trust contribution and a licensed local guide, and we sort both before you arrive. The piece that sets this trip apart is the yak hire: that money is paid straight to the herding households whose animals walk with you, a real cost but a fair one. As for getting in, the only way is the narrow Shimshal jeep track that hangs above the river gorge off the main highway.

Fitness, Altitude and What to Pack

Come prepared to walk. Despite the caravan, this is the same challenging high-altitude terrain as the pass trek, so train for sustained effort on steep, uneven ground and a slow build to 4,735 m. Bring sturdy boots, trekking poles for the scree and crossings, a sleeping bag rated well below freezing, and warm layers for the plateau. We supply tents and group gear; the yaks carry it up the trail.

Why Book With Us

We have operated in Gilgit-Baltistan since 2015, and the yaks, herders and guides on this trip come from Shimshal itself, so the caravan you travel with is a working part of the village, not a tourist prop. We time the safari to the herders' own migration where we can, keep groups small, and pay the yak hire straight to the families. Above all we are honest about what this is: a slower, cultural walk to the Pamir with animal support, where the river crossings, not a comfortable ride, are the heart of the experience.

What's Included

All camping equipment and expedition tents
Experienced Shimshali guide and porter team
All meals during the trek (local cuisine)
Homestay experience in Shimshal village
Transport: Islamabad–Hunza–Shimshal and return
Trekking permits and fees

Not Included

International flights
Travel insurance
Personal expenses and tips

Frequently Asked Questions

Do you actually ride the yaks the whole way?

No, and we will not pretend otherwise. Yak riding is intermittent and short, over rough ground, and it is offered as a cultural experience rather than a comfortable mount. You walk most of this trek yourself; the yaks mainly carry the loads and ferry gear and people across the rivers.

How is the Yak Safari different from the Shimshal Pass trek?

Both reach the same Pamir plateau at 4,735 m, but the safari is slower and more cultural, travelling with a Wakhi yak caravan that carries the loads and crosses the rivers. The Shimshal Pass Trek is faster and more strenuous, porter-supported, with no caravan.

How hard is the Shimshal Yak Safari?

It is challenging, the same high-altitude terrain as the pass trek: steep gorge and scree, big height gain and altitude to 4,735 m. The yaks ease the load-carrying and the river crossings, but you still trek most of it on foot, so good fitness is essential.

What is the Kuch and why does it matter?

The Kuch is the Shimshal Pamir migration, when the village drives its herds up to the summer pastures. We try to time the safari to coincide with it, so you travel alongside real working caravans and the herding camps are in full swing, which is the heart of this trip.

Are the yak river crossings safe?

They are the riskiest part of the trek, which is exactly why the yaks matter. In high water the animals are roped and pulled across carrying loads and sometimes people, using techniques the herders have refined over generations. We cross with their judgement and at the safer times of day.

What is the best time for the Shimshal Yak Safari?

June to September, ideally aligned with the Kuch migration for the full caravan and herding spectacle. Earlier in summer the gorge rivers run high and make crossings harder; later the plateau nights become very cold. We pick dates around the herding calendar.

Do I need a permit, and what about the yak hire?

There is no restricted-zone permit to obtain here, since the valley sits in the Open Zone and falls outside the CKNP charge. Your costs are a Nature Trust contribution, a licensed guide, and the yak hire that goes directly to the herding households. We take care of every part of that for you.

How high does the Yak Safari go?

The high point is the Shimshal Pamir at 4,735 m, the same plateau as the pass trek. You start from Shimshal village at about 3,100 m, so the body has to adjust to over 1,600 m of gain, which is why the itinerary builds altitude gradually.

From

$2,400

per person

* Prices may vary. Contact us for accurate, customized pricing.

Duration8–10 Days
DifficultyModerate-Strenuous
Group Size4–10 Campers
Best SeasonJul–Sep
Max Altitude~4,735m
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