Adi Kailash

Adi Kailash
Adi Kailash
Location in India
Highest point
Elevation 6,310 m (20,700 ft)[1]
Coordinates 30°19′09″N 80°37′57″E / 30.319137°N 80.632568°E / 30.319137; 80.632568Coordinates: 30°19′09″N 80°37′57″E / 30.319137°N 80.632568°E / 30.319137; 80.632568
Geography
Location Pithoragarh District, Uttarakhand, India
Parent range Himalayas
Climbing
First ascent 8 October 2004[2]
Easiest route Southwest ridge: glacier/snow/rock climb (PD+/AD-)

Adi Kailash (Hindi: आदि कैलाश), (Tamil: ஆதி கைலாஷ்) also known as Aadhi Kailash, Shiva Kailash, Chhota Kailash, Baba Kailash or Jonglingkong Peak, is a mountain located in the Himalayan mountain range near Om Parvat, lying in the Darchula district of western Nepal and in Pithoragarh district of Uttarakhand, India.

Both Adi Kailash and Om Parvat are considered sacred by Hindus.[3]

About

The Adi Kailash and the Om Parvat and are not one and the same.[4]

The Adi Kailash or Chhota Kailash is located in a different direction, near Sin La pass and near Brahma Parvat, the base camp of Adi Kailash is 17 km from the Kutti village at sacred Jolingkong Lake with a Hindu Shiva temple.[4][5]

Om Parvat can be viewed en route to the Kailash Manasarovar Yatra from the last camp below Lipulekh Pass at Nabhidhang India-China border post protected by the Indo-Tibetan Border Police also has Public Works Department guest house on the Indian side.[6] Many trekkers to Adi Kailash often make a diversion to view Om Parvat. Om Parvat is located near Nabhi Dhang camp (Nepal) on Mount Kailash-Lake Manasarovar yatra route.[4]

First Ascent

From Sept 19th to Oct 14th 2002 the first attempt, which was abandoned 200 m (660 ft) short of the summit because of very loose snow and rock conditions, was made by an Indo-Aussie-British-Scottish team including Martin Moran, T. Rankin, M. Singh, S. Ward, A. Williams and R. Ausden. The climbers promised not to ascend the final 10 metres (30 ft) out of respect for the peak's holy status.[3][5]

On 8 October 2004, the first successful ascent of Adi Kailash was by the British-Scottish-American team composed of Tim Woodward, Jack Pearse, Andy Perkins (UK); Jason Hubert, Martin Welch, Diarmid Hearns, Amanda George (Scotland); and Paul Zuchowski (USA), who did not ascend the final few meter out of respect for the sacred nature of the summit.[2]

Adi Kailash Yatra Circuit

The Adi Kailash Yatra Circuit begins by going up the Darma Valley and then going to Kuthi Yankti valley via the Sin La pass to join the Mount Kailash-Lake Manasarovar Tibetan pilgrimage route down the Sharda River.[5]

References

  1. Martin Moran (2014). "Cheepaydang, South Face and Southwest Ridge". American Alpine Journal.
  2. 1 2 American Alpine Journal, 2003, pp. 365-366. Available at AAJ Online
  3. 1 2 American Alpine Journal, 2003, pp. 365-366. Available at AAJ Online (PDF) Archived 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine.
  4. 1 2 3 Peakware - Om Parvat
  5. 1 2 3 "Moran-Mountain.co.uk Little Kailash expedition 2012". Archived from the original on 4 February 2017. Retrieved 17 April 2016.
  6. "AsiaNews - Borderline blues". Archived from the original on 28 April 2016. Retrieved 17 April 2016.
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