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Leh Ladakh WildlifeLadakh - characterised
by unruly terrains, rugged landscapes and snow-dressed mountains which
rise to several thousand feet from the surface of earth, with forbidden
valleys. As Ladakh is a cold desert so there is no signs of trees far
and wide. Winds blow here at a very high speed and everything is parched
by the rarefied dryness of the environment .Only few narrow fertile
valleys provide a clear sparkling air. The limpidity of the atmosphere,
infact, gives the night sky a unique clarity, so full and bright with
stars that one feels transported to some ethereal setting. Ladakh acquires virtually no natural forests, though along riverbanks and valleys some greenery can be seen. The lower mountain slopes are few but higher up, near the snow line, plants like wild rose, willow and herbaceous have favourably colonised the slopes. Ladakh is the alpine zone, where soil, wind, precipitation and exposure are main agents in the management of a particular life. The temperature variation due to height is by far the most important factor. Because of the decrease in the temperature, vegetation becomes more less and stunted as one ascends the slopes. In this extremely harsh environment one would hardly see any evidence of wildlife. Few of the animals which you can see here are : Yak Yak or you can also say dong is a wild ox and is the largest animal found in Ladakh. It is definitely more imposing than its placid domestic counterpart. Immensely shaggy and weighing about a tone it has curved horns whose tips can be as wide apart as 90 cm. and measure 76 cm. over the curves. It can easily be identified by its long black hair, which is tinged with gray at the muzzle. Spending its summers at a height above 6,000 meters, in winter it moves in herds to the lakes, marshes and lower valleys. Nyan Largest and most magnificent of wild sheep in the whole world, it is also called the Great Tibetan sheep (Ovis ammon). Roughly 200 of these sheep are found in the extreme eastern portion of Ladakh. The horns of the nyan measure up to 145 cm. and the animal normally remains at a great height, rarely descending to a level below 4,500 meters.
Urial Urial or shapu (Ovis orientalis) is also a sheep but the smallest sheep in the world. Its body, which is just about as tall as its horns usually weighs 85 Kg. and has horns measuring upto 99 cm. These sheep prefer the grassy mountain slopes. The need for protection of the urial is great as they are within easy reach of hunters. Their numbers have been declining rapidly and it is estimated that there are no more than 500 in Ladakh. Bharal The most common and wide spread of the sheep in the Ladakh region is the bharal or the blue sheep (Pseudois nayaur). You can found Bharal at an altitude of almost 6,000 m. In summer they graze in huge herds on the rich and abundant grasses of the alpine meadows. Their brownish-gray colouring provides them with protective camouflage and as they often stand motionless they can be extremely difficult to spot but, when alarmed, bharal will bolt swiftly to safety. Strangely, bharal seems to bear some morphological traits of both sheep and goats. Booking Form |
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