Devil Soul
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The Mecca of mountains in Pakistan’s Shangri-La
By Mike McCaffrey 3 hours ago
It takes incredible resources and dedication to try and hold power in these great mountains.
Towards the boundlessnorthern areasof Pakistan, the world’s greatest mountain ranges merge as one. Pushed upwards by the subduction of the Indian subcontinent, their snowy peaks rise above parades of clouds providing a habitat for The Golden Eagle, Snow Leopard, Himalayan Ibex, and The Tibetan Wolf.
Photo: Mike McCaffrey
This is where the Hindu Kush, Himalaya and Karakoram mountains merge, hosting five of the world’s 14 peaks which are higher than 8,000 meters (26,247 feet), including K2, the world’s second tallest peak after Mount Everest.
Flying over this region provides perspective to the viewer, as a sea of snow-capped summits can be seen perched against the horizon, and you actually have to crane your neck upwards to observe them towering above the plane.
Photo: Mike McCaffrey
Between the mountains lie little stone villages and idyllic resting places such as the Fairy Meadows, where small streams carry pieces of geological times from the melting glaciers into the deep river valleys. Carving away at the base of these sovereign ranges is the Indus River, a drifting rush of cloudy chocolate milk, flowing 3,180 km (1,980 miles) down into the plains of Punjab, which 5,000 years ago nurtured the famous Indus River Civilisation.
Photo: Mike McCaffrey
Through this land of tectonic shifts and glacial melts unveils a complex history of European, Asian, and Arabian civilisations. The Kalash people of Chitral ferment red wine in an otherwise Muslim region and trace their culture back to the conquest of Alexander the Great during the fourth century. Giant carvings of Buddha from the fifth century are etched onto sheer mountain walls. The people of Baltistan speak Balti, a derivative of ancient Tibetan, while in neighbouring Gilgit, people speak Shina, of Indo-Aryan origin.
Photo: Mike McCaffrey
Across these mountain passes, there used to run the southern route of the famous Silk Road, controlled by different rulers over the centuries, such as Persian and Tibetan Kings, different dynasties of Han Chinese, Roman emperors, Turkish sultans, Islamic caliphs, and Mongol Khans. It brought Chinese jade and silk to the Mesopotamia, the Syrian Desert, and Mediterranean ports in exchange for Roman perfumes, and gems from the heart of the mountains.
Photo: Mike McCaffrey
The ancient Silk Route has long been abandoned, but its legacy has left a deep impact on the Islamic culture. It left behind Afghan rubies and Roman coins which the merchants in Gilgit sell. The people still build stone houses on impossible cliffs, like swallows’ nests, and dart around with goat-like ankles along ledges and over avalanches, planting cherry, peach, and apricot trees, which ripen in the summer. Locals eat spicy dodo chicken soup, naan karahi, dry daal, and can tell the time of day from the ever changing kaleidoscope of sun and shadows on the surrounding mountains.
Photo: Mike McCaffrey
While the northern areas of Pakistan have been peaceful and stable for many years, this land has the potential to turn into a place of remarkable geopolitical significance, as was the case during the days of the Silk Route. However, it takes incredible resources and dedication to try and hold power in these great mountains.
Photo: Mike McCaffrey
By Mike McCaffrey 3 hours ago
It takes incredible resources and dedication to try and hold power in these great mountains.
Towards the boundlessnorthern areasof Pakistan, the world’s greatest mountain ranges merge as one. Pushed upwards by the subduction of the Indian subcontinent, their snowy peaks rise above parades of clouds providing a habitat for The Golden Eagle, Snow Leopard, Himalayan Ibex, and The Tibetan Wolf.
Photo: Mike McCaffrey
This is where the Hindu Kush, Himalaya and Karakoram mountains merge, hosting five of the world’s 14 peaks which are higher than 8,000 meters (26,247 feet), including K2, the world’s second tallest peak after Mount Everest.
Flying over this region provides perspective to the viewer, as a sea of snow-capped summits can be seen perched against the horizon, and you actually have to crane your neck upwards to observe them towering above the plane.
Photo: Mike McCaffrey
Between the mountains lie little stone villages and idyllic resting places such as the Fairy Meadows, where small streams carry pieces of geological times from the melting glaciers into the deep river valleys. Carving away at the base of these sovereign ranges is the Indus River, a drifting rush of cloudy chocolate milk, flowing 3,180 km (1,980 miles) down into the plains of Punjab, which 5,000 years ago nurtured the famous Indus River Civilisation.
Photo: Mike McCaffrey
Through this land of tectonic shifts and glacial melts unveils a complex history of European, Asian, and Arabian civilisations. The Kalash people of Chitral ferment red wine in an otherwise Muslim region and trace their culture back to the conquest of Alexander the Great during the fourth century. Giant carvings of Buddha from the fifth century are etched onto sheer mountain walls. The people of Baltistan speak Balti, a derivative of ancient Tibetan, while in neighbouring Gilgit, people speak Shina, of Indo-Aryan origin.
Photo: Mike McCaffrey
Across these mountain passes, there used to run the southern route of the famous Silk Road, controlled by different rulers over the centuries, such as Persian and Tibetan Kings, different dynasties of Han Chinese, Roman emperors, Turkish sultans, Islamic caliphs, and Mongol Khans. It brought Chinese jade and silk to the Mesopotamia, the Syrian Desert, and Mediterranean ports in exchange for Roman perfumes, and gems from the heart of the mountains.
Photo: Mike McCaffrey
The ancient Silk Route has long been abandoned, but its legacy has left a deep impact on the Islamic culture. It left behind Afghan rubies and Roman coins which the merchants in Gilgit sell. The people still build stone houses on impossible cliffs, like swallows’ nests, and dart around with goat-like ankles along ledges and over avalanches, planting cherry, peach, and apricot trees, which ripen in the summer. Locals eat spicy dodo chicken soup, naan karahi, dry daal, and can tell the time of day from the ever changing kaleidoscope of sun and shadows on the surrounding mountains.
Photo: Mike McCaffrey
While the northern areas of Pakistan have been peaceful and stable for many years, this land has the potential to turn into a place of remarkable geopolitical significance, as was the case during the days of the Silk Route. However, it takes incredible resources and dedication to try and hold power in these great mountains.
Photo: Mike McCaffrey