This day is the longest and toughest day of the Kashmir Great Lakes trek. The gradient is difficult. On this day, you will cross over the highest altitude of the trek which is GadsarPass standing tall at 4,200m. This day you will cross the highest altitude of this trekking route.
We will start early, have a proper lunch, and don’t forget to take your snacks like protein bars or fruits for this day.
Your trek leader will guide you and start you early in the morning for the day. The first attraction and the best attraction of the trek will be visible within an hour of your trek. Behold the two gorgeous lakes cozily and calmly adjacent to each other: Vishansar and Kishansar Lakes.
The lakes are famous for their blue water and abundant trout fish. You will see trout fish swimming around. The fish are of different colors. Both of these lakes have a religious significance, and they drain into the Kishanganga River that meanders through Gurez Valley.
After the lakes, start the ardent steep ascend to Gadsar Pass. It has a narrow and sharp trail. Ascend carefully and steadily. It takes around 2 hours to reach the top of the pass. It is during rains that the trail of this pass disappears.
Most of the breathtaking pictures that you see of the route are shot from this pass. Take some rest here for some time. Click your videos and pictures here to cherish the memories later on.
From the pass is a steep and a bit long descent. Place your steps carefully. The descent then finishes and merges into a long, lush meadow called Gadsar Meadow. The meadow is wavy breathtakingly placed between the two mountain stretches. It has lush grass and varied colorful flowers and herbs. The meadow is the most colorful of this trek.
Shortly afterward, you will see on your left a soothing, blue-colored lake – Gadsar Lake. The lake is the least visited and is an essential part of the Great Lakes Trek. Since it is almost in the middle of this trek, this lake is the least visited and explored and is one of the best alpine lakes that you will see on the trek.
Legends say the water and fish from the Gadsar Lake have healing powers. The campsite is just a small walk from the lake.
Note: It is on this day most of the treks get terminated during rainy days. If it rains heavily then we won’t be able to ascent the Gadsar Pass as the trail disappears and it gets all slippery and muddy. In that situation, we use the buffer day (there is an extra payment for the buffer day).
Buffer day means we don’t trek forward, we just spend another day at the same campsite. If the weather turns good and the trail is doable the next day, we cross the Gadsar Pass. If the trail is again slippery and it is not safe to cross the pass, then we abandon the plan of going to the other side. We spend the rest of the days exploring Vishansar and Nichani Valley and then descend to Shitkadi, Sonmarg.