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11 Jan 2012
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Not possible from the Nepal side. It's against the rules as it's a national park and you can't ride in past the park gates.
Whether it's even rideable is another question. It's a hiking trail primarily with things like steps and as such would be a push for even a trials bike. Before they shut it down to mountain biking, I met some Canadians that were riding/carrying their mountain bikes up, that was in 1989 and even for them sections weren't rideable. Squeezing past a yak train on a narrow hiking trail with a yawning cliff to one side wouldn't be a lot of fun on a motorbike.
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11 Jan 2012
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Bugger, that was my main concern (it being a national park) the trek was also but there you have it....back to the drawing board then...
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11 Jan 2012
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Shivalaya
I think the closest you can get from the Nepalese side is Shivalaya. Here's a story by Big Tom on their ride there:
BIG TOMS RIDE - TRAVEL BLOG
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11 Jan 2012
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MountainMan
Not possible from the Nepal side. It's against the rules as it's a national park and you can't ride in past the park gates.
Whether it's even rideable is another question. It's a hiking trail primarily with things like steps and as such would be a push for even a trials bike. Before they shut it down to mountain biking, I met some Canadians that were riding/carrying their mountain bikes up, that was in 1989 and even for them sections weren't rideable. Squeezing past a yak train on a narrow hiking trail with a yawning cliff to one side wouldn't be a lot of fun on a motorbike.
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Thanks to the Nepalese for this!
Bikes are great but they don't belong on the highest/remotest parts of this planet - that's my view.
So, I do hope that Nepal does not follow the example of China to develop bitumen based access to Everest base camp.
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12 Jan 2012
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Hey Ekke, thats great info thank you...pretty high up and thats what we wanted without guides etc...
Walkabout I'm all for preserving origins and hence wanted to attempt something that doesnt have a road or expect one to be built..afterall however I am a biker and thats my passion  but I am totally against building roads/tracks on native ground (hence why I ride trial  )
Actually in my search we found Marsimik Le in India...5582m..highest pass so that will do us me thinks
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12 Jan 2012
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Quote:
Originally Posted by tomski
Hey Ekke, thats great info thank you...pretty high up and thats what we wanted without guides etc...
Walkabout I'm all for preserving origins and hence wanted to attempt something that doesnt have a road or expect one to be built..afterall however I am a biker and thats my passion  but I am totally against building roads/tracks on native ground (hence why I ride trial  )
Actually in my search we found Marsimik Le in India...5582m..highest pass so that will do us me thinks 
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No worries tomski.
I am not against change it's just progress I don't like - Mark Twain I believe.
Seriously, I understand the need for roads between habitable locations (I have had a hand in building some, largish, highways) for commerce and communications and I am not at all against the aspirations of people in other countries who want the modern constructions that other nations have had for years. Unlike those others who bemoan the asphalting of piste, that has poorly served the economies of developing countries, because they want to travel "off road" - once, twice, thrice, whatever, but the local inhabitants have to travel that same route endlessly.
But roads/bridges have no right to exist where they serve no sensible purpose. As an extreme, to the top of Everest??
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28 Mar 2012
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Quote:
Originally Posted by _CY_
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Character building stuff and those kids will be all the better for it.
Looks like similar activity to what I used to get up to when I was their age and out of school (damned near drowned more than once).
There's nothing wrong with taking a decent walk in the countryside.
But, anyone who has herded a bunch of adults, never mind children, will know that 80 of them are not going to walk 62.5 miles per day for 2 days; not over that kind of terrain.
The bigger the group, the slower the rate of progress.
Interesting post though.
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28 Mar 2012
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Quote:
Originally Posted by tomski
Actually in my search we found Marsimik Le in India...5582m..highest pass so that will do us me thinks 
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Marsimik La is in a military zone, and you need special military permission from Leh to get there.
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