Local Sightseeing

Lahoul ALpine Homestay

Lahaul Valley

Lahaul Valley, meaning "country in the south" in Tibetan, is a high-altitude, scenic region in the Himalayas, known for its rugged terrain, Buddhist culture, and stunning landscapes featuring mountains, glaciers, and rivers, including the Chandra and Bhaga rivers which meet at Tandi to form the Chenab River. The valley is characterized by high mountains, snow-capped peaks, glaciers, and rivers. The Chandra and Bhaga rivers flow through the valley, meeting at Tandi to form the Chenab River. Lahaul is often thronged by tourists from May to October, as it becomes inaccessible during the rest of the year due to heavy snowfall. .

Hadimba Devi Temple

Hidimba Devi Temple, locally known as Dhungari Temple, also known variously as the Hadimba Temple, is a Hindu Temple, located in Manāli, a hill station in the State of Himāchal Pradesh in north India. It is an ancient cave temple dedicated to Hidimbi Devi, wife of Bhima, a figure in the Indian epic Mahābhārata.The Hidimba Devi Temple in Manali, Himachal Pradesh, is special for its unique pagoda-style architecture, intricate wooden carvings, and its location amidst the cedar forests, holding significance in the Hindu epic Mahabharata as a place where Hidimba Devi, the wife of Bhima, meditated. .

Sissu Lake

Sissu is the main town centre for the nearby villages of Ropsang-Khangser-Gyungling, Gomathang, Yangling, Jagdang, Sarkhang, Shurthang and Labrang. Labrang village also has a Buddhist Gompa called Labrang Gompa dedicated to Palden Lhamo.[citation needed] As Sissu is located a few kilometres from the north portal of the Rohtang Tunnel, this area will stay connected for the whole year. Hence, it will become a popular tourist destination in upcoming years. The area is beautiful and has facilities for tourist to stay here. Hotels of Sissu are Hotel Triveni, Hotel Plm dhara, a few Home stays and Goldrop Luxury Camps which gives the chilly feel of the area in summers..

Key Monastery

In the mid-17th century, during the reign of the Fifth Dalai Lama, Kye was extensively plundered and damaged by the Mongols, and became a Gelugpa establishment.[9] Around 1821, it was sacked again during the wars between Ladakh and Kulu. In 1841, during the Dogra–Tibetan war, it was severely damaged by the Dogra army under Ghulam Khan and Rahim Khan. Later that same year, it was also attacked by Sikhs.[10] In the 1840s, it was ravaged by fire and, in 1975, a violent earthquake caused further damage which was repaired with the help of the Archaeological Survey of India and the State Public Works Department..

Solang Valley

Solang Valley, a popular tourist destination near Manali in Himachal Pradesh, India, is known for its stunning scenery and adventure activities, offering both summer and winter sports like skiing, paragliding, and zorbing.It is a side valley at the top of the Kullu Valley in Himachal Pradesh, India 14 km northwest of the resort town Manali on the way to Rohtang Pass, and is known for its summer and winter sport conditions. The sports most commonly offered are parachuting, paragliding, skating and zorbing...

Baralacha La Pass

Baralacha La, or Baralacha Pass, is a high-altitude mountain pass in the Zanskar range, connecting Lahaul district in Himachal Pradesh to Ladakh (UT) in India, situated at an elevation of 16,040 feet (4,890 meters). Situated in the Zanskar range, along the Leh-Manali highway. "The Bara Lacha is the boundary between two separate regions distinguished by their physical characteristics. That which we have already passed through may be called the true Himalayan region. Here the gigantic ranges are covered with perpetual snow, furrowed by glaciers, and they arise from amid dense forests which clothe their flanks up to a certain elevation. They are separated by deep gorges, whose sides are precipices, and though which large rivers flow. In fact the scenery is Alpine..

Suraj Tal

Suraj Tal, also called Tso Kamtsi or Surya Tal, is an 800 m (2,600 ft) long lake that lies just below the 4,890 m (16,040 ft) high Bara-lacha-la pass in Lahaul and Spiti district of the Indian state of Himachal Pradesh. It is the third-highest lake in India and the 21st-highest in the world. Suraj Tal Lake is just below the source of the Bhaga River that joins the Chandra River downstream at Tandi to form the Chandrabhaga River in Himachal Pradesh. The Chandrabhaga River is known as the Chenab as it enters the Jammu region of Jammu and Kashmir. The other major tributary of the Chandrabhaga, the Chandra, originates and flows south-east of the Bara-lacha La..