Travel Asia - Pakistan

The Karakoram Highway (KKH)

by Peter van der Lans of Bicycle-Adventures.com


The Karakoram Highway is one of those legendary roads to travel in Asia. The name implies it's a big 2 or 4 way street. In fact, it's not even close to a "highway" but it is a road. This road that connects Pakistan to China. But what a road!

I know, I should be more precise, the Karakoram Highway, or KKH as it is known starts actually in Abbottabad. Up to this town the road is 4 way street and pretty busy.

The legend of the Karakoram Highway is long and spectacular. Everybody has heard of the legendary Silk Road. As the legend goes, it was the road where silk was transported from China to Europe. The truth of the Silk Road is slightly different.

kkh1In the old days there were no merchants traveling the whole route. In fact, silk and other goods from China were transported via different roads, which includes the legendary road Marco Polo traveled. However, goods were usually traded in cities on the roads going west and south (looking from Chinese perspective).

Therefore we can't say there was one Silk Road. In fact, there were many. The Karakoram Highway as we know the road nowadays was one of those Silk Roads. From Kashgar (or Kashi as it is known in China) goods were transported over the Khunajarab Pass to the lower lands of the western Indian subcontinent. It was a hard and dangerous road. And even today, it's still a hard road.

I have traveled the Karakoram Highway two times. It's a beautiful experience. As said above, the road starts in Abbottabad and goes north following the Indus to the Khunjarab Pass. The last 15 kilometers are hairpin curves to the pass and then the road swindles down to a more widespread open land with mountains surrounding and gorgeous lakes. In my humble opinion, some of the most beautiful landscapes i have seen were on this road.

Most people start in Islamabad and cycle from there on a modern 4 way street to Abbottabad, the official starting point of the Karakoram Highway.

Although it was late in the season, I tried my luck in going first to Murree, a little formerly British Hill Station. The idea was to cycle to Muzzafarabad and then go west to the Karakoram Highway. Read more about my adventures at the Karakoram Highway to Murree.

When I arrived at Abbottabad, I had the long Karakoram Highway in front of me. Here's a few lines about my journey to Chilas.

The next leg would bring me to Gilgit. It's important to know Gilgit in in fact the last city of any size in Pakistan. The next sizable city is Tashkorgan (China), hundreds of kilometers away.

Supplies can be found further on the KKH in Hunza or Sost but more major things, you have to buy here in Gilgit. There are no decent bicycle shops in Gilgit, as there are none on the whole Karakoram Highway. But if necessarry, you could do some very basic repairs in the local bikeshops in Gilgit. Don't expect high quality material, the main tool for a bicycle repairman is the hammer.

I usually say to people: "If paradise has existed, Hunza with Karimabad at it's centre could be one of the possible places". Hunza is beautiful, surrounded by several 6000 meter plus mountains along the Indus river it has a long history. Here you can read more about Gligit and Hunza.

Further north, the Karakoram Highway follows the Indus all the way to Sost. Here's the Pakistan border post. From here on the road slowly starts swindling up to the physical border. Pakistani and Chinese soldiers keep an eye on the road. After passing the physical border it's another long way to the Chinese customs in Tashkurgan.

The country side you're traveling in now is open and mostly empty though nomads still live here. One of the most beautiful lakes I ever saw, Karakul Lake is a great place to camp, though not in winter!

The Karakoram highway ends in Kashgar, the great trade city in the far west of China. Marco Polo writes about Kashgar. Walking on the legendary market, and reading Marco Polo's diary, one can see there's not much changed in 700 years. Kashgars' Sunday Market is still a must have seen in the whole of Central Asia and China.

Something about the author:
Peter van der Lans is a long term traveler who traveled as a backpacker and a cyclist since the mid 80's in Europe. In the early 90's he shifted his attention to Asia. Peter cycled from Holland to China, spend months in Iran and Pakistan, about a year in India and Nepal before moving into China where he cycled for more then a year. At present date, mid 2006, he has cycled over 68.000 km and it's unlikely he is willing to give cycling up as it became a way of life for him.

After the SARS in 2003 he moved to the UK for a while. Peter now lives in Malaysia. He has settled himself in Sitiawan, a little town near Lumut, the gateway to the little tourist island Pulau Pangkor. He likes Pangkor so much he decided to make a website about it: www.pulau-pangkor.com. While working on that website he slowly started working on a second and extensive website about his adventures when he was on his bicycle (which b.t.w. had been baptized Jim). The bike website is a large and ongoing project www.bicycle-adventures.com.

YPHH Connect