Debsa Pass

Debsa Pass

Debsa Pass is a 5,360-metre (17,590 ft) high mountain pass in the Himalaya mountains between the Kullu and Spiti Districts of Himachal Pradesh, India.

Joydeep Sircar led the teams which explored the watershed ridge and discovered the pass after approaching through the Parbati River valley in Kullu. After an abortive attempt on an impassable col further North in 1992, the actual pass was located and reached in 1993, but the team refrained from crossing it into Spiti under the mistaken impression that they could be arrested because they did not have Inner Line Permits required for Spiti. Two years later, the 1995 team planned to approach from the Spiti side, which involves much less height gain, but tremendous autumn floods in the upper valley of the Beas River and other areas of Himachal which wrecked roads forced them to take the Parbati approach again. This time they crossed the pass on 21st September and completed the route from Manikaran to Kaja.

Leomann's 1:200,000 map of Himachal Pradesh (Third Edition, 2005) shows a dotted track beginning at a point between the Kach (actually Kachh) and Bara Dwari Thach campsites and crossing the Kullu-Spiti watershed divide into the West Debsa Glacier to follow the West Debsa and Debsa streams to Thidim (should actually be Thango) in the Parahio Valley. This is a fairly accurate representation of the 1995 route, though the pass is left unmarked.

References

Coordinates: 31°54′15″N 77°48′07″E / 31.90417°N 77.80194°E / 31.90417; 77.80194



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  • Joydeep Sircar — (born 1947) is a mountain traveller and pioneer mountain historian. In 1979 he published his Himalayan handbook , an index of all the then named peaks of 6096 meters (20000 feet) and above in Afghanistan and the Indian subcontinent giving… …   Wikipedia

  • Parbati River (Himachal Pradesh) — Parbati River is a river in Himachal Pradesh, India that flows into the Beas River at Bhuntar, some 10 km south of Kullu. It rises from the Man Talai Glacier below the Pin Parbati pass and flows in a gradual curve from north northwest to west… …   Wikipedia

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