Mandani Valley to Kedarnath via Yangbuk & Mahapanth Col: Garhwal’s Hidden Glacier Traverse

Few routes in Garhwal stitch history, high science, and raw adventure into one continuous line the way the Mandani traverse does. We leave the road at Ransi, and instead of following pilgrims up the Mandakini, we cut across the grain of the range—threading Mandani Bugyal, shouldering over Yangbuk and Bishali Cols, and finally topping out on Mahapanth Col before we drop into Kedarnath. The path is a forgotten connector between two Kedars: Madmaheshwar in the east and Kedarnath in the west, both revered for centuries yet seldom linked on foot in a single push. Mandani Bugyal itself is more than a meadow; local lore says the Pandavas paused here on their ascent to Swargarohini, leaving a tiny stone shrine that still receives offerings when the grass turns emerald in mid‑summer.

FACT SHEET:

Duration: Delhi to Delhi in 10 to days. 7 to 8 days of trekking.

 Prerequisite: Prior high altitude trekking experiences on snow and ice is a must.

 Location: Rudraprayag district in central Garhwal, Uttarkhand

 Grade: Difficult/Hard

Physicality: ~ 8/10

 Highest Point: Mahapanth Col ~ 4750 m/15580 ft

 Access: Reach New Delhi or directly to Rishikesh and then take a bus or car to Ukhimath – change for Ransi. Exit via Gaurikund, Guptkashi and Rudraprayag

 Seasons: Late May to mid of October, avoid July and August due to monsoon

Nearest Rail station: Haridwar and Rishikesh

 Airport: Delhi or Dehradun (DED)

Day-wise Trek Itinerary

Day 1 – Ransi (1 950 m) → Sunera Kharak (2 743 m) → Kanara Kharak (3 038 m)

  • Climb past Ransi’s last fields; Madmaheshwar  Ganga glitters far below.
  • Rhododendron ridgeline via Daratoli & Jin Kharak; lunch on the grassy Sunera shelves.
  • Final push through dwarf‑oak and shepherd shelters to the open pasture of Kanara Kharak.

Day 2 – Kanara Kharak → Mallapaturi Rock‑Shelter (3 418 m) → Thouli Bugyal (≈ 3 100 m shelter‑camp)

  • Boulder-hopping along the narrow crest that divides the Madmaheshwar & Mandani basins.
  • Wide panoramas of Chaukhamba & Kedarnath peaks. Water scarce—melt‑patches below the trail.
  • Camp on Thouli’s sloping turf; fetch water 150 m downslope.

Day 3 – Thouli → Doara Khal (4 145 m) → Fulwani – Dogla – Gaheri Bishtoli → Mandani Bugyal (≈ 3 500 m)

  • A one‑hour zig‑zag to the shoulder of Doara Khal—the first look into Mandani’s emerald floor.
  • Steep descent through talus into the valley; rhododendron thickets hide Fulwani & Dogla sheep camps.
  • Cross Mandani Ganga on stepping‑stones, rope up for safety, and pitch beside the tiny Mandani temple.

Day 4 – Mandani Bugyal → Nag Ganga Gorge → High Camp below Yangbuk Col (≈ 4 200 m)

  • Follow Mandani Ganga till it meets the ice‑cold Nag Ganga coming from the west.
  • Turn west; a staircase of escarpments and old moraine ribs—three logical camp platforms.
  • Set tents beneath the rubble tongue of Yangbuk glacier; scout next morning’s line.

Day 5 – High Camp → Yangbuk Col (≈ 4 700 m) → Bishali Col (≈ 4 750 m) → Mahapanth Tal (4 750 m)

  • Pre-dawn start; mixed snow, scree, and occasional ice slabs.
  • Crest Yangbuk Col on the ridge spilling south from Yangbuk peak; drop carefully onto Kalyan glacier.
  • Traverse crevassed flats, and climb a loose right‑hand ramp to Bishali Col.
  • Edge along rock‑fall gullies to camp near—but not on—the sacred turquoise bowl of Mahapanth Tal.

Day 6 – Mahapanth Tal → Mahapanth Col (4 775 m) → Kedarnath (3 584 m)

  • Skirt Tal on its eastern moraine, ascending 150 m to Mahapanth Col (aka Kedar Khal).
  • Jaw‑dropping line‑up: Sumeru, Swetvarn, Hanuman Top & Janhukut guard the skyline.
  • Nerve‑testing scree descent beside Mahapanth Nala; the gradient eases only in the last 3 km to Kedarnath.
  • Evening darshan; lodge beds feel other‑worldly after five nights under canvas.

Day 7 – Kedarnath → Gaurikund roadhead (drive out)

  • Cruise the rebuilt pilgrim track, switchbacking past Bhimbali tea shops to Gaurikund.
  • Shared jeeps onwards to Sonprayag / Guptkashi / Rudraprayag.

About Author

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HT Desk
HT Desk is the in‑house editorial board at Himalaya Trekkers, led by Founder Sapta and staffed by route planners, operations managers, and field guides with a combined 150+ seasons on the trail. We exist to answer the practical questions trekkers ask every day—season timing, weather updates, route choices, options and comparisons, permit ladders, fitness prep, and trail ethics—drawing on live dispatches from teams across Sikkim, Uttarakhand, Himachal, Ladakh, and Kashmir.

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