The Shandur Polo Festival from 7th July
The Shandur Polo Festival is all set to begin from 7th to 9th of July at the Shandur Pass.
Passion for Polo will be the highest on the world’s highest Polo ground to experience Shandur Polo Festival from 7th to 9th of July at the Shandur Pass.
Shandur polo festival is an amazing festival celebrated by the tribes of Gilgit and Chitral in the northern areas of Pakistan. The tribes from the regions of Gilgit-Baltistan and Chitral meet at the Shandur pass every summer. The pass has a beautiful polo ground where a unique wild free-style polo is played between different teams of the region.
Shandur polo ground is considered to be the highest polo ground in the world at 3,700meter. The polo ground is adjacent to Shandur lake. The festival provides an amazing cultural experience in the Hindukush mountain ranges.
ITINERARY:
Option I (Shandur Polo Festival & Back)
Day 01 Islamabad-Gilgit ( via babusar)
Day 02 Gilgit –Shandur
Day 03 At Shandur festival Peshawar-Khyber Pass- Dir
Day 04 Final day at Shandur and drive to Chitral
Day 05 Day visit to Kalash valley and stay at Ayun village
Day 06 Ayun-Sawat via Lowari pass.
Day 07 Swat- Islamabad.
Option II (Shandur Polo Festival & Hunza Valley)
Day 04 Shandur-Gilgit.
Day 05 Gilgit-Karimabad (Hunza)
Day 06 Karimabad sightseeing and upper Hunza excursion
Day 07 Karimabad- Islamabad ( via Naran-Kaghan)
Shandur Top (el. 12,200 feet (3,700 m)) located in District Ghizer of Gilgit-Baltistan: Shandur-Top in Ghizer is often called the ‘Roof of the World’ where the Hindukush in Gilgit-Baltistan.
For more details contact at 03227093593.
Shandur invites visitors to experience a traditional Polo tournament which since 1936 has been held annually in the first week of July between the teams of Gilgit-Baltistan and Chitral. The tournament is held on Shandur Top, the highest polo ground in the world at 3,700 meters (the pass itself is at 3,800 meters).
The festival also includes Folk music, dancing, and a camping village is set up. The polo tournament is featured in the first episode of Himalaya with Michael Palin. Various teams of Gilgit-Baltistan and Chitral have always played the game of polo closest to its original form. In the past, the British Rulers were the patrons of the game.