Walking vacations in Kyrgyzstan
Footpaths are both off the beaten track and roads well-travelled. Nomadic herders, traders and armies have been using these paths for millennia, but most are little seen by tourists.
Just south of Bishkek, the capital city of Kyrgyzstan, the snowy Ala-Too range rises up in a wave. These mountains are the stomping ground of our walking tours in Kyrgyzstan. Taller than the Rockies and the Alps at their peak, they’re really just a warmup, almost doubling to Himalayan heights as they transform into the backbone of the great Tian Shan mountains of Central Asia.
While sipping on a kumis in Bishkek, getting your first tastebud-zapping taste of the kefir-like national drink, this wall of mountains is a hint of the awesome sights to come while walking in Kyrgyzstan. The routes ahead will cover snow leopard country, national parks, the second largest alpine lake in world, rocky wilderness, and green valleys dotted with yurt camps.
While sipping on a kumis in Bishkek, getting your first tastebud-zapping taste of the kefir-like national drink, this wall of mountains is a hint of the awesome sights to come while walking in Kyrgyzstan. The routes ahead will cover snow leopard country, national parks, the second largest alpine lake in world, rocky wilderness, and green valleys dotted with yurt camps.
Why go hiking in Kyrgyzstan?
Hiking is the best way to explore the Tian Shan mountains
When confronted with the rugged lay of the land, it’s easy to see why hiking is one of the best ways to see Kyrgyzstan. Driving will get you from A to B eventually, but rural roads are often potholed from the harsh winters and either take the long route around seemingly impenetrable mountains – or make a death-defying zigzag over them.
With walking boots and an excellent local guide, however, the mountains of Kyrgyzstan are far from impassable.
Thousands of kilometres of footpaths have existed for as long as people have been living in this land – for more than 200,000 years, and long before Kyrgyzstan as a nation was a twinkle in the eye. After all, until the 9th century or so, most people moved their settlements and livestock with the seasons, creating paths as they went. Stories of the nomadic tribes, Silk Road traders and armies who have walked here are around every bend – and a great guide will share them with gusto.
With walking boots and an excellent local guide, however, the mountains of Kyrgyzstan are far from impassable.
Thousands of kilometres of footpaths have existed for as long as people have been living in this land – for more than 200,000 years, and long before Kyrgyzstan as a nation was a twinkle in the eye. After all, until the 9th century or so, most people moved their settlements and livestock with the seasons, creating paths as they went. Stories of the nomadic tribes, Silk Road traders and armies who have walked here are around every bend – and a great guide will share them with gusto.
City homestays, yurt camps & noodle making
Small group walking vacations in Kyrgyzstan usually have a group size of just 6-16 people, making it much easier to stay in small, locally run accommodation. Hikers will be welcomed warmly into a guest house in Bishkek and snooze in a homestay in Chon-Kemin National Park. In Karakol, you’ll be invited into a Dungan household to share stories over a homecooked meal.
A real highlight is staying at a yurt camp on the shores of Issyk-Kul Lake. Most visitors stay for the day, but settling in for longer gives you the chance to get into the rhythm of sunrise swims, meals in the shared dining room and stargazing under some of the clearest skies on the planet. As well as being a great stay, visits to yurt camps help preserve the demand for yurts themselves – and of the skills of the people who make them. These camps are extraordinarily low impact too; once dismantled, it’s almost like the camp was never there.
Homestays and camping aren’t just unforgettable experiences – at every step, they ensure that your money remains in the communities you visit.
A real highlight is staying at a yurt camp on the shores of Issyk-Kul Lake. Most visitors stay for the day, but settling in for longer gives you the chance to get into the rhythm of sunrise swims, meals in the shared dining room and stargazing under some of the clearest skies on the planet. As well as being a great stay, visits to yurt camps help preserve the demand for yurts themselves – and of the skills of the people who make them. These camps are extraordinarily low impact too; once dismantled, it’s almost like the camp was never there.
Homestays and camping aren’t just unforgettable experiences – at every step, they ensure that your money remains in the communities you visit.
Hiking is the easiest way to meet people
Hiking between the surreal Mars-red mountains of Djety-Oguz Gorge, you’ll get the chance to meet people who hunt with eagles. In Kochkor, you’ll learn how craftswomen painstakingly make felt rugs by hand, weaving in images of the steppe – shepherds, goat horns and yurts. (The challenge is deciding how to roll one into your suitcase.) And you can have a go at making the Uighur staple of hand-pulled laghman noodles with a family in Karakol.
The whole way along, you’ll be in the great company of a driver, trek leader and local guide who will tie together the storied histories of Kyrgyzstan. They’ll also show which paths to stick to, keeping both you and the fragile mountain slopes safe and sound.
The whole way along, you’ll be in the great company of a driver, trek leader and local guide who will tie together the storied histories of Kyrgyzstan. They’ll also show which paths to stick to, keeping both you and the fragile mountain slopes safe and sound.
Walking in Kyrgyzstan vaction
Hike through the gorges of the Tien Shan mountains
From
US $1590 to US $1650
9 days
ex flights
Kyrgyzstan Great Lakes nomad adventure
Tour stunning lakes and experience a Nomadic way of life
From
US $2699
9 days
ex flights
Kyrgyzstan trekking vacation
Spectacular trekking through alpine meadows and wild pastures
From
US $5100
15 days
ex flights
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Where to go walking in Kyrgyzstan
Most walking tours in Kyrgyzstan begin and end in the capital city of Bishkek – your first stop if flying into Manas International Airport. They then loop out across northern Kyrgyzstan and around the lake of Issyk-Kul, exploring the national parks. Park entry fees are included in the cost of the tour and are a brilliant way to help fund, promote and protect these landscapes. Most hikes are moderate day hikes that range from three to six hours long, plus there’s the chance for more challenging treks and wild camping.
Bishkek
Stroll leafy boulevards to Ala-Too Square, an ominously orderly Brutalist piazza that was the stage of the anti-government Tulip Revolution in 2005. Lenin’s statue once loomed in the middle, swapped for Manas – the hero of the national epic poem – after Kyrgyzstan gained independence. Osh Bazaar is another highlight, where you can pick up baked snacks, dried fruit and nuts for the walks ahead. There are also flea markets to scour and sculptures to peruse in Oak Park.
Ala-Archa National Park
Chon-Kemin National Park
Most trips to Chon-Kemin National Park stop at the Burana Tower en route. Climb this 25m-tall minaret for 360-degree views of the Ala-Too range and valley, before descending back to earth to admire the carved balbals – Turkic memorial stones from the 6th century.
Issyk-Kul Lake
Altyn Arashan Valley
The walks around Altyn Arashan Valley crescendo like a particularly dramatic opera – from riverside paths to pine forests, then higher for views up to the perpetually snowy peak of Palatka, and higher again as paths nudge up to rock-strewn Telety pass (3,800m). Here, you can picnic in meadows decked out with snowdrops, tulips, edelweiss and primroses in summer, with the bulk of Karakol Peak (5,216m) rising above for a suitably impressive finale.
It’s like the landscape knows hikers will need something to soothe the inevitable adrenaline crash after hiking such exhilarating landscapes, so on the way back there’s the chance to soak in the valley’s natural sulphur hot springs.
Djety-Oguz Gorge
There’s a more permanent yurt camp back by Issyk-Kul Lake. The best hiking trips spend the night here, so you can enjoy the area at its most peaceful. Only a few people still follow the ancient traditions of hunting with golden eagles – but this is where you can meet them and get the chance to see this ancient skill in action.
Karakol
For the adventurous: trekking in Kyrgyzstan
Trekking vacations warm up with some of the walks above, before delving further east, looping up into the higher reaches of the mountains. Highlights include Chon Kyzyl-Suu Gorge, where the bright white yurts of nomadic families dot the green, river-threaded pastures.
These are intermediate and challenging hikes that you can take on with the help of porters. Traveling with a responsible travel company will ensure that they have full workers’ rights and a fair wage that isn’t siphoned off by a company from out of town. The big climbs are always rewarded too – usually with wild camping in beautiful canyons or a stay in a Silk Road-style caravanserai inn, all wrapped up in sweeping mountain panoramas.
These are intermediate and challenging hikes that you can take on with the help of porters. Traveling with a responsible travel company will ensure that they have full workers’ rights and a fair wage that isn’t siphoned off by a company from out of town. The big climbs are always rewarded too – usually with wild camping in beautiful canyons or a stay in a Silk Road-style caravanserai inn, all wrapped up in sweeping mountain panoramas.