Ecology, Spirit, & Textiles
of Ladakh
Trip Information
20-28 September, 2025
Do you have a passion for textiles, Himalayan culture, and sustainability?
Do vast open mountain spaces and traditional cultures speak to you?
With our hosts, Catherine Alle and Tsering Angtak of WeareKal, join National Geographic Explorer Carroll Dunham on this immersive and profound journey into the spirit of Ladakh through shepherds, sheep, their wool, water, soil, food, artisans, fashion designers, and environmentalists, Buddhist nuns and traditional healers. We will explore art, architecture, weaving culture, people, and fibers together in our search for fossil-fuel fabric alternatives. If you like to go deep when you travel to learn and meet inspiring people, this is the trip for you.
Trip Duration: 9 days
Group Size: 8-16 paxs
Trip Cost: $5500 /person. Single Supplement: $830.
A special journey benefitting the non-profit ATW80Fabrics Foundation. Includes a $500 ATW80F tax deductible donation.
Trip Highlights:
Extraordinary flight over a sea of snowcapped Indian Himalayas
Dramatic high desert landscapes with rich Buddhist culture
Talks by local environmental activists on Ladakhi ecological efforts to combat plastic and consumerism
Meetings with local Ladakhi artisans and experts on history and culture
Visit elaborate paintings and architecture of important Buddhist monasteries
Visit the oldest, most important wall paintings in Ladakh at Alchi monastery, a UNESCO World Heritage Site
Short hike to rural village of Tar, with a local lunch with farming family
Deep dive into Ladakh ecology, meeting with inspiring cutting-edge environmentalists
Visit traditional healing herb nursery to learn herbs of Ladakh
Meet with famous Buddhist Nun Activist Reformer Healer
Meet with respected traditional doctor to learn about traditional medicine
Meet a Lhamo, charismatic healer who channels protector deity Palden Lhamo
Visit textile museum and meet innovative fashion designers revitalizing and contemporizing traditional textiles
Workshop with WeAreKal creating hands-on, handwoven fabrics
Overnight on Tibetan plateau in a Changtang sheepherding community learning from shepherds about sheep care and ecology
Explore Thiksey Monastery, renowned Maitreya, Buddha of the Future
Itinerary
September 20, Day 1: ARRIVE IN DELHI
You are welcomed with a sign and escorted to our hotel for well needed rest after flight. Stay at Haveli Hauz Khas, The Manor, Haveli Dharampura, Imperial, The Claridges.
September 21, Day 2: FLY TO LEH SETTLE INTO INDUS CAMP
We will get up early for our transfer to the airport to catch an unforgettable flight taking us over incredible geography: the immense snow covered Himalayan Range to reach Leh, capital of the ancient Kingdom of Ladakh, once a critical crossroads of important trade routes. Bordered by the Tibet Autonomous Region to the east, the Indian state of Himachal Pradesh to the south, Jammu and Kashmir and the Pakistan administered Gilgit-Baltistan to the west, and the southwest corner of Xinjiang across the Karakoram Pass in the far north, it is a region rich in history from caravan times to today. We will be welcomed and taken to our home at the Indus River Camp where we will settle in, acclimatize. Optional Bird watching before Orientation distribution of welcome packs. 11,562 ft INDUS RIVER CAMP
September 22, Day 3: PILGRIMAGE TO THE ART OF ALCHI MONASTERY, TREK TO TAR VILLAGE
After optional yoga, meditation and breakfast, our adventure begins as we depart for Alchi Monastery (10,200 feet) , perched on the south bank of the Indus 40 miles outside of Leh. According to local tradition, the monastery was built by the great translator Guru Rinchen Zangpo between 958 and 1055 in the Kashmiri style blending Hindu and Buddhist artistic and spiritual details in the wall paintings—some of the oldest surviving paintings in Ladakh. Rinchen Zangpo, known as the ”Great Translator” is credited with building 108 monasteries in the trans-Himalayan region in his quest to disseminate Buddhism and Alchi is considered the finest remaining. To stretch our legs, we will have a short (1.5 hour) trek to the tiny village of Tar, where we will have lunch with a family and learn about village life and harvesting of barley, peas, apricots and apples. We walk back to our vehicles and make it back to Indus River Camp for dinner. INDUS RIVER CAMP
September 23, Day 4: FINDING BALANCE: WATER, ClIMATE CHANGE ADAPTION, HEALING HERBS & NUNS, TRADITIONAL MEDICINE, HERITAGE MUSIC
Optional Morning meditation and yoga. Breakfast talk on Ladakh Ecology with local environmentalists. We will go and visit a nursery growing traditional healing herbs and we will learn their usage. At lunch, we will meet Venerable Dr. Tsering Palmo, nun and traditional medical practitioner, who has worked tirelessly innovating Buddhist monasticism, training Buddhist nuns as medicinal practitioners to help with the health of their rural communities. We will visit with Amchi Smanla, founder of the Yuthog Foundation, who taking our pulses, will share Ladakhi perspectives on our health and harmony. Amchi Smanla will share the relationship between land, the elements and our bodies for maintaining health as we learn Ladakhi cosmologies of healing and maps of the body as well as medicinal plants traditionally used as natural dyes with their healing properties. We return to Indus Camp for live folk music concert with storytelling. INDUS RIVER CAMP
September 24, Day 5: SPIRIT EMBODIED, TEXTILE MUSEUM, LADAKHI COUTURE, WEAREKAL-TEXTILE INNOVATORS, SUSTAINERS OF HERITAGE
For those inclined, we will start our day with optional yoga and meditation before breakfast. We will meet with a Lhamo, a traditional Ladakhi female charismatic healer who channels Palden Lhamo, an important wrathful protector spirit, embodiment ancient divine feminine. We will then head to Leh for a leisurely heritage walk ending at the Textile Museum, meeting with Norbu and Jigmat Wangmo of Jigmet Couture, small ethical fashion house, reviving, preserving and promoting textile arts, ensuring traditional Ladakhi dress is contemporarized, fashionable and relevant. We return to WeAreKal, started by our hosts Catherine Alle and her husband Tsering Angtak. “We are farmers, spinners, weavers, nomads, designers, knitters and culture lovers. Our goal is to create meaningful products in harmony with nature and humanity, “says Catherine. “The evolution of raw materials into a final product is what we are excited about. We love the hand-making, therefore all of our fabric is hand-spun and hand-woven.” We will begin our workshop with local Ladakhi women weavers, followed by a snack of homemade sourdough and jam. INDUS RIVER CAM
September 25, Day 6: PILGRIMAGE TO SHEEP HERDING VILLAGE OF KHARNAK WITH TSERING ANGTAK
The time has come to meet shepherding families whose home is the Changtang, a sweeping high desert on the Tibetan plateau. We are lucky enough to have Tsering Angtak share with us his home village. After an early breakfast, we will depart for Angtak’s family’s village, stopping along the way at monasteries and for lunch. We arrive in Kharnak and are feasted with local produce: tea, bread, yoghurt before exploring Yakhang village, an old nunnery and settling in for some optional spinning and carding. In the early evening the animals are brought in for the night and once dark, the community gather in the community hall for worship and we are welcome to join them. CAMPING (all bedding supplied)
September 26, Day 7: SHEEP HERDING, THIKSEY MONASTERY & THE BUDDHA OF THE FUTURE
Everyone is invited to wake up at your own pace. Animals will leave for the pastures at 8 pm. After a breakfast of veggies and bread with Angtak’s family, we depart mid morning, returning to the capital of Leh. We will break for lunch at World Heritage site Thiksey Monastery, an impressive structure closely resembling the Potala Palace in Lhasa, it is famed for its extraordinary massive statue of Maitreya, the buddha of the future, as we reflect on the future of shepherds, farming, the preciousness of water, Ladakh’s people and its textiles and traditions, the planet, and our way of life. We return to Indus Camp by 4 pm, freshen up and relax, with an early dinner and wrap up with reflection on our pilgrimage, and the interwoven relationships made between people, fibers, and place. INDUS RIVER CAMP
September 27, Day 8: DEPART LADAKH FOR DELHI
After breakfast, we are dropped at the airport as we retrace our way back over the immense massifs of Himalayas, source of all water for the tiny communities below as we make our way to the bustling capitol of Delhi. Some may transfer to the international airport for evening flights home early on the 28th. Others will be taken to hotel. An optional excursion to explore the Red Fort an impressive Mughal era building made entirely of red stone to learn Mughal history, or explore Hauz Kaus or the fabrics of Chandni Chowk, or find innovative upscaling recycling treasures or other recommended places for Indian silk and cotton treasures.
Let us know if you’d like to extend your journey into Rajasthan to further explore India’s rich textile heritage!
Secure your place on our limited journeys with $500 tax deductible donation supporting the mission of ATW80Fabrics.
You can can also pay by check or money wire. Email us at atw80fjourneys@gmail.com for details.
Trip Leader, Carroll Dunham
Offering over 30 years of experience guiding journeys, medical anthropologist Carroll Dunham brims with an insatiable curiosity for exploring different ways of living, cultural traditions, rich geographies, and the natural history and biodiversity of this planet we call home. With a rich background in Buddhism, medicinal plants, and traditional healing systems, Carroll reveals remarkable makers, farmers, herders, designers, ecologists, and spiritual leaders who lend insight into the human ingenuity of plastic-free fabrics.
With boundless enthusiasm, Carroll Dunham has been leading journeys and pilgrimages for over 30 years with National Geographic, Wilderness Travel, and Wild Earth Journeys.
What’s Included
English-speaking local guides
Transfers upon arrival and departure (if applicable)
Transportation provided on-trip
Accommodation as indicated in the itinerary
Meals as indicated in the itinerary
Non-alcoholic beverages at included meals
Bottled or filtered water at included meals, private transfers, and activities
Daily activities and excursions as indicated in the itinerary
All gratuities except the Expedition Leader
What’s Not Included
Internal flights are an additional cost
Airfare to and from destination, as well as internal airfare where applicable
Trip cancellation insurance or any other travel insurance
Visas when applicable
Alcoholic beverages
Expedition Leader gratuities
Meals not noted as included (discretionary)
Additional beverages (discretionary)
Passport fees, visas, and visa photos as required
Phone calls, laundry, and other items of a personal nature (discretionary)