Fairy Meadows: Nanga Parbat’s Throne Room

History

The Killer Mountain’s Sanctuary

Discovered by German climbers in 1932 (35°25′N 74°36′E), this alpine meadow earned its name when they exclaimed: “This is a fairy’s meadow!” The area served as base camp for:

  • First Nanga Parbat summit attempt (1934)
  • Hermann Buhl’s historic 1953 solo ascent
  • UNESCO World Heritage tentative list (2016)
Fairy Meadows view of Nanga Parbat

Nanga Parbat (8,126m) at dawn from Fairy Meadows

Beyal Camp and pine forest

Beyal Camp’s ancient pine forest (3,300m elevation)

Geography

Gateway to the Western Himalayas

At 3,300m (10,827ft), this glacial plateau features:

  • Raikot Glacier – 14km ice river flowing from Nanga Parbat
  • Beyal Camp – Last treeline before basecamp
  • Junction Point – Where 3 valleys converge
  • 4-hour jeep trek from Tato village (dangerous cliffside route)

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