THE OUTRIDERS SIGNATURE EXPEDITION

MISSION HIGH-LA: LAND OF HIGH PASSES

The Third Pole Expedition: Stratospheric Contemplation on Two Wheels
The Outriders Signature Expedition
Mission High-La: Land of High Passes
The Third Pole Expedition: Stratospheric Contemplation on Two Wheels

WHY RIDE LADAKH?

THE LAND OF HIGH PASSES

Ladakh isn’t a sightseeing tour; it’s a physiological negotiation with the Himalayas. You are riding at 18,000 feet on a combustion engine that is gasping for air as hard as you are. The views are biblical. The comfort is minimal. The memories are permanent.

The literal meaning of Ladakh is “Land of High Passes” derived from the Tibetan words “La” (meaning “pass”) and “Dakh” (meaning “land”).  The region is also known by other names, including “Khapa-Chan” (Land of Snow) and “Little Tibet” due to its cultural similarities with Tibet. High-altitude deserts, glacial rivers, moonscape valleys and passes stacked one above another — each one testing your lungs, legs and sense of humor. This is the high-altitude kingdom where prayer flags flutter, yaks judge you silently, rivers carve impossible valleys, and passes with names ending in La stare down your ego. The air is thin, the landscape is biblical, and the adventure is pure.

We ride on the Roof of India on Royal Enfield motorcycles across the fabled high passes, from the Indus valley to Nubra dunes, turquoise lakes like Pangong Tso, remote villages and army outposts that feel like the edge of the map. It’s not a sightseeing tour. It’s a proper motorcycle expedition with support crew, backup vehicle, oxygen if you need it, and stories you’ll be telling until someone begs you to stop. Welcome to riding at its most ridiculous and most rewarding.

Motorcycle riding on rugged mountain terrain in Ladakh, with snow-capped peaks in the background.

TOUR SNAPSHOT

Why Ride Ladakh?
The Land of High Passes
Ladakh
Ladakh isn't a sightseeing tour; it's a physiological negotiation with the Himalayas. You are riding at 18,000 feet on a combustion engine that is gasping for air as hard as you are. The views are biblical. The comfort is minimal. The memories are permanent.
The literal meaning of Ladakh is "Land of High Passes" derived from the Tibetan words "La" (meaning "pass") and "Dakh" (meaning "land"). High-altitude deserts, glacial rivers, moonscape valleys and passes stacked one above another — each one testing your lungs, legs and sense of humor.
We ride on the Roof of India on Royal Enfield motorcycles across the fabled high passes. It's not a sightseeing tour. It's a proper motorcycle expedition with support crew, backup vehicle, oxygen if you need it, and stories you'll be telling until someone begs you to stop.
Tour Snapshot
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Season: June - September
Duration: 11 Days / 10 Nights
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Distance: ~800 Miles
Difficulty: Intermediate to Tough
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Machine: RE Himalayan/Classic

UPCOMING ADVENTURES

Upcoming Adventures
Aug 09 — Aug 19, 2026
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Sep 17 — Sep 27, 2026
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HISTORY & HERITAGE

Ladakh’s history is a tug-of-war between kingdoms, monasteries, invasions, trade routes, and the relentless geology of the Himalayas. Every village has stories older than most countries. Every monastery has monks more flexible than your hamstrings.  

Expect chanting, butter lamps, stories of ancient kings, prayer wheels, chai stalls, and wisdom delivered by people who’ve lived at altitudes your lungs consider impolite.

TERRAIN & CLIMATE

Ladakh sits between 3,300–5,500 metres (10,800–18,000 ft), which is high enough to make your fitness app cry. Days can be warm, nights can be arctic, and weather can switch moods faster than riders waiting for chai.

You’ll see deserts that look like Mars, lakes that look photoshopped, and skies so big you’ll start questioning your place in the universe. Bring layers. Bring humility. Bring lip balm.

ROADS & LIFE

Ladakh’s roads range from silky tarmac to “creative interpretations of what a road might be.” You’ll tackle gravel, water crossings, broken edges, construction zones, the occasional herd of goats, and the classic “is this really the way?” moment.

Modern Ladakh is a blend of monks, young adventure-seekers, and locals who’ve mastered the art of being unfazed by chaos. You’ll learn quickly: the mountains don’t care… but the people will take care of you anyway.

Know Your Terrain
Before You Deploy
🏛
History & Heritage
Ladakh's history is a tug-of-war between kingdoms, monasteries, invasions, trade routes, and the relentless geology of the Himalayas. Every village has stories older than most countries. Every monastery has monks more flexible than your hamstrings.
Expect chanting, butter lamps, stories of ancient kings, prayer wheels, chai stalls, and wisdom delivered by people who've lived at altitudes your lungs consider impolite.
Terrain & Climate
Ladakh sits between 3,300–5,500 metres (10,800–18,000 ft), which is high enough to make your fitness app cry. Days can be warm, nights can be arctic, and weather can switch moods faster than riders waiting for chai.
You'll see deserts that look like Mars, lakes that look photoshopped, and skies so big you'll start questioning your place in the universe. Bring layers. Bring humility. Bring lip balm.
🛣
Roads & Life
Ladakh's roads range from silky tarmac to "creative interpretations of what a road might be." You'll tackle gravel, water crossings, broken edges, construction zones, the occasional herd of goats, and the classic "is this really the way?" moment.
Modern Ladakh is a blend of monks, young adventure-seekers, and locals who've mastered the art of being unfazed by chaos. You'll learn quickly: the mountains don't care… but the people will take care of you anyway.

ROUTE OVERVIEW: THE HIGH-LA LOOP

This is not a loop you casually knock off over a long weekend. This is a carefully designed high-altitude motorcycle expedition that strings together Ladakh’s most legendary valleys, lakes, monasteries and mountain passes — while respecting altitude, weather, and human limits.

Zoom in. Tilt the terrain. Follow the climbs and descents. This interactive route shows you exactly where we ride, rest, gasp for air, and occasionally wonder who convinced us this was a good idea.

Route Overview: The High-La Loop
Where We Ride, Rest, And Gasp For Air
High-La Route Map
👆 Tap For Live Satellite View
This is not a loop you casually knock off over a long weekend. A carefully designed high-altitude expedition stringing together Ladakh's most legendary valleys, lakes, monasteries and mountain passes — while respecting altitude, weather, and human limits.
Launch 3D Satellite View

THE FULL ITINERARY

HOW THE DAYS UNFOLD, SUBJECT TO WEATHER, PHYSICS, AND COSMIC IRONY
The Full Itinerary
How The Days Unfold, Subject To Weather, Physics, And Cosmic Irony
Day 01 Map
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Day 01
Arrival In Delhi (Chaos Warm-Up)
↑ 700–1000 Feet
Welcome to Delhi — vibrant, loud, and delicious; where aromas, colours, and crowds form the world's most efficient assault on your senses. Exactly the warm-up your senses need before Ladakh. Airport pickup, hotel check-in. Evening: Gala Welcome Dinner. You meet the crew, other riders, and your future adventure family. The jokes start early; the bragging rights start later.
Day 02 Map
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Day 02
Delhi → Leh (Flight Into The Sky)
↑ 216m–3500m
A spectacular flight over the Himalayas drops you into Leh at 3,500 m. Hotel check-in, gear check, and altitude acclimatization. Evening briefing, bike allocation, and a short walk to the market for momos and chai. Early night recommended.
Day 03 Map
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Day 03
Leh Acclimatization & Local Ride
↑ 3500m–3200m–3500m  🏍 50 Miles
Gentle ride around Leh — Shanti Stupa, Leh Palace, Indus–Zanskar Confluence — just enough to wake up the bikes and the riders. Final gear check, final instructions, no heroics.
Day 04 Map
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Day 04
Leh → Nubra Valley Via Khardung La
↑ 3500m–5359m–3100m  🏍 75 Miles
The legendary climb to Khardung La, one of the world's highest motorable passes. Views big enough to make your problems feel small. Photo stop, then descend into Nubra's wide valley, monasteries and dunes. Desert, mountains and double-humped camels in one frame.
Day 05 Map
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Day 05
Nubra → Turtuk → Nubra
↑ 3100m–2950m–3100m  🏍 150 Miles
Ride to Turtuk, a village with Balti culture and a unique history. Narrow valleys, apricot orchards and stories of a frontier most people never see. Explore Diskit monastery and Hunder dunes, with its double-humped camels, en route.
Day 06 Map
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Day 06
Nubra → Pangong Lake (Via Shyok)
↑ 3100m–4350m  🏍 100 Miles
Remote, dramatic route following the Shyok river. Gravel, water crossings and scenery that looks fake. End the day at the legendary Pangong Tso, shining shades of blue during the day, like someone turned up the saturation slider to illegal levels, and freezing by night.
Day 07 Map
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Day 07
Pangong Tso → Leh Via Chang La
↑ 4350m–5391m–3500m  🏍 100 Miles
The mountains stop being polite. You leave Pangong's postcard blues behind and climb straight into thin air and bad decisions — Chang La, one of the highest motorable passes on the planet. You roll back into Leh dusty, grinning, slightly hypoxic, and absolutely convinced you've earned your dinner.
Day 08 Map
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Day 08
Leh → Kargil (Lamayuru – Fotu La – Namika La)
↑ 3500m–4108m–2700m  🏍 135 Miles
This ride throws history, geology, and altitude at you in one long, glorious punch. You carve past the moon-scapes of Lamayuru, cross Fotu La and Namika La, and drop into Drass. The Kargil War Memorial stops the jokes cold for a moment, grounding the ride in sacrifice and silence.
Day 09 Map
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Day 09
Kargil → Batalik → Leh Via Hamboting La
↑ 2700m–4100m–3500m  🏍 190 Miles
This is the long way home — and the better one. You peel off toward Batalik, ride tight valleys, punch over Hamboting La high pass, then cruise back via Magnetic Hill where physics messes with your head. By the time Leh shows up, you've earned it.
Day 10 Map
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Day 10
Leh → Delhi (From The Third Pole To City Lights)
↑ 3500m–216m
You say goodbye to the Roof of the World, trading prayer flags and thin air for a spectacular flight back to Delhi. By nightfall, the mountains are behind you and the music is loud — time for a no-holds-barred farewell party. Boots off, stories on repeat.
Day 11 Map
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Day 11
Departure From Delhi
↑ 216m
Breakfast, airport drop, emotional goodbyes, heartfelt promises to ride again... and a strong chance you'll book the next expedition within a week.

Inclusions & Exclusions

MISSION PAYLOAD

OPERATOR EXCLUSIONS

Inclusions & Exclusions
Mission Payload
Royal Enfield Himalayan or Similar Motorcycle
Fuel and Oil for The Entire Route
All Accommodation (Double Occupancy) & All Meals
Support Vehicle (Luggage & Spares)
Mechanic & Ride Leaders
Oxygen Cylinder
Personalized T-shirt/Hoodie
Gala Welcome Dinner & Farewell Party
Operator Exclusions
International/Domestic Flights
Travel Visa
Personal Travel Insurance
Alcohol & Beverages
Personal Riding Gear
Damages to Motorcycle
Room Service, Laundry, Tips
Anything Not Specifically Mentioned Under 'Inclusions'

ARE YOU A GOOD FIT?

YOU'RE AN OUTRIDER IF

SAVE YOUR MONEY IF

Are You A Good Fit?
You're An Outrider If
You want big-altitude riding
You can respect acclimatization
You're comfortable with riding on mixed surfaces
You like remote landscapes where silence is the reward
You can stay calm when plans flex
You prefer calm competence over loud bravado
Save Your Money If
Cold nights and dust do not sound like adventures
The phrase "limited services" triggers existential dread
You treat group rides like solo missions with witnesses
You confuse bravery with stupidity and ride accordingly
You need Wi-Fi like normal people need air
The word "remote" makes you anxious instead of excited
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