| Lonely Planet™ · Thorn Tree Forum · 2020 | ![]() |
SrinagarCountry forums / Indian Subcontinent / India | ||
Hi there, Does anyone knows how safe is to travel to Srinagar? I plan to go in september. Are there any tourists these days? Also, how to reach Kargil (and further to Padum) from Srinagar by public transportation? Thank you, Shone | ||
I haven't been in more than six months. Generally the area on the lake is pretty calm. In the city there can be escalations of conflict. The risk increases if you leave Srinagar for smaller villages to the west. | 1 | |
Shared jeeps/4WDs and buses for Kargil from the Tourist Reception Center . This year has started worse than last year. Two grenade attacks at Lal Chowk in January. Updates on my blog . | 2 | |
A lot can happen between now and September, check the media before going... | 3 | |
Mixed bag of predictable and random trigger events. January coincided with Republic Day , next upcoming events the year day of Afzal Gurus execution in early February , and Burhan Wanis death in July. Srinagar is always in lock down mode on August 15th. The other general factor is weekends , since the Friday prayers work as a rallying point. | 4 | |
Unannounced road closures can be a hassle and you don't want to be "rocked". One tourist did from such not too long ago. So ask before you go.. | 5 | |
Bad start of the tourist season , May 7th : | 6 | |
Thank you all... My plan is to travel across Ladakh, but had an idea to fly to Srinagar, and after to go to Padum, and Leh area in the end. Is Kargil safe place? | 7 | |
Anytime it’s really bad ( like in July 2016 ) the standard thing is running convoys up to Sonmarg , and let them proceed on their own from there. Works. | 8 | |
you can easily find many travel agencies which you can hire a car from them to to drop you off to Ladakh.I would not suggest public transportations. Srinagar to Kargil is approx 200km takes 8 to 9 hours but check it before going there, road between Srinagar and Kargil remanis blocked by snow from November to May. | 9 | |
Kargil is different. It has a large Shiite population. It is not unusual to see billboards with the face of Iran's Khomeini. The people are friendly, but less interested in tourism. There are the best naan breads being baked fresh all day in the market. | 10 | |
Here are some pics from a early December Srinagar-Kargil-Leh run - road closed three weeks later. Which is fairly typical, two closures in early January over the last six years. Just closed when I flew in last time early January, bought fresh ( well, frozen .. ) grapes in the market. Last year , after driest winter in decades , open road to Leh end-March. This winter has started the opposite way , probably not opening in April. Updates on my blog. | 11 | |
Buses & cars : great company on the buses. They are dirt cheap, so jumping off on a whim and continuing later is painless. Coming from Kargil I’ve jumped off just before Saspol , crossed the river and walked a few klicks to Alchi. Which is lovely. I often take a morning bus out from Leh , and for the return leg walk down to the main road and see who picks me up first. You can as suggested negotiate for a single front seat on a shared car , and you’ll pay for two seats. If you hire your own car & driver , make yourself useful and pick up people on the way. | 12 | |
Hi we were in Kashmir mid december last year. We only stuck to the tourist areas of Srinagar, Gulmarg and Pahalgam. Most if the places had recieved early snowful and our favourite was going through the luttle villages around Pahalgam, having snow fights with the local kids. There was a shutdown in Srinagar when we were there but managed to still get around and avoid the areas that were having problems.But yes things can happen at any time in Kashmir. But it was my favourite part of our trip in India this time and found the locals great and kept us up to date with the situation. Would love to go back in a other season. | 13 | |
This post has been removed by its author. | 14 | |
Four civilian , seven CRPF wounded in attack at Lal Chowk four days ago . | 15 | |
Thank you for sharing. Hopefully any would-be travellers stay apprised of the situation. | 16 | |
It looks like you intend only to travel by road. The area is popular for trekking, in case you'd consider it. As for the safety, the situation hasn't changed for several decades. It's been a conflict area since India and Pakistan independence in 1947. There are random clashes and bomb explosions, and the most recent one was today (post #15). However, as a visitor you shouldn't worry too much. Tourists are not a target. During my stay in Srinigar there was a bomb explosion outside the police station, however, that was far from where I stayed, at lake Dal. | 17 | |
A few were hurt last year , and one was killed by stone throwers in May. Eight pilgrims killed in a attack on a bus the year before.
Domestic and international tourism imploded for obvious reasons last time in 2016 : two months of curfews after the killing of Burhan Wani , more than hundred dead , and the frustrated docs in Srinagar going over a new threshold when they started to leak X-ray images . This was was the first time ever all airlines gave free full refunds on tickets to Srinagar. For the long term/intermediate perspective look up the history of the Tourist Reception Centre , that had been almost rebuilt on my visit in 2014 , the Hotel Punjab that went up in flames in a day long gunfight in January 2010 , the Silver Star Hotel being shot up in 2012 with two staff killed etc. Updates on my blog. | 18 | |
This topic has been automatically locked due to inactivity. Email community@lonelyplanet.com if you would like to add to this topic and we'll unlock it for you. | 19 | |