Marsyandi River Rafting
The marsyandi river rises on the northern slopes of the Annapurna Himal, flows east through an arid valley around manang and then swing south to joint the Trisuli river at Mugling.
Marsyandi means ‘raging river’ in local dialect, and this aptly describes it. Some of the river above Ngadi has been kayaked – the 1980 British Expedition started from Tilicho Lake at 4920m – but much of the upper river should probably be considered as unburnable.
The scenery is superb with every bend of the river opening up fresh vistas of some of the world’s highest mountains, but these are behind –as someone said “great views but you need rear view mirrors”. The Marsyandi is a photographer’s sculptured boulders, some spectacular white water, green valley sides, and a magnificent backdrop of the world’s highest mountains. It’s worth mentioning that although the valley has a rough road up it, and is quite densely populated, you don’t see this when you are padding because the river is incised about 100ft into the valley floor.
River Facts
River Name: Marshyangdi
River Days: 4
Difficulty: 4+
River Distance: 52 Km./ 33 miles (Approximately)
Rafting put in point: Nagdi
Rafting ending point: Bimalnagar
Water Volume (Cumecs): 80
Best Season: Spring & Autumn
