I was fortunate to have a trip with Aaj take team, a very dear friend of mine Siddharth Tiwari.
 Carrying my Canon 400 D with my entire kit and sid was carrying his video cam and entire crew.
Let me just fill you with a little bit of wiki-knowledge here, for those who have basic  doubts...OMGWTF Leh and Ladakh? Ladakh is a region situated in the  Indian state of Jammu & Kashmir, it consists two districts Kargil  and Leh, the latter being bigger and touristy than the former.  Ladakh  region, known as Little Tibet, borders with both Pakistan and China.   It's known for it's mountainous landscape and it's unique culture not to  be found anywhere else in India.  This discourse is a general write up  about Leh city, not too much of travelogue kinds.
If I had to describe Leh in keywords, those would be - Mountains, Blue  skies, Army, Stupas, Buddhism, Monasteries, Tibet, Art markets, Gompas,  Indus and Capricious climate.  The city of Leh has only two terrestrial  approaches: Manli-Leh highway and Leh-Srinagar highway, both of which  are seasonal, they're closed during winter.  Leh is served by Kushok  Bakula Rimpochee airport (code: IXL), located in the Spituk village on  the outskirts.  It's both a military as well as a commercial airport.   Jet airways, Kingfisher and Indian Airlines have flights from New Delhi.   Leh is literally cut off from the rest of the world, if the weather  Gods decide to be violent.
The life in Leh is extremely tough, especially in winters.  Water could  not be supplied in pipes  due to ruthless sub-zero temperatures during  winter, so you happen to see people with a queue of metal cans anxiously  waiting for the water supply tankers which suck up water from Indus and  supply to homes.  I still remember a bent and broken Buddhist lady with  her cans, asking me when we stopped for photographing Thiksey Gompa, if  we saw the water tanker coming.  And in winter I was told that, people  have to hammer-and-chisel out chunks of ice and heat it to get water.   Hibernation is the only occupation of the locals during winter.
Overlooking proudly over the downtown in the Leh palace atop a mountain,  a gigantic palace modelled on it's Lhasa counterpart.  Shanti Stupa, is  definitely the most visited landmark in Leh city.  It's a gleaming  white Stupa designed by a Japenese architect, standing atop a mountain  from which the panorama of the Leh city is breathtaking.  The ambience  around the Stupa is very tranquil and placid, which was very welcoming  for me.  The best photograph that could be composed from Shanti Stupa is  a distant monastery in the mild yellow evening light wherein the  backdrop would be auriferous mountains and blue skies.
 
 
