
Tajikistan is part of the Northern Himalayas spanning 7 longitudes (68-75 East) and 2 latitudes (37-39 North). It’s tucked between Kyrgyzstan (North), Tibet (East), Afghanistan (South) and Uzbekistan (West). In this post we present the overall geography of Tajikistan including major ranges and valleys and how to use Soviet topo sheets to plan a Himalayan traverse across a vast trail network spanning 350 mountain passes inter-connecting hundreds of valleys.
- Geography
- The Pamir Trail
- Mapping Tajikistan
- Planning a Traverse
- Offline Navigation
Geography

Tajikistan spans a vast Himalayan region of 7 longitudes (770km) and 2 latitudes (220km) most of it high altitude with significant glacial cover drained Southwest by major river valleys of Surkhob, Muksu, Panj, Bartang, Ghund, Murghob and Pamir. Below elevation map clearly show the high ranges (ridgelines) in yellow/orange/red and the valleys in blue/green. We overlay 400 mountain passes identified using Soviet topo sheets (blue dots) which allow you to hop across the high ranges connecting neighboring valleys.

The Pamir Trail
I recently mapped the 1500km long Pamir trail in OSM. More details on individual sections can be found on pamirtrail.org

Mapping Tajikistan
To map 400 mountain passes inter-connecting many valleys in Tajikistan we used 1:100K and 1:200K Soviet topo sheets. You can add below custom layers to nakarte.me to view the same:
- Soviet 1:200K: https://indianopenmaps.fly.dev/world/topo/russian/200k/gs/{z}/{x}/{y}.webp
- Soviet 1:100K: https://indianopenmaps.fly.dev/world/topo/russian/100k/gs/{z}/{x}/{y}.webp
- Mountain passes


Trails are shown as black dashed lines on these Soviet maps. Mountain passes are marked as black crosses labeled as “nep.”

By mapping all mountain passes you create a blueprint for Himalayan traverse planning identifying which points you can hop across mountain ranges to interconnect neighboring valleys.
Planning a Traverse
Planning a Himalayan traverse across Tajikistan is now a matter of “connecting the dots”. Mark a sequence of mountain passes that allow you to hop across mountain ranges and valleys in a continuous route. Open nakarte.me, select the “mapy.cx tourist” layer, load the Tajikistan mountain passes and Create a New Track “My Traverse”. The yellow line shows the general direction of our planned route.

Zoom into 2-5km scale (better overview) Soviet 1:200K map layer or 1-2km scale (more accurate) Soviet 1:100K layer to mark the trails (black dashed lines) connecting the subsequent mountain passes. You can download the sample traverse over here to overlay on nakarte.me.


Once complete you can view the entire traverse on the “mapy.cz tourist” layer to get an overall idea of your route. View the Elevation Profile to get an idea of the vertical profile of your traverse including total distance (150km) and elevation gain.

Limited routes across 400 mountain passes (15%) are mapped in Open Street Maps providing more accurate (GPS recorded) routes than the less precise Soviet 1:100K trails. Still the Soviet maps should provide you with sufficient reference to explore any given route.


Offline Navigation
Once complete you can download the same traverse (GPX) on your phone and download the base map, hill shades and contours for Tajikistan to start navigating the same offline. The Soviet 1:100K, 1:200K map layers above can be added to OSMAnd as online overlay map layer.

To create offline versions of the Soviet maps follow below steps in QGIS:
- Add XYZ layer with Soviet 1:100K webp URL
- In the QGIS Processing Toolbox use “Generate XYZ Tiles (MBTiles)” function to create offline map tiles in MBTiles format (Zoom levels 12-14, JPG 95%)
- Follow chapter 6.6 of my online alpine bootcamp to convert the MBTiles to SQLiteDb format which is supported by OSMAnd
- Download the SQLiteDb file on your phone and set as overlay map in OSMAnd
