Valley of Flowers in September
Uttarakhand, India
Most alpine blooms have peaked; you'll see hardy late-season flowers instead of the valley's signature carpet
September is the farewell bloom. The late-flowering species — bistorta, impatiens, and autumn composites — take over as earlier species go to seed. The valley shifts from peak colour to mature beauty. The monsoon retreats, giving more clear days. The crowds thin from August levels. The valley closes officially around September 30 (date varies). Late September is the connoisseur's window — fewer people, different flowers, better weather.
The September story
September farewell bloom changes the valley's character. The earlier exuberance gives way to mature beauty — seed heads among late flowers, autumn tones entering the palette, the Pushpawati River lower and clearer. September species include late composites, autumn gentians, and the remaining Brahma Kamal. The crowds thin significantly — maybe 50-100 visitors per day versus 300+ in July-August. The weather improves: more sun, less rain, clearer mountain views. The surrounding peaks with fresh snow create a dramatic backdrop that monsoon cloud hides in July. The valley closes around September 30. The last week of September is arguably the finest — fewest people, best weather, mature bloom, and the emotional weight of saying goodbye to a place that will disappear under snow for eight months. September Valley of Flowers is for those who understand that endings can be as beautiful as beginnings.
Why September scores 6.0/10
Weather
Blooms fading by mid-Sept, 6-14°C. Late season flowers only. Trail to valley still open. Quieter than August.
Who should go
- ✓Travelers with basic fitness
- ✓Farewell-bloom seekers wanting fewest crowds and best weather
- ✓Photographers wanting clear mountain backdrop with mature flowers
- ✓Contemplative visitors wanting the valley in its quiet final days
- ✓Repeat visitors wanting the September-specific species palette
Who should think twice
- ✗Those with mobility issues
- ✗Peak-bloom seekers — the main display is winding down
- ✗Cold-intolerant visitors — mornings approaching freezing
- ✗Those visiting after September 30 — gate closes
- ✗Travellers without warm layers for Ghangaria nights
All 12 Months
| Month | Score | Note |
|---|---|---|
| January | 0.0/10 | Closed. UNESCO World Heritage valley buried under meters of snow. No access until June 1. Trail completely impassable. |
| February | 0.0/10 | Closed. UNESCO site buried under meters of snow. Trail from Govindghat impassable. No access until June 1. |
| March | 0.0/10 | Closed. Snow still deep. Trek trail buried. Hemkund Sahib route also shut. Opens June 1 at earliest. |
| April | 0.0/10 | Closed. Snow melting at lower elevations but valley floor still inaccessible. Trail preparation by forest dept. |
| May | 0.0/10 | Closed. Trail clearing in progress. Valley still has snow patches. Official opening June 1. Book Ghangria stays. |
| June | 4.0/10 | Opens June 1 but few blooms yet. Green grass, snowmelt streams. Good for avoiding Aug crowds. Leeches starting. |
| July | 8.0/10 | Blooms beginning, 8-16°C. Heavy monsoon rain daily plus leeches on trail. Worth it for early Brahmakamal and primulas. |
| August | 10.0/10 | PEAK BLOOM. Mid-Jul to mid-Aug is the iconic carpet. |
| Septemberviewing | 6.0/10 | Blooms fading by mid-Sept, 6-14°C. Late season flowers only. Trail to valley still open. Quieter than August. |
| October | 2.0/10 | Closes early October. Valley brown and dormant. Only stubborn hikers remain. Trail closing for 8-month winter. |
| November | 0.0/10 | Closed. First snow. Valley going dormant. Trail shut. Govindghat base quieting down. 8-month closure begins. |
| December | 0.0/10 | Closed. Deep snow buries the valley. UNESCO site hibernates. No access until June next year. |
Nearby in Uttarakhand scoring high in September
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