Nanga Parbat above you. Zero light pollution. The Milky Way so bright it casts a shadow. This is the campsite.
I've stayed in the guesthouses and I've camped at Fairy Meadows, and if you have the equipment, camp. The guesthouses are warm and the food is good, but waking up at 3am in a tent to check the sky — that's something else entirely. At 3,300m with no cities within 150km, the darkness is absolute and the stars are architectural. The Milky Way isn't a smear, it's a structure.
The camping area is adjacent to the main guesthouses — a flat section of meadow with clear views of Nanga Parbat's Raikot Face. In peak season (July–August) it can have 20–30 tents. In May or September you might be the only one.
| Campsite fee | Rs.400–600/night per tent. Pay at guesthouse reception. |
| Tent hire | Available from guesthouses on site: Rs.800–1,500/night. Two-person dome tents, reasonable condition. |
| Sleeping bag hire | Available but unreliable quality. Bring your own rated to -5°C. |
| Meals | Eat at guesthouse restaurant: breakfast Rs.400–600, dinner Rs.600–900. Or bring your own food and use a camp stove. |
| Water | Spring water available near guesthouses. Usually clean — boil or purify for certainty. |
| Toilets | Guesthouse facilities available to campers. |
| Cooking | Camp stoves permitted. Bring fuel (no LPG available locally). |
The campsite at Fairy Meadows rates Bortle Class 2 on the dark sky scale — one level above the theoretical darkest possible. In practical terms, this means you can see the Milky Way so clearly that it creates visible shadows on the ground on moonless nights. You can pick out the Andromeda Galaxy with naked eye. Shooting stars are a regular occurrence, not an event.
For photography: any camera with manual mode and a wide-angle lens works. Set ISO 1600–3200, aperture f/2.8 or wider, shutter 20–25 seconds. The horizon includes Nanga Parbat's silhouette on clear nights.
For watching: bring a red-light head torch (white light destroys night vision immediately), a warm hat and gloves, something waterproof to lie on. Give your eyes 20 minutes to fully adjust — the sky keeps getting better as adaptation deepens.