It
is 15:10 and I am on my way to airport. It’s a long 50 km journey
to KIAL.It has been almost 3 months since I am back from my
last Himalayan trek, which was Har Ki Dun in Uttarakhand. Since I
came back, I felt an emptiness inside me. I was not complete. It took
me a while to understand, it’s the mountains I am missing.
This is not the first time. This has happened to me every time I came back from a Himalayan trek. I try to go to Himalayas in search of my lost soul at least once every 6 months.
Now, I am off to McLeodGanj, the hippie capital, the unofficial capital city of Tibet. McLeod is situated at the foothills of Dhauladhar range of Himalayas, at a height of 7000+ ft.
I plan to roam, travel, work, trek, explore and eat for the next 10 days. That’s right! I plan to work from a remote Himalayan town. I am doing all these Solo.I will try to capture my exploration in this blog for the next 10 days.
Himalayas calling and here I’m returning to you, as promised!!
So here it Goes..
This is not the first time. This has happened to me every time I came back from a Himalayan trek. I try to go to Himalayas in search of my lost soul at least once every 6 months.
Now, I am off to McLeodGanj, the hippie capital, the unofficial capital city of Tibet. McLeod is situated at the foothills of Dhauladhar range of Himalayas, at a height of 7000+ ft.
I plan to roam, travel, work, trek, explore and eat for the next 10 days. That’s right! I plan to work from a remote Himalayan town. I am doing all these Solo.I will try to capture my exploration in this blog for the next 10 days.
Himalayas calling and here I’m returning to you, as promised!!
So here it Goes..
Day
0:
Oh
what an evening it was!! first I was late for the flight. Then flight
got delayed by 20 min. when I landed in Delhi, it was 21:00.
Sunset seen from the flight.
I
had to catch a bus from Kashmiri Gate ISBT at 22:45. mind you, ISBT
is 22km from Delhi Airport. Friday evening traffic of Delhi, and I
was sure to miss that bus.
I
thought of catching the airport express metro till New Delhi station
and then another metro to ISBT, I thought this will take an hour and
i’ll at least have time to buy some water.
When
I collected my baggage and came out of airport, wrist watch showed
21:15. I rushed to the T1D from where there are shuttles to Metro
station. I got into a shuttle and a fight breaks down as someone has
lost his purse and suspecting other passengers. It’s 21:35 and
shuttle doesn’t seem to move an inch.
I
ran out with my heavy bags and run to catch a taxi. I move towards
prepaid taxi and there is a huge queue for meru taxis. I desperately
look for options and notice another taxi operator with no passengers
or queue. I rush to him and tell him I have a bus to catch from
Kashmiri gate ISBT at 22:45, can you take me there in an hour? He
replies with an ‘Yes’. I wouldn’t have been this happier even
if the girl I proposed would have said ‘Yes’.
I
pay the money, run to taxi, throw my bags in the boot, and tell him
“Chalo Bhaiyya!!!”. And there is a traffic jam right outside thr
airpot. Clocks shows 21:50. Jam clears and driver zooms past the
traffic of New Delhi. In the mean time I try to call redbus to get
hold of the bus number and driver details, but no luck. Is my much
waited backpacking trip coming to a halt in delhi itself? I am
stressed, worried, panicked and sweating. Heat of Delhi is adding to
it.
Cab
clocks 80 kmph on open roads of Delhi. Driver takes Akbar Road, India
Gate, Pragathi Maidan route and I reach ISBT gate at 22:35.
I
run in with the search of my bus to Kangra. To my shock there are no
HRTC busses with Destination board as “Kangra”. I run to
different busses and finally find my bus at 22:40. to my shock my
seat is the last one! When I had booked seat number 34 was 2 rows
before last row but to my surprise, it is the last seat in the bus. I
keep my luggage and run to buy a bottle of water.
Bus
leaves at 23:00 and I settle down for a long 11 hour journey to
Kangra.
Day
1:
I
reach Kangra at 9:30 on Saturday, I am tired, I am hungry and its
hot and humid outside. I run to a nearby ATM and withdraw some cash,
run inside the bus stand looking for a bus directly to McLeodGanj. To
my surprise, there are no direct buses.
I
catch a bus to Dharmashala and hope to find a bus soon to McLeod. I
am starving. My stay at the Himalayan Spirit, a yoga centre is at
Dharamkot, 2km uphill from McLeod.
I
get a bus soon to McLeod, its overcrowded and no place to keep my
bag. I hold my bag and stand throughout the journey of 10km, my bad
luck, there is a huge traffic jam just before McLeod and nobody moves
an inch. 10Km journey takes 1 and half hour and I finally reach
McLeod bus stand. I come out, try to negotiate autoes and nobody
seems interested because of the traffic jam. Finally one guy shows
interest and I hop in. pay 70rs to reach Dharamkot square.
Dharamkot
is a small village with only cafes and yoga places. No roads but only
gullies with foreigners everywhere sitting In cafes, probably stoned
already, mostly hippies practising yoga. To be frank, Dharamkot
doesn’t interest Indians who are mostly tourists just want to take
selfies wherever they go rather than trying to spend quality time and
understanding the importance of a place.
I
walk on the gullies to reach Himalayan spirit, a yoga place hosted by
Akshay, a young Yoga enthusiast who once was an IT professional but
quit to stay in Himalayas.
There
is a Cafe just before Himalayan Spirit, Called “The Cool Talk Cafe”
probably the only cafe that doesn’t offer Free Wi-FI and encourages
people to chat and eat. This cafe would become my one place to have
coffee and food for next 7-8 days.
I
take rest and take a walk towards the square of McLeodganj which is
busting by tourists from Punjab, Himachal, Haryana and Delhi. The
quiet yet steep shortcut towards McLeod Square is full of Oak trees,
chirping birds and mist. The aroma of the forest is orgasmic. Its a
quiet walk of 15 min and I reach McLeod Square.
The walk towards McLeod from Dharamkot
There
are 3 main roads in McLeod. One towards the Dalai Lama temple, and
one towards Dharamshala and one main road coming from Dharamshala
which is a wide enough road but full of traffic jam.
I
visit the Tibetan Dalai Lama temple and get lost in the beauty of the
temple. Those Buddhist monks with a peculiar charm on their faces,
that smile bring a peace to my body and soul with just a look at
their faces.
Idol of Buddha at the Dalai Lama Temple complex
And
then I stroll in the markets of McLeod looking at the various
Buddhist artifacts, home decor, dream catchers, ornaments for women,
toys for kids. it’s a different world all together.
The Prayer roller at the market for sale
Then
I visit the famous Norling Cafe for some cheese momos and Tibetan
Butter Tea. I kind of like the butter tea but can’t drink full. I
do not like the momos either. So I walk out and go to the famous
Nick’s restaurant for some Pasta. Pasta is uncooked and I walk out
have a spoon of pasta. Duh! Whatta tiring day it has been.
The Idols of Buddha at the McLeod Market
It’s
Cold, it’s dark and I have to climb a km of steep road to reach
Dharamkot. I pant, It’s tough to breathe, my heart pains and
screams, yet I make it to Himalayan Spirit and crash for the night.
Day
2:
Today
I rent a Bullet Electra and intend to get hold of the bike early in
the morning. The guy who had to handover the keys to me doesn’t
pick my calls. Finally he picks up and says i’ll give you the bike
at 9:30. I remind him I had to take the keys at 7:30.
Finally
the guy shows up and gives the key to me telling the location of the
bike parked. While leaving he drops a bomb saying, if the key doesn’t
work, call me and i’ll give you another key. Because the key looks
similar to the key of another Bullet electra. He also apologises for
this saying he was drunk last night and has a bad hangover. He wishes
me good morning while leaving and I reply to him “Good night to
you”.
I
walk to the cafe where the bike was parked and to my joy the key
works. I bring the bike to my place and get ready and leave. I had
plans of visiting the church “St. John’s in the wilderness”,
then head to Dharamshala for breakfast.
But,
there is a huge traffic jam towards the church and I realise there is
not even 50ml of petrol in the bike. I turn back, head towards the
McLeod city again, take the narrow down winding path towards the
petrol bunk in Dharamshala. Its a 6km journey and my bike goes off!!
I ride in neutral for most part of the road and finally reach a
petrol bunk in Dharamshala. It is a 300 mtr descend on neutral.
I
fill fuel and head towards the HPCA stadium in Dharamshala. Entry is
easy and the stadium looks stunning. Only sad part is that the
Dhauladhar mountain behind the stadium is not visible. I click a few
pictures and head out to have breakfast.
I
find a HPTDC hotel and eat parathas there and I head more down
towards Kangra.
Kangra
has a fort which was built centuries and centuries ago. The fort
stands on a hill surrounded 3 sides by river and one side by land.
The
journey is 25km long and beautiful. However I am too cautious as I am
riding in these unknown downwinding roads for the first time. I try
not to cross 40kmph and ride slow.
Its
hot and humid as I descend from 1500mtr to 700mtr. I am sweating and
need water. I miss turns to reach the fort and end up in a Kangra
Royal family’s museum and gallery. There is a huge family tree
indicating the royal family ruled this area for over 5000 years, the
kings of this family fought in Mahabharatha as well as against
Laxman, the brother of Lord Rama. I doubt that but the curator says
its true.
Then
I proceed towards the fort which is beautiful but I am too tired
because of the harsh sun and hot weather. I climb the steps to take a
few pictures, turn back and head back towards Dharamshala.
View from the Kangra Fort
Now
I am confident because I already know the roads, I ride fast but
still cautious. I navigate the curvy roads, overtake traffic and
reach Dharamshala in 30 minutes.
I
visit the Martyr memorial in Dharamshala and head up to McLeod. And I
see a huge, I mean HUGE traffic jam towards McLeod. The cars have
been stopped till eyes can see. I navigate through the cars to find
out these cars have been stopped because of a traffic jam in McLeod.
However, I am let to go.
Now
I take the Longer yet wide main road towards McLeod. The road has
zero traffic. I enjoy riding. I reach my place and rest a while.
I
wake up at around 18:00, have a cup of coffee, take the bike and head
towards Dal lake. I am surprised it is still bright and sunny. I roam
Dal lake, ride to Naddi, take a break at ‘St. John’s in the
Wilderness’ and head to mcLeod for Dinner. And it’s finally dark
and 20:00.
St. John's in the Wilderness
I
have a quick dinner, return the bike and head back to my place early.
Because tomorrow is a long and tiring day!! I am planning to trek to
Triund and Snowline on Monday and Tuesday.
Day
3:
It’s
Monday, the Festival of Ramadan and the last day of a long weekend. I
expect the crowd at McLeod to reduce today. Crowd and Traffic has
been too much over last two days.
I
wake up at 7:00 and walk outside. it’s raining heavily. Loud
thunders and clouds are at my door steps. it’s totally dark. I turn
to my left to see the hill where trail to Triund is clearly visible.
I see nothing today. All I see is black clouds, rain and thick fog.
A
sigh of worry crosses my mind. I can’t trek in this rain. The much
awaited trek to Triund is going to be cancelled without a single step
being walked.
I
sit for 10 minutes and think what to do. Rains looks to be reduced a
bit. I think and think and decide to get ready by 8:30 and see what
happens.
I
get ready be 8:30 and walk to cool talk cafe for some breakfast. I
order a cappuccino and pita with hummus. Enough protein for the day.
Thanks to rain and mountain gods, rain stops by 9:00.
I
pack my bag, take all essentials to survive a night on a Himalayan
hill top. A rain coat, jacket, my trekking pole, couple of apples,
snickers, a water bottle, a ltr of tropicana juice and m&m’s
are put into the bag and i’m ready to start by 9:30.
I
walk towards the Dharamkot square, 100 mtr before the square, a path
towards right goes towards the Gallu Devi temple. Its a well laid
path through the Pine forest. Ascent is not steep but gradual. The
rain has just stopped and the freshness is still in the air. Its
foggy and aroma of the pine forest fills my lungs. Nothing else
matches the joy of walking in such a beautiful pine forest in such a
perfect weather.
View from Magic View Cafe
I
hike for 45 minutes without a break and reach Gallu Devi temple. The
sight of temple shocks me. There are 100s of trekkers standing,
sitting, chatting and eating maggi at a cafe, cab drivers calling
“McLeod, McLeod”. I realise these are the people who have come
back from triund after hiking the previous day.
I
reach a forest check point, where a couple of forest officials
sitting and noting down names and address. There are two registers,
one to note today’s trekkers and one to note yesterday’s trekkers
who had hiked the previous day. A guy comes and says his name and
number 307 to the official. Official notes down his name, number and
total trekkers. That means he was the 307th trekker group
trekked yesterday.
I
give my name, address proof, sign in the register and start walking.
i’m the 13th trekker for the day. I want to reach the
summit before it gets too hot and sunny. But it doesn’t seem like
clouds are going away anytime soon.
I
see a continuous wave of trekkers descending from triund. I start to
count, I lose count after 100. then I think, if there were 400 groups
and average 4 persons per group, there were at least 1600 trekkers on
triund yesterday night. It must have been such a chaos and mess.
I
trek slow and steady, not giving any breaks until I reach the famous
“magic view cafe” somewhere mid way between Gallu Devi and
Triund. I eat a snickers, drink some water and continue walking.
Slowly fog starts to clear up and I get a few views. Just as I click
pictures, clouds cover up again.
The
trail turns to be a bit steeper and tricky now. I slip a few times.
Though my new pair of shoes is providing good grip, I slip on flat
skiddy rocks. I wonder how are these girls trekking with heels and
sandals. I walk and walk till 12:30. I have been walking continuously
for 3 hours now. Slowly fatigue starts to set in. also the height is
slowing my down. And now the last 1km of final ascent starts, also
known as the famous 21 hairpin bends. It’s steep, it’s
treacherous, it’s skiddy. I pant, I cry with breathlessness, I drag
my body up with so much difficulty. I take an hour to ascend last 1
km and I finally make the triund summit at 13:35.
A Tent at Triund
Triund
is a Meadow with a shiva temple located at a height of 9700ft. Triund
is a perfect campsite for those who trek to Indrahara pass up in the
Dhauladhar.
I
sit on top of a rock and try to get hold of the heartbeat and
breathe. Cool breeze blows from west to east along with the monsoon
clouds hurling towards the hill. Visibility is not even 50 ft. I see
a lot of cafes selling maggi and tea. Also few tents pitched which
are for rent. I take rest for 15 minutes and my stomach starts
shouting for food. i’m hungry, I need to eat.
I
go to a cafe and ask “Bhaiyya, khaane me kya hai?”. He replies
“Daal Chawal”. My eyes lit up, I get to eat rice! What else is
needed for a south Indian than a plate of rice? I take a serving of
dal and rice, he has added soy chunks to dal! Protein again, which is
good. I ask him to put more dal and start savouring. it’s yummy,
its heavenly. I finish the entire serving in no time. I pay 130rs,
which is costly but totally worth it if I think of the effort that
goes into making it here.
I
ask the cafewala for a tent and get one for rent. I pay 800rs for a
tent and sleeping bag and retire for the afternoon.
I
wake up to the hunger cries of my tummy. I run out, it’s still
foggy and zero visibility. I order for a maggi and tea. I finish in
no time. Slowly the number of trekkers on the hill is increasing as
more and more groups are coming up.
Maggi!!
By
17:00 clouds clear up for a few minutes that’s when the Dhauladhar
range is visible I click a few pictures before the clouds cover
again. The meadow looks stunning, green grass everywhere, valley on
both sides, trail to snowline at my back and trail to bhagsu in front
of me. what’s disheartening is the abundance of garbage everywhere.
Even though the cafes keep dustbin and ask everyone to throw garbage
there, our fellow trekkers who are more of a tourists doesn’t seem
to care. They eat-drink and throw garbage everywhere.
The
fog clearing not only shows the beauty of meadows and mountains but
also the sad part of it.
Night
gathers and so the drunkards and party people. They drink, they
dance, they fight, they shout. Everything that a peaceful trekker
like me doesn’t need.
This
goes on till 3am and I lose all my sleep. 3-4 girls in the next tent
keep on fighting and loudly shouting “BC, Bitch..”
I
try to shut myself from all the drama and sleep, but I can’t. Hell
with these senseless people who doesn’t respect nature.
Forest Rest house and tents
Rain
gods has shown mercy today since I started trekking and I wish for
the same tomorrow as well.
Day
1:
I
reach Kangra at 9:30 on Saturday, I am tired, I am hungry and its
hot and humid outside. I run to a nearby ATM and withdraw some cash,
run inside the bus stand looking for a bus directly to McLeodGanj. To
my surprise, there are no direct buses.
I
catch a bus to Dharmashala and hope to find a bus soon to McLeod. I
am starving. My stay at the Himalayan Spirit, a yoga centre is at
Dharamkot, 2km uphill from McLeod.
I
get a bus soon to McLeod, its overcrowded and no place to keep my
bag. I hold my bag and stand throughout the journey of 10km, my bad
luck, there is a huge traffic jam just before McLeod and nobody moves
an inch. 10Km journey takes 1 and half hour and I finally reach
McLeod bus stand. I come out, try to negotiate autoes and nobody
seems interested because of the traffic jam. Finally one guy shows
interest and I hop in. pay 70rs to reach Dharamkot square.
Dharamkot
is a small village with only cafes and yoga places. No roads but only
gullies with foreigners everywhere sitting In cafes, probably stoned
already, mostly hippies practising yoga. To be frank, Dharamkot
doesn’t interest Indians who are mostly tourists just want to take
selfies wherever they go rather than trying to spend quality time and
understanding the importance of a place.
I
walk on the gullies to reach Himalayan spirit, a yoga place hosted by
Akshay, a young Yoga enthusiast who once was an IT professional but
quit to stay in Himalayas.
There
is a Cafe just before Himalayan Spirit, Called “The Cool Talk Cafe”
probably the only cafe that doesn’t offer Free Wi-FI and encourages
people to chat and eat. This cafe would become my one place to have
coffee and food for next 7-8 days.
I
take rest and take a walk towards the square of McLeodganj which is
busting by tourists from Punjab, Himachal, Haryana and Delhi. The
quiet yet steep shortcut towards McLeod Square is full of Oak trees,
chirping birds and mist. The aroma of the forest is orgasmic. Its a
quiet walk of 15 min and I reach McLeod Square.
The walk towards McLeod from Dharamkot
There
are 3 main roads in McLeod. One towards the Dalai Lama temple, and
one towards Dharamshala and one main road coming from Dharamshala
which is a wide enough road but full of traffic jam.
I
visit the Tibetan Dalai Lama temple and get lost in the beauty of the
temple. Those Buddhist monks with a peculiar charm on their faces,
that smile bring a peace to my body and soul with just a look at
their faces.
Idol of Buddha at the Dalai Lama Temple complex
And
then I stroll in the markets of McLeod looking at the various
Buddhist artifacts, home decor, dream catchers, ornaments for women,
toys for kids. it’s a different world all together.
The Prayer roller at the market for sale
Then
I visit the famous Norling Cafe for some cheese momos and Tibetan
Butter Tea. I kind of like the butter tea but can’t drink full. I
do not like the momos either. So I walk out and go to the famous
Nick’s restaurant for some Pasta. Pasta is uncooked and I walk out
have a spoon of pasta. Duh! Whatta tiring day it has been.
The Idols of Buddha at the McLeod Market
It’s
Cold, it’s dark and I have to climb a km of steep road to reach
Dharamkot. I pant, It’s tough to breathe, my heart pains and
screams, yet I make it to Himalayan Spirit and crash for the night.
Day
2:
Today
I rent a Bullet Electra and intend to get hold of the bike early in
the morning. The guy who had to handover the keys to me doesn’t
pick my calls. Finally he picks up and says i’ll give you the bike
at 9:30. I remind him I had to take the keys at 7:30.
Finally
the guy shows up and gives the key to me telling the location of the
bike parked. While leaving he drops a bomb saying, if the key doesn’t
work, call me and i’ll give you another key. Because the key looks
similar to the key of another Bullet electra. He also apologises for
this saying he was drunk last night and has a bad hangover. He wishes
me good morning while leaving and I reply to him “Good night to
you”.
I
walk to the cafe where the bike was parked and to my joy the key
works. I bring the bike to my place and get ready and leave. I had
plans of visiting the church “St. John’s in the wilderness”,
then head to Dharamshala for breakfast.
But,
there is a huge traffic jam towards the church and I realise there is
not even 50ml of petrol in the bike. I turn back, head towards the
McLeod city again, take the narrow down winding path towards the
petrol bunk in Dharamshala. Its a 6km journey and my bike goes off!!
I ride in neutral for most part of the road and finally reach a
petrol bunk in Dharamshala. It is a 300 mtr descend on neutral.
I
fill fuel and head towards the HPCA stadium in Dharamshala. Entry is
easy and the stadium looks stunning. Only sad part is that the
Dhauladhar mountain behind the stadium is not visible. I click a few
pictures and head out to have breakfast.
I
find a HPTDC hotel and eat parathas there and I head more down
towards Kangra.
Kangra
has a fort which was built centuries and centuries ago. The fort
stands on a hill surrounded 3 sides by river and one side by land.
The
journey is 25km long and beautiful. However I am too cautious as I am
riding in these unknown downwinding roads for the first time. I try
not to cross 40kmph and ride slow.
Its
hot and humid as I descend from 1500mtr to 700mtr. I am sweating and
need water. I miss turns to reach the fort and end up in a Kangra
Royal family’s museum and gallery. There is a huge family tree
indicating the royal family ruled this area for over 5000 years, the
kings of this family fought in Mahabharatha as well as against
Laxman, the brother of Lord Rama. I doubt that but the curator says
its true.
Then
I proceed towards the fort which is beautiful but I am too tired
because of the harsh sun and hot weather. I climb the steps to take a
few pictures, turn back and head back towards Dharamshala.
View from the Kangra Fort
Now
I am confident because I already know the roads, I ride fast but
still cautious. I navigate the curvy roads, overtake traffic and
reach Dharamshala in 30 minutes.
I
visit the Martyr memorial in Dharamshala and head up to McLeod. And I
see a huge, I mean HUGE traffic jam towards McLeod. The cars have
been stopped till eyes can see. I navigate through the cars to find
out these cars have been stopped because of a traffic jam in McLeod.
However, I am let to go.
Now
I take the Longer yet wide main road towards McLeod. The road has
zero traffic. I enjoy riding. I reach my place and rest a while.
I
wake up at around 18:00, have a cup of coffee, take the bike and head
towards Dal lake. I am surprised it is still bright and sunny. I roam
Dal lake, ride to Naddi, take a break at ‘St. John’s in the
Wilderness’ and head to mcLeod for Dinner. And it’s finally dark
and 20:00.
St. John's in the Wilderness
I
have a quick dinner, return the bike and head back to my place early.
Because tomorrow is a long and tiring day!! I am planning to trek to
Triund and Snowline on Monday and Tuesday.
Day
3:
It’s
Monday, the Festival of Ramadan and the last day of a long weekend. I
expect the crowd at McLeod to reduce today. Crowd and Traffic has
been too much over last two days.
I
wake up at 7:00 and walk outside. it’s raining heavily. Loud
thunders and clouds are at my door steps. it’s totally dark. I turn
to my left to see the hill where trail to Triund is clearly visible.
I see nothing today. All I see is black clouds, rain and thick fog.
A
sigh of worry crosses my mind. I can’t trek in this rain. The much
awaited trek to Triund is going to be cancelled without a single step
being walked.
I
sit for 10 minutes and think what to do. Rains looks to be reduced a
bit. I think and think and decide to get ready by 8:30 and see what
happens.
I
get ready be 8:30 and walk to cool talk cafe for some breakfast. I
order a cappuccino and pita with hummus. Enough protein for the day.
Thanks to rain and mountain gods, rain stops by 9:00.
I
pack my bag, take all essentials to survive a night on a Himalayan
hill top. A rain coat, jacket, my trekking pole, couple of apples,
snickers, a water bottle, a ltr of tropicana juice and m&m’s
are put into the bag and i’m ready to start by 9:30.
I
walk towards the Dharamkot square, 100 mtr before the square, a path
towards right goes towards the Gallu Devi temple. Its a well laid
path through the Pine forest. Ascent is not steep but gradual. The
rain has just stopped and the freshness is still in the air. Its
foggy and aroma of the pine forest fills my lungs. Nothing else
matches the joy of walking in such a beautiful pine forest in such a
perfect weather.
View from Magic View Cafe
I
hike for 45 minutes without a break and reach Gallu Devi temple. The
sight of temple shocks me. There are 100s of trekkers standing,
sitting, chatting and eating maggi at a cafe, cab drivers calling
“McLeod, McLeod”. I realise these are the people who have come
back from triund after hiking the previous day.
I
reach a forest check point, where a couple of forest officials
sitting and noting down names and address. There are two registers,
one to note today’s trekkers and one to note yesterday’s trekkers
who had hiked the previous day. A guy comes and says his name and
number 307 to the official. Official notes down his name, number and
total trekkers. That means he was the 307th trekker group
trekked yesterday.
I
give my name, address proof, sign in the register and start walking.
i’m the 13th trekker for the day. I want to reach the
summit before it gets too hot and sunny. But it doesn’t seem like
clouds are going away anytime soon.
I
see a continuous wave of trekkers descending from triund. I start to
count, I lose count after 100. then I think, if there were 400 groups
and average 4 persons per group, there were at least 1600 trekkers on
triund yesterday night. It must have been such a chaos and mess.
I
trek slow and steady, not giving any breaks until I reach the famous
“magic view cafe” somewhere mid way between Gallu Devi and
Triund. I eat a snickers, drink some water and continue walking.
Slowly fog starts to clear up and I get a few views. Just as I click
pictures, clouds cover up again.
The
trail turns to be a bit steeper and tricky now. I slip a few times.
Though my new pair of shoes is providing good grip, I slip on flat
skiddy rocks. I wonder how are these girls trekking with heels and
sandals. I walk and walk till 12:30. I have been walking continuously
for 3 hours now. Slowly fatigue starts to set in. also the height is
slowing my down. And now the last 1km of final ascent starts, also
known as the famous 21 hairpin bends. It’s steep, it’s
treacherous, it’s skiddy. I pant, I cry with breathlessness, I drag
my body up with so much difficulty. I take an hour to ascend last 1
km and I finally make the triund summit at 13:35.
A Tent at Triund
Triund
is a Meadow with a shiva temple located at a height of 9700ft. Triund
is a perfect campsite for those who trek to Indrahara pass up in the
Dhauladhar.
I
sit on top of a rock and try to get hold of the heartbeat and
breathe. Cool breeze blows from west to east along with the monsoon
clouds hurling towards the hill. Visibility is not even 50 ft. I see
a lot of cafes selling maggi and tea. Also few tents pitched which
are for rent. I take rest for 15 minutes and my stomach starts
shouting for food. i’m hungry, I need to eat.
I
go to a cafe and ask “Bhaiyya, khaane me kya hai?”. He replies
“Daal Chawal”. My eyes lit up, I get to eat rice! What else is
needed for a south Indian than a plate of rice? I take a serving of
dal and rice, he has added soy chunks to dal! Protein again, which is
good. I ask him to put more dal and start savouring. it’s yummy,
its heavenly. I finish the entire serving in no time. I pay 130rs,
which is costly but totally worth it if I think of the effort that
goes into making it here.
I
ask the cafewala for a tent and get one for rent. I pay 800rs for a
tent and sleeping bag and retire for the afternoon.
I
wake up to the hunger cries of my tummy. I run out, it’s still
foggy and zero visibility. I order for a maggi and tea. I finish in
no time. Slowly the number of trekkers on the hill is increasing as
more and more groups are coming up.
Maggi!!
By
17:00 clouds clear up for a few minutes that’s when the Dhauladhar
range is visible I click a few pictures before the clouds cover
again. The meadow looks stunning, green grass everywhere, valley on
both sides, trail to snowline at my back and trail to bhagsu in front
of me. what’s disheartening is the abundance of garbage everywhere.
Even though the cafes keep dustbin and ask everyone to throw garbage
there, our fellow trekkers who are more of a tourists doesn’t seem
to care. They eat-drink and throw garbage everywhere.
The
fog clearing not only shows the beauty of meadows and mountains but
also the sad part of it.
Night
gathers and so the drunkards and party people. They drink, they
dance, they fight, they shout. Everything that a peaceful trekker
like me doesn’t need.
This
goes on till 3am and I lose all my sleep. 3-4 girls in the next tent
keep on fighting and loudly shouting “BC, Bitch..”
I
try to shut myself from all the drama and sleep, but I can’t. Hell
with these senseless people who doesn’t respect nature.
Forest Rest house and tents
Rain
gods has shown mercy today since I started trekking and I wish for
the same tomorrow as well.






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