Sunday, September 25, 2011

The Journey is the Destination

The river is everywhere at the same time, at the source and at the mouth, at the waterfall, at the ferry, at the current, in the ocean and in the mountains, everywhere, and that the present only exists for it, not the shadow of the past, nor the shadow of the future. 
--- Siddhartha by Herman Hesse


The road was a mere track of crushed stones and mud. A tiny stream cut its way on the mountain slope on the left, zig zagging its way, gushing like a teenage girl, making its way to a giggling little brook on the other end. The ice was still frozen over it, forming a cave, from within which it flowed endlessly. In the process, it also cut through the road as the bus jolted over the rocky stream and made its way into the valley. Inside the bus, the atmosphere was tense. Local Spiti men and women wanted to reach their villages quickly. The sun had already set and the landscape of the valley, like a moving picture had already changed a million shots per second, a documentary of millenniums of geographical evolution over a few hours. For the travellers inside, Indians like me and Anjali, or the foreigners - a British, three Americans, one French and one Danish, it was travel for travel’s sake. For this was not an easy ride. Every curve of the road spelt a bottomless rocky end with one mistake by the driver of the bus. By daylight, we sat mesmerised by our surroundings. Lofty peaks, rain kissed meadows of green, wildflowers of every hue in abundance, the last remains of the winter ice letting water through to flow into the speedy and mighty Spiti. As the river cut its way into the deep gorge of the Spiti valley, we followed its tracks on the edge of the mountains, round about-ing, rising and dropping altitude, over the two passes - Rohtang-la and Kunzam-la.

Time should cease to become important while travelling anywhere in India. Nobody appreciated that more, than the Danish girl. Stuck at Rohtang for over six hours due to a landslide, we munched on Manali Lichis on the roadside, trekking to precarious edges to take leaks, and making fun of Indian tourists in snow suits making their way to the pass to ski and click photographs. (I do not want to sound like a high-nosed “backpacking traveller” looking down at “tourism”. But the sight is really comical. Besides they cause loggerjams on the pass with their vehicles from the plains.) I think she said, “It is the inconsistencies of travel that make the experience annoying and beautiful at the same time.” or maybe she said, “Time is not a controllable commodity.” or maybe I’m making this up as I write. It doesn’t matter what she said. Moments like these, of endless wait, make me feel that time does not exist.



The non-existent time translated itself into a fearful, surreal bus ride into an altogether different aspect of nature itself. We crossed Kunzam-la, after a very late lunch at 5pm in Batal. There lies a small cosy mud house that serves the most precious food anywhere in the world. From here you can see the entire valley traversed from Manali onwards, only to leave it behind, to climb higher. Kunzam was crossed at 7pm, amongst raging howling winds. The darkness offset the white snow on the ranges, as prayer flags fluttered abuzz, their bright colors subdued in the decreasing light. Everyone on the bus prayed for a safe journey at the Kunzam gompa and the driver kicked in the gas at full speed. Or almost. The lack of shock absorbers on the “ordinary” HRTC roadways bus was never felt fully until now. The lights were switched off, leaving only the blue and red bulbs over pictures of sundry Gods and Goddesses towering above the driver’s seat.

The mind had already become numb over ten hours of travel and the landscape turned pitch black. If one pressed one’s face to the window, only dark outlines of the mountains were visible. The silhouettes moved with the pace of the bus, like ghostly shadows as the red-blue lighted interiors of the bus played bhajans. And we sang along. For a moment, I could not differentiate between the brown river and the muddy road. How was the driver maneuvering over water? He wasn’t of course. But he was magically jumping over stony interruptions caused by the many streams, described more romantically in the beginning of this piece. No, they were menacing. One tilt of the tyre on a stone in the stream could topple our bus on our heads. But that was not the last of my un-doped fantasies. Small lights crop up in the distance from time to time. Maybe that’s Kaza, the capital of Spiti. We are close, aren’t we? No. We cross thousands of these villages (of course they a few in number in daytime) as their lights loom close floating in mid-air surrounded by black like glow worms. I hallucinate beautiful bokehs. I give up. I’m going to sleep. I cannot imagine what I’m travelling through, what’s under or over me. I need static. But sleep is not easy, with a local lad stretched and sleeping over my shoulder from behind my seat.



Huts at Batal (above)

Kaza Bus Stand (above)


I don’t exactly remember now, how long it took to reach Kaza. It was nearly 11pm. We had started at 5am from Manali. Like the other travellers, we had no place to live. The town was shut. The dogs were sleeping. We were rescued by the owner of Tashi-delek guest house. Crashing the night, the altitude kicked in the next morning with splitting headache and dizziness. But I opened the curtains of my room to a landscape - so unreal, unfamiliar, mystical, so brown and so green, so desolate and so charming, so lofty and so humble, so earthy and yet sacred....where the water of the Spiti river flowed, only to pull me away with it.

Thursday, March 17, 2011


In the lap of the Dhauladhars


“I’ve been here since 1984”, said He. I exclaimed and replied to him that I was here last in 2007. And he said, “Yes, you do look familiar.” I wonder if I really did seem familiar to the man who ran the Magic View cafe 2500 metres above sea level, considering the number of people that climb to Triund in Himachal year after year, seasons after seasons, some who trek much further beyond and others like me who return aching and panting, totally unfit from city life but nevertheless vouching to come back again and hoping to get higher the next time. Me and Aparna had just eaten the most expensive and delicious Maggi of our life here at 80 Rupees per head. We ate hungrily looking down at the valley in front of us which nestled an eclectic civilization of Tibetans, Himachali folk, travellers, pseudo-hippies and trekkers. Up ahead the Dhauladhar range was sparklingly snow covered and shining in the sun. Below in Mcleodganj, the Dalai Lama was giving a special sermon at his monastery on the occasion of Losar while election was a few days away. Beside us two foreigners- one in a turban and the other in a hat talked non-stop of the meaning of life oblivious of us. An obese American sat quietly by himself munching the same masala Maggi concoction on the other end. Mr Magic view was rolling his number nth. Then there were the Japanese tourists, Indian boys clicking pictures incessantly and Punjabi boys playing dhinchak music as they trekked!


Where was I again? I was in the lap of the Dhauladhars, watching them watching me under changing colours of light from morning to night, going round and round them on foot and on bus for three days. At 2500 m, like all things in the mountains, we were close but way too far. “I want to be at the top of that point up there”, wished Aparna listlessly looking at the many magnificently imposing peaks in front of us. We both could do with some weight loss to even get to this same spot in lesser time when we returned again! 300 m up from here, Triund was covered with snow and we were late to get up there and come back down by nightfall as planned. Later in the night on returning to Dharamsala from our run up and down to Magic View, we sat cross legged and stared at the fantastic view of the range glowing in the moonlight from our host’s house. A single light flickered in the direction of the Triund ridge top. So close and so far yet again! I almost felt like a mountaineer who had to return back to base camp because of bad weather and just short of the peak by a few metres. It was bittersweet – much like those many things in life that you yearn for but can only reach so far.


The Dhauladhars were our companions for the three days we spent trapeezing over and under Dharamsala, Mcleodganj, Kangra and Dharamkot – they stretched out for us in full splendour in Kangra as we gazed at them through 9th century ruins atop the ancient fort. Here they had seen epic battles and the history of the Indian civilization unfold. We mellowed in their presence in Dharamsala as we woke up to catch the sun rising behind them. They played peek-a-boo in Mcleodganj bathed in a pinkish glow of the sunset as we woozied over Tempest apple cider (locally brewed). And at Dharamkot we looked up at the trekking trail we had left behind and said goodbye to the tiny speck of a hut of the Magic View cafe from where we could get to them closest just yet. Their whitewashed peaks remain a memory bathed with a melancholic glow.



P.S: Special thanks to the invaluable Himachal Path Parivahan Nigam without whom this trip would not be possible.