Monday, September 10, 2007

Himalayan adventure

I have a long cherished dream to visit Valley of Flowers. It comprises about 3o sq. km. of area in the Himalayas, which blooms with beautiful and rare flowers, growing wild, for all of about 40 days in a year. A plan to go there finally materialized in August, combining the Independence Day holiday with the weekend, and taking two days off, thus giving us a total of 5 days. The planned itinerary for our group of six was:
Tue: Take a night train from Delhi to Haridwar, reaching early morning
Wed: Pre-arranged taxi to pick us at Haridwar, and leave us at Joshimath or Govindghat by evening
Thu: Reach Govindghat, and trek 14 kms to Ghangharia
Fri: Trek 6 kms to VoF, and back to Ghangharia
Sat: Trek to Hemkund Sahib, and back through Ghangharia to Govindghat
Sun: Back to Rishikesh, and take overnight train to Delhi

The plan looked rather ambitious, but we never realized beforehand how much way off would we be! And the following details and pictures would describe what actually took place!!

We reached Haridwar after some adventure, delayed by more that three hours. As we crossed Haridwar, we could see the signs of a very recent flood in the river Ganga. We were apprehensive of the landslides in the higher regions, but there was a seasoned traveller and trekker in our group, who assured us that if landslides happen on this route, it was cleared within 2-3 hours by the Border Roads Org., which maintained the highway. Our fears put to rest, we enjoyed the beautiful weather and the scenery.


The mountains were lush green, due to the rains, and the entire route lay along the river Ganga and its tributaries - the rivers Ganga/ Alaknanda/ Mandakini were our constant companions after we crossed Rishikesh.


Many waterfalls, small and large, crossed the mountain side, some of them falling right on the road. Initially we were enchanted by them, but later some of them caused us a lot of problem.



A short distance from Rishikesh is a place called Kaudiyala, where we stopped for breakfast. The river is very wide here, as at Rishikesh. The current does not look strong, but it is actually very strong in the rains, rendering it unsafe to raft in this season. The rafting camps close down towards the end of April, when the rains start.

A little while later, we encountered our first landslide. Although a JCB and a bulldozer had been mobilized and were working on it from two ends, it took them almost five hours to clear the slide. Kilometers long queues of vehicles formed on both sides of the slide. While we waited in the hot afternoon for the way to be cleared, this black insect with golden trimmings caught our fancy.



There was another small landslide on the way, at which we had to wait for a little less than an hour. By late afternoon, we reached Devprayag. Devprayag, which meangs "holy confluence" is where Alaknanda and Bhagirathi meet to form the holy river Ganga. "Prayag" means confluence of rivers, and are considered as sacred places. Along this route, there are several "prayag's" - Karanprayag, Rudraprayag, Sonprayag, Nandprayag - all of these are holy cities, where tributaries of the Ganga meet.

We had a beautiful view of the confluence at Devprayag. We followed the course of Alaknanda from here, and reached RudraPrayag (the confluence of Alaknanda and Mandakini) by late evening - due to the delays along the way, we could manage to cover less than half the distance we had planned.

9 comments:

Pijush said...

@Sigma, Welcome back after long time. Nice to read this post. The pics are really wonderful. 1,3,5,6 are simply excellent.
Waiting for the total series and thanks for your honest comments/feedbacks in my blog.

Cuckoo said...

Nice post, awesome pictures. This is what happens when we go in rainy season. We don't reach our destination on time but the stopway is just too beautiful to be in bad mood.

Pictures have come out very well.

Pijush said...

Sigma, you asked about why the temples are up above the mountains. I think it is because Himalaya was considered holy place from old times (Ramayana and Mahabharata age). The sources of rivers are also considered holly in Hinduism. That may be the reason why the temples are there.

Anonymous said...

WoWWWW...some lovely, lovely Awesome pictures and I just endure the beauty of this region, which I feel has really stood the test of time and remains the same as was from ages and to me rainy seasons are one of the best times to visit this part of the Himalayas.

Sigma said...

@Pijush: Thanks. And I'll expect you to do the same on mine :-)
Well, what you say could very well be true about the temples in the himalayan region. But almost in the every hill-station that I have been to, there is a very popular/esteemed temple, on the top of one of the nearby hills, which is quite difficult to reach :-)

@Cuckoo: Yes, that is another side of it ... the view during the entire journey was amazing.

@Kalyan: I'll agree with you on the other things, but from our experience you can see that rainy season is not the best time to go there - we planned the trip in this time for an entirely different season - this is the only time when flowers are in bloom in the VoF.

Pooja Aggarwal said...

When I was halfway through your posts, I thought - my God! Valley of flowers! I have always wanted to go there....But then I saw that you had to abandon your trip. If I am in India during summer next year, maybe we can go together :-)

Sigma said...

@Pooja: Oh! I would love to go there ... as I said, it's been a long standing dream for me too! And it sure would be fun to go together!

delhidreams said...

oh sigma!
i wish u go to the valley of flowers next year
loved the whole journey, although i rad it backwards, and the second pic from bottom, where the town of devaprayag is visible in full glory has become my favourite...
take care

indicaspecies said...

Wow, good post and great pictures and can't wait to read the entire series. I've planned a VoF trek and so will begin from this Part of your Adventure.