I’m not
going to go into too much detail about each day of this trek, partially because
I’m still processing it, but also because it’s difficult to relate the reality
of such an experience to anyone who wasn’t actually there.
We spent
the first few days at Tsomoriri, unable to get started walking because we
couldn’t find a horse guy (the one who was supposed to come with us OR any
others). But the lake was beautiful, and
we spent the time camping and exploring the area. The lama in the region was doing a puja in
the hills where many of the nomadic Changpa people were camped, so we also went
up to see what that was about.
After some
time we managed to find a really lovely ghora wallah named Padma, who had seven
horses and two wives. We really struck
gold with this guy—he was wonderful, really kind, and had beautiful
horses. The poor dude actually ended up
having to run off after his horses multiple times during the trek, because they
would decide in the middle of the night that the grass they had seen the day
before was much more appealing. So Padma
would get up before dawn, find the horses gone, and have to go back the entire
day’s worth of trekking (in less than half the time it took us to walk it) get the
horses, and bring them back before we left in the morning. What an exhausting, difficult life!
The first
day we spend hiking along the lake, and I got two feet full of blisters from my
hiking shoes. It turned freezing and
sleety toward the end of this day, and the mountain wind drove the icy rain
nearly horizontal for the last hour of the hike. We set up camp at the end of this massive
lake, but one of the tents turned out to have gotten broken or undone (it was
never clear exactly what happened) so it took us a few hours to rig a useable
camp—but in the end the helper, Andgu (who was only eighteen and whom we all
referred to affectionately as Nono, which means “young one” in Ladakhi) managed
to get the tent up using twine and string.
This was the best we could do for the tent for the entire trek, but the
other option was that four people slept in one two person tent, so we managed.
Let me take
a minute to say here that in our guide for this trek, Gyaltso, we were blessed
with some sort of beneficent spirit. Not
only was he a kind, patient, tough guide with a great sense of humour and huge
wealth of knowledge about the plants and wildlife of the area, but he was also
a master cook! Every meal was a feast on
this adventure, completely in contrast with the roughness of everything else
about the journey. Porridge and omelettes
and chapattis or fluffy pancakes for breakfast, packed lunches, and dinners
with three types of veggies, curries, rice, and for the first few days, fresh
fruit for dessert. Not to mention how
much tea we drank!
The second
day was a river crossing— with the freezing river up just above our knees and
rushing current, we used a rope and rolled up our trousers and fought our way
across barefoot.
The rest of
the days sort of blur together until the pass—weaving through the immense
mountains, across dry river beds and piles of red and purple stones, freezing
nights and hot sun, thin air that made the going slow on my part. We are all sunburned and windburned and
tanned probably beyond recognition. Most
of the days, for the 6 to 10 hours of walking, I was alone in my head and the
landscape because my pace was much slower than everyone else’s. This was one of the most intense parts about
the whole adventure.
On the
fifth day we crossed the pass, which I was very bad at. Parang La pass is 5600 meters, and I
completely panicked at the lack of air.
The first part of the crossing is climbing up a glacier, which started
out pretty slippery but thanks to a lot of fresh snowfall the night before, got
easier to manage the further up we went.
Then there is a valley of snow where the glacier slopes steadily
upwards, before tilting sharply up towards the top of the pass. This was the really gruelling part of the
crossing, as the fresh snowfall now made it difficult to walk, with each step
sinking down above the ankle into blinding powder. This is when I really started to lose it, as
my panic at not being able to breath began to make me dizzy, and I fought with
the urge to vomit, a headache, and blurry vision for the last hour of the
climb. Gyaltso stuck with me and talked
me through each step, and I crested the pass about ten to twenty minutes behind
the others.
We topped
the pass at about 10 am, and then continued to hike until 5 pm to find a
camping spot where the horses could find food.
Down the mountain, through valleys, and straight up a plateau. Basically, we did the next day’s hike as
well. The benefit to this (besides not
having poor hungry horses!) turned out to be that we got to the village of
Kiber a day early, and were able to spend an extra day there.
The village
is beautiful, and because of the extra day there it turned out that we were
present for the ceremonial horse racing before the harvest. The oracle of the area gets possessed by the
local dev (in this case, two different spirits actually came into him) and he
dances crazily and ecstatically, pouring arak and chang all over the ground
before the horses take off. We stayed on
the hill above the fields until the sunset, watching the horses race and perform
various feats down in the valley and along a ridge between two mountains. Then we found some arak of our own and had a
little final party with Gyaltso and Nono in our camp.
Yesterday
we took a jeep to Manali, which is a ten to twelve hour drive (but only 180
kilometers, if that gives an indication of how non-existent the roads are) and
had blissful showers and collapsed into beds at a guesthouse run by a friend of
Shivani and Munir’s.
My first
thought as we came down out of Spithi valley into lower Himachal was that I
couldn’t believe how happy I was to see trees.
Forests of pine trees, moisture in the air, beautiful wooden houses—the
type of mountains and mountain towns I was familiar with! And the trees! Our guesthouse/cottage is surrounded by apple
orchards, so this morning for breakfast I went and picked myself some tangy,
crunchy apples. Resting here for a few
days.
Here are a few photos of the pass to tide everyone over until I can upload all of the trek pics:
Across the plain of snow.
Looking back down the glacier to where we camped.
Coming down from the pass into Himachal Pradesh. Goodbye Ladakh!
3 comments:
So inspiring my beautiful friend
Colorful and skilled narrative of your experiences! (glad you made it)
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