Zanskar
and Penzi la
We got up tired and dreary, perhaps due to the treatment meted
out to us at Zoji La and the subsequent treacherous ride.
Braving the winter and taking a refreshing bath to bring the
spirits back to normal, I invited the wrath of the locals
who all watched me doing the spectacle. Each one personally
advised and warned me of contracting pneumonia. One gentleman
went even to the extent of saying, “Listen gentleman!
This is not Delhi”. I pleaded guilty and decided not
to repeat the ‘misdeed’ :~)).
As
per our day’s itinerary, destination was Rangdum Village.
After a quick bread-jam-butter breakfast we ‘suru ho
gaye’. The Suru River like the Zanskar is a left-bank
major tributary of the Indus River and flows from south to
north. We encountered it at Kargil where it meets with its
own tributary, the Wakha-chhu River, making a broad basin
at the confluence point. As we entered the Suru valley, we
knew we made a wise decision of including it in our travel
plan and are going to have a gala time here. While riding
through the valley and up to the Rangdum village, we munched
on and assimilated the gradually unfolding panorama of the
impressive Himalayan landscape.
A relatively narrow valley, Suru is sandwiched between the
Zanskar and the Great Himalayan ranges with the river meandering
its way to Kargil through some really sharp bends. Lower Suru
valley is a verdant, cultivated, broad expanse of land. ‘Fall’
made it even more beautiful. Vegetation exhibited all hues
of yellows in the background of brown-grey dull mountains
with glistening freshly and heavily snowed peaks, and gushing
cyan-blue Suru itself, providing the contrast. We kept riding
towards Sankoo, first major township after Kargil, enjoying
the breathtaking scenery. Sankoo, 42km south of Kargil, is
the most developed town of the valley and owes that to its
proximity to the Kargil. The villagers and the Forest Department
have jointly taken up dense plantations of Poplars, Willows,
Myricarea and Wild Roses which add forest charm to the bowl
shaped valley. Sankoo must be the ideal getaway destination
for the Kargil dwellers. Like always, we passed like a phenomenon
through the village with every visible cheery face gazing
at us and children bidding a very good bye.
As
we touched Panikhar, the valley broadened. I entered into
a state of trance after viewing majestic Nun peak standing
at a formidable 7135 m (23410 feet). The other major peak
is the twinlet of Kun (7087 m) in the massif. Like Sankoo,
Panikhar too is picturesque village with houses mostly concentrated
on both sides of the road and on the left bank of the river.
But unlike Sankoo, it has little amenities to boast of. Here,
confluence of Suru and Chelong River, its major tributary,
has broadened the valley and made the land fertile as evident
from the numerous terraced fields in the vicinity.
Army’s presence in the region has eased off the crunch
of basic amenities a bit. Army has made camps to provide facilities
like first aid, STD/ISD/PCOs, mechanic/repair shops, and even
internet. We did not spot any two-wheeler or a mechanic, though.
Transport-wise both Suru and Zanskar valleys are not well
connected as we spotted only three buses during our stay in
the valley.
Riding past Panikhar we bade goodbye to very bad roads.
Now all we had was a track, uneven and strewn with boulder-like
stones. Surely, difficult accessibility to this region has
been one of the main reasons behind its virgin unadulterated
beauty. On the darker side, this has also left the region,
grossly, under-developed with almost no basic amenities. After
Panikhar, the road takes a sharp turn at right-angle towards
left, along with the river. It took us an hour and a half
to reach a glacial ravine. Under the shadow of Parkachik glacier
is situated a tiny hamlet, Parkachik. It is a small Dard settlement
in a deep gorge on the bank of Suru and situated right below
the Nun peak. From the road, there is a fifteen minute steep
descent to the village on an unstepped dirt track along small
terraced barley and wheat fields. In fact, at both Panikhar
and Parkachik, we found a series of intensively cultivated
level stepped plateau from the foothills to the bed of the
Suru River. We didn’t spot any wild exotic alpine flora,
the Suru valley is famous for, may be because winters had
already set in. Parkachik, like Panikhar, is a natural marvel
with picture-perfect surroundings and cool environs but, unlike
Panikhar, is situated on the right bank of the Suru River.
From 12 kms short of Panikhar (Thangbu village) to Parkachik
we had a clear glimpse of the Mt. Nun’s peak.
Parkachik
onwards, it is a remote land and human sightings were on the
wane, exponentially. It almost turned into a ghost country,
with little marmots to scare us every now & then. Ever-worsening
road conditions coupled with extreme cold made us long for
a break but mind severed off any connections with the body
except our eyes which kept soaking in the beauty of the glacial
countryside. We both were actually spellbound, unaware of
what treatment our bodies and the bike were receiving on that
bumpy, boulder-strewn, uneven, muddy and narrow track. Melted
snow made the ride even more difficult with balance going
for a toss and loads of mud sticking to wheels and mudguards.
Manish, being pillion, took the maximum punishment as he later
discovered strange maps on his butt. Resolute we just carried
on and on. Seeing a glimpse of Rangdum was the top thought
in the quarry of our minds. It took us two hours of a ‘struggle
ride’ to cover around 40 km section beyond Parkachik.
Then the valley started broadening with Suru River becoming
multi-streamed leaving small grassy islands in-between. The
narrow track gave way to a wide track and gradually broadening
valley widened to appear as a vast meadow. To our utmost delight
we were touching Rangdum, as the last landmark informed us.
Confirming our destination, we rode past the prayer flags,
chortens and a mani wall, the signs of Buddhism. We could
clearly see the setting sun spotlit Rangdum Gompa on the
other end of the valley perched scarily on a small steep hillock
though the aerial distance from our position should have been
more than four kilometers. Rangdum apart from being the gateway
to Zanskar valley is quite a destination in itself. Please
keep aside the ‘smooth’ approach ‘road’
for a moment and then imagine an elliptical stream-strewn
meadow valley centered by the Rangdum village and flanked
by towering mountains snowed in up to their base on one side
and tall barren rocky ones on the other. Don’t forget
to freeze with the cold and also please don’t step on
the snowed grassland. Dear friend you are standing at an altitude
of 3657m and the place is inhabited!
Coming back to reality, we quickly negotiated a few freezing
streams made by the melting snow and reached Rangdum village
at around 5.00 pm. Village comprises a few double and single
storied houses, elaborately painted in the ‘Laddakhi’
style and having a small ground left to each one of them before
the boundary wall. Residents there were not much bothered
by our arrival while we kept looking for a place to camp.
Due to snow all around we couldn’t find a suitably dry
place
to camp. I particularly insisted on a water source to be comfortably
near to the camp. Not finding any good place we rode a little
further from the village and crossed a bridge over a tributary
of Suru to reach a now-extinct Suru river bed patch of land.
Here the valley was widest and interestingly was not snowed
due to its proximity to the snowless rocky and barren mountains.
Here we had the water source comfortably near in the form
of the tributary stream of the Suru River and wind speed was
also relatively less intimidating. Contemplating on our campsite,
we melted into nature’s marvels so generously on offer.
Without a second thought, we offtracked a little inside on
the riverbed and then pitched our tent. Pitching tent ate
up our precious 40 minutes as we were breathing heavily due
to rarity of air, our fingers were near-numb and notably we
had no prior experience of pitching a tent. I am sure you
must be murmuring by now, “These guys are crazy…..how
could they never find time to at least first try pitching
a bloody tent.” You can spare us by acknowledging that
we wanted to pitch our first tent at 4000 meters. Crazy nah?
That camping night is indelibly etched in my memory.
The setting looked fabulous. The Sun was already down and
under the fast-fading daylight and all-encompassing cold we
braved the mind-numbing winds to soak in even more of our
adventure. We were super delighted to see our erected ‘ashiana’
for that night. Pebble strewn river bed far stretched to the
Gompa hillock at a distance and snowy peaks filled rest of
the backdrop. We rambled to our water source and filled up
two buckets we had for the spare fuel. Suru tributary was
already frozen on the banks. “What’s on the menu
today?” I asked Manish to get an almost instant response,
“Paneer, of course!”
Worth mentioning over here is the cooking problem that we
faced. After arranging everything I tried lighting up the
fuel cake in vain. Our lighter never lighted up. My dissonant
late advice to Manish to at least have checked the lighter
was just a spontaneous but useless eruption. There we were,
ditched and distressed! Poor hungry souls…..watching
the uncooked Paneer lying on the ground. “No worry,
I have the matchbox”, I said to Manish. Chill of the
wind that we were enjoying a few moments earlier turned into
our most hostile nemesis, not allowing us to light a matchstick.
Mercury was constantly dipping as we both were shivering outside
our tent badly in the want of fire and food. Finally, we both
stood in the way of the wind and used our hands as windshield
and a matchstick lit up. Igniting those cold fuel cakes took
almost fifteen minutes and more than fifteen matchsticks.
Next few moments we both watched our boiling ‘paneer’
without uttering a single word. I must tell you that I don’t
like ‘paneer’ so much but that night it became
my favorite. ‘Paneer’ at 4000 meters, sure it
tasted better. We both ate to the capacity and the residue
was licked from the utensil. We will never ever forget the
taste of the food we had that night, shivering but still eating
like beasts. Although, it wasn’t moonlit that moment
but we could clearly see our surroundings. That day we discovered
that even bright shining stars impart enough light to light
up the surroundings sufficiently. And did I tell you about
the sky? Man! Studded it was….with diamond like stars
shining in all their glory.
It was 9:30 pm and washing the utensils meant putting hands
into the ice. We opted to enter the tent instead. I have a
torch which has a thermometer attached to it. It can show
the temperature up to minus seven degree Celsius. Temperature
at that moment was 3 degree Celsius. Cool…..No problem.
Soon we switched to the rest mode ensconced inside our sleeping
bags. Wind kept knocking on the tent while we tried our best
to sleep. Manish was more comfortable due to his heavier
sleeping bag but I was grossly cold and felt the need of some
extra clothing. So I got up, wore leather jacket and then
again tried to warm up in the sleeping bag. Still the cold
was overpowering and I couldn’t sleep at all. It was
12:00 am and I thought it is a good idea to take a look at
the temperature. It was zero degrees. “Gosh! If it is
so inside the tent…….No no! I should better think
about sleeping”, I told to myself. Then perhaps I dozed
off for an hour only to be woken up by the gradually percolating
cold. I was very uncomfortable with my head out on a ‘merry-go-round’.
At 3 am when I rechecked the temperature, it was at its best…..at
the base…..minus seven degrees. May be less but my device
was incapable of recording lower than that. The fragile tent
jostled hard against the wind-attacks and appeared mere a
symbolic protection and so did the sleeping bag. Mind already
out and body aching for the want of rest I suffered that night.
‘Like it or lump it’ but the night (mare) was
to be passed. Icing on the cake was the water droplets dripping
on us in the morning. The vapor from our breath condensed
at the ceiling and gradually turned into ice in the night.
With the morning sun again raising the mercury to rather comfortable
levels, the ice thawed down on us. We both never ever experienced
sub-zero temperature, forget about the magnitude. Manish gathering
some strength made the first step out of the tent. It was
pleasant outside and he asked me to try outside. Torpidity
of my body disallowed any movement but I soldiered to win
a hard-fought battle. Indeed, it was much better, as I came
out with a heavy head and in an extremely irritated mood.
It was 11:30 am and thus the morning chores were completed
in the noon. Feces on ice looked great but camera was at the
tent. Yuck!
Summing up our camping experience, I must say that we were
very lucky to get a sunny day following nights freeze but
unfortunate to miss the dawn. But we had a sumptuous taste
of camping. Notably, we then could never muster courage to
camp during rest of our ride-tour as you will read further.
Manish could discern my condition and suggested that I should
better have some more rest in the tent. Manish is a hardy
fellow and never shies away from the most obvious sign of
trouble. But this time lack of rest and extreme cold got us.
Actually we were a little scared of the cold and ice by that
time. But I had Penzi La and Zanskar in my mind, the purpose
for why we were putting much of that effort. So mustering
strength we had, we were back on the job. Breakfast was laid
in the form of bread-butter-jam. Fuel cake ignition exercise
did not take much effort due to the bright sunshine, I guess.
At 1:00 pm we started and were almost four hours behind the
schedule. Deciding to visit the Gompa during the return journey
we rode past and were galloping towards Penzi La. It is indeed
a strenuous ride and takes quite an effort and skill to negotiate
the track. And in that frame of mind it became all the more
difficult for us. On the brighter side, the Strain, tension
and shiver were suitably and amply compensated with the stunning
views of the landscape.
What we saw was never reported to us earlier. The scenery
was just superb. A Large expanse of virgin marshy plain surrounded
by multicolored and spectacular permafrost mountain peaks
snowed
in till the base looked like a wonderland. Valley intermittently
is as narrow as the river itself with a small mountain section
left for track. Clouds resisted the sunlight to ultimately
create a ‘shadow dance’ on the snow clad mountains
while the otherwise verdant grass-cover down in the valley
displayed all hues of the ‘yellow’. After riding
for about 12 kilometers, a steep climb ensued. A few kilometers
further we luckily found three trucks and followed them. Not
only overtaking was impossible but we were actually benefited
by trailing them. The wide tires of the trucks were cutting
the snow and making a way for us to ride on. In the final
three kilometers, an already steep climb became almost vertical.
Trucks now were moving very slowly. It became difficult to
ride and balance on the snow. So we honked them for the way.
To our benefit a stretch of steep hairpin bends came. All
three of them halted there to cool off the engine a bit. I
revved the bike in first gear but it seemed insufficient.
I asked Manish to get down but then thought to give it another
final try. Holding the bike tight I stood on both legs freeing
my weight on the bike and revved it hard. Off we were and
bike generated some acceleration. On the track, all that a
rough muddy stretch could offer was there – slush and
more of it. Ride was made even more challenging by the hidden
ice at the hairpin bends. Loosing balance became the riding
way on this extremely tortuous route but luckily we managed
to escape without a fall. Final 200 meters were done in a
cinch and there we were at the Penzi La top (4450 m). The
word ‘Ecstasy’ seems inadequate to define the
feeling we had at the top. In our rapturous outburst, we gestured
WHOOPEE!
The top has a very small structure dedicated to ‘Penzila
baba’ but was unapproachable due to snow. Landscape
was white due to the total region covered with a thick sheet
of snow and the only other colors were brown for the unsnowed
section of the mountains and the rich blue of the sky. The
view of the Drang-drung glacier at a Yak’s spit distance
is breathtaking from the pass. We could clearly view the Penzi
La watershed separating the basins of Suru River towards north
and Stot River towards south. In fact, the glacial consolidation
at Penzi La is the source of these two rivers.
I was willing to celebrate our ‘victory’ over
Penzi La at Padum and Zangla but Manish was of the opinion
to return back. He mentioned his unwillingness for Padum right
there at the campsite. Despite the fact that if Penzi La gets
snowed heavily our tour will go for a toss, I proceeded towards
Padum. But I was in a dilemma. Getting stuck at Padum or before
Penzi La will mean ‘tour de finish’. I stopped
the bike and looked at the snow again. We both never saw that
much of snow ever in our lives. Obviously overwhelmed, I popped
that damn question to Manish, “Chalein kya! Wapis chalein?”.
With his positive nod coming in before the sentence completed,
I took a U-turn. Zanskar kept beckoning but I engaged the
ear plugs. As I am narrating this to you, I must share that
the ‘call’ has not faded. And as and when it rings,
a feeling of guilt engulfs me…..Why did I take a U-turn?
High altitude sickness and lack of sleep both were playing
a major role in our decisions and affecting our confidence
level. With no respite from extreme cold and gushy wind, we
skipped climbing the hillock of Rangdum Gompa but soldiered
on to Parkachik. Parkachik was an ideal location for night
halt for we were not only accompanied by the famous Nun cliff
and the vast glacial cover but also by the famous Dard inhabitants
of the Suru valley. We soaked up the view and heard about
the area’s famous cultural heritage from the caretaker
of the rest house. Although, the Kargil region is known to
be the only region of India with ‘Shi’ia’
Muslim majority but the Dards, an indo-aryan race which migrated
here from down the Indus, strangely comprise both muslims
as well as Buddhists. In fact, the Dards inhabited the valley
before Buddhism and Islam arrived there. Since the regions
of Dardistan and Baltistan are sandwiched between the Muslim
west and Buddhist east, they are culturally enriched with
both kinds of traditions, customs and practices. Parkachik
is essentially a muslim inhabitation and signifies the easternmost
extension of Islam in the Himalayan region. Dard folk looked
simple, pleasant, smiling and laborious. In fact, the Dards
only have brought irrigation and agriculture to the valley,
thus appropriately utilizing the resource-rich strata for
livelihood and sustenance. In fact, the valley serves as Ladakh’s
granary. This is quite evident by the intense agriculture
taken up at each inhabited place. However, Suru inhabitants
are not all happy about the current situation in the valley.
The caretaker of PWD Rest House, Mr. Mohammed and his friend
informed us that their language, Dardi, is gradually becoming
extinct and very few people use it for communication. More
so, the young Dardis are migrating to other areas in search
of employment.
Proper food and rest at Parkachik revitalized our languid
bodies enabling us to regain our expended energies and the
jollity continued. We had a quick breakfast and started on
the return journey to Kargil. Destination, though, was surreally
picked as Leh despite knowing that we won’t be able
to reach Leh before sunset.
But before proceeding further, I would like to sum up my
experience of Suru valley by stating that if you want to see
one of the most exotic locations, virgin but inhabited at
the same time, across the world, then head for Suru &
Zanskar valleys. Access to the valley is certainly not easy
as the frequency of state transport buses in the valley is
minimal and we spotted only a few trucks engaged in the road
construction work and a few 4x4 jeeps of the locals during
our entire ride, to & fro from Kargil. So, please be advised,
you and mobike should be in top condition to endure the rough
terrain, extreme cold, loads of mud and vagaries of nature.
There are no on-the-way/mid-way human settlements or roadside
shelters. In case of a breakdown trust me, you will have a
sky…..studded with diamond-like stars, roaring Suru
forming the steady background score, piercing wind and biting
cold chilling your bones.
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