Nepal Trekking
The Himalayas, over the
centuries, have
attracted trekkers,
mountaineers, pilgrims
and ascetics. Since time
immemorial its rugged
heights crowned with
snow and draped in vast
glaciers has lured man
to pit his courage and
ingenuity against its
dangerous challenge.
Below the snowline at
18,000 feet, nature
appears to relent and
from the austere
magnificence of the
heights brings down to a
different world of
cascading water falls,
lush green forests,
flower-bedecked meadows
and a variety of flora
and and fauna. Here the
rivers flow clear blue
and icy.
Here nestle small
villages and hamlets
with their diverse local
customs, dances,
folklore and
architecture. The people
are as vibrant as their
surroundings and in many
cases innocent of the
sometimes dubious
benefits of modern
civilization.
Since ancient times,
ascetics have climbed
into these inhospitable
heights in search of
peace. In doing so, they
have established places
of pilgrimage that have
become more than
household names since
their fame has spread to
all parts of the world.
Names like Kailash
Mansarovar, in Tibet,
Thyang Boche in Nepal,
and of course Badrinath,
Kedarnath, Yamunotri,
Gangotri of Uttarakhand.
Then there is Amarnath
in Kashmir and Hemis in
Ladakh.
Those first mountaineers
- whether ascetics,
pilgrims, traders,
hunters or shepherds -
had no special training
or climbing techniques,
but acquired a high
degree of skill from
necessity and constant
practice. Having to
cross the mountain
passes at heights
ranging from 1500 m to
5,800 m, they designed
ingenious equipment,
food and clothing from
indigenous material to
help them combat the
intense cold and
negotiate the
treacherous snow and
ice.
For a vast number of
people, the Himalayas
appear to be the
Shangri-la, to others,
the abode of God.
Trekking in the
Himalayas is now quite
enjoyable and has become
comparatively easy with
the development of
lightweight equipment
and clothing with
booming tourist
infrastructure. There
are difficult treks as
well as easy treks, long
and short treks.
Vehicles, helicopters
and aircrafts are also
available to explore the
Himalayas according to
one's resources, taste
and leisure time. But
you still find people in
remote mountain villages
who maintain the age old
traditions and have not
changed for generations.
There is much that is
new and interesting in
the Himalayan villages.
Stan Armington has
rightly said that
"Trekking is neither a
wilderness experience
nor is it a climbing
trip". Even at a height
of 12,000 to 14,000 feet
in secluded valleys,
there are small village
settlements tending
their flocks of sheep
and goats or herds of
Yaks of nomadic
shepherds and Gujjars.
As a result, there are
people on the trail to
guide and help you - the
trekkers. Articles of
daily necessity are also
available in these small
hamlets. Even in the
remote areas one can
easily mix with the
people and 'live off the
land". Most westerners
find it difficult to
comprehend this aspect
and visualize their
trekking trips to be the
same as those organized
in their national parks
or in wilderness area of
their respective
countries.
Almost all the Himalayan
valleys are full of
rural settlements and
the population gradually
thins out with the rise
in altitude. One always
finds people on the
trekking trails and
there is no dearth of
information as to
trekking routes and
directions. Hill people
are traditionally very
hospitable and this adds
pleasure to trekking in
the Himalayas more than
anywhere else. Some
people believe that
trekking in the
Himalayas is a climbing
trip where they have to
negotiate rocky cliffs,
thick jungles and
uncharted routes. But
this is not so. In
almost all Himalayan
regions, the local
people have well
developed trails. There
are routes from one
village to the other,
between adjoining
mountain pastures and
across well defined high
altitude passes, where
people travel from one
valley to other for
trade, cultural
exchanges, religious
activities and inter -
marriages.
These mountain trails
and high passes normally
do not require any
mountaineering skills or
artificial climbing
aids. Of course, at
places, they are covered
with snow and may have
crevasses. However,
these obstacles can
usually be crossed
without the aid of
mountaineering equipment
like ropes and pitons.
There are only a few
difficult treks which
need mountaineering
techniques or equipment.
An example is the trek
to the Nanda Devi
Sanctuary in India or a
trek across several high
passes which require
special equipment to
negotiate the glaciers.
Trekking is more
enjoyable than climbing
the peaks and offers
spectacular scenic
beauty. The Himalayan
region, till now, has
been comparatively less
affected by the modern
urban civilization with
its industrial
pollution. It provides
an opportunity to be in
natural surroundings and
to get away from the
milling crowds of the
cities. The trekker
usually returns home
rejuvenated, and with
new enthusiasm to take
up the challenges of
city life.
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