The tricky trek is called "Sar Pass" in Shivalik range of Himalayas. Sar Pass is at 13,800ft above sea level. We "Die Hard" Trekkers led by Vasu flew to Delhi and took an overnight bus to Bhunter. With a quick breakfast parathas (at least 3 each :-)), we took a local bus to Kasol, where the base camp was located.
"Sar Pass" expedition is organized by YHAI (http://www.yhaindia.org/) for 10 days, it costed Rs 6,090/- per person. Best part of YHAI is, once we report into the base campsite, everyone is treated equal, we are all participants immaterial of what we are in the real world. Everyone has to fall in line, carry a tiffin box for food/pack and a mug for tea/bournvita.
Day 1: Reporting at Basecamp, Kasol (6,500ft)
Report at reception, we submitted the membership form, doctor certification on fitness, with seal and registration id of doc. Tents allotted and we spent rest of the day in Kasol to shop.
Day 2: Acclimatization
Acclimatization is a must to tackle Acute Mountain Sickness (AMS). The symptoms could be vomiting, diorhea, giddiness, diarrhea, severe cold/cough, breathlessness.
We woke up at 5:00am, after the morning formalities, we got the whistle at 5:30am for Tea. More than tea, its the way to make sure everyone is awake :-). At 6:00am, second whistle to line-up for morning exercise, which includes a 2km run outside Kasol. We all form a round and do some hard exercises to heat up the body.
7:30am, we are back at basecamp and soon after breakfast, we lineup again at 8:30am for a 4km climb to get acclimatized.
After climbing for about 1000ft, we will be asked to spend a couple of hours as part of acclimatization. It was 52 people strong group majorly from Bangalore, Pune, Lathur, Mumbai, Gujarat, Kerala. So, we thought of introducing each other. When everyone was asking others to start off, one name came from the crowd, 'James' am from "South Africa", and immediate response, am Naveen from "Uganda", and then everyone turned to Canadian Bro Girish (pakka local), and the rest of peaceful Indians burst into laughter. This icebreaking session helped us started working together as a team.
We still had 1.5 hours left, and what better than playing Dumb Charades. We selected ("forced") the teams for performing at night 8:00pm. Then the cold water bath, every bathroom, we could hear hmmm, ahhhh, ouchhhh for bath with ice cold water. A few smart people chose to bath with hot water, rest of us wanted to truly acclimatize ("save money").
9:00pm entertainment session: AVD (Avadesh from Delhi) was the master of ceremony. All that he had was 4 songs :-(. But, come the moment, everyone rose to the occasion, we had 14 songs, 3 dance performances, the entertainment was unlimited.
Day 3: Acclimatization
After 6:00am exercises, we were asked to pack our rucksacks with at least 5kgs weight to start another practice trek for 8 kms. And again, we spent 2 hours on the peak to get acclimatized. This trek was bit hard and was very helpful.
Day 4: The Real Trek started
After 3 days of acclimatization, hard exercises, we were off to "Sar Pass", the moment had arrived. We were all set at 8:30am to begin our much awaited trek.
We reached Grahan camp by 4:00pm, all in good health, and were asked to dump the rucksacks and come out of tents to get acclimatized to the new altitude. Welcome drink, soup and then started off with dumb charades again :-)). We were given sleeping bags and a blanket. This repeated at all the camps, so only one set of thermals was sufficient.
Day 5: Grahan Camp (7,700ft)
From Grahan onwards we won't be getting mobile signal for next 3 days, in a way, its fun to be away from the mobile and get into the real world. Woke up early by 5:30am, after tea and breakfast, we started off by 8:30am towards Padri.
This was supposed to be a picnic, but still took a good toll on most, we reached Padri at 3:00pm. With at least a few having stomach upset, cold/cough.
Day 6: Padri Camp (9,300ft)
Padri to Mingthatch is the toughest of the entire stretch. While the beginning looks alright, the tough part is at the last 5%. The elevation is almost at 75 degrees and the elevation gain is almost 700 ft.
Day 7: Mingthatch Camp (11,200ft)
We were all very tired of the last 5% climb, but water scarcity meant we needed to use tissue papers. Water source was not strong enough, even drinking water was not sufficient. We all had a good dinner and slept early. AVD gave everyone in the tent a nice massage using the Decathlon water bottle.
Day 8: Nagaru Camp (12,500ft)
After about 3 hours of climb, we reached the most awaited destiny "Sar Pass". Sar in kulluvi means frozen lake. And pass meaning connecting two valleys. We got to see the wonderful frozen lake.
After all the photo sessions and knowledge gathering, we had to walk almost 4kms in snow. Best part of the trek. At times, the legs dipped into the 2-feet snow. Rarely, the support sticks went in 4.5 feet down. And the fun part, throwing snow balls at each other. Everyone got hit with at least one snow ball.
Day 9: Beskari Camp (11,000ft)
A sigh of relief for everyone that the peak was achieved, a sense of achievement prevailed in the camp. No one was ready to stand up inline for the assembly :-). We all were much relieved that we did not need to climb anymore. We met awesome Camp Leader Mr. Bhavesh, he shared his water paintings of Bekari surroundings.
3 people were not feeling well, but tablets and good sleep, everyone was up and healthy to climb down.
Day 10: Bhandak Thach (8,000ft)
Day 10: BhandakThach to Bharshani and to Kasol Base Camp
We started off from Bhandakthach with a heavy heart, we gave our experience and farewell speeches. Praised our good hearted guides for remarkably taking us through the mountains safely. 51 people completed the trek, only Hemalatha aunty had to return back as she was not feeling well due to high altitude.
Special Thanks to AVD, Krishna, Rafid, Naveen, Pramod, Bharat-1, Yogitha, Shivu, Bharat-2 for helping fellow trekkers on many occasions, without these guys trek would not have been complete.
When we all thought we reached safely, Vijay fell of the slope when he was just 20m away from the flat roads. That was a bad fall, he had a bump on his forehead and a hairline fracture on his right hand which was detected only in Kullu, with no x-ray facility at Manikaran and Kasol :-(. We hope he recovers soon.
We reached Bharshani at 1:30pm, took a cab to Kasol basecamp and after the formalities, received the certificates and headed back to Delhi to catch our flight back to Bangalore.
A dream called "Sar Pass" will remain in our hearts for a long long time. I must thank each one of the 52 in our group for making it a fun filled trek. We were more than a family, helping each other when needed. Hope to trek again with you folks.
Finally, our "Die Hard Trekkers" anthem:
"Sar Pass" expedition is organized by YHAI (http://www.yhaindia.org/) for 10 days, it costed Rs 6,090/- per person. Best part of YHAI is, once we report into the base campsite, everyone is treated equal, we are all participants immaterial of what we are in the real world. Everyone has to fall in line, carry a tiffin box for food/pack and a mug for tea/bournvita.
Report at reception, we submitted the membership form, doctor certification on fitness, with seal and registration id of doc. Tents allotted and we spent rest of the day in Kasol to shop.
Day 2: Acclimatization
Acclimatization is a must to tackle Acute Mountain Sickness (AMS). The symptoms could be vomiting, diorhea, giddiness, diarrhea, severe cold/cough, breathlessness.
We woke up at 5:00am, after the morning formalities, we got the whistle at 5:30am for Tea. More than tea, its the way to make sure everyone is awake :-). At 6:00am, second whistle to line-up for morning exercise, which includes a 2km run outside Kasol. We all form a round and do some hard exercises to heat up the body.
7:30am, we are back at basecamp and soon after breakfast, we lineup again at 8:30am for a 4km climb to get acclimatized.
After climbing for about 1000ft, we will be asked to spend a couple of hours as part of acclimatization. It was 52 people strong group majorly from Bangalore, Pune, Lathur, Mumbai, Gujarat, Kerala. So, we thought of introducing each other. When everyone was asking others to start off, one name came from the crowd, 'James' am from "South Africa", and immediate response, am Naveen from "Uganda", and then everyone turned to Canadian Bro Girish (pakka local), and the rest of peaceful Indians burst into laughter. This icebreaking session helped us started working together as a team.
We still had 1.5 hours left, and what better than playing Dumb Charades. We selected ("forced") the teams for performing at night 8:00pm. Then the cold water bath, every bathroom, we could hear hmmm, ahhhh, ouchhhh for bath with ice cold water. A few smart people chose to bath with hot water, rest of us wanted to truly acclimatize ("save money").
9:00pm entertainment session: AVD (Avadesh from Delhi) was the master of ceremony. All that he had was 4 songs :-(. But, come the moment, everyone rose to the occasion, we had 14 songs, 3 dance performances, the entertainment was unlimited.
Day 3: Acclimatization
After 6:00am exercises, we were asked to pack our rucksacks with at least 5kgs weight to start another practice trek for 8 kms. And again, we spent 2 hours on the peak to get acclimatized. This trek was bit hard and was very helpful.
Day 4: The Real Trek started
After 3 days of acclimatization, hard exercises, we were off to "Sar Pass", the moment had arrived. We were all set at 8:30am to begin our much awaited trek.
After all the initial enthusiasm, we started realizing the tuff terrain and took good breaks. We would fill up water at any stream on our way, its the cleanest possible water we could get.
Day 5: Grahan Camp (7,700ft)
From Grahan onwards we won't be getting mobile signal for next 3 days, in a way, its fun to be away from the mobile and get into the real world. Woke up early by 5:30am, after tea and breakfast, we started off by 8:30am towards Padri.
Day 6: Padri Camp (9,300ft)
Padri to Mingthatch is the toughest of the entire stretch. While the beginning looks alright, the tough part is at the last 5%. The elevation is almost at 75 degrees and the elevation gain is almost 700 ft.
Day 7: Mingthatch Camp (11,200ft)
We were all very tired of the last 5% climb, but water scarcity meant we needed to use tissue papers. Water source was not strong enough, even drinking water was not sufficient. We all had a good dinner and slept early. AVD gave everyone in the tent a nice massage using the Decathlon water bottle.
Nagaru campsite was the highest camp in Sar Pass trek. Nagaru provides wonderful view of several valleys and peaks from here. From here, Sar pass was just 3-hours away. The highest camp had the highest quality of food as well. Hot hot gulab jamoon in this ice cold weather was unbelievably good, and everyone's aim was to steal one of the jamoons from other's plate.
Only here, as soon as the sun sets, we are expected to stay inside the tent for the cold waves. So, 6:00pm dinner and 7:00pm bournvita and 8:00pm lights off.
We woke up at 2:00am, and after morning formalities, tea was served at 3:00am, breakfast at 3:30am and pack lunch at 4:00am, we started off from the camp at exactly 4:30am.
Meanwhile, Mr Kirti Sir and his son Prajot woke up at midnight and setup their DSLR camera for this beautiful pic of our galaxy Milky Way:
After about 3 hours of climb, we reached the most awaited destiny "Sar Pass". Sar in kulluvi means frozen lake. And pass meaning connecting two valleys. We got to see the wonderful frozen lake.
After all the photo sessions and knowledge gathering, we had to walk almost 4kms in snow. Best part of the trek. At times, the legs dipped into the 2-feet snow. Rarely, the support sticks went in 4.5 feet down. And the fun part, throwing snow balls at each other. Everyone got hit with at least one snow ball.
After the 4-km walk, came the fantastic part of snow slide. The slide was almost 400meters. Everyone went thru the awesome slide, for an easy ride downstairs, with elbows as breaks. Krupa was about to overrun the slide, and luckily stopped. Canadian Bro accidentally jumped off, but made good use of the jump and landed downstairs properly. Vasu was in high speed zone almost about to hit Jigisha.
Day 9: Beskari Camp (11,000ft)
A sigh of relief for everyone that the peak was achieved, a sense of achievement prevailed in the camp. No one was ready to stand up inline for the assembly :-). We all were much relieved that we did not need to climb anymore. We met awesome Camp Leader Mr. Bhavesh, he shared his water paintings of Bekari surroundings.
3 people were not feeling well, but tablets and good sleep, everyone was up and healthy to climb down.
Day 10: Bhandak Thach (8,000ft)
"Mini Switzerland" truly is mesmerizing. The snow mountains, tall trees, amazing valley views, vast grass lands, grazing horses, heaven on earth. The plank contest between Sushma, AVD and Swamy was all the start and then Vasu, Krishna, Manoj, Bharath, Shivu, Pramod also took the challenge.
Then it was cricket time. There was 1 batsmen and 1 bowler as per the rule book. Rest of the rules were all out of syllabus. 1 pitch out, 1 six out, 3 leaves out. And there were at least 25 fielders around the poor batsman. Gully, slips, short leg, silly mid on/off, leg slip, hand slip....
Only success criteria was to play as long as possible, because each ball we played as if a bomb was thrown at us.
Day 10: BhandakThach to Bharshani and to Kasol Base Camp
We started off from Bhandakthach with a heavy heart, we gave our experience and farewell speeches. Praised our good hearted guides for remarkably taking us through the mountains safely. 51 people completed the trek, only Hemalatha aunty had to return back as she was not feeling well due to high altitude.
Special Thanks to AVD, Krishna, Rafid, Naveen, Pramod, Bharat-1, Yogitha, Shivu, Bharat-2 for helping fellow trekkers on many occasions, without these guys trek would not have been complete.
When we all thought we reached safely, Vijay fell of the slope when he was just 20m away from the flat roads. That was a bad fall, he had a bump on his forehead and a hairline fracture on his right hand which was detected only in Kullu, with no x-ray facility at Manikaran and Kasol :-(. We hope he recovers soon.
We reached Bharshani at 1:30pm, took a cab to Kasol basecamp and after the formalities, received the certificates and headed back to Delhi to catch our flight back to Bangalore.
A dream called "Sar Pass" will remain in our hearts for a long long time. I must thank each one of the 52 in our group for making it a fun filled trek. We were more than a family, helping each other when needed. Hope to trek again with you folks.
Finally, our "Die Hard Trekkers" anthem:
"We are we are trekkers
1st 3 days acclimatize…
1st 3 days acclimatize….
we do mmmmorning walking
we do vvvvvery tough walking
we are..we are… trekkers
come in a line...count count again
come in a line…count count again
this is called as discipline...
this is called as discipline...
we end the day with hot drinks….
10 o clock…lights off
we are…we are…. trekkers
hard to die hard trekkers
Mundina sala cup namde"