Expedition Diary
Expedition Diary
Expedition Diary
By Ankur Jhunjhunwala
Contents
Contents 2
Preface 3
On and Off the Hermit’s Trail 3
The Milky Night, the Starry Way and I was Stumped! 5
Lost and Found! 6
On a Rampage 7
Independent and High 7
The End of a Beginning 9
Appendices 10
Bio-Data of members 10
Itinerary 11
Map 12
Summary of Expenses 13
Pictures 14
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Chau Chau Kang Nilda (6303)
Preface
My relation with mountains has been long and beautiful. Not that I have climb climbed
ed many peaks or
attained great heights, but having been born in the beautiful hills of Shillong, mountains
mounta have always
made me feel at home. Thus, it was not surprising when I got addicted to the sport of trekking and
climbing after having been introduced to in 2005
2005-06!
My first trek was to the ‘Double Decker Living Root Bridge’ in Shillong (inset). The short
hort trek fuelled my
determination and soon I found
nd myself returning to the jungles and the hills more often. I also took to
caving in the hills around Shillong. This was equally
exhilarating. My first major trek was that to Dodital and
Darwa Top in March of 2008. Ever since, my m love of the
high altitude and of challenging terrains has only
multiplied with every new trip and when in the
mountains with every next step.
As part of my preparation for the tas task that I had set for myself, I took to exerting myself at every
opportunity. A short stint with rock climbing in Nanital, time spent at the gym or in the pool was all with
an eye on the task. In June 2009, I finally began my hunt for a peak which would be not very technical
and yet challenging, requiring a not very long expedition, and yet high. After much research and
discussion, the Chau Chau Kang Nilda (CCKN) was picked, and after much effort a team was build and a
plan was put in place. I was very excit
excited
ed when I left Delhi for Manali on August 8, 2009!
However, once in Manali, I realized that I was without a team once more. Of the four members, other
than me, who were scheduled to join me, one had been held back by work, another had fallen ill, one
was out of reach and could not be contacted and the forth decided to go on a trek instead. Though
stranded for once, I decided to stick to the plan. In Manali, I was able to get another enthusiast, Mr
Pritamsingh, on to the team. When he and I were packing our sacks for the days ahead, we were
introduced to members of a climbing team from Kolkata who were set to attempt the CCKN as well. It I
was surprising because they too had permission from the Indian Mountaineering Foundation (IMF) for
accent on the same peak,, through the same route and at the same time as us (IMF does not allow two
teams on the same peak at the same time!). Anyways, we decided to join the team from Kolkata for this
expedition.
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Chau Chau Kang Nilda (6303)
August 10: I went for an early morning bath to the famous hot water spring of the Vashist Temple in
Manali. On my walk to the temple that was four kilometers away,
I met and mingled with few locals and was able to appreciate the
real Manali. The bath in the spring, though refreshing, drained me
of all energy for a while. Highlight of the day was ‘SIDDU.’ This, I
found to be an amazing steamed dish of wheat flour stuffed with
a paste of poppy seeds. The fact that poppy seeds were used gave
the real kick. The dish was beautifully tasteful, non-addictive,
devoid of drugs, made of illegal seeds that are expensive, and one
to which my footsteps would return in the near future.
Hot Water Spring, Manali
August 11: The day began early as we took the 0500 hrs bus to Kaza. The team, now 26 strong (including
24 members of the Kolkata group), was all enthused about doing the summit. In route, we passed
through mesmerizing valleys, mostly cold, dry and windy, and through the world famous Rothang Pass
(3978 meters) and the Kunzum Pass (4551 meters), neither of which stood out in any way from the rest
of the equally beautiful valley. On way, I met a Mr Anurag from Delhi, who was excited about things like
travelling and photography, as I was, and we decided to plan future trips together.
We reached Kaza at about 1700 hours in the evening, and proceeded to Langza directly from there.
Langza is a beautiful high village (4375 meters) in the lap of CCKN. Behind the village, the peak rises
majestically, 2000 meters in the sky! The first clear view of the peak (we had glimpse of the peak on way
to Kaza) caused me to respect it. I was confronted by the might and enormity of the mountain, which I
had not been able to appreciate earlier. I was all the more excited about the journey to the top.
August 12: I woke up to a bright and sunny day. The team had decided to call
it rest and acclimatization! Langza is famous for the sea fossils that are
abundantly found in and around the village, and not surprisingly, I found
myself day-packed to go scavenging! Pritam and I spent the whole of the
morning and a better half of the afternoon breaking stones along the river,
in the canyon behind the village. It was amazing how fossils of what
resembled snails were beautifully embedded within stones. We collected Fossils found near Langza
quite a few.
We returned to our ‘school’ to a late lunch and an unfolding drama. The villagers at Langza told us that
we would need the permission of the village heads before we could proceed to CCKN. Without the
permission, they informed, we would not be allowed to proceed, and no support, whatsoever, would be
provided to us. Our best guess was that this was a tactic to squeeze some money out of us in the form of
donations and gifts. We waited for the next day when we would meet the village heads.
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Chau Chau Kang Nilda (6303)
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Chau Chau Kang Nilda (6303)
August 13: Much reasoning and persuasion at the meeting yielded no results. The villagers decided not
to let us proceed. The pretext was a superstition that climbing the CCKN leads to bad weather and this
would ruin their ‘pea crop’ just at the time of harvest. All our
explanation fell on deaf ears. We would get no support (ponies and
porters to the base camp) and would not be allowed to proceed in
that direction. For once all seemed lost!
CCKN was not to be, at least not this time, but the team was reluctant to return without any ascent. I
was completely lost, and didn’t know what to do. While the rest of the members decided to attempt an
unnamed peak near the Kunzum Pass, I was still not sure. All my planning, all that effort and I wanted to
do the CCKN! After much brooding, I realized that I was left with no other option, but to join the rest of
the members at Kunzum Pass.
I packed again and joined the team on the way back to Kunzum Pass. As time passed, the mood
lightened slowly. Soon we were close and the Chandra-Bhaga (CB) range came in view. The majestic
mountains lifted my spirits again, and the photographer in me lost all sense of remorse and I clicked
away into my own world. We set up camp just before the Kunzum Pass at 4515 meters. It was a
beautiful site.
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Chau Chau Kang Nilda (6303)
On a Rampage
August 14: This was a rest and acclimatization day, again! While I realized the value of being in a team, I
was also getting restless with all the ‘rest’ days. Looking around I saw a lot of high peaks in the 5000
meters range, and decided to summit some of these. They were mostly trekking peaks and involved
trotting on a lot of scree. I decided to begin by summiting a peak just off the base camp. I called it Peak
‘1c’, as it was the third most prominent peak on the same ridge.
Pritam and I started on towards the peak at a slow pace, chatting all the time. The climb turned out to
be steeper than we had anticipated. We reached the summit (4900 meters) after some slipping and
scrambling on the scree. At the top, we were welcomed by a very beautiful sight of the landscape
beyond the peak. The flora at the summit also fascinated me.
August 15: I woke up and peeked out of my tent at the beautiful morning in the sixty-two year young
Independent India. For some strange reason, it seemed to me like everything around me was
celebrating that day – the smile of the mighty mountains, the glow of the sun on the snow and the grass,
the gurgle of the threshold brook, the grazing sheep at a distance, the wind flapping the tents and in my
hair, the blue sky and the bright clouds; everything seemed happy,
extending a smile to brighten the day and celebrate the occasion.
Obviously this brightened my mood too, and that of others in our
camp. We had to celebrate this day, and we did!
As a team, we hoisted the national flag at our camp and sang the
national anthem with pride. Subsequently, we decided to hoist the
flag on a nearby peak ‘1a.’ The climb up to this peak was long and Flag hoisting at Base Camp
on scree. We scrambled onto the top (5035 meters) after about three hours of climbing. During this
accent, I also managed to summit the peaks 1c (again) and 1b (4960 meters).
At the top, the team paid homage to the peak, the mother earth, the country and hoisted the ‘Tricolour’
with the feeling of patriotism running high in all.
August 16: Today I had hoped that we would proceed to Camp I (High Camp) which was at a trekking
distance of four hours. However, much to my frustration, the team decided to call it ‘rest and
acclimatization’ day. The weather too, reflected my mood as the morning was engulfed in mist and light
rain. Both Pritam and I were irked. However, with nothing else to do, we decided to day-pack to a
nearby ‘Peak 2b’ (5200 meters). For this peak, we needed to take a detour on route our ultimate goal,
the ‘Peak 3a.’ We trekked through some snow before we were on the summit 3 hours after starting
from base camp. It was on the summit that we decided to leave the group from Kolkata and proceed at
our own pace to the ‘Peak 3a’ the very next day. We returned to base camp in high spirits!
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Chau Chau Kang Nilda (6303)
August 17: The day started early at the camp. Pritam and I discussed our plan to break-off with the rest
of the group. As we had come as a team from Manali, the group from Kolkata had taken upon
themselves to arrange the climbing gear. However, we learnt, and to our horror, that the group was not
equipped for a rocky peak as the preparation was with a
particular focus on CCKN. The rest of the team had decided
to attempt only the peaks ‘3e’ and ‘3f’ instead of ‘3a’ as
was planned. This was a real put-off!
‘3a’ was to our south rising mightily for another three hundred or so meters into the sky which was still
clouded. Sadly though, we realized that it would be extremely dangerous to attempt ‘3a’ without
equipment from that ridge. The south-west face was a very steep fall (about 85 degrees) to the valleys
over six hundred meters away. The south-east face could offer a rough climb on rock. However, a closer
examination revealed ‘dead-rock’, something which we didn’t want to risk. Pritam and I settled on ‘3b.’
This is as far as we would get in this expedition.
As the weather cleared, we clicked on pictures to our heart’s content. Try as we might, our cameras
could not capture the beautiful landscape as we saw it. That image we have in our hearts alone! After an
hour on the peak, we began our descent. A quick lunch, a stop at a high lake – where floated double hills
and shadow; and a chat with the rest of the group who were setting up the high camp, later, we were at
the base camp. Here we put up for the night.
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Chau Chau Kang Nilda (6303)
August 19: Today was a very special day for me in many ways. For on, I had learnt that my friend Pritam
was an expert para-glider, and promised me a long flight from
Maadi to Kothi. The 20 minutes flight was an ‘out-of-this-
world’ experience for me! It left in my mind images of the earth
as I had never seen before. I can still feel the rush of the wind in
my ears sometimes.
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Chau Chau Kang Nilda (6303)
Itinerary
Actual Itinerary:
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Chau Chau Kang Nilda (6303)
Map
Ranges 1, 2, 3
CCKN
Fig: Map showing the location of the planned peak – CCKN and the climbed peaks
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Chau Chau Kang Nilda (6303)
Pictures
Fig: CCKN – Standing tall behind the Langza village (Aug 12 ’09)
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Chau Chau Kang Nilda (6303)
Fig: The play of light on the might mountain at sunrise (Aug 12 ’09)
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Chau Chau Kang Nilda (6303)
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Chau Chau Kang Nilda (6303)
Fig: Peaks ‘1a’, ‘1b’ and ‘1c’ from base camp (Aug 14 ’09)
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Chau Chau Kang Nilda (6303)
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Chau Chau Kang Nilda (6303)
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Chau Chau Kang Nilda (6303)
Fig: With the team from Kolkata on Peak ‘1a’ (Aug 15 ’09)
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Chau Chau Kang Nilda (6303)
Fig: The Peaks ‘3a/b/c/d/e/f’; view from Peak ‘2b’ (Aug 16 ’09)
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Chau Chau Kang Nilda (6303)
Fig: Pritam (left) and Ankur (right) on Peak ‘3b’; Peak ‘3a’ in the backdrop (Aug 17 ’09)
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Chau Chau Kang Nilda (6303)
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Chau Chau Kang Nilda (6303)
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Chau Chau Kang Nilda (6303)
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