|
Rainbow Welcome in Arang Kel |
Day
9: Tuesday, August 26, 2014
Bye-Bye Taobat
After spending six days it was the time to leave our first Neelum destination
– Taobat. We had to go back to Kel to hike to Arang
Kel – which had created a lot of buzz in the local traveler community in
the recent years due to its majestic landscape. Last night, Abdul Hai confirmed
our seats in the Kel bound ‘public transport’ jeep and instructed us to be
ready as early as 06:30 in the morning. Instead of two, we booked four seats,
the whole row behind the driver seat, for convenience. (Cost: 4x250 = PKR 1,000
– ~USD 10).
When we woke up in the morning, before sunrise, it was overcast and then
started drizzling also. The jeep arrived around 07:30, a bit late, most
probably because of the precipitation. In the meanwhile, Abdul Hai arranged a
raincoat and then helped us in transferring the luggage to the other side of
the bridge where the jeep driver honked to report his arrival. Making our way
through the front door, we squeezed in the rustic four-wheeler.
Reaching Taobat was not East Logistically
but Leaving it was difficult, Emotionally
During our stay in Taobat, the easygoing Abdul Hai became part of our
life. He was always available; smiling, helping, and trying to make it memorable
for us – an absolutely dependable person. We all had wet eyes responding to his
waving goodbye!
No doubt that reaching the heavenly dead-end village was logistically difficult
in the first place, but leaving that blissful piece of earth was not easy
either. It was one of the most beautiful places I had ever seen and the most
satisfying experience ever. The fresh
unadulterated air, the pure mineral water, simple but chemical-free food, the
stunning scenery, and above all the hospitality and friendliness of locals; we
will be cherishing those moments throughout our life inshallah.
The Jeep Business
The jeep we sat in was plying on Gurez Valley road, i.e. Taobat –
Kel, which was a tough trek, so much so that it were only four-wheelers which
could be used as public transport. For a given day, around 4-5 jeeps make Kel –
Taobat round trips in addition to the ones which only provide for the ‘standing
facility’ in the open air trunk. Taobat – Muzaffarabad ones looked the most
spacious, maybe because they also carry the load while coming back to Taobat.
Muzaffarabad bound jeeps also cover more distance, taking it 3 days each for
the complete round trip. Every evening at-least 3 jeeps depart Muzaffarabd for
Taobat in addition to the occasional ones which leave in the daytime.
Regardless of the route they ply, all the jeeps were remarkably
antique, at-least 30-40 years old models, or even older. As in the other remote
areas of the Northern Pakistan, they are the lifeline of the local life without
which it would be even more primitive and slower. This makes it the most
important business of the area. Jeep owners generally belong to the more
affluent, and influential, families. Even jeep drivers are revered upon highly
not only because of their life-saving, or otherwise, maneuvers but also because
they bring in the updated news, and rumors, from the outside world.
Life in the Jeep
Hilmat village was our first stop which was located next to Taobat
where we recovered our National Identity Cards, CNICs, deposited at the
military check-post. The town was more of a military base, probably the brigade
headquarter, or something like that, overlooking the Line of Control around Gurez Valley. As the jeep moved
ahead to the hamlets of Nikro and Karimabad we got a chance to see the local
life more closely. It stopped at every village, and at times in between also,
to swallow more commuters, and then some more. Although it was an ‘advanced
booking’ system and was supposed to run ‘seat by seat’, the conductor could not
succumb to the ‘demand’ and filled it to the maximum.
Soon he started eyeing our ‘empty looking’ seats as well. It was not
decent of us to occupy that much space when our companions were literally
sitting on each other, however, we did not want to make it any tougher for the
kids, so I declined the advances politely. He did not pursue that further and
the new normal was established inside the vehicle. The front seat was stuffed
with three women and one teenager in addition to the driver, ustaad, who afterwards started
instructing the newcomers to scramble at the roof! Among all that chaos, kids
found it interesting to interact with local children jumbled up in their
parents’ laps behind our seats.
The Breakneck Jeep Journey was
Mesmerizingly Beautiful Also
The journey continued with all the twists and turns of the trek which
was gaining and losing height intermittently along with the winding river. The
landscape was breathtaking with dense pine forests all around. After every few
minutes, a waterfall was coming down the hills adding more beauty to the
already spectacular views. Some of the waterfalls were on the other side of the
river while some were right on the trek we were passing through causing sporadic
splashes. After leaving behind a dozen villages – Phulwai, Sardari, Janwai, et
all – we finally reached Kel at around midday.
Arrived at Kel; the Boring and
Harsh Reality
I found Kel an unimpressive sprawling dirt town, which only turned
uglier with the rain converting the mud on the road into a filthy sludge. Or
maybe I was dejected over leaving the dreamlike Taobat. In any case, we wanted
to climb directly to Arang Kel without staying overnight in Kel so we dropped
off from the jeep at Arang Kel junction which was located at the tail end of
the main road.
The weather was still overcast – a bad omen for the 3+ hours hike,
which could get slippery and dangerous. That made us change the mind and we
postponed the trek for the next day. Leaving Urooba and kids at the junction with
the luggage I looked around for a decent room and finally ended up at New
Sardar Sarhad Hotel, after peeking into a few other shoddy options. Located at the
far end of the road, Sardar Hotel was not too encouraging too; claustrophobic
rooms, gloomy corridor and obsolete décor. However, it was the best of the available
options. I negotiated hard before bringing in the troupe hoping that the weather
would get better the following day. (PKR 1,000 per night for the double room)
The whole tiring episode of searching, negotiating, and shifting the
luggage in the room took around 2-3 hours. In the meanwhile, we had belated
lunch, Daal Lobya, from Sardar Hotel and
then went out for a stroll around town. The town was actually a couple of
furlongs dirt trek, one side of which was encroached by a messy array of even
dirtier looking restaurants, grocery stores, and barber shops while the other
side was occupied mostly by a military camp, which was the only neat structure
on the ground.
It was a busy road, with all sorts of smoke spewing vehicles – jeeps,
rocket buses, wagons, coasters, and even sedans – arriving and departing. In
this muddle, we wandered around aimlessly for an hour; had soup from a roadside
vendor for Rs. 10 – supposedly made of free range (desi) chicken, had tea from another hotel, refilled kids’ medicines
from a well stocked military pharmacy, called back home from a 19th
century telephone booth, did window shopping around souvenir shops, had more
tea, and then returned back to our room, bored and tired to the core.
While going to the bed, we were discussing the upcoming challenge
ahead; ~1,000 feet hike to Arang Kel which we resolved to undertake the
following day.
Day
10: Wednesday, August 27, 2014
Arang Kel – the New Darling of
Pakistani Travelers
Fortunately, the sky was clear when we woke up in the morning – a good
omen for the hike. We had breakfast, re-arranged our bags, handed over one
extra backpack to the staff for safe custody and left the hotel at 10:00 am. I
checked with the hotel staff for the porter but they demanded PKR 2,000, which
looked too much. We had one big backpack, one medium sized daypack, and a
stroller for the kids, which we distributed among ourselves and reached the
Arang Kel junction passing through Kel bazaar.
First part of the Arang Kel trek, from the junction on the main road to
the army check-post on the other side of the river, was a jeepable track,
however, we hardly saw any vehicles around. So we kept walking; first passed a government
school where ninth grade students were coming out after their exams, then
crossed a better looking tourist motel probably owned by the government, then
descended down to the river which we needed to cross to start the ascent.
Registering with the Police and
then with the Army
At the start of the bridge, there was a police check-post where a
constable noted our details in the register after asking regular questions;
where were we from and how many days we wanted to stay uphill, etc. He also
wanted to retain my National Identity Card, CNIC, but I somehow managed to keep
him away from that. He was polite and friendly otherwise. A bunch of kids spotted
us and gathered there to watch the ‘show’! Out of hospitality, the policeman instructed
one of the elder kids to carry the backpack, the big one, for us. That was like
a boon from nowhere, as we were already tired even before starting the actual
hike, but I was reluctant in availing the favor. The policeman insisted and assured
that it would be helpful so we gave up.
Across the bridge, the same drill repeated at the Army check post. They
registered us, asked same questions, wanted to deposit my CNIC which I once
again avoided, and seeing our sorry state instructed another ‘cigarette-smoking’
teenager, who was already on his way up, to carry the other backpack. Resultantly,
we were only left with two kids and the
stroller. Even with the reduced load, I thought of throwing away the pram which
was only adding weight to it. In addition, I was steering Misha also who was enjoying
the adventure. But Mikael refused to walk anymore so Urooba had to carry him
along. As a result she exhausted soon but thankfully one of our porters had
mercy on us and carried him on the shoulders.
The Hike Got Steeper and Greener
A furlong ahead, we left the wide track and entered into the jungle
trail following our porters. It was that point where the slope increased sharply
making it tougher for us. On the halfway there was a beautiful stream coming down
from the dense jungle. We took that as an opportunity for the much needed
stopover while one of our porters fired his cigarette. The smoker guy was the
friendlier of the two while the other looked rather quiet and jaded. It was already two hours that we started the
trek and we only covered half the distance. Pulling ourselves together we again
resumed the hike which was getting steeper and greener with every passing turn.
Arang Kel Chairlift; A Case of Kashmir
Government’s Failure
Far in the sky we could see a hanging yellow cubical. It was the much
touted Arang Kel chairlift which we had been hearing about for last couple of days.
Unfortunately, it was out of order and that too right from the day when it was
commissioned. Talk of the town was that Sardar Atiq, the former
Prime Minister of Azad Jammu and Kashmir, while passing through the area in his
helicopter, spontaneously gave orders to construct a cable car over River
Neelum. That would have helped locals, as well as travelers, by cutting down
the distance between Kel and Arang Kel. Sardar Sahab, with the mindset of a Mughal Emperor, ordered
to complete that within one month. The bureaucracy showed the required efficiency
and hired a contractor from the KPK province whose only experience was construction
of a meager ropeway on Swat River, which is called douly in the local language. Khan
Sahab completed the task within the stipulated timeframe, for a few million
Rupees, even without a proper feasibility.
The result was obvious. The ropes could not bear the shear and resultantly
one of the supporting wires broke in the test run. From then, fate of the
chairlift had been hanging and was well reflected in the shape of the omnipresent
yellow cubical. There were rumors that a new contract had been awarded, this
time to a proper engineering firm, so let’s keep the fingers crossed. In my
opinion, replacing the tough trek altogether with the machine ride may reduce the
Arnag Kel fun, however, if this infringement can cut down the initial part only,
i.e. the river crossing, it would be the most effective solution.
We were not Welcome in Arang Kel
At the hill station, we wanted to stay for two nights, or more. For the
night stay we did not book a room in advance and was instead relying on the information
I collected through friends and PakWheels. At
the start of the trail we crossed a chap who claimed to be the owner of a cottage,
Awami Guesthouse. He apologized, as a mark of hospitality, that he could not accompany
us but assured us that he would inform his assistant at the top who would come
down to pick us up. The assistant, Younus – a very cunning looking local oldie,
only showed up when we were already there, resting near the tuck shop right at
the entrance of the plateau. He was only interested in taking us to his place
and did not want us inspecting other options. He even misguided us as there
were a couple of well furnished rooms available behind the shop, which we only
got to know when it was too late.
We did not like Awami Guesthouse and instead settled at the Musk Deer
Resort located nearby. Staff at the resort did not look supportive either
except for the young manager, who belonged to Muzaffarabad. He excused us about
the unavailability of chef and suggested to bring food from the same tuck shop,
which was located at a distance of a couple of furlongs and was actually an
army encampment. We were expecting much more hospitality and friendliness but
got disappointed with the cold shoulder, or maybe our threshold had been raised
by the treatment we got in Taoabt.
On the other hand, one of the porters also started bugging me. Although
they were tagged with us for gratis but I did not want to be a slave runner and
offered them Rs. 400 each, based on my Fairy Meadow experience a couple of
years back. The quiet guy was asking for 1,000 instead and gave me quite a
headache before getting lost. The other one, Tufail, was satisfied whom I
politely suggested to give this money to his mother rather than wasting on the
smoke, but I doubt he would have heeded that.
We were not only tired to the core but disappointed also with the behavior
of locals. With the day passing fast, it was getting cold, making us to think
about shortening our stay and leave the next morning. We were not even interested
in the beauty of the place anymore.
Best was Yet to Come
But as they say, best things in life come free and without notice. So
first arrived the same Sialkoti group – whom we met at Taobat and then a fully fledged
rainbow showed up right behind our cottage.
It was a wow moment for us; all the frustration and fatigue vanished quickly
and we all were screaming and shouting our lungs out with the full energy. It
was a stunning, crystal clear, full arc in front of us which stayed there for
more than an hour till around sunset. That was the most beautiful moment of our
whole trip, or maybe of the lifetime. The tough hike and the expenses, all was paid
off! We were in complete ecstasy.
Getting Lost While Chasing the Rainbow
When I came back to my senses, I noticed a group of confused looking
young travelers who looked in search of something. I was more intrigued by
their typical Karachiite accent, which I heard for the first time after 10 days.
They looked in trouble. They told me that they started the hike very late –
again a typical Karachiite trait – from Kel and somewhere on the trek they got
a glimpse of the rainbow. Mesmerized with the sighting their group scattered and
started chasing the rainbow leaving the original trail. So they were looking for
their lost group members and were afraid because of the looming darkness. Running
short of time and light, they decided to go down to Kel, where they planned to
stay overnight, and to wait for their friends there. Hopefully they would have
regrouped without any loss.
Bonfire with Sialkoti Friends
With the sunset, the Silakoti group started the bonfire and invited me
to join as well. They were long time friends and had been traveling together every
year. It was a nice chatting session; we shared our traveling stories, introduced
our personal life, and had random discussions especially on politics. They were
interested to know about the political situation in Karachi, especially about MQM
and target killings, which I tried to explain based on my views, while I was
interested in the political situation on ground in Punjab, especially about Imran
Khan’s popularity.
Around the wood fire, the discussion continued with a frequent pinch of
pun followed with a loud burst of laughter. Contrary to the daytime when every
second on the hike looked so long, time had been passing unnoticeably. It was the
perfect environment – exactly what a traveler would crave for. The aromatic
firewood was adding more flavor to the ambiance but at the same time it started
irritating my bronchi forcing me to say goodbye to that unforgettable company.
|
Getting Ready |
|
Jeep View: Leaving Taobat Early in the Morning |
|
Jeep View: Sunflowers in Front of a House Looked Like a Fashion |
|
Jeep View: Stream Gutting Down to the River After Passing through the Jeep Track |
|
Jeep View: A Typical Guraiz Valley Hamlet |
|
Jeep View: The Tough Guraiz Valley Road |
|
Jeep View: River Neelum Flowing in Guraiz Valley |
|
Jeep View Passing Sardari Village |
|
Jeep View: The Furious Nala Coming from the Mountain |
|
The Jeep Crossing an Enroute Bridge |
|
Jeep View: A Millitary Camp Nearby |
|
Jeep View: The Staircase |
|
Jeep View: The River Getting Wider Close to Kel |
|
Jeep View: A Welcome or Goodbye Depending Upon Where are you Coming from! |
|
Jeep View: Goodbye Guraiz Valley |
|
Jeep View: Tent Houses at the River Bank |
|
Jeep View: Just Outside Kel |
|
Jeep View: Almost in Kel |
|
Ustaad - The Jeep Driver |
|
A Closer Look into the Interior |
|
Yes This Boy Traveled Half Outside |
|
Usad Exchanging News on the Road |
|
Helping a Broken One |
|
We Dropped Off at Arang Kel Junction |
|
Work in Progress, Forever! |
|
The Arang Kel Junction |
|
Parbat Hotel Kel - Not the One We Wanted |
|
Brother and Sister |
|
Bakarwal in Kel |
|
Lahori Hotel Kel - Again Substandard for Us! |
|
Sardar Sarhad Hotel Kel; Just Bearable |
|
A Pharmacy in Kel |
|
Peeking inside Kel Army Camp |
|
First Part of the Arang Kel Trek |
|
Kel Suburb was Better than the Bazaar |
|
Tourist Motel Kel - We Missed That |
|
Mikael's Group Photo with School Kids |
|
We Descended Dowo to This Bridge to Start the Hike |
|
Waterfall on Arang Kel Trek |
|
The Wooden Bridge on Arang Kel Trek |
|
Our Guides on Arang Kel Trek |
|
Taking Rest Halfway on Arang Kel Trek |
|
The Dysfunctional Arang Kel Chairlift Hanging in the Middle of Nowhere |
|
Dragging the Stroller Proved Useless |
|
Looking Back on the Steep Hike |
|
Misha Feeliing Tired Finally |
|
Looking at Kel from Height |
|
Plantation in a Broken Tree Trunk |
|
Awami Guesthouse Arang Kel - Not Good Enough |
|
On the Way Between Musk Deer Resort and the Army Canteen |
|
The Bonfire |
No comments:
Post a Comment