North-East part of
India always seemed a mysterious place to me. Waha ek baar to jaana banta hai bhai. I got my chance now. Harsha
was at college, Mom was going to baby-sit Adhrit, it was only me and Gopal (my
long-time Guinea-Pig). It started with various options – Sikkim & Bhutan,
Bhutan & NE etc and finally I decided to do a dedicated 10 day Bhutan trip
on a bike. I decided to keep it completely unplanned & ad-hoc. Maybe this
correctly reflects my state of affairs at-least for the next one year. The only
things decided were my start and end dates – 16th to 27th
April. The bike, route, hotels, everything is undecided. So much so, that in
case Gopal doesn’t get his permit, we would probably drive around for 10 days
in Sikkim (That is if we get the bike)!
15th
April - Day 0: The Under-Preparations
I reached home from
Nagpur at 2PM. I had just 15 hrs before I leave and hadn’t started my packing
yet. Gopal leads me in under-preparedness. He plans to go to the tehsildar office today to check if they
can issue him a domicile certificate to prove his Indian-ness! Except for the
documents that Bhutan Immigration Authorities accept – Passport or Voter’s ID
Card, we were carrying all other documents to prove that this man is an Indian.
We had his driving license, ration card, birth certificate, domicile
certificate, affidavit attested by Executive Magistrate and a couple of other
ID cards. If they still don’t allow him then maybe Sikkim is a better place
than Bhutan!!
Vishal and Hoshner
got the golden opportunity :) of sending their photography gear with me to Bhutan so collected the stuff from
IBM office. Spoke to Gautam of Adventures Unlimited for the rental bike. I hope
he sends the bike because I don’t have a backup there.
Gopal came to
Vikhroli at 8PM with Mom, Dad & Adhrit. Adhrit is unwell and when he
finally vomits all that he has eaten during the day, I take him to the doctor.
All okay with him and I finally leave for home at 10 PM.
Gopal called up on my
way home to give the first shocker…his ticket from Kolkata – Badgodra is for 17th
and mine is 16th!! How the @$#* can I do such a @#&^%$# thing. We
cancelled his flight ticket and booked a Tatkal Ticket by Shatabdi Express from
Kolkata to NJP. Now I will reach Siliguri at 2 PM and Gopal at 11 PM – we have
already lost one day.
Everything else looks
small now. We packed everything –food, clothes, and other utilities in one
large bag-pack. We had one bag with my cameras and one with all paper-work.
16th
April – Day 1: Mumbai – Kolkata - Siliguri
Travel anxiety is the
best alarm bell. It just doesn’t let you sleep. I went to bed at 2 AM. Got up
at 2.30, 3.00, 3.15, 3.45, 4.00 and then finally at 4:30 AM. Gave Gopal a
sarcastic remark to wake him…this never used to work earlier but it seems to
work very well these days. Just when I was to leave, Adhrit woke up and seemed
to figure out that he loves me a lot. I had to promise to get him a Yak when I
came. I knew he will not forget this.
It was Gopal’s first
flight..he was super excited. We got an auto to the airport easily. I was delighted
to see Pritam Vywaharkar at the airport. He was travelling to Kolkata in my
flight. I liked the look he gave me wearing Shorts and T Shirt with a bag-pack
on my back. I couldn’t stop myself from talking about business with him. Guess
I really needed this trip to de-tox me from the IBM I had in my veins.
We reached Kolkata
peacefully. Here I take my next flight and Gopal goes to Howrah station to
catch his train. I resisted buying the Lonely Planet book on Bhutan & saved
1000 bucks. I couldn’t resist the samosas and kheer kadam at Kolkata Airport.
80 bucks and several calories consumed.
I met Ganesh from
Adventures Unlimited at Bagdogra Airport. Finally I get to see my ride – a
Maroon Bullet Classic – 350cc. It was in pretty good condition. We drove from
Bagdogra to Siliguri where I would stay till Gopal comes. Siliguri seemed a nice,
small town. Weather was every bit the perfect holiday climate. Gitanjali Guest
House offered us a twin room at 550 bucks which was within our budget. I drove
around Siliguri, had my dinner at “Sona
ki Rasoi”. Sona gave me a nice Punjabi Thaali for just 175 bucks, I knew
this would be the last good meal for some time. Gopal reached NJP at 11 and we
called it a day at 12.
It rained last night.
We started by 6AM. The plan was to complete all formalities and reach as close
to Thimphu if possible. Phuentsholing is about 150 Kms from Siliguri and
Thimphu is a further 170 Kms. We also have the uncertainty over Gopal’s permit.
Shibu, the extra
helpful hotel attendant gave us directions for a short cut to NH 31C which goes
to Guwahati. We have to travel to Hashimira and then turn towards Jaigaon which
is the border town on the Indian side. Then we cross over to Phuentsholing
where we can get all requisite permits and move further inside Bhutan. NH31C is
maintained by the Military for a large portion. The road is amazing. Driving
here especially in the mornings is a pure joy. We passed through several army
establishments, Mahananda Wildlife Sanctuary, a small ghat and crossed river
Teesta. The road then is a straight stretch which passes through several tea
plantations. Sans traffic, we could maintain an average speed of 70 Kmph. After
we cross a place called Baripara, we hit a bad patch. This is probably the
biggest patch of bad road I have ever driven on – almost 10 Kms. The road here
seems non-existent.
With about 3-4 kms to
go, we had our worst nightmares come true….a rear tyre puncture!!! I asked
Gopal to stay with the bike and hitched a hike to Hashimira. There were 2-3
repairmen but the only one available was a Sardarji. Papaji might have had a
bad fight with pepe, he was just in no mood to come but finally after much
coaxing he sent his assistant. We hitched another hike back to the bike. While
these guys were looking at what to do with the bike, I caught hold of an empty
pickup van and managed to get him to drop us along with the bike to Hashimara.
We loaded the bike in the van and came over to Hashimara to get the repairs
done.
Our Ride being repaired at Hashimara |
Back at the
immigration office, we got our permits done within half an hour and then spent
the next half hour discussing our possible routes with Thinleey. He gave us an
animated overview of what to do and where to go in the next 7 days. The
adventure traveller in us wanted to do a cross country travel in Bhutan – get
in from Phentsholing then go to Thimphu, Paro, Punakkha, Bhumthang, Trashigang,
Mongar and exit from Samdrup Jongkar. Just that we had to be Tarzans to do all
this on a Bullet in 7 days. The other extreme was to go only to Thimphu and
Paro and spend 7 days meeting locals, going to villages, knowing culture etc.
This would have been too boring for Gopal though. Finally we decided to keep
the itinerary like the whole trip – unplanned!
The permits issued to
us from Phuentsholing were valid only for 4 days and did not allow entry beyond
Thimphu and Paro. So we had to get the validity extended and get permits for
restricted areas (which is the whole of Bhutan outside the above two cities). I
wondered if they are definitely going to allow me to stay longer and visit more
cities than the two, why don’t they issue me an appropriate permit in the first
instance! Also our bike needed a different permit which is issued by their RSTA
(Road Safety and Transport Authority) aka our RTO. The Indian driving license
is allowed but this permit is needed to carry and Indian Registration vehicle
in Bhutan.
We stayed back at
Phuentsholing in Gelsing Lodge where the manager Mr Shantilal Jain (a Marwari
settled in Phuentsholing) gave us the same cold treatment he gives to every
guest who stays with him. We had our first and last taste of Bhutaneese Food
and concluded that these people definitely have priorities other than tending
to their taste buds. How much more unimaginative can one be than having Rice
with dish of Cheese Sause and Chillies (Rice with Ema Datsi)? We got a local
pre-paid mobile connection from Tashi Cell and then roamed in Phuentsholing
before calling it a day.
18th
April – Day 3: Finally we Enter the Land of Thunder Dragon
I woke up early and
decided to take a walk around the city. Phuentsholing is a nice town with a
large proportion of curious onlookers. They seemed pretty interested in me
taking pictures.
Offices in Bhutan
open by 9 and you can get your work done in no time if you have all the
required documents. The RSTA guys needed copies of the Vehicle papers, Driving
Licenses and a hand written application. True to our nature, we “maska
lagaaoed” the RSTA officer who signs the approval hoping that this should
fasten our permit only to realize that this is not required. He signed my paper
immediately and further went on to apologize that this has taken more time
because they have an audit. Normally this would happen even faster!! (What
world am I in??). The permit was issued in no time and what took up our time
was finding and getting the photocopies. We were finally done by 10.30 and
ready to leave. We were all excited that finally out Bhutan tour was about to
start.
Indo-Bhutan Border on Bhutan Side |
Petrol in Bhutan is
sold by Indian Oil Companies. Plus it is available 10 bucks cheaper than it is
in India. So we filled the Bullet upto the brim and started the journey. The
distance between Phuentsholing and Thimphu is 175 Kms and is winding journey
through the Himalayas. We have to cross an immigration counter just outside
Phuentsholing where we have to produce our Entry and Bike permits and then
started the “washing machine journey”. If one has a GPS phone and Google Maps
installed on it, he should see the roads in Bhutan. When someone wants to go from A to B, he will get a Bhutan Ghat between the two
points. First you take a right turn in which you take a winding path long way
towards the right and then you come back all the way close to where you started
and then move slight ahead and repeat the same. It’s similar to the wash cycle
in a washing machine. First it rotates you clockwise and then rotates you
anti-clockwise!!!
The roads are superb.
You come across some beautiful sights. It slowly starts getting cooler as we
move higher. The highest point on way to Thimphu is about 3500 mts. Most part
of the road is a 2 lane highway. It becomes a single lane ghat road about 100
Kms from Phuentsholing. We stopped at a few places on the way – sometimes to
enjoy the scenic beauty and sometimes to rest our backsides. We planned to
reach by 4 and spend the day roaming around Thimphu. Gopal seemed much worse
than Harsha in pillion riding. Either his discomfort threshold is too low,
or he does some basic mistakes while sitting behind, he just cannot sit behind
long enough. Maybe its just the start of the ride..he will get used to as we go
along. We stopped at a cozy looking hotel for lunch and had first of our Maggie
Noodles for lunch. Rain ensured that we did not start for more than an hour and
then wet, single lane, muddy ghat roads ensured that we drove at an avg speed
of 20Kmph. We finally reached Thimphu at 6PM.
I thought this will make a good picture...Bhutan Roads |
19th
April – Day 4: Thimphu
Agenda for the day was to get Bhutan Permit extended, get permit for Restricted Areas and Extension and Restricted Area permit for the Bike. All the permits have to be done serially!! We spent the better part of the day visiting the Immigration office and then the RSTA in Thimphu.
Our route finalization discussion seemed to go nowhere. We were keen to atleast to go upto Bhumthang as spending 7 days in Thimphu and Paro would be a too “honeymoon style” holiday. This was supposed to be an adventure trip. Bhumthang on the other hand was 250Kms and it seemed impossible to reach there in one day on the bike. Just then we figured out that there are 2 buses which go to Bhumthang at 6AM and 6:30AM. This would reach Bhumthang by 5 PM and seemed perfect. So we decided to dump the bike and take the Bus, as seeing Bhutan was more important than driving in Bhutan and Gopal merrily agreed.
Our route finalization discussion seemed to go nowhere. We were keen to atleast to go upto Bhumthang as spending 7 days in Thimphu and Paro would be a too “honeymoon style” holiday. This was supposed to be an adventure trip. Bhumthang on the other hand was 250Kms and it seemed impossible to reach there in one day on the bike. Just then we figured out that there are 2 buses which go to Bhumthang at 6AM and 6:30AM. This would reach Bhumthang by 5 PM and seemed perfect. So we decided to dump the bike and take the Bus, as seeing Bhutan was more important than driving in Bhutan and Gopal merrily agreed.
Roaming in Thimphu
was fun. There wasn’t much to see but it’s a nice place to move around. We
spoke to shopkeepers, vegetable vendors, “Old Monks” (NO PUN!) to know about
life in Bhutan. Writing about my observations is beyond the scope of this tour
diary but it was nice to see a different way of life. We found a few decent
indian restaurants. Shopping was out of question except for the Yak which I
would have to buy at whatever price available. The King’s castle can be seen at
a distance of 50 mtrs, Taj Tashi you cannot miss on the main street, the market
place, The Buddha point with 60 feet Buddha Idol is a nice place to be. Views
are great and I could feel the IBM getting weeded out of my system!!
An old lady in Thimphu... We kept laughing at each other..she in Dzonkhang and me in English!!! |
Thimphu City as seen from Buddha Point |
Aasmaan
se gire Khajoor Main Atke. This was probably the only thought
in Gopal’s mind all through the bus ride. Even I did not know about this motion
sickness thing Gopal has but it was terrible for him. It started within half an
hour of starting from Thimphu and accompanied him all the way to Bhumthang.
Gopal.....in his bad shape!! |
The roads start from
being okay to bearable and go all the way to bad. It’s a single lane road
throughout and the bus driver drives as if there is one way
traffic…unfortunately it is not this way. So we keep braking, swaying and
dodging other vehicles as we move from one mountain to another. I think the
runway at Paro airport must be one of the few straight roads in Bhutan.
Bhutanese have a
unique feature of constructing buildings on the most precarious positions on
mountains. Houses or monasteries whatever they are, these buildings are
constructed at the absolute edge of mountains. All along the roads, you come
across houses made right on the edge with the mountain on one side and a deep
valley on the other. Apparently they make it so that it merges well with the nature.
A Typical House cum Hotel in Bhutan |
We reached Bhumthang
just before it started getting dark. Phuentsho Guest House was way outside our
budget. 1250 per night was steep but not enough to push me to search for other
alternatives in the cold. It turned out to be a blessing as the fireplace
inside each room was the life saver. Gopal decided to hit the sack and I
ventured out for some time before calling it a day at 9PM.
21st
& 22nd April – Day 5-6: Bhumthang
Bhumthang is a
beautiful valley. The main town – Choekhor is as small as a college campus
around a Murchangphy Chhu (Bhumthang River). It is considered religiously
important town with a few old and sacred monasteries. The Jambay Lakhang and
Khurje Lakhang were both built around the 7th Century AD. This town
was also frequented by the Tibetian Guru Rinpoche who has cult status amongst
religious people in Bhutan. The town is surrounded on all sides by beautiful
mountains and you get a serene, unhurried and contented atmosphere.
We spent the whole
day visiting monasteries. We meet Chimi Dorji, a monk teacher in Jakar Dzong
and who took us to his house. We later visited the monk we met in the bus –
Sonam Chope and saw his monastery. Our cab driver Leki was a nice man who also
doubled up as our tour guide. He took us around the town and we also managed to
witness a game of archery. The most amazing thing about him was that he was a
man with limited means supporting his parents, wife and 3 daughters but seemed
pretty happy with what he had.
Jakar Dzong |
On the second day, we
visited a village called Chhume. The locals at Chhume village were celebrating
their annual festival and had assembled in an old temple to perform their
traditional dance and songs. It was the first time I could see dance and
costumes that we normally see in History or National Geographic Channel. Such
festivals are visited by a lot of foreigners who pay through their nose (Fees
of $ 250 per day) just to visit Bhutan. The locals wore traditional costumes
that Indians would associate with a Rakshas
and danced in groups singing “Ringa ringa roses” in Bhutanese language. Just
that instead of falling down they jumped higher!
Chhume Villagers Dancing |
The one on right was considered as the epitome of evil in Bhutan! |
Bhumthang was a
beautiful town and every local we spoke gave rave reviews of the place.
Visiting this place was indeed an eye opener on what to expect in Bhutan. I
realised that Bhutan is not a place for the general tourist who visits to see
some great “spots”. Bhutan is also not a place where they advertise naturally
beautiful locations to attract people – it’s not in them to do anything like
this. Bhutan is a beautiful place. You go along a road and you will see a mind
boggling sight but not a single soul around to shout about its beauty, it
probably may not even be marked in their tour guides as a place to visit.
Places they mark as attractions are places of traditional importance and they
genuinely believe in their significance. Be it their old monasteries, Dzongs or
places like the “Burning Lake” which to a normal person just appears to be a
small bridge with Ura river flowing under it. So if you don’t appreciate the
beauty as the locals see it, you have missed the spot and all you will come
back with is the comment that one of the Indian officials in the consulate in
Phuentsholing made – “Yaha kya rakha
hai..sirf pahad hi pahad hai. Dzong dekh ke kya tum Buddh banoge?”
23rd
April – Day 7: Bhumthang to Thimphu to Paro – The return roller coaster
The return journey
from Bhumthang was a lot more peaceful. Gopal had taken several preventive
measures to avoid the grumblings in his stomach and some of them maybe worked.
So he was more at ease. I also managed to get into a conversation with a school
kid travelling with us and had some fun with him.
Today was the Election-Day
at Bhutan. They were supposed to elect 20 representatives from each district that
would be part of the National Assembly. Radio in Bhutan was full of election
coverage. In one interesting conversation, the correspondent was speaking to
villagers of a specific constituency which had 11 polling booths spread over an
area of about 50 sq kms and had a total of 1600 voters!! They had almost 90%
voting and a lot of people could not vote because they did not have the correct
ID cards! Bhutan was indeed a nation under construction.
The original plan for
this day was to return to Thimphu and then start for Paro on 24th.
We however reached pretty early and thought about stretching a bit and leaving for
Paro in the evening itself. This plan worked out and here we were travelling
another 60 Kms on the Bike to Paro.
The road from Thimphu
to Paro was indeed the best journey on a bike I have ever had. Everything about
this journey is perfect. The roads are simply amazing. The scenes alongside are
simply awesome. It just reinforced my latest finding about Bhutan that beauty
in Bhutan is there to be seen and not to be shown. It was a journey I in which I
could drive the 70 Kms in about an hour but wished that it took longer – the biker
in me was pulling the accelerator on an inviting road and the beautiful
mountains were making me stop and simply admire their beauty!
24th
April – Day 8: Paro
Paro was another
beautiful place. The town is as small as Bhumthang. Since this has the only
international airport in the country, most tourists to Bhutan visit here. It
has several avenues for shopping and shopkeepers here are experienced enough to
judge whether you would actually buy or just window shop and leave! Obviously we
were attended with least priority and we found everything to be atrociously
expensive.
The main reason for
visiting Paro was to see the Tiger’s Nest. It is the most outrageous
construction ever seen. Built on the absolute edge of a cliff, it provides a
superb view of the valley and a scare for the faint hearted. Journey to the
Tiger’s nest is a 2 hr trek which culminates to a simple monastery. We realised
that climbing the mountain itself was the destination and did not enter the
temple and returned with hope of visiting a few more places in our last day at
Bhutan.
The outrageous Tiger's Nest |
25th
& 26th April – Day 9 & 10 : Back from Bhutan
The plan for the day
was to reach as close as possible to NJP. We were to catch a train from NJP on
26th evening and wanted to leave little chance for disasters to
strike. The cold had started becoming irritating, the bike ride was getting
more painful for Gopal, the food tasted increasingly bland, I was missing
Adhrit even more and we wanted to get back ASAP. We started from Paro early and
decided that if we were to reach Phuentsholing by noon, we would carry on to
Siliguri.
The return journey
was surprisingly peaceful. Memories of the whole journey were so fresh in my
mind that I could recognise each and every place we halted on our way to
Thimphu. We drove swiftly to reach Phuentsholing at 11:30 and crossed over to
India. The first thing we did on Indian roads was honked loudly for no reason
and overtook a car from the left. Breaking traffic rules seemed extremely liberating.
We crossed the bad patch before Hashimara with no sweat and drove almost non-stop
to reach Siliguri 5:30 in the evening!
The bike is the most
important thing in a trip like this. We decided to compromise on everything
else – Hotels, Food, Shopping just to ensure that we had a good bike. While I don’t
know if I overspent on the Bullet, it gave us absolutely no problems. It would
start in a single kick and would effortlessly take us up and down the mountainous
stretches in Bhutan and India. Bullet, I believe is the best bike to drive in
such trips. It doesn’t go faster than 110 so keeps you in check, it is very
stable even on bad roads and finally it keeps you seated in a good posture so
you won’t have back issues after a long day. After driving the bike for over 1500 Kms in
the last 10 days, I actually felt bad returning it to Adventures Unlimited. You can visit them on http://www.adventuresunlimited.in/
With one full day to
spare we decided to pre-pone our return journey. We spent the night in the
waiting room at NJP station and took the early morning Shatabdi from NJP to
Kolkata. We reached Kolkata by 2:30. We decided to spend the least possible for
a decent stay and ended up staying in a hotel cum museum called “Howrah Lodge”
right next to Howrah Station for all of 550 bucks. It was an old hotel and
everyone there seemed proud of its legacy.
With nothing to do in
Kolkata, we watched KKR take on KXIP at Eden Gardens. I fulfilled my lifelong dream
of watching a match at the biggest stadium in India. The crowd in Kolkata was
too docile compared to apna Mumbaikars but had a good time.
27th
April – Day 11: Amchi Mumbai!!
We felt as if we were
being picked up from the refrigerator and shoved into the cooker. Kolkata was
hot and humid. So much that we decided to skip Gopal’s mission to collect coins
and head straight to the Airport. We saw the battered KXIP team waiting for
their flight at the airport. We were sitting right opposite to WV Raman for
almost half an hour and failed to recognise him (not that we would have done
anything different even if we had recognised him!).
Reaching home was
something I was looking forward to for some time. Meeting Adhrit after a long
time was amazing. Although he was expecting me to get a real Yak, he was too
happy to meet me and did not fret over this toy Yak. It is now a part of his
small animal kingdom and he gets it out to play often.
Out of the
refrigerator, into the cooker, I now have to prepare to enter the oven –
Ahmedabad.