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Kashmir On Trek Minus Tourists

Local adventure-seekers are filling the space, exploring their backyard like never before

For thrill-seekers, no destination is more alluring than Kashmir바카라™s bowel바카라”that vast, sparsely populated interior dotted with lakes, valleys, forests, mountain treks and tales. It is a land that defies easy explanation, a remote expanse filled with meaning. But this terra firma has been off-limits for most, except spirited Kashmiri adventurers who are discovering their backyard like never before. They take familiar trekking routes: Aru village to Kolahoi pass, Sheshnag lake and Betaab valley in Pahalgam, Gangabal lake and Mt Harmukh. Sequestered in their homes the entire summer, their movement restricted even after the lockdown slowly unlocked in stages, everyone now wants to be elsewhere. But tourists have been away for more than a year바카라”since Article 370 was abrogated in August 2019, the state was sliced into two Union territories and restrictive measures imposed in anticipation of public unrest. Covid and the India-China standoff along the Line of Actual Control closed the door completely.

Popular trekking routes in Kashmir are less than two hours from Srinagar and the city is dotted with offices of tour operators offering guides, porters, and campsites. Most have not had a single client since August 2019 when the government ordered all 바카라œoutsiders바카라 to leave J&K. This year, according to a senior tourism department official, only 1,000 domestic tourists visited Kashmir. No foreigner, obviously. Britain, Australia, the US, Canada and Germany have advised its citizens to stay off Kashmir. The J&K government has lifted its travel advisory recently, but it had little impact. 바카라œNot a single country has lifted/modified its travel advisory to Kashmir,바카라 the tourism official says.

Riyaz Ahmad Lone, 40, says the last time his company in Pahalgam took a group of foreigners for trekking was in July 2019. Domestic tourists are also down to a trickle. Lone has guided a few friends to Tarsar Marsar lake and that바카라™s about all. The man who has been in the business for eight years says he hasn바카라™t seen such a slump before. 바카라œWe lost two years and don바카라™t know what is in store. We don바카라™t know what 2021 has in store,바카라 he says. Rouf Tramboo, running a trekking company since the 1980s, couldn바카라™t agree less. 바카라œWe thought tourism might pick up this year, but COVID-19 dashed our hopes,바카라 he says. He has started visiting his office on Boulevard road overlooking the Dal Lake in Srinagar in months. He spends most of his time reading books on Kashmir and gardening.

But there바카라™s some hope. Lone says Kashmiris바카라”hordes of college kids and professionals바카라”are scouring the mountain trails, fording the rivers and posting pictures of their adventures on social media. These photos attract trekkers in the rest of the country and abroad as well. Travel agents and companies in the Valley are getting a number of queries, but these are not translating into business. Besides, the Kashmiri explorer is not a new thing. Kashmiris have been exploring the Valley바카라™s hidden nooks, especially in southern Kashmir, in the past three decades, despiteĀ  insurgency-fuelled upheaval in the region.

The government has reopened Kashmir for tourism, but partial restrictions remain. Like Gangbal lake and Mughal Road are closed for tourists, as was Zaberwan hills, including the Shankaracharya hilltop in Srinagar, for some time. There are more obstacles바카라”take the popular seven-day Kashmir Great Lakes Trek from Sonamarg to Naranag Valley. The route covers Vishansar lake (at an altitude of 12,700 feet and comes after Nichnai mountain pass), Kishnasar, Gadsar and Satsar lakes. It includes Gangabal and ends at Nundkol lake, which can be reached through Zach pass바카라”the trek바카라™s highest point at 13,500 feet. But many trekkers develop cold feet as the army바카라™s permission is needed for the tour. Yet there are optimists like Mohammad Arif, an alpine mountaineer, skier and owner of a trekking company who has taken several tourists on the lakes trek, including Barsar lake, the highest in the Valley. 바카라œMy aim is to introduce Kashmir to the world. Our trekking routes, our mountains, skiing fields can attract tourists from all over the world. I am doing my bit,바카라 says the man who quit his bank job to open his own company.

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He says the most beautiful thing about the Valley is that it was explored by locals. 바카라œThat is why you see a good number of Kashmiris going trekking. It is a good sign.바카라 There바카라™s good news too. In July, Arif climbed Eastern Pinnacle Peak in the Thajiwas mountain range along with three local mountaineers, including Nazir Junior, a 바카라˜ponywala바카라™ or people who hire out mules. British explorer John A. Jackson scaled it in 1945 and no one since in 75 years. More such feats바카라”26-year-old Nawab Moazum Khan and seven more, including three Kashmiris, reached Kolahoi glacier, 26km from Pahalgam, in September. The trekkers double up as unofficial surveyors of a land less visited. 바카라œI could feel the glacier has receded,바카라 says Khan, whose previous expedition to Kolahoi was in 2015.

The free-spirited Kashmiri adventure-seekers have not enthused one vital cog in the trekking business: the porters and ponywalas. In Pahalgam, ponywala Javed Ahmad Mir says the good old days of his horse ferrying trekkers and supplies through narrow mountainside treks are gone. 바카라œTourists don바카라™t visit. Kashmiris go for trekking on their own. They won바카라™t take a guide along,바카라 he says. Mir has been working in MGNREGA project to make ends meet. 바카라œIt is difficult바카라¦nothing seems right with this place and lack of tourists says it loudly.

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By Naseer Ganai in Srinagar

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