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'The Land of Moonlit Snows': On your marks, get set, hike!

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Press Trust of India New Delhi

The phone beeps while you are hard at work in office. It's a Facebook notification from a friend holidaying in Ladakh. You ignore it, and the phone beeps again, this time it's Instagram feeding you with a stream of photographs of sunrise, sunsets and mountains.

It's hard to ignore now. The Himalayas are calling, loud and clear, not for a staid, laid-back holiday but a rugged expedition to higher, hard-to-access reaches. And the problem, apart from meeting work deadlines, is you have no experience of trekking.

That's the gap author Gaurav Punj hopes to fill with his book "The Land of Moonlit Snows", which is a guide to climbing mountains both for the novice and the pro.

 

The recently launched book, said Punj, is for those who want to travel and trek in the Himalayas but feel it needs "herculean levels of fitness and preparation".

"Whether you are a perpetual traveller or procrastinator, the message that the book gives out is -- exploration is for everyone," Punj told PTI.

He claimed there are "over 2,500 treks in the Indian Himalaya" but tourists explore less than 10 per cent of the routes.

"Trekkers are still a small percentage of the total tourists that are going to the mountains.

"We want to be adventurous and explorers, but we don't take that extra step of going to new places. Having said that, I am sure trekkers will soon realise the need and obligation to spread out," said the experienced trekker, born in Uttar Pradesh and raised in Punjab.

The book shares with readers the must-dos for trekking, be it planning hikes "in small groups (less than 12)" or why it is so important to opt for local guides, cooks, and drivers.

"Easy availability of right information, sharing of trek experiences and local contacts is the key. The reason I write books on the Indian Himalayas is to do exactly that (induce interest among people towards trekking)," said Punj, who has also written "The Land of Flying Lamas", another book on trekking in the Himalayas.

What about those who believe that trekking is an expensive hobby?

Punj replied that it all depends upon how comfortable you want to be while trekking. Hundreds of products that the industry would want you to buy for trekking are not necessary, he said.

"A good pair of sturdy trek shoes is the only place where I would suggest you spend your money. Everything else is optional.

"A simple backpack -- instead of waterproof one -- (just pack your clothes inside in plastic bags and it becomes waterproof), a poncho instead of expensive rain wear, regular cotton t-shirts and tracks, a woolen sweater, and a regular jacket are more than sufficient for most of the treks you will be doing," he added.

The government also subsidises treks for youngsters through the Youth Hostel Association of India (YHAI), which he claimed, "have extremely affordable trips".

Different from other travelogues, which the author claimed are mere "document experiences of an individual from his/her point of view", the book is a mix of stories of people on the road and "25 day-by-day itineraries" of eight go to destinations for trekking.

Also, for all the treks mentioned in the book, the author answers two Ws (who can do this and when), one H (how long), and of course "recommended for" along with the category.

"An important point to note here is that most of these treks have similar infrastructure and support system -- local guides, equipment, etc -- as the over-trodden ones.

"The missing link is the will of trekkers to explore and the inertia of travel companies to offer more than the usual," he added.

The 203-page book, priced at Rs 399, is published by Westland Books.

Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content

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First Published: Sep 26 2018 | 12:35 PM IST

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