The Mountains Calling

The Buran Ghati trek Cinematic video out now on my YouTube channel. Please like , comment and subscribe , you will surely enjoy it.


At kedarkantha peak

Stuck in a hazy nightmare,Lost in an urban illusion,Craving to get my breath,Back from the land above ! A faint whisper wakes me,From an urban slumber.Holds my face and echoes“Come to me in the land of Gods” O powerless soul! wake up,Free yourself from this muddle,The mess that pollutes ,Is created by you ! O […]

The Mountains Calling

Read full poem by clicking above

©2023 Piyush Singh

Into The Himalayas

The Buran Ghati trek video out now on my YouTube channel. Please like , comment and subscribe , you will surely enjoy it.


There’s a path which leads you
To the wilderness above.
I chose to walk on that
With my heavy breath.

It will test your will,
Through the forests and hills.
And the cold wind would sing
The song of life and death.

Your sweat and pain,
Will shine with snow.
And your life will glow,
With the beauty above.

Give me your might,
O beautiful Himalayas !
The chaos you’ve gone through,
And the strength to bear all.

©2023 Piyush Singh

Buran Ghati Pass Trek

From the beginning of time man has been fascinated by mountains And his curiosity drove him beyond it in search of food shelter and livelihood.


But his quest for adventure Forced him to come back to mountains time and again because it was the mountain which taught him to fight against his own weakness infusing strength in him.


For me mountains not only infuse strength but it enhances your perspective. Trekking or hiking in the mountains is like a meditation when your complete focus is on the trail, the beauty of nature,your breath and you hardly worry about your past or Future.


You are truly present in the moment when the mountains test your resilience and your one mistake here and there can become life threatening.


It was my time for the test when I decided to go for Buran Ghati Pass Trek in the Shimla district of Himachal Pradesh. Previously I have been to 2 Himalayan treks- kedarkantha and kuari pass along with few hikes and attained maximum height of 3800 + meters . This time I decided to go above 4500 meters but something more awaited me.

Ancient temple at Janglik


The trek starts from Janglik ( 2804 m ht), an ancient ( 400-500 years old) and remote village situated in the Shimla district of Himachal Pradesh. The trail from Janglik ascend into a deep forest of Oak and pine trees and opens up to Dayara meadows (3376 m ht)

Dayara


From Dayara the trail goes further up and the beautiful landscape slowly turns to white of snow from the green of meadows . Further you walk alongside pabbar river and the trail guides you to Litham (3578 m ht) . Here you find yourself among the big mountains , fully covered in snow.

Litham Campsite


From Litham , you resume your journey alongside pabbar river , flowing beneath several snow bridges , and walk further up in snow ( mostly in the month of May you find snow and this time due to western disturbance there was excessive snow) to reach Dunda ( 4075 m ht) campsite, the last campsite before buran pass .

In between Litham and Dunda
Dunda campsite


Then, the judgement day comes . You wake up early at 1 am in the dark , prepare yourself for the hardest day ( we took almost 14 hours to cover 8 km in excessive snow ) and start your climb at 3 am in the dark. The climb is steep and you walk on hip deep snow ridges ( twisting your ankles and sinking deeper in snow many times) , applying your full strength and trusting your instincts and your trek leader.

Weather suddenly became Good for the final push . Dunda campsite


You climb for more than 1 hour to reach your end goal , the buran pass , situated at an altitude of 4575 m . This pass connects the pabbar valley to sangla valley in kinnaur . The stunning views of Snow covered mountains from here take your breath away . It is nothing less than a blessing to witness the beautiful creation of God from this point. Climbs like these infuse a sense of wisdom you never felt before. You start looking at things with a broader and better understanding.

The hardest climb
Finally at Buran Pass
Preparing to go down
The other side


The descend from here is quite technical , the pass stands like a wall to the other side and you have to come down 30-50 m with the help of a rope ( rope rappelling ). You lose height pretty quickly and mostly come down by sliding on the snow. You reach your last campsite at manerang village and from there to barua to go back to your urban life.

The group that refused to give up


We were a group of 5 people ( me , my wife , one solo traveler and two men of 55 and 62 years of age) led by our trek leader and the staff of the company we hired. The weather was bad from the beginning due to western disturbance and we faced rainfall, hailstorm and snowfall throughout our trek .

There were nights when we thought that our tents will blow away due to angry winds of the storm. The winds did took away few tents. And the relentless snowfall haunted us at nights when we thought we might get buried in deep snow.


We were stuck at Dayara campsite ( first campsite) for more than a day due to bad weather. During this time, we saw trekkers coming back from higher campsites because of excessive snowfall which lowered our spirits. But thankfully we got 2 good days in between to become only the second group to cross pass this season untill then.


We walked in mud , climbed in hip deep snow, doubted ourselves several times and applied our full strength to finish this trek. This was the test i wasn’t prepare to take but when I saw 2 people in our group above 55 years fighting it out , it gave me a lot of confidence to continue.


There are times when you feel like giving up , you lose your breath, your entire body becomes stiff but when you see your fellow people or trekkers feeling the same heat , you are inspired by them to continue.


This is the power of connection. We humans most of the time depend on each other to thrive , we respect each other in difficult times when our survival is on the line and i believe we can learn this only when we are together in the wilderness like Himalayas .

A Place which Feels like Home

Every now and then we feel the urge to stop doing whatever we are doing and get away from the rat race of the cities. The tension, the chaos, the worries all take a toll on us. That’s the perfect time to connect to mother nature, the wilderness, the place from where our species evolved.

That’s what I thought one month ago and decided for the Buran Ghati trek which starts from the janglik, a remote Himalayan village in the Indian state of Himachal Pradesh.

I will write about the adventure and challenges we faced during the trek soon. Till then enjoy the poetic video i posted above.

The mighty Himalayas

©2023 Piyush Singh

Walk Through

Walk as if
Your feet want to taste
The sweetness of the meadows,
Rustling through the misty green.

Walk as if
Your feet want to feel
The pain and the fun
Struggling through the snow.

Walk and explore
‘cause your heavy breaths
In the mountains
Infuse life you never knew…

©2023 Piyush Singh


The picture above is from my recent trek to Buran Ghati in Himachal Pradesh.

The Way Of Water

Dayara Thach Himachal Pradesh



Though I am destined to flow ,
From the mountains to ocean,
Yet my curse is to wash away,
Everything that comes my way.

In some way I infuse,
Life in the living,
But when the sins overflow,
I Rain like fire to kill…(Flood)

I feel guilty to carry,
The living and dead.
I am the carrier of God
To play the game of life and death..

©2023 Piyush Singh


The above click is from my recent trek to Buran Ghati Pass in Himachal Pradesh. I will post about it soon. Please like, comment and follow for more posts like this.