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Himalayan Highway: Colin Ward

1) Colin Ward traveled from Manali to Leh, a distance of 587 kilometers, along northern India's highest roads with a CTC Cycling Holidays group. 2) The trip was delayed for two days after a rockslide blocked the road, requiring dynamite to clear it. 3) Ward experienced altitude sickness at campsites over 4,800 meters, with symptoms like headaches and breathlessness.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
60 views3 pages

Himalayan Highway: Colin Ward

1) Colin Ward traveled from Manali to Leh, a distance of 587 kilometers, along northern India's highest roads with a CTC Cycling Holidays group. 2) The trip was delayed for two days after a rockslide blocked the road, requiring dynamite to clear it. 3) Ward experienced altitude sickness at campsites over 4,800 meters, with symptoms like headaches and breathlessness.

Uploaded by

lahsivlahsiv
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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where Northern India Start Manali

finish Leh Distance 587 kilometres


words Colin Ward
pictures Colin Ward

Himalayan
highway

Northern India has some of the highest roads in the


world. CTC member Colin Ward travelled there
with CTC Cycling Holidays

en months earlier Id been reading the CTC


Cycling Holidays brochure at the breakfast
table. One stood out: An adventurous tour
traversing the Himalaya to the Buddhist kingdom of
Ladakh. The following summer a stone lighter and
with many training rides under my belt I was in
Manali in northern India.
I glanced at the local paper, the Himachal Pradesh
edition of The Tribune: 15 Killed in Bus Mishap, read
the headline. Two days before we arrived, a bus was
hit by a boulder on the Keylong-Leh Highway and it
plunged 200 feet down into a gorge. It was the same
road we were due to travel.
Our departure from Manali was delayed by 24 hours
while the road was cleared. We had already had a
50km shakedown ride on our reassembled bikes, the
day after wed flown into Delhi and then up to Kullu
on a smaller Kingfisher plane. So there was nothing
to do but wait. We watched rain gush of the roofs and

4 4 cyc le ap r il/m ay 2012

1) Low gears essential!


2) Heavy rain caused a rockslide
3) Waiting to start in the valley
4) Altitude sickness is an issue
5) A short hop from New Delhi
6) On the way to 5,300m up
7) Roads were often unsurfaced

listened to the thundering Beas River.


That afternoon the sun appeared, and in the hotel
bar at seven, tour leaders John and Pat Ashwell told us
that the road to our first camp at Marhi was expected
to be clear by morning. A great cheer went up and
glasses were charged with Kingfisher beer to toast the
road menders.
Do not pass
A pair of saffron-robed Buddhist monks sat chanting
their mantras in the hotel foyer as we departed. They
gave us white silk scarves, which streamed in the
breeze. The sun was shining, the road was drying and
we were optimistic. A beekeeper and groups of happy
tourists in taxis waved to us as we began to climb.
After 25km we ate our first roadside lunch while
looking down on our morning hairpins in the valley
below. There was very little traffic on the climb to Marhi,
which I was grateful for as it meant I could ride in the
middle of the road; I was scared of the precipitous drop
at the edge.
High above our camp, the road to the first big pass
the 3,950 metre Rhotang La zigzagged up the
steep mountainside. We could see the bright red and
yellow trans-Himalaya trucks queuing near the top.
Apparently, rocks had fallen on a truck carrying bottled
gas, blocking the road. All we could do was keep our
fingers crossed that it would be cleared by morning.
It wasnt. After riding and pushing through thick mud
for a couple of hours, we passed a long line of waiting
lorries and reached the place where the police had
stopped the traffic. Gas bottles had been unloaded and

himalayan highway GREAT RIDES


2
3

5
6

Do it
yourself
Return flights
from London
Heathrow to Delhi
are about 500600, and it costs
around 90-120
each way to fly
from Delhi to Kullu
and back from Leh.
For suggestions on
routes, including
Manali to Leh,
read Himalaya
By Bike by Laura
Stone (16.99,
Trailblazer). See
also the website
himalayabybike.
com

the damaged truck bulldozed out of the way so that the


road workers could dynamite the fallen rocks.
John asked the police officers if we could pass. They
said no; it was too dangerous. Even if we could get
through with our bikes, our bus with the food, support
crew and camping equipment would be left behind.
John made the tough decision to lead us back down to
the Marhi campsite.
We waited the whole of the next day, drinking tea
from a dhaba in the sunshine beside the river and
listening to the dynamite explosions. Puffs of smoke
issued from the road high above. Just after four oclock
in the afternoon, word reached us that the blockage
had been cleared, but traffic from the north was being
allowed through the narrow gap first.
With flights to catch from Leh to Delhi and from Delhi
to London, we were now two days behind schedule
even if we sacrificed a rest day in Leh. There was
nothing for it but to load the bikes on top of the bus
and drive until we crossed the 4,800-metre snow-clad
Baralacha Pass, which is where wed have cycled to
without the delays.
Riding high
The sky was very blue up here and the sun shone on
multi-coloured rocky scenery that no photograph can
do justice to. Riding downhill was easy, but as soon as
I had to climb even the gentlest ascent my legs were
like jelly and I was panting for breath. We were at a
seriously high altitude and I found that the reduced
oxygen level was really sapping my strength. In the
afternoon we climbed the 21 hairpins of the Gata

CTC. O R G . U K cyc l e 4 5

PAGE 24 schwalbes latest expedition tyre is the marathon mondial

FACT FILE

HIMALAYAN TRAVERSE

Route: Manali to Leh on


Indian National Highway
21.
Loops to the 4,950-metre Namkeela Pass. Then we
descended just 300 metres to our campsite at Whisky
Nalah.
This was our highest camping place. I felt cold and
sick and had a bad headache. It was altitude sickness.
I got straight into my sleeping bag and took a diamox
tablet and a couple of paracetamol. Some of my
companions suffered from symptoms much worse than
mine; others appeared to suffer not at all.
I didnt feel fully fit the next morning but at least the
headache was gone. I mounted up and rode for the
first half of the day. In the afternoon, I hitched a lift in the
bus. The day after was the big one the 5,300 metre
Taglang La and I wanted to climb it.
We camped near to Tso Kar Lake at the north end
of the Morei Plain. It was a warm evening and I took
my camera to photograph a brilliant white stupa (a
Buddhist place of worship) before dinner. When I woke
in the night, there were a million stars in the sky and the
Milky Way looked positively creamy. No light pollution
up here!
Next morning, I didnt have a headache and the
breathlessness had gone. The road would climb
another 700 metres over 36km, the sort of ride I would
think nothing of at home. After a short stretch of sand
we had 10km of recently laid tarmac, where we bowled
along as if we were on a Sunday morning club ride.
The mountain air was fresh in my face and wild birds
sang me on my way.
Then the road got rougher again. We began to string
out as each cyclist found his or her own pace. I was
slowing down and feeling weaker. Down below, I could
see the bus slowly gaining on me. Surely I wasnt going
to be swept up? Not this close to the top I could see
it! I drank some fruit juice and kept going.
Up ahead, I could see a string of prayer flags like
coloured T-shirts on a washing line. It was the top! The
guys that were ahead of me were waving and cheering.
Well done! they yelled in my ear, slapping me on the
back. You made it!

4 6 cyc le ap r il/m ay 2012

8) After getting off their own


bikes, the group explored urban
India by cycle rickshaw
9) The bus was the trips
luggage carrier and backup
vehicle

Distance: 587km total,


including day rides to
Nagar and the Khardung
La, 447km by bike and
140km by bus.
Time taken: 10 days
travel from Manali and
Leh, including the ride to
Nagar.
Conditions: High
altitude mountains, with
a sometimes lunar-like
landscape. Road surfaces
very variable.
Bike: Thorn Sherpa.

Others rode either


traditional touring bikes
or hardtail mountain
bikes.
Accommodation:
Mixture of hotels and
organised camping.
Price: 1,895 in 2011,
including flights, food
and accommodation.
For 2012, it is 2,295 for
a 20-day tour (reference
1247). At time of writing,
places remained. Other
than that, you only need
spending money maybe
100.
More information:
cyclingholidays.org

jammu and
kashmir

Khardung La
Leh

Tso Kar
Keylong
Manali

himachal
pradesh

uttrakhand
Bhuntar

punjab
New Delhi

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