The bone rattling ride
Sunday, November 1st, 2009Riding a motorcycle is fun. On mountaneous terrain its even better because of lowered pollution levels, scenic beauty and overall sence of relaxation while one is in the area. It had been a month or so since my last big ride and I was getting kinda bored sitting at home every weekend. The monsoons had shattered all hopes of being able to ride by bringing us the gift of landslides, showers on every weekend and ofcourse disgusting, sticky-ew weather. I had waited for all this to be over..Patiently.
It was mid August when I had formulated the idea of a long-ish ride somewhere in the mountains. The rains had mostly subsided, the monsoons had began their retreat and rain was limited to the occasional shower. I posted a message on our group forum that I was planning a ride in the first week of september and invited proposals from everyone. My good friend Jojo suggested that we go to Chanshal Pass, which connects the remote Dodra-Kwar region to mainland Himachal Pradesh. When I enquired online I was told that the road was “dead”. I called jojo and told him that the road seems to be in a bad shape, lets go somewhere else. He was stubborn. He sent me a link from a newspaper that showed a pretty, lovely jet black new road as the picture for an article about the area. It stated that the road had been comissioned by the chief minister of Himachal.
We decided to give this ride a go-ahead. In a high level meeting attended by all the main biker babas, a unanimous decision to visit Chanshal, Dodra and Kwar regions of Himachal was passed.
Regional/Topographical Background:
The area is designated as the “Sulej Circuit”. Rohru is the largest town in the area ahd has most facilities including excellent pooris made with diesel riddled oil at the side of a busy road. True “Street(read road) food”. Rohru is 115 kms from Shimla. The road(ughh) to Chanshal-Dodra-kwar is via Chrigaon/Larot. Views: Amazing. Nearly devoid of pollutants, the air is crisp and carries with it the smell of Apples, pines and other associated mountainous flora.
This article has been written two months late as it took 1 month for my hands to stop shaking like Dr. A.K.Hangal’s and my back to return to its normal shape, whatever it might have been. I thought I had parkinson’s disease but it was actually the road. Here goes:
We decided to move early and stop at Hatkoti, which was our destination for the day. There is an amazing temple named the Hateshwari Devi temple which has a pot that once held a demon! We reached Theog at 1pm via Chandigarh-Shimla-Kufri and thought nothing of it. The ride was amazing, the roads were fun. The traffic was undaunting. We spoke with a dhaba owner about the possibility of moving ahead to Rohru and he said “Oh sure, Rohru is just 80 from here!! takes 2 hours or 3, max”. We were ecstatic!
We ate some more pakoras and decided to move towards Rohru ASAP as our destination was 15 kms from Rohru, making the total distance just 65-70kms which meant under three hours!! or so we thought. A suspicious looking hoarding made me a little suspicious but the locals told me that it was hogwash! The road is “Fine”. I was still a little suspicious but I decided to go on anyway.
We drove from Theog towards Rohru. The road was small, littred with a few potholes but oh well, this is India. Potholes are everywhere, even on superhighways. We thought nothing of it. Ten kilometers hence we met a dusty patch of an unpaved, half broken road close to a turn that had a small dust caked waterfall flowing under it. Due to our experience with waterfalls and such we thought “Oh well, its just a patch, they might be making a channel for the water to flow under the road, tis OK!”.
I covered my face with my bandana, took a P break and moved on. The dust flew with us for a kilometer and two and the strong-ish wind with the traffic helped a lot(the dust, not us!). I said Oh well! and kept going.
About fifteen kilometers further my butt started complaining and I noticed that there was no road, but a remanant of a road that once existed. We breathed in deeply and moved on, thinking oh well, its just 65kms! how bad can it be? We are experienced bikers! we’ve gone to Zanskar!!-Two days later I would regret making this statement.
The dust followed us like the devil. I told JoJo that this seemed like the continents had shifted along with time and we were now in the 30s in America in the midst of the dust bowl. He shrugged me off and I walked to Umang, who was wiping the dirt off his face(unsuccessfully).
He said “This is awesome! dust, broken roads and no food!!” Umang is from Himachal, btw. We had some more tea at a dhaba close to Chaila and decided to look for a place to eat. We reached Kotkhai- the apple paradise of Himachal at 3:30 PM. This included chitchat breaks, numerous pit stops and other stops. It was okay, Hatkoti was just a few kilometers ahead. We found two dhabas which had no food.
We moved on towards Khara pathar. Khara Pathar means “Standing Rock” in regular hindi and “Tall rock” in himachali. Same difference, lots of “Pathars” were “Kaharo-ing” on the road too. We drove onwards and saw this little Dhaba called Apple Crown. We were famished so we decided to stop. I talked to the owner in sign language indicating we were hungry and needed food. He was like yeah, we got food, come on in!!
We let out a few bloodcurdling screams and decided to eat. The food was good. Actually it was amazing! The place was dingy, it had a “toilet with a view” but the food was good. We spent an hour to eat this well deserved lunch, have some tea, walk around and stretch our backs n legs n moved onwards to HatKoti.
At 7 we thundered into the quaint city of Hatkoti. Good time, we said. The road was nasty-ish from Theog to Khara pathar but it got Okay close to Hatkoti. We found the government guest house where our friend Umang had “booked some rooms”.
The guy denied any knowledge of this booking. We gave him some glaring looks while he spoke with his uncle and voila! rooms appeared!. We unpacked, went in, Lay down and ordered tea.
The guy came and said “Here is tea, but please look for something to eat. The area closes by 8″. We ran out, a dhaba was open. We asked him about food, he said sure, I will be here until 9:30. We relaxed a bit, some took a bath and we decided to go eat.
I had barely started to dream about pretty mountaneous hamlets and cute women when an infernal din woke me up. I thought that the demon in the pot had managed to escape and was hungry! I ran to the window and saw that it was not the demon, but the “daily pooja” had begun at the temple. This was 6:30 AM. So much for alarms! We decided to bathe n go to the temple. It was extremely pretty.
We came back and decided to have breakfast at the dhaba. We got fat rotis filled with a little amount of potato. The guy had been nagging about this Halwa that he made but never made it for us! That broke Jojo’s heart!
We moved towards Rohru. It was an uneventful ride.
Rohru is a city full of traffic, diesel fumes and lots of people. Kinda disgusting and like any other city. The views enroute Rohru are amazing, BTW.
At rohru we enquired about the route to Chanshal and lots of friendly people guided us.
One guy even decided that he will drop me off to the last village so I can go on from there. I wondered why he called it the “Last Village”?
I would come to know soon enough. We drove on and the views changed from good to excellent to Oh My Gawd.
The road was riddled with potholes but we could easily manage 60kmph without much effort which was good. The road changed from two lane to single lane soon.
Also good. The views were much better, a little rivulet flowed next to the road and made the area so lush and green. I had never seen anything like this. Beautiful little houses, small trees, flowers, apple laden orchards, small farms, the works!
We came to a little bridge over a river. The locals said cross the bridge and turn left.
We did.The road was covered with mud, slush and sand. We thought it was a landslide. No worries, we have driven through dozens of those. We went on. Gravel. No worries. More sand and gravel!
Oh, well. 3 inch high sharp stones! Oh cool, they are making the road wider here.
Seems better up ahead. I saw a little nepali kid and I gave him a candy. I asked his dad how the road was. He smiled. I should have guessed what that was for.
We went ahead. Sand again…Well, better than sharp stones, aint it? Soon the sand gave way to a path covered with 2 inch high stones jutting out of the ground, sand, slush and gravel along with some pine needles so that if you escape the first part, the pine needles will make sure that you fall flat on your butt.
Four kilometers further one of our team members gave up. He said dude, this is the WORST road ever!! I felt better when my cousin accidentally shot me in the bum! I could not say no to that though I have not been shot anywhere, let alone ma keester.
We went on, crossed larot and I reached an unpassable patch. Water, eight inches deep slush and some more water along with a fifty degree steep incline at a turn.
Nasty. I managed to go through. I came back and was trying to tell the others where to cross when I saw that Umang had gotten stuck. His bike was stuck in the mud and it felt as if it were in quicksand. Four of us could not pull it out. We stopped a jeep that was coming our way, and seven people somehow managed to make it move.
I told him where to go and two seconds later he was stuck again!! I pushed him off and drove the bike to the side. He was just driving it the wrong way. Slush+mud+sand+gravel+water needs some skill. Skills we learnt in Spiti, Ladakh, Jallori and other associated trips. The bike stopped working 1 second after that.I checked it, it seemed okay. I screamed and kicked it, the damn light turned on. I got an evil tinkle in my eye n announced that the bike needed some “Russian Treatment”
We moved on(why?). Fiften gruelling kilometers later we reached the mighty Chanshal pass.
It was pretty amazing. We took a few photos but the clouds had blocked all the views! Our butts had given up, we wanted to sleep right there and we were famished. The quintillion bumps on the road had digested, assimilated and well..made short work of the super heavy parantha we ate. We asked a guy about where to eat. He said two kms down this road is a small Dhaba.
When we complained that the jeep guy said Two kms further is a dhaba and that was twelve kms ago, he said it might have closed down. He had never gone beyond this pass. We decided to turn back. Our backs hurt, the butt had announced its resignation and the stomach was churning and nagging at the same time. My arms hurt, my legs felt like jelly and my spine had almost bent into an ungodly shape. He said, go to Larot, there is a dhaba at Larot. We did just that. I drove back trying to savour some of the amazing views offered by this valley.
The area is extremely beautiful!! We reached larot and had Maggi with tea. It was 5PM. We moved back towards Rohru and then Hatkoti(it was my insistence that Hatkoti had better rooms. We would soon find out that I was very wrong). Raj K’s bike died. It took us a hour and two mechanics to fix it. We moved towards Hatkoti. The guest house dude told us that the place was booked to the brim. We took a room in a stinky dharamshala, fortunately found food and decided to call it a night. We discussed the route with the hotel owner and he told us that the route was awesome.
The next morning we woke up, took a bath and saddled up. We were going back home!! We drove to Rohru again giving the Russian treatment to Umang’s bike whenever required and stopped at the Mechanic area in Rohru. The bike was fixed, jojo had diesel riddled pooris with super disgusting alu. I went nextdoor and ate scrambled eggs made in a valvoline auto grease box. Was fun. The food tasted OK though. We moved onwards to Sungri.
The views just went from wow to Oh my God. Amazing. The roads were good, the views were awesome! We thought we were in heaven. The bad part of the road was over…or so we thought. holes, potholes and road-wide craters welcomed us with fine sand and dust that filtered through our helmet visors and bandanas. At sungri we saw a T junction. Rampur-60, Narkanda-40. Narkanda was closer to home.
We turned that way, crossed super horrendous roads via Khardala, Bagi and finally reached Narkanda. It felt as if our butts had found cushions. The road was amazing. We stopped to eat at Narkanda and moved towards Chandigarh.
This was an eventful ride, full of views that make you forget the stressed out and strained muscles, the bruised bones and eyes ready to pop out of their sockets.Momentarily. The route is highly recommended, though you may want to skip the road after Larot. The views are similar. It has been almost two months since we went to chanshal. My butt starts hurting the very moment I think of the route but in 2011 I might go there again!
Link to Photos: http://picasaweb.google.com/djm263/ChanshalPass




































































