Operation Tashi Delek
Tezpur to Tawang by bicycle -
an unreport
Tashi Delek – We’ll leave the explanation to Tibetan scholars (which we
certainly aren’t) and Wikipedia. Suffice to say it sounds nice and elicits a
cheerful response in return.
Cast of characters:
Rohit Kulkarni (alias AgK – short
for Agent K): I first met him when he was eight years old at a nature camp.
Since then he’s held flashes for me while photographing creepies
(sometimes in the rain, under an umbrella in the dark); been Joint-CEO of two
of our now defunct start-ups - Money Up Front Photography and Get Lost
Adventures; co-judged a fashion show in Miao, Arunachal Pradesh; interned at
National Geographic Channel, worked at FM radio stations, MTV and UTV, after
which he’s currently taken a possibly permanent sabbatical from the corporate
world to become a successful potter. Initially steadfast in his resolve not to
join me in madcap schemes, “Caps, I’ve
built enough bloody character to last a lifetime! Absolutely not! No (expletive
deleted) chance!” he usually succumbs
to his inner weakness for (mis-) adventure and he’s back on one of our ‘ops’.
VM
VM
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Snowflakey |
Viral Mistry (yep, really his real name; henceforth referred to as VM): one time amateur
power-lifter, wannabe rock-climber, currently heads an engineering firm and has
a compulsive desire to point out hydraulic devices in everyday life. Also more
sensibly – is married to a qualified
wildlife researcher, has a young son and a ΓΌber-cool Siberian cat. VM has the
dubious distinction of standing with one leg on a windowsill, propped up by his
field assistant whilst hanging onto the tail of an unidentified snake that was
trying to escape into the false ceiling. Ten minutes of this unorthodox
manoeuvre resulted in the snake reversing and the first images of a live Dinodon gammei (Sikkim False Wolf Snake) in the world. Enjoys eating, cycling
and messing around with bicycles.
‘J’ Indian Army. Details intentionally
vague in the interests of National in-Security. Still cycles.
Caps – short for Captain:
not a rank, and yep really my surname, incapable of taking life
seriously and just plain
nuts.
Note: distances are approximate
at best. Kilometer stones often disagreed with one another (possibly to confuse
the Chinese) and VM’s smartphone and ‘Strava’* would often behave just plain
dumb. Hence we focused on eating momos and reaching our next halt. *Explanation
for non-cyclists – it’s the cycling app.
We have to thank the Indian
Army for all their help; again details intentionally vague. Thank you all!
How the trip came about:
After climbing a considerable distance there was a long and very welcome descent. Several villages were scattered along this section. We stopped at a shop where an old gentleman was stitching a suit made of machine-woven yak wool from Bhutan. He paused to sell us litchi juice and packaged potato crisps, which were eaten immediately. Suitably fortified, we reached the Nyukmadong War Memorial to find an unusually somber AgK. A beautiful memorial marks the spot where over a thousand Indian soldiers died in the ‘62 war. AgK spent a quiet moment paying our collective respects to the dead while we continued riding upwards and onwards to our accommodation.
It was bone-chillingly cold in the evening and we huddled up in our room discussing matters of national concern – like Chinese carbon bicycles ruining the Italian boutique bike market. The day ended befittingly with us binge-watching ‘India’s longest-running, highest-rated detective serial’ on TV – C.I.D. (source AgK).
The next day was to have been even shorter – 10km to Baishakhi, but ‘J’ called and said the Army doctors advised us to keep going past Baishakhi, ride over Sela Pass and descend to Jang rather than spend another night at altitude. As we were guests of the Army, it made sense to follow orders.
From thinking 'easy-peasy 10k', we suddenly had an approximately 80km ride that included the highest point on our ride to Tawang – Sela Pass 13,700ft (4176m). It was going to be a long, long day in and out of the saddle. That’s if the weather and our legs held up. Post lunch we replaced all the brake pads in anticipation of a long (possibly 37km) descent from Sela Pass. Whatever was that “no respite” all about?
As we neared the pass, the last few kms were shrouded in mist. Several ‘SUV Tourist’ cars crossed us and the drivers waved, cheering us on. We’d met them at the Bomdila Festival and it was nice to see fellow lunatics en-route.
We free-wheeled down the pass and rode smack bang into a series of brilliantly executed food-ambushes. ‘J’ had ordered every Army detachment/ unit/ soldier between Sela and Tawang to stop and force feed us. They followed orders. VM exhibited exemplary form and managed to tuck into several hot pakodas with gusto. “It really hit the spot, I could’ve finished the entire casserole.” AgK had eaten kadi and rice at an earlier ambush (which we escaped) and gave up after eating just one. We were stuffed and rolled down the entire way to Jang burping. There was snow on the roadside and we paused to add layers of warm clothing. We stopped to photograph our bikes in the snow and AgK molesting icicles. A herd of yaks stampeded, startled by the noiseless, wheeled animals which rolled past. The descent was dusty and cold. Despite road signs proclaiming smooth roads, they certainly were not!
Sela Pass was snow bound and we got stuck for a while. VM promptly got out to photograph frost-rimmed prayer flags overlooking Sela Lake and a frozen bush. I dragged him back into the car after watching his artistic endeavors for a bit.
Had an un-balanced, probably gluten-laden lunch of jalebis, samosas, momos and bread pakodas, which were washed down by saunf-laced tea. Reached Tenga in the afternoon. Had tea and transplanted some parts onto ‘J’s bicycle. VM aired his biking clothes in our room. Having built considerable character over the years, I chose to ‘wear and air’ mine instead.
How the trip came about:
‘J’ told me he was posted to
Arunachal Pradesh and invited me to visit. I’d spent a fair bit of time
traipsing around the eastern side of the state looking for snakes and was in
love with the place, its people and food. ‘Once upon a time’, ‘J’ and I had cycled to Vaishno Devi (yep, we took our bikes all the way up, and yep, we carried
them up certain sections); later I’d cycled from Pune to Chennai for his
wedding. So it seemed obvious that bicycles would be a part of the equation.
I’d
asked a few good friends if they wanted to come along. They’d enthusiastically
agreed, however due to life responsibilities, only the irresponsible ones
finally made it – AgK, VM and I.
In
a turbulent lead-up to the trip, I’d fallen off the cycle, banged my knee and
been told by a super doctor who taped it up, “Absolutely no cycling.” A week later he changed his mind (which is
why I said he’s super) and I was back on the bike. As if this wasn’t enough of
a deterrent, the car VM’s folks were driving in got rear-ended a few days
before we left. Since they escaped unscathed, VM didn’t cancel his trip.
We’d
decided to fly with our cycles instead of sending them ahead by surface
transport. Expensive, but we’ve always planned for the worst-case scenario and
there was no point being on a cycling expedition without bicycles.
I’d
also taken
along a fair amount of spares and bike tools that weren’t exactly light. This
annoyed the living daylights out of AgK who due to our ‘travel light’ credo wasn’t
allowed to bring along his only blazer – essential he thought, since we were
guests of the Indian Army.
Day 1. Pune - Kolkata – Guwahati
November 19th
Taking
off from Pune, we changed flights at Kolkata and reached Guwahati at around
lunchtime. We found our hired vehicle and secured our bike bags to the roof
(with two independent ropes for redundancy). After doing so, we discovered the thing
wouldn’t start. AgK (seasoned veteran of ‘Cars That Refuse to Start’ – mostly
his own jeep) diagnosed the problem as air in the fuel line. True or not,
we finally managed to start the beast. A quick lunch and we drove to Tezpur. It
was around 1930 by the time we reached our accommodation; really late given
it’s pitch dark in the northeast by 1730. We wolfed down dinner, spent a good
two hours assembling the bikes and then fell sleep with head torches on our heads.
Day 2. Tezpur (Assam) – Sessa (Arunachal Pradesh)
November 20th
Approximately 90km (70-ish flat,
20-ish with climbs); 9hrs
We
set off at 0530 (broad daylight in this part of India) after tea, pausing only
to check with a few morning walkers that we were aimed in the right
direction.
“Watch out for
elephants”, warned
VM as we pedalled down a mostly flat road. He’d worked on the herpetofauna (frogs,
their relatives, snakes, lizards) and knew the area well. While we kept a
lookout for pachyderms, the Army R.O.P. (Road Opening Party) kept watch for
folks inclined to blow up the army convoy (that was to pass later).
They looked like they meant business,
which was good, ‘cause it wouldn’t do to have someone take a pot shot at AgK – our 'ceramicist' cum publicist, who was travelling with the convoy.
To
add more drama, despite several e-mails clearly stating our travel dates, the
I.L.P. (Inner Line Permit) issued to us had expired two days before our trip
had even started!
At Bhalukpong – the border between
Assam and this part of Arunachal Pradesh – we flashed our ‘date fail’ I.L.P.,
smiled, ate two bananas each and confidently pedalled through. The climbing had
begun.
A
little later AgK drove past, pausing briefly to check if we were fine, before
going on to sort out our accommodation at Sessa.
As soon as we entered Arunachal Pradesh, the terrain changed dramatically. Mountains covered by forests surrounded us. The canopy was a myriad of green, yellow and orange. Occasionally we saw wild banana leaves or bamboo stuck into the hillside from which a non-stop stream of water gushed.
As soon as we entered Arunachal Pradesh, the terrain changed dramatically. Mountains covered by forests surrounded us. The canopy was a myriad of green, yellow and orange. Occasionally we saw wild banana leaves or bamboo stuck into the hillside from which a non-stop stream of water gushed.
We
finally reached Sessa at 1430 for a late lunch. While we managed to negotiate the steep
inclines without dismounting, AgK had considerably less success in convincing people
about how he made a living. His impassioned explanation of being a full time
potter was dismissed with a terse “Kuchh
bhi”!
The
night at Sessa was cold. Very cold.
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I prefer a sac to panniers; the pump is as light as a mini and actually fills fat tyres |
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Rubberised bar-ends keep fingers a bit warmer |
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'Fiber' cages don't mark bottles. This one has been tested on several mountain 'roads' |
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A rather expensive saddle bag, but it did its job brilliantly |
Day 3. Sessa (Arunachal Pradesh) - Tenga (Arunachal Pradesh)
November 21st
Approximately 60 km (mostly climbs,
but with some descents); 5hrs
Post
parathas for breakfast at 0500, we
started out towards our next destination – Tenga. A disinterested AgK waved us
off and went back to devour what was left of brekker. He was due to leave an
hour later, so we’d have a suitable head start over the chase car.
After
Sessa we climbed up to N’chephu aka Zero Point – the ascent was reasonably
steep and when we were told by the locals that there was a fair bit of downhill
a short distance ahead, our relief resulted in us stopping instantly for tea
and potato crisps.
Slowing
only to ensure that the bikes were fine, AgK breezed past, not quite caring for
the riders. A strapping young officer had warned him at Sessa about there being
“no respite at all” till Bomdila – a small detail that he conveniently omitted
to mention until we reached Bomdila.
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VM has a thing for rocks
|
The
road was a random mix of ups, downs and certain sections where the road simply didn’t
exist. We pedalled resolutely past these; AgK had an uneventful drive to Tenga. The
accommodation delighted his once-upon-a-time-ridiculously-highly-paid-executive
heart – the bathroom had a programmable shower flanked by two plush bathrobes. His
joy was short-lived as we insisted on moving to more austere quarters; this one
seemed way too luxurious. AgK never one for building character, wasn’t
too happy. After shifting to rooms with loos that didn’t require a college
degree, we embarked on cycle repairs that kept us busy for rest of the evening.
The
rear derailleur (gear mechanism) on VM’s bike was misbehaving and we
replaced the inner cable with a slicker new one. VM quickly learnt how many
people it takes to mess up any repair effectively – more than one is one too
many. After running out of subjects to Instagram, AgK decided to test-ride the
bike and expertly proclaimed “Ouch!”
His comment alluded to VM’s saddle being a pain in the _ ss (obvious portion
of one's anatomy). Nothing could be done about it, so I suggested VM wear two pairs of cycling shorts,
which helped a bit. Dinner was
scheduled with ‘J’. AgK presented him with a sake bottle and cups made by Curators
of Clay. What lingers in the memory of that day is a delicious dessert
laced with vodka made by Mrs. ‘J’.
Day 4. Tenga - Bomdila
November 22nd
Approximately 35 km (mostly climbs with a few downhill sections); 5
hrs
After
a continental breakfast, we set off for Bomdila at the usual crack of dawn. It
was fairly cold and I started off with six upper layers that were peeled off as
the day warmed up. From experience I knew that blowing one’s nose with
full-finger gloves would result in skin loss, so I resorted to launching snot rockets
– a technique frequently employed by bike racers worldwide. I shan’t attempt to
explain. There’re plenty of information on the net illustrating the technique.
Our
stay at Bomdila was at the highest point in the vicinity. Guess it was supposed
to be strategic – the advantage of height over the enemy etc. The strategy certainly
is highly effective, after attempting to pedal up some near vertical gradients, we
gave up and pushed the bikes up a track, to collapse outside ridiculously
comfortable rooms allotted to us. AgK was already there, looking mutinous in case
we decided to move to even marginally less comfortable accommodation. It was
Sunday and we pigged out on dosas
stuffed with chicken. AgK did a photo-shoot with VM – some Bollywood poses beside
his bike, a la SRK. These were promptly WhatsApp-ed to VM’s wife as proof that
he was actually cycling in Arunachal.
After this we cleaned, checked and lubed
both bikes. Daily checks included making sure nothing had vibrated loose, there
were no broken spokes, wheels were more-or-less true and that the brake pads
weren’t worn out. Contrary to the popular trend of riding with low tyre
pressures, we’d pumped them up as hard as was safe in an attempt to minimize
‘pinch’ punctures. It worked. We had no flats at all, just several eyeball-rattling descents.
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Smell my armpits |
In
the evening we attended the Bomdila Festival 2015. It was a grand event. A
popular local politician was welcomed with around fifteen minutes of spectacular
fireworks. Folks had come from afar, some to participate in the cultural
dances, some to sell their wares and some to just partake in the festivities. AgK
bought about 1.5 kg of ripe-gotta-eat-'em-now
kiwi fruit for the princely sum of 80 rupees from Norbo Shimrozu of Sashipaam, who
proudly told us that he’d grown them. His basti
was a four-hour walk from Nafra! After this, there ensued, to quote AgK, “a kiwi fruit carnage”.
We also ate
smoked pork; smoked mithun and bamboo
shoot to ensure no major food groups were left out. Somewhere between the fruit
and fauna we watched local dances. The performers’ costumes and masks were stunning.
Monpas, Nyishis, Sherdukpens and
possibly Buguns were on stage (at
different times). There were two gents in a giant yak costume. A young lad
rendered a spirited version of ‘Yeh shaam
mastani’ and ‘Chittiyan kalaiyan’
was played twice – ample proof of Bollywood’s musical invasion – one that gladdened the Mumbaikars in AgK and VM. The ultimate party animal (me) dragged
my two accomplices back to our digs as we had an early morning ahead. The night
was so cold that at some point, AgK dragged his bed (cot,
mattress and all) into our room, as we had a heater that was safe to leave on while
we slept. That boy needs considerable work on building character!
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Norbo Shimrozu shows off the kiwi fruit he grew |
Day 5. Bomdila – Nyukmadong/ Nyukmadung
November 23rd
Approximately 65km; 7hrs
We
cycled off with our backs toward a dark apocalyptic sunrise which, purely figuratively, warmed the cockles of my black heart.
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Building character before sunrise |
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Sunrise with bicycles |
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Definitely worth braving the cold |
After climbing a considerable distance there was a long and very welcome descent. Several villages were scattered along this section. We stopped at a shop where an old gentleman was stitching a suit made of machine-woven yak wool from Bhutan. He paused to sell us litchi juice and packaged potato crisps, which were eaten immediately. Suitably fortified, we reached the Nyukmadong War Memorial to find an unusually somber AgK. A beautiful memorial marks the spot where over a thousand Indian soldiers died in the ‘62 war. AgK spent a quiet moment paying our collective respects to the dead while we continued riding upwards and onwards to our accommodation.
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Nyukmadong War Memorial |
It was bone-chillingly cold in the evening and we huddled up in our room discussing matters of national concern – like Chinese carbon bicycles ruining the Italian boutique bike market. The day ended befittingly with us binge-watching ‘India’s longest-running, highest-rated detective serial’ on TV – C.I.D. (source AgK).
That
and a freezing night meant we left relatively late the next morning – at 0540hrs.
Day 6. Nyukmadong/ Nyukmadung – Senge
November 24th
Approximately 25km; 3hrs
We
did a short ride of about 25 kilometers, as we’d been ordered to
acclimatize at 9,000 feet (2,743 meters) and there was no accommodation further along the route at this altitude. AgK, ever the sportsman, played a high altitude, floodlit
badminton match – and he has the gall to call us
nuts! Floodlight, as it was pitch dark at 1730. Needless to say he got walloped.
From thinking 'easy-peasy 10k', we suddenly had an approximately 80km ride that included the highest point on our ride to Tawang – Sela Pass 13,700ft (4176m). It was going to be a long, long day in and out of the saddle. That’s if the weather and our legs held up. Post lunch we replaced all the brake pads in anticipation of a long (possibly 37km) descent from Sela Pass. Whatever was that “no respite” all about?
Day 7. Senge - Baishakhi – Sela - Jang
November 25th
Approximately 80km; 10hrs
Another 0530 start. We set a really steady pace and were lucky
with the weather. On
one incline, I saw a message written in tar on the road. Someone (perhaps a
lady working on road repairs) had inscribed in tar, “I miss you Lobsang.” It touched me deeply. Years of building
character and eating ‘lye patta' and rice stood me in good stead . . . almost. I sniffed, mentally wished her the best,
best vibes and continued climbing, hoping she’d find someone to fill the
missing space. With bicycles, it’s easier to fix breaks, one just bolts on a new
part.
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The kilometer stone says it all ![]() |
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Mugshots (literally) at Sela ![]() Feet of (Curators of) Clay ![]() AgK saw and photographed his first yak |
As we neared the pass, the last few kms were shrouded in mist. Several ‘SUV Tourist’ cars crossed us and the drivers waved, cheering us on. We’d met them at the Bomdila Festival and it was nice to see fellow lunatics en-route.
Incredibly,
at the pass we had a spell of magical sunshine, and as we stopped to give
thanks and take pictures, AgK found a little kitten, which he carried off the
road and put near an Army post. ‘J’
drove up, we had tea at Sela pass itself – a happy coincidence, and
he sped off.
A
not-so-brief aside – reasonably reliable legend has it that Sela and Nura were
two local ladies who helped Jaswant (Indian Army) hold off a heap of invaders,
back in the early ‘60s. It’s very cool that one of ‘em is honored forever by
naming the pass after her. There is also a place called Nura/ Nuranag, further
down. Ladies, you rock!
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We got snow (and fortunately sunshine) on the Sela descent |
We free-wheeled down the pass and rode smack bang into a series of brilliantly executed food-ambushes. ‘J’ had ordered every Army detachment/ unit/ soldier between Sela and Tawang to stop and force feed us. They followed orders. VM exhibited exemplary form and managed to tuck into several hot pakodas with gusto. “It really hit the spot, I could’ve finished the entire casserole.” AgK had eaten kadi and rice at an earlier ambush (which we escaped) and gave up after eating just one. We were stuffed and rolled down the entire way to Jang burping. There was snow on the roadside and we paused to add layers of warm clothing. We stopped to photograph our bikes in the snow and AgK molesting icicles. A herd of yaks stampeded, startled by the noiseless, wheeled animals which rolled past. The descent was dusty and cold. Despite road signs proclaiming smooth roads, they certainly were not!
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You think Pune roads suck? |
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A relatively decent section |
Day 8. Jang – Tawang (at last)!
November 26th
Approximately 36km; 6hrs including
the paratha and espresso ambushes
We started later than usual and ran into two more food-ambushes. This time we were
prepared, and AgK and I gave VM a run for his appetite. Tea, beaten coffee –
sprinkled with drinking chocolate, eggs, toast, jam and alu parathas with dahi. All of this was rapidly vacuumed.
VM and I pedaled on to what we thought would be a triumphant entry into Tawang.
It might’ve been, except for the fact that ‘D’ – the gent who drove AgK, decided that as VM
and I had cycled up Sela, we had the legs to ride up the shortcut. A combined
assault of the food-ambushes and positively insane gradients ensured that we did
no such thing. Once again we were reduced to
pushing our bikes up (one of the many) stairways to heaven. We arrived breathless
at the War Memorial. VM had enough of this and entrusted his bike to AgK, who
hauled it up the rest of the way to our rooms. A cup of tea and a bath
later, we were wondering what to do next as the entire adventure had come to an
(at least so it seemed then) anti-climatic end.
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Snow Lion |
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Tawang War Memorial ![]() |
No
chance! The Indian Army had other plans in store for us – as in keep the troops
occupied. We had lunch and carefully cleaned and packed our bicycles. Immediately after
this we were dispatched on tours of the Tawang Monastery, War Memorial and
later in the evening saw the Sound and Light Show, warmed with cups of steaming
hot soup. Had dinner with ‘J’ and talked about bicycles and bike races.
Thankfully
the Gods had held off blessing us with inclement weather till we reached
Tawang. A few hours after we slept, it rained and then snowed.
Day 9. Tawang – Bumla and Lake Shungetsar (not quite)
November 27th
No cycling day
My
initial plans to WD40 the packed bikes (again) were ruthlessly nuked by an overwhelming majority – ‘J’, AgK
and VM. Instead they proposed we go to Bumla and Lake Shungetsar. So we set off. Fresh snowfall had made the road
impossible to negotiate without snow chains. We returned to Tawang in search of
momos. Returning to our digs, I got
back to 'WD40-ing' and the smart phone boys got back to '4G-ing' their pictures and
posts to the rest of the world. In the evening we waited till the Tricolour was
lowered at the War Memorial, then headed back to food and sleep.
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Frozen stream |
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AgK demonstrates how to milk an icicle |
Day 10. Tawang –Tenga
November 28th
No cycling day
Woke
early and went back to the War Memorial to see the Tricolour being hoisted at
0530. It was cold, dark and extremely moving. Had brekker and left for Tenga.
Stopped
at Jaswantgarh to wolf down a second breakfast of hot parathas
and dahi. When asked, “Yeh thandi mein dahi jamta hain?” our
host proudly retorted, “Jat fauj hain
sir-ji, dahi kahin bhi jama lenge!”
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It snowed heavily after we'd reached Tawang |
Sela Pass was snow bound and we got stuck for a while. VM promptly got out to photograph frost-rimmed prayer flags overlooking Sela Lake and a frozen bush. I dragged him back into the car after watching his artistic endeavors for a bit.
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Frozen bush at Sela Lake |
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Frozen prayer flags at Sela Lake |
Had an un-balanced, probably gluten-laden lunch of jalebis, samosas, momos and bread pakodas, which were washed down by saunf-laced tea. Reached Tenga in the afternoon. Had tea and transplanted some parts onto ‘J’s bicycle. VM aired his biking clothes in our room. Having built considerable character over the years, I chose to ‘wear and air’ mine instead.
Day 11. Sunday in Tenga
November 29th
No cycling day
VM
and I rose at 0500 and went for a walk. AgK stayed in bed, ostensibly power
napping, until VM 'WhatsApp-ed' him an image of a Tamasha movie poster. This galvanized the sleeping giant, who
rushed us through breakfast and some ‘brown chocolate’ shopping – which VM insisted
his depleted blood sugar levels needed after all the cycling we'd done. We
walked to a theater and made it for the 1100 show. A Bollywood movie in Tenga!
Had Sunday lunch with ‘J’ followed by an early dinner and turned in.
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On-screen smooch capture |
Day 12. Tenga - Guwahati
November 30th
No cycling day
Left early for Guwahati. Arrived and
did nothing significant. Went for a walk in the evening, watched TV. Basically
waited for our flights home the next morning.
Day 13. Guwahati – Kolkata – Pune
December 1st
No cycling day
Left for the airport. Checked in luggage to Kolkata. Hung around at Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose International Airport till our flight back to Pune.
[Parsimonious tip: if one has to change flights/ airports, make sure you get a single PNR number and book the bicycles through till the end. This way one pays excess luggage only once.]
[Parsimonious tip: if one has to change flights/ airports, make sure you get a single PNR number and book the bicycles through till the end. This way one pays excess luggage only once.]
Day 14. Pune
December 2nd
No cycling day
Early
next morning I was up and out on a two-hour walk-run as prep for a long run. I passed a few barking dogs, absently waved my carbon-fiber dog
deterrent (a broken trekking pole), and was already thinking about returning to
Arunachal Pradesh. Tashi Delek and Jai Hind!
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We'll be back . . . |
Un-report by: Ashok Captain, Rohit
Kulkarni, Viral Mistry and ‘J’
The end
The end








































It has been 4 years and yet I vividly remember your classes at 5th Herp school at Baripada! The blog is equally hilarious and informative :) So glad to have found your blog!
ReplyDeleteThanks. Glad you liked it.
DeleteLoved the flow. There is an extra "Γ€nd" in this write-up! Go figure :)
ReplyDeletePriyanka.
Found one extra 'and' and corrected it! Thanks for spotting it.
ReplyDeleteGreat stuff! Incredible feat! :)
ReplyDeleteThank you!
DeleteI don't know whether I want to ride like you more than I want to write like you! That was a brilliant journey, Captain.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Ma'am!
DeleteRead some of your posts; you're unique in your own style (riding 'n' writing). So keep on (both). Safe travels and all the best.
Loved your journey and the character sketch of every member. Keep travelling and writing!
ReplyDeleteThanks Ma'am.
DeleteYep, I plan to travel. Writing - when something is write-worthy. All the best to you. Keep on cycling.
Absolutely loved your blog ��
ReplyDeleteSo brilliantly written.
Your whole journey sounds like a beautiful story written in an absolutely spectacular place.
Fell in love with the pictures!!
You have rekindled my love for cycling
Keep cycling and writing
Cheers !!
Hemakshi
Ooopssss and thanks so much Ma'am! I just visited this to send the url to a pal (that's how disorganised we are/ I am). Am so glad you liked the blog/ journey. We really, really had a blast. And 'gladdest of all' (my English teacher can't correct my grammar any more) that its rekindled your love for cycling. I hope that translates to you are riding a bicycle and having fun. Cheers and all the best.
DeleteAbsolutely loved your blog π
ReplyDeleteSo brilliantly written.
Your whole journey sounds like a beautiful story written in an absolutely spectacular place.
Fell in love with the pictures!!
You have rekindled my love for cycling
Keep cycling and writing
Cheers !!
Hemakshi
Loved your blog viral !!
ReplyDeleteBrilliantly written about your beautiful journey of the most spectacular place
The photographs were absolutely mesmerising π
You rekindled my love for cycling
Keep moving with your bike everywhere and let us experience your journey with your writing !!
Cheers
Hemakshi
Brilliant stuff AC! I got to admit, you've got a penchant for writing as well my friend. It's an un-reported fact that you are one witty n quirky adventurer who's more admirable when he's on a saddle!
ReplyDeleteHoping to join you on your pedal based adventures soon
Thanks Zuber. I just read this comment. We're busy plotting our next trip to the Big A and we'd love to have you join us.
ReplyDeleteHello Sir, I am Vidya Kulkarni and a crazy cyclist.Reading this in 2018, Nov. I am planning for a North East ride and was looking for some route info.. and came across this. I woulr really appreciate if I could get some insights about the do and don'ts. Any way I can connect you?
ReplyDeleteThanks
Vidya Kulkarni
Seriously outdated reply, but contact me at ashokcaptain (at) hotmail dot com (no spaces). BTW the north east is H U G E and I suggest contacting folks who are familiar with the area that you want to visit.
DeleteAfter you suggested me to ride this route a year back (sinhgad pohe shack at the base). I have blown this years vacation on some other trek, but now I have managed to find this well written blog, using which hopefully next year October I will get there.
ReplyDeleteCheers
Om man, you gotta go. You will love Arunachal Pradesh. Or else - YOU BETTER!
ReplyDeletevery nice post. Thanks for sharing content and such nice information for me. I hope you will share some more content about. Please keep sharing!
ReplyDeleteBest Uttarakhand Resort Ramnagar
Super-seriously outdated reply - Apologies and thank you. I just visited the blog to see if it was still 'there'.
ReplyDeleteWow! Amazing and inspiring adventure Captain! Enjoyed your wicked humour too :)
ReplyDeleteThank you (sheesh, yet another outdated reply) π€ͺ.
DeleteWonderful blog! I want to do this route too. But not confident π
ReplyDeleteYet another outdated reply (apologies). Just prepare and go. Since we first rode the route, the roads have improved amazing and several (most) sections are tar and better than the Pune roads. Best vibes for your ride.
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