Thursday, July 21, 2011
Narkanda – Beauty Beyond Imagination
Narkanda is a beautiful place surrounded by pine forest at a distance of 63 km from Shimla and situated at a height of 2703 meters from the sea level. It is on the Hindustan Tibet Road and mid way between Shimla and Rohru.
If you are planning to visit Shimla, don’t miss to visit Narkanda. If you are a nature lover, you would adore this place more than Shimla. Blind and mindless construction of houses and exodus of rural population has spoiled the pristine beauty and charm of Shimla. Don’t miss to visit Mashobra, Kufri, Naldera and definitely not Narkanda if you are planning your next vacation to Shimla.

Pic.Credit:Team BHP
Attractions at Narkanda
Hatu Peak
Hatu Peak is the main attraction near Narkanda; named after Hatu Mata whose ancient temple is situated at top of hills. Hatu peak is located at an altitude of 3,330 meter and offers a panoramic view of the dense pine forests; you can also get a beautiful view of the snow clad Himalayas from Hatu peak.
Places to Visit near Narkanda
Kotgarh
Kotgarh is the apple heartland of Himachal; a beautiful place with a wide spread of apple orchards. Kotgarh is famous for its delicious apple variety; which is even exported. It is at a distance of 82 km from Shimla.
Mode of Transportation
You can reach Narkanda by choosing most modern modes of transportation.
Road: You can board a bus from ISBT Delhi or Chandigarh to Shimla. From Shimla you can hop on to a HRTC bus or hire a Jeep to Narkenda.
Train: The nearest railway station is Kalka which is at a distance of 60 km from Shimla. You can take a train from Kalka to Shimla and enjoy the joyous ride on the toy train as it meanders around the hills and disappear through hundred odd tunnels.
Air: The nearest airport is Jubbarhatti, a few kilometers away from Shimla
You can visit the Narkanda throughout the year however January to June is the best time.
From the archives of British Library :

Photographer: Bourne, Samuel Medium: Photographic print Date: 1860
View of the dak bungalow overlooking the smaller village houses at Narkunda, from the Elgin Collection: ‘Spring Tours 1894-98′. This is a late print of a Samuel Bourne photograph, Bourne’s original negative number (1426) has been scratched out and replaced by a later reference. Narkanda is a small village situated high in the Himalayan Mountains. The bungalow in this view provided accommodation for travellers on the old Hindustan-Tibet caravan route. Narkanda has awe-inspiring views of the snowy peaks as it is located on the ridge of the last watershed before the Himalayan range. Below Narkanda, to the north is the Sutlej Valley and beyond it is the snowy massif. The ridge on which Narkanda stands is the watershed between the Sutlej on the north and the Giri river. The sleepy town of Narkanda sits astride the watershed between the Arabian Sea and Bay of Bengal.

Photographer: Bourne, Samuel Medium: Photographic print Date: 1863
Photograph of a view on the road to Narkanda, Himalayas from the ‘Strachey Collection of Indian Views’, taken by Samuel Bourne in 1863. Samuel Bourne, the bank clerk and amateur photographer arrived in India in 1863 during the early years of commercial photography. Photographs taken during three expeditions to Kashmir and the Himalayas between 1863 and 1866 demonstrate his ability to combine technical skill and artistic vision. These views display a compositional elegance which appealed to Victorian notions of the ‘picturesque’; strategically framed landscapes of rugged mountain scenery, forests, rivers, lakes and rural dwellings. What gives Narkanda its awe-inspiring view of the snowy peaks is the fact that it is located on the ridge of the last watershed before the Himalayan range. Below Narkanda, to the north is the Sutlej Valley and beyond it is the snowy massif. The ridge on which Narkanda stands is the watershed between the Sutlej on the north and the Giri river. The sleepy town of Narkanda sits astride the watershed between the Arabian Sea and Bay of Bengal.

Artist: Scott, Mrs WLL Medium: Lithograph Date: 1852
This lithograph was made from plate 14 of ‘Views in the Himalayas’ by Mrs WLL Scott. It was sketched from the verandah of the staging bungalow at Kotgarh in the Himalayas, at sunset. In the middle distance is the village of Kumarsain, and on a high hill behind is the Ramgarh Fort of Kulu. Providing background are the Kangra mountains and the snow ranges of the High Himalayas.
Mrs Scott wrote of the light in the mountains, which changed hourly and transformed the appearance of the region radically. She confessed to finding it difficult to convey the beauty of these changes on paper.

Artist: Scott, Mrs WLL Medium: Lithograph Date: 1852
This lithograph is taken from plate 13 of ‘Views in the Himalayas’ by Mrs WLL Scott. In 1850 Scott sketched this view at sunset at the staging bungalow in Kotargh. She wrote that the mission here was run by a German sent by the Chuch Missionary Society. There had been initial mutterings about him “taking his hire when his labours were so unfruitful, but he has lately had such good cause to be satisfied and thankful, that he has requested of the Society a fellow-labourer to assist him.” The river Sutlej runs between the hills in the two nearest ranges.
In the early 20th century, an American missionary imported apple seeds to Kotgarh and today Himachal Pradesh is a renowned apple-growing region of India, with Kotgarh at the heart of its orchards.





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