A winter pilgrimage to Rudranath temple

This time winter has arrived a little earlier in the plains as well as in the Himalayas. While the first snow fell in the Himalayas, the cold and fog spread in all directions in the plains. This means that now we have to sit by a fire in the evening to keep ourselves warm. The cold reminded me of the #winterchallenge being organised by @worldmappin which will continue till 31 December. Every day travellers can see their names in #traveldigest and can visit www.worldmappin.com to check their ranking in the leaderboard.

While some bloggers wrote posts about amazing places on the grand arrival of winter and made us aware of new places, I was not able to participate in this competition for 2-3 days due to being busy in a running event, but from tomorrow onwards I will write regular posts so that I can finish in the top 10 in the leaderboard. If you do not know about this challenge till now, then definitely check it by going to this link and participate. https://hive.blog/hive-163772/@worldmappin/update-halftime-at-winterchallenge-look-up-your-ranking-or-engesp

So let's go on today's journey where I will show you an iconic temple built in 1500 BCE. According to Indian mythology, the Pandavas came to this place during their exile and they established a Shivling and temple here while worshiping Lord Shiva. This temple is also a part of Panch Kedar and has religious significance for all Hindus. I am also a spiritual and religious person, so I also chose this location, however, I also came here to visit because from here one can see the huge view of Nanda Devi mountain. The height of this mountain is 7816 meters. In total, more than 100 mountain peaks can be seen from here.

From Delhi I take a bus to Gopeshwar, this distance is 500 km and the bus takes 12 hours to reach here. After visiting the Gopeshwar Mahadev temple dedicated to Lord Shiva in Gopeshwar, I reach Sagar village from where the walking path to Rudranath temple starts. Sagar village is 45 km from Gopeshwar, which takes about one and a half hours to cover by local bus, the height here is 1770 meters. I reach Sagar by evening, here I stay at an Om Home Stay where a room is available for 600 Indian rupees. After having dinner early in the evening, I get into the quilt and take a warm deep sleep.

In the morning, the locals tell me that the first snow of the season has fallen and after Pung Bugyal, there will be knee-deep snow, if you are going alone, take care of wild animals and if you have a sleeping bag then it will be good because there is no shop or hotel around the temple. I ask about the hut, the answer to which is yes. So I already have the sleeping bag and materiel, so I pack them in my rucksack. Saying bye to the hotel owner, I leave at 7 in the morning. I reach Litwak in one and a half hour which is 6 km from Sagar village and the height here is 2000 meters. The sun is yet to come in this part of the mountain, so it is feeling colder.

The road from Litwak enters the forest and as soon as I enter the forest, I hear the sound of a bear screaming at a distance, which scares me and without thinking much, I start walking fast on the mountain. I cover the next station which is Pung Bugyal in one and a quarter hour. This distance was 4 km and there was an elevation gain of 675 meters in it. Pung Bugyal is a grassland which is situated at an altitude of 2600 meters. Due to bad weather, less mountains are visible from here, otherwise I would have been able to have the first darshan of Nanda Devi from here. I eat something in Pung and move ahead.

Pitradhak is 3.5 km away which takes one hour to cover, from here onwards only snow is visible. I am getting very tensed thinking about the bad weather and knee-deep snow. Rudranath temple is 3.5 km from Pitradhak, there is nothing but snow on this route. While walking here, snow starts falling and I and my bag start getting wet. While walking at a height of 3250 meters, on one hand the cold wind is blowing like a storm, on the other hand the snow feels like a slap on my face. When I look around, everything looks white. I am afraid that the sleeping bag may get wet, because then an accident can also happen at such a height and cold.

By risking my life, I finally complete the last 3.5 km in 3 hours. The height of Rudranath temple is 3600 meters and there is an elevation gain of 1250 meters while hiking till here. Walking from 7 in the morning, I reach Rudranath temple at 0530 in the evening. It is very cold here, the temperature is probably -5 degrees. I try to find people around the temple who are not visible in heavy snowfall. In a hut near the temple, I clean the wet matters with a dry cloth and take out the sleeping bag which was dry. I eat 2 chocolates in the sleeping bag and go to sleep thinking that we will see what happens tomorrow.

So this was my journey to reach Rudranath temple in which I heard the sound of a bear while walking alone and also had to face fresh snowfall. I hope you liked this exciting journey. See you in the next blog where I will talk about other aspects of Rudranath. Take care and enjoy the winter challenge.

Disclaimer: This post is originally written in Hindi and I have used Google Translator to translate the Hindi text in English. All the photos have been clicked by me from canon 77d and edited in lightroom.



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Great job! Keep up the good work! 👏 !STRIDE (Comment !STOPSTRIDE to stop receiving upvotes & STR)

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By risking my life, I finally complete the last 3.5 km in 3 hours. The height of Rudranath temple is 3600 meters and there is an elevation gain of 1250 meters while hiking till here.

I told you not to take any risks @himalayanwomb 😅😱 - You are on fire! But it looks so cold up there. How can people even survive in huts like that?!?! - Is someone living there in winter?!

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I respect your concern, although there are no huts or buildings at such places in the mountains, but such huts are found somewhere near the temples. Because very few people come here in a year, so these are not maintained. For example, I felt cold throughout the night because the gate of the hut was broken and due to the gate being open, there was a constant danger of man-eating animals.

No one stays here in winter, the temple and all the huts are closed till summer.

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Oh, what an incredible adventure. I wonder what drove the men who built that temple in such an inaccessible place, beyond the founding myth. I suppose they used only materials available in the area, but after that they have been many centuries dedicated to maintaining it, which is the most difficult thing. Seeing more than a hundred peaks must be an experience from up there, wow, what an experience! I enjoyed your photos, they’re so beautiful.


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This temple is associated with Indian mythology and was built by the Pandavas in 1500 BCE. The Pandavas were five brothers who came here to meet the Hindu god Shiva. They built this temple using a combination of stones and trees using interlock technique which cannot break even due to heavy snowfall and earthquake.

And you will not believe that such temples do not even require maintenance. Thank you for your comment and I send you best wishes from this temple.

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I have always been fascinated by the wisdom of men from ancient times, how they achieved constructions capable of supporting millennia. Enjoy your stay there a lot.

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That looks very cold there. It is incredible that you traveled all that way at the cost of life, is to put fire to the candlestick (very typical saying in Latin America). Although I don't know if the fire thing goes very well, since here what you see is a unique cold. The place is beautiful and incredible. I can't deny that it is enveloping.

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The Indian Himalayas are still in raw shape, the forests, trails and man-eating animals are still living an organic life without being touched by the modern society. And some of our temples are built in their homes which are built from 2000 meters to 5500 meters.

I travel to these temples and get stuck in snowfall due to the high altitude. The cold is a challenge here because mountaineering gears are very expensive which is far beyond my reach. So we are living here with very little and are moving in a natural way with nature.

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Now my goal has become high and I have made it my target to keep writing well every day which will take me to 200,000 upvotes soon

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The snowy landscapes are even more charming but I bet fighting the cold can be really hard and hiking too can be more difficult by the way the view it's amazing 😍

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My bag is not waterproof so my sleeping bag got wet while walking in the snow. The door of the hut where I stayed was broken and cold air kept coming in the whole night. Yes, cold is a challenge in the Indian Himalayas because good mountaineering gears are expensive and are out of my reach.

The temperature was -10 degrees, my shoes got wet due to snow and I narrowly escaped frost bite. But whatever it is, the feeling of being here is the best and thanks to your comment which is motivating me that the destination is more beautiful than the journey.

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The love I get from hive motivates me to write well every day. Thank you for being a part of my success

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What a frosty scenery! Love it!!

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The photos are not able to do 100% justice to this snowy place, in reality, this place was as scary as it looks beautiful. Because there were many man-eating animals here like Himalayan bears and snow leopards.

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I can't imagine my journey to such distant and remote lands. 😎I love the warmth too much.😀

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Ofcourse it was a difficult journey but on reaching the destination all my fear and tiredness vanished

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