Sunday, April 20, 2008

Girnar



Girnar, India

Date: March 27th, 2008

Time: 6:00 am – 10 am

Distance: Roughly 3 miles?

Elevation change: Roughly 2005 feet

Weight: Mehul 0 lb

Junagadh is now my home town in India – in the west most state Gujarat. Junagadh is on the western foothills of Girnar, which is a small mountain of about 2000 feet height. I had to Google a lot for the exact elevation. One site confidently reports 2005 feet. Roughly 2000 feet seems correct. Wikipedia reports 3600 feet, but I can tell that that’s way off. Girnar is a big pilgrimage place for Hindus (and Jain, if you consider them different J). There are wide, well maintained lava stone steps all the way to the top. Somehow, people believe that there are 9,999 steps to the top of the mountain. However, the steps are clearly numbers with the interval of 50 steps and it counts about 4,500 to the first summit (Ambaji temple). It’s pretty much straight up path (no ups and downs) and if you consider 6” height for every step, it would result in to some 2,225’.

Anyways, I wanted to climb Girnar couple of times during my 2 week stay in Junagadh, but it happened only once. One more time I went hiking on the “Pradaxina Marg”, a route that goes around the main mountain through the surrounding hills. Similar to Gir forest (http://www.iit.edu/~bhatmeh1), Girnar and surrounding hills are also covered with deciduous forest. There’s a big variety of fauna and flora, including a lot of mammals. Lions and leopards are found in Girnar too. However, they don’t dare to come near crowded pilgrimage places.

To avoid the heat, me and my cousin Maulik started the climb at 6 am in the morning. There was a faint twilight at that time and there were many people who started the hike. We kept going at comfortable speed and we climbed first 1000 steps in about 20 minutes. I had some time constraints and we weren’t sure whether we’ll go all the way to the top or not. But we kept going and soon we reached the straight vertical up lava stones portion of the mountain. Sun already rose by that time, but we were on the west side of the mountain, so sunlight was not hitting us directly. I noticed that besides two of us, almost nobody was wearing sports shoes. Most people were in their flip-flops. Other change that I noticed was that bottled water and “water pouch” were omnipresent. Old style water stops with earth-pots were rarity. Being environment friendly, we stopped at a place where a young village woman was selling water from the clay-pot. Her 1.5 year old son was playing in the “shop”. I asked her how can she manage to get water so high. She told me that it was from “Gaumukhi Ganga” (water dripping from the lava stones in a nearby cave). Indeed the water was cold and with a very distinct mineral taste of mountain stones.

Moving on, we met a monkey family enjoying the early morning sun. Took a few pics and video shooting of them. Then we moved on, and in no time, we reached the top (Ambaji temple). We noticed that we took 1 hour 30 minutes to reach the top. My regular hiking speed is about 2 miles per hours, so it must have been roughly 3 miles. There was a helipad built on the top, we enjoyed the view of the surrounding areas from there. I saw the “Bordevi” pilgrimage, where I enjoyed a week long scout camp during my high school years (a nice place in the middle of the forest, about 8 km away from where we begun our hike). We identified various dams in the area and couple of towns etc. I wasn’t so keen about going in the temple, but when Maulik insisted, I paid a visit.

On the way back, we stopped again at the water-woman. On the way to the top, I paid a little extra money to her. On the way down, when I had difficulty finding the change, she said it’s ok if I don’t have change. Her generosity touched me - she must be from a very poor family, she must have figured that I’m a “tourist”, and she knew that I happily overpaid on my way up. Still, she had no intention to rob us. Fortunately, my cousin had change to pay for the water and we happily move on.

We took it real slow to go down. It took us an hour to reach the bottom. It was getting real hot around 10 am – the temperature must be reaching 30 degrees centigrade at that moment (or may be more). This was a real prep for the Grand Canyon in that sense.

2 comments:

चिराग: Chirag Patel said...

Nice article. I didn't know that you started your blog! Really, ecosystem awareness is the most effective thing we can do.

હરસુખ થાનકી said...

ગિરનાર વિષે સરસ લખ્યું છે. મને હજી ગિરનાર ચઢવાની તક નથી મળી તેનો અફસોસ પણ છે.