We were going to be cycling from Guwahati to Tawang and further to Bum La, in the northwestern corner of Arunachal Pradesh, close to the tri-junction of Bhutan, China and India. This was to be followed by a week long trek along the Bailey Trail, a rarely traversed trail with history of exploration by Pundit Nain Singh, Bill Tilman and the Dalai Lama.
But the Rains of Arunachal had a plan of their own. Read on to find out what happened.
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3. Mt. Deo Tibba: 300 metres to Summit
Excerpt from the article:
“By 6 am that morning, in a matter of ten minutes, the perfect world that our trekkers had been exalting about no longer existed. The winds were fierce, the temperatures had dropped and the visibility was dismayingly low.
Staying was not an option. So, a plan was quickly put in action.
Rohit was to descend down as quickly as possible and ask the cooks to prepare some tea and hot khichdi. It was essential for each member to get something warm into their systems as soon as possible to fight the bitingly cold winds they were being exposed to.
The descent was nerve wracking to say the least. Heavy snow-fall and the cold winds had frozen sections of the rope which made it slippery to hold onto while negotiating descent. To make things worse, chunks of ice and snow were tumbling down the slope as well…”