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Travel Guide » Asia » Chamba
Explore: The World | India
Chamba, Uttaranchal
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(Uttarakhand)


The Dominion of Clouds

One moment we were on a hilltop, the next on a cloud. A wispy caravan lifted up almost from nowhere and all too suddenly, and then we were adrift in a world all our own, astride a cold cloud. The transport from the real to the magical was quite as sudden and startling as Harry Potter crashing into that brick wall on Platform 9 3/4 to enter the world of Hogwarts: the cloud swept up the hill and past the hilltop and transformed everything. Suddenly, the sky had vanished and the hills all around were gone. The little town and its people and its twisting lanes and distant lights had all disappeared. And all there was was a translucent cotton-wool jungle drowning in its own silence. Someone switched on the sodium vapour lamps on the winding drive up to the resort: they looked like blurred blossoms popping in a dream. Then Sadhuram emerged from the mists bearing a tray of cosied tea and said this is what Chamba is like most evenings and nights the dominion of clouds.
We were inside the mammoth glasshouse they have erected on a promontory overlooking the merging valleys cut by the Bhagirathi and the Alaknanda. Suddenly, enveloped by nothing but floating cloud and sodium lights twinkling in thick dew, it was like being on deck chairs in a skyship. It is like no place you might expect within seven hours from Delhi.
Why isn't Uttaranchal's Chamba as celebrated or as well known as Himachal's? Perhaps only because this is a new state and they haven't worked too hard on publicising it. At times you are almost thankful they haven't. Lack of exposure has kept in Chamba what most hill stations have lost or are fast losing - the air of remoteness, of being somewhere else, somewhere special. Chamba is a getaway in a very real sense. When you get to Chamba, you have got away from most of the things that you want to get away from in a metropolis - crowds, traffic, pollution, decibels, treadmill pace, routine.
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Getting There
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To See & Do
Chamba isn't much of a town, more a junction en route to higher and better-known destinations in the Tehri Hills: Gangotri, Yamunotri, the ancient and vanishing town of Tehri itself. The controversial Tehri dam is fast nearing completion and Old Tehri is mostly an abandoned town, with the displaced resettled in New Tehri and partially in Chamba itself. The haphazard influx hasn't done the mofussil mess of Chamba any good; but then, you don't go to Chamba to pitch up in the middle of town. You look for higher, quieter nooks in the surrounding hills.

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A cosy nook
  You?ll find none better than the Hilltop Classic Resort, which, as its name suggests, is located on a hilltop directly above the township. You spiral steeply up a thousand kilometres and you are on what is perhaps nature?s favoured piece of masonry in these parts ? a spacious summit that enjoys a 360o panorama. The resort spreads itself leisurely all over the top and the slopes. A health spa and Kerala massage centre to one side; a pet pen full of wild hares and honking geese to the other. Rolling botanical gardens, a gym, a children?s park with swings and slides and merry-go-rounds... even a swimming pool, for heaven?s sake! But why that at such a height? This is after all a good thousand feet above Chamba town and gets snow during the winter. But the caretakers would tell you things get fairly heated up during summer months, again on account of the resort?s height and the direct sun it gets: the pool waters get gently warm and visitors have found it a pleasant quirk to go swimming on a hilltop.

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The great outdoors
  On clear mornings, the Langtang range lies burnished on the northern skyline ? a dozen or more snowcapped Himalayan peaks etched on the horizon like some overdone painting. Or stay out on a moonlit night, which is rare because of Chamba?s daily twilight trysts with clouds: but the skies are sometimes so clear and low, you would think you could pluck at stars. And, of course, there are the peaks of Langtang by lunar light, like another overdone madness from a tripping painter. Chamba is still a fairly pristine and protected world; the hills are fairly well forested and unbreached. Sometimes, by dark, you can hear the growl of a hungry panther on the prowl nearby. And you will often see or hear furtive hares and jackals, darting about in the bushes. About the best thing about getting away to a place like Chamba is that there are no existing prescriptions on places to see or things to do. Do nothing and you?ll have done what you came here to do. And for eager beavers in the poor habit of making a holiday more of a rushabout than the city, there are walks ? endless prospects of meandering in the thick cedar and pine forests, interminable little hill trails to traipse.
Content Source: 
Outlook Traveller
Contributed by: 
Sankarshan Takur
  
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