Day 4 : Badrinath - Alaknanda River and Brahma Kapal Ghat - Tapt Kund and Panch Shilas - Badrinath Temple - EXPLORING THE LAST INDIAN VILLAGE IN UTTARAKHAND, MANA VILLAGE (PART I) - Mana Village - Places to visit (Part II) - Diwali celebrations in the Badrinath Temple
At 3118 mtrs (10229 ft) above sea level, in the shadows of the holy town Badrinath, is pitched a pretty little village in Uttarakhand - Mana. Better known as the last Indian village before the border with Tibet, the village is famed for the dazzling vistas it offers and the intriguing history that is scattered amongst its rustic lanes and idyllic slopes and to experience this first hand we headed for the Mana village from Badrinath at about 3 in the afternoon after a short nap in the Devlok hotel.
The drive to Mana was very smooth with some of the best views we have had till now, it just took us around 15 mins to reach the place.
Smooth roads and spectacular views
encountered during the drive to the Mana village
The first thing I noticed on reaching the place was the stillness in the air. For a town so close to Badrinath, where pilgrims flock in hordes, Mana was completely a laid-back retreat…very calm and quiet… perhaps may be again our off-season-visit had a big role to play in this. It was getting dark by the time we reached the place, the sun was just beginning to take cover behind the mountains, the air was crisp and in no hurry to get anywhere just like the people here.
Sun ready to take cover in the mountains
Mana is a small village stuck in time – one has to park one’s vehicles at the village border itself and walk around on foot thus giving you a chance for a refreshing walk in the midst of the heavenly Himalayan surroundings – just you and nature!
The majestic mountains, the sparkling waters and the haunting beauty
all around were only just adding gems to this tiny paradise
The town instantly drew me in with its old world charm that was visible in the traditional houses and the narrow roads that take you through the village.
A walk in the mountains
Most of the houses were sealed (I am not sure if you can see that in the pic), as the village was about to shut down for the winters (for 6 months or so as it gets snow-bound with sub-zero temperatures) and residents had begun to move towards the lower areas.
Sealed doors in the Mana Village
The narrow quaint lanes through the beauty of nature and the traditional small woody huts took me further into a world full of peace and tranquility. There were small field like patches outside the houses which the villagers cultivate to grow vegetables and other edible stuff for self consumption.
Patchy Fields
As I walked further, I noticed that most of the inhabitants of the village (the last generation of the Indo-Mangolian tribes) were engrossed in their respective works…the women were either doing farm activities or wrapping up their household tasks while the men were out in the shops.
A hard day’s work is not yet over… The womenfolk busy in their daily chores
Perched at such a high altitude and leading an almost isolated kind of life, I could not help but admire the élan with which they carry on their difficult, hard working and rudimentary existence even in such hard and unfriendly conditions…
Mana Village at a glance
The Mana people are also reputed for their weaving skills. The hand woven shawls, carpets or durries and sweaters are a masterpiece in themselves.
Fascinating works of art by the Mana people on display
But the best was definitely saved for the last: Potatoes! Yes Mana is famous for its potato produce and this I had well gauged this, the moment we had entered the village. Big potato sacks were neatly arranged, and stacked up for sale right at the entrance itself. I was guessing from the Harsil apple episode that Vishwanath was never going to leave it and never ever going to let us leave from here without taking one! And I was right! He decided to take the matters in his own hands…
Vishwanth (in blue jacket) haggling with the traders
Since it was the village closing time, he wanted them cheaper than the quoted prices…
Vishwanth very happy and content with the bargain :)
The sack was humongous, so we split it into two; one for us and one for him. We bought ours back home and relished these pahadi aloos (mountain potatoes) to our heart’s content and distributed it amongst our relatives too.
An incredible evening it was reminding me again of what a wonderful break it is to relish those hushed moments of beauty and silence at its very best!
Previous posts from this trip -
4. ISKCON Temple, Delhi
5. Entire DAY 1 of the Yatra (includes The journey finally begins... Haridwar to Uttarkashi)
5. Entire DAY 1 of the Yatra (includes The journey finally begins... Haridwar to Uttarkashi)
6. Entire DAY 2 of the Yatra (includes Enroute to Gangotri - Gangnani, Enchanting Mother Ganga... Our First Dham - Gangotri, Places to visit in and around Gangotri, Bhaironghati, Harsil, Pilot Baba Ashram in Bhatwari, Temples of Uttarkashi)
7. Entire Day 3 of the Yatra (includes Uttarkashi to Birahi (Chowrangikhal), Uttarkashi to Birahi (Kemundakhal))
7. Entire Day 3 of the Yatra (includes Uttarkashi to Birahi (Chowrangikhal), Uttarkashi to Birahi (Kemundakhal))
76 Comments
Oh, you're so lucky to be driven to Mana. I walked.
ReplyDeleteThose days the village was much smaller. We went past the military post too.
Yes, agree the air is relaxing and peaceful.
I love places like Mana (ie. laid-back & quiet). Pictures are one more beautiful than the other. My favorites are the one with the sun rays and weaved articles, their colors are so lovely.
ReplyDeleteWhat a fascinating post - your photographs capture beautifully what must be a very special place.
ReplyDeleteDear Arti
ReplyDeleteI was waiting for this episode!! Thank you so much for the photos on mana village. I was not allowed to take camera to Mana when I visited last time many years back. I think, now it is allowed, need to find out if one can take camera up to Basundhara fall.
I read your previous posting , and read it many times. Now I realized I forgot to type few words of appreciation! It was great reading indeed.
Have a nice week
beautiful images of an amazing place!!
ReplyDeleteI can't wait to commence my Amarnath trip..! Wonderful Arti..!
ReplyDeleteI'm glad to hear that they can plant potatoes at this place.
ReplyDeleteIf I'll go there, I'm sure that I plant a lot of potatoes with people living there.
Lovely post!!! I really liked the picture with a cabbage peeking out from a corner!!!!
ReplyDeleteWell, you have covered the length and breadth of the village in one go, was anything else left in the village :)
ReplyDeleteIt's a nice feeling being in the last village of India and just across is an unknown land that is strikingly similar but barred for us.
Kudos to you for this excellent stuff and looking forward for more.. happy blogging!
Beautiful photos! LG Tina
ReplyDeleteThat weaving is simply beautiful as are the views of the mountains.
ReplyDeleteWhat an incrediblely gorgeous place! Such an interesting post and superb captures as always, Arti. Your photos are always the next best thing to being there myself -- and I would have loved to be there! Hope your week is going well!
ReplyDeleteSylvia
lovely place n great pictures .
ReplyDeleteEverytime I see a post on any place in the Himalayan region of India something inside of me sincerely urges me to go visit... I hope I get to some day. Really interesting specifically to see the livelihood in the 'last village' specially the haggling on the potatoes lol
ReplyDeleteUS Masala is hosting a giveaway. Do check it out here
US Masala
I'm in awe of this scenery and the lifestyle here in this village. I would so love to walk that narrow road through the village, and just breathe the air and take it all in. I think I would have to pinch myself, because it would be easy to fall into a state of disbelief. the vastness of this unique world leaves me wanting more. thanks for sharing this Arti.
ReplyDeleteI love potatoes! The weaving is beautiful, and those clouds look like they are coming out of the mountains! They are sealed up all that time? Don't they get sick? How could anyone get to them to help them? How do they get any food?
ReplyDeleteDesire to visit my home state gets stronger every time i visit you.Thanks for this amazing post on Mana.Waiting for the next part.....
ReplyDeleteSo faszinating Arti - how i long for this stillness sometimes! Would love to slip into these pix and trail of with you for today! xox
ReplyDeletethe post itself takes me to the different world.. Aarti, you rock,, nice work and nice pics..
ReplyDeleteSo you have sent us again in the heaven on this earth only.........What a wonderful pics, I am just watching them again and again. All feelings are stopped and mind is in eternal bliss.
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing all this.
@ The Chair Speaks
ReplyDeleteWe too crossed the military posts, infact much of the area belongs to them.
@ Ushnish Ghosh
ReplyDeleteWhen did you visit it Ushnish da?
Now camera is allowed in Mana village. Dont know about Vasudhara falls, missed it this time.
@ Shridharan
ReplyDeleteEven I am excited about your Amarnath trip!! Safe journey. Keep us posted.
@ cocomino
ReplyDeleteThey taste wonderful too!
@ Santosh
ReplyDeleteYes there are still things left, Part 2 coming up next!!
@ Aipi
ReplyDeleteYa, the Himalayas can do that to anyone... They have a magnetic power to attract people!!
Will surely participate in the giveaway, congrats on completing 1 glorious year of blogging:)
@ Ms. Becky
ReplyDeleteEven I am tempted to go there again, looking at this post... Just a gorgeous place!
@ Ginny
ReplyDeleteThere arent people in those sealed houses Ginny! The people (the whole village population) moves to the lower reaches of the Himalayas during winters!!
@ Mohini
ReplyDeleteIts really heaven on earth... You want to get lost there!!
@ ALL
ReplyDeleteThanks for those comments. Yes, its a lovely place to visit with nature playing its part to the fullest.
beautiful pics
ReplyDeleteHello,Arti!
ReplyDeleteThe arts by Mana people are wonderful!
Are the arts made to sale for exporting to other countries? The works are very original arts. I like them. Do Mana people come back into the village from their lower areas in spring? I love potatoes too!
Have a great day.
Tomoko.
Dearest Arti,
ReplyDeleteYOUR excursions through a land unknown to me bring me to the revelation that no matter where you have been OR HAVE NOT BEEN, there is a common thread that connects us all...the need for beauty. What a heavenly place indeed, amongst the majesty of the MOUNTAINS!!!! THANK YOU FOR YOU EVER SO KIND WORDS about my post. I means so much to me that my ideas do touch others around the world...and VICE VERSA! BIG HUGS, Anita
Beautiful pics! Incredible India. There is so much in India to explore and enjoy! And you are lucky to be able to do that.
ReplyDeleteGood luck!
Keep traveling. Keep exploring.
It looks so peaceful and I love how remote it is and that the locals move before the winter.
ReplyDeleteAwesome pictures, as usual. Such a quaint picture perfect village tucked away in the mountains....Heavenly! Do continue the Yatra, Arti:)
ReplyDeleteIt's an awesome experience to be so close to nature. Loved the 5th picture on the post. I am from Himachal, your post made me so homesick in Boston.
ReplyDeleteSounds wonderful to be in that quiet rural village after being around crowds for a while. It is beautiful there.
ReplyDelete@ Redrose
ReplyDeleteThe art is for sale in those regions, I dont know about whether they are exported to other countries.
And yes the people return back to the village once the summer kicks in.
Great post & Beautiful photographs.Hope some day I will be visit the awesome place.
ReplyDeleteDear Arti,
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot for sharing your Mana Yatra. I too had visited this village in 1985. Nothing seems to have changed during all this period in that village. We had to walk that three Kms. with my two small children. Your post does not find mention of Bheem Pul (bridge) and Vyas Gufa. Or will it form part of Part II of your writing.
Your all photos are really great. Take one very close to divine nature. I also recall having seen big glaciers, in fact we walk over them many times.
And the post rewinds memories when I was there last year. Thanks for writing and sharing.
ReplyDelete“A refreshing walk in the midst of the heavenly Himalayan surroundings ..”: my senses remind me of what it’s like from my past experience in Japanese mountains, still I can’t fully imagine as Himalayan mountains are so special. I have just yearning with sighs.
ReplyDeleteStuck-in-time Mana village is so attractive to visit, however I don’t think I can endure such life once I know this convenience I have now, but surely there’s something there we have left behind. Thank you for the introduction of this paradise, Arti.
@ vishan lal
ReplyDeleteWow! 1985... That must be quite nostalgic, the camera wont be allowed at that time as Ushnish Ghosh has commented above...
And yes Bhim Pul and Vyas Gufa will form the next part...
There were large glaciers but those were on the opposite side of the valley.
I envy you a lot!!!!!!!!
ReplyDeleteVery fascinating information. I particularly like your photo of the beautiful works of art.
ReplyDeleteWhat lovely shots of a beautiful place!
ReplyDeleteI thank you so much, why i travel with your great photos , in places distant and beautiful, that I will not go ever ...
ReplyDeleteI wish you a beautiful summer!
many greetings
yet another wonderful post... the last village of india... must have been an amazing people...
ReplyDeletethe photos r brilliant as usual... seems the people are so mingled with the nature...
the mountains are wonderful... had a complete feeling of peace on seeing these pictures...
Beautiful photography Arthi...it was amazing looking and reading ur post...ya I am off blog world again for some time but will be back soon ..thanks so much for the support tht u show Arthi it is much appreciated !
ReplyDeleteWonderful skies, Arti. I love the cloud formation and the flare by the sun. Thanks for this fascinating visual trip, my friend. Happy weekend. :)
ReplyDeleteअपनी चार साल पहले बाइक पर की गयी ये यात्रा दुबारा याद हो आयी।
ReplyDeleteफ़ोटो बहुत अच्छे लगे।
I had also visited Mana village with my family in
ReplyDelete1998.Also visited Vyas Gufa,Bhim pul and many other places.Your presentation with pictures is excellent.It refreshed my memories.
Thanks.
You are welcome on my blog.
Hey do you know anything about ShivaKashi?
ReplyDeleteHi Arti, "Mana" in English sometimes refers to magic and your tour there was certainly magical. My favorite photo is of the sun going down behind the Himalayas. I can almost taste those potatoes grown in the crisp mountain air!
ReplyDeleteI felt divinity, serenity and quietness of the mountains as if I were there. Himalaya Mountains are depicted as the most holy place in the mural painting of Yakushi-ji Temple. Probably I won't be able to visit such a high altitude, but your photos and words took me there. Arti, Thanks a lot.
ReplyDeleteAn interesting place for sure! Thanks for stopping by my blog. I am presently on hiatus from posting on blog until I get some things accomplished that need getting taken care of.
ReplyDeleteHi Arti,
ReplyDeleteYour pictures are amazing that you captured on your adventurous trip! How blessed you are to be able to travel to such a beautiful place.
Thanks for visiting my blog and for your kind comments. Have a wonderful week!
xoxo...Gloria
Hi Arti,
ReplyDeletethanks for visiting my blog and promoting my post.
Incidentally I have added two snaps of my dog on the train...thought you might like to know.
Here is the link
http://restlesssouldier.blogspot.com/2011/07/travelling-with-dog-by-train.html
thanks
RS
There's such amazing serenity Arti... I long to go spend my days in such wilderness and peace. The pictures are beautiful too!
ReplyDelete@Tech Blogger If you are talking about Shivakashi of Tamil Nadu, then I am afraid i don't have any information on it.
ReplyDeleteBut there is a town by the name of Uttarkashi in Uttarakhand and if you are referring to that, then you can follow the link I have pasted below -
Exploring Uttarkashi in Garhwal Himalayas, Uttarakhand
@Barb The place was certainly magical and i never knew Mana also refers to the word 'Magic'. Thanks for sharing :)
ReplyDelete@Snowwhite The Himalayan region is known as the abode of the Gods, a holy place holding some of the most sacred sites in India. Many pilgrimage places can be found at the foothills of these mountains and peaks, the most revered among them being the Char Dhams of the Garhwal region. Many thanks for sharing the info with us.
Such a serene, simple life people lead in villages. Have only heard of this tiny village, thanks for sharing pics and more info on it Arti! Must-go!!
ReplyDeleteYour pictures are amazing that you captured on your adventurous trip!Beautiful photography..bice work frnd
ReplyDeleteWow Arti, you really captured spirit of the place through the pictures and words :)
ReplyDeleteThanks Arti, for this lovely blog! I missed seeing Mana when I went to Badrinath, but you made this up for me.. :)
ReplyDeleteWonderful experience. The landscapes are very scenic.
ReplyDeleteLovely description as usual. Thanks for taking us to this journey to Mana. I am so totally dying to get to a calm place like that away from the din of Mumbai.
ReplyDeleteI remember the road sign indicating Mana Village but I diverted towards Ghangaria...
ReplyDeleteItching for another trip but dunno how I'll manage time!!
My God, Arti...So serene a place! Lovely to get a glimpse of this beautiful place thru ur pics...and the durries are fabulous! Lucky you...:)
ReplyDeleteHello Arti,
ReplyDeleteThanks for refreshing my memories.
I had gone to Mana village back in 2007. I remember the peace and serenity I had experienced up there. Enjoyed going through your post.
Thanks.
Fascinating Arti! Thanks for giving us a free ride to Mana :)
ReplyDeleteWhat a lovely place!!! You are lucky that you got to visit such a beautiful place. Your lively pictures and narration transported me there :)
ReplyDeleteI remember this post, one of the first few I guess I read on your blog. Feels great to read it again...Thanks Twitter...:)
ReplyDeleteGreat Blog the Post was awesome
ReplyDeleteThis is an excellent blog. I randomly check about Mana village google brings me to this blog. I read about mana 7 years ago. and after that i never find a good reading about that place. now you bring back to me that peaceful place in front of my eyes. i like to read about thapovan and other holy places even i know there. reading gives me satisfaction and happiness. thanks
ReplyDeleteDelighted you stopped by... Your suggestions, feedback are really appreciated. Thanks a lot :) Hope you visit again!
If you have asked a question, please give me at least 2 days to reply back. Thank you :)