Magic
Of The Himachal Himalayas One must remember, the
Kangra valley is not one place in particular.
It happens to be the name given to the entire
region that lies between the Dhauladhar ranges
of the Himalayas to the north and the last strangling
foothills to the south. So, roughly speaking,
this talk is about a slim rectangular belt running
90 miles in length and 30 miles in breadth through
the mountains. To the north, the peaks rear skyward:
first a low chain of ridges followed by an extensive
line averaging between 7,000 and 9,000 feet. Directly
behind those are massifs rising from 13,000 to
well over 16,000 feet. Then the snows.
Anything else
would have ruined it. A different alignment, a
different mode of taking the railway through the
maze of hills and valleys would have spoilt its
picture postcard perfectness. This unique line
has just two tunnels, one of which is only 250
feet and the other 1,000 feet in length. The traveler
must remember this is a total distance of 103
miles. Instead of boring his way through the mountains,
the railway engineer has skillfully avoided running
head first into the hillside. Instead of following
dizzy curves, he has cleverly chosen to avoid
the awkward corners and straighten his turning.
For the Kangra Valley Railway presents to the
traveler, a chance to gaze as long as he likes
on the ever present panorama of snow-clad ranges
and the gold green fields without being swung
round every few minutes on a narrow are before
his eyes can greet the scenery.
Certainly the
scenery through which the train passes is ample
compensation for the extra distance covered as
compared to getting there by road. The most picturesque
parts of the valley are exposed to the view –
the stretch of 18 miles from Mangwal to Kangra,
for example, lies through country unsurpassed
for its majestic grandeur with the majestic Ban
Ganga gorge and the deep Kangra chasm as two piece
de resistance. As one approaches Palampur, the
ever present background of snowy chain peaks, 15,000
and 16,000 feet in height is barely ten miles
away. From here onwards, the line runs parallel
to the Dhauladhar range and much nearer to it
than any other railways in India that ever comes
so close to the eternal snows.
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