Tag Archives: Manali – Leh highway

Cycling the Manali-Leh highway: Part One

Planting The Seed
It was a simple aspiration… solo cycle the Himalayas, full stop. With the crowning glory of this journey being the Manali-Leh Highway, a very high altitude route famous among cycle tourists in equal measures for it’s stunningly beautiful landscape, diverse traditional cultures, and the many challenges it presents. Challenges? High altitude, deteriorated road conditions, rainfall, relentless sun, freezing cold, snow, and wind. All the things you would expect from the unpredictable mountain passes. Culture? Landscape? Well, you will have to check out the photos!!

Altitude Map of Manali-Leh Highway
Altitude Map of Manali-Leh Highway

This would be a test of my courage and my resolve. Did I have what it takes to bike solo and unsupported across one of the highest motorable highways in the world?

Well, the trip is now over and I have cycled the distance…. though the trip ended up quite different that I had thought and the above questions remain unanswered!

I conceived the idea from the luxury of my house sitting gig in Thailand where I had been relaxing for several months after my epic world cycle trip that brought me from London, England to Koh Lanta, Thailand. Having spent over a year in the tropics, I was dying for some crisp mountain air and wild mountain scenery and as my house sitting gig was about to end… I jumped at the chance to cycle a high altitude highway.

Part of wanting to tackle a high altitude pass was to make up for missing out on the Pamir Highway when I cycled through Central Asia a year and a half previously. The Pamir Highway is another high altitude route also coveted by adventurous cycle tourists and one I missed out on because Tajikistan, the country in which the Pamir Highway lies, was in the midst of some political instability and access to the highway was cut off.

Bummer.

Pamir_Highway_Route

So here it was two years later and opportunity knocked to do the Manali-Leh Highway. And it was sooo calling me!

Only thing was, the window to do the route was closing. It was May and I had about four months to gear up, get me and my bike to India and cross the pass before it closed in September. I had to giddy up!

Slight Change of Plans!
Gearing up was no easy feat, considering I had been cycling in fair weather for the most part of two years and I had long ditched most of my cold weather cycling clothing. Not to mention all the essential biking clothes I had which was all but worn out.

Yikes! But the lure of the adventure before me made preparing a joy and the anticipation of what lay ahead filled me with wonder and excitement.

It was early in these preparations though that my journey took on a completely different flavour. The way in which I wanted to travel required me to be self supported, which meant I needed my cook stove that I had left with a friend in London. I emailed Heather telling her what I was up to and if she could please send along my cook stove?

I also asked her along! I knew she was an adventurous sort as well and what did I have to lose by asking…

Me:
" I still haven't given up on some crazy adventure karma having our paths cross again. I mean if biking Ladakh appeals to you... you are totally welcome to join!!"
Heather:
"I would actually love to come out & join you on part of your cycling trip, if it was ever possible to co-ordinate. I am looking for a bit of a cycling adventure.."

Say what?

Holy shit!!!

The face of my trip changed completely. And for the better. Yes I like the challenge of solo travel and all that, yet only because I usually can’t find anyone daring enough to come with me! Here was a good friend wanting to share this with me. I could not have been more please and I gladly let go of my solo aspirations to include Heather in my plans. No… it was more like the adventure all of a sudden became ‘our’ adventure. As much hers as mine.

Heather, Wilson and I in Bristol, England
Heather, Wilson and I in Bristol, England – 2012

With about three and a half months to go, there was a very real possibility that I would now have a cycling companion!! It may seem like a silly thing to be excited about, but none of my friends who I have invited to cycle with me have ever taken up the offer. Which is cool I understand about priorities, but I have longed for the opportunity to share my world with friends, a friend, anyone!!

And here was Heather saying an enthusiastic “yes!” to become part of this Himalayan adventure.

Despite repeatedly pinching myself to ensure that this was really happening, I also often remind myself that at anytime, circumstances in Heather’s life could prevent her from joining me.

Though as time progressed, it became very clear that she was totally serious and committed to doing this journey with me.

I remained in this flux between anticipation of her arrival and the very real possibility that she may not make it, right up until I saw her arrive at the Chandigarh airport.

Arrival
Heather, my intrepid cycling companion who booked two weeks out of her busy schedule to accompany me on a journey of a lifetime, a bicycle adventure from Manali to Leh, was here in Chandigarh! I could not stop staring at her as she struggled with her bicycle in the baggage area. I mean sure, she is totally cute… but I was staring at her (mostly) because I couldn’t believe she was actually here! It was like seeing a mirage….

“Really? She’s here? This is happening?”

“Darren, stop staring and help me with the bike.”

Right.

IMG_1868
Auto Rickshaw ride to the Chandigarh Hostel. Note bike box!!

Oops!
The plan was to relax a bit in Chandigarh and then catch a bus up to Manali later that evening. In the meantime I would get my bike adjusted to make it easier to climb the many passes on the Manali-Leh highway. Well, I never did get my bike fixed! I left to go get it done then realized that I had left it too late and had to have Heather meet me at the travel agent where the bus to Manali was booked.

So not even a day in India and I had Heather flagging down an auto rickshaw, piling in with her bike and luggage and go off to a location she only knew the name of with a rickshaw driver who soon got last and our only communication was through texting through her London mobile account. I was down to six remaining txt messages and about to cancel our night bus, when she appeared out of traffic with a big though nervous smile that said, “Okay I made it… but that was tough!”

I had hoped to make the first bit easy for Heather as this was her first time in ‘real’ India outside of her resort trip to Goa. But no. I blew it and there she was alone in a rickshaw in a strange city in a strange country. Oops… sorry ’bout that! But as I say, she arrived with a smile and an “Oh well, shit happens!” and we hopped our bus to Manali in the nick of time.

So not even a day with  my new travelling companion and I came face to face with one of the biggest challenges of travelling with someone… having someone witness, and be affected by, my mess ups! When I’m on my own they aren’t really mess ups, they are just the way I do things!! But with someone along, I am acutely conscious of the fact that how I do things don’t always go as planned and I’m especially conscious when it affects them in a negative way. And the illusion I have of myself as a fully capable and competent traveller… is put to question! Ugh.

Manali – Mile Zero
I had just been to Manali with my cousin Allison. And had the place sussed out, and even had arranged for the guy who runs the guest house we would be staying at to pick us up. THAT all went smooth and even the rest of our two day stay in Manali went smooth. It was a nice backdrop to get reacquainted. Not to mention gear up a little more and put Heather’s bike together.

We booked a room with a loft and so had plenty of space to sort out our respective gear. I had bought a tent on account of a suggestion from two Scots who had done the trip the previous year and highly recommended that we travel with one…. yet it also put my gear quotient over the top.

Carrying waaaay too much stuff!
Carrying waaaay too much stuff!

I was simply carrying too much gear.

Though it was too late to leave anything behind as I may not make it back to Manali and I didn’t trust leaving my laptop behind. Yeah that’s right… I brought my laptop!!

So I resolved to just suck it up and carry the load. Tent, campstove, camp fuel, cookware, laptop, camera, assorted charging cables. Oh and food as well!!

Didn’t feel quite right… but what were my options?

We did a fun short cycle without the panniers the day before we left, just to make sure the bikes were okay and ensure we knew our way out of town! I had cycled with Heather before in Bolivia and in England and I knew her to be an extremely good cyclist. She had her doubts about whether or not she could keep up… our little fun cycle reassured her that she was up to the task.

Our few days in Manali ended with a great dinner and a beer and a last minute planning session at a very nice hotel. We returned to our guest house for our last sleep before the big journey began the next morning! Both of us excited, yet nervous to begin this crazy adventure cycling one of the highest and most difficult highway on the planet!

On The Road Again… Very Soon!

I leave Thailand in just over two weeks. That’s when my visa is up. I won’t be coming back straight away as I have for the past year. No. I will instead be packing my bike into a box and flying with it to Delhi! To start an epic bike ride through the Himalayas!

I am both excited and nervous about this. Excited because… I love an adventure… hello!!! And nervous because… its frickin’ India and India is frickin’ scary! Last time I was in India I made myself sick with anticipation about how it would be when I landed. I projected all kinds of dreadful scenarios that, in the end, never came to be. My landing was smooth and wondrous and I hit the ground running with five other travellers and with their help, we easily navigated our way through Calcutta and on to Bodhgaya, Varanasi and Delhi. No ay problema!

But that was then. That time it all worked out! This time? the dreadful scenarios are piling up and pushing themselves into my stream of thought which of course causes me butterflies. All the what ifs!!!

Ahhhhh! This is not my first time around the block! Why the nerves?!

Oh well, here’s hoping it all works out!

Some answers to questions people have asked.

Dude! You got it amazing there… why are you leaving?!
Ha! Totally I got it good here… all things material a guy could possibly want. And the weather to boot! So why am I leaving?

I have been in Thailand one year almost to the day, and despite loving it here, I am totally called to be on the road right now. Longing for crisp mountain air and a good thigh burn up a steep incline. I long to see my breath and gaze across mountain landscape. And yeah… spend a few nights in my tent freezing my butt off!

I want to experience the depth of spirit I remember from my last time in India. Here I’ve become somewhat hedonistic in a way that is not sustainable or even desirable. It  feels kinda empty. Fun! Don’t get me wrong… but lacking depth and meaning.

So where are you going?
Think I already gave that away! India! But NW India to be more precise! When the opportunity presented itself to get back on the bike… My first thought was NW India and more specifically the Manali – Leh Highway. Four hundred and fifty odd kilometres of remote mountain highway that crosses four 4,000 metre passes.

…And Why?
 When I was crossing Central Asia by bicycle… I was driven on by the hopes of cycling the Pamir Highway, another high altitude roadway that for me is the holy grail of the kind of cycling I want to do: Remote, challenging, beautiful, cultural. I didn’t get to do it because at the time the Pamir Highway was closed on account of some political turmoil.

I felt cheated! And wondered if I would ever get a chance to do this route again. Though when my mind focused on NW India and the Manali – Leh highway… it was like, “Yeah, this will more than make up for missing the Pamir Highway!”

Need to give a shout out to Mat and Anna from Poland. Two intrepid cyclists who I met in Kyrgyzstan and then again recently in Koh Lanta! They held me spellbound as they told the story of their ride through NW India… and even after they had gone, I scoured their blog: Getting Nowhere captivated once again by their account of their journey through this remote area. I had written India off as too dangerous a place to travel… and yet herr were these two telling me otherwise.

Are you travelling solo?
Okay no one has actually asked me this, maybe they just assume I am! But I am so excited that, no!!! I am not travelling alone. At least for the first couple of weeks.

I had contacted my friend Heather in London who I stayed with while in London asking if she would mind sending me my stove and water filter that I was storing at her place. And I said, sincerely that if she wanted to join me she was more than welcome! And to my surprised delight… she said, “What the hell? Why not?” A bike expedition she was supposed to go on in Death Valley had been cancelled and she was more that ready for an adventure!

I met Heather in Sucre, Bolivia at a home stay and shared good conversation and a few bike excursions! One in Sucre and also we did the Death Road in La Paz. A wild decent down what’s claimed to be the most dangerous road in the world. Fun!! Clearly we both survived!

As I mentioned Heather was also very kind to host me at her place at the start of my World By Bike adventure. I still have extremely fond memories of that stay and my time sightseeing there. She even biked with me my first day out of London and also joined me from Bristol to Bath during the ‘I don’t know what the hell I’m doing so I will just meander around England’ phase of my world trip.

I was such an unaccomplished rookie cyclist back then and she got to witness some of my freak outs!

Hopefully now after a couple of years on the road and 12,000 km on the bike… I will have a little more panache.

Heather has perhaps as adventurous a soul as I do and I admire her because she has balanced her adventure fix while also maintaining her career as a doctor.

Many many people have taken interest in this thing that I’m doing… though I have been dying for someone to join me in cycling these far reaches of the planet. That Heather has bought the plane ticket and jumped in with both feet gives, for me, much needed external validation to what I’m doing.

Are you ready for this?
In terms of preparing? Hells no! I am scrambling at the moment to save my life!! Ahhhhh! But in the bigger sense of being ready… absolutely. Despite my extended stay in Thailand, I still see myself as a dude on bike exploring the world and I am so ready to get back to that. Needing some perspective actually on the hollowness paradise served up. Behind the good times.

What about this new website?
Alright no one asked me about this either but no one knew about it! I am really excited about having a ‘home’! Not just an account on Travelpod. A place where I can showcase my digital life! My writing, my pictures and my goofy videos! So far this is a work in progress but stay tuned!

Okay I just pushed out over a thousand words! In future posts, I’m going to try and keep it around there and write more often. And yeah I know that this post isn’t the type of writing people have come to expect from me… and I need to work out my nerves before I get back to that!! Weird! Starting a new website like this has left me very self conscious about my writing. here’s hoping that doesn’t last long. Hey! At least it’s informative eh?