Black Peak Expedition travel tours in India today from trekupindia.com: Community and Support – Trekking in India, especially on well-trodden paths, often involves trekking groups or organized tours that provide experienced guides, porters, and fellow trekkers. This sense of community makes the experience safer, especially for those new to trekking. Seasonal Flexibility – India’s vast size and diverse climates allow trekking at different times of the year. While the Himalayan region is popular during the summer months, trekking in the southern hills or coastal areas can be ideal during the monsoon season or in winter. Read even more info at phulara ridge trek.
Seasonal Flexibility – Depending on where you trek, you can find opportunities to hit the trails throughout the year. While the Himalayas are ideal in summer, the lower-altitude treks in places like Kerala or Uttarakhand are fantastic in the winter or monsoon. Adventure Beyond Trekking – Many trekking areas offer other adventure activities such as river rafting, paragliding, camping, and mountain biking, so you can combine your love for trekking with other thrilling experiences.
Staying in tents and sleeping in sleeping bags on a hard floor: Trekkers don’t realise how different it is to sleep on the ground that is not their bed. It is enough to make many lose their sleep. This is the truth about trekking. We sleep where we can. The bad: Our Hillman tents and sleeping bags are extremely warm and top-quality. But camping outdoors means you are roughing it out. You’re camping in cold snow sometimes, or camping on sloping surfaces, mostly on hard earth. Sometimes you hear heavy rain battering the tent through the night, with snow and water leaking in. Sometimes you might even have a tent mate who snores! How to deal with it: Mental conditioning plays a big role here. You must be prepared for such conditions much before you get on your trek. You must also be layered and cosy much before you go to bed (even before sundown). But come what may, you will roll over to the corner of the tent, or be bunched up in the morning, will wake up multiple times in the night. Even given all these factors, trust your body to take rest. A couple of hours of sleep will rejuvenate your body even if you feel you have not rested enough. The good: This is one of the best experiences on a trek. It’s what gives you a feeling of adventure, an experience of the wilderness. Even stepping out of your tent in the middle of the night to answer nature’s call is a celestial experience. You’re not going to see the Milky Way spread out above you every day. No matter how cold you get in the middle of the night, it’s going to remain one of your favourite experiences for life.
Kuari Pass Trek: Kuari Pass is a trek that blows everyone’s brains out with its terrific views of the India’s highest mountain. It is one of our most “complete” treks with few of the best forests, campsites, ridge walks and mountain views. Irrespective of you being a seasoned trekker or a beginner the Kuari Pass is a trek you need to do. It is a must-do for the views of some of India’s most celebrated mountains – Mt Nanda Devi (25,673 feet) and Mt Dronagiri (23,182 feet) – in any season.
Buran Ghati: Best Months: May, June, September, October. Any nature lover will go weak at the knees on this trek. This is by far the most perfect trek we have seen — it has the best parts of India’s greatest treks stitched together in one trek. I had sent you a brilliant video on it last week. Watch it here if you missed it. This trek has the prettiest forest sections, unimaginably beautiful meadows of Dayara, and perhaps the best campsite out of all our treks, nestled in the meadows. To add to that is the thrilling pass crossing at 15,000 ft. where you rappel down a snow wall. It’s an incredible trek and I hate to say it, but I think everyone at Indiahikes is biased towards this trek!
How to tackle negative temperatures: Layers. Layers. Layers. The mantra is to carry enough layers. With layers, whether you’re from a sweltering Chennai or a humid Mumbai, you’ll be able to tackle a Himalayan winter. Here’s the trick. Carry five warm layers — a pair of thermals for the night, two sweaters, one fleece jacket and one padded jacket. Along with these you need warm accessories — a woollen cap, gloves, woollen socks (for the night) and a neck warmer. With these, you can deal with the coldest night with no worries. (I’m going to address all of these layers in detail further down). Read additional info on Gaumukh Tapovan Trek.
What kind of sunglasses do you need? If you have a good pair of sunglasses (whether Aviators, Wayfarers, or shielded sunglasses), they will all work. The best suited to trekking are well-fitting shielded sunglasses that leave less or no gaps in your vision. Tips to use sunscreen lotion: Use sunscreen rated SPF 40 or more. If you can’t find SPF 40, go for SPF 30, but not lower than that. Apply sunscreen to all exposed body parts 30 minutes before setting out on the trek. No matter what rating of SPF your cream has, reapply every 2 hours. Apply abundantly. A good layer of sunscreen is essential for its effective action, so don’t be stingy with it. Buy a ‘broad spectrum’ sunscreen. Broad-spectrum sunscreens block out both UVA and UVB rays. They usually have the phrase ‘broad spectrum’ printed on their labels.