What can you do in Darjeeling in a few hours? I spent the limited time
available to me lazing in the Chowrasta Mall - a flat land where roads meet,
usually described as the heart of the hill town - and taking a walk around the Mall
Road, which starts from the Mall and goes around Observatory Hill to join the
Mall from a different side. I also visited Mirik – another hill station in the
Darjeeling Hills on the same day.
We drove from Jalpaiguri town through Siliguri (via National Highway
31) to Darjeeling (via Rohini and Hill Cart Road) (Distance: Siliguri to
Darjeeling - 80 kilometers, Jalpaiguri to Darjeeling – 120 kilometers). Relentless
views of fields, military encampments, tea gardens, distant hill ranges, jungles
and human settlements on the way, one after the other, left us almost
breathless and asking for more.
Before reaching the Mall, we stopped at Batasia Loop – one of
several loops of the Darjeeling Himalayan Railway – five kilometers ahead of
the town. At Batasia Loop, the Darjeeling Himalayan Railway or the toy train takes
a 360-degree turn to make a sharp descent towards Darjeeling town. The spot
offers a panoramic view of the town and the ranges around. A war memorial has
been constructed at the spot.
Darjeeling is at an average height of 6710 feet (2045 meters). The
Mall is a meeting a point of people, a shopping area, a tourist attraction and
a viewing point of distant snow-capped mountains. Contrary to our expectations
– fuelled by a prediction of the Met Department of possible rains - the weather
was good. It was bright, sunny and pleasant. People were out in hordes just
standing around. I sat in the Mall watching women in traditional Bhutanese and
Nepalese attires, a lady sweeping the Mall, boys and girls from schools, and
perhaps colleges as well hanging about, locals lounging and tourists looking
around. There are stores including some really old and heritage book and other
kinds of shops bordering the Mall and stretching beyond - on the streets around
the Mall. I took a walk on the Mall Road and saw dozens of rhododendron trees
with various hues of red and pink flowers on the slopes above and below me.
Other attractions in Darjeeling include a few parks, temples,
botanical and zoological gardens, Himalayan Mountaineering Institute, a few
other institutions, a cable car and tea estates.
The drive from Darjeeling to Mirik via Ghum and Sukhia Pokhri and
the return journey from Mirik to Siliguri (Distance: Darjeeling to Mirik – 49
kiliometers, Siliguri to Mirik 55 kilometers) were even nicer than the first
leg of the trip. The routes have miles and miles of pine and fern forests, tea
plantations, occasional habitations, cantonments and gorgeous views of distant
ranges.
Mirik – at an average height of 5810 feet (1700 metres) - is well
known for its lake fed by perennial rivers. The lake – said to be 1.25
kilometers long - is surrounded by a dense forest on its west side, which lends
its water a green hue. In winters, migratory birds visit the lake. A board next
to the lake claimed this year Siberian Cranes had been there. I took pictures
of a few Great Comorants, sitting comfortably with an air of grandness about
them, in the middle of the lake. There are a few restaurants and small eateries
by the lake. At one end of the lake, people had gathered to feed colorful fish,
the kinds you would see in aquariums, only bigger than average aquarium
varieties.
I must have spent about 45 minutes at the lake before heading back
to Jalpaiguri. It was a day well spent. I was content, happy and tired, all at
once!
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