
An
enormous area of the Himalaya to the east of Bhutan is yet to be explored!
Arunachal Pradesh and other areas of the North East Frontier Province have
been closed to outsiders since the beginning of the century. This is because
the Chinese refused to ratify the border with Tibet (called the McMohan
Line), set in 1914. However at the end of 1996 parts of this sensitive
border area were released and opened to tourism .
We begin with a
steamer ride 8 hours up the mighty Brahmaputra from Dibrugarh to Pasighat.
We will then trek on good paths through jungle and forested hills to Komsing
and beyond. After this we will relax with some game viewing at Kaziranga
wildlife National park.
Best Time: Mid October to Mid
March
Style of Trek: Camping
Duration: 18 Days
Trekking
Days: 7 days
Grade: Moderate
INTRODUCTION
A land that time has forgotten. It is a place that has a tiny
population in relation to its size, that contains vast unexplored areas,
colourful friendly tribes, pristine jungle-covered foothills, forested
mountain ranges and unclimbed Himalayan giants. It is still administered by
a rather quaint system, similar to that set up under colonial rule.
Arunachal Pradesh, once known as the 'Hidden Land', is the only state
in India which has been completely closed to all outsiders since the latter
days of the British in India.
One of the last great geographical
puzzles that fascinated Victorian explorers was whether the Tsang Po River
in Tibet swung around the eastern end of the Himalaya to become the
Brahmaputra. Most famously one of the pundit explorers was sent on a mission
to drop logs into the Tsang Po while Political Officers in India waited to
see if they came out on the Indian side. Naturally, many explorers tried to
follow the Brahmaputra through the system of gigantic gorges which do indeed
bring the Tsang Po around the Himalaya and down into Arunachal Pradesh. Some
of those early explorers were massacred by the fierce tribes who lived in
the foothills on the approach to the Tsang Po gorges. This trek has, as one
of its main objectives, a visit to the village of Komsing where there is the
grave of Capt. Noel Williamson, just one of the explorers who met an
untimely end. To this very day no westerner has travelled the entire length
of the gorges from Tibet through into Arunachal Pradesh. It remains a
fascinating objective for future explorers when political constraints allow.
Apparently in the 'old days' villagers traded with Tibetans for metal using
a route up the gorges but this no longer happens.
It was partly
because the tribes were regarded as extremely dangerous, and partly because
this area of land has, since the beginning of the last century, been claimed
by China as part of its own territory, that Arunachal Pradesh and
neighbouring states were strictly off limits. It is only now that this vast
area of the Eastern Himalaya is slowly opening up. Of passing interest is
the fact that the sixth Dalai Lama was born on the soil of Arunachal Pradesh
and the present fourteenth Dalai Lama found safety and refuge here when he
fled the cultural revolution in Tibet.
LOCATION: Arunachal
Pradesh is situated on the north eastern tip of India, bordering Bhutan on
the west, Tibet/China on the north, Burma (Myanmar) on the east and the
Indian state of Assam to the south. It covers 84,000 sq. km, its climate
varying from sub-tropical to alpine. Some 80% of the state is covered by
natural forest, with numerous turbulent streams, roaring rivers, deep
gorges, lofty Himalayan mountains and hundreds of species of flora and
fauna.
TERRAIN: It is made up of mostly Himalayan
foothills. These are jungle covered or forested, culminating in high snow
capped peaks on the Tibetan border. The heights of the mountain peaks range
from 11,000ft/3,353m to 21,000ft/6,400m, with the highest peak at
23,255ft/7,088m in Tawang District. There are five major rivers - Kameng,
Subansiri, Siang, Lohit and Tirap which drain into the Brahmaputra river,
but it is the Siang which is the Tsang Po coming from Tibet.
VEGETATION:
There is a great variety of vegetation, ranging from climbers to an
abundance of cane, bamboo and orchids. Arunachal Pradesh is known for a rich
occurrence of orchids at varying latitudinal zones - from the foothills to
the snow-clad peaks. There are about 450 species of orchids reported from
this state and many more may yet be discovered. The government of Arunachal
Pradesh has banned full-scale logging, hence pristine forests abound.
CLIMATE: The climate during the summer is hot and humid at the
lower altitudes and in the valleys covered by dense tropical forests,
particularly in the far eastern section. The rainfall is amongst the
heaviest in India, with the annual average being more than 300cm! Therefore,
as can be expected, the vegetation varies greatly in relation to the
elevation, ranging from a wide belt of tropical rain forest along the
foothills and the low-lying areas, to tropical and subtropical at higher
altitudes. Our trek is timed to take place during the 'dry season' when the
weather should be warm and sunny and the forests leech free.
PEOPLE:
Although a number of tribal groups constitute the total population, the
density of the population is only 8 per sq. km. There are as many as 25
tribal groups that form the population in the state.
All the
individual tribes have a rich cultural heritage and have been unspoilt due
to the remoteness of this area. During the 200 years of British rule in
India the British Government itself closed the borders to its own kind in
1873. Arunachal Pradesh is one of the few states in British India which
Christian missionaries were not allowed to enter, unlike Nagaland and
Mizoram. Headhunting has long since ceased in the state (unlike Nagaland
where this practice petered out relatively recently) and the Arunachalis are
generally known to be a peace-loving people. However, one famous tribe in
particular (the Wanchos of the south-eastern Tirap district of Arunachal
Pradesh, who saw action against the British in the mid 19th century), used
to infiltrate and attack the ferocious Konyak tribes of north-eastern
Nagaland until quite recently.
Throughout the trip, one comes into
contact with a number of different tribes. The Adi, meaning 'hill man', is
the most prominent, forward-looking and independent-minded of all the tribes
in Arunachal Pradesh and neighbouring areas. Both men and women wear their
hair close cropped. Polygamy is widely practised. The Adis have two main
divisions - Bogum and Onai - and under each there are number of sub-tribes -
the Gallong being the most prominent. Adi villages are well organised, as is
the council called Kibong and are generally situated on the spurs of hills.
The main feature of the Adi villages is the dormitory club for boys and men
called Moshup. Some villages also have a separate club for girls called
Rishong. The main deity is Donyi Polo (Sun Moon God), a compound deity
regarded as the eye of the world.
RELIGION: The religion of
the bulk of the population consists of belief in the existence of a High God
or Supernatural Being and a host of other spirits and deities. The High God
is called differently by different groups of people. Many however, believe
in the dual existence of the High God, one in the sky and the other on
earth. While the High God is always believed to be benevolent, the spirits
and deities are grouped under two classes - benevolent and malevolent.
TEMPERATURE
AND RAINFALL GUIDE:Climate: Summer :Max. 40°C,
Min. 18°C;
Winter:
Max. 12°C, Min. 5°C
Best Season: Mid October to Mid
March.
Rainfall :266 cms annually, most of it falling between
May and September.
Please
Contact us for detailed programme and cost.