Kashmir - Paradise on Earth - Pics by Nitin J Shetty
July 9, 2007
(Nitin J Shetty, a leading Chartered accountant from the city and an avid reader of daijiworld.com, visited Kashmir recently with family, along with a few friends and their families.
His overall impression is that there is a misconception among the compatriots about the safety aspects there. He strongly recommends Kashmir as a tourist spot for those who only think of foreign locations for a holiday. The place is absolutely safe, thanks to the vigilant Indian army and the security apparatus, he opines.
The people of Kashmir, says Shetty, are very polite and receptive. Poverty still exists. His previous visit was in April 1980. Today, after 27 years, Srinagar is still the same, he feels. He observes that there has been practically no development over the past years.
He so gracefully thought of sharing his picture collection with our readers. Incidentally, his daughter Anushka Shetty too contributes write- ups to daijiworld.com. - Editor-in-chief)
Kashmir - also called the Switzerland of India
(with inputs courtesy Jammu and Kashmir government)
Set like a jewelled crown on the map of India, Kashmir is a multi-faceted diamond, changing its hues with the seasons - always extravagantly beautiful. Two major Himalayan ranges, the Great Himalayan Range and the Pir Panjal, surround the landscape from the north and south respectively. They are the source of great rivers, which flow down into the valleys, forested with orchards and decorated by lily-laden lakes.
The Mughals aptly called Kashmir ‘Paradise on Earth’ where they journeyed across the hot plains of India, to the valley’s cool environs in summer. Here they laid, with great love and care, Srinagar’s many formal, waterfront gardens, now collectively known as the Mughal Gardens. Anecdotes of four and five centuries ago describe their love for these gardens, and the rivalries that centred around their ownership. They also patronized the development of art & craft among the people of Kashmir, leaving behind a heritage of exquisite artisanship among thes people and making the handicrafts of the land prized gifts all over the world.
A dry fruits shop in Jammu – Large walnuts can be seen on sale
Karan Singh’s palace at Jammu, now a musuem.
Roses
Nishat gardens
Flowers
View of Dal lake from Shalimar gardens
Kashmir is a land where myriad holiday ideas are realized. In winter, when snow carpets the mountains, there is skiing, tobogganing, sledge-riding, etc. along the gentle slopes. In spring and summer, the honey-dewed orchards, rippling lakes and blue skies beckon every soul to sample the many delights the mountains and valleys have to offer. Golfing at 2,700 m above the sea, water-skiing in the lakes and angling for prized rainbow trout, or simply drifting down the willow fringed alleys of lakes in shikaras and living in gorgeous houseboats are some of the most favoured ones.
Season
Kashmir has four distinct seasons, each with its own peculiar character and distinctive charm. These are spring, summer, autumn and winter.
Spring, which extends roughly from March to early May, is when a million blossoms carpet the ground. The weather during this time can be gloriously pleasant at 23oC or chilly and windy at 6oC. This is the season when Srinagar experiences rains, but the showers are brief.
Summer extends from May until the end of August. Light woollens may be required to wear out of Srinagar. In higher altitudes night temperatures drop slightly. Srinagar at this time experiences day temperatures of between 25oC and 35oC. At this time, the whole valley is a mosaic of varying shades of green - rice fields, meadows, trees, etc. and Srinagar with its lakes and waterways is a heaven after the scorching heat of the Indian plains.
The onset of autumn, perhaps Kashmir's loveliest season, is towards September, when green turns to gold and then to russet and red. The highest day temperatures in September are around 23oC and night temperatures dip to 10oC by October, and further drop by November, when heavy woollens are essential.
Through December, to the beginning of March is winter time, which presents Srinagar in yet another mood. Bare, snow-covered landscapes being watched from beside the warmth of a fire is a joy that cannot be described to anyone who has not experienced it. Some houseboats and hotels remain open in winter-these are either centrally heated or heated with ‘bukharis’, a typically Kashmiri stove kept alight with embers of wood, quite effective in the winter.
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