 Trek to Pindhari/Kafni Glacier.
Trek to Pindhari/Kafni Glacier.
Roaring  winds from Mt Nanda Devi East was crashing the tent at Camp-1 (5200  meters); one lift would take the tent down 300 meters onto the other  side of the ridge. Ice axes, 3-feet snow stakes and walking sticks  that were used in anchoring the tent loosened out in no time. I used  all that was in the tent to hold the 3 corners and stood firmly at  the 4th,  I knew I was losing ground and had to get out to safety abandoning  the tent, my backpack and other essentials were ready to be dragged  out, it was just a matter of time that I would be forced to exit.  After one bigger round of pounding, I heard Bharath and Takpa, they  rushed in kicking down the anchors into the snow and we were holding  on to the tent for the next 45 minutes till Nanda Devi calmed down. 
Locals  believe that Nanda Devi range is one of the most powerful and  dangerous range in the Himalayas, they offer prayers to Nanda Devi to  ensure that her fury does not bring doom. For a mountaineer peaks in  Pindari Glacier have always been the most challenging quests, given  its inhospitable terrain and highly unpredictable weather conditions.  But Pindari Glacier is also one of the most beautiful regions, and  our quest to climb Mt Nanda Khat (6611 Meters) started for Loherkhet. 
Trek  from Loherkhet to Pindari Glacier (the glacier has receded in the  last two decades) is a pure scenic beauty of 50 Kms, the trail is a  traverse all through the huge rocky hills on one side, river Pindari  gushing right below and rocky & lush green hills on the other  side with several waterfalls that join river Pindari at the base. The  rich forest cover on both sides of the river houses an amazing  assortment of flora and fauna, birds like Eurasian Jays, Rose  Finches, Snow Partridges, Snow Doves, Fly Catchers etc are found in  abundance and Dr Lalit captured over 45 species of birds through his  lens. 
Even  though the Rhododendron flowering season was over, there were still  some pink patches here and there in contrast with lush green  surroundings. The clear water in the river splashing the huge rocks,  sound of the waterfalls all around and the wind was soothing. Dakuri  our first camping site gave us a 180-degree trailer of the snow  covered peaks like Maiktoli, Cream Roll, Sunderdhunga Col, Panwali  Dwar, Bhanoti, Nanda Devi and its outer sanctuary ridge. 
As  we hiked up and down the hills crossing Khati, the chirping of the  birds and the sound of the pleasant breeze was replaced by the  roaring river; with water gushing down rapidly slamming the huge  rocks in its way making its presence felt. Tiny brown dippers did  entertain us for a while but the sound of the river was too loud to  be ignored. As we reached a place called Dwali where the water  flowing from Kafni & Pindari Glaciers meet, it was a different  world all together; the enormity of the water was so much that the  hills on both sides are literally invisible. 
As  we moved to higher altitude the trees and shrubs were replaced by  grass and the trail opened into the meadows covered with the bright  yellow Butter cups and over 4-5 colors of Potentilla. With clear blue  sky, and ice covered peaks far ahead, it looked like a carpet of  flowers just laid out to shoot a scene in Yash Chopra movie. 
One  of the threats that was very eminent was excessive grazing, each of  the flocks were not less that 2-3 hundred sheep and the total sheep  would not be less than 4000. Added to grazing, shepherds set off fire  on the dried grass and in they do not even spare the Juniper shrubs.  Birds were screaming out of the fire abandoning the nest and the  little ones and the eggs. It was heart breaking to see the  destruction caused; the grass that holds on to the top soils erodes  within no time causing landslides. 
As  we approached basecamp, the view of the magnificent peaks, constant  noises of the avalanches and rock falls welcomed us. Given the  logistical difficulties for a 12 member team to manage itself for  20-30 days we decided to set up our advance base camp closer to the  peak we would be attempting. As we got closer we could sense that the  furies of the nature got stronger, calmer nights were replaced by  thunder, snowfall and the day with gushing avalanches. At advance  base camp it was indeed a 360 degree effect, as we were completely  surrounded by the peaks, Lamcher, 1, 2, 3, Nanda Kot, Changuch,  Trails Pass, Nanda Khat, Panwali Dwar, Baljuri. 
Our  movement to higher camps got slower than planned, and sometimes we  stayed in the tents for 24-48 hours. Route to Camp-1 was about  4-hours with two rock faces of 150-200 meters each, an ice wall and  an altitude of 900 meters. Occupying Camp-1 with all that we needed  took us 8 days, and the approach to summit camp from there on was a  snowfield filled with crevasses, snow bridges and a climb 3-4 hours.  The hidden crevasses are always dangerous, many may not be dangerous  but in bad weather anything can get worst. Reeba fell into a crevasse  and could not pull herself out, we luckily had Wallambok who got down  into the crevasse and release her climbing boots that was stuck.  Smaller incidents more than being dangerous take away a lot of energy  and time, thereby slowing the progress in the mountains or getting  held up in bad weather. However well trained or experienced  mountaineer one could be, there is no possibility of competing with  the bad weather or taking an unsafe route trying to challenge nature  at its worst.
After  days of waiting for the weather to get better we finally got a clear  window, summit attempt started with splitting the team into two. As  it was an alpine style climbing we could do better with two teams and  also the risk factor would be much lesser in smaller teams. As one  team conserved their energy at Camp-1 the lead team successfully  attempted the summit, it took over 20 hours, weather got worst at the  end of 11 hours, but reaching the lower camp safely was a priority.  The next day second team did not get lucky, they were to start the  summit ascend by 10 pm and weather never cleared, with heavy  snowfall, complete whiteout and strong winds they had to move down to  safety with heavy hearts.
Every  expedition, every summit attempt may not be always successful, what  drives a mountaineer to these mountains again and again seeking new  highest and new challenges is the sheer love to be midst of the  magnificent peaks. Mountains do really bring out the best in you; one  would look at them and wonder how tiny and insignificant human beings  really are. 
For  a true mountaineer surviving the cold, facing the challenges,  climbing the mountains is not a sport but it’s an ‘Attitude’  they love to live. 
For  adventure at its best reach info@basecampindia.com
See pics of trek to Kafni / Pindari Glacier