🌄 “Whispers of Sissu: A Solo Sojourn in the Heart of Lahaul"
Some places don’t just stay in your memory — they stay in your soul.
In the summer of 2024, during an offbeat Himachal journey, I found myself in Trilokinath, a sacred village in the
heart of Lahaul Valley. On that
route, I passed through Sissu —
a modest hamlet, almost dreamlike, perched around 10,000 feet above sea level, gazing peacefully over the Chandra River Valley and crowned by
the cascading Sissu waterfall.
That
brief encounter with Sissu was enough. I had fallen for it — not with the rush
of a tourist, but with the quiet longing of someone who knew they'd come back.
I
remember thinking, “Man, I need to come back here. Alone.”
Cut
to 2025 — I finally did it.
Day
1 – From Chaos to Calm in Sissu
After
months of thinking about it, my solo trip to Sissu finally began. Took a Mumbai–Delhi flight the previous day,
followed by the classic overnight Volvo
to Manali. A long, tiring ride, but that excitement of heading into the
mountains always makes up for it.
By
early morning, I was somewhere near Kullu,
still groggy and cold, when the bus conductor turned out to be a total gem —
helped me catch a local bus heading
towards Keylong. No frills, packed with people and character. The ride
itself was wild in the best way — winding through Manali, passing the adventure heaven Solang, and then that magical stretch through the Atal Tunnel.
As I entered the Lahaul Valley, I could already feel the vibe shift — from crowded to calm, green to brown-and-white, city mind to mountain soul. After about two hours, I got off at Sissu.
🏡 Checking In: Zostel Sissu
Landed
at Zostel Sissu, which honestly
felt like it was placed there by the universe just for views. Right on the Manali–Keylong highway, it overlooks
the Chandra Valley, and you can
literally just sit on the porch and stare into peace.
Freshened up, got some warmth back into my bones, and devoured a proper mountain-style aloo paratha breakfast. It was cold outside — a light drizzle, low clouds, that perfect ‘blanket-and-chai’ kind of weather.
💧Waterfall Calling
With
no real plan (and that’s the best kind of plan), I decided to walk to the Sissu Waterfall. A half-hour stroll
downhill took me to the helipad area
and parking lot — from there, it was postcard stuff.
On
one side: the snow-capped peaks.
In front: the majestic Sissu waterfall
thundering down into a heart-shaped
gorge. Between us: the icy blue Chandra
River, flowing like it owned the valley.
Had
another round of chai, because
how can you not in that setting?
Then
came the fun part — decided to try the zip
line across the Chandra River. Short, sweet, and a proper adrenaline
kick.
The trail from the other side to the base of the waterfall took about 30–40 minutes. All the way, the views kept changing — the wind colder, the river louder, the waterfall closer. Reached the base and just sat there — cool breeze, glacial spray, silence. Pure mountain magic.
Headed
back the same way, legs slightly tired but heart very full. Reached Zostel, had
a lazy lunch, and crashed hard
for a perfect post-hike siesta.
Woke up around 4:30 pm to the scent of chai and a new face — Vaibhav, a fellow traveller from another corner of the country. We got talking over tea, and instantly clicked.
🏯 Evening Walk to Sissu Monastery
As
the drizzle cleared and the sky softened, Vaibhav and I decided on a whim to hike up to the Sissu Monastery — perched quietly on a
small hill just behind the Zostel.
The
45-minute uphill climb wasn’t
tough, but it made us slow down — exactly what the evening needed. Every few
steps, we’d stop and turn around, and the view would just keep getting better.
The valley below opened up like a canvas — misty, glowing, still.
The
monastery itself was peaceful and timeless. Traditional Tibetan architecture, walls painted in faded reds and yellows, and prayer flags dancing wildly in the wind.
Not many people around — just the sound of the breeze and the faint rhythm of
chants echoing from inside.
But
the real moment? That sunset from the
top. Standing there, we could see the entire Chandra Valley laid out before us — from the dark mouth of
the Atal Tunnel far to the left,
all the way to Tandi, shimmering
in golden light on the right. Below, Sissu
village looked like a quiet little painting, and around us, the massive Himalayan peaks stood like guardians,
catching the last blush of the sun.
It
wasn’t just a great view — it felt like the whole valley was pausing to
breathe.
Walked
back down slowly, our minds unusually quiet, already knowing this moment would
stick around long after the trip was done.
Got
back down to Zostel just in time as it got darker and colder. Over a warm
dinner, Vaibhav and I chalked out a plan
to ride towards Keylong the next day. But for now, it was time to crawl
into bed, bury myself in blankets, and let the tiredness of the day melt into
deep mountain sleep.
Sissu
had already delivered so much — and this was just Day 1.
Woke
up around 7 am, the air crisp
and cold, just how the mountains greet you in the morning. A steaming cup of chai was the only
motivation needed to crawl out of bed. Bath? Nah — that was a problem for
future me. Today was about the road.
Got ready by 8 and left Sissu on bike with Vaibhav. The sky was clear, the sun gently warming up the valley, and the roads… empty, winding, and beautiful.
🏍️ Ride of No Timelines
We
cruised along the Manali–Leh highway,
with the Chandra river keeping
us company on the left, and the snow-capped
peaks standing tall like silent guardians. The road curled through
mountains, and every turn had a fresh frame waiting.
There
were no plans, no rush. That’s
the best part about these rides — you stop when you want, breathe when you
need, and just go with the flow.
We halted for breakfast before reaching Tandi, and then again at the confluence of the Chandra and Bhaga rivers — a magical spot where two mighty mountain rivers shake hands. It was quiet, surreal, and absolutely postcard-worthy.
We took the right turn.
Soon enough, we rolled into Keylong — the biggest
town around here, but still sleepy in that Himalayan way. Perfect spot for a
hot chai break. Sipped slowly, soaking in the cool air, surrounded by
old-school charm and prayer flags fluttering on rooftops.
From there, the Bhaga river kept us company on
the right. It rushed along — wild, noisy, alive — with steep cliffs and
snow-dusted peaks towering around us. That stretch? It felt like driving
through a postcard.
And then came Jispa.
Tiny. Dreamy. Right by the river. Clear skies
above, wide open spaces, and a kind of silence that hums with peace. Tents
dotted the riverside, perfect for camping. But we didn’t linger too long —
something about the road kept calling us forward.
Soon enough, we were at Darcha — a quiet little spot, but with a bridge so long it felt like we were crossing into another timeline altogether. Not just over a river, but into something deeper. Himachal’s longest bridge, they say. Felt like it.
Darcha’s where the mountains make you choose.
Left leads you into the wild, remote Zanskar
valley.
Right? That’s where we were headed — up towards Deepak Tal, Baralacha
La, and beyond to Sarchu.
We took the right without thinking twice.
The road started to climb gently, winding like a
lazy river through brown hills and open skies. The chatter died down. Something
about the place makes you quieter. The air was thinner now — colder too, but
fresh, crisp, like it had just been born.
It wasn’t just a drive anymore. It felt like we were floating — slow, calm, just letting the mountains guide us.
💎 Deepak Tal – Stillness at 12,400 ft
Deepak Tal , a small, high-altitude lake nestled at 12,400 ft, it’s easy to miss on the map but impossible to forget once you’re there. The water was crystal clear, turquoise, and so still it felt unreal — like the sky had poured itself into a bowl between mountains.
The
lake mirrored the surrounding
snow-capped peaks, creating this mind-blowing, surreal effect. Few
people around, just the soft wind and that stillness only such places know.
We sat there, soaking it in. No rush. No checklist. Just present.
⏳ Turning Back
Due
to time constraints, we decided to head
back to Sissu. The return ride was quieter — not just because we were
tired, but because that kind of scenery leaves you speechless.
Back at Zostel, it was time to say goodbye to Vaibhav, who was heading back the same evening. Just 24 hours, and it felt like we’d known each other for weeks — that’s how the mountains bond you.
🌌 Surprise Plan
As the sun dipped
behind the peaks and the valley wrapped itself in quiet,
I was settling into the stillness — warm dinner, tired limbs, no plans.
And then came a
whisper, casual but golden —
“ I’m heading to Chandra Tal early morning… want to come?”
My heart didn’t
even pause.
How could it?
Because just then
it hit me —
the Chandra River, my silent
companion for the last two days,
flowing beside me through winding roads and wide-open valleys,
rushing past villages, waterfalls, and morning teas —
she begins her journey at that very
lake.
Chandra Tal — the Moon Lake some where at 14,000 ft in Spiti Valley .
Remote, sacred, unreal.
And now I was
being called there.
Like following a
thread back to its source.
Like a story returning to its prologue.
Dinner tasted
richer with that quiet thrill.
Sleep came gently,
as I curled beneath heavy blankets,
carried by the thought of moonlight dancing on high-altitude waters,
and a river waiting to show me where it all begins.
You know those
days that start with a simple “let’s go” and end up becoming something you’ll
remember forever?
Yeah, this was one of them.
🚙 The Offer I Couldn't Refuse
Met
Harshvardhan the previous
evening at Zostel — young, full of energy, and clearly someone who lived for
adventure. We clicked instantly.
He had a beast of a vehicle — a Toyota
Hilux 2800cc 4x4 — and a plan to visit Chandra Tal the next morning.
I didn’t even
need to think.
A solid vehicle, good company, and one of the most mystical high-altitude
lakes in the Himalayas? Count me in.
🌄 Early Start, Foggy Uncertainty
We met around 6:30 am, loaded our stuff, and hit the
road. By 7:30 am, we were at the Koksar police checkpost — the last
gate before entering the wild terrain ahead. A few vehicles were already
parked.
No one knew if permissions would be given today — the route was tricky and
unpredictable.
So we waited. Tea. Breakfast. Chai again. Snacks for the
road.
Got a chance to talk to a few fellow travellers. Lots of excitement, and a fair
bit of nervous laughter too. Also made a quick phone call home,
knowing that once we left this spot, there’d be no network till late night.
At 9 am, the green signal came through. The gate opened. It was on.
🛣️ The Road That Wasn’t a Road
Let me tell you
right now — the term “road” is being generous.
We left the tarmac behind within minutes. What followed was pure off-roading madness.
About an hour in,
we were stopped again. Roadwork ahead
— probably BRO clearing a blockage. More waiting, more admiring the surreal views. The mountains were massive,
still wearing their late-spring snow patches. Eventually, we resumed around 11 am.
The “track” ahead
was narrow, rocky, and constantly
shifting — a single lane carved out of a fragile mountain slope, with loose stones, landslide
zones, and the Chandra River tumbling
beside us far below.
Every few hundred
meters, the terrain changed — from dry
gravel, to deep mud, to glacier melt gushing across, to slushy tyre marks, to pebbled paths barely holding together.
On one side: vertical cliffs with snow hanging above like
a frozen curtain.
On the other: the roaring Chandra,
wild and untamed.
At one point, we
had to drive through a flowing stream,
water splashing against the vehicle, glacier bits floating by. One wrong move,
and we’d either slide into the river or get stuck in the mud.
The Hilux didn’t flinch. Neither did Harshvardhan.
Valleys of Silence
As
we moved deeper into the heart of Lahaul, it started to feel like we had left
the world behind.
The
narrow trail dipped gently and the mountains suddenly opened up into a vast, wind-swept valley — raw, haunting, and
strangely peaceful. It was like stepping into another planet. The landscape was
barren but beautiful, with loose rock fields, snow patches melting into silver streams,
and the occasional glint of sun off distant glaciers.
There
was no proper road here — just a faint path etched into the valley floor, made of pebbles, hard-packed mud, and the memory of tyre tracks. The kind
of track that made the suspension groan and the tyres think twice.
The
Chandra River, who had been
hugging us on the left for most of the morning, now drifted to our right, flowing gently through the wide
valley.
She looked calm, but you could sense her wild power beneath the surface — the
kind that carved these valleys, shifted stones, and forced you to respect the
mountains.
The only sounds were the crunch of gravel under tyres, the occasional splash as we crossed glacier-fed streams, and the wind whistling between jagged peaks. It was beautifully desolate.
We
passed:
🏚️ Chhota Dara
A
tiny, forgotten hamlet in the middle of nowhere. Just a handful of stone-and-mud houses, some prayer flags fluttering,
and silence so thick you could hear your own heartbeat.
No shops, no signs, no noise — just the sound of the wind echoing between abandoned
walls. You wonder how people live here through snowstorms and isolation. But
that’s the Himalayas — unforgiving, yet humbling.
🍛 Batal – Tribute to a legend
Next
came Batal, a windswept outpost
known monument in memory of legendary Swatantrya Veer V.D. Savarkar.
A tea break at Chacha-Chachi Dhaba run by a local couple famous among bikers and overlanders, the
dhaba is a lifeline in this emptiness.
It’s not just a place to eat — it’s a place where people warm up, swap stories,
and feel human again after miles of stark terrain.
The air here was thinner. The clouds were lower. And yet, there was a strange warmth as we passed the dhaba — like the mountains themselves knew the comfort it offered.
🌉 The Iron Bridge
Just
beyond Batal, we reached a small iron
bridge, the kind that creaks under your tyres and makes your heart skip
a beat. Only one vehicle at a time,
and beneath it, glacial water crashing
through boulders.
Crossing
it felt like passing into another chapter of the journey.
On the other side, the Chandra River
switched back to our left, and we continued forward, the landscape
growing even more rugged, even more remote.
Every
turn in this stretch felt like a painting — not the pretty postcard kind, but
the bold, untamed, epic kind,
with nature showing off her raw power.
There
were no villages beyond this point. No people. No buildings. Just the Hilux, the river, and two tiny humans
moving through the belly of the Himalayas.
This was the kind of silence that doesn’t scare you — it fills you. The kind you carry back with you long after the journey ends.
🚗 Final Stretch – To the Moon Lake
By now, we were deep into the wilderness — no trees, no humans, just
towering mountains and a river that had become our quiet companion. And then
came a fork in the trail — an unmarked, dusty divergence in the middle of
nowhere.
The right turn pointed towards Kunzum Pass, and beyond that, Kaza in
Spiti — another dream for another time. But today, our path lay to the left,
towards the mystical Chandra Tal — the legendary Moon Lake.
And that’s when things got really wild. The “road” became little more
than a suggestion — a narrow, rocky trail winding upward, etched into loose
scree and shifting stones, with massive boulders and melting snow patches on
either side. The gradient turned steep, and every turn came with a drop so
sharp it made you hold your breath.
There were places where only one wheel could grip solid ground, and the rest
just bounced over rubble. We slowed down to a crawl.
The Hilux growled its way up every hairpin. The engine worked hard, but never
complained.
Harshvardhan kept his focus razor-sharp — both hands on the wheel, eyes
scanning for sudden dips or soft patches where a tyre might sink.
Below us, the Chandra River shimmered like a silver ribbon, disappearing
into the folds of the valley. Above, jagged cliffs and hanging glaciers
reminded us that this was their kingdom, not ours. At times, it felt like we
were driving through a dream and a landslide at the same time.
Finally, around 2:45 pm, after nearly 5 hours of relentless driving for
just 85 kilometers, we reached the Chandra Tal parking lot.
There was no grand signboard, no crowd, no fanfare — just a wide open
patch of gravel, a cold wind, and a soft hush in the air. But for us, it felt
like reaching the moon.
Every single kilometer on that journey had been hard-earned — through
unpaved madness, melting glaciers, gushing streams, and ever-changing terrain. But
that made the destination all the more precious.
We stepped out, stretched our aching legs, and looked ahead — a short
20-minute walk still separated us from the lake. But the excitement? It was
already overflowing.
Just a short 20-minute walk from the parking lot,
and then — there it was.
Chandra Tal. The Moon Lake, cradled high at 14,100 ft, silent, sacred, and
surreal.
It appeared like a secret the mountains had been keeping, suddenly
revealed between bends of wind and stone.
The lake lay still — turquoise and glassy, a perfect
mirror to the drifting clouds and the solemn, snow-capped peaks that stood
watch around it.The kind of stillness that makes even time pause for a moment.
We didn’t speak much. We didn’t need to. No checklist. No agenda. Just
slow steps along the edge, the crunch of gravel underfoot ,a few photographs,
and a lot of wonder.
It was the kind of place where even a whisper feels loud. Where your
breath slows without you asking. Where you feel something ancient… watching
gently, accepting your presence.
And somewhere deep inside, a quiet realisation settled in — this is where
the Chandra River is born.
The same river that had stayed beside us since
Sissu, tumbling through valleys, sliding under glaciers, whispering through
gorges. Now I stood at her origin — her first breath, her still beginning. We
had followed her upstream, not just through geography, but through something
far more spiritual.
It didn’t feel like reaching a destination. It felt like arriving at the source of something within.
🌀 The Return – Wild, Wet & Worth It
The
return wasn’t easy.
The
sun had melted more snow, and
all the small glacial streams had
turned into gushing mini-rivers. We crossed ankle-deep water, saw a
car stuck in mud, and had to wait
out a rainfall.
As the day ended, the valley was bathed in golden light, and then came a moonless, pitch-black silence. No lights, no vehicles, just a lone road curling through the mountains, headlights cutting the darkness.
By
the time we reached Koksar around 9 pm,
we were shivering, hungry, and absolutely alive.
A plate of steaming hot dal-chawal never tasted better. We finally reached Zostel, wrapped up the day with tired smiles, and collapsed into bed — dusty, sore, but so full.
🙏 Grateful Hearts
A
big shoutout to Harshvardhan —
for the company, the conversations, and for making this dream happen.
And a huge salute to the BRO (Border Roads Organisation) — those silent heroes who maintain these insane routes in such harsh conditions. If we reached Chandra Tal, it’s because of them.
⛺ What’s Next?
No
rest yet — tomorrow I head back to Seobagh,
near Kullu, to join the Roli Kholi trek
with YHAI.
More
trails, more tales — stay tuned. The mountains aren’t done with me yet.










मस्त डिटेल लेख लिहिला आहेस. असाच फिरता आणि लिहिता राहा. विनायक वैद्य यांनी पण फेसबुक ला डिटेल वर्णन केलं आहे.
ReplyDeleteThanks. Guess its Meera Potdar
ReplyDeleteSuch a lovely read, Sir! I must say you are an extremely adventurous, gutsy and passionate traveller.
ReplyDeleteLoved how you took the spontaneous rides with Vaibhav & Harshavardhan and enjoyed as complete strangers and still enjoying each other's company. Guess the mountains gave you the space and time and you took the opportunity to go all out and live in the present moment.
Each video, and the pictures reflected your delicate choice of words.
Thanks for sharing your trip with us, thoroughly enjoyed it. I felt like I traveled Sissu, Jispa, Dracha, and the epic Chandra Tal myself.
BTW: Kabira is one of my favourite songs and Aloo paratha is my go to meal.
Thanks Bhavana
Deleteखूपच अप्रतिम. त्याला लाईव्ह फोटो. ओघवत्या पण सोप्या इंग्लिश मध्ये शिवाय अलंकारिक भाषा.
ReplyDeleteThank you
ReplyDeleteThe narration, especially your surprise encounter with a stranger, and the stunning beauty of Chandra Tal truly brought the experience to life. It reminds me that some of the best travel memories are made not just at the destination, but also in the unexpected moments and connections we make along the way. Keep writing ! Keep inspiring!
ReplyDelete