Harsh wonders

1083

SRINAGAR (AP) – The skies are overcast. On the plains, temperatures have dropped below freezing. High on the mountains, peaks are draped in thick snow.

This is the time of Chillai Kalan, also called ‘The Great Winter’, a Kashmiri phrase that defines the harshest 40 days of cold in Kashmir that commence in late December and extend into January and early February.

Renowned for its breathtaking landscapes, Kashmir in winter transforms into a wonderland.

Tourists fill its hotels to ski, sledge, and trek the Himalayan landscape.

But winter also brings the region’s most challenging weather conditions, affecting daily routines in agriculture, transportation and other livelihoods.

For locals, the major source of heat is the kanger, a pot filled with hot coal embers tucked inside their pheran, a traditional knee-length cloak.

Almost ensnared by its warmth, people only step outside for work and other essentials.

The subzero temperatures in Kashmir also coincide with frequent power cuts. It is one of the idyllic valley’s long-standing, unresolved crises.

This year the unscheduled power outages, sometimes lasting 12 to 16 hours, have disrupted patient care for those with respiratory illnesses and affected businesses.

The stillness of winter in Kashmir, however, also offers a promise of vibrancy come spring.

The cold rejuvenates fields and orchards, mainstays of the region’s economy, and the snow replenishes freshwater streams.

ABOVE & BELOW: Tourists from Kenya sit by a bonfire outside a cottage in Drang village northwest of Srinagar in Kashmir; and stars light up the sky in Drang village. PHOTO: AP
PHOTO: AP
ABOVE & BELOW: A woman prepares bread, as her cousins sit near, inside a mud house; and boys slide down a snowy slope on sledges in Drang village. PHOTO: AP
PHOTO: AP
ABOVE & BELOW: A woman walks with her face shielded from the cold; a boy looks out of a window covered with a plastic sheet as a shield against the cold; a villager warms himself by a wood fire stove while cooking dinner; a man chops firewood outside his home; and tourists visit a partially frozen waterfall. PHOTO: AP
PHOTO: AP
PHOTO: AP
PHOTO: AP
PHOTO: AP
ABOVE & BELOW: A man prepares ‘harisa’ before serving it to customers; and a shopkeeper poses with a traditional fire pot called ‘kangri’, warming his ears. PHOTO: AP
PHOTO: AP