iBreathe | Simple Living at The Goat Village

I am often asked how I decide on places I want to travel to next.

Places just happen.
It’s not as like I run an algorithm that makes predictive analysis on matters related to travel.

Garhwal, Uttarakhand, India
What's not to love about places choosing you (rather than it being the other way around) when it's a visual like this one?
Just like how until Friday, the 11th of November 2016, I didn't know I would be trekking to Nag Tibba. I had never looked it up and because to me the name Nag Tibba had been nothing more than clickbait that I had witnessed cropping across my social media timelines. Why, I did not even know which Indian state it was a part of. Somewhere in the Himalayas is what I would tell myself and leave it at that.

But that was until the 11th of November 2016.
That was the morning when after a 3 hour drive from Dehradun, I trudged my way uphill from Pantwari and heard myself say, “Ah there Nag Tibba! Pleasure to finally have this opportunity to meet you.”

The opportunity sneaked in on me in the guise of an email from The Green People who run an eco-enterprise, The Goat Village, in the Tehri Garwahal region of Uttarakhand - on the trek route to Nag Tibba, to be more precise.

My curiosity was piqued. Uttarakhand was beckoning me after I first visited it some 10 years ago. What was going to stop me? Nothing. Well except dengue – which delayed my journey nonetheless!
And so after booking, un-booking and then re-booking tickets, I was well on my way.

Tehri Garhwal, Uttarakhand, India
Just another morning in Tehri Garhwal

I have a way of learning the simplest of things the hard way – like how ill-suited a duffle-bag converted into a backpack is while on a trek. Oh well.
But that and the low-stamina from the on-going recovery courtesy dengue notwithstanding, I lauded myself after those 4 arduous kilometers that brought me to The Goat Village because back home getting anything done that required me to be mobile and use bi-pedal locomotion would result in leaving me constantly drained and low on stamina.

The Goat Village is at the half way mark to Nag Tibba. There is however an alternative for non-trekking enthusiasts (though I wonder why you’d want to be there, if not for the trek). One can haul a ride to Lasser Gaon – which is at the midpoint of Pantwari and The Goat Village, i.e., you trek 2 instead of 4 kilometers to get to The Goat Village.

High from having completed this first leg in its entirety, it was most rewarding to be handed a tumbler of nerve-relaxant also known as Buransh (or rhododendron juice for the uninitiated). Sorry there is no photographic evidence as this nectar was wolfed down in a single gulp!
For someone whose previous meal was nothing but a snack at KFC in New Delhi the earlier evening, lunch was not something that could wait any longer. A simple and nutritious fare of manduwa ki roti (finger millet flat bread), rajma (red kidney beans), palak ki sabzi (spinach) and rice was also wolfed down without a trace of any photographic evidence!

Tehri Garhwal. Nag Tibba. Uttarakhand. India
A meal with a view. One of the few times when I remembered that a photograph wouldn't be such a bad idea!

Tehri Garhwal. Nag Tibba. Uttarakhand. India
Because being Zen lends itself to finding the black and white in the grey. Or at least some of it!

Over conversations, I began to understand more about The Green People and The Goat Village – of how it is an initiative to mobilise farmers as a measure towards reversing the tide of migration from villages in the mountains to cities like Dehradun. This year old enterprise aims at restoring the dignity in agricultural labour which has witnessed a decline with parents preferring that their children opt in for anything other than working on the field! Enter Bakri Chaap – the brand under which produce from across villages under The Green People umbrella is packaged and sold across select stores and boutique hotels in Dehradun and Delhi.

So given its vision, The Goat Village - an eco and responsible tourism venture - is but naturally all things modest and environmentally sensitive; at least to the extent possible. Every meal follows the 'farm to table' route implying that everything you eat is locally grown. It also implies that non-vegetarianism is not encouraged, not at every meal.

Nag Tibba. Tehri Garhwal. Uttarakhand. India
Lounging like a boss at The Goat Village

Offering a 360 degree view of the Himalayas where the sound of silence cradles you away from the din of everything you have left behind in the plains, The Goat Village could be considered as somewhat austere in its approach by some, especially those not as acquainted with the ways of being connected with nature and engaging with local communities. In other words, treat The Goat Village as a recommendation from yours truly only if leaving behind your gadgets, thingamajigs and other worldly ties for a few days is something you are willing and ready to experience!

The Goat Village very recently went from being completely off the grid to being solar powered. So yes, hot water is available during certain hours of the day (a service I did not avail of because cold water does not feel as cold when you loll in the sun later). And no, there are no lights or bulbs or fans or switches in the rooms though you are provided with solar as well as kerosene powered lamps (yet again a service rendered irrelevant thanks to the days/nights leading to the supermoon)!

Nag Tibba. Tehri Garhwal. Uttarakhand. India
The super-moon at some 3000 metres above sea level


It is for these reasons and the fact that you can connect to 2G as well as charge your power banks that The Goat Village is an in-between for anyone like me who prefers that cusp between civilisation and wilderness…


A photo posted by Elita (@nomadicthunker) on

A photo posted by Elita (@nomadicthunker) on

A photo posted by Elita (@nomadicthunker) on


Yours truly was invited by The Green People to The Goat Village. Views and thoughts expressed are my own (like always)!

***

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