SPITFIRE GAUTAM

Picture of Spitfire Gautam or Gautam Lahiri

Bizarre experiences – My sixth sense warned me and the inevitable happened…

The devil's road from tasi viewpoint to Yumthang valley, Sikkim by gautam lahiri

The state of Sikkim, India is beautiful. The encircling lofty ranges of the Himalayas played hide and seek with the fluffy clouds, and the slanting sunlight painted ever dynamic natural pictures of immense dimension. Sikkim is adorable.

The ice cold wind that sweeps the valleys caresses a soul with its soft touch, gently putting the visitors to a quiet slumber.

Undulating hills wrapped in cotton clouds through the waving trees were a sight to behold by gautam lahiri
Undulating hills wrapped in cotton clouds through
the waving trees were a sight to behold

Amidst this supreme beauty, if you happen to be a driver, remember that underneath the grandeur lies the most treacherous tools of deception and once carried away by the natural magnificence, you will have the most catastrophic end in the crucible of nature.

You have to be constantly vigilant. The terrain is merciless and has zero tolerance for a single spec of a mistake.

Yet again, the mystical forces of nature wrapped us and I am alive to narrate you the true story of missing our own annihilation.

We drove down to one of the most stunning and equally inhospitable Himalayan terrains, in the state of Sikkim, India –  Yumthang valley.

The white dotted houses clinging to the gentle slopes of Tashi viewpoint by gautam lahiri
The white dotted houses clinging to the gentle slopes of Tashi viewpoint

Started from Tashi viewpoint

These are not roads but rocky outcrops washed by hilly streams. We drove cutting the water
These are not roads but rocky outcrops washed by hilly streams. We drove cutting the water
Imagine the road ahead as I slowly bounced the Tata Sumo on the wet boulders layered with broken clay

At Mangan, which is the midpoint between Gangtok and Yumthang, we broke for lunch.

Mangan approaching with jagged mountain sections on the right and a 1000 feet drop on the left. I maintained balance of speed and brakes to avoid a skid by gautam lahiri
Mangan approaching with jagged mountain sections on the right and a 1000 feet drop on the left. I maintained balance of speed and brakes to avoid a skid

After having Thukpa, and other oriental dishes, typical of the place, we set off.  

The road and beauty around kept changing from left to right as it hugged the huge craggy mountains.

At places, we could not see beyond one kilometer through distant rolling fog, so had to gear down and drove with caution.

Mountains are ruthless and they do not seriously like anyone to commit a mistake at all.

The Danger ahead

Innumerable streams criss-crossed the roads that made their way through water washed boulders on slopes Mangan to Tashi viewpoint by gautam lahiri
Innumerable streams criss-crossed the roads that made their way through water washed boulders on slopes, Mangan to Tashi viewpoint

A gut numbing worry or perhaps a six sense started to brew in me of a danger as I noticed that the driver was pushing the car at unnecessarily high speeds.

He was dazed and drowsy. Showed no restraints on the speed especially around the corners laced with mud and rocks.

We crossed this bridge before Mangan, draped in fog and rain. Cross-winds were slamming it making it sway at Mangan, Sikkim by gautam lahiri
We crossed this bridge before Mangan, draped in fog and rain. Cross-winds were slamming it making it sway

I told him twice but he had a glazed look in his eyes, and hardly changed his driving style.

I had hardly spoken a syllable when disaster struck. The driver turned sharp right, throwing the left rear wheels skidding across the road, and the rear tires got jammed in thick mud.

The Sumo hands in suspension. Held by a 6 inch section of its fender against the culvert stone at Mangan by gautam lahiri
The Sumo hands in suspension. Held by a 6 inch section of its fender against the culvert stone. A rapid flowed just behind where I took this snap

He veered left, but the Sumo kept its forward uncontrolled movement and lurched left over a broken slope as its front left wheel went into the air.

The car dipped, and with a metal screeching sound, grazed against a road stone or a bridge embankment and stopped movement.

The Sumo was at a drunken angle looking at a shallow ditch. If it had rolled into the ditch, it would have cartwheeled several times on its side, and I have no idea where the car would have crashed, because a slope of 600 plus feet below was looking at us covered with dense undergrowth and a few trees grown on the slope mounds.

Frozen with fear

The tires skidded on this section of mud, and clay before it went flying into the ditch at Manga, Sikkim by gautam lahiri
The tires skidded on this section of mud, and clay before it went careening into the ditch

I saw for a few seconds or a minute at the old landslide that blocked a section of the road a little far away on the winding road which had fallen into a valley below amid trees and grasses.

The drop was about three hundred feet and then there was fog so I could not see beyond what lay.

The Sumo pitched three or four degrees, and slid slowly and stopped. My family completely froze in the rear seat, thinking the end of it all. Every movement we made, the car tilted but did not move out. I told my family to go at the right rearmost corner as slowly as possible, thinking the extra weight will hold the Sumo on the roadside edge and I was in the front seat looking at the depression below. The Sumo creaked as I moved by an inch.

The rescue

After about ten agonizing minutes of being perched at that angle, we heard a rumble of a heavy engine. My son and wife desperately waving their handkerchiefs through the open window to attract attention.

The army dumper which we saw unloading load that saved our lives on our way back at Tashi Viewpoint, Sikkim by gautam lahiri
The army dumper that saved our life seen here on our way back, unloading rocks

A loaded army dumper. They stopped. Eager hands grabbed the Sumo’s roof rails first and they tied thick ropes to them and strung them to the dumper’s rear bumper. 

Once the rope was taught, I disengaged the gear to ‘neutral’ and the truck pulled away slowly and by inches the Sumo came out of the slope.

After the arm steadied the Sumo, local people from the near by village helped the Sumo to safety. Look at the road edge which is keeping the Sumo from disappearing into the ditch up front at Mangan, Sikkim by gautam lahiri
After the army pulled the Sumo, local people from the near by village helped us to safety. You can see the road edge that kept the Sumo from disappearing into the ditch up front

We all disembarked from the stricken Sumo.

Not sure, how many times we thanked the army personnel. Having pulled us out, the army truck drove away.

After they left, the local people and a few other Sumos’ joined to bring us fully out of it.

Our return

Evening ahead, under a light rain, the road becoming bad to worse; I drove the Sumo across multiple on no-road surface towards Tashi Viewpoint, Sikkim by gautam lahiri
Evening ahead, under a light rain, the road becoming bad to worse; I drove the Sumo across multiple on no-road surface towards Tashi Viewpoint

Without the driver, I drove back stolidly, to Tashi viewpoint, a 60 kms of twisted, rock laden, muddy hill roads.

Darkness surrounded with the decreasing day light and we reached the hotel a little after 7 pm and parked the car.

Touched her hot bonnet, the water dripping tires and kissed the A-pillar. She saved us. We stood looking at each other and parted.

We did not reproach the driver or the company. Handed the keys to the hotel reception.

Inference

A bow to the universe for love and care I share at yumthang valley with cars by gautam lahiri
I bow to the universe for love and care I share with cars

They may not talk, but provides enough evidence to make you believe they shield you from dangers mystically.

I spread my arms, and bow to the veiled force with gratitude, to these charming ladies who protected me, and to those who accompany us today in our quest for exhilaration.

Additional readings

You can read about four more mystical occurrences, where man and machine complemented each other. A Maruti 800 car battled a flood at Camac Street and saving the driver from the cops, at College Street and reached us to safety.

A Zen, that ran into a mechanical snag but never let the family down. The Nagarjuna Sagar dam story will keep you guessing till the end. Her dramatic climb backwards on a broken gradient at the Golconda fort will mesmerize you.

Trip and location statistics

Cars used:Swift Diesel 1.3 L engine, 4 cylinders / Tata Sumo Victa 2.0 L engine 4-cylinders
Total distance covered:1800 Kms
Fuel (Diesel):69 liters
Places to visit in Sikkim (Only lakes):Gurudongmar Lake, Khecheopalri Lake, Menmecho Lake, Teesta river, Cholamu lake, Kartok lake, Tsomgo lake, Lachung river
Other Non lake places:Baba mandir, Nathula, Pelling, Lachung monastry, Rumtek monastry, Tashi viewpoint, Seven sisters waterfall, Goechala, Kanchenzonga, Zuluk, Ravangla, Gangtok
Distance from Kolkata to New Jalpaiguri:585 Kms
From New Jalpaiguri to Gangtok: 120 Kms
Nearest airport: Bagdogra
Nearest railway station:New Jalpaiguri
Travel Basics


One response to “Bizarre experiences – My sixth sense warned me and the inevitable happened…”

  1.  Avatar
    Anonymous

    I could “feel” the incident of the car slipping off the gravel road and getting stuck in the mud, reading through the way you have described everything so meticulously. I can understand the panic that hits you when you get stuck in a situation like this with you family in the car.

    Completely understand your love for the machines and if I am not exaggerating, you got to feel your car and build a “Avatar” like relation with the machine, and she will never let you down. Having experienced similar things, I can relate to your feeling. We will talk about it when we meet up for a coffee/drinks and chat.

    Good to see that everyone is safe. Take care and keep posting !!

    Anand

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