Photo from the Zemu Valley with the peaks courtesy www.himalayan-info.org
October 27th
2014 Gangtok to Lachen 2750 metres 6-7 hours
We left Gangtok on a sunny autumn morning with Kangchenjunga
floating in the clouds. The road followed the North Sikkim highway and we
followed the valley of the Teesta river all the way to Chungthang where the
permits were checked. Travelling along this road I thought of the early
pioneers like Paul Bauer, Douglas Freshfield, and Vittorio Sella who has walked
along Teesta valley on their way to Lachen. We stayed the night at the very
luxurious and comfortable Apple Orchard Hotel.
October 28th
2014 - Drive Lachen to Zema and then trek Zema to Tallem 3250 metres 4½ hrs.
The morning was cold and
cloudy and the group had breakfast at Apple Orchard at 8 AM and left by 9.30
AM. There was a problem with one of our
vehicles so we walked part of the way until Zema. There was another problem at Zema about the
weight of porter loads but this was also sorted out. We left Zema at 10.30 AM
after receiving Khadas for our full group. The
trail went down from Zema to the river and there were a lot of landslides to be
crossed on the trail in the first two hours – the upper trail has been damaged
by landslides and the current lower trail follows the Zemu Chu river. In many
sections there is no trail and the path requires clambering from boulder to
boulder using both hands. There is a steep section like a chimney which needs
to be climbed up with cascading water spraying the trekker from a nearby
waterfall. We stopped for lunch around
1.20 PM in a clearing near the river. There is a proper trail after lunch which
climbs above the Zemu Chu through some very pleasant forest of ferns and
rhododendrons. Just before the camp site of Tallem, the trail passes through a
large meadow which at this season had plenty of dried flowers. It would have
been a spectacular site in summer. Tallem was reached around 3 PM – the walk
took 4½ hours with a half hour lunch stop. The weather remained cloudy in the
evening with low mist covering the tree tops.