As said, the last km or so towards Chang la is insanely steep, and the fatigue felt is huge. Every 100-200 m, I have to stop now, oxygen barely reaches the lungs and mind goes mental just looking at that incline still ahead. Chang la is so close yet by bicycle still another half hour away. This is where one appreciates the ease of our Safari VTT drives i.e., a drive by a motor vehicle, the torque would have made it barely noticeable!
Stopping, a bit of cycling, stopping is the routine for me. My last cycling on a high pass was almost an year back, Oct 10, 2012 on to the Khardung la top, and only being a dedicated cyclist once a year in bicycle travels like these - progress is painfully slow for myself but then surely bit by bit I approach Chang la.
Finally I see the last turn, towards the left is Chang la. Just one more turn to go!!
Sacrilege at its worst!!! A DSLR being used to take a "selfie" but then I am just plain happy. Finally at the mighty Chang la, around 2-1/2 days after leaving from Leh.
Quote:
Chang La (el. 5,360 m or 17,590 ft) is a high mountain pass in Ladakh, India. It is the third highest motorable road in the world.
Chang La is on the route to Pangong Lake from Leh. The name literally means "Pass towards the South" or "Pass in the South" (Chang = south, La = Pass). --- Wikipedia
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As the mighty Chang la rock signage was bit occupied and also mighty hungry after all the exertion and with only morning tea till now, I head off to the canteen to have a couple bowls of Maggi and similar cups of tea.
At the Chang la canteen for some food, i.e, couple of Maggi noodles and tea.
By the time I gulp down the noodles and cups of tea, the mighty Chang la rock signage is empty. It is time for some few memorable snaps,
at 17586 feet - both for Mountain Knight [Trek 4300D] and myself
Having almost spent an hour over here at Chang la, it is back on the bicycle again -the planned stop for the night being at Tangste 35 km from here.
Among the reasons that most probably any mountain cyclist, and myself for the last 2 days, slog on this brutal incline, is for the experience of a massive downhill ride that one invariably gets as one crosses a mountain pass, particularly as high as these. As very a minimal analogy - the same reason why we queue for more than 10 minutes or more to get on to the top of a water slide through all the crowd, to just experience the exhilaration and rush and twists that is all but over in less than 10 secs.
My first experience of a high-altitude downhill was last year [2012] while going down Rhotang la - believe me, it is one fantastic rush.
You just don't get that on a motorcycle or by a car.
All hard work down, it just time to enjoy this massive downhill of 30 km or so that would take me all the way to Durbuk and beyond may be to Tangste. Camera tucked in securely as sling, it is time to rip down this huge downhill mountainside.
