Water chestnuts a blessing in cold Kashmir winter
WULAR LAKE: As the chill of the winter night breaks and the morning haze clears, the young woman wrapped in a woolen tunic rows her shallow boat through the weed-choked waters of Wular Lake until she reaches a marshy spot where a prized crop of water chestnuts grows wild.
She puts on short wooden skis, slides over the dense tangle of green, reaches down through the floating canopy and starts picking the sweet, aromatic berries. Across the lake, thousands of other women and men are going after a harvest that will total some 5 million kilogrammes for the year.
“It's a hard job, but this is what our families have been doing for ages,” said 26-year-old Kulsooma, who along with two brothers has been harvesting water chestnuts with their father since she was a child. Like many people in the Himalayan territory, Kulsooma goes by only one name.