Travel: Sudhan Gali will make you forget Murree
Bagh in Azad Kashmir has become so famous that it seemed natural for me to go there, especially as it was a little over an hour’s ride from where I happened to be. As the cramped public minibus arrived at Bagh, the sight of heaps of trash and blue plastic shopping bags, strewn on both sides of the long bridge at the entrance of the city put a damper on my spirit. The weather as I stepped out of the wagon at the bus stand was distinctly stifling after the preceding night’s rain. Bagh did not seem to like me much, it seemed.
It was afternoon and I wondered where I would sleep the night when suddenly I bumped into a stout, rose-cheeked middle-aged man.
“Are you a taxi-wallah?”
Unlike congested, degenerating Murree, this unexplored town in Azad Jammu and Kashmir reminds you of the fresh air and scenic vistas that hill stations were meant to be about
“No. I drive that wagon between Bagh and Rawalakot.” He pointed towards his minibus.
“Ok then, can you recommend a hotel or guest house for the night in pleasant surroundings away from this crowded and stuffy bus stand?”
“Do you want to stay in Bagh? There is nothing here,” he seemed surprised and I felt awkward.
“I have never been to Bagh; it is a new place for me,” I justified my intention to stay there.
The minibus driver said, “If I were you, I would go to Sudhan Gali. It’s just an hour away, cool, quiet and lush green. You will forget Murree and remember me with gratitude for recommending it to you.” His recommendation had a tone of enthusiasm. “Come, that wagon is leaving in a few minutes. I will get you a good seat and instruct them where to drop you. They all know me.”
Zakir was a jovial fellow and had driven public buses in Karachi for 13 years on the Saddar-Nazimabad route. He returned to his hometown, Rawalakot, when things became too rough in Karachi in the early 1990s. Notwithstanding the need for caution with strangers in new places, and unlike Bagh, we hit it off instantly.
Two hours later but before sunset, the coaster dropped me in the cold, refreshing mountain air scented by pine trees, in the main bazaar of Sudhan Gali. A nearby signboard said ‘7,800 feet above sea level’. The bazaar consisted of a dozen small shanty shops, a couple of dhabas and not more than around 40 people, including the shopkeepers.
A rundown room albeit with hot and cold running water, in a five-room guesthouse run by the Azad Kashmir Tourism Department, became my shelter for the night. It is adjacent to the more expensive Benazir Palace hotel on a hill a 10-minute walk from the bazaar. The inn-keeper told me that he had given me a “low” price because these rooms were closed for repair! Consequently, he dispensed with the formality of paperwork.