Journey to Kangchenjunga, Nepal’s hidden jewel — Part I
Read Part II of this travelogue here.
After my last trip to Gondogoro La, a friend asked me where I was headed to next.
“Mount Kangchenjunga”, I replied. “Mount Kangchen- what?” she asked.
I was not surprised — not many people know about or even heard of Kangchenjunga. This despite the fact that at 8,586 metres, it is the third highest mountain in the world, after Mount Everest (8,848m) and just 25m shy of the second highest K2 (8,611m).
Kangchenjunga was once assumed to be the highest mountain, a status it lost in 1852 after The Great Trigonometrical Survey in India established Everest as the highest mountain. K2 was measured second highest and Kangchenjunga third.
About Kangchenjunga
Lying on the border between Nepal’s yet-to-be-named Province No. 1 and the Indian state of Sikkim, Kangchenjunga is the eastern-most of the fourteen 8,000-metre peaks and the only one in India.
The word Kangchenjunga is Tibetan and means 'the five treasures of high snow', treasures referring to the five peaks of this massive mountain. Four of these cross the 8,000m mark (Kangchenjunga Main 8,586m, Kangchenjunga West 8,505m, Kangchenjunga Central 8,482m, Kangchenjunga South 8,494m and Kangbachen 7,903m).
These peaks do not classify as individual mountains by themselves due to their lack of prominence.
Also read: How my love for the mountains took me from Hyderabad all the way to Everest Base Camp