A Tom-thumb train, with a difference!
The Tour Map: New Jalpaiguri-Sunk-Tindharia-Gayabari-Kurseong-Toong-Sonada-Darjeeling
At about the 22nd km, is another complicated loop. The travelers then experience their first reversing zigzag as the train whistles through its next loop at Chunbati (2,000ft) scaling greater heights to reach the station at Tindharia (2821 ft).
Soon the train heads for another reverse, the last one at 3,400 ft just after Gayabari station where the line runs close to the edge of a precipice with the Pagla Jhora or "Mad Torrent", a thundering waterfall in the distance which in its fury washes away road and track, houses and shops every few years cutting off Darjeeling for days during the monsoons.
The next one, Mahanandi station at about 48 km, gives one a glimpse of the source of the river. Another kilometer or so, and the Kurseong station (4,860 ft), or “The Land of the White Orchid” emerges, as the train whistle through the streets and shops with little children screaming in excitement.
The train heads for the Toong station (5,565 ft) with the mighty Kanchengunga in the backdrop, hypnotizing the beholders and the thought of chasing such heights in a Tom Thumb carriage, tingling their nervous system. Piercing through dense fog the train reaches Sonada station (6,552 ft) - known for its wild bears, bounty of fruits, vegetables and milk and Darjeeling tea gardens.
From here the train snakes along twisted paths along the Senchal Lake, Tiger Hill, Kalimpong and the many tea gardens to alight at the Indo-Nepal Border - Ghoom (7,407 ft) - enveloped eternally in a mist and dotted with a legion of colorful monasteries. From here the train starts descending towards Darjeeling to reach the most spectacular engineering feat on the line - the double loop at Batasia, aptly named the “Agony Point” after the churning it does to one’s stomach - with the breath-taking snow-white peaks of Kanchenjunga as a backdrop. At Batasia, there is a memorial to the Gorkhas. After a painstaking trail, the train takes its last drink of water before teetering precariously on the hillside to reach its final destination, the Darjeeling station.
Right from big-wigs in the literary world (Mark Twain called the journey his most enjoyable day on earth) and nature enthusiasts to the Bollywood - the toy train so synonymous with Darjeeling - continues to mystify its guests with a journey one of its kind. If you want to have a dekko first, watch the Bollywood flick Pareenita’s song sequence “Kesto majaa” video. Irresistible - it is!
Categories:
Darjeeling,
India Tourist Spots
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