The Nicest Place I've Known

We reached out to our favourite authors and artists to tell us the nicest place they have known—a city, town, village or spot, anywhere in the world. Here are four

offline
We reached out to our favourite authors and artists to tell us the nicest place they have known—a city, town, village or spot, anywhere in the world. Here are four

Anita Nair loves being at Dedhgrahat, Himachal Pradesh

Six hours from Delhi is a little mud road at Dedhgrahat, near Kandaghat town in Himachal Pradesh. Down this road is Long View, my friend Aarushi’s home and my go-to place when I need a holiday from myself. Long View, with its trees and dogs, spectacular views and slow internet, is what I dream of on particularly stressful days.

Our days here begin late and end late. The cold has a way of seeping into the bones so you need a fire lit every night and an electric blanket to snuggle into. A place where you breakfast at noon and dine at midnight.

But what makes Long View the nicest place in the world for me is the mountain near Parotha. We would walk along the highway and from the side of the road begin the climb. There is no real path except what is used by the Gurjars [nomadic pastoral communities in northern India] as they take their cattle grazing, and sometimes mules, to bring down firewood. Each time as I take that first long step up the thickly wooded mountainside, I tell myself that I will not think of the degree of difficulty.

As a mountaineer, I am a walking disaster: I have a dead left leg from a herniated disc; my poor vision has completely destroyed my spatial awareness. But what I do have is an absence of fear and Aarushi alongside. She climbs as though she were going up a gently curving staircase. Every time I need help, she offers a hand. And then there are the dogs Ranga and Jimmi, who wait for me every time I falter.

Long View is at 4,500 feet. The first viewpoint is at 5,100 feet. It is all pine trees and from there the deodars begin. I like to sit on the lip of a cliff with the dogs and gaze at the road far below. A four-lane highway is being carved in the mountainsides and the slopes are turning raw and denuded in the name of progress. But at this height, everything seems distant and removed.

Once atop, I lie do...

Read more!