New Delhi: There are places in the Himalayas that don’t announce themselves. They simply exist quietly, completely and when you learn about them, something
shifts in the way you think about mountains. Somdhara is one of those places. Sitting at nearly 5,346 meters in the remote Kumaon Himalayas of Uttarakhand, close to the frontier between India and Tibet, at coordinates 30°52’02” N, 80°00’35” E, this peak has been many things to many people across many centuries — a geographical landmark, a spiritual symbol, a trade waypoint, a cartographic mystery. But before it was any of those things, it had a name that told you everything. Som, meaning moon.
Dhara, meaning stream. Together, they conjure something almost impossible to translate cleanly — the idea of a cool, lunar current descending from the heights, pouring silently into the valleys below like light made into water. In a landscape as stark and magnificent as this, that image doesn’t feel like a stretch. It feels exactly right.
The land around Somdhara is the kind that reminds you how young and noisy civilization actually is. The air up here is thin. The winds move through without asking permission. Snow and rock stretch out in every direction, untouched by the pace and pressure of modern life.
The peak forms part of the Great Himalayan Range, and its contribution to the region’s ecology is far greater than its remoteness might suggest. Snowmelt and glacial streams born on these slopes find their way down into tributaries of the Kali and Gori Ganga rivers, eventually sustaining lives and livelihoods that may never have heard of Somdhara at all.
For most of the year, the mountain sits wrapped in snow that catches the light and throws it back in a silvery gleam — ethereal is the word people reach for, and it earns it. Somdhara sits between two worlds: the green, breathing valleys of Kumaon on one side and the vast, cold plateaus of Tibet on the other. A bridge between them, holding its place in silence.
The spiritual weight this mountain carries goes back a long way. In Vedic tradition, the moon is not just a celestial object — it represents calm, it represents healing, and it represents amrita, the divine nectar of immortality. Somdhara, then, is not simply ice and altitude. It is imagined as a sacred reservoir, a place where cosmic coolness and purity concentrate and then spill outward into the world.
The streams that run from its slopes are more than water in this understanding — they cleanse, they renew, they carry something of that lunar stillness down into the heat and restlessness of the plains below.
It’s worth pausing on that for a moment, because it speaks to something the high Himalayas have always offered seekers and sages: an atmosphere so removed from ordinary distraction that the mind, given time, begins to settle into itself. For centuries, people have believed that places like Somdhara don’t just permit meditation — they actively invite it.
The wider Kumaon region has played a central role in India’s spiritual and historical journey for longer than most places can claim. It has been the main gateway for generations of pilgrims making their way from the plains toward Mount Kailash and Lake Mansarovar — journeys that were never easy, always long, and undertaken with a seriousness of purpose that’s hard to fully imagine from a comfortable distance. During the era of the Katyuri kings, from the 7th to the 11th centuries, and later under the Chand dynasty, the high peaks of these ranges were revered as sacred guardians.
Rivers, forests, mountains and streams were not resources to be managed — they were presences to be honoured. That reverence meant that remote peaks like Somdhara were protected not just by their inaccessibility, but by something deeper: the shared belief of the people who lived in their shadow.
The passes near Somdhara were, for a long stretch of history, anything but remote in the human sense. Communities like the Bhotias moved through these corridors regularly, carrying salt, wool, silk and grain between India and Tibet, their routes worn into the mountain paths by generations of footfall. The Lipulekh Pass, close by, was the main door for trans-Himalayan trade and pilgrimage — a threshold between worlds.
Over centuries of that kind of contact, Vedic and Tibetan Buddhist traditions didn’t so much collide as interweave. Monasteries and shrines appeared. Folk songs and oral traditions carried a shared spiritual culture that neither side could claim as entirely its own. The Himalayas, so often described as a boundary, were in practice exactly the opposite — a place where civilizations met, traded, and left marks on each other that haven’t faded yet.
Then came the colonial era, and with it a very different kind of attention. The British needed to measure the subcontinent — all of it, including the parts they could not safely enter themselves. And so they trained a remarkable group of Indian explorers, known as Pundits, to move through the high Himalayas in disguise — as traders, as pilgrims — gathering data that European surveyors could never have collected without giving themselves away. Nain Singh Rawat is the most celebrated of them, a man whose journeys through Tibet and across the mountain ranges helped produce maps of places the outside world had barely heard of. For colonial cartographers, peaks like Somdhara were the edge of the known, standing between empire and whatever lay beyond.
In Indian philosophical thought, there’s a pattern worth recognizing: mountains represent higher states of consciousness, and watersheds represent points of transition, where one thing becomes another. Somdhara fits both descriptions with an almost deliberate precision. It is where snow becomes river, and where silence, for those who have made the journey, becomes something closer to insight. The Himalayas have long been thought of as the mind of the earth — and if that holds, then Somdhara might be the point where that mind grows most clear. Pure, still, lunar.
That clarity, though, is under pressure now. The glaciers feeding Somdhara are retreating — not dramatically in any single year, but consistently, in the way that slow erosion always is: quiet until it isn’t. Rising temperatures are accelerating glacial melt across the entire Himalayan range, and the rivers these glaciers feed sustain millions of people across northern India. Agriculture. Forests. Wildlife. Whole civilizations built around the assumption that the water will keep coming.
The ecological reach of this region extends well beyond the peaks themselves — into the Nanda Devi Biosphere Reserve, all the way toward ecosystems near Jim Corbett National Park. Protecting these watersheds is no longer a matter of sentiment or tradition. It is a practical necessity, and an urgent one.
For the trekkers who do make it out toward Somdhara, the journey tends to do something to them. The wind, the cold, the icy terrain, the immensity of the silence — all of it tests you in ways that are hard to explain to someone who hasn’t been there. But almost universally, people come back describing it as transformative.
Something about the stripping away of noise, the reduction of life to its simplest terms, the sense of standing inside something ancient and indifferent — it lands differently than ordinary experiences do. Somdhara doesn’t care whether you find it meaningful. That, perhaps, is exactly why people do.















