2 Abode of Gods the sight of rolling mists of enveloping valleys in a pall of vapour. This land of fact and fables has been described as the abode of Gods and Goddesses; in fact what Palestine is to the Christian and Mecca to a Muslim, likewise Uttarakhand is to a Hindu—the home of the great Gods which hold the way to final liberation. There may be dozens of reasons why people come to the Himalayas, since time immemorial but the most appropriate seems, as a guide said, that he is fully alive on the mountains. Others do it because they want to escape from society either in search of spiritual longings or for their sheer fascination for solitude. Some take to trekking and mountaineering to test their physical endurance and to be free and breathe fresh air. Companionship is a strong motivation too, because the pilgrims, tourists, trekkers and even mountaineers stay in close touch and this chance for lasting friendship lifts climbing above other sports because society tends to make human relation- ships superficial, mountaineering deepens them since 'shared adversity has a lot to do.' Another reason is that human mate- rial for climbing attracts substantial men. In fact, there is a clique of super climbers who starve for new vistas of vision, strange people and new peaks, seeking unclimbable and for this purpose spend nights roped together on sheer wall bivou- ces or snug in a bed roll under constant discomfort of falling ice and snow on the high Himalayas. Indeed this is a different treed of visitors to the Himalayas. The trekker meets through his mind's eye new civilizations, inhabited by strange people who practice different trades and indulge in uncommon traits of socio-economic behaviour. The entire phenomenon is baffling. The disire to see strange cul- tures holds irresistible attraction. Trekking as a sport Like all other sports, trekking is a safe sport, provided you are well equipped and know what you are doing. It strips character to the bones. A few minutes in a camp or on a rock can tell you more about a man's character than five consecu- tive cocktail parties or continued sessions of gay games in a ,disco. On a ledge, no one can fake anything. Words hardly