The
legend goes that king Jumbulochan was out hunting. He saw a tiger
and a goat drinking water from the same pool. He considered the
place very auspicious and founded a city there, calling it Jammu
Nagri. He transferred his capital to the new city from the Bahu
Fort. Jammu is worth a visit for the scores of temples here and
for being the cradle of the Dogra Culture.
The meandering Tawi River flows in the Jammu Foothills and there
is the backdrop of the imposing Trikutarange of peaks. It is also
the starting point for the starting-point for visiting the holy
shrine of Vaishno Devi at Katra. The Kashmir region starts near
Banihal, 17 kilometers (11miles) before the Jawarhar Tunnel ,
where the dominant language changes from Dogri to Kashmiri style.
The landscape blossoms north of the pass where the lush fields
of the Vale of Kashmir stretch away to the north. The image of
houseboats reflected in the waters of Dal Lake against a backdrop
of snowcapped mountains is a really, but this is only part of
what Kashmir has to offer. The valley, or vale. is a large oval
plain 136 Kms long and up to 40 Kms wide, with Srinagar, at 1,593
meters, at the approximate center.
The autumn colours and the saffron harvest near Pampore are a
wonderful backdrop to a low -altitude trek. From June onwards
the oppressive heat of the plains makes the cooler days in and
around Srinagar even more attractive. Since the partition of India
divided the state and cut the road via Rawalpindi and Baramulla,
the longer route via Jammu is the only practicable land link with
the rest of India . (There is also a road linking Himachal Pradesh
with Ladakh.)