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Pune to Goa cycling trip – bliss in the western ghats.
[Hi there! Unlike all my past posts, this time I’m going to try something new while writing this post. I’m just going to pretend that I’m talking to my cycling partner on the trip – Nupur, recalling the whole experience. Hope you like reading this new style…]
Yo Nupur!
I finally sat down penning my memories from the trip. I don’t think I’d be able to do full justice to the amazing experience but I guess I’ll still give it a try.
I remember how it started with you asking whether I’d be interested in a cycling trip. And without a second thought, I said YES, even before you mentioned where we’d be going!
Each of the places we visited was completely new to me, and so was the excitement.
Remember the first day when we started the ride from Chandni chowk of Pune towards Mulshi?
We started early morning and stopped for breakfast at this Marathi dhaba which served an amazing Puran poli. Did I get the name right? Also that serving of desi ghee from which, I happily ate not just mine but your part of it too! Good thing I don’t worry about putting on weight. đ
That filling breakfast was finger licking good! Was it the best we had on the trip? Was also good for our tight budget.
Soon after that, we were pushing uphill for the climb along Mulshi lake. Those jaw-dropping views from the top made every uphill pedal totally worth it.
Someone rightly said that the best view comes after the hardest climb…

Hello breathtaking views… That dog who ran a half-marathon with our cycles along the beautiful routes through those remote villages?
I swear he was running so close to the cycles that one of us could have easily tipped over. Though I still feel sorry for him to have followed us when we had nothing for him to eat. Poor chap kept following in anticipation.
Or maybe he was just escorting us to make sure we cross that territory safely. We’d never know. How awesome it’d have been, if I had the superpower to understand dog-speak. đ
As we moved towards Lonavala, there was a downhill diversion bringing us to this dam where we saw our first real heavy downpour.
Those endless buckets of water being poured from somewhere up in the sky. Isn’t this the place where we ditched using the rain jackets? What a blissful place and time it was! Honestly I had even forgot when was the last time I enjoyed rains so much. It felt energizing. Like something with a power to make a dead alive…

Hello rains… So what if this diversion turned out to be the wrong one. Well yeah except the part where we had to ride back steep uphill.
Riding further ahead amidst all that beauty, there was a moment when my stomach did a knock-knock to remind me that it needed refueling. Like urgently. Those few kilometers ride were a real test where I could sense my intestine had started digesting itself just to keep some energy flowing.
That highway we later joined was the much needed silver lining. Was good riding on smooth roads after almost a whole day of riding through the village roads. Icing on the cake were those gorgeous waterfalls which kept us company throughout this stretch.

Joining the road to Lonavala Finally we arrived at a roadside dhaba where, being extremely hungry, I lost count of how many vada paavs we had. I think this is when I finally got used to, and accepted vada paavs as a proper meal. Yeah I guess it is indeed something one can actually survive on.
Climbing further towards Lonavala we met this heavy fog with negligible visibility. Not to mention that sudden rush of all those people which was a stark contrast to the region we earlier rode through where we barely saw anyone for hours.
As soon as we reached Lonavala, the “buckets” followed us again and we quickly looked up a hotel which would be our resting place. And remember that generous man at the reception, who, on seeing these two cyclists coming in the heavy rain, gave us a good discount, which in his own words was out of the respect for what we were up to.
And with a much needed rest, we finally called it a day! Hot shower, a massage with that magic oil, while recalling what a great day it had been, brings a joy of victory. Well celebrated with an awesome meal followed by chocolate, and a good night’s sleep excitedly looking forward to the next day of adventure…
[The hike + run to Rajmachi fort, the phones getting waterlogged one by one, and a lot more all the way to chasing the flight in Goa on cycles, to be continued…]
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Carrying bicycle via flights in India
Okay so I needed to carry my cycle from Delhi to Pune and that’s when I got some suggestions from my cyclist friends about which airlines to go with. After checking with multiple airlines, these are the responses I got.
Next up, Vistara
And then Air Asia
which as per that page, came out to be something like this:
Sport Equipment 15kg INR 1890 20kg INR 3190 25kg INR 5090 30kg INR 6390 40kg INR 9390 After starting to loose hope, finally Air India comes to the rescue.
(I also called them up just to be doubly sure)
So as of June 2019, Air India seems like the most cost effective option considering that the flight ticket on AI was only 300 Rs costlier than the cheapest option while it also includes a free meal.
So check the prices, and if AI is not costing more than the cost of carrying cycle with the other airlines, maybe just go with AI for a change? đ
Happy cycling!
PS: Thanks to Nupur Singh, Pratyush Thakur, and Gaurav Duggal for their inputs and help.
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Shock, denial, and Regret. Adios, my best teacher, mentor, and advisor.
About 7 am today, I woke up, only to notice a couple of messages on a Whatsapp group of friends, and on another group on Facebook.
“Prof. Ashish Sureka was no more.”
I went into shock. And denial. While everyone was sharing their reactions, I just didn’t know what to say. I picked up myself and went outside for a walk looking for an undisturbed spot at this place Narkanda where I arrived yesterday. It was a whole flashback of the old times. The shock continued for next several hours and I couldn’t gather strength to even check what really had happened.
I got to know the details that he decided to end his life due to the ongoing depression and had committed a suicide, much later when a friend and batchmate who happens to be from Narkanda called up to check how I was finding this place. The details of what had happened were brought to everyone’s attention from the Facebook post by another Professor from our alma mater. I went to see his post…
The post links to a blog post from Prof. Ashish who shared about his depression and his fight against the same in 2015. This was the first time I found this blogpost.
Talk to anyone who ever met him, one thing every single person will tell you is the extremely soft-spoken manner he always talked in. His ever smiling face was always full of positivity. In my two years of working closely with him, I don’t think I ever saw him angry. Without any doubt, he was one of the rare few people, everyone liked talking to.
Very early during my B.Tech. I got to work under his guidance and that continued to me taking all the courses he was teaching, and in parallel working with him on several projects, few of which got published in reputed conferences. I distinctly remember several of our meetings, discussions, high teas and the lunches in and outside our campus. Things he used to tell me, moments from the classes he was teaching, and our one-to-one conversations.

That’s me and the-always-smiling Prof. Ashish Sureka from one of the conferences we went to present a paper, one of the many times he provided me the opportunity to work with him.

And that’s us having a small celebration when our research group received a research grant.
“Atul, it’s not enough to just start things, it’s even more important to see them through and take them to their logical conclusion. Persevering won’t often be easy but that’s the only way to do good things that matter.”
“Atul, you should be more decisive and be part of the decision, and not just leave it up to others to decide for you.”
“Atul, you can do better than this.”
As far as memory goes, I always had an interest in programming but it was only after taking a course taught by him that I developed a real interest in Computer Science. What it really means to build something big, parts by parts. He was always supportive of me even during my academically difficult times, which doesn’t happen often in the education system. It’s safe to say that I am what I am, thanks to guidance by him.
Not long after this, my life took a turn and I happened to gradually move away from research towards the startup world and we happened to go out of touch. We barely spoke to each other in past 5 years. The only brief conversation that happened in a long time was on Twitter recently when in response to one of my Tweet he said…
Good blog Atul. Keep writing, building and making innovative things solving user’s problems
â Ashish Sureka (@ashish_sureka) December 6, 2016
In retrospect, he clearly was still suffering from depression and yet his response was so positive and motivating!
Now that I read his post from 2015, in which he tells others suffering with depression to
“…take the right treatment and surround yourself with supportive/positive people.“
I find it incredibly selfish of me to not have been there in his difficult times, especially when he helped me so much. Forget about being there, I went so out of touch that I never even knew what he was going through.
It’s easy to tell yourself that nothing I would do, would have changed what happened, but maybe, just maybe? The thought that a small action from your side had a non-zero probability of changing an outcome so big and important, is something that makes digesting this incredibly sad news all the more difficult. Lately, I have been living a life without any regrets but this one, this one is a clear regret I have. This regret is a burden that would stay with me.
The minimum I can think of that I must do is reducing this self-imposed Vanvaas, and seeing more friends and family more often.
I surely can’t even imagine what his family and the people who were actually close to him during all this, must be going through.
To my best teacher, mentor, and advisor who is so unfortunately not among us anymore, I truly hope you find the peace up there.
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A year since I left my job
Today morning a notification from Facebook caught my attention. It reminded that itâs been one full year since I had taken the sabbatical from my job at MobiKwik.
Time âcanâ fly!
I had earlier seen how amazing the experience of traveling in the mountains of Nepal was. Where I went solo trekking the Annapurna circuit during a month-long break earlier that year.
The distraction-free time in the mountains of Nepal helped me introspect about what things I value in life and how Iâd like to change the priorities. (In retrospect, the head was still not 100% clear at this time, which eventually did happen months later. More on this some other time!)
I knew gathering material possessions didnât excite me.
I could live frugally.
I had some savings that I could use efficiently.
And I had this wanderlust (what a cliche this word has become!). To put it differently, I like traveling far, and experience the hidden secrets of nature as well as those of different cultures. Knowing that it would inevitably come with some extreme challengesâââwhich attract the crazier me like anything!
So as I came back home from the last day at the office, I packed my bag to leave for Ladakh, with a one-way ticket, where I was going to trek the Markha valley. This is one of the classic tea-house trails of India and the experience was indeed very rewarding!
Laddakh. Same country, yet worlds apart.
â Atul Goyal (@Atulgoyal) September 17, 2016
After Markha valley, I took a bus to Spiti and in all, I stayed for more than a month. Tried to capture parts of my Markha and Spiti experience in this video if youâd like to see.
After Spiti, it was a time for North-East and I left with another 1-way ticket for Sikkim.
Picking up free lessons everyday in Sikkim. Photography. Videography. Business. Life. So glad I extended my stay. In love with this place!
â Atul Goyal (@Atulgoyal) December 26, 2016
I made some amazing friends, got to see incredible places and since I didnât have any fixed plan I ended up spending more than a month in Sikkim and Darjeeling. After which, I went for a quick week-long trip to Meghalaya with new friends I made in Sikkim.
During these travels I had been validating the idea of a travel startup that Iâm currently working on, while talking to different travelers. Those discussions and the problems I had myself faced showed signs that there is a gap in travel discovery that I can probably help plug.
By the time I came back home, it was winters and a dream in queue was to see Kinnaur and Spiti in winters. Time to fulfill the dream! Landing in Kinnaur with non-stop snowfall was an out of the world experience. Challenging, yet extremely rewarding. And while it was my third trip to Spiti, the surreal winter Spiti had great adventures in store.
The magnificent Key Gompa. The crown jewel of Winter Spiti!
As if coming straight out of fairy talesâŚ. â¤ď¸#keymonastery #spiti #winters pic.twitter.com/AcBrGuAoCjâ Atul Goyal (@Atulgoyal) May 25, 2017
Coming back home was when I talked toâââmy now cofounderâââPrakhar who was also excited about the idea of MyWanderlust.in and since we had closely worked with each other, we knew that it was a perfect team. And he put in his papers!
After a discussion with folks at my office, we agreed on ending the sabbatical and me officially resigning from my job, as I was now going to continue with the startup with no plan to join back. It was the conclusion of my four-years amazing time at MobiKwik. (Thank you for the great company Kwikers!)
For some guidance on building the Minimum Viable Product, we applied for the 10 week remote program called StartupSchool by YCombinator and luckily got in! Our presentation at the end of the program was our first showcase of the product to the outside world.
After spending next three months getting our startup incubated and working with a few brilliant interns during summer break at the very helpful incubation center of our alma-mater IIITD, we decided that we wanted to continue working on the startup while traveling the country instead of calling one place our base.
And with that started our South India trip where we are making progress with the startup while also exploring this amazing part of the country.
3 weeks in Mumbai + Hampi + Gokarna. Now on the way to #GodsOwnCountry Kerala đ´!
Startup + backpacker life combo working out. Dream for me.
â Atul Goyal (@Atulgoyal) September 2, 2017
In fact, Iâm typing this post listening to the sound of the rain outside the window of my room in Alleppey which has been our temporary base for more than a week now, and where we also launched beta version of MyWanderlust. (the announcement of beta here).
After having explored the beaches, the backwaters and the amazing Kerala cuisine in this welcoming slow paced city of Alleppey, itâs time to move out and resume exploring more of this Gods Own Country, Kerala.
Next hopâââVarkala, here we come!
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If you made it this far, thank you for reading! Let me know if youâve any questions in mind or anything I could help you with.
Also, if you like, checkout my travel journeys. Or create yours and MyWanderlust will help you share your travel experiences with the world! Or start here for some travel inspiration.

My travel page on MyWanderlust -
Bike ride. Leh to Pangong Tso.

That ride to Pangong Tso. Ocean of memories associated with it! [Prologue: This is from my first trip to Ladakh. I was with three other friends and we did the Delhi – Srinagar – Ladakh – Manali circuit in a car. The Srinagar-Leh highway as well as Manali-Leh highway are both amazing for road trips with super awesome views, but more on that some other time.]
So the previous day we were in Leh and we were roaming around in the town trying to find bikes for a bike ride to Pangong lake. We initially planned to leave the car back in Leh and pick it up when we come back to the city. We went to every single bikes-on-rent shop and garages, many of them multiple times trying to find a bike which wasnât booked. And even as the dizziness due to the high altitude of Leh was starting to wear us out, my determinism to do the bike ride refused to come down.
This is 2014 so one of my earliest travels in the remote mountains and was kind of a dream trip.
As the sun went down and Leh became darker, my friends decided that theyâd all just go to Pangong in the car and forget the bike ride. But looking at my craze I did get a company to keep looking for “one” bike.
In the end, we found a Royal Enfield classic “Desertstorm” which is a 500cc beast. It just so happened that I am not the biggest fan of Royal Enfield and had actually never even rode ANY Enfield before! And here was a 500cc beast, apparently ready for this new rider.
As it was clear that there is no other bike available in the town, it was either this bike or no bike. Didnât take a long time before a decision was made. đ
So I brought the bike to the guesthouse and we all called it a day for the next dayâs journey.
Early next morning, I, on the bike and the other three in the car started together and went to the fuel-station to load up the required ammo. The plan was that weâll go together but somehow we got split up and couldnât find each other on the whole route. And there is no phone network outside Leh.
So as I started moving out of Leh, I was getting a little better control of the bike which kept on improving during the long ride.
Come Chang La (5360m) and the really bad stretch of road along with the unbearable cold wind hitting directly against the chest made it a bit challenging. I wasnât sure whether the others were ahead of me or behind so I took a break at the pass. Riding the troublesome past several kilometers making it here was a huge milestone, and even though I was hoping that I might see the others here, that didnât happen.
I was hungry and the eatery here was closed but I did get some water to drink.

With a salute to the army folks standing near a bunker at the pass, I resumed my journey. The views from up here were nothing I had imagined. (The views throughout the route were a treat for the eyes and I didn’t bother taking the camera out of rucksack and as a result I don’t have any photos of the route except those from this break at Chang la).
I knew what Ladakh was going to be like but seeing the real thing and that too riding on two wheels, was an out of the world experience.
As the elevation dropped the breathing became easier and so did sensing of things around. After hours of endless no-manâs-land, I saw an army shooting range on my right and a small eatery on the left. Stopped for a while and ate maggie while listening to sounds of firing from the shooting range, arriving after bouncing off the opposite hill.
The energy boost did make the ride from here on, way more enjoyable and the last stretch to the lake was a real delight.
The first view of the huge Pangong Tso in the distance was nothing short of spectacular. As I made it to the lake I finally had a rendezvous with the gang with a huge, huge sigh of reliefâŚ

The gang. With the beautiful Pangong in the background! Look at the color of the lake! Yep, it’s real! -
Chansu – a beautiful village off any traveler map in Sangla valley

Photo taken with self-timer from the top of a waterfall. The houses that you see is the village Chansu. Enjoying the vistas and the music produced by the waterfall with a fresh breeze of air serving as cherry on the cake! After a fateful turn of events during my month long stint in Kalpa, this Spring, I landed in Chansu.
Chansu – a village in Sangla valley – reached via a winding dirt road from the Baspa II dam just before Sangla, taking you higher and higher till you arrive at this serene place. Chansu is a magical place only locals know about. There are no hotels, no guesthouses and not even homestays.
Without any dependency on tourism, the economy is almost exclusively dependent on agriculture which primarily includes apple, Apricot, peas, potatoes, and other vegetables.

An apple in the making. (More: Arrival of Spring â Photoblog from the beautiful land of Kinnaur) I had met this amazing family in Kalpa and getting invitation to come to their village of Chansu was something I just could not reject.

I got a chance to spend a couple of days here, staying at Simi’s great-grandparents’ house. Getting to see the life of people in these remote mountains up-close, and getting to learn new things in the process was an amazing amazing experience. And when I wasnât at the farm or at the house, hiking around at the outskirts of the village was my favorite pastime so much so that time just flew!
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How an evening at Chandratal became an adventure we didn’t see coming…
Different people find their dose of adventure in a wide variety of experiences. This is a story of how an evening at Chandratal became an adventure I can never forget…
This time of the year. Two years back.
The faint visuals of the evening at Chandratal still keep popping up as part of memories. Sometimes when I’m revisiting the photos. And at other times subconsciously…
It was my first trip to Spiti. I was traveling with my younger brother, Gaurav and my friend, Chirag. I didn’t know of Spiti long before that. Didn’t go with much preparation. Didn’t factor in the EXTREME cold that nights at these high-altitude regions unleash even at a time when the plains are burning hot…
So as fate had it, it was going to be a full-moon night the day we were at the Chandratal lake. As some of you would know, camping around the lake is banned so this base camp is the campsite. This campsite is like just a kilometer before the lake. From there, it’s an easy walk to reach the lake.
Many of you would also have experienced the drastic drop in temperature that happens at such a high altitude as soon as the sun goes down.
As naive as we were, we planned to walk to the lake in the later part of the day so that we reach there a bit before the sunset, enjoy the views for a while, wait for the sunset and be back to the camp after catching a glimpse of the full moon. If I knew any better I’d have picked up every single piece of warm cloth we had in the bag back at the camp, and keep some extra quick energy food. Did I tell you we were so naive?

As we reached the lake, with the sun reaching for the horizon, the whole setting was that of a surreal landscape. The breeze flowing past the sublime surface of the lake, the surrounding vistas and the golden rays of the sun… it was nothing short of an out-of-the-world experience.
We could see more people around the lake by this time. Some of them were also looking like having conquered the world. There was this big group of foreigners getting photographed with a huge flag of India. I could relate to their joy.
Only till we were blessed by the Sun.
Thanks to the thin atmosphere, this region hardly retains any heat and un-surprisingly it drove every single person around us, back to their relatively comfy shelters. Except for three souls. Who were determined to catch a view of the moon. Yep, the three naive ones…
As it got colder and colder, with the wind getting even stronger, we were losing energy fast. We had a packet of dry fruits. Which got finished in a blink.
We hoped that it would become bearable if we don’t face the direct wind so we hid behind piles of rocks hoping to prevent ourselves from some of that nature’s fury.
That too, didn’t move the needle.
We kept trying different things but all efforts were in vain. Finally when we didn’t see anything working, realizing we had barely enough energy left to go back to the camp we decided to call it a day. It was pitch dark and we – the naive ones – didn’t have any torch. So we planned to use the phone flash as long as the battery lasts.
Though walking was supposed to help keep the body a bit warm, we underestimated the cold. It was sucking energy fast. We were going numb…
We walked and stopped, walked a bit more and stopped, to catch up with breath and regain some energy. The time was 8pm-ish and there was no sight of the moon. Not that that was our biggest concern though.
What should have been like a half an hour walk, took endless time.
Or so it felt.
So a point comes when we are walking real slow and I’m thinking and rethinking whether we would make it or not, but thanks to the strong company of Gaurav and Chirag, we don’t lose hope even when we are drained of all the energy and body heat. Not even a single time did we mention to each other about any pessimistic thoughts. There was this unspoken fact all three of us knew that only thing that we can do is keep walking. And that’s what we did…
A few minutes later we noticed some lights in the distance. Lights that must be coming from the dinner tents back at the campsite. It was clear that we still needed to walk a lot to reach those lights. And we had exhausted phone batteries by now. What were we expecting!? Of-course nothing lasts forever!
The distant lights from the base were a sure hope, though. That we just need to keep following the zigzagging path faintly visible under the multitude of stars and keep heading in that direction down to the campsite…
After an endless walk, just before we were about to reach the camps, the magnificent moon with all its glory arose from the mountains from our back side. Surreal, it looked!
Coming back to reality we resumed our marching ahead to the campsite and eventually after what felt like an eternity we did make it to the camps.
Was this whole experience something I’d choose to plan given an option? Probably not.
Did I regret anything? No.
Was the experience worth the trouble? Hell YES! -
Arrival of Spring – Photoblog from the beautiful land of Kinnaur
Melting away of snow with the arrival of Spring, brought a palette full of colors during my month-long stay in Kinnaur. Spring – such a lovely time to be in the mountains!

An apple in the making. From Kinnaur – the land of Apples! 
The above one and the below one are photos of same branch of Apricot (khubaani) just 3 days apart! 

Plum flowers! 
Met this beauty on a hike to a waterfall in Chansu! 



And some lovely flowers of Chulli (wild apricot) growing on the roadside everywhere in Kalpa! Spring â¤ď¸
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Winter Spiti – Photoblog from the Wonderland!

Surreal White Spiti 
The statue of Buddha blessing the valley at Langza 
Key monastery – the crown jewel of Winter Spiti 
Key monastery – another view 
Magical night sky at Kibber