Gadsar Lake Explained

Gadsar Lake
Other Name:Lake of Fishes
Location:Ganderbal district, Jammu and Kashmir
Type:oligotrophic lake
Inflow:Melting of snow
Outflow:A stream tributary of Neelum River
Basin Countries: India
Length:0.85km (00.53miles)
Width:0.76km (00.47miles)
Area:0.7421km2
Elevation:3600m (11,800feet)
Frozen:December to April
Pushpin Map:India Jammu and Kashmir#India
Pushpin Map Alt:Location of the lake in Jammu and Kashmir.

The Gadsar Lake,[1] also called Yemsar, is an alpine high altitude oligotrophic lake[2] in the Ganderbal district[3] of Kashmir Division in Jammu and Kashmir, India. It has an elevation of 3600m (11,800feet), a maximum length of 0.85 km and maximum width of 0.76 km.

Etymology, geography

Gadsar in Kashmiri means the lake of fishes, a natural habitat of trout and other types of fishes[4] among of which is the brown trout.[5] Yemsar means Lake of Yama.[6] The lake freezes in the month of November to April and is mostly covered by snow during these months, the floating ice bergs are seen even in summer. It is surrounded by alpine meadows full of various kinds of wild alpine flowers, therefore the lake is also called as the valley of flowers.[7] The lake is mainly fed by melting of glaciers. The Gadsar Lake outflows through a stream flows north westwards and joins Kishanganga River at Tulail.

Access

The Gadsar Lake is situated 108 kilometres northeast from Srinagar city. From Naranag a 28 km alpine track leads to the lake. Another track of 41 km northwest from Shitkadi Sonamarg via Vishansar Lake and Krishansar Lake leads to the Gadsar Lake crossing two mountain passes of Nichnai and Gadsar of more than 4100 meters above sea level.[8] The best time to visit is from the month of June to September.

Gadsar, the lake of death

The Gadsar Lake is also called Yemsar which means the lake of Yama and is also referred to as the lake of death.[9] A myth still unresolved. Shepherds grazing their flocks in the outskirts of Gadsar lake during summers believe that, there lives a Lake Monster, a freshwater Octopus which drags the creatures from shores by its tentacles into the water. There is an uncertainty in the minds of visitors, a kind of threat which prevents them going near the shores. The shepherds also chose otherwise grazing their flocks at the shores of the lake. The fishes are being caught outside the lake in a stream from which it flows out.

References

  1. Book: Charles Metcalfe MacGregor . Charles Ellison Bates . Central Asia: section 1. A gazetteer of Kashmír . 31 July 2012 . 1995 . Barbican Publishing Company, 1995 . 978-1-900056-85-4 . 188, 496–.
  2. Raina. HS. KK Vass. Some biological features of a freshwater fairy shrimp, Branchinecta schantzi, Mackin, 1952 in the Northwestern Himalayas, India. J. Indian Inst. Sci.. May–June 2006. 86. 287–291. 21 February 2012.
  3. Web site: Gangabal in Ganderbal . kashmirparadise.com . 2012-04-19 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120425130431/http://www.kashmirparadise.com/sonamarg-tour.html . 2012-04-25 .
  4. Web site: Fishes and Fisheries in high altitude lakes, Vishansar, Gadsar, Gangabal, Krishansar. Fao.org. 2012-04-19.
  5. Book: Petr. T.. Fish and fisheries at higher altitudes: Asia. 1999. FAO. Rome. 92-5-104309-4. 72.
  6. News: Excelsior . Daily . 2012-08-17 . Sacred Shrines of Haramukh . en-US . 2021-05-15.
  7. Web site: Gadsar the valley of flowers . aazadkashmir.com . 2012-04-19 .
  8. Web site: Go to Kashmir. go2kashmir.com. 2012-04-19.
  9. News: Excelsior . Daily . 2012-08-17 . Sacred Shrines of Haramukh . en-US . 2021-05-15.

External links