Takdah : Silent Hills Of Teas, Pines And Black Panther
There are places in the hills that become destinations, and then there are places that quietly remain memories. Takdah felt like the latter from the very beginning.
While the roads to Darjeeling keep carrying endless waves of tourists, honking vehicles and crowded viewpoints, Takdah seemed to sit silently somewhere beyond all that noise — hidden beyond the forests, tea gardens and drifting mountain clouds. We had heard about it in fragments before. A quiet village. Old colonial bungalows. Pine forests. Mist. But nothing really prepares you for the strange calm the place carries.
Just after crossing Ghum, the road suddenly turned right, almost as if leaving behind the familiar rhythm of Darjeeling altogether. The traffic thinned. The noise faded. And slowly, the tall pine forests of Lamahatta began appearing around us like silent guardians.
The mountains here felt different. Quieter. Older somehow.
The road curled through deep pine forests where sunlight struggled to reach the ground. Fallen leaves covered parts of the roadside like a rust-coloured carpet, and the air carried that unmistakable damp mountain smell of moss, wood and mist. Occasionally the forest opened up for a few seconds to reveal distant green slopes before swallowing the road once again.
Then came the narrow forest stretch that almost felt like an entry gate into Takdah itself. It was not grand in any obvious way, yet there was something cinematic about it — the winding road disappearing into trees, the sudden silence, the soft mountain fog drifting lazily between the branches.

Leave a Reply