In 1982, the smallest national park in the Himalayas was created to protect the catchment area of the Pushpavati River and Bhayandar Valley.. This stream follows the contours of the steep valley which leads to Hemkunt Sahib, and is the constant companion of the pilgrims who trudge upward on the footpath.
The first westerner to enter the head of the valley was Edmund Smythe a noted "Shikari" & one of the earliest members of the Alpine Club. Among his other contribution for prosterity was the recruitment of the "Pandits"- Indian Explorers from the valley of Johar & Niti who would fill in nearly 100,000 sq kms of previously unmapped terrain in Nepal, Tibet & China.
He was appointed the first Inspector of the Kumaon Circle Public Instruction Department in 1861, he opened up a long disused pass between Niti & Badrinath, at the head of the Bhayundur Valley.
British mountaineers were to rediscover this same valley in 1931 . Frank S. Smythe passed through in 1931 after a successful first ascent of Kamet looking for a place to recuperate he and his team literally stumbled across this little piece of heaven & named it The Valley of Flowers
He was awed by the variety of wildflowers growing there, and returned in 1937 to collect more than two hundred botanical species. His 1938 book entitled The Valley of Flowers brought this remote Himalayan meadow to the attention of the world. In 1998 along with the nearby Nanda Devi Biosphere Reserve it was named a World Heritage Site by UNESCO
The locals, of course, always knew of the existence of the valley, and believed that it was inhabited by fairies.
The Valley floor is a glacial corridor, eight kilometres in length and two kilometres in width during which it slopes from almost 3,500 metres above sea level up to 4,000 metres. True to its name, the Valley is carpeted with wildflowers during the monsoon season.
FLORA : Of the many species which coexist in this unique ecosystem, are
•Brahmakamal: (Bhrama – The creator God in the Hindu Trinity, kamal= lotus)
•The Cobra Lily(also found in Sikkim)
•The extremely rare Himalayan Blue Poppy native to the region,
•The uncommon varieties of primula and orchid which bloom during June, and
•The impatiens, potentillas, and campanulas which paint the valley pink, red, and purple during July and August.
A stone path meanders among the flowers and across streams. The flowers grow so tall that leaving the path is difficult.
Few visitors continue beyond the first one or two kilometres inside the Valley but a hardy few go in search of a grave rumoured to be there among the flowers.
(In 1939, Joan Margaret Legge, a botanist from the Kew Botanical garden in London, was collecting floral specimens in the Valley when she fell to her death. A memorial was erected in her honour. Etched in English and Hindi into the white marble of the gravestone is a line from Psalm 121 which reads "I will lift up mine eyes unto the hills from whence commeth my help."
Folklore:
Traditionally the Valley of Flowers was used by local shepherds for grazing their flocks. But in the minds of many it has a greater significance. The myths told about the valley by locals and visitors paint a picture as evocative as the flowering that is the Valley's namesake.
There are stories about faeries who carry off anyone who wanders into their domain. There are other stories about flowers in the Valley with a fragrance potent enough to make anyone who inhales it faint away.
In Hindu mythology the Valley was created when the gods showered flowers down from heaven. Since then, so the local people say, the Valley has been host to great sages who attained enlightenment while meditating there.
In the last decade I've made 2 trips to the valley and each visit was like descending into a mythical world (could have been Tolkien's Middle Earth or Alice's Wonderland)
The valley is always covered in mist which hangs low barely skimming the riotous colours of the wild flowers which carpet the landscape. I’ve never seen so many flowers grow in one place even in nurseries..