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Srinagar
is located in the heart of the Kashmir valley at an
altitude of 1,730 m above sea level, spread on both
sides of the river Jhelum. The Dal and
Nagin lakes enhance its picturesque setting,
while the changing play of the seasons and the
salubrious climate ensures that the city is equally
attractive to visitors around the year.
City Of Lakes
Srinagar's lakes are the reason why the city
receives so many tourists. Not just expanse of
water, the lakes are filled with houseboats,
villages, narrow water canals, lotus and vegetable
gardens and houses and shops.
Life on the lakes, as witnessed from the confines of
a Shikara, is unique. It is possible to book a
Shikara for the whole day and sightsee Nishat
Garden, Nasim Bagh, Hazratbal Mosque, Pathar Masjid
and Shah Hamdan's Shrine, having a picnic lunch in
the boat.
DAL LAKE
The Dal
is
famous not only for its beauty, but for its vibrance,
because it sustains within its periphery, a life
that is unique anywhere in the world. The houseboat
and Shikara communities have lived for centuries on
the Dal, and so complete is their infrastructure on
the lake, that they never have to step on land!
Doctors, tailors, bakers- one can see them all in
tiny wooden shops on the lake, near picturesque
vegetable gardens and acres of lotus gardens
The most
confusing parts of Srinagar for it's not really one
lake at all, but three. Further more much of it is
hardly what one would expect a lake to be like -
it's a maze of intricate waterways and channels,
floating islands of vegetation, houseboats that look
so firmly moored they could almost be islands and
hotels on islands which look like they could simply
float away.
Dal Lake lies immediately to the east and north
of Srinagar and stretches over 5-km. The lake is
divided into Gagribal, Lokut Dal and Bod Dal by a
series of causeways
The main causeway across the lake carries the
water pipeline for Srinagar's main water supply. Dal
gate, at the city end of Dal Lake, controls the flow
of the lake into the Jhelum river canal. It's the
steady flow of water through the lake, combined with
its relatively cold temperature, which keeps it so
clear looking.
NAGIN
LAKE
Nagin is
generally held to be the most beautiful of the Dal
lakes. Its name comes from the many trees, which
encircle the small, deep blue lake. Nagin is only
separated from the Larer Dal lakes by a narrow
causeway and it also has a number of houseboats
moored around its perimeter.
Nagin Lake, which is usually thought of as a
separate lake, is also divided from Dal Lake only by
a causeway. The causeways are mostly suitable for
walkers and bicycles only so they make a very
pleasant way of seeing the lake without having to
worry about traffic or Shikaras.
A Nice Getaway
If one wats to really get away from the chaotic city
life all then Nagin is a good place to find a house
boat and do it the surroundings are much more serene
and isolated than on Dal Lake. One can rent rowboats
from the camping site here - either to simply row
around the lake or to look around for a houseboat.
MUGHAL
GARDENS
Kashmir
was a favourite of the Mughal emperors who visited
it as often as they could. Cool and refreshing after
the plains of North India where the business of
governance kept them, they planted gardens with
stepped terraces and flowing watercourses. When they
rested in their gardens, they dreamt they were in
paradise.
The next garden along the road that encircles the
Dal is the Nishat, built by empress Nur Jahan's
brother Asaf Khan. The largest of the gardens,
Nishat has several terraces, a central watercourse
and a majestic site between the Dal and the Zabarwan
hills.
The third Mughal garden - the Shalimar - was planted
by Jehangir, the Mughal emperor, whose love for
Kashmir was legendary. Shaded by magnificent Chinar
trees, the Shalimar is a series of stone pavilions
and flowing water with paint box bright flowerbeds.
SHALIMAR BAGH
The Shalimar were built by Emperor Jehangir for
his wife Nur Jahan, 'light of the world' in 1616.
Although it is known today as the 'garden of love'
it was originally named the Farah Bakhsh or
'delightful garden'.
The garden is built in four terraces with
traditional water channel running down the middle.
The gardens measure 540 by 183 metres. During the
Mughal period the top terraces used be reserved for
the emperor and the ladies of the court and was the
most magnificent. It included a pavilion made of
black stone in the middle of the tank. Black Marble
fluted pillars supported the pavilion, which was
used as a banquet hall.
Shalimar Bagh has an air of seclusion and repose,
and its rows of fountains and shaded trees seem to
recede towards the snowcapped mountains. A Son Et
Lumeiere or sound and light show is put on here
every evening during the May to October tourist
season.
PARIMAHAL
The old Sufi college of Pari Mahal, the 'palace
of the fairies', is only a short distance above the
Chasma Shahi gardens. One can easily walk from the
gardens up to the Pari Mahal then follow a footpath
directly down the hill to the road that runs by the
Oberoi Palace Hotel. The Pari Mahal consists of a
series of arched terraces. Recently it has been
turned into a very pleasant and well-kept garden
with fine views over Dal Lake. It's attractively
sited on a spur of the Zabarwan Mountains. The
gardens are beautifully kept even today and a Son Et
Lumiere show is put on here every evening during the
May to October tourist season.
NISHAT BAGH
The Nishat Bagh is another lovely garden with its 12
terraces representing the 12 signs of the zodiac,
which descend gradually and seem to almost merge
into the lake. It is situated on the banks of world
famous Dal Lake in the backdrop of Zabarwan hills.
With its flowerbeds, trees, fountains, the Nishat
presents a dramatic sight. The gardens were designed
in 1633 by Asaf Khan, brother of Nur Jahan, and
follow the same pattern as the Shalimar gardens with
a polished stone channel running down the centre and
a series of terraces.
It's the largest of the Mughal gardens measuring 548
metres by 338 metres, and often the most crowed. The
walks beside the channel are bordered with lines of
cypresses and Chinars. Also found within its
vicinity are some remains of Mughal period buildings
including a double storey pavilion enclosed on two
sides latticed windows.
Directly behind the garden is the Gopi Tirth, a
small spring gushing forth crystal clear water,
which feeds the garden water.
CHASMA SHAHI
Cheshma Shahi is the first Mughal garden one will
pass after Nehru Park. Built at a height above the
city, its views are as stupendous as its layout. The
smallest of Srinagar's Mughal gardens, Cheshma Shahi
has only three terraces in addition to a natural
spring of water enclosed in a stone pavilion.
Smallest of the Srinagar Mughal gardens, measuring
just 108 metres by 38 metres, the Chasma Shahi, or
'Royal Spring', are well up the hillside, above the
Nehru Memorial Park. The fresh water spring in these
pleasant, quieter gardens is reputed to have
medicinal properties.
The gardens were laid out in 1632 by Ali Mardan Khan
and include three terraces, an aqueduct, waterfalls
and fountains. The water from the spring supplies
the fountains and then goes through the floor of the
pavilion and falls to the lower terrace in a fine
cascade of five metres, over a polished black stone
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