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Su setting at Dhoopgarh, highest point of the state |
The
lilting tunes played by the massed bands on Vijay Chowk at New Delhi every year
as part of the Beating the Retreat ceremony during the Republic Day
Celebrations have deep and, shall we say, enduring connections with Pachmarhi.
All the players are from the military band school of the Army Education Corps
(AEC) located at Pachmarhi. Not only does the school effortlessly make vibrant as
well as sombre music it also
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Lovely setting off a Pachmarhi walk |
impeccably trains its pupils for the demands of
various formal and non-formal occasions. Its fame has spread far and wide. It
has its alumni spread over several countries of South, South-East Asia and some
of even Africa. It has also helped the Indian Army get into the Guinness Book
of Records by organizing a performance by a massed band of as many as 4459
musicians forming
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An old Protestant church |
the largest military band ever under one conductor when they
played “Amazing Grace” some years ago.
Pachmarhi,
in Madhya Pradesh is known for this school but is better known as the only hill
station of the Central Indian province of Madhya Pradesh and a touristy place.
It is situated on the Satpura mountain range at an elevation of around 3000 ft.
The mountain range rises somewhere in Gujarat and stretches across Madhya
Pradesh only to dissipate into the plateaus of Chhota Nagpur in the East. It
runs parallel to Vindhya Ranges creating a basin in which flows the mighty
River Narmada which originates from its forests in
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A plantation near Dhoopgarh |
the east runs west to empty
into Gulf of Khambat.
Most
of the Satpuras were at one time heavily forested and were very rich in
wildlife, more so toward the east around the origin of Narmada. The range,
therefore, hosts a number of wildlife sanctuaries and tiger reserves. Pachmarhi
is perched on and around the highest point of Satpuras supporting a climate
that is by and large equable, though with progressive deforestation and general
warming of the globe temperatures in summers sometimes manage to compete with
those at lower elevations.
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Painted glass windows of the Protestant church |
Discovered
sometime in the mid-nineteenth century by the British, like numerous other hill
towns it started off as a place for physical rehabilitation of the East India
Company workers/soldiers. As had happened elsewhere, it too started off as a
sanatorium town for the army. Despite efflux of time Pachmarhi has a
well-maintained cantonment to which was added the Military Band School in 1950
at the instance of the first Field Marshall of India, Gen. KM Cariappa.
Named
after “five caves”, i.e. “Paanch marhi”, the place is associated with several
legends, including from the Epic Mahabarata. The forests around the place, however,
are highly regarded as they have numerous rare
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Another beautiful natural setting |
species of plants and plenty of
wildlife. UNESCO, therefore, declared it as a Biosphere Reserve covering around
5000 square kilometers. The Biosphere Reserve comprises as many as three
conservational nature parks, viz. Bori Sanctuary, the oldest wildlife sanctuary
of India, Pachmarhi Sanctuary and Satpura National Park.
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Lunching out in the open |
The
town is small and has remained so over the decades. There are some old
churches, a few temples in the neighbourhood and several sites like natural
water falls, deep valleys thick with vegetation and rugged rocky outcrops. Many
of the sites are difficult to take in for people advanced in age but, I should
think, it is a trekkers’ paradise. They can trek and explore the Satpuras
around the town and visit the places hallowed by legends.
Others
can enjoy a retreat in pleasantly hospitable climate in lodges and hotels that
are modestly priced catering especially for middle class pockets.
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