Hindustan Times (Delhi)

HUNT CALLED OFF, HIMALAYAN VIAGRA VANISHES IN U’KHAND SNOW

- Arvind Moudgil letters@hindustant­imes.com

JOSHIMATH (CHAMOLI): The heavy snowfall in the higher ranges of Himalayas earlier this week has disrupted the hunt for a prized aphrodisia­c fungus popularly referred to as Himalayan viagra.

It’s the time of the year that the mushroom called ‘yarsagumba’ (Ophiocordy­ceps sinensis), also known locally as ‘keerajari’, appears in the meadows when the snow starts melting.

But the heavy snowfall this year has forced villagers to call off the hunt for yarsagumba and climb down from the higher reaches of Chamoli district in Uttarakhan­d.

They will have to wait till the snow melts and that may leave only a handful days left in the Yarsagumba season.

“Couple of villagers left their rations in tents and came back to their respective villages because there is still 3 to 4 feet thick layer of snow in the higher ranges,” said Sanjay Kunwar, a trekker from a village called Baragaon. He added that the villagers would wait for another 10 to 15 days for the snow to melt. There’s a lot at stake.

The mushroom, which has a long history of use in traditiona­l Chinese medicine, fetches ~2 to ~5 lakh per kilogram or above locally, depending on quality. It plays a vital role in the local economy, that’s largely pastoral.

Usually, as the month of May approaches, villagers from Dasholi, Ghat, Urgam valley, Niti valley, Deval and Joshimath blocks of Chamoli district start start moving into the higher ranges, armed with essentials and rations. They camp there for at least two months while hunting for the prized mushroom.

While this year’s harvest seems to be in jeopardy, there’s hope yet.

Devendra Singh, a social worker from Wan, the last village on the motorable road in Deval block of Chamoli district, said that the villagers who have returned from the higher ranges such as Bhagubasa, Shila samundar and Kelvavinay­ak, would go back again in couple of days.

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