Shikara at sunrise on Dal Lake, Srinagar

Kashmir by Shikara: Drifting Through the Paradise Emperors Could Not Buy

A cedarwood oar, a copper samovar, and a 400-year-old Mughal garden on the far shore. Notes from three days afloat on the Dal, the Nigeen and the Jhelum — the Kashmir most tourists miss.

YJ
YatraJunction Editorial
10 min read974 words

Emperor Jahangir, trailing his Mughal entourage across the Pir Panjal in 1620, is said to have looked out over the Kashmir valley for the first time and murmured the Persian couplet that now lives on every postcard: 'If there be paradise on earth, it is here, it is here, it is here.' Four centuries later the valley is still trying to live up to that sentence — sometimes honouring it, sometimes breaking it. But on a cedarwood shikara gliding across Dal Lake at 6 a.m., with the snow of Zabarwan pink above you and a Kashmiri grandmother ferrying lotus roots past your elbow, paradise seems less like hyperbole and more like a simple, quiet fact.

Night one: learning the geometry of a houseboat

A Kashmiri houseboat is an architectural paradox — 30 metres of cedar, walnut and Persian carpet anchored to a lake bottom, with balconies that sway half a degree every time a breeze passes. They were invented by accident: the Dogra Maharajas of the 1880s forbade outsiders from owning land in the valley, so enterprising British colonels commissioned boats that could be built, furnished and inhabited without a single land deed. The Lady Churchill, built in 1884, still takes guests; the chinar-wood ceilings of her dining room have been polished weekly for 142 years. Each houseboat comes paired with its own shikara and oarsman, so the lake becomes your private driveway — 7 a.m. to the floating vegetable market in Rainawari, dusk to the Nishat Bagh ghats, and silver-trimmed returns lit only by the samovar steam in the bow.

The Mughal gardens — four hundred years and still on theme

Four gardens rim the Dal, each one a Persian-charbagh template laid out by the Mughals in the 17th century. Shalimar Bagh (1619, built by Jahangir for his wife Nur Jahan) remains the grandest — three rising terraces bisected by a stone water channel, the third terrace reserved for the royal zenana and once barred to all men save the emperor. Nishat Bagh (1633, Asaf Khan, brother of Nur Jahan) has twelve terraces for the zodiac and a view of Hari Parvat Fort that hasn't changed in four centuries. The water still flows by gravity from a glacial stream; the chinar trees lining the axes were saplings when Shah Jahan passed through on his way to commission the Agra Fort — which means the trees you'll walk under are ten human generations old.

Pahalgam and the valley of love songs

Ninety-five kilometres south-east of Srinagar, the Lidder river chooses a shepherd village called Pahalgam to slow down, braiding into shallow channels between pine-covered knolls. This is the valley Yash Chopra made famous in Betaab (1983), lending the adjoining meadow its film-set name — Betaab Valley — which then became the mandatory Bollywood hill-romance backdrop for two decades. For walkers, Pahalgam is less about cinema and more about trails: the short rides to Baisaran and Chandanwari, the day trek to Kolahoi glacier's snout, and the three-day summer route to Tarsar Marsar, an unbranded alpine lake-duo that stays at 3,800 metres under a stretched blue tarp of sky. July to August, Pahalgam transforms — 300,000 saffron-clad pilgrims queue for the 48 km walk to the Amarnath cave shrine, one of the great pilgrimages of the subcontinent.

Gulmarg: Asia's highest gondola, and why it sometimes breaks your heart

At 2,730 metres Gulmarg is already high enough to qualify as a proper ski resort; at 3,980 metres (the Apharwat peak, reached by the Phase II gondola) it is one of the highest lift-served skiable summits on earth, just below Zermatt and above Whistler. Locals will insist on the winter visit — first snow in late November, powder conditions by January, Japanese and French ski photographers arriving through a slow trickle of DGCA charters. The gondola cost ₹750 crore to build, ran over budget by 300%, and can shut for a full day if the winds at Apharwat top 70 km/h — a fact not mentioned on any brochure and worth accepting with a shrug and a cup of kahwa in the village café while you wait.

What to eat, wear, and be careful of

  • Wazwan is the 36-course Kashmiri wedding feast; the restaurant-scale version at Ahdoo's or Mughal Darbar runs 7–12 courses for about ₹2,500/head and is the single richest Indian meal you'll ever meet.
  • Kahwa — saffron tea with almonds and cinnamon, served in brass samovars — is the unofficial currency of hospitality. Refusing a second cup insults the host; accepting a third commits you to lunch.
  • Buy Pashmina only from certified outlets in Lal Chowk or Polo View; the shawl should pass through a wedding ring, weigh under 200 g, and come with a GI-Tag certificate. Under-₹3,000 'pashminas' are rayon.
  • Dress modestly in Old City Srinagar and around Hazratbal — shoulders, knees and hair covered for women, no shorts for men — the Jamia Masjid is still a working Friday mosque.
  • Internet and phone service is periodically restricted by law; Airtel and Jio 4G work in Srinagar, Gulmarg and Pahalgam, but Ladakh-bound plans should pre-download offline maps.

Where Kashmir sits in your wider yatra

Kashmir threads naturally into a Himalayan circuit — from Srinagar a three-day drive takes you to Leh and then the Indus valley monasteries; alternatively, fly south to combine with Vaishno Devi in Jammu, the most visited Hindu shrine in India. Travellers on a wider pilgrimage arc often pair Kashmir with Amarnath in summer (July–August only) and with Auli skiing in winter. For those planning the classic North India loop, a week in Kashmir slots in perfectly between Amritsar and Spiti. Browse all hill stations for more options.

The first time I came to Kashmir the sky broke open and I thought: this is the secret every Indian grandmother has been trying to tell me. This is why her songs are sad.
A traveller's diary, Dal Lake, October 2024
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YJ

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YatraJunction Editorial

Our editors are travellers, historians and food lovers who have collectively visited every state of India. Every guide is fact-checked, field-tested and updated with love.

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Frequently asked questions

Is Kashmir safe for tourists in 2026?
Srinagar, Gulmarg and Pahalgam have been peaceful and heavily visited since 2022. The Indian government issues a daily advisory; check the MEA portal before travelling. Do NOT travel independently to the LOC areas or border districts (Uri, Kupwara, Machil). The main tourist corridor — airport, Dal Lake, Gulmarg, Pahalgam, Sonmarg — is actively secured and hotel occupancy sits above 80% in peak season.
How many days should I spend in Kashmir?
Six days is the sweet spot. Two on a Dal Lake houseboat with a day trip to the Mughal gardens, one for Gulmarg (gondola and skiing/tobogganing depending on season), two for Pahalgam (Betaab, Aru, a short trek), and one flexible day for either Sonmarg glaciers or the Srinagar old-city silver-and-papier-mâché bazaars.
Is the Amarnath Yatra a reasonable add-on?
Only if you book months ahead and are physically fit — the trek from Pahalgam is 48 km over 3–4 days at altitudes up to 3,888 m. Registration is mandatory (shriamarnathjishrine.com). Helicopter from Baltal to Panjtarni (₹3,000) shortens it to a single day. The cave is open only for 45–60 days in July–August; check the annual yatra dates before building your itinerary.

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