Discover the Sacred Himalaya: Complete Gangnani Journey, Hidden Nagas, Living Temples

A slender waterfall cascades down mossy rock, framed by bamboo and dense foliage in the Himalayan hills near Gangnani Village, Uttarakhand, captured for a Living Dharma travel story.

Journeying into the Hindu Himalaya, the group halted at Gangnani in Uttarakhand, a modest roadside pilgrims’ base that shelters seekers en route to the high mountains. The famed Gangnani hot springs offered immediate respite; the warmth of the waters contrasted vividly with the cold mountain air, restoring the body after winding ascents along the Ganga valley.

One companion, long familiar with Gangnani, revealed layers of local knowledge that elude most passersby. According to villagers, a great saint—an avadhut who dwells primarily in the forested highlands rather than human settlements—periodically descends to spend the night at a temple here. On that day, goatherds had reported a sighting in the nearby hills, heightening the sense that an encounter might be imminent.

Exploration unfolded at a measured pace: a brief climb up a small waterfall and a visit to the understated local temple framed the afternoon. Above the hot springs, tradition holds that Maharishi Parashara once dwelt in a cave and performed Tapasya, anchoring Gangnani in a deeper sacred geography that ties landscape and lineage across centuries.

Hospitality came generously. Villager friends served a simple, superb Garhwali dinner—vegetables from their own fields and an unforgettable local specialty: enormous cucumbers. In this setting, food, conversation, and crisp mountain air combined to create the calm that precedes meaningful encounters.

Small roadside shrine in Gangnani village with a Shiva lingam under a metal naga hood, Mahadev mural, Hindi lettering, offerings, and a cow-head water spout in the Himalayan foothills; Living Dharma travel.
In Gangnani, a humble mandir to Mahadev gathers flowers, water, and serpent guardians. This quiet pause on our Living Dharma Himalaya travel reveals how village shrines keep the river's spirit close to daily life.

Late that night, a village boy quietly arrived with news: the Baba had appeared in Parashara’s cave. The group ascended in haste. In the cool darkness, a lone Naga baba—of the Juna Akhara order of sannyasins—sat in serene composure. He was known locally as Om Giri Baba. In common practice, “Giri Baba” marks the initiate of Juna Akhara, and “Om” is not a conventional name but the primordial syllable; together they function as a deliberate anonymity, a humility before the Absolute.

He spoke at length on subjects not meant for public circulation. When asked about Nagas, he offered a specific account: a little over twenty kilometers east into the hills lies a hidden Naga lake. A Maninag—bearing a radiant Nagamani—dwells beneath its waters. Locals come by night for darshan of the gem’s glow. The lake, he emphasized, is approachable only by a long, trackless hike through wild, forested mountains. The narrative resonated as a living thread in the broader tapestry of Naga lore that pervades the Himalaya.

Before parting, the ascetic noted he would begin sadhana at 2 a.m. He was gone by morning. Dawn light captured snowy ridgelines while the moon lingered above the western horizon—a quiet tableau matching the Baba’s unannounced arrival and departure.

Sunlit ridges above Gangnani in the Hindu Himalaya, with forested slopes and rocky outcrops under a cloudless blue sky; a faint moon hangs overhead while the valley foreground lies in deep shadow. Living Dharma travel.
Morning light spills across the green slopes above Gangnani as a pale moon lingers over the Hindu Himalaya. A quiet pause on our Living Dharma journey, where the valley's cool shadow meets the bright, sunlit ridgelines.

The following day brought a more strenuous objective. Behind the roadside ashram near the hot springs, an unmarked footpath—hidden from the casual eye—switchbacks up a steep, overgrown slope to a secluded village of Naga worshippers. Few outsiders ever find it without local guidance. The ascent took just under two hours; on the way, two men descending expressed surprise to see strangers on their mountain trail.

The settlement is small and widely dispersed: approximately 149 people spread across nearly fourteen kilometers of mountainside, with family homes set beside tiny crop terraces, goat pastures, and thickets of cedar and deodar. Some dwellings possess new electric connections; many still do not. There is no road—only footpaths—so water comes from streams, goods from donkeys, and news by word of mouth. Landslides, the villagers cautioned, are often triggered by goats and require constant vigilance.

Local life reflects intimate reciprocity with place. A farmer proudly rinsed an immense cucumber in the stream, planning to sell fresh slices to visitors at the hot springs. Dozens of small lizards sunned themselves on nearby rocks, curious and skittish—silent, ubiquitous witnesses to a thriving alpine ecology.

Stone courtyard in Gangnani village, Himalaya, where a traveler bends to greet a calf near a prayer flag, with villagers, tin‑roofed houses, and green mountains rising beneath a bright blue sky.
Morning in Gangnani, high in the Hindu Himalaya: a quiet stone courtyard, a curious calf, and friendly exchanges beside a prayer pole. Moments like these ground our Living Dharma travel in simple village grace and mountain calm.

Their primary reverence focuses on two beings: a local Naga who resides in the streams and forest, and a magnificent deodar cedar (Devadaru). Shiva and an obscure village Devi are also honored, though secondarily. The devotional balance underscores a Himalayan religiosity in which landscape, watercourses, and trees constitute a living temple.

The deodar, said to be around 450 years old, commands awe at first sight. Bundles of grass hung from its branches to dry, a practical act that also signals kinship with the tree’s sheltering presence. Seated within the wide hollows of its trunk, the group meditated, sensing the convergence of ecological time and spiritual continuity.

Conversations with residents illuminated a distinctive Naga worldview. Many believed they themselves had been Nagas in recent memory and are now born as humans. The Nagas, they explained, do not reside in the temple; they inhabit the streams and woods. The temple is a human-arranged point of veneration where Nagas may visit by their will. The villagers described a relationship of mutual respect: before building, they ask the Nagas’ permission to avoid disharmony; they seek help in curing ailments of people, herds, and crops; and they honor the possibility that Nagas can teach hidden tantras and impart protective knowledge.

Towering conifer on a sunlit slope near Gangnani in the Hindu Himalaya, its tiered branches silhouetted against blue sky and distant forested ridges, capturing the calm of mountain travel.
On the road to Gangnani, a towering conifer rises from a steep green hillside, its layered limbs etched against the clear Himalayan sky—a quiet pause where Living Dharma meets mindful mountain travel.

In that spirit, a Naga Puja was performed in a serene stream. Cleanliness was paramount: the group scrubbed bird droppings from a flat-topped stone used as an altar and arranged offerings with order and care. The invocations first honored Manasa and Kaliya as regional Naga rulers, affirming lawful alignment. Protective Naga Lords were then invoked in the eight directions—moving clockwise from east: Ananta, Vasuki, Shankhapala, Kulika, Takshaka, Mahapadma, Karkotaka, and Padma—accompanied by quiet statements of goodwill, non-harm, and cooperative intent.

Historical memory in the region preserves episodes of conflict between humans and serpent-beings. Within the Dharma traditions—Hindu, Buddhist, and Jain—annual acts of atonement and restorative practice foster a shared ethic of ahimsa and reconciliation, reinforcing unity across paths while honoring the guardianship of nature-beings.

The group chanted the Sarpa Mantras from Yajur Veda, Maitrayani Sanhita 2.7.15, along with additional Naga mantras. Offerings included cardamom, nutmeg, cloves, sugar, honey, sesame, walnuts, local apples, and fresh green shoots—ingredients known in traditional practice to please Nagas.

Devotees stand barefoot before a small Himalayan temple in Gangnani Village as a drummer plays and a priest performs ritual offerings beneath garlands and bright cloth, with pine-covered mountains behind.
Morning darshan in Gangnani Village: a drummer summons rhythm as a priest tends the shrine, the Himalaya rising beyond. A quiet moment of Living Dharma encountered on our travel through Naga traditions and mountain life.

Villagers observed the Puja with quiet interest. At one moment, an elderly woman appeared on a ledge above the stream—one-eyed, staff in hand, dignified and intent—watching in silence. When the rite concluded and heads turned, she had already departed, leaving behind a lingering impression of ancestral watchfulness.

Afterward, the hosts guided the group to their Naga temple and demonstrated their own Puja, similar to rites at Sem Mukhem. They also venerate a trident, a sacred wooden post, their village Mother deity, Lord Shiva, and a ceremonial Naga drum used in the rite—sound, symbol, and devotion coalescing in a pattern of worship that is both local and continuous across Garhwal.

As the day waned, the journey through Gangnani and its hidden village clarified a central insight: in the Hindu Himalaya, sacred geography is not metaphor but lived reality. Hot springs, caves, cedars, streams, and serpentine guardians weave a cohesive dharmic ecology in which reverence for life, interdependence, and restraint are shared values across Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism, and harmonious with Sikh commitments to service and environmental stewardship. The path through Uttarkashi toward the Gangotri region thus becomes more than travel; it is an invitation to witness living traditions that safeguard both people and place.

Note: This journey occurred in autumn 2022. Linked information on temples and places is current as of mid‑2025; logistical details can change quickly and should be verified independently. All photos © Devala Rees.


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What is the focus of the journey described in the post?

The piece follows a group into the Hindu Himalaya, pausing at Gangnani’s hot springs and a cave linked to Maharishi Parashara, before a midnight audience with a Naga baba of the Juna Akhara. It highlights sacred geography and living traditions in Uttarakhand.

Who is Om Giri Baba?

A Naga baba of the Juna Akhara mentioned in the post, who speaks about Nagas and a hidden Naga lake. He is described as Om Giri Baba, a local figure whose anonymity signals humility before the Absolute.

What is Naga Puja and what does it involve?

The Puja takes place in a serene stream and follows strict ritual cleanliness with orderly offerings. The participants invoke Manasa and Kaliya as regional Naga rulers, then call on the eight directional Naga Lords with mantras, accompanied by offerings such as cardamom, nutmeg, cloves, sugar, honey, sesame, walnuts, apples, and fresh greens.

What is the central insight about sacred geography in the Himalaya?

The post states that sacred geography is not metaphor but lived reality. Hot springs, caves, cedars, streams, and serpentine guardians form a cohesive dharmic ecology, where reverence for life and restraint are shared across Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikh stewardship.

How do Nagas influence local life and building decisions?

Locals say Nagas reside in streams and woods rather than temples; before building, families ask the Nagas’ permission to avoid disharmony. They also believe Nagas can aid healing for people and livestock and may impart protective knowledge.