
The East-West highway, known locally as the Lateral Road, was started in 1962 and constructed primarily with manual labor. Initially only 8.2 feet wide, some of it was expanded to two lanes by 2014. The geology is unstable. Landslides are frequent, especially during summer monsoons, but they can occur any time. In this photo, you see on a landslide on the left and a collapse of the road on the right. Our driver would warn us when a “free massage” was approaching. In addition to four wheel drive passenger cars, the road is shared by overloaded 8-ton Tata trucks with their trademark wisdom eyes, along with public buses and the ubiquitous Toyota Coaster buses full of tourists. It’s a bit narrow here and they appear to have given up on paving this section. We are told that the further east you travel, the worse the road.

















Fascinating travels. Thanks for sharing though we don’t envy you traveling on those roads. I remember our family telling us the roads were collapsing under their wheels as the bus drove by. Good Luck.
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Exciting trip with beautiful scenery.
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