So this Sunday the management had
planned a day trip to Khewra Salt Mine for their guests, namely us and the
Egyptian Engineers (collectively referred to hereon after as “us”). Naturally
we were excited as this was our first trip since coming to this scenic site of
D.G. Khan Cement at Khairpur Village, Dist. Chakwal but popularly referred to
as Kallar Kahar, (as those islooites who don’t really live in isl but on the border
between Pindi and Isloo like to give their address as Islamabad).
So after breakfast we packed in the
HI-Ace along with our lunch (no, it was not alive) and off we went to Kallar
Kahar. From the plant site, there are two ways of going to Khewra Salt Mine.
One goes through the local road passing through Katas, giving the view and
opportunity of the famous Katas Raj Temples. But since it had rained two days
ago and knowing only too well the condition of local roads, our guide (manager
Mr Khalid) decided to take the high road through Motorway M2. For our Egyptian
guests this was the first time they were touring the country in Pakistan so
they were anyway excited on the M-2 when we passed through the beautiful curves
(and fifty shades of rock) of the Salt Range. At Lilla Interchange we exited
the M-2, and a short distance down a fork in the road came, we took the left
one and went parallel to the M-2 back in the direction from whence we came. Our
driver, apparently seeing the familiar bumpy road and remembering the good ol’
days when he was a public transport driver (kidding, I am KIDDING!), decided
that any speed below 70 km/h was not worth his, and the Hi-Ace’s salt. So I had
to sit straight in a military posture to properly absorb the shocks, bumps and
dives (amplified as I was sitting in the back seat) which the van traced along
the crests and troughs of the road.
The road looked like the road going
to the house of Courage the cowardly Dog, passing through the middle of nowhere
with empty barren land on both sides, interrupted now and again by a house
here, a farmhouse there, a tire shop here, a mosque there. But the dwellings
were few and far between, and with the Salt Range on our front and right, the
road must have a real spooky effect at night. Although for a Sunday, the
traffic was pretty decent with one or two tourists vans also seen by the
scribe. In one of the farms, my colleague pointed out four ostriches, black and
white, standing still. This was my first time seeing an ostrich (or shatarmurgh as it is called in Urdu) so
I was pretty excited, which waned quickly as the van sped along.
Nearing our destination we began to
see the off-shoots of the salt mine industry, with small setups of Plaster of
Paris manufacturing, white lime etc. Far away to our right we could see the Dandot Cement Factory spreading dust 10
times its area into the atmosphere, reminding me to thank Allah that we were
working at an award winning for cleanliness factory at D.G. Khan Cement Factory. A little further on from Dandot Cement
were visible the chimneys of the ICI
Soda Ash Plant.
As it turned out the road turned
into a T- and we took the left towards ICI Factory, and ultimately Khewra Mine.
This road was a well-developed two-way road complete with side yellow paint and
reflectors. Upon reaching the mine we saw that there were pretty decent attendance
as families and kids alike had come for a Sunday outing.
Having brought our train tickets
and getting briefed by the guide on the history of Salt discovery in these
hills (yeah horses came for battle and started licking the rocks back in Alexandar era 326 B.C. ) The train was
a rickety open carriage sort and creaked and clanged (I was surprised it was
even running) its way 2 kms inside the mine to the entrance lobby.
The inside of the mine had a gloomy
look, as the authorities had apparently determined that light should be as dim
as possible to allow for bad photos (photography haram bro :p). But we had
other thoughts.
Snapping as much photos as we
could, we followed the guide who started off by showing us the asthma treatment quarters, small chaar-dewari in which the patient is
kept for a week or two and by breathing in the mineral rich air apparently gets
cured. Important point to note, all mines maintain their temperature. This mine
also kept at a cool 18 degrees Celsius,
and the air was as good as mountain air to breathe in. Progressing further our
guide showed us the color of the rock salts, by shining light on it, similarly
there were pools of water glowing
strangely by installed lights in the mined out sections. They mine 50% of the
area and leave the rest for structural integrity (yeah dude, we are under a
MOUNTAIN!!).
We moved on to see stalactites and stalgmites hanging from
the wall, I don’t know what they were, never could differentiate one from the
other) and moving further on we were greeted by a mosque built entirely out of salt rock. The salt rock here has
three distinct colors, white red and pink (multiple shades of red of course but
I let the guide speak). The mosque stones were lit by lights from inside and
looked really beautiful.
Further inside the mine we came
upon glorious white mounds formed by
collecting stalactites. (Yeah I just googled. No, not gonna change the
previous terms :p ). Some were even fenced around which people were taking
photos. Moving on we came to a so called fawara chowk (“fountain roundabout”
in English, though where’s the fun in that?) where a salt and Pakistani
souvenir shop was created. People were thronging through the chowk in three
different directions. One road led to a lower level where a mined out portion
resembled a creepy lake (microscopic
version of Voldi’s lake where he hid the horcrux), on the wall of which cracks had formed the word “Muhammad” in
Urdu of course. Our nation’s obsession to finding religious inscriptions in
nature does not seem to abate, EVER. Likewise the guide treated us to a discourse
on this occurrence.
This lake culminated in the mine
visit and we came back to the surface, breathing the polluted mountain air
thanks to the three Punjab University buses and two buses from Quaid-e-Azam
university. It was an amazing visit though if you are planning to bring your
car and travel a couple of hours to here I’d highly recommend putting on the Katas Raj Temples and Kallar Kahar Lake also on your list so
that the two-hour mine visit does not seem so boring.
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