The Tranquilo Traveler
The Tranquilo Traveler is a celebration of voluntourism, slow travel, and other interesting ways to see the world. Travel writer and award- winning Moon Handbooks author Joshua Berman created The Tranquilo Travel as a resource for world trippers and international volunteers, a window to the author’s travels in Nicaragua, Belize, and beyond, and an update of his books and articles.
Monsoon Honeymoon: Mussoorie

We arrived in Mussoorie on Sunday morning, exhausted, sheets of rain coming down, after an all-night bus ride from Dharamsala. Mussoorie was a place where, as we settled into our fancy hotel, black-faced monkeys with dewy white coats appeared out of the mist on our room’s balcony, wild eyes and babies clinging to their bellies. It was a dripping wet, green-mossy place that sprawled unattractively across a steep hillside, 7,000 feet above sea level. Mussoorie seethed and honked with Indian tourists, too many people, even in the low season, too many aging hotels way past their glory days, too many identical trinket shops sellign so much crap from China (a far cry from Dharamsala whose Tibetan crafts shops all declared the “made in China” label as anathema). The rains barely dampened the vague and tired carnival feeling of “the mall,” an endless main street of activity, a strange Indian cross between Coney Island and a cheap flea market.
Still, the people came: families and honeymooning couples from Delhi; Kanwaria pilgrims on their way to the Ganges in their orange shirts and flag-adorned motorcycles; and uniformed students, back in session in Mussoorie’s many elite boarding schools. The oldest of these was Woodstock, formed by foreign missionaries 151 years ago. This was where Dr. Stewart decided to send his two daughters, Ellen (S.’s “Jama”) and her older sister Jean. They spent nearly their entire childhoods here, sometimes traveling home to Rawalpindi in the summer, where, we imagine, they accompanied their father on his many botanical forays.

Campus is still a lush place, surrounded by miles of unbroken forests; snow-capped Himalayas to the north, the wide Dehra Dun valley to the south — not that we could see any of these things for the clouds. So we can only imagine how wild it must have been, back in the day when Jama and her sister were here. A snapshot: Tay standing under the WOODSTOCK SCHOOL sign, the same spot under which her Jama must have passed hundreds, if not thousands of times. Wet black pavement, gray clouds and overhanging pine branches, too dark for a good photo, even at midday, but I tried anyway. Then there were the close-up shots of the girls’ files, partly destroyed in a fire, which made the blackened edges and contents even more interesting — report cards, letters from the U.S. after they’d graduated and were applying to college, the familier signature of Dr. R.R. Stewart.

The school was modern, active, and precariously perched on the hillside, far from the bustle of the mall, where, we were told, students were allowed to go to the bazaar each week. There are 450 students now, Indians, Nepalese, Tibetan, Bengalese, and a handful of Americans and Euros. Our stay in Mussoorie was short, our visit to the school even shorter.

Despite our discoveries there, Mussoorie was a place we wanted to leave — especially after five one hundred dollar bills disappeared from our hotel room and there was nothing we could do about it. We felt angry and frustrated, but extremely fortunate that (1) we were not harmed and (2) our travels can still go on.

5 Responses to “Monsoon Honeymoon: Mussoorie”
Mussoorie ain’t too bad! Sorry about yr $500, but you were never in any “danger”…..NYC is far more dangerous
I read your article in Yoga Journal and thought I would check out your blog. Good for both of you! Three years back I went on a four month trip to India that turned into two and a half years! I made it to Thailand and China, also, but 99% of my time was in India. I just want to tell you that I hope you give South India some time. SO many people only go to North India missing out on the incredible beauty in South India. It is also vastly different from the north. My heart lies in the South!
Good luck to both of you and I wish you much enjoyment.
hi joshua,
sorry about the 500 bucks,but Mussoorie deserved far more time.i can understand that for you it was just another stop on a long tour,but for people like me who went to school there and have kept returning there ever since,it is Xanadu,the mystical heaven atop the mountains.There is so much more to Mussoorie,especially the schools and their related histories.I went to St.George’s,and have also spent a lot of time around the Woodstock area.Landour,and especially Sister’s Bazaar,is heaven,and the area Rachel’s friend Sarah is referring to is Chaar Dukaan(literally ‘FOUR SHOPS’).she must’ve stayed at Devdar Woods.Anyway,nice reading about your travels,may the Lord be with you throughout and keep you safe.
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I’m so sorry you had a bad time in Mussorie! I really loved it, but I stayed further uphill from the city in a much less busy area. I can’t remember the name of it - I want to say Char Rukh Khan, but that sounds a little too much like the name of the Hindi film star. It was right next to Landour Language School, not far from Woodstock, I believe.
Anyway, sorry you had a rough time, glad your trip is continuing on. I’m enjoying reading your stories.
Sarah (Rachel’s friend)