Trek Duration: 7-8 hours | Trek Distance: 15 km
Altitude Gain and Loss: ⇗ 590 ft; ⇘ 360 ft (11,220 ft to 11,450 ft via 11,810 ft)
Difficulty: Easy, mostly level walks interspersed with a few ascents and descents.
Highlights: View of the Sleeping Buddha range
Today, you trek above the treeline and hit the ridge where if the weather is good, you will catch the views of the 4 tallest peaks of the world.
The trail from Molley to Phalut is a 6 km straight route that almost touches Nepal on your left. This will take you about 2.5 hours to cover. There are a series of gradual descents, steep ascents and level field walks, each coming in intervals of about 15 minutes. After this is half a km flat meadow walk followed by 1 km of a steep climb, which can be negotiated by taking shortcuts. Look out for the trekkers’ hut which the locals call Phalut Bungla, on your way. From this point, you will reach Phalut by climbing steadily for about half an hour.
The route offers one of the finest views of the Kanchenjunga massif and all the other peaks around it collectively known as the ‘Sleeping Buddha’. The peaks that you can see from the left are Kumbhakarna, Kanchenjunga and Simvo in the background. Below Kanchenjunga are Kokthang, Rathong, Frey, South Kabru, North Kabru, Kabru Forked, Goecha and the ridge of Pandim just ahead of Simvo. The depression between the ridgeline of Goecha and Pandim is the Goecha La, which is a popular and beautiful trek in Sikkim. It is amazing to witness such providence that these mountains, formed billions of years ago, and how they collectively appear to a person from distance, hold a near-perfect resemblance to the enlightened one himself – The Buddha in a resting position. Your first look at the ‘Sleeping Buddha’ is spellbinding and sends you into a spiritual trance. It gets imprinted on your psyche and remains there. The viewpoint is on the hillock to your left after reaching Phalut. Reach there early to get magnificent views of the entire panorama of mountains and peaks.
Phalut is a small grassland with minimal or no vegetation. There is only an SSB camp, a forest guest house and a GTA (Gorkhaland Territorial Administration) trekker’s hut. You may chance upon wild Yaks grazing around the hillock by the GTA hut. You can take a quick stroll up the hillock where you will be standing on the India-Nepal border marked by a boundary marker. Standing here you have a magnificent view of the hills and valleys on the Nepal side. Though this is a remote place, you get the closest views of the entire panorama. From here, the Sleeping Buddha range is at an aerie distance of only 38 km!
After spending an hour or hour and a half exploring the place, you now start to trail via the same route back to Sabargram to rest for the night at the campsite there.