Yamunotri in February
Uttarakhand, India
February is maximum winter. The temple compound under deep snow. The Yamuna's source (a frozen glacier above the temple) is inaccessible. Kharsali village maintains the deity through winter. The approach road from Barkot may be snow-affected. Plan for May-June or September-October.
The February story
Closed. February research: the Yamunotri temple is small — a modest stone structure housing a black marble idol of the Yamuna goddess. The spectacle isn't the temple but the journey and the setting: a narrow Himalayan gorge, the young Yamuna river crashing below, steaming hot springs beside the temple, and a glacier (Champasar, feeding Saptrishi Kund) above. The traditional pilgrimage involves cooking rice in cloth bundles dipped into Surya Kund's 88°C water — the rice cooks in 5-10 minutes and is offered as prasad (sacred food). This hot-spring cooking tradition is unique to Yamunotri. The Yamuna's significance: it flows through Delhi, Agra, and Allahabad (where it meets the Ganga). Every glass of water in Delhi carries Yamunotri's glacial beginning. The Char Dham circuit (Yamunotri → Gangotri → Kedarnath → Badrinath) is Hinduism's most important Uttarakhand pilgrimage. Book May for the opening or October for the closing.
Why February scores 0.0/10
Weather
Temple closed, snowbound. Deepest snow of the year. Trail impassable. Village Kharsali hosts winter puja ceremonies.
Who should go
- ✓Travelers with basic fitness
- ✓Nobody — maximum winter severity
Who should think twice
- ✗Those with mobility issues
- ✗Everyone — maximum winter, no access
All 12 Months
| Month | Score | Note |
|---|---|---|
| January | 0.0/10 | Temple closed. Extreme snow at 3,300m. Trail from Janki Chatti buried. Idol shifted to Kharsali for winter worship. |
| Februaryviewing | 0.0/10 | Temple closed, snowbound. Deepest snow of the year. Trail impassable. Village Kharsali hosts winter puja ceremonies. |
| March | 0.0/10 | Temple closed. Snow melting slowly at lower elevations. Trail still buried. Opening depends on weather — usually late April. |
| April | 2.0/10 | Temple may open late April (Akshaya Tritiya). 2-12°C. Trail clearing. Early pilgrims if road opens. Snowpatches remain. |
| May | 10.0/10 | Temple open, best weather 8-20°C. Char Dham season peak. 6km trek from Janki Chatti comfortable. Hot springs at temple. |
| June | 8.0/10 | Full season 10-22°C. Temple busy with Char Dham pilgrims. Trek trail in good condition. Hot springs popular. Book ponies. |
| July | 4.0/10 | Monsoon rain makes 6km trek trail slippery and dangerous. Landslides block Janki Chatti road. River in spate. Risky. |
| August | 2.0/10 | Peak monsoon. Trek trail waterlogged. Multiple landslides on approach road. Temple accessible but journey dangerous. Avoid. |
| September | 6.0/10 | Monsoon clearing 6-16°C. Autumn trek window. Trail drying. Temple still open. Fewer pilgrims. Peaceful darshan. |
| October | 8.0/10 | Last month before closure 4-12°C. Temple closing ceremony (Yama Dwitiya). Autumn colors on trail. Final pilgrims. |
| November | 0.0/10 | Temple closed for winter. Idol shifted to Kharsali. Snow arriving. Trail shutting down. 6-month closure begins. |
| December | 0.0/10 | Temple closed. Deep snow. Trail buried. Janki Chatti base quiet. Winter worship continues at Kharsali village only. |
Nearby in Uttarakhand scoring high in February
How to reach Yamunotri
Airport
Jolly Grant, Dehradun — 285km
Rail
Rishikesh — 260km
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