Archery & Polo

In Leh, and may of the villages, archery festivals are held during the
summer months, with a lot of fun and fanfare. They are competitive events,
the surrounding villages all sending teams, and the shooting takes place
according to strict etiquette, to the accompaniment of the music of surna
and daman (oboe and drum).
As important as the archery are the
interludes of dancing and other entertainment. Chang, the local barley beer,
flows freely, but there is rarely any rowdiness. The crowd attend in their
Sunday best, the men invariable in traditional dress, and the women wearing
their brightest brocade mantles and their heaviest jewellery. Archery may be
the pretext for the gathering, but the party's thing.
Polo is
traditional to the western Himalaya, especially to Baltistan and Gilgit. It
was probably introduced into Ladakh in the mid-17th century by King Sengge
Namgyal, whose mother was a Balti princess. The game played here differs in
many respects from the international game, which indeed, is adapted from
what British travellers saw in the western Himalaya and Manipur in the 19th
century.

Here,
each team consists of six players,a nd the game lasts for an hour with a ten
minute break. Altitude notwithstanding, the hardy local ponies - the best of
which come from Zanskar- scarcely seem to suffer, though play can be fast
and furious. Each goal is greeted by a bust of music from surna and daman ;
and the players often show extraordinary skill. For example, when starting
play after a goal the scorer gallops up to midfield holding ball and mallet
in the right hand, and throws the ball, hitting it in the same movement
towards the opposite goal.
Unlike the international game, Polo
in Ladakh is not exclusively for the rich. Traditionally, almost every
village had its polo-ground, and even today it is played with verve in many
places besides Leh, especially in Drass and Chushot, a big village close to
Leh. In Leh, it has been partly institutionalized with regular tournaments
and occasional exhibition matches being played on the polo-ground in the
shadow of the palace. The local crowd takes a keen interest, especially in
those matches in which a civilian team takes on the Army. Altogether, polo
adds a unique kind of colour and excitement to the summer in Leh.