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Forget Manali: Try Shoja for silence, pines, and zero plans
ETimes | July 30, 2025 5:39 AM CST

So you are planning a trip to the hills, and type “Manali” into your travel app, only to be met with overpriced homestays, traffic jams, and reels of paragliders and café lattes. Sounds familiar? This means, it’s time to ditch the crowd and follow the whisper of the pines to Shoja, a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it village in Himachal Pradesh that offers exactly what Manali might not be able to provide, which is silence, solitude, and sweet, sweet nothingness.

Where exactly is Shoja?Nestled at around 8,000 ft above sea level in the Seraj Valley, Shoja (also spelled Sojha) sits quietly between Banjar and Jalori Pass, and is roughly 5 hours from Manali, yet galaxies away in vibe. It’s the kind of place where your phone network dies, and your stress goes with it.

What’s here?No neon-lit markets. No rooftop DJs. No waiting in line for Maggi with 40 other tourists in snow boots. Shoja is gloriously uneventful. Which means your itinerary looks like this:

Wake up to clouds curling around deodars.

Drink chai on a wooden veranda that creaks just right.

Walk until your legs or the fog say stop.

Repeat.

If peace had a postal address, it’d be this.

Read more: Global Tiger Day 2025: 8 must-visit tiger reserves in India to celebrate the Big Cats

Shoja’s towering pine and deodar forests aren’t just scenery, they’re characters in your no-plot-just-vibes vacation. Walk into the woods, and you’ll hear them whisper (or maybe that’s just the wind). Either way, it’s hypnotic. The Jalori Pass, just 5 km away, offers treks to Serolsar Lake, a glassy pool surrounded by myths and more trees than people.

No plans? No problem.Don’t come to Shoja with a checklist. This is not the place for aggressive sightseeing or back-to-back selfies. Come here to un-hurry. Stroll to the village temple. Try local Himachali dishes like siddu and madra at a homestay. Watch the sun set behind a ridge that doesn’t have a name—and doesn’t need one.

Yes, it is quiet, in an unfiltered way. Expect misty roads, mossy roofs, and the kind of dramatic skies that don’t need editing. One click and if you show it to your friends, they will ask you “Wait… where is this place?”

Getting thereShoja is best accessed via road. The nearest big town is Aut, which you can reach from Delhi via Mandi. From Aut, hire a cab or take a local bus through winding roads that progressively shake off civilization. The last hour is all pines, bends, and heart-fluttering views.

Read more: Sudha Murty Shines Light on Leh Palace: Why This 17th-Century Marvel in Ladakh Deserves a Spot on Your Travel List

So, why Shoja?Because sometimes, the best plan is no plan. Because the pines don’t care about itineraries. Because the silence here is not awkward, it’s healing. And because you deserve a break from Manali’s overexposed postcard and discover a story that’s still being written in birdsong and breeze.

Shoja isn’t just a place. It’s an exhale. And trust us—you need one.


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