For too long, India’s extraordinary cherry blossom landscapes have remained the exclusive knowledge of local residents, travel bloggers, and a small community of dedicated flower chasers. That is changing rapidly, as word spreads of the spectacular blossom seasons that unfold across the country from Himachal Pradesh to Meghalaya. This season, with blooms currently underway across multiple regions, is the perfect time for travelers to chase petals across India’s most beautiful and least crowded blossom destinations.
Dobhi village in Kullu Valley, Himachal Pradesh may be the best-kept secret of all. Set amid fruit orchards that bloom with apricot, peach, and plum blossoms in spring, the village offers a blossom experience that is as intimate as it is breathtaking. Local travel enthusiasts who have spent years exploring these orchards describe the white plum blossoms as among the most beautiful natural sights in all of India — a sudden explosion of white on bare winter trees that appears almost overnight and vanishes just as quickly.
The Kasar Devi area of Almora in Uttarakhand is another secret that deserves to be shared more widely. Wild Himalayan cherry and peach blossoms appear between late February and March in a landscape framed by snow-capped peaks and deep blue Himalayan skies. The experience of witnessing the abundance of blossoms during peak season — described by one visitor as feeling like it was raining flowers — is one that travelers consistently cite as transformative.
Srinagar’s blossom season from late March to early April is arguably India’s worst-kept secret, having attracted international visitors for decades. Yet even well-traveled visitors are consistently surprised by the depth of beauty the city offers during this period, from the famous Mughal gardens to the informal blossom viewing spots along Dal Lake. The garden caretakers at historic sites like Shalimar Bagh serve as living repositories of blossom tradition, connecting present-day visitors to centuries of Mughal spring garden culture.
Ladakh’s Apricot Blossom Festival in April and Shillong’s autumn cherry blossom festival in November represent the final two secrets waiting to be discovered. In Ladakh, the combination of high-altitude landscape and pink apricot blossoms creates a visual experience that photographers describe as a paradise. In Shillong, the paradox of cherry blossoms in autumn — a phenomenon unique to this corner of India — turns every November visit into an experience unlike anything else in the country’s travel calendar.