Picture a quiet morning in Manali: a rustic wooden balcony, mist-covered peaks in the distance, a laptop open for work and a cup of coffee close at hand. Then comes a small interruption with outsized consequences — the milk and instant noodles are finished. In a metro such as Delhi, that would usually mean a few taps on a phone and a delivery in minutes. In the mountains, however, the same errand turned into a much longer story. A video by content creator Akhil Dhruv showed just how far quick-commerce has travelled, and what it still can’t do.
The video captured Akhil placing a Blinkit order from a secluded mountain cottage in Manali, where the app showed a ‘25-minute’ delivery estimate. But as the clip made clear, delivery motorcycles cannot climb steep, unpaved Himalayan dirt tracks, and the process needed a compromise.
What followed was less a routine grocery run and more a 2-kilometre cardio fetch quest. Akhil swapped his slippers for sturdy hiking boots and set out on a 1 km trek down a steep, winding path from his remote stay. On the way, he navigated past livestock and even befriended a stray dog before reaching the nearest motorable road.
There, he met the delivery rider, who arrived with Blinkit’s yellow bag, and the handoff was completed. The more demanding part came next. With groceries in hand, Akhil made the 1 km return uphill, a climb that took about 15 minutes. The episode showed that ‘instant delivery’ in the mountains can still depend on a customer’s willingness to do some of the journey on foot.
As digital nomads head to parts of Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhand, quick-commerce companies are expanding into tier-2 and tier-3 tourist centres to serve travellers who want to stay in the hills without giving up access to urban conveniences. At the same time, the experience underlined the limits of doorstep delivery in remote terrain. For those planning a mountain workation, road access remains crucial when ordering essentials online, and off-grid properties may require coordination with delivery partners at a safer meeting point on the main road.

