In August this year we went to
Medikeri, the beautiful, lush green district headquarters of Coorg, Karnataka. Somehow I did
not record the trip then. Well as they say better late than never! Since the
trip was planned by Anu and Ajit we went to Chennai first and I managed to
contact a virulent strain of viral fever on the flight. The generous person
that I am, I spread it quickly to everybody else at home. The first few days
all of us spent inhaling steam and gargling and popping homeopathy pills. But
then the prospect of a great trip perked us up and the six of us (Amma and Didi
included) bundled up in two cars and drove off.
The distance from Chennai to
Medikeri is only 590 Kms, cutting right across peninsular India, both cities
being practically on the same latitude (Chennai 13 and Medikeri 12). However,
we decided to take a night halt in Bangalore. Stayed in Ajit’s sister’s
unoccupied, but fully functional house. After a comfortable night we were ready
for the second leg of our trip. Though we had early breakfast, before starting,
we were eagerly waiting for the Kamat Lokaruchi Restaurant on the highway
between Bangalore and Mysore.
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T/P break made memorable because of the antics of this monkey |
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He set the tone for the trip to come |
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Anu unravelling idlis cooked in banana leaves |
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Didi buying trinkets from the shops outside the Kamat restaurant while her coffee was arriving |
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an interesting bullockcart mostly used for transporting 'tendu', tobacco leaves |
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the road throughout is like this |
After crossing “Silk City”
Ramanagara, “Toy City” Channapatna and “Sugar City” Mandya we reached
Sarangapatnam, Tipu’s capital and quickly drove around the place because we
were more interested in seeing the ‘’awesome’’ (the word is meant to convey its
original meaning and not what tweenys mean by it these days) Mysore Palace.
SARANGAPATNAM
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entering Tipu's realm |
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Jama Masjid |
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Tipu was killed in the 4th Mysore War on 4th May 1799 AD and his body
was found here. The stone was set by Col Wellesley as a recognition of his bravery in battle. |
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''mind the kerb'' |
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The benign looking Col. Bailey's dungeon, where Tipu used to keep his prisoners chained to the slabs fixed on the walls. |
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beating the heat |
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a sight enough to make you vegetarian for life |
MYSORE
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St. Philomena's Church |
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The Mysore main post office |
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the clock tower recording our time of arrival |
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the 'awesome' Mysore Palace |
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elephant rides of the palace |
Lunch was tricky because
everybody could not agree on a place to eat, ultimately eating after waiting
for more than 30 minutes in a queue, to eat at a big and popular restaurant.
MEDIKERI
The remaining 120 kms were
comfortably covered and we reached the Club Mahindra resort, where we
were going to spend the next 3 days, by dusk. As soon as we sat down to have the
welcome drink (fragrant Coorg coffee) we heard the place burst into a medley of
loud buzzing sounds, which we were to discover, was a regular evening melody of
the cicadas.
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a cicada up close. Great camouflage |
When we sat on our terrace early
the next morning, the melody reverberating in the mist was the long, repetitive whistle of
the Common Hawk Cuckoo, the 'papiha' of Indian folklore – I was in heaven! The next 3 days were spent walking up
and down the undulating pathways of the resort, discovering little treasures of
nature at every nook and corner, and eating their sumptuous buffet breakfasts
and dinners.
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the picturesque pathways going up and down the resort |
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building blocks named after fruits |
The afternoons we spent exploring
the nearby places of tourist interest.
DUBARE ELEPHANT CAMP - The first day we drove about 35 km for the Dubare elephant camp. Honestly, I did not much care for the place, but it was an outing.
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enroute to Dubare stopped to have breakfast |
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Rajeev and the set-dosas |
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comfortable enough to sleep on! |
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Making a tasty morsel with hay and jaggery to feed the elephants |
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Homage to the River Goddess on the bridge |
TRIVENI SANGAM - Next we went to the confluence of the rivers Cauvery, Kannike and Sujyothi - some 40 kms from the resort.
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Shri Bagandeshwara Temple |
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Inside the Temple |
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About the confluence |
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Inside the Temple |
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warding away evil spirits !! |
THALAKAVERI - about 7 km above the Triveni Sangam is the scenic Thalakaveri ie. the source of the river Kaveri. However after reaching there Anu realised that her car had guzzled all the gas coming up the hill. So could not much appreciate the beauty of the place in the thick mist and the two of us practically rolled down the hill on neutral and found a petrol pump just about when the car was ready to stall.
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Thalakaveri |
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This petrol pump in the wilderness saved us a lot of trouble |
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way to Thalakaveri and the K.S.T.D.C. restaurant where we had lunch |
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Places to see near Medikeri |
ABBY FALLS - After a rain drenched adventurous little trek we managed to see the Abby Falls, while Amma and Rajeev stood under a canopy at the parking lot.
BYLAKUPPE BUDHIST GOLDEN TEMPLE - The second day we visited the Tibetan Monastery some 40 km on the Mysore road. It is a large Tibetan settlement, home to at least 5000 lamas, with a beautiful monastry.
It is the largest teaching center of the Nyingmapa lineage of Tibetan Buddhism in the world.
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A Nunnery |
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Some inmates of the nunnery |
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The Nyingmapa Buddhist Monastery Gate |
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stall selling pretty Chinese made trinkets |
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'Namdroling' the Buddhist Golden Temple |
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largest Nyingmapa teaching center in the world |
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The best place to eat in the camp |
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Anu certified this as one of the cleanest restaurants- coming from her, believe you me, its huge. |
On the way back Anu and I went on an adventure trip to the Orange County (another resort) to collect a consignment of lemon grass oil, said to keep insect pests at bay, while the rest of the people went to Medikeri market to buy spices and Coorg coffee.
We drove back the third day,
again taking a night halt at Bangalore, after a delightful, fun packed trip.
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Rajeev, I also have beautiful memories of Coorg and the Tibetan monastery. Thalcauveri is probably one of the most beautiful spots I have seen. Imagine climbing all those 400 steps to find a barren, sharp stoney, and flat hilltop! Someone who built all those steps must have had a vengeful sense of humour! But I loved it all including the spiced-up slice of Totapuri mango at the Tibetan monstery.
ReplyDeleteThankyou for sharing your experiences. Made me relive the trip. At the top of those 400 steps there is a "Gau-mukh" kind of a spout in a storey down structure, where the water spouts into which people had thrown so many new & old coins (for a Numismatist like me, it was a "terrible" thing not being able to examine any of them). Another thing we remember was that one of our cars nearly ran out of petrol but got to a petrol pump without pushing it. Got drenched while trying to visit the Abby Falls, heard the call of the Cicada (which was like an amped up stereo system at work), bought some beautiful green tea drinking mugs at the Tibetan monastery which we are using for our daily evening tea. Generally had a lot of fun !!
DeleteRamchandra Lalingkar has commented:
ReplyDelete"Excellent photographs".
Thankyou.
DeleteVineeta Jain has commented:
ReplyDelete"Wow Sumita!! Enjoyed going thru the blog...loved the pics. Rajeev looked pretty SET himself while waiting to devour the set dosa! Are they made with some different dough?"
I think they are covered and cooked. Single fry. Look less oily too !!
DeleteBharat Bhushan Bagga has commented:
ReplyDelete"Very lively description of a lively tour and awesome pictures."
Nice post with really good pictures.
ReplyDeleteThanks
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