Showing posts with label Karnataka. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Karnataka. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 9, 2007

The 8 day south side story


Hey as you know a blog runs sequentially in reverse order. The last post coming in first... I tried to construct this trip story in one or two posts, but tough luck, then it ran into quite a few pages. So the only option was to break it up into a few posts and make it by day and place of visit.

As usual lots of things happen when you have an open mind and a restless soul.

To get to this trip story from the beginning click here. Do leave your comments. And thanks for stopping by.

Monday, October 8, 2007

October 2, 2007 - Tuesday. Nagerhole to Kannur


Trip start point Jungle Inn
Distance 140 Kms (approximately)
Trip end point Malabar Residency, Kannur
Route Nagerhole – Husur - Coorg – Irrity - Kannur
Duration/time 6 hours (11:30 AM – 5:30 PM)

The day began at right earnest. With the morning came the call, that Kerala would be the place to visit and not Mysore. God’s own country beckons.

So at breakfast a short quiz with the manager, re-confirmed the route and went back to the Bullet…ready to go. Problem. The rear tyre was FLAT. The friendly staff at the resort brought out a leg pump for air, the only way out, pump it up take it 20 kms to Hunsur and get it fixed.

Baggage dismantled quickly, a rushed out pumping later, I set out to Hunsur at rocket speed through the narrow lanes…

Found the puncture shop, got it fixed, bought a new tube, got it wheeled in, gassed up and rushed back to the resort. 2 hours gone. The most helpful manager came with me and helped through the entire drama… good to see people like this exist.

Back to resort, the entire baggage settled in. Distraught and a little stressed out, but then, that lit the fire in the belly to do what everyone seemed against. We both decided it had to be Kannur and not Mysore come hell or highwater. 11:30 AM.

So instead of turning right on Hunsur road we turned left. A fatal left turn that we came to learn within an hour or so of cruising through coffee and rubber plantations and slick roads and cool breeze on our faces.

Right after the plantations at Coorg the roads become a little potholed. But then, what the heck we thought, if this was what the guys back there were talking about, we’ve seen worse… this was nothing.

Somewhere, (I just did not observe nor do I remember the point) it starts to drizzle. And then came complete disaster. It came like hell unleashed. We hit what was the remnants of the hill road. It was mudslide, gorged up, watered, loose, bricked up, slush pits…

The speed came down to 2 kms/hour. We had to stop at various point and wifey had to dismantle. There were wide pools of mud which had to be ridden through. Jutting rocks which had to be avoided. Loose slippery mud to be crossed quickly, and that was not all, there was rain beating down from the heavens above. Well here's a real taste of gods own wrath.

We went on, soaking wet, praying that our water resist bags remained water resistant. From one hole to another, hop, skip and skid through the terrain.

Only those who did not know about this terrain chose to venture here apart from some foolhardy truckers who came this route to save a quick buck probably or were insane.

We found a stretch where trucks were stuck in the mud. The drivers were piling up rocks on a sudden death pit so that it could cross over. A couple of cars stalled in the middle drivers thinking of turning the other way around.

The rain began lashing out heavily. We stopped beneath some trees and in a mud pile. I got so stressed that I got the urge to puff a cigaratte. Which I did. I lit one and smoked it in the rain. AAAH. What a relief. That hit felt good. Once the nicotine got into my blood and that too after almost 4 months of laying off I was feeling lighter and the pain reduced, a little refreshed.

After that both of us went for it. Eff the rain. And this time focused and serious about getting over with this. Did not have the balls to take out my brand new camera kit to shoot this terrain as a show piece.

Gods own country they say Kerala is. I am sure, that was God’s own shit pot. Where he farted and crapped leaded balls to devastate anything that moved.

I wish the people in this part of the country woke up and started doing a bit of work. Like booting out their idiosyncratic government to the vultures. Bloody politicians filling up their own coffers while devastation like this exists.

Co-incidence that this was Mahatma Gandhi’s birthday as well. What a debacle to the state of the nation.

On one side we talk of progress and on the other such disasters exist. The only thought I could summon up at that time was to build a remote controlled car chain the state head and his crony inside and run that car at 50 kms/hr (no more) flat out on the terrain ONE WAY. If he’s still alive, then, I am sure he would do something about the road within the next 24 hours.

For gods sake at least BLOCK THE TERRAIN for traffic!

We soon reached a shack which seemed like a place to get some tea and also get out of the rain and terrain for a bit. The shop served up delicious Kerala parotta’s (pancakes) and sweets. Wifey dug into them and we lighted up a bit.

As the rain slowed down a bit, we mounted the bull and were off again. We found that the rocks would last another 2 kms. Well after about half an hour we crossed the landslide zone and into a small town.

Passed through it quietly. Surprise, even here the roads were pothole ridden. Nothing compared to other terrain but then, not roads by any standards.

Wifey had taken the brunt of the attack from the rear… the jerking is more painful for the pillion rider and she almost gave up at a point. Where she just wanted to break off. Try to hire a cab (if one existed in these villages) and go.

Somehow managed to coax her to hang on. Some coffee and cigarettes later we rode on to Kannur. And that last 10 kms was good, we made it in one piece. Victory. Found our way to Hotel Malabar Residency a 3 star hotel vending out cheap rooms… well this was off season mate and no one comes here anyway.

The rest of the day went into unpack, drying, slugging a drink, eating and then blacking out! The worst was over.

Next day at Kannur. Click here.

September 30. A raging bull in Nagerhole.



Trip start point Airport Road
Distance 200 Kms (approximately)
Trip end point Jungle Inn (Nagerhole)
Route Bangalore – Srirangapatinam – Hunsur – Nagerhole
Duration/time 4 1/2 hours (8 AM – 1:30 PM)

This ride was really really repetitive and boring. Done this stretch so many times. Cut till Hunsur. Nothing changes… do refer to my earlier trip stories for more on this route (Bangalore-Mysore).

After Hunsur comes the diversion to the small single road which leads to the jungle. And that’s where everything changes. The road less tarred. Lush greens all around. Cotton fields on either side. Clouds painting sketches in the blue sky. Lone cottages looking serene. The cool fresh air right on your face. And even the mind changes, thoughts change. Forgotten are the frustrations of the city life, the irking traffic, the pollution, the navigation, the deja vu... this is life to be lived, loved.

This is fresh, green, passionate. The mix with the clear blue sky, a canvas that makes the mind go wild… the whiff of natural scents, the flowers blooming, the smell fresh soil which has tasted water… this was the real trip.

Well, it lasted all of 20 mins and the resort sign welcomed us. We dismantle the Bull and walk up to the office where the friendly manager helps us find a place to stay room or tent was a choice. We were lucky he said, normally, this place was packed on weekends this weekend the bookings were a bit low.

We went for the jungle tent which was a contraption hung on solid foundations of course and with a walled up toilet.

Freshening up and lunch went in a flash, we were out on the road to find our way to the Jungle. And it came within 5 minutes… NO ENTRY FOR MOTOR BIKES.

No amount of coaxing the forest guard could change his mind. So I guessed something must’ve happened. On chatting up with the manager later that evening we got to know that some bikers were caught unawares by a wild elephant and had suffered injuries. I am yet to fathom how one could survive an elephant attack though!

Anyway the day went behind finding designs by clouds and subjects by the village folk. Thumped back in the evening to our tent.

The night is different here. Everything shuts down at 7. There’s no light, no music no cacophony of sound. One can hear the sound of crickets, some distant howling, and of course the staff at the resort having a scrap over something insignificant.

After a heavy dinner, a short night walk around campus, and, overhearing a corporate gang's drunken conversation how they should be working (there was a convention on those two days at the resort) we decided to call it a day.

Quick to fall asleep with dreams of getting into a jungle safari the next day.

Read the next part. Click here.