Visit to Udagamandalam
Destination : Ooty (present name Udagamandalam), Nilgiri, Tamil Nadu
Departure : Sunday 20.11.2005, 2000 hrs by Yaswantpur Express to Yaswantpur, Bangalore at 1030 hrs on 22.11.05
Return : Sunday 27.11.2005, 1520 hrs by Coromoandal Express
Participants :
A dozen from the B E College gang
The journey : This was one of those rare trips, where from the beginning the journey started pleasantly. We found our places in the train and settled down for a 2-night trip, the longest so far. Next morning, it was clear, that we have left North India and have entered the more civilized South. The people were more polite and considerate, there were no signs of the aggressively obnoxious North Indians. Loken even had a tough time to find a claimant for a Rs1 coin he found lying on the floor. By about 15:40, we crossed the 3kM wide river Godavari. The scenery changed form Tal trees to sugarcane fields, date palms and huts with roof of Tal leaves. All railway stations major and minor were exceptionally clean. The morning thereafter, we reached Yaswantpur, a railway station at the outskirts of the fast expanding Bangalore city. We collected Chitrita, who had split from her College excursion trip and came to Yaswantpur from Salem. She was sitting in a far platform. It was only by the strength of palwan Tulai, that her bag, containg a quintal stones from half of the hills could be carried to the platform of our arrival.From Idle brain's paradise
The place : By far the best boarding & lodging we ever enjoyed in all our trips.
Lawley Institute 19 13 | The Gang |
Moss grows lush in this high, humid hills | Indoor "adda" in a rainy day |
Nara & Krishnan our organizers | Hi! Says hero # 1 |
Outside of hotel of hero # 2 | Inside of hotel of hero # 2 |
Hither & thither :
Disregarding the rain, we hired a bus for sight seeing trips.
Chhñeiya Chhñeyia railway line | Train to Kunoor | Outing on a rainy day |
On 25.11.05, the rain having practically stopped, we trooped into the Botanical Garden, a stones throw from our rooms. Compared with the sprawling and totally neglected Botanical Garden at Howrah, next to our College Campus, this one did not boast so many varieties of trees, but inspite of its smaller size and fewer collections, whatever it had was displayed in lovingly maintained, neat and elegant fashion. It was a pleasure to roam around. The pleasure was for an entry fee : Rs5 per child, Rs10 per adult, Rs30 per still camera and Rs500 per video camera. On enquiring about this high fee for video, we were told an intriguing tale. It seems, the film or ad industry people surreptitious shoot film sequences using the background of the Botanical Garden for commercial profit, but did not pay any utilization fee.
The astounding thread flowers | Hydrangea at Botanics | Lily at Botanics |
Lunch on banana leaf | Delicious evening snack | Part of breakfast |
The Governer’s house | The Governer’s drawing room | A traditional Toda (tribal) hut |
Return journey : We had some time to kill at Mettupallayam Rly Stn, waiting for the Nilgiri Express to be put to the platform. It started raining. A local train came and terminated at this station. We spent the time, loudly teaching ourselves the Tamil script, by reading the nameplates on the local train, in English and Tamil, much to the amusement of local co-passengers. By and by, we discovered, that the name of the place, as spelt in Tamil is actually Mett-Upallayam.
Where do we go next :
Rosenheim, Germany | Sydney Opera |
2 comments:
Oh, it´s very nice.
Das ist sehr interessant.
bye Manuela
Need your email id. Please contact me. neenu.babu@yaatrika.com
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