Thursday, October 16, 2014

Malpe - The most perfect beach on Indian Subcontinent

My mom did not have great experience from 7 day long trip to South India last year. She actually does not like travelling long stretches for many days that too in car. But my father is crazy about driving and travelling. So I took midway by choosing a place where we dont have to move around a lot but still it will be lot of fun.

Factors considered were - 
  • Less movement for sightseeing
  • Driving distance not more than 8 hours
  • Good road condition

So we decided Beach. In 2012, Anjana and I had gone to Malpe and were amused by its finest golden sand & flat beach. 

So it was grand, A GRAND FAMILY TRIP
Ohhhh okk my bad, forgot to introduce you to guests of this trip - Originally it was 9 members namely My mom, dad, Anjana, Ashwini(my elder bro), Lovely(bro’s wife), Shubh (my nephew), Logan & Victor (my two Labradors now about 11 months old) and myself. So we decided to take both cars Linea and A-star. However, we had new addition in guest list after a lot of convincing done by me (using saaam, daaam, danddd, bheddd). Additions were Aparna (my cousin elder sis) Tushar (her husband), Little (my cousin younger bro. Little only by name otherwise he goes beyond 6 ft) and Shalu (Tushar’s sister). So now were a total of 13 members with addition of a new car Duster of Jizs(Tushar, I also call him Jizs).

So considering a family of this magnitude with people from almost all age groups and living organism from two different species (excuse me in case I missed a few species stuck to living bodies invisible to naked eye), we decided to visit Malpe due to its family friendly beaches and lazed around mood. 

Malpe Beach - a place worth visiting
Malpe comes under coastal belt of Karnataka and practically first ideal beach destination if you start moving from South to North. It is about 420 kms from Bangalore and about 60 kms from nearest airport city Mangalore. It is about 5 kms from Udupi town and about 10 kms from Manipal town. Malpe’s beach can beat Goa any day if not for the nightlife and developed tourist facilities in Goa. Malpe town is practically a fishing village (you literally feel it with the strong stench when you enter the town). with hardly any choice of accommodation. There are just 2-3 organised resorts and nothing else beyond that. So if you want a cheaper stay option, you either have to go to Udupi town or Manipal town, both easily manageable in 5-15 mins time if you have your own car. 


Bangalore to Malpe Route
We left Bangalore on 3rd October (Friday) around 3.30 PM from Kanakpura Road. Took NICE ring road to Tumkur road (about Rs 90 per car). After we exited at Tumkur road, immediately entered the toll road after paying Rs 20. You have to take a the exit towards Mangalore highway before Neelamangala junction (there are enough signboards). As soon as you take left, you will see the new 4 lane toll road starting again. We tanked up both Linea and A-star on HP petrol bunk and moved further towards 1st toll plaza on this road. We stopped to be joined by Duster right after toll plaza. Moreover, we wanted to feast on the mouth watering mutton masala cooked by my mom. Soon all non-veggies were overloading themselves with rice and mutton whereas veggies with paneer. We started at around 5.45pm from there after everybody was satisfied with quantity dumped in the tummy.

Road till Hassan is just amazing and we zoomed past the stretch with not much pain. Now there are two ways to go to Malpe from Hassan onwards. One is you keep going straight on highway to Mangalore and then take right to Malpe. This route remains in terrible condition due to excessive rains in Shiradi Ghat section. Even trucks scrape their bottom, leave alone cars like Linea and A-star. Government is planning some tunnel based road in future but that is too far away. The other route is via Belthangady which mostly passes through divider less but low traffic road. We stuck to latter. 

So you have to take right from Hassan town towards Belur. Hassan to Belur is divider less but wide road where you can easily race at above 100. However, be careful of sudden dividers raised on sharp curves which could become fatal if you miss them at night while taking pass from other vehicle (my dad faced it in Linea). I was leading the troop with A-star followed by Linea by my dad and Duster by Jizs. 

From Belur take left towards Belthangady via Mudigere. This road is also good with narrower road but manageable as there is hardly any traffic.  People started loosing patience as it was getting night and we were also concerned about dinner. 20 mins past Mudigere, you will hit Ghat stretch which will be welcomed by big iron barricade(open all times). Just before this barricade, you have shops which are open till late in the night and you can find decent food and other supplies (except fuel). We finished our dinner there and moved further up the deep dark forest in the ghat section. We stopped in middle of ghat at around 11.30PM in the night because Bhabhi(bro’s wife) has motion sickness which aggravates on curvy road. But the youth gang saw this time as opportunity and we clicked some Ramsay Brothers type horror pictures in the middle of road and Jungle with no lights or vehicle around. 

From Belthangady, we took road to Moodbidri and further on to Karkala. You will find some and only rough patch of entire journey between Belthangady & Moodbidri. 15 mins past Karkala you have take left towards Manipal again welcomed by good stretch of road throughout. We reached Manipal around 2.15AM and retired in our home stay at Parnakuti Homestay.

Our Homestay - Parnakuti Homestay in Manipal (or say Malpe or Udupi also)
Parnakuti Homestay is located in Manipal. The owner bought a single storey property and built 2 floors above it. They have stay options from 3BHK, 2BHK, 1BHK, etc. We found the house and the rooms very spacious with almost all amenities available. They have a full fledged gas stove based kitchen on first floor which can be used by anybody there. In every house also they have kept cooking arrangements on induction cooker. Best part is they allow pets as they have all kind of pets present in their home stay like dogs, cats, birds, turtles, rabbit, etc. So you have an in-house zoo right there.

Next morning everybody got up by 10.00 and we left for beach by 11.00. We stopped at a small AC south-indian eatery on the way where they also allowed us to take Logan and Victor in the restaurant. 13 of us ate like world is going to end and this is the last meal. We ate Vadas, idli, dosa, onion dosa, puri bhaji, etc and guess what, how much was the bill  - only Rs 720. It cant get any better and we all thanked the restaurant guy for his great food.

Oh We reached the Beach
Finally we reached THE MALPE BEACH. As soon as Logan and Victor saw the water, they went crazy and ran like sky’s going to fall. I was still in car so Jizs and Bro ran for rescue getting them back in command. We chose a point to camp and water lovers went for dip. 

Even if you go 100 meters ahead in water at Malpe, still water will rise only upto your chest level. Other than a few occasional tides, you can comfortably stand and enjoy water. Also, there is no reverse current which is the most dangerous reason for maximum sea related accidents. 

It was field day for Logan and Victor
We all formed a gang in water and we appointed special edition ‘BOUNCERS’ - Logan and Victor. They chased many tourists away by their rambo-mambo dance and run on the beach. I had bad time running after them chasing them not to chase others. They were not chasing any person but the objects on shore lying here and there. But everybody who fell in the line of their charge thought they were going after them and so it was almost stampede like situation on beach with people hiding, carrying, lapping their kids away from the two uncontrolled monsters. Somehow we got hold of them and then they started chasing tides in the sea. Labradors are natural swimmers still we were scared that they may get tired and start drowning. So Anjana and I used to hold them in water and in the process they scratched (inadvertently) us at various places. 

Marley & Me
After about half an hour of swimming, I got them out of water and a scene from movie “Marley & Me” danced in front of my eyes. Victor after coming out of water immediately started rotating at same place while sniffing the ground and by the time I could have realised, he released a full load of shit barely 3 ft away from water. I felt so embarrassed while my mom(sitting near our camping site) watched all this. We are brahmins where any stuff like shit, pee were used to be treated with cow-dung or lot of cleaning in ancient days. We may have moved on but you cant change the foundation of a culture. I found disposed paper plates on beachside with which I picked up all the shit and threw it far away from beach. Try imaging my brahmin mom watching her loved younger brahmin son picking up dog’s shit in soiled paper plate(dont know what was it used for) and running like crazy away from the beach and then not even washing his hands with soap or something. 

Water and The Gang
Unaware of all this our gang was enjoying the water with people trying all sort of strokes possible. Bhabhi who swam in river before this showed her swimming marvel by some fron stroke while swimming pool trained Jizs tried his hand backstroke which always made him taste salt. Best part was my sis flexing her swimming muscles was followed continuously by Jizs in case her swimming skills had given way to water. When Little used to swim, everybody else used to turn back because his gigantic body splashed water more than a Bosch car wash can do. Bro was playing safe and so he did not try any swimming while Anjana was showing off her way to sleep(her favorite job) even in water by floating on her back. Shalu was lost in all this and was continuously trying to locate herself in water. Babu and Bapu (I call my Dad Bapu) were on the shallow end playing in just knee deep water. Mom adopted wait and watch policy to form strategy for entering water.

Malpe Beach has this one more interesting thing. You can take fresh water bath in one of the various pay & use bathrooms which is not commonly found on Indian Beaches. We all got fresh by 6.00PM and then we started the culinary journey. 

Malpe Beach - a paradise for sea-food lovers
Right at the beach, you have multiple stalls for sea food especially fish. We got fried Pomfret for Rs 35 each(impossible price), Bangda for Rs 20 each, crabs for Rs 40 each and so on. We left no part of stomach untouched with fish and sea food. Vegetarians resorted to soybean chilly, veg chily, fried rice and noodles. 

Finally we called it a day. Everybody was off to sleep. Victor got loose motions, it seems he drank too much sea water. We were carrying their medicine which came handy. 

St Mary’s Island - A must visit from Malpe
Next day morning all of got early and by 8.00, we were at Gandhi Statue on Malpe Beach. Reason was we had to go to St Mary’s island by boat which charges Rs 150 per person to and fro. We had special arrangement made with one boat operator and so he gave us freedom of spending as much time as we ant at Island. The ride lasted for about 10-12 mins and there we were. I really had tough time getting Logan and Victor off and on the boat as boat had some structural design issue and there was no clear port. We were carrying elaborate breakfast with us which we enjoyed for next 45 mins. After that, 5 of us along with Logan and Victor started island exploration. Island has some strange formation of rocks(must be volcanic rock ages ago) and it had those long grasses right from movie Jurasic Park 2. But exploration was worth and we enjoyed the place till 12.00Noon. Later we returned to Malpe Beach where we played Volleyball in water for sometime. It was time to say good bye to our Duster friends as they had to catch up with work on Monday morning. Sis, Jizs, Little and Shalu left around 3.30 PM directly for Bangalore taking same route. 

We enjoyed till evening repeating the ritual of eating fish and sea food. Everybody retired by 10.00 to sleep. 

The sad part begins - We are going back
Next morning, I could sense a feeling of sadness on everybody’s face as we were going back leaving behind the blue water, golden beach and unending supply of inexpensive sea-food. But as every journey has to come to an end, ours was not an exception. We started back at around 11.00AM and with few lunch and tea stops, we managed to reach Bangalore by 10.00PM (owing to crazy traffic in Bangalore city due to incessant rains). 

This would be an unforgettable trip not only because of the destination but because of the participants as every single of them were adding extra flavour to the trip. If you travel, try travelling in a big family group(which is now very rare to be seen) and watch your fun increase many folds in the same destination. Thanks to all the fun mates - Sis, Jizs, Giant Little, Shalu, Bro, Bhabhi, Babu, Dad, Mom, Anjana and of course our two Mambo masters - Logan and Victor. 

One thing which I missed here was that the entire group complexion turned to brown to dark to black as nobody was carrying sunscreen(sunscreen will also turn tan here) and as if we really cared about our changing color. Only two of us were not going to face racism - Victor because even deepest darkness will get shy in front of him and Logan because he is the bright boy. All for now, over and out

Quick Facts
Bangalore to Malpe - 420kms
Time - 10 hours (with breaks)
Road - 4 lane till Hassan and good roads from Hassan till Malpe
Route - Bangalore-Hassan-Belur-Belthangady-Moodbidri-Karkala-Malpe
Weather - Pleasant to Hot
Best time to go - October till March
Hotels - You will easily get something from 500-3000 in places like Udupi, Manipal, etc
Ideal number of days to spend - 2-3 full days are more than enough
Food to try - Try seafood on local stalls right at beach
Adventure - You can enjoy one of the many water sports (which we did not) like Jet scooter, paragliding, etc
Must carry - Anti Tan lotion else you will understand the meaning of racial discrimination after you are back from Malpe


Sunday, October 12, 2014

Bangalore to Madurai Roadtrip & A visit to Meenakshi Temple

How it started
Last year when my parents came down to Bangalore, we planned a long 1week trip to South India. First stop of this tour was Madurai.

Because my mother prefers to visit religious places first before any tourist place, we thought of starting with religious place.

Head & Tyre count 
Linea's 500lts boot filled to brim(1 week prep). Notice the gears on my dad's body(2 specs and 1 camera)
Travelers were my dad, mom, Anjana and me and of course our great Linea. I got new set of stock tyres replaced on my car just before trip. Got Good Year(comes with new car also) for about 20k. Along with that I had also increased the car ground clearance by installing new GC Kit from Fiat. So me and my car both were set to rock it.

To Madurai
We left Bangalore at around 11.30 am(from my house in Banaswadi) in the morning as my dad came to Bangalore just last night. Route from Bangalore to Madurai is awesome with 4-6 lane highway throughout (about 450 kms run) . The pain part is Hosur and Krishnagiri for the crazy truck & lorry traffic. Once you are through with these places, remaining distance is like breeze. We crossed Salem by 2 and my car clocked average of 19 km/l maintaining an average speed of 85-90 kmph. 

We found this chap outside our hotel early morning so took his service. He was happy he earned early morning
After Salem, we stopped under a tree off the main road. We were carrying very tasty home cooked food with us. Already late for lunch, we finished our food in minutes and dozed off for some 20 mins enjoying breeze under the tree.

Notice wires above head
My Dad loves driving
We were ready to start again when my dad took to steering. My dad closing 60 still loves driving for long stretches and he dreams of driving bigger car in future. I admire his stamina and wishes I also stay as fit as him when I turn his age. At an impressive speed, he raced past through the Kanyakumari highway which will suddenly turn empty with hardly any vehicle on the highway. So this means my dad had a free hand to zoom past and he exploited it to the best by clocking speeds upto 130-140 km/hr at times.

You have to take slip road (at Checkanurani) for the left turn to Madurai town. There are enough markers to make sure that you don't miss the turn. Once you have taken turn, it will take at least another 30-45 minutes to actually reach the place where you want to stay. Now be careful on these divider less roads as the mood will be of highway drive so car automatically clocks speed upwards of 100km/hr with no divider and stray vehicles all around. 

At Kathir Palace, Madurai
I had booked a family room in Hotel Kathir Palace (from yatra.com) which is a 5 minutes walk from Main temple. We reached Hotel by 7.00PM. Hotel was decent with restaurant serving good north Indian food. The room was very spacious with four beds in the family room. Mom and Anjana took to some rest while Dad and me went for some shopping (we had forgot to bring our electric Kettle this time). The market (all around temple) is really vibrant and crowded like any other Indian market.

I find it very sad about Indian tourism. We have some unimaginable heritage like Madurai Temple but it is completely surrounded by dirty and unmanaged shops and vendors, wires hanging around the gopurams(towers) and bad roads to access. 

Best time to visit Meenakshi Amman Temple, Madurai

Most of the crowd in the temple builds after 9.00AM in the morning. I had read it at a few places and so we decided to give an early morning visit to temple. Next day we left our room by 6.00 AM to visit temple. It was a pleasant morning perfect to venture out in a hot and humid place like Madurai.

As soon as we reached temple we were approached by a temple guide who asked Rs 250 to take us for a temple tour. We accepted and he made our journey through temple very very easy. I have found out that it is better to get hold of some such person in a place like Meenakshi Temple which is so humongous you will always be lost and trying to understand where to go next. We did darshan, puja and also fed the elephant in the temple. 

You must buy some prasad from the shop towards the end of the tour where they sell halwa, laddos, etc stuff at very reasonable price. So if you want to pack something for back home, pack here but keeping it fresh could be challenge.

Madurai has hot to very hot weather throughout the year. So always be ready to face extreme burst of heat during daytime. November to January should be little better. AC rooms are expected always if you are not used to extreme heat. 

There are numerous eateries outside the temple where you can enjoy delicious breakfast. There are many places which serve tasty and authentic Tamil Nadu non-veg food in lunch and dinner.

There is one more place to visit in Madurai called Raja’s Palace which we were not very keen as Anjana and I had seen that in our previous trip and my parents were keen to proceed to our next pilgrimage centre Rameswaram. 

Quick Facts
Bangalore to Madurai - 450kms
Time - 6-7 hours 
Road - Excellent, careful about lorry traffic near Hosur
Ideal number of days - 1.5 days at max
Hotel Budget - You will easily get decent AC rooms upwards of Rs 1,200
Best places to see - Meenakshi Temple, Raja’s palace, local market
Best time - Mornings on any day of the year 

Tips - Get hold of Temple guides. They have government approved rate card so no cheating




Sunday, February 9, 2014

Bangalore to Kodaikanal - A must have experience

After rounds of Yes & No, we finally decided to visit Kodaikanal for Independence Day Long Weekend trip. Kodaikanal is about 480 kms from Bangalore and is one the most beautiful hill-stations of India situated in the state of Tamil Nadu. At an altitude of 2133 mts ASL, the place is cool round the year with a lot of greenery and nature around. Not being very close to the two major metros (Bangalore & Chennai), the place still has untouched feeling left unlike its only other sister from Tamil Nadu, Ooty. There is a lot to do in and around the town and even a 5 days/4nights trip is not enough to do all that you can.

On the day of Eid, we met Uttam, Khusbhu(Uttam’s wife), Duggu (Khushbu’s 1.5 years old son) and Sweety (Khushbu & Sweety are Anjana’s cousins) convincing them to join us for the trip. So the D-Day decided was 14th August and we were supposed to leave town by 4.00PM.

The Route –
First day plan decided was Bangalore to Karur(Night Halt) at about 300 kms on NH7. Since the road is flat and smooth, we expected to cover it in about 4-5 hours on our Linea. Day 2 plan was to travel another 180 kms to Kodaikanal via Dindigul and Batlagundu with most part of journey in Ghat section. Return route was same without a stop at Karur

As we start…
Going by Indian tradition, we left at 6.00PM from Khushbu’s house(in JP Nagar) towards Hosur Road. One of the worst time to hit Hosur Road, we got stuck for almost 3 hours in maddening rush uptil Krishnagiri. The Road condition of Bangalore to Krishnagiri is also not very good with occasional diversions and rough patches due to ongoing work on NH7. Having travelled on this road a number of times, my advise would be to either leave early morning or in the afternoon to cover this stretch faster. We crossed Krishangiri by 9.00PM and after about half an hour or so we stopped for Dinner. We had a long menu for dinner courtesy Anjana and Khushbu(Noodles, Paneer Masala, Kachori, etc) but due to rain, we had to take shelter under one line restaurant and thus ordered some food from there as well. After getting refueled, we hit the highway again. All the fairer occupants in the car started asking to break the journey at Salem(199kms from Bangalore) itself but I knew its outcome the next day with stretched journey in Ghats. A 50 km drive in Ghat section can do equal fatigue as 300kms in plains. So a 280 km drive was too much for the next day. After a lot of convincing, we finally reached Karur by 1.00 AM and retired for the day in Hotel Perrys (Non-AC Rooms Rs 600+Taxes and AC Rooms at Rs 1000+taxes).

Day 2 is always most exciting part of a trip…
We left Karur by 10.00AM. The morning was bright and beautiful and moods were high. We stopped at Dhabba(they spelled Dhaba as Dhabba) restaurant for breakfast but the restaurant proved it’s a Dhabba(a black spot) among restaurants as they had nothing to eat or drink. After turning right towards Kodaikanal from Dindigul, we stopped in a coconut plantation to enjoy the food we were carrying with us. While we were savoring on cucumber, watermelon, sweets & namkeen, Sweety was busy stealing some dry coconuts which may have fallen-off from trees. She managed to steal about 5-6 of them. We continued further to Kodaikanal and finally reached our Hotel (Hotel Springs Valley – 750+taxes for deluxe room) at 3.30PM. After leaving our bags at hotel, we left immediately to have lunch. We found  Hotel Paradise Inn which served us really delicious Lunch at a reasonable price (about Rs 700 for 5 of us). The restaurant has a separate veg and non-veg section with a big, airy seating area. Duggu was enjoying the place as he was stuck in the car for a long time.

Post Lunch, we went straight to Kodai Lake. Sweety, Uttam and I took bicycle on rent(Rs 20 for half an hour single-seater and Rs 50 for double-seater) and took a round of Lake, a 5km ride with markers on the road to tell you how much you have already covered. It’s a very relaxing walk/ride alongside the lake with lots of eating and shopping joints. Finally we came back to hotel and retired for the day.

Day 3
We (Anjana, Sweety and I) left for Dolphin’s Nose in the morning for some trekking. We actually trekked down about 1.5kms on a way formed by roots of trees. En-route, we found an abandoned house on the way which must be haunted in the night. After clicking some haunting pics, Anjana and Sweety started walking back uphill. I walked further down and found out a small trekking path through deep forest which leads to old Kodaikanal Town. Few locals told me that it was a good trekking route of about 3 hours one way. Having no trekking partner, I had to give up the idea.

We came back to hotel by 9.330 AM and all of us got ready for a day full of sightseeing. We went to Hotel Hilltop Inn for Lunch (or say breakfast which was late). Taste was really good however, quantity was extremely compromised. Still we managed Lunch for 5 adult and one infant for about Rs 800. As per Kodaikanal standards, it was slightly expensive bill.

Post that, we left for sightseeing tour of Kodaikanal. We took Upper Shola Road to visit places like Guna Caves, Pillar Rock, etc. However that was wrong road. This is a long circular stretch which leads you to multiple sightseeing points like Pine forest, Pillar rocks, Moir Point etc. However, the local administration has create a one way policy to visit these places to keep traffic in a system as it gets really crowded on a weekend on public holiday. Still there are no markers saying one-way and not even locals will tell you that. So always take Observatory road to start your sightseeing. This will take you to all sightseeing point in the right order and without facing crazy traffic. Further ahead on the route, you will reach back to main Kodaikanal town near the Lake.

We really liked Guna Caves which was foggy and misty. We climbed up till the top and spent some time there. You can actually spot those huge rocks from top which you will later see from Pillar Rocks point. While returning back, it started raining and we took shelter under a omlette vendor’s tarpaulin. We also enjoyed hot coffe/tea with tasty omlette to get a little warmer in the cool weather.  After visiting all other sightseeing spot, we hit Upper lake view road from where you can click some real beautiful photograph with lake in the background.

Greatest Adventure of the Day
I was exposed to one very interesting side of human instinct. In the morning today, Sweety and Anjana were involved in stealing Pears from several pear plantations which is in abundance in Kodaikanal. It was maybe that time of the year, when every tree was full of hundreds of small and big pear. It tempted Sweety and Anjana to try their hands on a few unprotected plantations. In the afternoon, when we were returning back, Sweety was accompanied by Khushbu also and Anjana played role of watchmen. I declared if anybody is caught, I will refuse to even identify them, leave alone protecting them. Sweety, the master thief, provoked even Uttam to join the gang for high quality steal from a big private plantation and thus, we had about 2-3 kg of pear with us. I was now playing the role of the one partner in crime who awaits the gang with car ignition on. So initially it was Sweety alone who was doing it but towards the end, every single person (leaving Duggu) joined her and enjoyed the loot.

We came back to hotel after Sweety reported pain in her back. Anjana and I left again for a walk uptil lake (around 7.00PM) and later did cycling there. Right at the junction of bridge and Lake, there is a Chicken Kebab point where you can buy some real tasty chicken tandoori and kebab items. I got some chicken packed for me and Sweety (all others were vegetarian). Uttam and Sweety resorted to Hotel paradise again for dinner due to clean and open space where Duggu was comfortable.

Day 4 –
I woke up in the morning and headed straight to Forest Department Office (opposite Al Baiq restaurant) to get permit to visit Berijam Lake. It is a simple process to get the permit. You should have an ID proof with you along with some cash. A form(available there itself) needs to be filled with detail of car and travelers and submitted there with some cash payment(for vehicle pass) as per your mode of transport (We paid about Rs 150 for our car permit). No charges for travelers.

We left the hotel by 9.00 PM and hit Astoria Restaurant for breakfast. The place is really crowded in the morning and so we had to wait. In the meantime, ladies with us found out a wholesale chocolate shop named ‘Lords’. It is right inside the Kodaikanal main Bus stand waiting complex. I remember we bought home-made chocolates from Ooty for about Rs 500/ kg, the same chocolates were available here for only Rs 250/kg. We bought some chocolates later in the evening.

Astoria though a good place again, had the same problem of quantity. The food was tasty but quantity as per the price was really less. We packed some food for lunch also. We paid about Rs 650 for having Masala Dosa and Puri sabji(4 plate packed also) with some coffee. We felt the place really expensive.

We reached the Forest check post which is right next to Moir Point (so take the same road as Day 3). We entered the deep dark forest which was really beautiful. We were a little upset with crazy drivers driving in that forest with one hand continuously on horn. We really felt the need of educating people about not blowing horn. It was mostly the Tamil Nadu numbered yellow plate(Taxi) cars. They were in some kind of hurry and most irritating part is that all of them had got some really loud horns installed in place of original company horns and when I said loud, they were really deafening. This was throughout Kodaikanal. Being in Bangalore, where you don’t get to hear so many horns even on a traffic signal, it was too much for us. To add, it was a single lane road so every time you have a car overtaking you or coming from other side, one of you have to get off the road.

We stopped at Silent valley which at the first look was really confusing as in what is this place. We went where everybody was going and then we found it to be beautiful. However, the story continues. There is way down the slope where nobody dares to go due to its feel like a horror movie set of forest (wrong turn). But when you walk down the slope, you find a small water stream flowing down the valley like a waterfall. The thing is you will be at the top of the waterfall and not under it. And it is actually scary but equally beautiful and a must not miss type place.

We drove further and reached Berijam Lake which was truly awesome. Set amidst mountains from three sides or say all sides, the lake was playing hide and seek with us and foggy cloud. We were carrying all camping stuff with us but tents and that day we really felt the need. It was raining in parts, which was good and bad both. You have to leave the car a little ahead and then walk down about 500 mts to reach the lake. By the time we reached the Lake front, rain stopped. We enjoyed food (we carried with us) and clicked several photographs in different angles possible. Please carry your own food and water as you will get here nothing. After about 2 hours, we said good bye to the place and drove back to Kodaikanal. Please note that the permit given to you will be collected by the forest department at the time of exit. So please don’t throw it after you get entry.

We reached our hotel by 4.30PM and all of us preferred some rest. We left again for last ritual of any trip which is shopping. We bought some chocolates, some oils and spices. Our last dinner was again at Hotel Paradise only as everybody voted for the place. Back at hotel, this night, we played some cards also we had bought on day 2.

Day 5 – Oh the pain begins
We left hotel and started our return journey by 9.30 AM. Plan was to visit Madurai before heading for Bangalore. We stopped in twice before reaching Maudrai by 1.00PM. A big disappointment was waiting for us in the face of closed doors of temple. The temple is closed between 12.30 and 4.30 PM. No choice left, we headed for lunch in Madurai only and then started return journey. Bangalore was about 433 kms at 2.45 PM when my Linea touched NH7. The road is completely free till Salem so you can really drive fast till then. But after Salem, suddenly there is a rush of vehicles on the road so your average speed comes down drastically.

Finally we reached back Bangalore by 9.30PM. We reached home by 11.00 PM after dropping Uttam and Sweety in JP Nagar and Banashankari.

Facts to share –

Bangalore to Kodaikanal – 480kms approx
Time – 9-10 hours
Road – Smooth throughout
Ideal number of days to spend – atleast 3 nights and 4 days
Best places to see – Berijam Lake(must see), Guna Caves, Silent Valley, Byrant Park, Kodai Lake and cycling at Kodai Lake
Best time to go -  Almost round the year
Hotel budget – Keep about 500-5000 per night as per your taste
Food to try – Try Tamil Nadu delicacies like Chicken Chettinadu
Adventure – Try stealing some pears
Must carry – Warm clothes and ear covers during cycling
Turn off – Terrible road condition inside Kodai town and blaring horns of Tamil Nadu registered Taxis.

All for now, I shall come back again soon with my next experience