Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Jumbo Love

Our next stop was Pinnawela. The elephant orphanage here is one of its kind in the world.

Among the Giants

Minefield victim
The inhabitants are the sick, orphaned, wounded and maimed. Take the three legged jumbo, for example. He lost his leg in a mine field blast a few years ago. Unable to survive in the wild, he was brought here to be nursed back to health. He even had a prosthesis fixed up using the funds donated by a wealthy European. Unfortunately, the leg didn’t stay put. Now, he manages with a limp.

Fun and frolic in the river

There are 70 odd elephants in the orphanage.The funds for the food, hygiene, and health requirements are generated from the entrance fees of the place and from the sale of exquisite craft products such as paper, coasters, elephant figurines etc. made from, hold your breath, elephant dung!








For more Pics visit : ElephantOrphanage and ElephantDungShop
                                                                                                                  To Be Contd...

Monday, October 4, 2010

A Break in the Clouds!

August 26, 2010

We left Camelot early on Thursday morning with a packed breakfast of fruit and bread (Unfortunately, that’s the only option at all the hotels in Lanka for us veggies except for the places like Kandy and Nuwera Eliya which have good tamilian restaurants).

By this time Henry had discovered the fact that we were honeymooning and had made the effort to book a really good room and to alert the staff at the Sigiriya hotel. This really made Sigiriya the highlight of our trip.
Beautifully made-up bed @ Sigiriya



Simha Giri (Sigiriya)

My first sighting of the 500ft high monolith- Sigiriya (Simha Giri or Lion Rock) was a beautiful lake filled with lily blooms and the great rock rising like a sun in the background; it was awe inspiring.
Sigiriya was a fortress of the exiled king Kashyap in the 5th century B.C. He had committed patricide for the throne and was in ill favor with his people and the Buddhist religious leaders. He required many safeguards against his numerous enemies, so he built his palace on top of this rock and further protected it by building walls around it. The outer wall is 16ft high with a crocodile filled moat in the middle and an equally high inner wall. Only the foundations of these can be seen today.
Outer wall, moat, Inner wall.
There are intricate and extensive pleasure gardens with water fountains and swimming pools on either side of the main pathway leading to the steps up the monolith.

The unique feature of this place was the hydraulic pressure system which was used for the fountains and also to pump water 500ft high to the king’s palace. An engineering marvel, the working and design of the pressure stations remain a mystery to the best minds in UNESCO even today.


Drip Ledges
As we were trying to digest this fact, we came across another interesting feature. A niche meant for a statue of the Buddha in the rock face at the foothill. This niche has two successive drip ledges which are nothing but abrupt breaks in the rock’s slope.; the function of which is to protect the statue by preventing rain water from dripping into the area below the overhang and marring the beautiful frescoes on the walls behind the statue



Babylonian concubines of King Kashyap


We began the backbreaking climb and were totally out of breath halfway up the extremely steep steps, where a wall full of amazingly lifelike life size paintings of Kashyap’s many concubines was a welcome break. Distinctive features of face like the eyes and the color show that they were of many different races- Sri Lankan, Mongolian, Babylonian, African etc.

Lion's Paw Staircase








Further up, there is a Lion’s paw shaped entryway. The face of the lion too was carved into the rock but it is not easily visible due to erosion over the centuries.







The palace on the top used to be an impregnable wonder. The king did not carve any steps up to it; instead, he used to order his underlings to pull him up by ropes; which was one of the many defensive techniques employed for his safety. BUT, we are no kings, so no underlings to pull us up. We still went up. Wonder how? No big mystery here- we just used the modern steel staircase courtesy the Sri Lankan Archeological Department.
The two notable features of the palace are: a beautifully carved stone throne and a natural swimming pool for the King. 


The view from the top!



The amazing sea of green 360° around the rock made the punishing climb worth our while. The breathtaking view from the top is the best thing about Sigiriya.
Feeling completely wiped out, we relaxed a little by spending some time splashing about in the king’s pool.



On our way down, we came across the king’s audience hall. A huge rock was cut in half and laid down so that the flat edge forms the upper platform for the king and his ministers. Those who sought an audience with the kind could approach from the lower level. As we were checking out this neat little piece of work, out of the blue a hawker approached us; holding a jewelry box and proposing a deal- if we could figure out how to open the box we could have it for free. Very much interested, but short on cash since we weren’t planning on doing any shopping that day, we agreed to give it a try.

On pushing, prodding and prying the box umpteen times in n different directions, we gave up. The guy then demonstrated the trick, showing us the cleverly hidden groove that unlocks the box’s mechanism and quoted SLR 4000 as the price. Vashu haggled the price down to 2500, expecting him to refuse. Wonder of wonders- he snapped it up! We thus became the proud owners of a wooden elephant who had a secret chamber in his belly.


For more pics visit : Srilanka Sigiriya
                                                                                                                        To be Contd...

Monday, September 27, 2010

Sri Lanka - First Day, First Show

Anywhere but there!” exclaimed my dad when Vashu and I told him about our painstakingly researched Sri Lankan honeymoon itinerary. No sooner did we convince both sets of parents that we weren’t suicidal to think of honeymooning in a war-torn country, we started getting disdainful reactions from everyone who heard of our choice of place. 
          “Sri Lanka mein kya hai?” asked Varsha. Rekha tried putting it a bit more delicately- “Did you take enough time to decide on a good place or not? Don’t be in a hurry; it’s after all a once in a lifetime opportunity!”

Both Vashu and I badly wanted to prove all the naysayers wrong. But I only hoped our "Great Expectations” didn’t turn out to be as drab as a Dickensian one.

Sri Lanka was completely a trip of firsts for both Vashu and I. Our first time on board a flight, first time abroad and not to forget our first few memorable days purely in each others arms.

Landing at the Bangaranayake International Airport at Katunayake, Sri Lanka, the first thing that struck us was the cleanliness. I’d never seen such a clean and well maintained public space in all my time in India. So used to large crowds everywhere, the airport seemed surprisingly less crowded.

Henry with his Pride & Joy



We met Henry, our great guide cum chauffer at the exit and promptly fell in love with his supremely comfy Toyota Corolla with its equally great number plate (WP JS 7878).













August 25, 2010

The first stop was Negombo, a city on the west coast, slightly north of Colombo.
We checked into the Camelot beach hotel and were led into a room that was, to put it kindly, uninspired. Burnt sienna and cobalt blue combination is really not my thing! 
Going down to the hotel restaurant, Vashu nearly had a fit seeing the buffet price tag- a whopping SLR 1300 per head! “Par kya kare? Bhook bhi to koi chees hoti hai!” 
Moral of the story- Look for food/ internet/ and anything else you require outside the hotel if you don’t need burnt pockets.

Bridge on River Maadhu

Fishing Boats, Negombo





Touring Negombo city was off-putting. Nothing much to see or do here. I could see our Great Expectations crumbling and could almost hear my friends loud “I told you so!”


Then came the silver lining to our dark clouds- Sigiriya, a world heritage site.
                                                                                                                                                                          To be Contd...





Written By: Aarabhi
Photography By: Vasistha

Monday, May 3, 2010

Bhoga Nandeshwara - A weekend trip near Bangalore

Author: AARABHI
Photography: VASISTHA

"Shall we go out this Sunday?" my fiancée asked me. I said yes (who wouldn't?).

We decided to surf the net for a suitable spot and he sent me a link of a blog on Bhoganandeeshwara temple. The moment I laid my eyes on the temple photo, I was sold!

So, the destination decided, we left Hebbal around 8 am on a breezy April day and wound our way along the airport highway on our bike. A wide wide road uncluttered by Bangalore traffic led us to the Airport turn-off on the left. A little past this and past the enchanting but unfinished Jain temple which is hard to miss we reached a left turn leading towards Nandi hills.

Traveling along this road, we passed charming villages and grape orchards with the farmers selling the grapes by the roadside. Both the seedless black grapes and the green ones (with the seeds) are available in mouth-watering colors and quantities. You just might need to bargain for the best price and buy it on your way back home as it'll be tiring to lug it along on the outing.

This road leads to a T junction where we took a right towards the temple following a helpful signboard of The Archeological Survey of India

The temple itself dates back to the Chola period with its age approximating to 1300 years. 
A fort-like outer wall encloses a huge courtyard with a driveway leading straight to an arch of beautiful stonework. 
What catches the eye is, a couple of rows of stone chariot wheels arranged as if awaiting a chariot to alight on them any minute!
A "Mahanavami Dibba", in ruins, but being restored, lies next to these wheels. It was used for utsavas and such gatherings in the golden days.
We espied a small kalyani with steep steps next to the dibba and eagerly headed towards it only to find green sludgy bog at the bottom of the structure. 
The other side of the driveway holds a kutty “Darbar hall”. Still being restored, it is not a pretty sight, but particular features catch the eye such as the popular motif of the Cholas, sculpture of “The Lion”.
Entering the arch, we came to an inner courtyard. The one commendable thing is that the whole temple complex is remarkably clean. No garbage or unsightly graffiti in sight. This came as a pleasant surprise to us. The main temple at the centre holds stunning masonry. The pillars in front of the sanctum-sanctorum are especially beautiful. A narrow passage for “Pradakshina” around the sannidhi has wall carvings from Shaivite mythology.
 


We got busy clicking our way through these beauties and proceeded to photograph the temple “Gopuram”. 
A “Kamateshwara Temple” beside a quaint old well held a small but amazingly life-like Nandhi”.
The “Apita Kuchamba Temple” dedicated to the heavenly consort of Lord Shiva, goddess Durga, is also in the vicinity.

Other structures in the courtyard include the “Tulabhara Mantapa” and the “Vasantha Mantapa”. 
The best feature of this temple is the “Shringi Thirtha”. It is a big kalyani with steep cut steps. It is said that the Dakshina-Pinakini (South Pennar River) flows from this pond. It is a masterful engineering work. The geometry and exact proportions of the square pool make the modern architectural techniques seem like mere child’s play.
After breaking our fast beside the unfortunately dry Shringi Thirtha, we headed back out of the temple only to catch sight of these amazing birds in the outer compound!

The Hoopoe on the tree led me on a merry chase across the courtyard, abandoning my fiancée to his own devices. I would stop to focus and it would fly off to a different tree the next minute!
The White-cheeked Barbets had a neat little cavity nest in an almond tree. It looked like the busy couple was feeding a flock of little ones as they flitted in and out of the nest rapidly allowing me only a few misplaced shots of them.

A pair of sparrows, a really rare sight in Bangalore was also a treat for my camera.


Muddenhalli- the birthplace of Bharatratna Sir M Visveswariah, is just a couple of kilometers from the temple.

This village has the old hose of Sir M V which has been converted into a small museum.
We enquired our way to the building only to find the board “State Bank of Mysore”!
On entering we realized that the branch entrance is through the front hall of the house with the indoor steps leading to the first floor.
This anomaly didn’t make much sense until we realized that Sir M V was this bank’s founding father!
His century old passbook of SBM is framed and proudly displayed in the museum.

Numerous felicitations and gifts received by Sir M V, including the much acclaimed Bharat
Ratna are also displayed.
Other things to be seen are his book collection, lots of articles published about him in newspapers, and other small but fascinating details about his life and activities.

His samadhi is next door to the museum and is a very peaceful place with a neat little park around it.

All in all, it was an informative visit. A must see for those wishing to know more about the great visionary.

Directions:

  • We started at 8am from Hebbal and drove a non-stop motorcycle marathon along the highway.
  • We took a left turn from the main road about 12kms past the “Airport turn-off”. A direction board saying “Nandi Hills” is the landmark for the turning.
  • This road leads to a T-junction and a board directed us to the right towards B temple. The temple is about 15km from the Chikkaballapur main road.
We reached the temple around 9 or 9.30am, so it is an hour and half’s drive from Hebbal.

What?
An ancient temple (Bhoganandeeshwara temple), a museum ( House of Sir M Visveswariah converted now into a Museum in his memory).

Where?
About 50km from Bangalore. At the foothills of Nandi Hills.

Who?
Suitable for the solitary traveler seeking solitude to a large family or friends group, including couples.

When?
Best time of the year- Sept/Oct when the rainfall would have ensured a full Kalyani.
Otherwise, anytime is fine.

To Do:

Admire fantastic sculpture and understand a great man whose thinking was far ahead of his time.

Not to Do:

Sully the painstakingly carved sculptures and defile the sacred surrounds.



Check out http://picasaweb.google.com/vasistatravel/BhogaNandeshwara for more pics on BhogaNandeshwara

Saturday, April 3, 2010

Manchinbele Lake - A weekend trip near Bangalore

Manchinbele Lake
Author: Aarabhi
Photography: Vasistha

My fiancée and I left home (in B’lore) a little late (around 7.30 a.m.) in the morning on a hot March day and reached the lake at 8.40 a.m.; a ride of about 25kms from the kengeri, rajarajeshwari arch.

 We sped along the Bangalore-Mysore highway till the Rajarajeshwari Dental Hospital was in sight and turned right beside it into a narrow lane till we came upon the “Doddaladmara” or “The Big Banyan Tree”. A left turn here and a few minutes more of riding brought us to the “Chandrappa Circle”. One more left at the circle and we followed the road till we reached the beautiful Manchinbele reservoir.


  
    Though small and not an engineering marvel, the dam is nonetheless charming. The reservoir and its surrounds have a refreshing vista with the blue blue water amidst the green green hills and the blue blue sky above.




A leisurely stroll around the water’s edge brought us to a pile of boulders where we parked ourselves for some much needed nourishment and conversation. Snacks and drink demolition completed, we whipped out our cameras and began exercising out fingertips.


A lot of pussyfooting around for the perfect shot of shy birds and shyer fiancée, I wrapped up my cam and we headed back home after a short visit to this enchanting and idyllic place.




Travelling Guide


What?
It's a small dam and reservoir fit for a day's outing from Bangalore.

Where ?
It is about 40KMs from the city centre(Majestic), on a cross road off Mysore road travelling towards Mysore and 12KMs from "The Big Banyan Tree".

Who?
It's perfect for couples and small families looking for a quiet and intimate time together.

When?
   Time of the year: Excepting the monsoon season when the approach roads might be slippery and   treacherous, the lake is beautiful the year around.
   Time of the day: Very early in the morning (6.30 to 8 a.m.). The weather is breezy and cool around this time with the rising sun’s light being diffused. In other words- perfect for photography.

To Do:
Stroll, climb, trek, birdwatch, and picnic.









Plenty of birdlife to be seen here. From water birds to Bulbuls and Wagtails. A nice grassy lawn at the water’s edge makes for the perfect picnic spot. It grows much hotter as the day proceeds and there is no shelter around; so an umbrella or a car is preferable for shade. 
For the well connected: The dam itself is a prohibited area and entry is restricted for visitors without special permission. Boating might be an option if you can catch the “Theppa” users.

Not to Do:
Litter!
No plastics or bottles left behind to mar the pristine beauty of this place, please!

Stay on after dark!
The place is not completely safe (lack of light, unsafe people around) after nightfall.
Preferably finish having fun and go back home before dusk.

Play loud/raucous music!
This is a very peaceful and quiet place and loud music is as out of place here as snow is in hell.

Languages:
Kannada. Hindi and English are understood tolerably.

Food and Water:
No eateries or safe water sources here! Bring your own food and water.

Halt:
No hotels/ rest houses at the spot. There might be a resort (Kanva resort) close by (not confirmed).

Sanitation:
No facilities available, unfortunately!