Tuesday, August 24, 2004




























Chunchi3


Chunchi1
The calm water pool just before the falls

The majestic Chunchi Falls
Multiselect didnt work :(
Oh Cool..I can multiselect and post. Wow!!! I dont have the patience to caption each of these...So I am just posting them together. (You are most welcome to caption them if you want)
On the Way
Sangam. Notice Dash Carrying his shoes on a stick
Goats Leap: Makedatu

Monday, August 16, 2004

Road Trippin'

I will keep this short, atleast shorter than my last blog. Primarily because after the last post people, some of them influential, decided that I was extremely jobless and I have been burdened with work ever since. Secondly, I promised not to disparage the one who gave me a lift, which being Nari, implies that the blog size will be cut in half.

To cut a long story short we started out on the bright and sunny last Saturday morning for a bike (+ car) trip to Mekedattu and Chunchi falls, somewhere around 100 kms from Bangalore, one customary hour late (This time me and Gokhs were the primary culprits). The couple of cars were of Jins' and Kapils'. Rest of the people had bikes, most of them being your regular pulsars and fieros. The notable exception was of course Deepak whose Enfield looked to be of the same vintage as the bike driven by Lawrence in Arabia. Also Himanshu made his grand entrance in his usual time, the very last moment. One thing about Hims is that he looks more like a biker than anyone else... at least his waistline does.

The first hour or so was spent in navigating the streets and heavy traffic of Bangalore and picking up people from Banashankari and adjoining areas (Seema, Rohan, Naveen). The actual biking therefore kinda started only after the Metro at Kanakpura road. From there each vehicle was more or less on its own with Nari trying to prove that his Pulsar can overtake Jins' Zen at 100 km/hr. Biju took a stop in between to pursue his passion for capturing lotuses and lilies on silver bromide. Others utilized the stop for eating Haldirams' savouries and biscuits. All in all the drive continued without any major incidents till Kanakpura, reaching where Nari gave me a brief about the political history of the place (basically Deve Gowda and some female called Tejaswini fighting it out... nice sight that would be). In between Gokhs' and Hims' bikes were caught by the authorities for having drivers without licenses, Richa in Hims' bike and Seema in Gokhs'. The funny thing is that both of them have valid licenses which they forgot to carry.

After hustling around the dusty streets of Kanakpura for some time, we got our breakfast packed and the bikes filled with fuel and continued with our journey. This track (from Kanakpura to Mekedattu and Chunchi) was of an entirely different hue from highway. The road was flanked on the sides by tilled fields and grasslands with an occasional hillock rising up at some distance. Moreover the road was completely empty and yet in a good condition. What is the probability of that happening in India? All in all the drive was one of idyllic ambience and though it was easy to rip off at speeds of 100+ most of us chose to cruise. Soon we reached the diversion we had to take to reach the Chunchi falls (Naris info: The river is Arkavathy. Moreover, isn't BDA in some shit because of a layout of this name?). In between Sumit, Gokhs and some others reclaimed their simian ancestery by climbing some trees at the roadside much to the amusement and glee of the locals there.

Reaching Chunchi I thought "Jisne bhi bola tha yahan waterfall he usse bahut maroonga, yahan to water bhi nahin he, fall kahan se aayega" (My verbatim thoughts all throughout are slightly edited since I expect honorable citizens of the society to read this. Those more knowledgeable may put in their choice adjectives at will). People however had started going down and I duly followed them thinking (in Hindi) that so many people wouldn't be making fools of themselves. Luckily, for me after some distance down I could hear the water crashing against the rocks and some distance ahead finally saw the waterfall. Rest of my time was spent in trying to reach the foot of the falls via various approach routes and gazing at the waterfalls thinking things like "Where is this much force generated?”, "Why is the water green?" etc etc. Also everybody, me later than others, had their afternoon brunch here consisting of the packed Rava idlis and Masala dosas from Kanakpura. Finally, after almost an hour at the falls it was time to move on. I saw Biju and Nari getting to the top via a more circuitous and difficult route and alongwith Seema and Gokhs decided to follow their example. Unluckily for us there was absolutely no marked trail to the top and hence we had to face two false leads as well as hordes of cacti and thorny shrubs before finding a rather long winded way up. On reaching top almost everybody had left, with Nari waiting for me, and Deepak telling us that we will meet at Sangam. On a side note what is the probability that two brothers will separately make a trip to the same place on the very same day. Nari and his brother defied those odds.

On a trip of this length it is inadvertent that there would be a few mishaps and slipups. Till this point we were lucky not to have any such incident. However the optimism was short lived. Just leaving the Chunchi diversion into the main road, Hims bike gave away refusing the most heartfelt coaxings of the owner for starting. What had supposedly happened was that Richa was driving the bike and she lost her balance causing a minor fall (Incidentally some time before someone commented that Hims bike looked good on Richa… which she then had duly corrected). However, the mishandling caused the fuel to get slightly rich and only Gokhs' pushing allowed the richness to go down the throat oops carburettor of the bike. Gokhs' commented wryly that "Thank God, Mere bike ke saath kuch nahin hua". Of course, nobody denies his lack of prescience.

As we moved a couple of kilometers ahead we saw Jins car as the center of all attraction (with a fluroscent yellow color you can scarcely avoid to be ...). A word now on the driving technique of Jins. He is evidently fond of curves and sharp ones at that. Earlier in the morning we (me and Nari) had witnessed Jins going around potholes with a sharpness and elan that even Schumacher (the Michael variety) would be proud of. However, his front tires did not like his antics and gave out on a rather particular juncture causing the car to swivel around the track tracing out a total of 360 degrees (this is hearsay ... actual figure lies between 180 degrees to 720 degrees). Rajesh and Abhishek, being first hand victims, were trying to milk as much popular mention out of the situation by claiming things like "our weight at the back made the car stay up, rather than topple". Just as the front wheel was replaced, Gokhs and Seema ride in with the news that there back brakes have gone kaput thanks to another near miss which the bike did not like very much. As a result, they had to drive the rest of the trip at a rather sedentary speed (I am sure much to the relief of the rest of the gang).

We managed to reach the approach to the Sangam (the place where Cauvery and Arkavathy meet) without any further incidents. The approach was down a hill and the road was full of sharp turns. Just as Nari took the first turn a Yamaha bike powered past us with great flourish and panache. I then said to Nari, "Yaar, isse zindagi se pyar nahin he kya". Emerging just around the bend, we saw a jeep slowly moving and on the side the same Yamaha lying on the ground while the riders were ruefully rubbing their ankles. Nari could not help but burst out laughing and I basked in the glory of my foresight. In the same stretch Deepak also decided to test his luck by trying to do a Fangio at Nurburgring, straightening out three curves into one. The bullet refused to bank under the weight of Deepak because of which he continued to move straight into the mud track and bushes wherein he finally regained control. Much to the astonishment of me and nari, Prachi was laughing throughout his whole episode. And just as we reached the Sangam, the bacchas’ (Anil and Sumit) came with the news that they too had a fall, with the result that Anils' ankle was twisted and Sumit bike's headlights were cracked.

To reach Mekedattu we had to cross the river Sangam and go around 4-5 km downstream along the edge of the river. The water at Sangam just came to my waist and the only pain crossing the river was taking off my shoes to ensure that they do not become wet and putting them on again. Hims found out this long staff that we both used for carrying our shoes across the water. On the other side, half of the gang took the bus and the other decided to walk. After walking for some distance me, Hims, Sooraj and Sumit decided to make our lives more interesting by forsaking the beaten path and took the path across the hills. After some meandering in the hills we soon realised the futility of the entire exercise and joined the main group. Prachi and Richa also had some brainwave and decided that time was ripe to burn off extra calories and hence decided to jog rather than walk.

At Mekedattu the river goes through a stretch of uneven rock formations causing the water to gush through at incredible speeds. In the main section water falls from two perpendicular rock faces causing an immense vortex at the foot. The speed of the water was such that when we dipped our feet in it, we had to hold on to the rocks for the fear of being washed away. Also to reach the water we had to climb down an almost vertical rockface, next to which were the rapids, giving a person very little room for error. I went down via another way though I later managed to climb up the rockface with much help from Deepak. In fact, the other way was not any easier, just slightly less scary. We returned from Mekedattu sitting atop the bus in what proved to be a very bumpy ride and with Rajesh regaling us with sings to "suit the mood at the moment". Gokhs' rather adventurously decided to dangle along the bus’s backside. Reaching Sangam we spent some time in the water, those who knew swimming showing off their prowess, those who did not just standing there lapping it all up. Rajesh and Hims now formed the "Mutual appreciation of each others' swimming club". Soon however it was time to get out of the water and prepare for heading back to Bangalore.

After drying ourselves and changing into dry clothes we had a rather late lunch consisting of Rotis, jam, pickle and mixture (and my Bhelpuri that Raju thought I made impromptu... am I one to refuse free accolades?). Also just as we had changed, it started drizzling slightly after an entirely sunny and spotless day threatening to bring to realization the unpleasant aspects of Murphy's law. Thankfully, nature spared us. In addition, Nari who had till now gone without any mishap lost his bike keys. He had given them to Richa and forgotten about them. I think Richa managed a wiggle a choc out of Nari.

The drive back was rather quieter with everyone tired. And most importantly we had no further mishaps. Reaching the outskirts, we bid adeiu to Rohan, Naveen and Seema and moved on to Talisma. Hims managed to pull one last stunt by getting lost in Malleswaram with Richa. Wonder why and where Malleswaram came in between Jayanagar and Sadhashivanagar? Kapil also managed to get lost thus holding up people whose bags were in his car.

And I. Went home after an icecream at Baskin Robbins. Ordered biriyani from Nandhini. Took a hot water bath. Ate. Slept till next morning 12:00 noon.

_Sriyansa

Disclaimers:

1. All thoughts are my own.

2. All offenses are intended.

3. Any lapses in memory are to be blamed on the heavy workload in office and not on my memory.

Tuesday, August 10, 2004

Meharban..kadradan...sahiban...

hindustan...pakistan...nadan..adan...
Dil tham ke baithiye...
aaa raha hai,
aapke saamne,
aapka apna.....
Jo aapko dega....
Bachcha, aaj dharti hil jayegi...aasman kamp uthega,
bijlee kadkegi, dharti phategi...jab...
(ok will stop here as its becoming a kind of cranky).

Guys, Santhosh's penchant to make 16$ even better has resulted in 16$'s Web Log. There are several advantages (I know Deepak swears by them):
1. One stop repository of all the T Logs of past, present and future.
2. It allows us to manage the comments at one place. You know, how messy it becomes when somebody wants to add anything to what Sathosh has already written in his travel log...and how all those beautiful comments are lost.
3. Will allow us to share the spirit of 16$ with ppl outside CVL in a better way.

So I have posted all the Travel logs on which I could lay my hands on at: http://adventuresof16dollars.blogspot.com/
Still need to post the pics...somehow my picasa client is not working(can anybody help me here please)
Please let me know your blogger ids, so that I can add you as members, and then even you can post.

Regards
HimS
PS: Please go to the above link to post your comments. This mail is already posted there.
PPS: Santhosh, please fwd this to other 16$ members whom I have missed.

Monday, August 02, 2004

On Cloud Nine and Back ... The trek to Mullyangiri and Baba Budhan -- Sriyansa Das

So what is next ... I am back from the trek I was supposed to go and boy was it good ... you bet it was ....

Cloudy skies, misty mountains, gusty winds, verdant scenery we had it all. Added to it a heady dose of rain, leeches, dumbCs and foot-in-the-mouth incidents (with Gokhale and Himanshu these are inevitable) the weekend was definitely one to remember.

We started on Friday night, the start being delayed by the customary hour. I was rather surprised at the relatively short delay. Guess working in a company gives one some semblance of punctuality. I hope it did that to me. Anyway, we started off on a rather sedentary note with almost everyone hitting the dreams the moment the bus started to roll. Deepak had pre-DJed the songs to be played in our times on the bus and I have to say that the choices were impressive. I remember getting a single seat to myself and still tossing and turning trying to find the most comfortable postion to catch a wink or two. And just as I had (or it seemed so) the bus lurched a halt in front of the Chikmagalur bus station. Trivia freaks might recollect that it was this constituency that gave Indira Gandhi shelter after she was thrown out by the people in Rae Bareily. Anyway, I guess or rather hope that it is known more for its excellent coffee.

Coming back to our trekking expedition and finishing off the morning exigencies at the bus stop, the packing for the trip started. The first task was the picking of the sleeping bags. Biju and me did one of our 'chance pe dance' items and picked out a couple of decent bags early on. Anyway regardless of the bag one got the major problem was that of packing them in such a way that water could not get to them in these rainy days. Gokhale wrapped his one in a Dominoes polythene and with his blue jeans and properly tucked T-shirt looked more like the model pizza delivery man rather than a trekker. On a side note Gokhale had lent me his sweat pants thinking they would not look good on him. Turned out that those were better suited to the conditions than his impeccable Lee jeans. Just one of many faux pax by him. Himanshu came with an ingenious idea to wrap 3 polythenes so as to cover his sleeping bag. And most of us stuffed them into our huge backpacks. All in the spirit of deepak saying "There is nothing worse on a trek than having a wet sleeping bag". In hindsight nothing could be more true.

Wrapping off the breakfast and refilling our water bottles we were on the bus again to get to the point where we would start our trek. During the breakfast came to know that Biju was getting married, and to who else but Aruma, a news that left both Saniye and myself flummoxed at the breakfast table. Within minutes after leaving Chikmagalur bus station, we were in the mountains and could see the greenery of the coffee plantations by our side and the rising clouds on the mountains above. I do not remember the checkposts' name where we got down but what do remember the view from down there was awesome and at the same time was just a whiff of what was to follow. It was not raining but rather drizzling slightly. Backpacks loaded, jackets and raincoats tightened we set out. Rain had made the moutain soil into slippery clay at most places so we had place each step in a careful and calculating manner. Initially I (and some more people) has some problems in dealing with the slippery surface but soon got adjusted to it. The hill we were climbing was called Mullyangiri and from Nari's info it was the highest peak in the state of Karnataka. We had actually covered quite some distance uphill on the bus itself but a significant amount of climbing was left to be accomplished.

I kinda stuck to the front of the group and hence missed some of the action that must be happening at the back. But one incident stands out in my mind. Halfway through the climb we came across this rockface that must have been around 10 feet in height. Not finding any trail circumventing it, we decided that probably climbing it was the only option. Saniye was at the head of the group and how she managed to climb that thing I do not know. Biju managed it front of my eyes with some unhealthy stretching of his leg muscles. Prachi went in next with Biju holding her from the top and Sooraj pushing up her legs from below. Sooraj also accomplished the task somehow. I was the next and managed with Biju helping me from the top. But Sujai had other ideas. He decided that not everyone would be eager to take up so much pain and would have found a easier solution and managed to find, after some searching a trail which circumvented the rock face. We sat there panting while the entire group merrily ran a circle around the rock. I felt genuinely stupid. Moreover, Biju was saying things like if you are a man climb this rockface. Just wondering whom he was trying to prove himself a man to.

After more trekking uphill and some water breaks, we came across this wonderful alcove with a small temple. A rusty looking old tree covered entirely with green moss and lichen gave shade. Lilac flowers of some unknown genus completed the picture giving the whole setup the look and feel of Impressionist painting. In addition, the view of the valley below was nothing short of incredible from there. We were by now quite a some distance up and could see the meandering river running across the plains, the greenery of the forests and a small town (was it Chikmagalur??) at a distance ensconced in them. That is when the clouds underneath us cleared enough. At this stage we were very close to the top of the hill and continued to climb on till we stumbled across a couple of caves. After some initial exploring, we left them and continued uphill. I was return later to these caves after Shankar shown pictures of the amazing rock striations on the walls of these caves. In fact, one fabulous rock layering looked like a Japanese Kabuki mask to my eyes. The cave itself was very low with me having to usually move on my knees or haunches.

Nothing and I mean nothing can really describe the feeling I got on reaching the top. There was the structure rising out of the mist that look like some kind of Paleolithic Stonehenge with stairs leading to its mysterious interiors (It later turned out be one of those fortress kind of walls). Wind was howling, yes literally howling as the clouds swathed everything around us in the mist that gave each of our physical embodiments an ephemeral nature. Forms became undefined as I squinted to look some feet ahead. Taking the stairs, we reached inside the compound and were pleasantly to see a functioning temple inside with people actually staying there. A thought struck me then and would come back to me later as we moved on about how these people would be feeling staying at this remote place.

We circled around the whole compound while waiting for Santhosh and others to climb and decide upon the future course of the trek. Before they came in Sooraj spotted a snakeling (I still wonder if it was a snake or a retarded earthworm?). Some photos of the snake and Himanshu wanting a bottle and few helpers to capture a 12 cm long snake it was decided that we take shelter for the day at the temple itself. In addition, from this point the fear of snakes manifested itself in Hims mind to an extent that he had to go to ludicrous lengths to pacify them. The priest had allowed us to use the hall provided we maintain some decency and keep our shoes away from the shrine. We were soon sequestered in the main hall of the temple, sitting on our mats, devouring the packed chapattis with pickle, jam, mixture or anything else we could put our hands upon. After this moment, the group was in a constant state of ingestion with biscuits, mixture, tea, coffee (and sugar in case of Hims) constantly reaching our stomachs. I fell asleep for some time inside a sleeping bag, without a zipper, which caused me to lash out my legs much to the discomfort of Prachi, and man did see berate me enough for this. And by the way I also found out that Prachi and Neha were both from Rourkela (you know, my hometown). On hearing this, for the nth time (n -> infiniti), I realized world is a small place. On further hearing they were Carmelites, a further remembrance of the days I used to (ok not correct entirely …) ogle at girls and curse St. Paul guys came rushing back. How weird memories are?? At the slightest hint, they just inundate you.

After an hour or so of sleeping and another meal of rice and rasam (which I did not partake being full) junta sat down to pass their time playing DC. When guessing movies people were saying things like “__________ of ____________” and Deepak always cracked the obnoxious joke, “Abbey Dash tere ko bula rahe hain”, while I was trying to sleep inside my rather comfortable sleeping bag … now a zipped one. After some time I realized the futility of the whole endeavor of sleep and jumped head on into the ongoing game of DC. I announced my participation by giving others things to act like “Requiem for a Dream” and “The Great Gatsby” and acting things like “lag” and “synonym of” in ways that seemed completely natural to me but were immediately dubbed by the group as IIT DC techniques. Baffles me. I mean if you show 2 fingers horizontal, parallel, one on top of another, what else can it mean other than “equal to”?? And of course there was this classic act where Gopika was trying Sooraj to guess the name of the restaurant in 3rd block Koramangala where they went for dinner. After some obscene number of hand gestures and Gopika’s frustration at Sooraj, the movie turned out to be “Steel Magnolia”, Magnolia being the name of the restaurant in question.

In between the DC and dinner, some of us went out into raging gale sometime in the evening. The venture outside was mainly due to the natural causes rather than any daredevil attempt to go out in the wind and pit our strength against it. However, the weather outside was much worse than earlier in the day. It was drizzling slightly and the wind was much more stronger, strong enough to blow away some instances of the Homo sapiens class into oblivion.

Dinner again was the usual romping affair with Hims putting sugar into all kinds of things to make them more edible (his opinion). Some more tired acting and guessing later we all were ready for bed. Rolling out the mats in the floor we snuggled into our sleeping bags to drift away into a night of dreams. Or were there any??

During our afternoon nap, Sujai had proved himself a master in the art of snoring. From Santhosh’s account in the morning, Sujai was the clear winner in the snoring competition with me and Sooraj giving a semblance of competition to him. I do not know about Sooraj but I am sure I do not snore. Anyway also from Santhoshs’ account of the night Abhishek was saying some things like somebody is opening a polythene bag and that I was virtuoso cycling in my sleeping bag. Wonder when Santhosh slept.

Very unlikely, I opened my eyes by myself in the morning. After brushing my teeth and I came back to find Raghu poking a sleeping Hims with his toe. On asking him what he was doing he replied “I am pinging him to see if he is alive”. Henceforth we forgot Raghu and were introduced to Pingu. Sometime later Raghu took a fascination to an antique rifle (or was it a musket?) hanging in the walls and wanted a couple of photos with it. The helper of the temple correctly identified him as Tiger Prabhakaran. I thought he meant the LTTE supremo but it seems there is a Kannada hero of that name. I keep on telling Nari that he can become a Kannada superstar but he does not listen to me. My beliefs were reinforced. Raghu was henceforth to be called only Tiger Pingu Prabhakaran aka TPP. Me started wondering what CPP stood for??

Anyway putting our feet into shoes wet from exposure to rain, hail, snow and god knows what during the night we set out down the hill on the second part of the trail. Our eyes were now adjusted to a visibility of 10 metres or so and it was intermittently drizzling so the ground was slippery and we were putting each step with care. More so as we were moving downhill. I broke away again to the front of the group with TPP, Saniye. Biju, Aruma and Shankar. I had my first experience with a leech on this part (more on leeches later) and my first slip crashing my bum on the rocky ground but still alive and kicking. The experience of trekking here was more like walking through the Scotland of Braveheart or the green misty environs of Lothorien in Fellowship of the ring. Quite some distance of the journey was on the edge of a cliff which sloped down into a deep forest that was purported to be tiger territory. My thoughts while walking through that part were like “Don’t slip. Don’t slip…”

Somewhere during this period, TPP saw a snake. It was obviously not one but he was petrified and insisted on informing others at the back before moving forward. Now I was without my contacts and only make out a vaguely make out something around a feet long and green in color. I thought it is probably a grass snake but then whats the big deal. After a minute or two of waiting, I decided to have a closer look and then found out it was a rather large blade of grass. Nevertheless, I had moved quite a distance ahead of the main group and very soon reached the end of the trek at a checkpost. Since the main group was still some distance away from the destination, we contented ourselves by gorging on chocs and guavas’ which I had carried the previous day and had insisted on distributing this morning so that my backpack weighed less.

After the main group arrived, we realized that we had told the bus driver to wait at another post 7 km down the road. However, luckily for us the driver applied his brains and first came to this post. Dumping our backpacks inside the bus we climbed onto the top to admire the scenery as the vehicle skirted around carefully on the mountainous terrain. Another first for me. Winding down the road, we were on our way to the spot where we could start the second leg of the trek leading to Baba Budhan. Incidentally, Baba Budhan is the one who got coffee out of Arabia into Chikmagalur and I am sure his shrine should be one to visit for any half decent coffee connoisseur. We had the mountain on one side of the road while the other had coffee and eliachi plantations on the downward slopes.

Going down we came across a waterfall (a man made one) with a chai stall in its side, where we got down, and took at few snaps. Someone then gathered some information that pointed to another waterfall a furlong away and bigger one at that. Now I do not think any of us knew how much exactly is one furlong is but guessed that it should not be more than a kilometer or slightly more than that. Anyway, we went for it. Sounded too irresistible. As usual, I kind of stuck with the avant garde. We must have trekked a km and a half before we saw and heard the first traces of the river. Soon we were climbing down to it. Also we could see a small waterfall and guessed that it was the one we came in search of.

Immediately Deepak went down into the water and Biju and me were testing the waters to see if we could also get in. At this time I suddenly realized that leeches were probably holding their version of Woodstock at the very same place. And Saniye already had one on her ankle. Aruma and Saniye rushed back. I wanted to stick around for slightly longer having came so much distance. Anyway, I also found a couple of leeches trying to get inside my socks. I now have a theory that states that leeches lack the sense of smell. I turned around and saw that Deepak had disappeared. I thought he had decided to take a dip in the water. Suddenly saw his head bob up with an expression which baffled me. Actually, he was like 20 feet away and I was still without my contacts. He went down and again his head came up in a expression which looked like he was gasping for air. Now I knew something was wrong. I called Biju and he realized the gravity of the situation and immediately went forward to help Deepak. However, by now Deepak seemed to have recovered himself and was swimming out to safety. Safety being first we moved as fast as possible from that place towards the bus. The trailing group was appearing and we pushed them back saying no point going there. Too many leeches and too deep water. Later Deepak told that there was a sudden depression underneath the falling water. Suddenly the chapter in my standard ninth geography textbook on water erosion came into full focus. We trekked back realizing always that the place was teeming with leeches and more leeches.

After coming back to the road we de-leeched ourselves by checking inside every piece of clothing. Still, Santhosh later said that he found a leech at his house. On a side note, Neha and leeches are a deadly combo. The height of the situation being when she mistook a small blade of grass for a leech and was jumping and stomping her foot trying to shake it off. It seems she took a photo of a leech to show what kind bloodsuckers were after her. As for me, I found two inside my left shoe and three more at various positions in my body. (I am sure you are not interested in the anatomic details). Another small detail. The waterfall we had searched for in the leech infested territory was missed by everybody but Biju, Hims and Shankar. Luckily Shankar had his absolutely brilliant digicam and so he took some decent videos and photos of the same to spare us some of the agony. And Hims got back leeches and as soon as he found on his waist start bawling like a 10 month old kid who is hungry and finds howling as his only form of expression. How true is the adage “There is a child in each of us”.

We started out towards the starting position of the trek towards the shrine of Baba Budhan sitting atop the rented minibus. When we reached there people who had already changed clothes were loathe to continue the trek in fear of spoiling the only pair of clean clothes they had. So some of them decided to continue to the shrine on the bus while we trekked our way up. Now some idiot had told that the trek to Baba Budhan was on relatively flat ground. As we trekked up the hill, I was running out of breath and could not wait to reach the flat track where the going will be easier. Alas! It never came. More than that, the path became steeper and the trails less distinct as we went up. But somehow we reached the top of the hill and from there the shrine which was to be our final destination for the trip.

Drenched to the skin by now we were eager to get out of our wet garments. Most of us managed to change in a dignified manner. Hims was however was upto his usual tricks he made the last seat of the bus a curfew zone for around fifteen minutes as he was doing god knows what. Finally, everybody was changed and we started down the hills towards Chikmagalur to have something as a late lunch. On the way, we bid our farewell to the hills talking the last couple of snaps. Reaching Chikmagalur we went to this place which served something called “Open Dosa”. After a year in Bangalore I had not heard of any such creation. Eager to try one almost every body ordered one of those. Turned out that it was pretty heavy and sufficed for a lunch and tiffin rolled into one.

Finally in the bus, dry and filled, it was time for DC again. The highlights of this session being Biju getting to my acting of Bekhudi as “back” and “Udi” or someone getting Tehzeeb from “The” and “Zip”. As they say, great minds think alike. However, around nine we had run out of movies and were so tired that we laid low in each of our seats waiting to reach Bangalore and go to bed to give rest to our tired limbs. It was finally around midnight when the bus stopped in front of the Talisma office and within half an hour I was in home, bidding adieu to my trekmates, trying to go to sleep while Ankit and Ajay wanted every single detail of the trip.


_Sriyansa

--

PS:: Life was usual the next day. Photos were put up in share and experiences were shared. General agreement being that this was amongst the best treks by the 16$ trekkers.