Pykara is a picturesque picnic spot 20 km away
from Ooty on the road to Mysore. There are two things one could do here rather
simply sightseeing, taking a boat ride around the thick sholas on the Pykara reservoir
or walk down to waterfalls on the opposite side of dam on Ooty-Mysore main road.
I have visited the Pykara reservoir once while past the village couple of time,
the water level of the lake was at bottom when I was there on a midsummer day
or monsoon that suppose to begin.
I couldn't take a boat ride on the reservoir
and well you no need a reason why, as u could see in the picture above I took
from the road, the water and boat jetty were at lowest ever seem. The stairs leading down to boat jetty were
stared at developing a terror which really needs courage for a normal being to climb
up/down. But the sight of the deep reservoir
and fenced sholas beheld into mine and being summer holidays there were number
of tourist thronged the place drove through a brief forest woods.
The boat house runs by the TTDC (Tamil Nadu
Tourism & Development Corporation) is a secondary yet fabulous option to who
like boating in Ooty, other than the one mainstream rower into the town. There’s
also a restaurant attached to the boat house and the reservoir’s maximum level
were seem to measure through conceal of the soil bank. But I just wonder will
the reservoir behold its spellbound reveled through its dept rather watched or
riding boat at its FRL (full reservoir level).
The Pykara reservoir is also a river, which
is considered very scared by Todas – the tribal of Nilgiri (Blue Mountains).
The river rises at Mukurthi peak, flows through Pykara and Glen Morgan dams
forms an inherent part of the Pykara hydro-electric power plant – one of the
oldest in the country. Mukuthi is the second largest peak among the Nilgiri and
one of my dream was touching its foothill.
On the picture above u could see a herd of buffaloes grazing on the other side of the reservoir. Buffalos are the main livelihood of
Todas, who also does crop business these days, breeding of buffaloes and milking
and making butter were their source then. The buffaloes named after the Toda’s were
a unique breed and genetically isolated population among the Indian breeds of buffaloes confined to the Nilgiris. Apart Todas, other communities such as Badagas
and Kotas also maintain buffaloes in small numbers.
The Pykara waterfall is another wonderful
place to visit, where many Indian films shot their duets and action here. But the
path to the waterfall doesn’t seem disabled friendly so I could make a visit to
its roar, unlike my parents and cousins who enjoyed the scenic location. The photo
beneath was captured by them.