Colourful balls (comprising red, green n blue) and other goods hanging
outside a shop at a little town called Kavindapadi near Gobichettipalayam. During
our travel to Nilgiris, we stopped there to buy sweets and snacks to my dad’s
friend house near the town. I got to shoot few more interesting scenes there
which I would share later.
Monday, June 12, 2017
Saturday, June 10, 2017
Motherhood
One of our street dogs feeding
its pups on the roadside near our home. The picture was shot few months back
and the pups were well grown now to turn more than a dozen stray dogs in our
street. Couple of pups were taken by some to grow and the remaining joined with
the existing dogs. When we shifted to this street in 2015 there were few dogs, but
now has grown into a gang and sometime it does quite annoy at nights. Having a
pup at home it’s not possible to keep away the disturbance and when one starts
to bark the others join in barking war and sometime dad have to shoo them away
at night.
Last year, the same dog gave birth to 7 pups and no action has been taken to control the growth of dogs in our street. Two days back I saw couple of ladies feeding the many dogs with biscuits at the street end and one was fondly caressing the little ones, but I wonder do they really care about the numbers being increased? Only that day I saw all the dogs at a place and the numbers really put me awe.
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Last year, the same dog gave birth to 7 pups and no action has been taken to control the growth of dogs in our street. Two days back I saw couple of ladies feeding the many dogs with biscuits at the street end and one was fondly caressing the little ones, but I wonder do they really care about the numbers being increased? Only that day I saw all the dogs at a place and the numbers really put me awe.
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Thursday, June 08, 2017
Rubber Plantation @ Kanyakumari
During a visit to Kanyakumari and
while coming back from Pechiparai Dam, we stopped by a rubber plantation with
the road passes between the estate. It was the first time I got to see rubber
trees and each tree was tied by a coconut shell along the trunk and the top
layer has been removed for the rubber milk to flow into shell. The milk is
collected later and processed to form rubber sheets which left to dry for few
days before transported to various purposes and use.
Kanyakumari is the only district
in Tamil Nadu where rubber is produced and among the available of 19233
hectares of rubber plantation, 24020 tonnes of rubber is produced annually. Though
Kerala is the leading rubber producer in India, Tamil Nadu contributes 3% of
the total natural rubber production in India, which is no.4 among the top ten
rubber producing counties.
Neatly fenced rubber estate and the road leads beautiful amid trees |
The geographical location of
Kanyakumari helps doing excel in rubber industry, with adequate and well
distributed rainfall in the Western Ghats. In the southern region, Tamil Nadu
is the second major producers of natural rubber and the rubber goods are
manufactured both in the organised and small-scale sectors. And the manufacturing is mostly like tyres,
tubes, belts, balls, washers and rubber sheets.
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Tuesday, June 06, 2017
Staying at Sathyamangalam Guesthouse
Following Kodiveri Dam, we halt
at Sathyamangal for the night stay. My cousin had booked at the Sathyamangalam
guest house for us and it lies on the bank of Bhavani River. It was over 6
pm when we reached the guesthouse and the staffs were awaiting for us, and they took
care of our need well. Actually there isn’t a need for them, because things
were fine on their own and the couple of rooms were spacious with one air
conditioned. I was surprised to see a ramp facility at the entrance of the house,
which claims 5 steps.
I really
enjoyed staying at this guesthouse, though it is a very old house and tiled
roof, the interiors are renovated for moderate suite and its natural environment
of river and trees around turned to be my favourite. When we arrived, found
number of birds (mostly herons) perching on and off the branches of the trees
while making the river its hunting pool, there was noise of birds amid the
silence. At morning I got to listening different sound of birds and clear
picture of things around.
Orange lily, showing stamens with pollen-covered anthers shot at the courtyard of the guesthouse. |
The night spent
comfort and cool under the AC and the weather wasn’t bad like the day time and
it’s less hot because of the wind. But we experienced abundance mosquitoes outside
the room and though they come and sit large on our skin doesn’t bite
surprisingly! But one or two does. The dinner and breakfast was bought from the
restaurant nearby and I really liked the ven pongal and idly as morning
tiffin. Once finished the morning activities I was out with my camera to take photos around.
The guesthouse
is built facing the river and there’s a separate stair (but locked by gate) to
get down to the river and I really liked the architecture of this house with
wide portico and corridors on both sides. The courtyard is simply beautiful
with flower pots, plants and trees giving a nice green environment to the
house. The guesthouse belong to the highways was maintained well and their
provision of ramp proves their concern for unable people and the couple of
staffs were friendly and shareable.
From the
guesthouse we could see the activities on the bridge across the river that
connects Mysore road. And beyond that a steeple rose between the trees. The
water flow in the Bhavani River is very less and this’s the water that
overflows as waterfalls in Kodiveri dam. We moved out of the guesthouse after
the breakfast and drove towards Athikadavu on the foothills of Nilgiris.
Labels:
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Saturday, June 03, 2017
Hideout
After checking Lovedale railway
station, near Ooty, on the 3rd day of our travel to Nilgiris
we encountered a Bison while looking for a place to have lunch. Driving further
on the isolated Lovedale road adjoining the backyard of the Lawrence School we come to
halt on the roadside to have lunch, but we unnoticed there was a Bison (Indian
Gaur) standing at a height of about 15 foot vertically from where we stood.
We almost decided to get down but
heard the rustle sound in the bushes above and it was a bison grazing and
hiding among the bushes. Though it isn’t a huge one and standing on the edge of
the vertically down, it’s impossible for it to climb down or leap off but
parents were not willing to stop there so we move on to another spot. Before
doing so, tried to capture the Indian gaur hiding in the bushes and what you
see here were visible then.
The Indian Bison or Indian Gaur
is a
strong and massively built species, the largest extant bovine, native to
South Asia. Gaurs are black
in color while females are brown, but both the hide of male and female Gaurs is
white below the knee of each leg. I have seen Indian gaurs in the mountains of Kodaikanal
and Valparai, but it continues to excite seeing in wild.
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