Saturday, December 22, 2018

Beechworth

The historical town of Beechworth is located 285 kms in the North Eastern side of Victoria. There are eminent buildings and stories from the time of the gold rush in 1852-1875.


Things to Do in Beechworth:
1. Nowadays Beechworth is famous for its Beechworth Bakery and Honey. 
    Australian bush-ranger and outlaw Ned Kelly had multiple connections to Beechworth, 
    The favourite pie of the Beechworth Bakery which is a must try is also called Ned Kelly.
2. Woolshed creek/ waterfall - A couple to camping places and is a good place to have a quiet evening.
3. Old Beechworth Gaol - here the Ned Kelly stories
5. Billson Brewery
6. Cellar Door and Cantina at Eldorado Road Wines




 This is the restored picture of the original Beechworth Bakery


Friday, December 21, 2018

Victoria - Coastal Drive 986 kms


Coastal Drive - East Victoria

Days -  December 21st 2018 to December 24th 2018
Distance - 986 kms
Number of Day:- 4 Days

We started our journey early at 5AM and made use of the long summer days since sunset was at 10PM.

Route Map:
St Kilda
Sandringham
Mornington Peninsula
Phillip Island
Venus Bay
Yanakie
Port Albert
Golden Beach
Lake Entrance
Croajingolong National Park
Eden
Bateman Bay

Friday, November 16, 2018

Yarra Valley - VIC

We blocked our time in the wine country of Yarra Valley for a 4 days long weekend. We drove up to book our stay in the Sanctuary House resort who offered us a wonderful stay and food option. 

We drove towards Marysville to cover the iconic and the most beautiful Black Spur Drive. In a country like Australia where everything is picture perfect and beautiful, it is a difficult decision to put this in the must do list for every one who visits Australia. The total distance covered is about 30 kms from Healsville to Marysville through Narbethong. It offers you the smell of the fresh pines with towering trees and spectacular valley views of the Maroondah Highway winding into the Great Dividing Ranges.
Our way back was through Yering Station Winery and Cellar door. The old Yering station has been transformed into a winery, cellar and the railway park into a spot for the weekend village market. 
Route:
Day1: Badger Creek
Day2:  Healsville Sanctuary
Day3:  Narbethong - Black Spur Drive
Day4:  Maroondah Reservior
            Yering Station Winery
            Yarra Glen


Sunday, October 21, 2018

The Queer Daylesford & Hepburn Spring - VIC

Drive 108 kms from Melbourne and there is a beautiful spa town called Daylesford. Friendly, welcoming and pretty - this town woos me to spoil myself with knick-knacks. The natural mineral springs are the prime attraction of Daylesford and definitely the spa to add on.
On a day that was 25 degrees on Melbourne, we planned to drive down to Daylesford as a summer weekend trip. Halfway through, we were thanking our six senses to have picked up the wind jackets as it was 12 degrees in Daylesford.
It is difficult to write what to see in Daylesford, because its all you have to do, look around, enjoy and have a great time when you are there. We could spend the day walking up and down the boutiques on the main street of Daylesford. There is a corner Antique shop opposite the information centre. There is a Saturday farmer's market in the school premises with friendly faces and good food.  Lined with cafe's and restaurant, we settled into the Himalayan Bakery & Cafe which is bustling with visitors forever and have an overwhelming meal. We visited the Mill Market down the road and was overwhelmed by the never ending collection of op-shop stuffs and collectables.












We drove down the Daylesford Lake and sat there for an hour listening to the bird and the ducks around. This was pristine and beautiful. We packed up post late mid-day and headed to see the natural springs in Hepburn spring. The taste of the spring water is truly bad. It would be similar to soda with other minerals in it, but definitely worth the try.

We started to head back as 4 PM and everything was closing down post 3 and if you don't book in somewhere, there is nothing to do in the evening other than a couple of pubs to hang out at.

Sunday, September 9, 2018

Melbourne - Sydney - Melbourne : 2065kms

9th September 2019 - 19th September 2018

Who is driving: - 3 Travellers in a 4X4 packed up
Total Distance: -  2065 kms
Number of Days :- 10days

Route Maps:

Route from Melbourne to Sydney:
We started as early as 4:00AM on 9th September 2019.
Day1 - Melbourne
           Wandong
           Wangaratta - Brekkie
           Bowning - Lunch
           Campbelltown - Snack
           Sydney

Day2 - Milson Point, Harbour Bridge, Opera Bar, Kirribilli, The Rock
Day3 - Pitt Street, Grounds of Alexandria, Western Suburb
Day4 - Whale Watching
Day5 - Manly, Northern Beaches



Route from Sydney to Melbourne:

We left at 5:00AM from Sydney to be able to reach our evening destination to camp in Sussex Inlet.

Day6 - Sydney
           Wollongong - Brekkie
           Kiama
           Berry - Lunch
           Hyams Bay
           Jervis Bay
           Lake Entrance - Dinner
           Sussex Inlet
Day7 - Bredbo
           Jindabyne
Day8 - Kosciuszko National Park
           Snowey Mountains
Day9 - Melbourne



This route is a discovery of not so touristy but must try places !!


Monday, September 3, 2018

Bendigo - VIC, Australia

If the time machine has stopped and never started yet, it is here in Bendigo.

We planned our visit in the 1st ever White Night - Bendigo celebration there. Bendigo is a town 165 kms from Melbourne CBD. it is a beautiful 3 hours drive with 2 stops in small villages that give you great pies and amazing coffee. In the 1800's, the gold rush in the mines of Bendigo built the town and its population and currently there are 30000 residents in Bendigo.
On the evening of the White Night, Bendigo geared up to accommodate more than 60000 people from the surrounding towns and Melbourne.

We were thrilled to be a part of this big crowd. We planned a day  trip to Bendigo in a sunny winter day whose evening temperature  forecast was -1 degrees in Bendigo. It is going to be a cold night after all. As per our plan, we had decided to book a place to stay on the go, so we packed the hot coffee for and jackets and left for our trip.

We exited out through M1 into the Midland Highway and went all the way to Kyneton cruising at a good 100 km/hour. We pit stopped there for coffee and pies at Country Cob Bakery.

We reached Bendigo in 2 hours and 30 mins covering 150 kms. Bendigo is beautiful for its boom-time during the gold rush. The tram network was the first one here to be built in Australia and dates back to the 1890's. The colonial buildings and the beautiful lake paints a beautiful picture of time travel to the last century. The white night would start only in the evening and we had enough time to roam around in the town centre. We did what we do first at any new place, visit the tourist information centre and  collect the map. 



We walked by the 19th century town-hall along with many ornate buildings built in a late Victorian colonial style, Colonial Bank building, Masonic Hall, Joss House, the historical Tram Shed, power station and definitely the Bendigo Tramway museum. We also visited the gigantic Sacred Heart Cathedral which is  a sandstone church, is the third largest cathedral in Australia and one of the largest cathedrals in the Southern Hemisphere. The Bendigo Art gallery is a state of art that we visited is one of Australia's oldest and largest regional art galleries.
Every building in this town has a character to it be it a private house or the butcher house turned pub and the public buildings. One has to visit Bendigo to feel and see the beauty of this place.

Towards evening, the temperature started going colder to a good -3 degrees Celsius and the white night started with the lights, animation, tram cars, song dance and food across the city.
We hung around till 9PM and called it a day to head back to Melbourne. 



Monday, August 20, 2018

50 by 50 - Our WIP Bucket list ...incomplete !!


1. The Great Wall of China - The 7m-high and 7m-thick fortification takes at least a day to walk between its battlements, shunning hawkers and tourists for less-visited sections where you clamber up unrestored stairs and through crumbling towers.

2. Siq To Petra Jordan - The rock-carved Nabataean city of Jordan with its century old ornate facades and classical architecture.

3. Whitsundays Island of Australia - The 1930 resort in this island has whale watching in the Antarctic. It is the most beautiful turquoise and green merge of the coastal Queensland.

4. Cherry Blossom Japan - The sakura- zensen in the Kiyomizu-tera in Kyoto, Tokyo’s Ueno Park or the castles in Osaka or Himeji, all of which are lent a dreamlike air by the arrival of the blossom each spring.

5. Galapagos Island Ecuador - The giant tortoises, canoodling waved albatrosses, lumbering land iguanas and Darwin’s finches, to name but a few – each a key player in the world’s most celebrated workshop of evolution.

6. Scotland - The Single Malt taste of the century old barrels.

7. Faroe Islands - 300kms from Scotland the sight of the Puffins in the North Atlantic weather.

8. Italy - There is no reason to miss the Roman Holiday, Pompeii.

9. Myanmar - Every year between November and March, barefoot pilgrims flock to Kyaiktiyo – the Golden Rock – high in the Eastern Yoma mountains. Sometime in life I would want to find my roots. Shwedagon Pagoda .

10. New Zealand - Because we are neighbours and it is beautiful. The South Islands and North Islands

11. Spain - For the Merida, Barcelona, Basilica and Don Quixote. The places like Portugal, Morocco, Gibraltar and Ibiza.

12. Spanish Archipelagos - The Balearic Islands and the Canary Islands.

13. Luang Prabang Laos - The monasteries of Laos. A tiny mountain kingdom for more than a thousand years and designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1995, Luang Prabang is endowed with a legacy of ancient red-roofed temples and French-Indochinese architecture, not to mention some of the country’s most refined cuisine, its richest culture and its most sacred Buddha image, the Pha Bang.

14. Gili (Trawangan,Meno and Air) Indonesia - The pure white-sand beaches framed against the warm turquoise waters.

15. Great Barrier Reef, Australia - The seven wonders of the natural world spreading across 3000kms. It is almost parallel to the Queensland coast, from near the southern coastal town of Bundaberg, up past the northern tip of Cape York.

16. Machupicchu, PeruInca city of Machupicchu is the long-anticipated high-point of their trip. 20th Century best-known archaeological site on the continent.

17. Angkor Wat, Cambodia - 12th century  Hindu temple and Siem Reap and Cambodia

18. Dubai - Dune Bashing, Abu DHabi - Great Mosque, Russel Khaima, Food Trail, Dubai Mall - fountain. Fly Emirates A380.

19. Sri Lanka - Paradise of Great food. Re-visit.

20. Leh Ladakh IndiaGar firdaus bar-rue zamin ast, hami asto, hamin asto,hamin ast

21. Rajasthan India - Go crazy for colours.

22. Madhya Pradesh India - Khajuraho, Gwalior, Panchmari, Mandu, Bhedaghat, Maheshwar, Rathlam, Itarshi, Chambal.

23. Croatia  -  The Dubrovnik Old Town is a medieval landscape where all the buildings were erected over 500 years ago and are designed in the Roman, Gothic and Baroque architectural styles. Plitvice Lake, Hvar Island and Rovinj. Listen to the Sea Organ in Zadar.

24. Nordic Denmark ( South Funen Archipelago of Funen, stay in Typical house on Lyø,  Shakespheare's Kronborg castle, Copenhagen-North Zealand, Roskilde, Pearl of the Baltic - Bornholm, Trelleborg Viking Fortress), Finland ( Helsinki, St. Petersburg, Leningrad, Epsoo, Ikea), Northern Lights - Iceland, Norway ( Atlantic Ocean Road), and Sweden

25. Istanbul  - Turkey, Capadocia, Black Sea - Bosphorus, Hagia Sophia, Taksim, Levent, Grand Bazaar, Mahamuttpasha Bazaar.

26. Azerbaijan - Caspian Sea, Armenia, BTAK Railways to Turkey, Baku, Kazakhstan. 

27. Uluru (Ayres Rock), Australia - Just see the world's largest sandstone mass 450kms from Alice springs.

28. Bali, Borobodur Indonasia - World Largest Buddhist Stupa which is ten stories high and measures over 120 meters (400 feet) per side. 

29. Tasmania - For the Cruise and the Lavenders.

30. Great Australian Bight Nullarbor Plain is the home of  camels, wombats and mobs of kangaroos, or pull off to spot southern right whales from the magnificent Bunda Cliffs.

31. Western Australia - Waves Rock, Bungle Bungle Range, the weird geological curiosities called Pinnacles,  bubble-gum pink lake Hillier on the Recherche Archipelago, Kimberley rocks, Super Pit gold mine of Kalgoorlie, is the biggest open cast mine in Australia, Treetop walkway - Albany, 

32.  Czech Republic - Prague, Karlsbad, Czech Palace, Jankov, Bohemian Paradise, lbe Sandstone Mountains, Prague Jewish Museum, Karlstejn Castle is a large Gothic-style castle from the mid-14th century. 

33. Italy -  The endless list of everything which we will do in a career break.

34. Central Europe - Austria (Salzburg, Innsbruck, Graz, Durnstein, Villach thermal bath) . Germany ( Berlin, Cologne, Munich, Dresden, Stuttgart, Dusseldorf, Saxon), Hungary ( Budapest, Denube, Balaton), Slovania ( Triglav National Park, Bled, Kopar), Poland (Warsaw, Nightlife, Wroclaw)

35. Dublin - Trinity College - Book of Kells, Guinness Pub Crawl, 

36. South India -  Temple tour, Beaches, Goa, the green belt.

37. Coastline Australia - Melbourne to Sydney to Brisbane to Gold Coast.

Mt. Donna Buang - VIC


Away from the famous locations and resorts that pinch your pocket to have fun, I looked into an infamous town to see the snow.


Located 96 kms away from Melbourne city, the Mt. Donna Buang is located ahead of the famous Yarra Valley wineries. This place is ahead of the beautiful Warburton town a passer-by’s beautiful experience of snow on the way to Lake Mountain, Mt. Baw Baw or the very famous Mt. Buller. Note, there are no snow resorts, expensive boutique experience of snow in this place. This is an experience of snow by the nature.


Preparation: - As first timers, there are longs lists of retail engagement that everyone thinks is a must for snows. However, my answer is No. Your 2 layers of jackets and a windcheater should do us good. The snows are not killing cold. A benny, a woollen scarf and hand gloves should be great from your regular closet. What is a must for this experience is a PVC flat heel boot as we call them. You can pick up the starter from Kmart for about $15-$30. Do carry tissues and hand sanitisers.

We left home at 8AM on a Sunday morning, however, I realised snow is most beautiful when fresh. An early morning start at the onset of the sunrise is the perfect time.
The Route – Melbourne City Centre –> Richmond -> Collingwood -> Exit into Eastern Freeways through M3 -> Exit to there right from the Freeway golf Course -> Koonung Reserve -> At Eastlink take the Ringwood exit and head into the Mt. Dandenong Road -> slow down to enjoy the Yarra Valley and get surprised with the beautiful ranches and Kangaroos, horses, Lambs and cows.-> Yarra Junction -> Warburton -> Warburton Holiday Park -> winding roads to the Mt. Donna Buang.
Things to see -> The Mt. Donna Buang is walk to see a handful of things. Prepare to go slow as this is a regular route and would often have a lot of cars, families and children. We stopped at the Rain-forest Gallery and parked the car around. The snow fall is very heavy here, however, the roads are slushy. Get into the gate opposite to the public toilet opposite to the Rain-forest Gallery and follow the snow path. The further you go; there is a natural hot spring and the Donna Buang observation centre. There is a picnic area as well. If you carry picnic, you can grab a bite by the snow. We stayed there for a good 2 hours.


We came downhill back into the Warburton Town centre. There are some beautiful stores like – Warburton Candy Emporium, Earth ware handmade store, Warburton bakery, the fresh Donut food truck, the tennis court and the Green festival Venue Park. We went to grab lunch at the Riverside Café and the Yarra river flowing right there in through the backyard. There were king parrots which have red wings in the tree across the street and few minutes later the lazy sun was covered by the passing cloud till it started raining hails. We sat down to enjoy the rain from across the glass doors over lunch. We grabbed a heavenly slow cooked Lamb shank, Salmon & prawn grill and some delicious coffee.

We picked up from home grown wine as well. We walked around the town, spoke with the locals to learn about their daily life and got into the car to head back. On the way back, there are a couple of organic home farms; we picked up fruits and vegetables way back. 

Let us promote the farmers and their effort to give us fresh produce. It was a beautiful all day experience of snowfall in the Victorian mountains. Yarra Valleys have my sight on for a visit during springs next.


Tuesday, August 14, 2018

The Journey - Down Under !!



The flight took off and slowly the city lights started fading away into the clouds. I am not fascinated by the window view of anyplace other than the Himalayas when flying from Delhi to Kolkata and the descending of the flight in Sydney. I have never loved a breaking out from the clouded sky so much.
It was then that I realised that I have packed up for good, that it was the moment of my life that I waited so much. It was that moment when the running tears from my eyes could not justify if I would want to be in the flight or jump out, will I regret it for all the organised chaos I will not be a part of henceforth or am I going to phase out into a different human being who would search for solace. I knew life is not easy in the other side, but well, I was not warned that it was not doable.

I flight attendant extended her smile with a wet tissue and I thanks that existing good world who are ready to absorb my sadness. After the 18 hours with transit and break and change of flight and change of the contour of human physiology, I finally rush out to win the fight of surviving claustrophobia towards the end of the journey. It is 8:45PM here which is the busiest time of the day in any airport across India. We are in a deserted, quiet with hardly anybody. We followed the arrow bridge and walked a long way till we came to the escalator and then directly into the immigration section. “Hey Mate… this way please.” The friendly Aussie airport security staffs on duty calls out. Security check was done and we were out of Melbourne airport within no time.

This is another beginning, another adventure and another journey. This one has one difference than the rest… there is no going back. I remembered the Jamaica song, “I got to say, I am on my way and won’t be back for many a days. My heart is down my head’s not turning around …”


I don't know when I will get be back to this page once again after putting the puzzles of this new land in place. I have read a couple to snippets about the land, its vastness, its people and the surprises. The only hope for us is we learn and build our sand castle with these surprises.

All The Best - Australia !!

Tuesday, September 5, 2017

Moving my life - On the go


10th March 2017:

Pleasure or Business ??? that's what my co passenger asked me in the Cathey Pacific traveler lounge.

There came the moment of truth..... I am uprooting myself from a garden where I was all these decades..... to an unknown where I would be. We had passed the security check, we had wrapped up our baggage, we had down sized our belonging from a 1200 sq ft flashy apartment with designer lighting and upholstery and antic furnishing to a 94kgs of baggage tucked into the rear of the Boeing A320. Our beloved family and friends stand in the other side of the glass windows in the airport where we could not hug them for happiness and comfort for god knows how long now.

We don't know if it was business or pleasure.
We moved- uprooted - changed our location - we were off to the La La Land.

Australia...here we come !!

Wednesday, July 15, 2015

Manchali Forest, Kutte - South Kodagu

Here comes another weekend of May and the Bangalore weather has already started cooling down with good amount of rainfalls in regular intervals. We planned this trip out of nowhere as we only knew that we would run away from the crowd during the weekend.

While looking into a few places in Nagarhole, I came across the South Kodagu map.

South Kodagu in untouched, unexplored and holds a part of Nagarhole and Wayanad green belt. This was interesting. Though it did not have much on to do list, we chalked our way for a relaxing weekend. Searched for a good place to stay and kept the Nagarhole Safari intact in our mind, we looked up The Woodpecker Homestay in Kutte. They are prompt and online on Facebook. I was certainly impressed by their welcoming communication over FB.

We left Bangalore early morning 4 AM on Saturday and took the exit into Mysore road through the Matikere Road. We drove till the Circle of Ranganathitthu Bird Sanctuary and went into Hunsur - Elivala Road. AT Elivala Junction, we had a quick fresh breakfast. The small joints offer mouthwatering freshness of the morning. Once done we continued till Kutte.

Our route was Bangalore - Ramanagara- Channapatna - Mandya - Mysore - Hunsur - Nagarhole - Kutte. We took the NICE Road exit into NH17 and continued for 147kms.At the KRS Road to Elivala, we drove for about 17.9kms and took the Mangalore-Mysore Highway or Mysore-Medikeri road to Doddahunsur for about 37.1kms. From there, we followed the Nagarhole Rd to Gonikoppal. Then into the Kutta Rd/Squadron Leader Ajjamada B Devaiah Rd for about 47.4 km. From there, we drove to the Manchalli Rd. Manchalli  Forest is an extension of Nagarhole Forest reserve and the Woodpecker Homestay is 2.7 kms from the Main Road. Surprisingly the distance between the Manchalli Forest and Nagarhole is about 7kms.

It had been a beautiful drive through the greens. We reached there by 11:30 AM. The Owner of the Woodpecker Homestay, Sharmin, was waiting for us on the main road. Sharmin and his wonderful family is the warmest host any guest can ever find. They make every guest feel at home. His wife and mother are awesomely homely and amazing chefs. We greeted us with fresh juice and oranges from the orchard. They made us comfortably settled in the homestay rooms that were booked for us. The property is beautiful and looks like a postcard with flowers, a blue well and trees all around. Overlooking the homestay is the Wayanad Mountain.

The homestay can accommodate people in 3-4 rooms. The rooms are big and clean. They are well equipped and clean big rest rooms. The long balcony is the best place to sit and listen to the silence or the chirping of the birds and the sound of the crickets. The dining space is out in the open in the extension of the balcony. On the whole, a very cozy place to be.
The woodpecker does not serve lunch so once we freshened up and chatted up with the family for a while, we went with Sharmin to pick up lunch from the nearest Robusta Restaurant. Once done, we grabbed a nap to freshen up for the evening.

The coffee from the estate came around 4:30PM. We walked around the property for an hour to see turkeys, ducks, birds and a good number of butterflies. There is a stream with gushing water just behind the homestay and we walked around there. When we were back, the evening started getting colder and we were served with soup and salads. We spent the evening sitting by the stream in a born fire, humming and singing.
Around 10PM, we were served with a buffet of dinner. This was a wide spread and vegetarian, non-vegeterian, pork and deserts were there. The food tasted amazing. It was hot and fresh and so lip smacking that we could not thank Sharmin enough. Both his mother and wife are very warm people and has classic and authentic culinary skill. We could not finish the food for its quantity; however, we were guilty to leave such tasty bites for the day. We retired early around 11:30PM that day.
Next day was early. I woke up to my regular travel routine of 5:30AM and set out with Camera to capture some interesting things around. The fog would not let me do so anyways; hence I strolled around with a homestay dog in company. Once I was back around 7:30AM, we left for Nagarhole. The 50kms odd stretch of Nagarhole forest had been beautiful. There is something wild about this stretch, something virgin, untouched and wild. We say elephants- tuskers to be precise, herds of deer, monkeys and our regular forest mates here and there. We were back from Nagarhole around 10:30AM.

We were served with lip-smacking breakfast of Coorgi cuisine and continental. We had kadambuttu, curry, sambar, bread, jam, egg, fruits and coffee. Post breakfast, we packed up, freshened and bid goodbye to our amazing hosts.
Woodpecker is peace abode, beautiful place with beautiful people. I cannot write enough about how good the hosts are. One has to visit and experience the essence of The Woodpecker Homestay. We will want to go back again and again.

On our way back we drove down the Iruppu Falls and took our way back to Bangalore through the Hassan Road in the rains.

Contact:
The Woodpecker Homestay
Address: Woodpecker Homestay, Manchalli Village and Post,
               South Kodagu, Madikeri, Karnataka 571250, India.
Phone -  Sharmin +91 99022 30943

Tuesday, May 5, 2015

Bandipur - An Experience With Wilderness !!

Another weekend comes by and the rainy weather and gloomy sky is calling us to the wildernesses. I got the green signal from my bunch of travel boys. We made a quick call to Mr.  Mahinder Singh and we were got availability in the Tiger Ranch, Bandipur. It is Rs. 1510/- per head with Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner and Camp fire. I had to transfer Rs.1900/- online to pre-book. Watch the numbers that were mentioned and when asked, the owner says it’s got Vaastu attached to the numbers. This is the place where the Movie “Jungle” was shot by Ram Gopal Verma and the crew had stayed there for 45 days to shoot.

We left at 3 AM from Bangalore and reached Mysore with 2 halts for tea at 6AM. I counted 47 speed breakers till Mandya and 64 till Mysore. This brings about a good time loss on the way.

For breakfast, we dropped in to a very old joint near the Mysore Zoo, inside a lane by the Commissioner’s House in Mysore. The name of the place is Mylaari. Fresh crispy Dosa and tasty idly was served with coconut chutney.  We left for Bandipur at 7 AM. The road after Nanjangudh is all torn down. Trees have been cut to extend the 2 lane into a 4 lane highway. The entire stretch has been diverted with constructions due to which evening we lost more than 90 mins in an average. We reached Bandipur at 10:30 AM. A sigh of relief took over once we were at the gate that says- Welcome to Bandipur Tiger reserve.  We got into a roadside tea stall and refreshed ourselves with some hot coffee.

We started our drive through the forest and on driving deep for 10-12kms; we reached a junction which says take left for Serai, Country Club etc. We tool the left and went another 8-10kms and took a small trail to the right and off roaded for another 4 kms. There was Tiger Ranch right in front of us.

Wild and basic is the mere look of the place. Tiger Ranch is adventurous and unattractive to look at but extremely hospitable and managed well. We were shown our room with 15mins. They were huts built with metal sheet and thatched roofs with clean European washroom. The hut has beds, good blankets, bedside tables, racks in a form of bare necessity and comforts of sofa and center table to add on. This was one of those first time experiences one has with basic requirements and adjustments. Nothing was inconvenient however; there was no sign of the slightest material luxury anywhere. As we sipped our cold drinks in the sit out, we were all looking forward to the evening.  We freshened up and got ready for the lunch. Lunch was at 1 PM and immediately after lunch we rested for 2 hours.

At 4PM, when the dark clouds started gathering together, we left for a drive into the forest. The best part of the Tiger Ranch is that it is situated deep inside the forest and is among the few places that are located into the wilderness. While driving through Bandipur and crossing the border of Karnatake to the Mudumalai forest, we spotted deer’s, nilguy, bison’s, mongoose, peacocks, common monkeys, black faced langur, various birds and a solitaire elephant striding past the path into the forest. We were spellbound and at around 7PM we reached the kutte after the Mudumalai forest and at the start of masinagudi town, after the temple, in the right is a small tea stall that sells coffee made of malai. Since that was in our checklist, we shared our amazement and held around for half an hour over a cup of coffe. We started back and reached our homestay around 8PM. It had started raining profusely by then and hence the campfire was cancelled. We sat at the sit out and kept a watch on the eyes of the deer’s and the forest wolves that were sparking beyond the electric wire and making us shiver. We were hoping for an elephant to show up though. The owner of the resort sat with us and as always, we talked about the incidents and the difficulties and the beauty of the life in Tiger Ranch. At 10:30PM, the dinner was served. Food remained simple yet extremely tasty and once we were done, at 11:30PM, all lights were switched off and every room was given with a LED lamp and asked to get inside their respective cottages. The forest guard sits outside with a torch and monitors the huts all night.

We spoke for sometimes, locked the doors and got into the blankets listening to the rainfall on the thatched room and the far barks of the dears and the monkeys. The cicada noise was constant all day and night along with frogs, wolves and some other animals. It was an amazing feeling and none of us were aware who slept when.

Next day early as 6AM, we are awake with the jumping and screeching of the monkeys over the huts.  Morning tea was served hot and we lazed in the sit out for a long time. The sky was gloomy and it was still drizzling. We sat outside in the lawn around the wet ash of the born fire that was not lit up last night. We had a lazy breakfast, freshened up and left The Tiger Ranch at around 11AM. Lunch was on the way and we took a de-route from Bandipur – Chamrajnagar – Malvelli – Talkadu – Kanakpura and Bangalore. Though the distance turned out more by about 50kms, we are happy to avoid the Sunday evening traffic and speed breakers of Mysore Road and take the beautiful, scenic and picturesque road instead. We reached Bangalore at 10PM.

Thailand - Bangkok & Chiang Mai

Planning the trip to Thailand after reading through a lot of blogs and reviews, I must say, I had my apprehensions and, in my head, ran a hi...