Sunday, 28 January 2007
RT workshop
"In keeping with this changing scenario, Kerala Tourism is now keen to put the concept of Responsible Tourism into practice. "... read more here on the initiative of ICRT India along with Kerala Tourism
© GP 2007
Wednesday, 24 January 2007
Paying the price
"Section 144 declared in Tirur, Tanur,Tanalur and Kalpakanchery police station areas"
"One more!. An auto driver from Iringavoor is fighting for life"
"Latest news - Three more attacks this morning. One Hindu and two Muslims. Situations becoming worse"
The above were SMS I received in a day from friends from Tirur. Since the murder of Ravi, an RSS worker last week, the town was gripped in fear and looks like its a killing field.
Five more have been stabbed and according to trust worthy field reports, most of these guys have nothing to do with religion or sects or alliances! Except for the guy murdered (he was an accussed number 3 in a murder where RSS workers, butchered a neo-muslim convert in Tirur several years back), rest of the guys became easy target for both Muslim and Hindu fundamentalist groups. Looks like none of the hardcore militants are targetted, instead the strategy seems to be to focus on those who stand on the fringes of ideologies
If not for the local names, this could be a news from an area where sectarian killings happens! This is from Malappuram District.
Welcome to the new reality of Kerala!!
A trend that started around Babri Masjid destruction in 1992, has been largely over looked. Political parties including the left busy appeasing minority and majority vote banks will take another decade or even more to understand the complexity of this vicious circle. Not restricting to politicians, I wonder what the so called cultural stalwarts like Sukumar Azhikode (who blatantly supported militant (of course masked!!) organisations like NDF) will have to say on these unfortunate incidents that is gripping various small towns of Kerala.
Signals were there for all to see. Look at these samples:
"Kerala, which is clearly becoming a sanctuary and a possible recruiting and training base for some religious fundamentalist groups with inter-State links. The activities of such groups have assumed dangerous dimensions. This is particularly true of northern Kerala, where a significant Muslim population suffers from a broad range of economic and social disabilities and the BJP, the RSS and its satellite organisations pursue an aggressive strategy of stoking communal sentiments. "
"In 1997, Chief Minister E.K. Nayanar told the Kerala Assembly that five to eight extremist groups were operating in northern Kerala and that they received funds and other forms of support from foreign countries, especially Iran and some countries in West Asia. He also said that the situation was "serious"."
Read more such reports here Concern in Kerala
On my way back from Trivandrum, I got down at around 4 am on the secluded dimly lit highway junction in Kuttippuram to go home. Similar to my Fort Cochin experience, the auto driver refused to take me in! After convincing him, he took me home only to share a hell lot of unbelievable stories that happened in Tirur area in the last one week. It definitely sounded like those scary stories we heard from friends who went through Bombay riots! According to him,"You know? Those who were dragging them through the streets were those boys whom they see daily in their neighbourhood!".
I can't imagine the situation where I will be attacked by someone just because I was born into some religion! Worse to doubt my fellow passenger or my driver just for the reason that he is a Muslim or a Hindu!
Well, this is in fact the reality!
© GP 2007
Saturday, 20 January 2007
Noites de Havana!
Tired of debates and arguments on defining what is Responsibility in tourism in 'local context', I decided to take off from work this afternoon. Since all my colleagues are in Kerala this weekend, I had a luxury of being alone and decided to go home and watch Dirty Dancing instead .
Gosh! How much I miss dancing!!
Last time I watched this movie was with Maya in Vienna in her apartment. I had known her for almost 6 years after we met on Internet and been good friends throughout ever since. Even during my stay in Europe, somehow we missed meeting each other many times, until last year.
After struggles of missing baggage and waiting (for a change!), when I came out of the Vienna airport, there she was; anxiously waiting. As we both expected, the meeting was so normal as if we have been meeting each other in the same town on a day to day basis!
She was tensed about her relation but crazy in love with her Cuban boyfriend! Even though we have been discussing about him many times, I wasn't sure how serious this relation was, but then it was so obvious that night when she came back dead tired after dancing the whole night and told me "I have never been so happy!"
As Javier says in the movie, "Dancing is about being exactly who you want to be in a mad moment".
(Shame that I missed their invitation to go out for a Cuban night and instead decided to sleep!).
Now they are together and she is expecting a baby in February. May be it's time to visit the lovers again in before ITB Berlin. This time at the least I will be there with a relaxed mind, unlike last time when I was struggling with my problems with J!
Here goes the lovely couple:
© GP 2007
Tuesday, 16 January 2007
Just 20 minutes!
We reached the river side where we met Velutha around 1330. No one had any idea, how we trekked so swiftly. There wasn't a single part of our body that wasn't aching. Except for Ravi, I guess most of us were too tired for anything. He kept on clicking photographs, even dared to ask us to pose couple of times :)
May be he didn't really gauge the situation. Or he didn't think the danger of getting stuck for one more night in the middle of nowhere surrounded by wild animals and that too without any food! Anyways, it was good to have someone with energy oozing out at this situation.
We met "Rajan", a nephew of Velutha on the way who suggested that we trek directly to Nilambur through plains rather than attempting a tiring hike up to Meenmutty. Considering the fact that he was the first human contact since previous afternoon, it was a blessing to see him. It was a choice between 4 hours of climbing or 2 hours of trek to another district and then hire a jeep to reach back in Wayanad which will take another 4 hours by road. We chose the latter.Even after 4 hours of slow trek along the river we were still far away from any sort of human settlement. Rest of the trek was like a pilgrimage.
No one even whispered. Legs were almost falling apart, hunger was burning every known senses in the body and the fear that we might not be able to get out of the forest was too much to accept.
Finally we saw a tribal settlement, (A unfortunate intervention of forest department and Hill Area Development Authority where tribal are "rehabilitated" and brought into the main stream!!) where the poverty stricken community couldn't even offer us rice gruel. After hearing our misadventure, the forest officer on a patrol who saw us at the entrance, came along with us and asked the community members if they could give us some thing to eat.
To some of the tribal whom we met on the way, we kept on asking like "how far?", how long"! The distance to the rubber and spice plantation was "just 20 minutes sir"! Great. That twenty minutes came after another two hours literally in a tea shop run by the plantation workers!
© GP 2007
Monday, 15 January 2007
Second day
All of us were up by 6 in the morning. Those who slept close to the burnt wood were up "half-baked and half-frozen"! We didn't waste much time and started exploring another route that Thomas assumed is the final way to Soochipara. (again!)
In an hour we were sure about one thing.
None of us wanted to spend another day roaming around in the forest where elephants were roaming around like cattle. Except for some sweets I had in my trousers and plenty of river water, we had no access to food.
We decided to trek back the whole distance we covered the previous day. At the least we knew the way and the time it takes to trek back.
Another ten hours!
Trekking back through semi deciduous forest
The fear was only in terms of climbing the last stretch from the foot hills to Meenmutty waterfalls. That is probably a climb from 200 metres ASL to 1300 in one stretch! Something that is quite possible on a normal day but not when fuelled by hunger, fatigue, fear and low morale.
As a last ditch effort, Anoop and I decided to climb a steep hill in front of us to check out the surrounding areas from a higher altitude. Halfway, we understood that both of us were literally risking our lives by climbing that slippery terrain with no equipments whatsoever. In half an hour, we reached on top only to see miles and miles of forest and mountains in front of us and signalled the rest of the team to continue the trek. We followed them.
From their onwards the speed in which we trekked was crazy! Those bamboo filled areas which we trekked carefully the previous day (considering the presence of elephants) were ignored completely and we were pacing as if we would just say a "Hello, nice to meet you" to the wild elephants and continue the run!
We just wanted to get out of the forest!
© GP 2007
Sunday, 14 January 2007
Photos
Cold
Luckily, it didn't rain at all that night. Seeing the drizzle earlier before we settle down, I was wondering how we would stay dry the whole night, especially when the temperature was dipping. Without much dialogues and discussions, each one of us had found safe and 'comfortable' places to stretch on various boulders.
Thomas and Anoop had again become the wonderful resource persons. Gauging the importance of the heat and light considering the whole night in front of us, they had dragged in a huge wood. The fallen tree was stuck between rocks probably during the previous monsoon.
After twenty minutes effort, we managed to set fire to the thick wood which lasted for the whole night. It saved us from elephants (fire keep the elephants away!) and we had some of our colleaugues literally lying down on top of it by the beginning of the next day!
© GP 2007
Saturday, 13 January 2007
Helicopter rescue!
Before settling down on the huge rocks, Thomas made one last ditch effort to climb on to the nearby hill to get an idea of the location. He was certain that the Soochipara waterfalls was just nearby, may be just behind the mountain in front of us.
While rest of the team waited down, Thomas and I climbed on to see only many more other mountains ahead of this one! As it got darker, it became important that we climb down at the earliest and figure out how we are going to spend the whole night. It was damp, cold, and dark.
We had ran out out of food except for some bananas and we decided to keep it with us and go for the endurance test. All our muscles were hurting so badly that no one wanted to walk around again looking for dry leaves and wood to set fire.
In another 5 minutes, Thomas came back shouting that he had found the trek path!
He saw foot prints. He saw bamboos cut down for ladders by the honey combers. It didn't take another ten minutes for us to come down after checking the route. The thick smell of elephant dung, cold and darkness inside the wood was so scary that we decided not to risk any more and instead settle down on one of those boulders in the middle of the river.
AB was worried about not being able to send a message to his office in Bangalore, Thomas and Anoop was worried about not being able to convey the message to their family that they are safe. My concern was about VT and rest of the team waiting for us at the waterfalls with the jeep to pick us up wondering what had happened to us. Since we had gone into the forest with permission, definitely the forest department will be notified that we are missing, and that the whole area will have thousands of stories about The Blue Yonder team that went for location scouting and got lost in the forest!
Apart from the jokes we were making about VK and Arun coming in a helicopter to save us, that was probably one of the worst nights we ever spent inside the forest.
© GP 2007
Friday, 12 January 2007
In the middle of nowhere!
Don't know if it was my training in disaster management or just sheer common sense, that I had started looking for a safe place to camp by 3.30pm. Even after an hour we trekked according to the information we had and the direction we reconfirmed with Velutha, there was an uneasy feeling about the trek route. It was obvious that not many had trekked this path in recent days.
Decreased light, hovering rain clouds and trumpets of wild elephants from all possible places (later we realised it was the echo because of the huge boulders) didn't give me confidence at all to trek any further. Being the leader of the group, Thomas didn't show much panic, but it was kind of obvious that he was lost when we reached the huge boulders that should ideally lead us to the Soochipara waterfalls.
It started drizzling and slippery rocks were the last thing we needed at that time. The moment I saw fear in Thomas's face, I decided to take charge of the situation. While climbing from one boulder to another I had noticed couple of places that we could convert as safe shelter.
I wasn't looking at a shelter for the night, but more than that, I just wanted to ensure that we were on a height unreachable to elephants and be on a safe plain where there was no chance of a flash flood hitting us in the middle of the night!
© GP 2007
Thursday, 11 January 2007
Velutha
Which way? Kalakkapuzha
*Are there elephants here? (Yes of of course!)
*Will they chase you? (He he, They are elephants, they will definitely chase you if you are on its path!)
*What will you do when they chase you?( He He, What do you think I will do? I will run like anyone else!)
I still remember how much he was laughing seeing me jumping (falling!) into water after seeing a snake moving swiftly between my legs. He continued to laugh through out our interaction.
Later that night, when we got stuck in the forest and wondering how to spend the night, all his laughter made sense to us! He was basically laughing at our stupidity of exploring an area that we didn't know at all!
Monday, 8 January 2007
The adventure begins
By the time we got permission papers from the forest department and assistance of the VSS (Vana Samrakshana Samiti - Forest Protection Committee), it was already late to start the descend from Meenmutty. With packed food for six of us and enough water and our small backpacks, we were literally running down the narrow trek paths. Except for AB and Ravi, all of us were comfortable with the terrain as we had trekked that route until the second level of the falls, several times.
Except for the 'snack stop' and lunch break we hardly stopped anywhere. The idea was to cover the distance in 'one-go' and check out the details later on a revisit. If we had to follow the previous days experience, we were sure that we would never complete the distance on time. It was quite difficult not to stop and record some of the breathtaking images in the rain forest.
We did reach the distance half-way by around 130pm; some of us took bath in the cold stream and had the sumptuous lunch of rice flakes, kappa and coconut chutney(obviously Thomas's wife was very resourceful!). Then we met the tribal chief "Velutha" from the "Kattunaikar" community and his children who were fishing in the "kalakkpuzha".(That was the first time I was seeing some one fishing using darts and bamboo blowpipes!).
Respecting their privacy, we didn't take any pictures at all but did click away like mad at the scenery and Ravi especially had some 300 jpegs within 4 hours of trek!
© GP 2007
Sunday, 7 January 2007
Meenmutty to Soochipara
Meenmutty is literally inside a rain forest region and only adventure seekers could be seen moving in this area. Popular amongst domestic tourists as well as locals, the other famous waterfall 'Soochipara', is quite easy to reach because of the concrete steps the DTPC (District Tourism Promotion Council) had constructed!.
Difficult terrain and tougher ways to reach such destinations seemed to have been the flavour of the season for us. So we hardly went to trek to Soochipara waterfalls.
Since we had only two days during the weekend to explore, we decided to skip the Nilambur trek for some other time and do the Meenmutty-Soochipara trek instead.
Who would have thought that this was going to be an unforgettable adventure of a lifetime!
(Pic taken from the top fall. there are two more falls before it joins
the 'kalakkapuzha')
Saturday, 6 January 2007
Meenmutty waterfalls
Fort Cochin
It was while trekking down Meenmutty waterfalls that we met Thomas "Chettan". Similar to some of our earlier "findings", Thomas was one of those experiences that made our work interesting day by day.
Living on the fringes of the forest, there wasn't a path that Thomas didn't know. From running to stop the forest fires set by miscreants or to help the excise department to chase the illicit liquor brewers, or to help those who got lost looking for the waterfalls, Thomas was all over the place.
During one of our regular treks, he mentioned about the forest track leading from Wayanad to Nilambur. We weren't sure about the geography of the area, but still was surprised to hear that one could actually walk through the forests to Nilambur from Wayanad within less than 6 hours! Considering the fact that it takes around 4 hours by road through the mountain roads in a four wheeler, I was longing to trek this route.
In the sultry Cochin, I wish I were there in Meenmutty overlooking the rain forests! Still can feel the cool breeze on my face.
Even the refreshing spring that quenched our thirst many times!
© GP 2007
Friday, 5 January 2007
Air Deccan again!
Stuck once again in the Bangalore airport @#$%!
Notoriously late Air Deccan is delayed by 5 hours! Should be sleeping in Cochin by now and instead I am still stuck listening to the "delay" announcements. Shame that I am not carrying a digi-cam to take pictures of the chaos in this airport. Everyone seems to be losing their patience. Looks like this is going to be one more of those moments of OTS (One Tight Slap).
Probably the last time I am going to take an Air Deccan flight!
Flashback:
Seeing me struggling to find finance to organise the symposium in Bangalore last month, a friend who is close to Capt Gopinath of Air Deccan, offered to get a booklet of tickets and I kindly refused. Instead I said that I will be keen to see him attending the symposium rather.
I should probably thank the stars that made me stick to that decision. Probably I would have made more enemies than friends if at all I had offered these tickets for the delegates!!
In the meanwhile:
"Vettakorumagan - Kalam prepared for our visiting guests
Five basic natural colours that were used for preparing the "Kalam".
© GP 2007
Thursday, 4 January 2007
Welcoming another year
By the beginning of the New Year in Fort Cochin, we had :
- Four hotels attacked by a mob in Fort Cochin
- Seven cars broken (those I counted on the Calvathy road)
- Foreign tourists abused (as I heard one drunk shouting to a tourist, "Go back Go back , Bloody bastard George Bush!") (What did the poor Dutch tourist and his daughter had to do with Saddam or George Bush for that matter!)
- Musicians scared away ( they were on their way to a fusion music concert)
- Business loss for many ( tourists left many restaurants fearing another attack!)
- Business gain for some (those tourists who ran ended up in the shacks on the beach!)
When asked "Who do you think these people were?", various answers came from the property owners
- Rioters! (Drunk and having fun!)
- Muslims (Emotional response to Saddams' hanging on the Eid. (Though most of the faces I saw were regulars in leftist rallies, and some of them were coming out of the reading room of a local political party office! It is quite sad to see these sort of branding)
- Business rivals ("You buy we Cook eateries" who were trying to take business away from established hotels on Calvathy road!)
- Dissidents from the Cochin carnival organising committee!
Basically when the bell struck at 12, I was wandering looking for a taxi to go home!
(What a wonderful way to celebrate the new year!)
When I found some vehicles drivers were not willing to take an "unknown" male passenger unless I have a reference of an "attached hotel" they work with! Am sure I didn't look like a "tough guy!". It's really unfortunate to be reminded of the insecurity in which this society lives!
One can't blame these drivers considering the number of murders and criminal activities that are increasing in Kerala these days.
© GP 2007