When the month of Karthika (this eighth month, as per
Hindu solar calendar, starts when Sun enters Scorpio, corresponding to October/November)
started, I remembered the TV program about Varanasi Karthika masa/month last
day celebration when Ghats are lit with oil lamps. I wanted to be there.
Unfortunately no rooms were available in any of the guest houses
near the main Ghat. They all said the same thing, rooms get booked 6 months in
advance for this festival! Checking on the net, I read about Dharmasthala
Karthika masa “Laskhadeepotsava” festival. Dharmasthala is the temple town on the banks of the Nethravathi River in the Belthangadi taluk of Dakshina Kannada in Karnataka.
We decided to go there as it is only 6 hrs drive from Bengaluru & to
stay somewhere outside Dharmasthala town as accommodation within the town is
catered to pilgrim crowd. We were warned of the crowds in this temple town;
forget about the festival time, this sacred place attracts 10,000 people on
average on a normal day.
Travelling to Western Ghats by itself is a thrill - Older than the Himalayan Mountains,
this mountain chain of the Western Ghats, declared UNESCO World Heritage site,
represents geomorphic features of immense importance with unique biophysical
and ecological processes. The site’s high montane forest ecosystems influence
the Indian monsoon weather pattern.
A quick search found what looked & sounded like an awesome home
stay, “Stream of Joy”, 30 km from Dharmasthala in Arasinamakki by the River
Kapila & in the middle of Adike thota/ beetle-nut farm. A call to the
host, Mr. Kashinath Damle, helped us book a cottage at a very nominal rate of Rs.
3,000/- including 3 meals/day for 2 people. He informed me of heritage temples
within 10-15 km radius and a short trek into the forest for some great bird
watching. Added bonus was he was going to be our guide for these. Key
information he stressed is, it is fully vegetarian with no liquor allowed and
place not suitable for people who cannot do stairs! With one of Viji’s friends joining us,
it became even more economical at Rs. 4,000/- total including 3 meals/day for 3. After booking
the cottage & bus tickets, the word that came to my mind is “Destiny” since
these two places were never in mine or Viji’s bucket list or in radar of our
things to do/see.
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Arasinamakki |
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Stream of Joy |
On Dec 9, 2015 off we went on a 2N/3D getaway by the 10:30 PM
Airawat bus to Dharmasthala. We were informed by host to get down at Kokkada
(20 km before Dharmasthala) & to take a Rickshaw to Arasinamakki (10 km
ride) for a cost of Rs. 200/-. Checking with the bus driver, we found out
that we would reach this place around 4:30 AM. Ride was OK as night bus
ride can never be comfortable especially
the ride through the winding Ghats. Reaching little early at 4:15 AM, we were happy
to see an auto in the stand & were at the property by 4:30 AM. Although we
were sort of in the middle of nowhere, riding an Auto felt safe! We were
greeted by the host. As I had booked the cottage for 3 full days, we were able
to check-in at this odd hour. The Cottages are located a little distance from
the main house and have few steps along the way. Our cottage was clean &
simple with an attached bathroom and a small sit-out facing the river.
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Kapila by the cottage |
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Cottage |
10th Dec: We
crashed for couple of hrs and later walked around the property which is neatly
done: 4 cottages, 2 small and 2 slightly
larger to accommodate 3 people. Each cottage has basic bathroom with a nice old
style “Hande/copper vessel” for hot water right outside each cottage bathroom
with direct pipe connection. The dining area is a gazebo with net all
around in the middle of all the trees & close to the cottages. The
River Kapila, in its tranquil form, flows a few feet from the cottage
completely surrounded by greenery. Kapila, originating at “Devaramane”
in Gutti Village of Mudigere taluk of Chikmagalore district, also takes-in the
waters of a river-let “Bairavi” and flows westwards before joining
Netravathi at Koodali Pathikallu. Understand during monsoon, river
rises to 10ft and comes to cottage entrance steps, but now it was only up to my
thighs and you can cross this pure/clean/transparent flowing water by foot or
use home-made bridge from beetle tree trunk & balance across. They
have a bamboo raft & a man-made rain fall on the river for your pleasure.
Added to this natural picturesque beauty is the continuous music from varieties
of birds. Simply fell in love with this place instantaneously. Had
breakfast around 9:00AM – delicious banana leaf wrapped idly, chatni &
sambar with avalakke and pinapple kesari bath. I ate more than I should (Well!
What’s new?) .
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Rubber tapping |
Discussing our plans with Mr. Kashinath, our host, we decided to
visit Dharmasthala after lunch. The agenda was first to see some of the
temples/places I had listed & walk around till late evening to see the
lighting of deepas/one lakh oil lamps. We were informed once again of the huge
crowd during this time and the long lines to temple. Our host arranged a taxi
ride at Rs. 650/- each way. After breakfast we took a walk in &
around the estate, saw the interesting process of rubber tapping and just
relaxed by the river enjoying the pristine Kapila!
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Dharmasthala Main St |
After a heavy typical South Canara lunch, off we went to
Dharmatsala at 2:30 PM on a 30 min ride to the 800 years old historic place-
Shri Khestra Dharmasthala. Today’s Karthika festival special was
lakshadeepotsava, Sahitya sammelana/literature discussion and Gowri Marukatte
Utsava/street fair. It is said “Twenty generations of the Heggade lineage
have devoted their lives to manage and develop the Dharmasthala kshetra. Sheer
dedication, selfless service and pious devotion to God and Man, have been the
foundation of the revered religious centre that Dharmasthala is today.”
This is one place where people of all walks of life & religion
\ are united. I say to all those Indians who are screaming on top of their
lungs about intolerance... please come here :-) Its history & legend
are amazing; details can be found here - http://www.shridharmasthala.org/subsequent_page.php?id1=3&id=2
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Sri Manjunatha Swamy temple |
We were in for a surprise when we reached Sri Manjunatha Swamy
temple, contrary to what we had heard there were very few people as it was
temple’s afternoon closing time. It was 2:50 and we were asked to run/walk real
fast through the long… winding barricade path to reach the inside of the temple
as they close the door at 3:00 PM. Huffing and puffing along the long path, we
ran this marathon in a hot humid afternoon (like we say in Kannada mata mata
madhyana uri beselu) and reached inside the temple in time for dharshan.
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Dining Hall |
Unlike in North India, no pandas/priests bother you for money or
to perform special poojas. Priest here specially informed us to go to the food
hall “Annapoorna Dining hall” and have the meal before its 4:00 PM closing
time. This is Dharmatsala for you… or, should I say, South Canara temples
uniqueness where everyone is fed well for free during lunch time in a clean and
hygienic environment. I remember what the famous Indian chef Vikas Kanna once
mentioned, the tastiest South Indian meal he ever had was at the Udupi Shri Krishna
Temple free lunch.
We went on another long walk in the Sun towards the lunch hall to see it. It is
indeed amazing, to see how they feed approx 10,000 people, on average, every
day. Since we had heavy lunch already, we did not eat anything. By
now the heat was getting to us. Could hardly believe it was almost 4:00 PM but
still the Sun and the heat was way too much to handle. There was no space with
shade available to sit. Went to the Information Center to check the time
the lamps will be lit, but to our disappointment we were informed that oil
lamps will be lit after mid night after the chariot is drawn through the Temple
Street. They also said oil lamps are few and mostly electric light everywhere
which will be on as soon as sun goes down.
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Modi,,, Modi... Modi |
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Original House |
Although we passed by Modi chai shop J , we went to a canteen nearby to sit and made my first wrong move,
while the other 2 had cool drinks, I opted for coffee (stupid!? May be! But
when I heard coffee I was tempted to have it). Went to see “Neliyadi Beedu”
the original residence of the Heggades. (Story goes
“Devathas or guardian of Dharma (Religion) consider it to be a
seat for flourishing Dharma. Hegade’s were instructed by Devathas to propagate
Dharma and offer free education, food and shelter to people of Nelyadi Beedu,
which is still followed to this day & hence the name Dharmatsala.”) The house was locked and we have to see it
from outside. Adjacent to this is Shri
Chandranatha Swamy Basadi, a well known Jain temple. Across is their grain
storage building called, Jama Ugrana and an antique car museum. We
walked thro’ the fair/jathre street and noticed more and more people were just
coming to Dharmatsala and festivity had started. By now it was past 5:00,
yet still very hot. We went to towards the Bahubali hill.
“In 1973 a statue of Lord Bahubali carved out of a single
rock, was installed at Dharmasthala on a low hill near the Manjunatha temple.
It is about 39 feet.” You have to climb about 250 steps to the base of the
statue. Statue is done nicely but nowhere close to Bahubali statue in
Shravana belugola. It was very crowded with school children.
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Sri Rama Kshetra |
Although exhausted, from here we took a Rickshaw to see Sri Rama
Kshetra which is couple of kilometres away. This new temple structure looked
colourful & attractive. External architecture reminds you of Bhubaneswar
temples, the inside is North Indian/Iskon style white marble idols and
halls. Legend has it that Lord
Rama stayed here for some time during Seethanveshane/search for Seetha. In 70’s
a temple was built here.
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Festivity |
From here, we took an interesting local shared van/taxi ride back to
Dharmasthala for just 10 Rs :-) By now the lights were on and the entire
place looked so festive. We headed to Kamat for a drink, and I made my 2nd mistake of the day with 2nd cup of coffee in the heat.
Festivity had started, streets in & around the temples as well as the temples
were lit with lots of lights. It was indeed Lakshadeepotsava,/100000
lights...The crowd was getting bigger and bigger by the minute. Musicians
in groups were playing Mrudhanga and Nadhaswara at every 20 ft distance, the main
Chariot was being decorated. Many make shift food and fancy stalls with
decorations were attracting customers.
Children play/ride area was in
full swing and beaming with so many lights and rides. All in all, a very high
energy atmosphere!
After spending some time wondering around, we decided to leave at
8:00 PM, our car was ready! The winding road back to home-stay was too much to
take for me at this point. The coffee(s) I had in that terrible heat
started doing numbers in my stomach and I felt nauseated…luckily I started
puking only after I reached the cottage. I felt terrible & just crashed
that night! For the first time, although when Viji told me the dinner was very good,
I did not even blink! By
morning, I was perfectly fine again with all the toxins out of my system.
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Beetle nut |
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beetle nut trunk bridge |
11th Dec: Woke up to a beautiful morning. There is
nothing like being in the midst of the nature. Went for a short walk across the
river via the beetle trunk bridge. Plan for the day was to visit the off-the-beaten-track
heritage temples within 15 km radius of Arasinamakki. Had a good breakfast
(Akki Rotti, chatni & avalakki) and set out with our host to see temples in
his car. The hosting family is so humble and kind, it is beyond words! He took
time from his busy schedule to accompany us in his vehicle to these temples
with no additional taxi/tour charge.
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Southadka temple |
First stop was “Southadka
Shree Mahaganapathi Temple”. It
is more than 800Yrs old and has no gopura/temple structure. It is in open field
amidst of nature. The origin of the name is interesting- Southa in
kannada means “cucumber” and Adka means “plain/field”, this Ganesha idol was
found by cow herd boys who used to offer tender cucumber which was grown mainly
around here. This temple is considered as one of the siddhi kshetras.
There are lots of brass bells of different size hanging all the way from
entrance to the idol sanctuary. We were just in time for morning
pooja/maha managalarathi, which was such a great sight and sound from100’s of
bells. Panchakajjaya Pooja, the way it is done, is one of the typical South Canara
trademarks for Ganesha. It is so colorful to watch. Avalakke
Panchakajjaya Prasada &
laddu were delicious!
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Vaidhyanatheswara temple |
From here we proceeded towards the historic Kokkada Vaidhyanatheswara Temple,
It is one of the few places where Hari and Hara, both
are worshipped in the same temple complex. The management &
priests here are Vaishnavaits. In this complex there is Vishnu, Vaidhyanatheswara
and Neelakanta idols/temples. According
to the history it is more than 2600 Yr old “In Dhvaparayuga, Madhvacharya
consecrated the idol of Lord Vishnumurthy in Kokkada & authored the
Sanskrit book ‘Krishnamruthamaharnava’ here”. 2600 year old!! Goose
bumps experience indeed!
The main temple as you enter is peaceful, beautiful & clean,
it is of Vaidhyanatheshwara - temple is in ‘Deerga Sthandilakara’
structure and was built approximately 1000 years ago. There is a stone writing
in Halegannada/Old Kannada in front of the temple which was written in 1544 by
Devu (son of king Desinga). He also consecrated Dhwajasthamba, the flag post, in
front of the temple. Garbha gudi/Sanctum was glowing with oil lamps all around –
the word that comes to mind
is “pure”.
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Pushkarani and Neelakanta temple |
The Nandhi, in front, is a natural rock formation. Next to this
is the small Vishnumurthy temple, the current structure in the form of Mandal
is believed to be of the Vijayanagar period.
Next to it is this beautiful Kalyani/sacred pond which is believed to have many
herbal properties and hence called as Dhanwanthari Kshethra. Pond is believed
to be built by Pandavas. The Neelakanta Swamy temple which is in middle of
the pond is believed to be one of the very old temples in the region.
This temple probably is the least know heritage temple in Karnataka.
Thanks to Dharmasthala trust that contributes to the up-keep of all these
temples.
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Way to temple |
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Hanging bridge |
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Temple Complex |
Next stop was Panchlineshwara
Temple dating back to
Mahabharata. Here mother nature is at its feet, you have to walk about a
km in the middle of beetle farm & cross a beautiful hanging bridge on the river
called “Gundya holae” to reach this temple. Here the scenic beauty of
Western Ghats - the greenery, water and the surrounding hills/mountain -
Yethena buja (looks like shoulder of an Ox and hence the name), Amedhe kallu
and Shingani gudda - is breathtaking. Seems you can trek these hills but
minimum 10 people are required. We were told there are elephants and
leopards in those areas & hence local guide/villager is essential for such
treks. This temple complex is marvellous in a traditional style
of this region and Kerala.
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Gundya Holae |
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Yethena Buja |
Our host told us that we will cover Shishila Temple & sunset
point in the evening and we headed back to cottage. The drive was picturesque
and beautiful all the way. We saw a few “Cold pressed coconut oil mill” on the
way and, of course, we wanted to buy some oil. The price is so cheap (Rs.185 /liter)
with an appetizing fragrance (spoken like a true Mangalorean). You realize what
a rip off in Bangalore organic stores for cold pressed oils at Rs. 500/litre.
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Host ready to serve lunch |
After a great lunch and a short nap off to Shishila – This temple, on the banks of Kapila
River surrounded by dense forested mountains,
is a biodiversity hot spot. You have to cross a hanging bridge on
Kapila River to reach the Shiva temple. Idol here is in the form of a Linga & is believed to be
Udbhava Linga. There are interesting folk stories about this temple. This place
is known as Matsya Theertha as huge numbers of Mahashir fish is found here in this
river. These fish are considered sacred and prasada is offered everyday to them.There
is a belief that feeding these fish can cure skin disease.
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Damle ready with puffed rice bag |
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Fish...Fish |
A devotee from Bangalore has paid for & requested our host to feed the fish on his behalf every time he came here. So, our host had carried a huge bag full of “Aralu/puffed paddy” and the moment he threw some in the water a huge group of fish came up the water and we all got so excited. He showed us a trick, he made loud thumping noise on the bridge and walked towards the steps to the Kapila river, the fishes followed him. It was as if they knew he was going to feed them. I guess they are used to people feeding them and follow footsteps. It was an awesome experience feeding these fish, they are anywhere from a foot to 3 ft big, Our enthusiasm went up 100 folds automatically; it is one of those being in the moment experience!
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Shishila temple |
After we emptied the bag of Aralu, we went inside the temple. It
is a serene 800Yrs old rocky temple with internal architecture being more like a
Basadi/Jain Temple. There is a memorial carved in stone that reminds one of a terrible disaster
on the liveliest occupant of the river–the Mahashir fish. They perished in
thousands when miscreants poisoned the river in 1996. Residents of Shishila village
joined hands to set up the Matsya Samrakshane Vedike (Fish Protection Forum). Known as the Shishila Temple Fish Sanctuary, today it is one of
the finest such sanctuaries in the country and a prime example of what is happening in our country
today: Locals taking efforts in protecting eco system/aquatic life & becoming
self-appointed guardians of the environment, in this case this fish sanctuary.
A total contrast to this, our Govt’s unscientific Yettinahole Dam project, that is coming up
just 15 km away from this sanctuary, will definitely upset the eco system here
and of the Western Ghats in general. Sad state of affairs with
total disregard towards the nature! They have not learnt any lesson from 2013
Himalayan tragedy!
By now it was cloudy and sun already going down and so, we dropped the plan of
going to sunset point. We headed back towards the home stay. We spent
some quiet evening time at the water recalling how mesmerizing day had been!
Had a great dinner again and finally off to bed for an early morning bird
watching.
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Bird watching trek |
12th Dec: Ah…our last day here! After a good cup of coffee, off we went
for bird watching. A group of four Techies from next cottage joined us.
It was a wonderful guided walk tour with our host. Inside the forest
area, hardly 2 Km from the cottage we saw many birds. The whole
experience was very good! The nature walk of uphill/downhill/straight path
surrounded by thick vegetation, music from birds and us chatting all the
way – very different experience from our Hawaii bird watching tour, where
fellow tour group members would get annoyed even if you breath loudly and snap
at you saying birds will fly away. In India birds are like us, adjust madee attitude with humans and won’t fly
away when they see or hear us.
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Beetle nuts |
We saw 17 different species including
hornbill (Barbet, woodpecker, grey hornbill, King fisher, Bee eater, plum
headed parakeet, Cormorant, Heron, greater Coucal, Black hooded Oriole,
Flycatcher, Drongo, Common Iora, Red whiskered Bulbul, Sun bird and white
wagtail). Some of these, you get to see quite often near the cottage
river area here. After an amazing couple of hours’ walk, headed back to
cottage.
As usual, had good breakfast and nice chat with IT folks
who surprising were sort of my peers and all four from different parts of
India. These guys with 20+ yr exp & the couple we met earlier who
worked 30 yr in IT before retirement was a total contrast to the three
youngsters we met first day. Those youngsters had quit IT jobs after a year as
they felt IT is not their cup of tea. We hear this quite often nowadays. Parents, please note J if you are pushing your kids to
do Engineering - money you spent on Engg degree is down the drain.
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pepper |
After some rest we decided to hit the water. It was so relaxing just being in this peaceful
clear river. We enjoyed being under the waterfall at the river.
You can just sit in the water and watch the reflection of the surrounding
scenery for hours. We just hung out there till it was time to catch the late
night bus back to Bangalore.
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Stream of joy - Viji (watercolor) |
What an enchanting 2N/3D trip right in our own
backyard at an unbelievable total cost of Rs. 6000 Rs/head. Arasinamakki
came in as such a pleasant surprise and feel so privileged that destiny brought
me to such a magnificent place! A real hidden gem!
Beautiful narration of our trip, adding historical information of the temples & places enhanced the quality of this blog. Such a tranquil place which can drive away all the blues of city life.Hope, we will go back to this place again.
ReplyDeleteViji
Hi Radha, Such a detailed narrative travelogue with all the important information included. I really appreciate the way you and viji make such wonderful trips to the places where you become a part of nature. Kudos to you both. I had the satisfaction of seeing those places through your blog. Thank you !
ReplyDeleteForgot to mention about Viji's painting. Her creativity at its best. Beautiful painting ! Shambhavi
DeleteAnother masterpiece. I am sitting in the cold weather with snow outside, by reading your wonderful blog, it transported me to our Daksina kannada, its beauty, serenity and hospitality .
ReplyDeleteThoroughly enjoyed it
saroja
sorry to read your ordeal after drinking coffee. it is better to carry a tablet of antacid handy for any stomach upset of any cause
ReplyDeletethe trip write up is excellant and very informative. time well spent and rewarded, will keep in mind when we go that side.
Anand
Viji's watercolor painting ' stream of joy' matches your writing .Good job viji
ReplyDeletesaroja
Excellent Radha. Love to go to these places. Very well written. Viji lovely painting.
ReplyDeleteLeela
What an Amazing experience of a beautiful place with all its glory and a team of passionate nature loving sisters to help us picture it all.It takes you along as you read and makes you question your purpose of living away from it all in a faraway land.
ReplyDeleteThanks Radha and Vijaya for this and for all of your adventures.
Ranjini
Thanks for all the generous comments... Appreciate it!
ReplyDeleteWonderful "Peace is always beautiful”
ReplyDelete