Thursday, March 25, 2010

Day 23 - Sambavarvadakarai to Trivandrum

The village home has a vintage appeal even as the straight-through corridor reminds of a city apartment..a sort of similar difference - flats have fixed height and varying breadth; here breadth is constant, while storeys may be added:


A skylight keeps the house naturally well-lit throughout the day.


The kitchen garden has a grindstone and various herbs and fruit trees.


The backdoor opens out to the highway toward Kerala.


The aangan (courtyard) has a well and a traditional tulsi (basil) plant.


The oval shape of the shared well enhances neighbour satisfaction. During the monsoons, the water level rises several feet with the water table.




A heavy brunch of dosas, gunpowder (a special masala mixed with a drop of oil), sambhar with bhindi, and Bovonto (a local, aerated, grape-flavour drink - really addictive for a soft drink):


Found the bike had developed a flat overnight - interesting that she did 3500 km in almost a month without tyre trouble, and this on the second to last day of the journey. Called in a village puncture specialist who cycled down with assistant and took the wheel away for repairs.


The village street in morning light:



A temple just outside the residential section of the village:


Quaint designs on the houses, some built upto 50 years back


Saty bullets down the bucolic boulevard:


Headed towards Kutrallam Falls, a set of waterfalls at Tamil Nadu's western border and an important waypoint for annual pilgrims.


Carvings on the rocks


Rounding a bend brought the Western Ghats into view, a green carpet of paddy fields leading up:


With the shifting cloud cover, the green shades frequently change contrast


A woodpecker was knocking on wood to get lucky for lunch:


The road runs parallel to a river as it climbs the hill


After the teak forests, rubber farms abound



The rubber collection system is simple: the farmer makes a gash in the tree bark and hangs half a coconut shell under it, the sap drips into the cup and is scooped up every evening.


Christmas eve just 3 days away, spirits soar in Trivandrum with twinkling churches making even red lights a pleasure stop:

5 comments:

R Ramesh said...

I am very happy to see this snaps of SAMBAVARVADAKARAI.

shagun said...

nice to know that.. it is a beautiful place, feels like the serene back garden to god's own country :)

TV Ganesh said...

Hi! This is Ganesh from New Delhi. I am from Tenkasi, not far from SambavarVg.
A little taken aback to see a guy on a bike with U.P. registration down an Agrahaaram in our area...! The photo looks out of this world !
Congrats to you all guys.

Ganesh
25.8.12

shagun said...

Hi Ganesh,

Thanks for the appreciation. Sambavar's a place rich in its offerings to travellers and we were like bees to the nectar even though our beehive may be in U.P. :)

Vivek Balasubramanian said...

Glad to see our village here. My family can go back maybe 2 centuries to Sambavar. My father and most of his siblings who actually grew up there are all gone. I am reminded of my youth when I used to go there with family. I still have relatives there. Anyways brought a cheer when I saw your travel adventures through our village.

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