RSS

Photo story of our trip to Doeguling Tibetan Settlement

We had been planning to see the Doeguling Tibetan Settlement near Mundgod for a long time – it is around 130 km from Sagar. Ratna and I keep coming to Sagar regularly now – once every 5 or 6 weeks – and stay in our beautiful home here. Finally, on 7th July, the great day came and we set off in the morning. Ratna’s younger brother Gopalakrishna (we call him Gopali), and her elder brother’s wife Shailaja and her daughter Deepthi joined us. We went to Padavagod (the village where Ratna was born and where they all stay) and picked them up and then set off around 9:30. We packed some “vegetable pulav” and lots of water and some snacks for the journey.

The Corolla, with its new tyres, was running like a charm. The car is remarkable – 6 years + old, has run 1,26,000 kms, and is still as good as new (except for some scratches and dents). Totally trouble-free, the engine purrs and delivers power smoothly and effortlessly – I love this car!

The monsoon is fully on, and this area is known for heavy rains. The morning was overcast, and Ratna was a bit worried. We went via Sagar – Siddapur – Sirsi, and reached Sirsi by 10:45 am. It started raining pretty heavily from there on, but we were snug and safe in the Corolla and didn’t have any problem. All through, I was playing old Hindi songs from my Nokia N8 – it has a built-in FM transmitter, and we can hear the songs on the car radio!

From Sirsi, Mundgod is around 50 kms, and we found our way to the settlement by 11:45. We started seeing the Buddhist monks right from Mundgod town – the settlement is around 5 km outside the town. They were walking in twos and threes with umbrellas held high, in their red robes, all over the town.

I checked up on the Internet – the Government of Karnataka gave 4000 acres of forest land to these homeless Tibetans when they landed here, in 1966. They have built three major monasteries, and have developed settlements where families live, and even do a lot of agriculture. I believe there are more than 2000 monks, and the families and others number probably around 20000.

It was pretty difficult to know where to go. The place is neat, clean, well-laid out, with concrete roads. But no signs pointing to places of interest. We kept asking passing monks where the “temple” was, and finally they directed us to a huge structure. Once there, we found a giant prayer hall where we expected the temple to be, but all the doors were closed. Finally a monk tapped on a side door, and another monk inside let us in.

 

The huge prayer hall has, on one wall, several very large images of the Buddha – different “Buddhas” like medicine Buddha, etc. The central statue is the largest, and in front of it there is a very large “throne” with a life-size photo of the Dalai Lama kept on it as if he is sitting there. The monk told us the Dalai Lama visits here once a year.

The photo below is taken using the Panorama app on the Nokia N8:

The prayer hall, with long rows of mats where they sit for prayer:

Some views of the inside:

This is how the main door looks like. Shailaja, Deepthi, Ratna and Gopali are standing here.

The temple looks like this from the front:

The view from the temple, opposite it, using Panorama:

Some close-ups of structures from the view above:

One more:

And another:

Beautiful flowers with the temple in the background:

After we went around, we had a picnic lunch at the basement parking area of the temple, and then set off back. We had been told there is a temple around 10 km from Sirsi where a lady had lit 3 lamps in 1979 and which were still burning, without anyone filling up oil into them – it is known as a miracle in that area. We went to visit that place. This lady was a very pious lady belonging to the goldsmith caste. The temple consists of the original room which was the puja room in that house, and the rest of the mud house has been knocked down and a concrete structure built around it later. The approach road to the little village with these miraculous lamps is pathetic. The place has been visited by several dignitaries including the Dalai Lama.

Here are some photos of the puja room with the lamps. The three lined up the middle are the eternal ones. The photo is very dim because there is a steel mosquito mesh fitted to the door, probably to allow people to see in and yet allow air (and of course oxygen) inside.

The one on the left is one that is lit every day by the Pujari. The photo with an electric lamp above is that of the lady who lit the three lamps. The photo below is of a signboard in Kannada explaining the story:

So after visiting this, we drove back to Padavagod to leave our relatives home before returning ourselves to our Sagar home. On the way back, we continued to enjoy some really wonderful old Hindi songs.

One hallmark of the landscape of the entire journey is the wonderful lush greenery. This whole Sagar / Sirsi area is very green with dense forests. It is a pleasure to drive through them – a feast for the eyes!

 
Leave a comment

Posted by on July 8, 2011 in Uncategorized

 

Ramaa’s wedding

The elder daughter (Ramaa) of my younger brother (Ramchandra who we all call “Ramu”) got married at Bangalore on 20th May 2011 to Prasad. We went for the wedding. It was a grand affair – Ramu believes in doing things in style. After a long time we met the parents of Raji (Ramu’s wife). They are both over 80 and still active and taking good care of themselves! They stay at Vizag and run an Ashram there.

Prasad’s father works in KSRTC and still has 2 years to go before retirement. They are from Belgaum. Prasad was 2 years senior to Ramaa when they were both studying engineering. They know one another from that time, and decided to get married.

The purohit was Manjunath Bhat, who was also the priest who conducted the marriage of my son Chandan with his sweetheart Lekha. This fellow is a real expert – you should see the way he chants the mantras and conducts the pumas – a real “vidwan” or learned man!

Ratna loves to attend weddings, as it gives her a chance to wear gorgeous silk sarees and deck up in her gold jewelry! Chandan and Lekha also came, and were probably the smartest couple there!

Ragini, Ramaa’s younger sister, was looking smart in a blue ghagra-choli. Weddings like this give us an opportunity to meet relatives who we have not met in a long time. vijay a (my cousin who grew up with us) was there, with her husband Murali and their children Pooja and Gaurav. Pooja has completed her engineering and is going to start work shortly. Gaurav had completed his PUC and is now a bit confused – he is thinking of skipping one year and trying for IIT.

 
Leave a comment

Posted by on May 22, 2011 in Uncategorized

 

Meeting the neighbours and improving the environment

We moved into our new house in mid-January. It is much larger than the earlier one – we bought an old house and did it up. It is so comfortable – we are enjoying it very much!

I took this photo of our house from the terrace of a house opposite (of course with my trusty Nokia N8 phone). You can see our two red cars: the Chevrolet Spark belonging to my son Chandan, and the Toyota Corolla that I drive.

There is a bamboo tree on one side and a “sampige” tree on the other.

The house opposite belongs to an elderly couple whose son is in the U.S. They have bought an empty site next to their house and have developed a nice garden. This garden is a great view for us from our own terrace, as shown in this photo:

One of the best things I like about the road we live in are the trees with yellow flowers – there are many of them along the road, and in season the entire road is a blaze of glory! See the flowers on a tree just opposite our house in this photo:

Seeing these blossoms brings back fond memories of when I used to drive down to Yuken every day to work – we loved to see these and other blossoms – violet, purple, red – so many beautiful trees lining stretches along the way!

This Sunday, I got a phone call from Mahesh, who is our neighbour. He and a group of people living on our road, in association with an NGO called “Saahas”, were planning to visit every house on this road. The objective was to build awareness and get agreement to a proposal as shown in the pamphlet below:

So a group of 6 of us led by a very enterprising lady, walked up to each house, met the owners, tenants and whoever were living there, and explained this to them. They were all very positive and promised to seggregate the waste – wet waste to be hung high so that dogs don’t get at them and put out every morning for garbage collection, and plastics, paper etc. which can be recycled to be kept at home and put out every Saturday morning when a special collection will be done for them.

A good opportunity to meet all the neighbours! Quite an interesting lot, living on our street!

 
Leave a comment

Posted by on April 12, 2011 in Uncategorized

 

Visit to Sridhara Ashrama near Sagar

Now we are back at Bangalore, after two full weeks at Sagar! It was a great break, and was the time when I started this whole blogging business, which I am now beginning to enjoy! I just learnt how to create this blog within Microsoft Word, and post it directly to my blog! Hope this works!

A few kms away from Sagar is a small hill where the famous saint, Sridhara Swamy, did his meditation and became a famous, respected figure. More details about him and his times can be found at the website www.srisridharaashrama.org. Ratna is very fond of this saint, and from her childhood has held him and his teachings in high regard. Whenever we go to Sagar we make it a point to go there, climb the hill, pay our respects at the temple, and enjoy the peace and tranquillity in this wonderful place.

Before we climb the hill, we go to this spot at the foot of the hill where pure mountain water keeps flowing from this fount 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. This is called the Sridhara Thirta and I quote below from the website:

Despite the calm and quiet landscape, there was an immense scarcity of water at Varadpur. Realizing this, Shri Shreedhaswami dug out a small hole from the ground with the thumb of his right leg. A small stream of water surfaced and began flowing down. This stream, known as the Shridhar Tirtha, flows with full force till date facilitating people with water supply in abundance.

We wash our hands and feet and put a few drops on our head. There is a little pond just opposite, and some devotees bathe there before climbing the hill.

After this, we start the climb from this point, from where a flight of stone steps wind their way up the hill. We now find that we have to pause at least 3 or 4 times before we manage the climb to the top.

As we reach the top, the temple looms before us. Unfortunately photos and videos are not allowed inside the temple, so I just took this photo outside.

After finishing the darshan, and going around the temple, we paused near the wall shown here and enjoyed the fantastic view below. The whole area is verdant green and a paradise of nature. I used the “panorama” feature of the Nokia N8 for this.

Before going down, I couldn’t resist the temptation to take a panorama view of the temple premises:

By the time we reached the foot of the hill, Ratna was a bit tired and took a brief rest under a tree, next to a picture of Sridhara Swamy:

This, then, is the picture story of the visit we made to Sridhara Ashrama during our Sagar visit!

 
Leave a comment

Posted by on March 2, 2011 in Uncategorized

 

First day of Mariamma Festival at Sagar

A very important festival and fair starts at Sagar town today – the festival of the Goddess Mariamma, or the “Mari Jathre” as the festival is called locally. Today, the first day, the Goddess is kept at her “mother’s house” and the worship or “puja” is done by the Brahmins. Around 11 pm tonight, she will be shifted to her “husband’s house” and then the worship is taken over by the traditional caste which does it at the Mari Temple right in the heart of Sagar.

This “Jathre” is celebrated once in 3 years. Hundreds of stalls and shops come up around the heart of the town. A huge fair also comes up, with roundabouts and different rides. Villages from hundreds of nearby villages flock in, wearing their finest clothes. Those who eat meat carry sheep on 3-wheelers and 2-wheelers which they will sacrifice and enjoy at their relatives’ homes. In the olden days, an ox used to be sacrificed at the festival, but now that is stopped – an ox is used for the puja, and is later auctioned to the highest bidder.

The festival this year is from 22nd Feb to 2nd Mar.

With great difficulty, pushed and hemmed in by huge crowds, Ratna and I along with some relatives and neighbours managed to do the “puja” this auspicious first day. In the evening we’ll go around the shops and stalls and soak in the atmosphere of this famous “Jathre”.

 

 
Leave a comment

Posted by on February 22, 2011 in Uncategorized

 

Hawaii – a wonderful book by James Michener

Hi – I am back again after a one-day gap! Lazy days here at our holiday home at Sagar. Most Companies I work with as a Consultant are busy with their year-end targets (the financial year here ends 31st March) and don’t really want us around at this time. Also, Chandan (my son) and Lekha (my daughter-in-law) had gone off to Thailand for a holiday so Ratna said she would get bored stiff at Bangalore so let’s go to Sagar…….

The first week is over, and we are planning to stay till next Sunday – the first time we have stayed so long (2 full weeks!). I landed here with good intentions of getting in a lot of work done on the side, but frankly have done very little. Have done a lot of exploration – started this blog, became alive once more on Twitter, saw several wonderful TED talk videos which I had downloaded but had never managed to see!

One of the things I have really enjoyed this time has been the quality time I could spend reading! I am reading James Michener’s Hawaii – an epic novel, wonderfully written, which starts from the time nature was throwing up volcanoes millions of years ago which erupted to create these beautiful islands. Michener has a wonderful way of going into great detail and then stepping back and moving ahead tens or sometimes hundreds of years while still keeping the thread of the story intact. What an author! He has painted a thrilling picture of the original Tahiti island where the natives, fed up with a new God insisting on too many human sacrifices, decided to set off on their double canoe through thousands of miles of unknown ocean to reach what is now Hawaii! From there he goes on to how Calvinist missionaries from New England changed the face of the islands, and on to the arrival of the Chinese and the Japanese, and the annexation of the islands into the United States. I still have a quarter of the book left, and am looking forward to the adventures ahead!

Meanwhile, in our little garden, flowers continue to bloom in the warm sunshine!

 
Leave a comment

Posted by on February 20, 2011 in Uncategorized

 

The fantastic Hans Rosling – data wizard!

I got this video link from a tweet by Bill Gates – I follow him on Twitter. Now that I have learnt how to embed YouTube videos into my blog, here goes:

In this video, Hans Rosling literally presents his fantastic bubbles on thin air – his technical team must be something great! 200 countries, and 200 years of data presented in an easy-to-understand manner in just a few minutes!

 
Leave a comment

Posted by on February 18, 2011 in Uncategorized

 

Village festival and fair

This seems to be a season of festivals and fairs in the Sagar area. The Goddess Mariamma is a local diety who has a special festival in her honour, which is held once in 5 years. A committee organizes the idol, the decorations, and auctions the stalls where the fair will run. Huge crowds visit, with devotees offering her sarees, bangles and flowers, in addition to the usual incense sticks, coconuts etc. Selected sarees are used to adorn the idol, and are later sold by auction.

Stalls are put up in the area, selling fancy items, food, toys etc. This year, they said only 12 stalls came – 5 years back they had over a 100 stalls. Villagers from surrounding villages come with their families to pay their respects and to enjoy the fair.

The idol is decorated with currency notes, bangles, bananas, etc. This is similar to the Kali Puja in West Bengal. In the earlier days, goats or pigs used to be sacrificed to the Goddess, but now that is not done. However, devotees of certain castes do the sacrifice at home, and enjoy the meat.

 
Leave a comment

Posted by on February 18, 2011 in Uncategorized

 

Snake-catcher at work!

The last time we visited our home at Sagar, we reached here in the afternoon of 25th Dec after driving down. We usually keep the house locked up when we are away, so we unlock it and start going around to see if everything is OK. When I opened the back door which opens out to a passage, I saw a brown snake slithering away – it had just crossed the back door and was going towards a corner where we had kept an old carton and some other junk. Ratna (my wife) of course was horrified and I immediately closed the rear door.

With the help of a neighbour, we called up a local snake-catcher (his name: Manmatha) and he turned up half-an-hour later. He asked me where the snake was, and I pointed. He was wearing stout boots but had nothing on his hands. A few minutes later he came out with a brown cobra which he was holding suspended by the tail! He then calmly proceeded to put the snake into a small bag – at this point I had the presence of mind to pull out my Nokia N8 and start capturing on video. This clip is attached with this post.

I asked Manmatha what he would do with the snake and he said he would let it loose in the forest. What bravery and skill!

During that entire stay of a week we hardly ever opened the back door. When we returned this time on 13th February, no sign of the snake. Now we have recovered our courage and go out the back door often. We still don’t keep the door open most of the day, as we used to!

 
Leave a comment

Posted by on February 17, 2011 in Uncategorized

 

Lazy morning at Sagar

Got up at 8 am! Too late, huh? Anyway, the sun is up and bright as usual, and the busy little birds chirping away – this is the best part of staying at our Sagar home – the closeness to nature.
After a cup of hot coffee, I walked down to the small shop near Chennamma Circle to fetch milk, while Ratna got busy preparing breakfast. My Nokia Sports Tracker app shows I walked 0.82 km.

The photo shows what the road I walked on looks like.

So now breakfast (delicious – Ratna is a very good cook!) is over, so I sat down to try and write up my blog!

 
Leave a comment

Posted by on February 17, 2011 in Uncategorized