When you
leave the city premises at the crack of dawn on a weekend, the open roads are
more than just inviting – there’s something very comforting about the scenery zipping
past you as you see fewer buildings, and eventually, plush green fields and the
countryside.
The idea
was to spend the day exploring Bheemeshwari. While the aim was not completely
achieved, in part thanks to the heat, it was still one of the most relaxing days
out in a while. The stirring greenery and plantations fortified with electric
fences gave way to dry and dusty roads as we approached Bheemeshwari’s wildlife
sanctuary and forest reserve.
We
embrace summer in Karnataka right from February, so we figured the weather also
meant we weren’t going to spot much wildlife. We were wrong: almost as soon as
we drove in we spotted a rambunctious herd of wild boar, scouring for food, no
doubt, but judging by their disapproving snorts, the dry shrubs were not quite
what they were looking for.
The lush vegetation
leading to Bheemeshwari lends itself to the sanctuary too, we are told, when
the subsidiary of Cauvery running through the reserve flows in all its might
during the monsoons and colours the now arid landscape with shades of brown,
green and that moss-black-grey hue specific to deep waters.
Moving on
to what we actually experienced. The time it took for us to assimilate our
surroundings and choose an adventure package that best fit our group at the
reserve did not do anything to alleviate our apprehension over the hordes of
monkeys that flocked the reserve. We were thankful for the lemonade we were
served, although we gulped it down just to be sure it wasn’t unceremoniously
snatched from us.
The
website said we should have a pair of walking shoes handy for our nature walk.
But what they really meant was hiking or trekking shoes, built to carry you
steadily up steep, gravel ridden slippery inclines.
Apart
from its surliness towards inexperienced hikers like me, the walk had a lot of
pros too. On our way out of the resort and its offices, we spotted a beautiful
mother owl - the very colour of the bark of the tree where she homed. While we
gushed over her standing barely a few feet away, she opened one eye to show her
explicit displeasure at being interrupted during her beauty sleep.
We’d
barely marched a few yards ahead, when our guide pointed out little owlets
perched high and far above, curiously peeking down at visitors from their safe
nooks in the huge bough of a tree. With a grin, he quickly explained they were
Sleeping Beauty’s babies, homed firmly away from her during her day’s snooze.
Gazing up at their clamour and games on the tree’s bough, I couldn’t help
glimpsing back at the owl and feeling a bond with her when I remembered my own
little one firmly ensconced at home with her dad. Oh yes, Mother Nature sure
knew what she was doing!
We
spotted quite a few varieties of birds; their names elude me now, but our guide
knew them in two languages. We stopped every now and then when we heard a new
call and bent in every angle till we spotted them.
Somehow,
the heat didn’t really get to us till we hit the slopes: a steep, slippery hill
that had recently survived a forest fire. Three quarters of the way up, two of
us gave up: one at the risk of slipping and spraining her
previously-once-broken-arm, and me wheezing from the ashes scattered around and
struggling with my ‘walking shoes’. While the rest of our lot clambered further
up to enjoy the complete view from the top, my friend and I turned to take in
our view.
The
picture laid out in front of us was mostly set in a desert brown tone, with a
feeble arm of the much fought over Cauvery river snaking a rocky course for as
long as we could see. As meagre as it seemed right then, it was just as easy to
picture it all at its season’s best. The rest of the landscape was pretty much
what we’d traipsed through – a jungle closely knit with dry shrubbery and trees
with wide, protective branches.
When we
stumbled back off the hill, groaning at our empty water canteens, our guide
proffered us pieces of a wood apple, completely wild and natural, he said. I
didn’t think I’d appreciate the sour fruit till I actually took a bite. But my
gourmet retreat in the jungle was to be short lived as I heard an angry screech
from an equally angry monkey and I quickly decided to forgo the fruit, lest the
beast decided to teach me a lesson in sharing.
On the
way to the shallow pool of the river, we spotted herds of spotted deer as they
sped away from our footsteps. Our guide took every opportunity to point out old
elephant manure, trying to assure us if we visit again after the monsoons, we
were sure to spot them too. Kind of shuddering at the idea of trying to outrun
a herd of wild elephants, we assured ourselves that maybe our trip was timed
well enough.
The water
looked murky, but when I managed to steer my way in carefully past the moss
ridden rocks, the sand bed immediately caressed my soles invitingly. I guess we
were too old to splash around, so while some of us lounged under the trees by
the banks, a few of us picked our way around with the guide assuring us the
water was safe.
His
definition of safe, however, mystified me a few hours later. After a lazy lunch
and lounging in the hammocks with the monkeys, that now seemed part of the
locale, running around insisting on inspecting the contents of our backpacks,
we decided to try out the kayaks and the traditional parisals.
This is
the deeper end of the river, the guide explained, and we gazed curiously at the
rocks amid the river that separated the shallow bed where we spent the earlier
part of the afternoon and the deeper end where we were now being rowed around. With
one hand reaching to caress the water, I asked him more on a gut feeling rather
than on knowledge, if there were crocs in the river. Yes, he said simply, as
though they were nothing more than fish. Being a bit more dramatic by nature, I
remembered Lake Placid, and decided to put my hand to better use taking
pictures of our kayaking friends.
Curiosity
got the better of me somehow, “Can we spot them now,” I asked our guide.
With
something akin to pride glinting in his eyes, he rowed us closer to the rocks
just in time to see what we thought was a section of the rock, slide in quietly
at the sign of intruders, tail swishing ominously. Still reeling from the
thrill, we quickly spotted two other crocs rising a little to the water’s
surface, almost as if to peek at us, and disappearing just as suddenly.
When we
stepped out of the boats, the sun was setting tranquilly on a day, which was
tiring, but filled with good company and laughter. The drive back seemed familiar
now and we settled back into our seats, tucking the day safely into memory.
Nice recap of the trip. I had a re run reading it. A nice keepsake for the future. Thanks.
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