04.04.2010
I was too busy to write for two days, so here it is. Day 3
of our tour on 02.04.2010 went right according to plan (Sappu and my plan, that
is ;) The original plan was to first go to Karapuzha Dam then to Amalaveyil
Farm, then Soochipara Waterfalls and last head to Pookote Lake. Sappu and I
wanted to go back to Kuruva Island for some more rafting but had decided to
sacrifice it (grudgingly) so that mom could go to the Farm (since mom loves
gardening).
But (heehee) after we went to Karapuzha (just about okay
after all the sightseeing we’d done the previous days) when we proceeded to the
Farm, it was… closed! It was Good Friday, a holiday! Yoohoo! So, off we went to
Kuruva!
Frankly… was a little apprehensive (places rarely match up to our charmed memories of them, on a second visit) and
when we reached there it seemed like every other person on Earth had landed
there (it WAS Easter weekend!). But fortunately, it being lunchtime by the time
we reached, many were returning after a morning visit. So we got our boat and
off we went. Headed straight to the rafting area… EAGERLY. Had to work hard to
persuade dad to join us (he has a kneejerk ‘no’ reaction to any suggestion with
the slightest shade of adventure) and the experience was… DIVINE!
Floating slowly and silently over the nearly-still waters,
with branches screening us in green light and water tickling our feet when it
washed onto the bamboo raft… ah! The destination was a row of rocks but our
rafter/boatman took us farther up. One and a half hour of bliss! He also showed us
a tortoise surfacing, briefly. Rafting done, we happily went back to the
mainland for lunch. We ate at Ashwathy where we’d had a rice meal on our
previous visit (the onion pickle was… yum!).
Then we were racing against time to reach Soochipara before
5. Got there and trekked downhill (stopping for pineapple slices floating in a
mixture of vinegar, sugar and green chillies) to see the tiny trickle that was
all that remained of the fall (it being dry season).
We were to leave on 05.04.2010, so we set off early for Kozhikode station, so that we could get in a visit
Pookote Lake at Vythiri (what a lovely place!). It
was the typical walk through verdant woods
with the water to one side, lilies floating through it. Wished we'd had more time to enjoy it fully.
Image Courtesy: Irvin calicut, CC BY-SA 3.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0>, via Wikimedia Commons
Picked up some great banana chips on the way. For fried snacks, there was barely any oil on them, not even when they were kept on tissue paper. Which is why I could earnestly tell my friend, Savio, (on our return) that the chips were fried in water and he bought it! Hee hee! It's true when they say the easiest to dupe is a prankster ;)
P.S. Keralites are developing a liking for bright, garish
colours for their houses. It could be, as Sappu said, an attempt to save power at
night. You wouldn’t need lights on the road, with those houses standing as beacons!
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