Showing posts with label Western Ghats. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Western Ghats. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 28, 2025

The Ant Whisperer of Dasara: A Slippery Tale from the Ghats

 The Ant Whisperer of Dasara: A Slippery Tale                                   from the Ghats


The Ant Whisperer of Dasara: A Slippery Tale from the Ghats
AI Generated

We’ve all done crazy things in our childhood. Not the "my parents were so proud of me" kind. No, I’m talking about those things that don’t exactly earn you medals, but come back again and again as comedy blockbusters in your mind's private theater. They’re so out of the box that even the box says, “I’m out!”

Now, while scratching my head about what to write next—what people would like to read, or what would at least not make them hit the back button faster than a mosquito hits your ear—I suddenly remembered one of my all-time favorite childhood episodes.

It didn’t happen during the usual summer holidays, mind you. This was during Dasara holidays. Yes, that special time during October–November when schools close, and in our part of the world—South Canara—the world opens up.

You may ask, “Why now? Why do people suddenly step outside?”

Aah. Let me give you the secret recipe.

See, in the Western Ghats, from June to September, the place doesn't get rain—it becomes rain. Morning, afternoon, evening, night—there’s a non-stop concert by the Rain God. I’m talking Lollapalooza-level headliner rain, the kind that makes you forget the sun ever existed. The clothes refuse to dry, and the mosquitoes, leeches, and frogs decide it’s their time to shine.

The vast open verandas—once used to dry arecanut and coffee beans—turn into temporary vegetable farms. The land becomes so fertile, even cucumbers start throwing parties.

Come October, just as the Rain God starts taking breaks between his back-to-back concerts, Dasara arrives like a sweet interval scene. And that’s when magic happens. You step out, and suddenly it's like someone painted the world with 500 shades of green. The ghats, the forests, the farmland—every inch sparkles in chlorophyll glory. Even the mossy path glows like it's been polished by a thousand tiny brushes.

Now let me pause this poetic nonsense before you think I’m auditioning for a nature documentary. Because what I really want to tell you… is a story. One that involves slipperiness, stupidity, and suspense.


The Slippery Stage and My Weirdest Pet Project


Our mid-term routine was simple: Wake up to thunder that sounds like God dropped a wardrobe. Eat idli, sip steaming coffee, and watch rain pour through iron window grills like a movie curtain. Lunch. Watch rain again. And then—on lucky days—a short playtime window when the rain took a tea break.

The walking path around the house was a world of its own. Covered in pachi (that shiny, slippery moss), it was an open invitation to perform all forms of dance. One foot on the wrong patch and boom—you’re in a live episode of India’s Got Accidental Talent. From classical to hip-hop to breakdance, the pachi didn’t discriminate.

But one day, amidst all this wet drama, a thought struck me. You know how people keep dogs, cats, maybe a parrot? Yeah, normal pets. Boring. Predictable.

I, the great innovator of my time, decided to raise… wait for it… giant ants.

Yes. Not those little ones that visit your kitchen without an invite. I’m talking about the majestic, slightly scary, red-black big ants that you only find in the lush wilderness of the Ghats. They were strong, had good work ethic, didn’t bark or poop everywhere. Perfect pets, right?

Wrong. Very wrong.

But I was convinced. I found an old Horlicks plastic jar—one that once held promises of "strong bones and sharp minds." I thought, “What better place to host my mighty ant kingdom?”

So here’s what I did:

  • Made tiny holes for air.

  • Caught about 10 of these ants (after a thrilling Mission Impossible chase).

  • Dropped a spoon of sugar inside. (Ants = Sugar = Happiness. Basic biology.)

Voila! My first ever ant aquarium. Or maybe ant prison. But who’s judging?

The Slippery Stage and My Weirdest Pet Project
AI Generated 


The Empire That Didn't Last


For the first day or two, I felt like a zookeeper. I’d talk to them.
“Hello General Ant, how’s the sugar supply chain today?”
I even named them—Antony, Antina, and so on.

They roamed, climbed, and acted all civilised. My cousins were curious. Some laughed. One even suggested I teach them to form words like “Hi!” inside the jar.

Then came Day 3.

They were… still.

Day 4: Still still.

Day 5: Funeral procession. Inside the jar. For all ten.

My mini ant republic had collapsed. I was heartbroken.

I’d like to say I cried. But no, I was still trying to poke and see if someone was just in a meditative state. Spoiler: They weren’t.

That day, a wave of guilt hit me. Like really hit me.

I had taken wild creatures who were free, who knew the dance of rain and leaf and soil, and I had trapped them—for my own entertainment. My ant farm was, in truth, a plastic prison. I wasn’t their friend. I was their jailer. And they paid for my experiment with their tiny lives.

The Empire That Didn't Last
AI Generated


The Moral of the Mossy Story


Years later, as I sip hot coffee and look out at the rain hitting my balcony grill—just like those childhood days—I smile and sigh at the same time.

That memory is still funny. But it’s also a tiny bookmark in the diary of “things that taught me something.”

It taught me about curiosity.
It taught me about boundaries.
And above all, it taught me that just because we can do something, doesn’t mean we should.

Today, when I see ants walking in a line across my kitchen floor, I step over them gently. No more ant hotels. No more sugar traps. Just quiet respect for lives far smaller, but no less important, than mine.

The Moral of the Mossy Story
AI Generated 


Final Thought


Childhood makes us do strange things. Sometimes funny, sometimes foolish, sometimes downright facepalm-worthy. But each one teaches us, shapes us, and gives us stories to laugh at... and reflect on.

So next time you slip on moss, rear ants, or think you’ve got the next big idea—remember, it’s okay to experiment. But it's even better when your experiment ends with life, not a lesson in loss.

And if anyone asks, “What was the craziest thing you did as a child?”—you can proudly say, “Well, I ran an ant hotel during Dasara. Didn’t end well for the guests, but hey, the check-in process was smooth!”



Monday, May 5, 2025

Conversations with Malnadati – The Soul of Western Ghats

 Conversations with Malnadati – The Soul of Western Ghats


Conversations with Malnadati – The Soul of Western Ghats
AI Generated


Straight roads. Never-ending lines. My car cruised past 100 km/h, slicing through the dry plains like a hot knife through butter.

But the rhythm broke.

The wheels began to slow. The road curved. Then curved again. And again.

Right. Left. Left. Right. A hypnotic zig-zag of bends—welcome to the gates of the Western Ghats. The artificial chill of my car’s AC suddenly felt out of place.

Kushalnagara. The place where the plains end and the soul of the Ghat begins.

I rolled down the windows. The crisp fragrance of blooming coffee flowers filled the air. A scent so rare, you wish you could bottle it forever. As the landscape turned into a green sea of coffee plantations, pepper creepers, and tall trees dancing in the mist, I felt something surreal.

A gentle voice beside me. A woman sat there—mid-aged, serene, her eyes as old as the hills.

"Who are you?" I asked, heart thudding.

She smiled.
“You were thinking of the Western Ghats. I am her. I am Malnadati.”
“Call me Sahyadri, Nilgiri, Anaimalai… I have many names. But across 1,600 kilometers, I am one spirit.”


"Where do you live?"

Malnadati: “From the southern tip of Kerala in Agasthyamalai Hills, I rise like a spine through Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Goa, Maharashtra, and end in the green hills of Gujarat’s Dangs. I’m home to millions—people, trees, rivers, animals, and stories.”


Western Ghat
AI Generated



"You give birth to rivers?"

She nodded. “I am the mother of rivers. My tears become life for millions—east and west.”

  • West-flowing Rivers:

    • Kerala: Periyar, Chaliyar, Pamba

    • Karnataka: Sharavathi, Netravathi, Kali

    • Goa: Mandovi, Zuari

    • Maharashtra: Vaitarna, Ulhas, Savitri

  • East-flowing Rivers:

    • Tamil Nadu & Karnataka: Kaveri – “I hold her like a lifeline.”

    • Tamil Nadu: Bhavani, Vaigai

    • Karnataka: Tungabhadra, Hemavathi, Arkavathi

    • Maharashtra: Krishna, Godavari

Kaveri is sacred. “She flows from Talakaveri in my Kodagu hills, nourishing Karnataka and Tamil Nadu. She's not just a river. She’s emotional. She’s survival.”

Western Ghat-River
AI Generated


"You seem vast. How do you stay connected?"

“I’m woven by Ghats. My folds connect east and west, forest to city.”
  • Agasthyamalai, Thenmala, Ponmudi (Kerala)

  • Palakkad Gap – a crucial ecological bridge

  • NilgirisOoty, Coonoor, Kotagiri

  • Bisle, Shiradi, Sampaje, Bababudangiri, Agumbe, Charmadi (Karnataka)

  • Amboli, Tamhini, Lonavala (Maharashtra)

  • Chorla, Anmod (Goa)

  • Saputara, Barda Hills, Dangs (Gujarat)

Ghat
AI Generated



"What about the towns and hill stations we visit?"

“They’re part of me too.”

  • Romantic escapes: Munnar, Kodaikanal, Wayanad, Ooty

  • Coffee cradles: Chikmagalur, Coorg

  • Cool getaways: Mahabaleshwar, Matheran, Saputara

“These places stabilize climate, attract rain, and offer refuge for flora and fauna. They’re my crown jewels. But they’re fragile.”

Hill Station
AI Generated


"Are you hurting?"

She looked away for a moment.

“They cut my trees for roads and real estate. They build resorts. They call it development, but it chokes me. Deforestation, commercial farming, mining, and tourism without ethics—they’re all wounds.”

“I see fewer hornbills. Fewer elephants. Even the monsoon doesn’t dance like it used to.”

Western Ghat
AI Generated


"Why should people care beyond just nostalgia?"

Her gaze turned sharp.

“Because I am not just your past. I am your future.”

  • I am one of only eight ‘hottest hotspots of biodiversity’ in the world.

  • I shelter over 7,400 species, many found nowhere else.

  • I anchor the monsoon, regulate rainfall, and protect coastal aquifers.

  • I store carbon, purify air, and keep your rivers alive.

“If I fall… so will you.”

  • No forests = no rain

  • No roots = dead rivers

  • No trees = barren soil

  • No hills = urban floods

“What Himalayas are to the north, I am to the south.”

Western Ghat
AI Generated


"So, what can we do?"

“Don’t just visit me—understand me. Defend me. Respect me.

  • Support sustainable tourism.

  • Say no to illegal land grabbing.

  • Plant native trees, not ornamental.

  • Oppose destructive highways and monoculture farming.

  • Speak up. Stay informed.

As I turned back to the road, she vanished. But her scent lingered—coffee, monsoon, wild ginger.

Every bend on that road was her whisper.
Every drop of rain—her song.
And her voice? It lives in every river. Every forest. Every sigh of wind that runs through the hills.

Will you listen to Malnadati before her voice is lost?

🌧️ Ghostware: The Code That Loved Her

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