Green is the colour of life, renewal, energy and nature. Of all the myriad hues, it is the most soothing colour to the human eye. And no place offers a meditative calm with a magical healing touch as Kerala in the rains. As the southwest monsoon sweeps up the Western Ghats and across the country, it drenches the vegetation, cloaking it in unimaginable shades of green. According to Ayurveda, it is the best season for replenishment and rejuvenation for nature and man. Flying into Kochi, the rivers ran full, the waters turbid and olive, snaking through dense jade tapestry. Everywhere, a magical world of upside-down landscapes was reflected in streams, backwaters and puddles. In the open grounds, enthusiastic youngsters played football, unmindful of the slush and tumbles. Dove-grey clouds loomed over the hills and rumbled their delicate sound of thunder. What better place to start our monsoon sojourn than the highlands of Munnar? Fed by recent rains, the waterfalls en route—Cheeyaparra, Vallara and Kallar—roared as gushing torrents. Munnar, named after the ‘moonu aaru’ or three rivers that meet here, is a busy town and we slipped past Signal Point and disappearing phone networks to the vast open tea estates of Devikulam.
At Lockhart Bungalow, a three-room British tea plantation bungalow wrapped by a pristine lawn, 1,500 acres seemed a large enough tract to lose oneself in.
Colonial-era drawings of local flora and avifauna lined the walls. It felt a lot like home, for the only mealtime discussion was about what the next meal would be.
Denne historien er fra 29th July, 2024-utgaven av India Today.
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Denne historien er fra 29th July, 2024-utgaven av India Today.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
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Ways of Seeing
'INDIA'S MOST IMAGINATIVE ART HISTORIAN' B.N. GOSWAMY SHARES PITHY OBSERVATIONS ON ART AND RELATED MATTERS IN THIS POSTHUMOUS ANTHOLOGY OF ESSAYS
Modern Master
A major new exhibition at DAG Delhi sheds light on key moments in the artistic career of M.F. Husain
THE RATAN TATA YOU DID NOT KNOW
The face of India's oldest mega-corp for as long as most of us can remember, Ratan Tata, who died at the age of 86 last month, was both a well-known public figure and an enigma. As the first chairman to hand over the reins to a non-Tata, he seemed to be breaking the mould, and not for the first time. But he was also a steely guardian of corporate tradition. Thomas Mathew's newly-published biography is based on hundreds of hours of conversation with Tata as well as many of his confidants. Excerpts
The Chronicler of Dreams
DREAMS INFORM EVERYTHING THAT PAYAL KAPADIA DOES, WHETHER IT'S HER STORIES, HER CHARACTERS OR HER FILMMAKING EVEN IF THEY'RE ALL ANCHORED IN STARK REALITY
INDIA'S FDI SQUEEZE
THE ECONOMY SEEMS ROBUST, BUT FOREIGN INVESTORS ARE SHYING AWAY FROM PUTTING THEIR BIG, LONG-TERM BETS ON INDIA
THE MAJHI MAKEOVER
The Mohan Charan Majhi-led BJP government is establishing its 'people-first governance' by eliminating the perceived bureaucratic dominance of the Naveen Patnaik regime and blending accessibility, Odia pride and a development drive bolstered by central support
BEWARE THE NEW BIG CON
CYBER CRIMINAL NETWORKS, OFTEN BASED ABROAD, ARE NOW LEVERAGING TECHNOLOGICAL AND PSYCHOLOGICAL TOOLS TO WEAVE ELABORATE STINGS WITH FAKE COPS AND ENFORCEMENT AUTHORITIES TO DEPRIVE UNSUSPECTING VICTIMS OF THEIR ENTIRE LIFE SAVINGS
TECH TWO: THE NEW FRONTIER
INDIA HOSTS NEARLY 50 PER CENT OF THE WORLD'S GCCs. MNCs AIM TO LEVERAGE THE COUNTRY'S ROBUST SERVICES INDUSTRY AND ABUNDANT TALENT POOL
JITU ON THE BACK FOOT
On December 16, 2023, the Congress had announced Jitendra 'Jitu' Patwari as their new Madhya Pradesh state president, signaling a generational change as he replaced veteran Kamal Nath.
THE MISSING COPS
THE STATE POLICE NOW OUTSOURCES ROUTINE TECH JOBS LIKE MOBILE PHONE TRACKING, BUT THERE'S NO SUBSTITUTE FOR BOOTS ON THE GROUND IN, SAY, DRUG CONTROL