by Rajesh Thomas
Disclaimer:
The names have been changed to protect the innocent and the guilty.
At the
beginning of the last century, a planter in the erstwhile James Finlay company
received a horse allowance of thirty rupees per month, probably a princely
amount in those days. With ever increasing costs, in 1971 the last of the James
Finlay planters who rode a horse received three hundred rupees per month as
allowance. The company probably felt that maintaining a horse was more
expensive than maintaining a wife as the same planter received only hundred and
twenty five rupees increase in dearness allowance when he got married.
Jokes
apart, it was recognized that transportation was a lifeline to a planter in the
olden days, a time when communications were poor. Even after the advent of motor
vehicles, transportation was of vital importance in the life of a planter and his family - for
work, social life and emergencies. Many a planter would readily admit that
without his vehicles he would feel handicapped. Many newcomers grasp the
importance of this soon or they learn it the hard way.
|
Photograph supplied by the author, see Editor's note for more |
Funnily,
not every creeper comes into the gardens with the experience of handling motor
vehicles and quite a few of them learn to ride and drive after joining. For
such assistants it is baptism by fire to learn to ride in treacherous
conditions, especially if they join during the monsoons. Handling heavy ‘Bullet’
motor cycles (as an old manager put it they were built like Patton Tanks) for
the first time in these kutcha field roads meant that during one of the
inevitable falls they invariably had the silencer burn their legs. A silencer
burn was called a company seal and was a source of mirth and enjoyment for all
other Assistant Managers in a party or at the club bar.
More
often than not, after a fall from the motor cycle is the embarrassment of
having to be helped back onto one’s feet and the bike back onto its wheels. One
of my father’s colleagues who started to learn how to ride after he joined the
gardens had fallen for the umpteenth time - and for the umpteenth time the
workers had to rush to lift him back to his feet. After he had dusted himself,
one of the supervisors offered him a sympathetic piece of advice, “Why are you
struggling like this, why don’t you just employ a driver for your bike?”
One
such rookie Assistant in the High Ranges, when asked at a party whether he had
mastered the motor cycle, replied innocently that he had learned to ride up
hill and, “am now learning to ride down hill”.
Another
novice rider in the Annamallais - let’s call him M - was coming back from a
party, when he hit a porcupine and had a dozen quills stuck in his front tyre.
When his Senior Assistant who was following him on his motorcycle asked how he managed this, M in all innocence replied that he thought it was a
peacock.
Another
old timer on transfer to a new planting district, when asked whether he found
the ghat road steep, gave a disarming reply: “I couldn’t tell, it was dark”!
This same gentleman had a reputation of being rather rough on his old Amby,
thereby giving the motor foreman at the group workshop a tough time maintaining
his car. A colleague of his at the club bar had this observation to make, “We
change gears while he changes gear boxes”.
Now
that doesn’t mean that planters didn’t know how to drive. Most of them were
expert drivers who could drive under any kind of conditions, i.e. when
inebriated, on dirt tracks, up and down hill roads, through ditches, over
streams and rivers - and that too vehicles in any condition. There was an
enterprising planter in the Annamallais coming back from a late night party who
found that his forward gears had jammed. Instead of panicking, he calmly drove
the last fifteen kilometers in reverse gear, and through a startled bunch of
donkeys inside Valparai town in the dead of night. Eighteen years down the line
this feat is still talked about in Annamallais.
Not
only do creepers learn to ride and drive on the gardens, so do many of the
planters’ children. When my father was teaching me to drive a Jeep, I rolled it
three times into a pruned field. Surprisingly, all of us including the Jeep
escaped without a scratch. After it was pulled out a rather shaken self
apologized to my father, for which my father replied with a grin, “You only
rolled the jeep while your friend N drove a brand new estate tractor into a
wall”. N was the son of one of my father’s colleagues who was my age, and more
mischievous than me. For a long time,
this jeep was never referred to by its number but as the one Rajesh rolled.
The
real excitement in the garden starts when the Manager’s or the Assistant
Manager’s wife starts to learn driving. Most husbands do not have the patience
to teach their wives to drive and usually use a standard phrase, “…there is a
lot of work”, and excuse themselves. Normally one of the seniormost of the
garden drivers is given the task of teaching the nuances of handling the
motorcar to the Memsahib. This Senior Driver normally would have put in at
least around 25 years in the garden and would have seen a myriad of Sahibs and
Memsahibs. He would keep a stiff upper lip, maintain stoic silence and speak
only when spoken to.
|
The Memsahib's mode of transport 'from Bottom to Top Station' in 1921. See Editor's note. |
Before
the start of the day, the Senior Driver would normally inform all other drivers
about the route the Memsahib would be taking and caution all the other estate
and bus drivers to drive carefully and to give her the right of way. The word would
spread among the rest of the estate population and the women folk and children,
when they saw the Manager’s car coming in the distance, would safely ensconce
themselves behind two rows of tea.
Another
Assistant Manager - let’s call him R - after many nights of difficult driving
after parties declared that he was only going to marry a girl who
could drive, dreaming that he could sit safely in the passenger seat or
probably take a snooze on the way back home. So when he met S for the first
time he was completely bowled over by her and promptly asked her whether she
could drive.
Pat
came S’s reply that she had a drivers’ license. So they got married.
On the
first Saturday after that, R had a relaxed and enjoyable night at the club. Knowing
that he did not have to drive, he knocked back a couple of more rums than
usual. He handed over the car keys to S
in the club parking lot. Within a few minutes of leaving the Annamallai Club, S
took the first two hair pin bends in true world rally championship style at
sixty kilometers an hour and with that all the effects of the evening’s rum
promptly vanished, leaving R in a cold sweat, totally sober and
desperately clutching the dashboard.
Then
the hard fact hit R that in India having a driver’s license and knowing to
drive are two totally different things. The couple have been happily married
for the last seventeen years but in all these years, however late the party is,
and however many drinks he has downed, R
always drives. The rumor is that R has been on the wagon for the last couple of
years, thereby further solving the problem.
Nevertheless
many of the ladies in planting became accomplished in handling motor vehicles.
In fact a now retired planter always used to let his wife drive inside Chennai,
when they went on their annual leave. He always felt that she drove better than
him in the city traffic.
N, a
manger in the BBTC estates in the Singampatti group was posted under my father
in the early nineties. His wife V, a city lass, never having seen a tea estate
or the jungles, decided to learn to drive after getting married. As narrated
before, a very senior driver named Karupiah was deputed to teach her driving.
The
BBTC estates of the Singampatti Group are situated in the middle of one India’s
last bastions of wilderness amidst the Kalakad – Mundanthorai tiger reserve. As
the gardens are situated in the middle of the tiger reserve, the wild life
there naturally considers the tea fields as a part of their domain. As V was
driving on a narrow road, an ill tempered lone elephant charged at her car. She
froze and the engine stalled, and Karupiah, with great of presence of mind,
pushed her to the end of the driver’s side and took over the wheel. He had to
reverse for over a half a kilometre before the elephant stopped chasing them.
Karupiah,
born and brought up on the estate, probably knew every bump and pothole on
those roads. His quick thinking and also the good fortune that the old
ambassador cars did not have bucket seats and floor shift gear sticks ensured
that he was able to move to the driver’s side easily. N and V later moved on to
Chennai where they run one of the city’s most popular watering holes.
Nerves
can either freeze a person or can galvanize a person into action. This incident
amply demonstrates the latter. Another Assistant in the High Ranges – U -
brought a car (a Maruti Van). Since he did not know how to drive, one of the
staff promised to teach him. So the next weekend off they went to the nearby
golf course at the Kundlay Club to master the motorcar. U was having a tough
time getting a hang of the clutch and the gears and driving in a straight line
at the same time, much to his staff’s consternation.
Meanwhile
in the shola nearby, a tusker whose afternoon siesta was disturbed by this
ruckus, was working himself into a serious rage. He decided that this white
thing going around the fairways had to be shooed off and decided to take
matters into his own hands. With a piercing sound he launched himself out of
the jungle and at the Maruti Van. The sight of the charging tusker in the rear
view mirror - coupled with the blood curdling trumpet - was too much for U to
bear.
Spurred
on by the charging pachyderm, U’s hands and feet miraculously swung into
coordinated action as the gears changed and the clutch released automatically.
The car moved as if it was on auto gear. U swung on to the tar road and never
stopped till he reached his estate with the staff beside him frozen in fright.
Meanwhile the elephant having victoriously reclaimed his turf went back to
continue his slumber. There endeth the successful driving lesson. The Regional
Transport Officer at Munnar had no hesitation in giving U his red badge of
courage.
Much
water has flowed under the old Victoria Bridge since U’s first driving lesson
and he has gone on to become a safe and reliable driver, but his habit of
anxiously checking the rearview mirror often continues to baffle many.
Editor's Note:
'creeper' is the term applied to a new assistant on the plantation
'shola' is a patch of jungle
Many thanks to Rajesh for explaining the terms, and for the photographs, which are all from the two websites whose links are given below.
http://pazhayathu.blogspot.com/2014/03/blog-post_23.html
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My name is Gowri Mohanakrishnan and I'm a tea planter's wife. I started this blog because one of the things that I wouldn't want us to lose in a fast changing world is the tea story - a story always told with great seriousness, no matter how funny - always true (always), maybe a tall tale, long, or short, impossible, scary, funny or exciting but never dull.
Happy reading! Cheers to the spirit of Indian Tea!
Hahaha. Ripping. It's amazing how after a few rounds in the Club bends have a miraculous habit of straightening. I think that with the help of Rum we planters invented autopilot. Brilliant, Rajesh.
ReplyDeleteThanks Sri
DeleteThis narrative is not for the fainthearted. Cannot tell you how many deaths I've died over reverse gears, hairpin bends, frozen drivers, 'wildebeest' and speed maniacs!
ReplyDeleteGod is clearly in His heaven in the tea disricts of South India!!
Thank you Ma'am
DeleteExcellent ...
ReplyDeleteThanks Manoj
DeleteGot trasported in time to our annamallai days Rajesh ...your writing brings the recent past alive . excellent piece
ReplyDeleteThanks Aditya
DeleteWell written. Reminds me when Asad Mohsin was asked how long it took for his new Assistant to learn how to ride a bike replied, oh just 2 or 3. 2 or 3 days? No 2 or 3 bikes !! This is a true story.
ReplyDeleteThank you Sir.
DeleteBrilliant Rajesh. You should write more.
ReplyDeleteDefinitely will try Uncle.
ReplyDeleteVery funny indeed! Oz taught me how to drive the jeep at Dalsingpara. Brought down 2 Areca palms with Roma Circar sitting on the passenger side, speechless with horror!
ReplyDeleteStill speechless, Chinny!
DeleteExcellent RAJESH.
ReplyDeleteYes silencer burns, damaged ligaments, and bruised elbows were all the signs of having mastered the "Bullet" on treacherous estate inspection paths. Dr David Rajan our savoir in Coimbatore sorted out the more major issues, so as to say!!.
Just came across your site. Reminds me of learning to ride my father's Bullet at age 16 on Paralai estate and ending up in the tea with him holding onto the back. Soon mastered it to at least 2nd gear. To start kick and relax the leg, otherwise you could be shot off the bike by a misfire
ReplyDeleteMy father remembers your father very well. They both played tennis for Annamallai club in the various meets. I was speaking to him today and I understand that one meet against the High Ranges when they were short of a lady player for the mixed doubles, your sister Melanie partnered my father and won. Much regards to everyone.
DeleteWhoa ! Driving everyone around the bend !!! My Sunday cuppa left completely neglected as I navigated the tramas peligrosas ( dangerous curves) in your exciting piece Rajesh ! And so delighted to have it featured in Chai for Cancer thanks to Gowri and Indian Chai Stories
ReplyDeleteThank you Maam
Delete