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Tuesday, October 8, 2019

Fine Dining

by V.R. Srikanth

Silver Saddle is located around 57 kms from Coonoor and Ooty and at an elevation of around 6,250ft msl. It is also on the very south western edge of the Nilgiris as the range hooks eastward towards Kinnakorai village which lies 2.5 kms away.
Shola forest (all pix by Srikanth)
To reach the Saddle, one has to pass through some of the most dense shola or endemic forests that have been around for nearly 180mn years since the split of Gondwanaland. The forests are composed of native trees and ferns and dense undergrowth are so thick that, one can barely see a couple of feet inside them and they are virtually impenetrable. I hope the photos accompanying the story do the area justice.

I purchased the property that spans both the sides of the Saddle over a decade ago. It was in part an abandoned tea garden but the owners had thrown in the towel many decades ago, resulting in the area being overrun by everything neath the soil.
Off SilverSaddle
Silver Saddle
The area, as it is ringed by the celebrated neela kurunji plants (a species that flowers once in 14 years) and endemic Shola forests sustains all the wildlife that there is in this biosphere. Elephants do come up to the Saddle from the lower reaches, to escape the summer heat or endless harassment from insects or as in this case even for a romantic weekend.

The early settlers here gave up on the area and abandoned it due to the harsh climatic conditions because of the fierce winds, known to exceed over 120 kms per hour, quite frequently causing untold damage and creating almost inhospitable living conditions from time to time, especially during both the south west and north east monsoons.

Bewitched by the beauty of the land, my wife Sashi and I decided to brave all this and decided to take on all that the Saddle had to throw at us. As we were both over fifty, we were readily labelled as insane. It called for a real pioneering effort starting with clearing the area, making rivetments, terraces, creating water storage tanks, in other words just about doing everything that was needed to make a living here.

Finally we did plant herbs like rosemary, thyme and oregano and seasonal vegetables. We maintained very little of the restored tea as labour was a challenge and there were many abandoned tea fields in the area where minimal maintenance was being done and only the leaf was being plucked, that too, infrequently.
Neela Kurunji or Strobilanthes Kunthiana at Silver Saddle
We did grow some exotic veggies, like iceberg lettuce, zucchini, rocket, kale, etc., for our table and the Ooty market. The Elephants from the valley did visit the area around our home and in the tea fields below but stayed away from our herb and vegetable fields due to some inexplicable reason.

After a season of fierce winds that certainly dried up the moisture on all plants instantly, we did have some settled conditions finally and we're looking forward to a sizeable harvest from our lower fields.

My wife and I in the meantime spotted a romantic pair of elephants in the area around the tea bushes and grassy mountain slopes about half a kilometer from our fields. We kept observing this pair comprising of one tusker, as they intertwined their trunks periodically and kept disappearing into and re - emerging from the sholas rather frequently. We were completely enthralled by the foreplay of the pair.

Hard economics came back to haunt us over the arranging of a shipment of nearly half a ton of zucchini to the Ooty market the next day which would hopefully result in some money coming in for payment of a few weeks' wages in those harsh times. Instructions were issued for an early morning harvest, the next day.

Which never happened. The romantic pair did dine out and laid waste to everything. A tigress and a cub ensured that we had to abandon the area for over a year subsequently. There is never a dull moment at the Saddle.


Meet the writer: V.R.Srikanth

I am a resident of the Nilgiris. I am a retired Corporate Management Professional having done two brief stint as a planter, nearly thirty years apart, mainly in Coffee. I live on my estate growing timber, organic herbs and vegetables. 

Is this your first visit here? Welcome to Indian Chai Stories! 
 
Do you have a chai story of your own to share? Send it to me here, please : indianchaistories@gmail.com. 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. You will find yourself transported to another world! 

 
Happy reading! Cheers to the spirit of Indian Tea!

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17 comments:

  1. Immense courage to brave such challenges. I admire this with a twinge of envy for I always longed for such adventures!
    Thank you.

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  2. Thank you kindly Sir. Been really blessed to be given a second chance to do something that I loved the best.

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  3. It was beautiful and nostalgic to read about your life at Silver Saddle. I love your descriptive prose. About the landscape, and the hurdles Shashi and you faced. About amorous wild elephants! And to top it all a Tigress and her cub! You should write more Planting stories Srikanth. Well done 👍

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  4. You were always a daredevil Srikanth with an Elephantine memory. We studied together in same school in different section for two or 3 years upto 6th standard and some 16 years later I heard a somewhat vaguely familiar voice at INDAL Belagavi calling out my name when I could only recollect the name not face. After that the year and we spent together at (known then as) Belgaum was unforgettable. Maybe the reason the elephants created havoc was because you competed with their memory power! You would know my name by connecting the dots. Unfortunately this is my Google name and I cannot post the real name

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  5. Well done Sri. I have been following Silvers saddle's progress closely for the last few year. You have come a long way since. Regards Rajesh

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    1. Thank you Rajesh. It's been a big plus having you as a neghbour and for your advice.

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  6. Your stay seems very adventurous as well as perilsome,but also interesting.Your wife & yoursef have explored a lot overthere & might be there is still more to unearth.
    Wish you comfortable living in Silver Saddle in the days to come.

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  7. Envy your surroundings. Surely you feel happy with what you have done. Why not get a gun and shoot the tiger if it is bothering you - then again Planters have tigers,leopards and elephants wandering around and come face to face now and then. The land belonged to them before you arrived. Great life you have and every day a bonus.

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  8. Srikanth, you have the gift. Beautiful as the photographs are, I got the picture straight out of the prose. Wonderfully written ... Enjoyed every word!

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  9. Salute your spirit, and that of your wife!

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  10. Thank you very much. We wouldn't like to live anywhere else. Had an elephant visiting us yesterday. He was a bit annoyed with the fencing. Uprroted a few posts in frustration.

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  11. Boy! I would give an arm and a leg to live at the Saddle. Love the Neelakurunji photo. I have walked on Grass Hills and lived in the Anamallais and so know Shola forests and Strobilanthus. Admire your and your wife's adventurous spirit. Thanks for the story.

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    1. Yawar, you are most welcome to come and stay with us. It will be a pleasure to show you around. Please do come. Presently in Gudalur teaching drama in a school run by another Parry Agro planter, Cetus Gomez. Met Norman Wood and Lorraine the other day. It is indeed a small world.

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  12. Great story! Can’t wait to read more. Thanks for adding masala to tea of life;)

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