MYSURU ROAD TRIP – NOSTALGIA (30-Apr-2021)

Mysuru - City of Palaces, a road-trip on Bengaluru-Mysuru highway brings fond memories!

A perfect getaway anytime from the hubbub of high-decibel Bengaluru, the true motivation has been its pristine beauty, uncorrupted residents, a clean environment, delightful eateries, to name a few.  The true excuse though being a ‘thavaru mane (home-sweet-home)’ for my better half. Unfortunately, not anymore after the demise of both her parents; her mother passed away 6 months ago, a tragic statistic to the dreaded virus.

On the highway, road-dividers are new inventions now.  Then a challenge, being at one’s own risk to maneuver the oncoming traffic on two narrow lanes.  A mayhem of sorts that brought the traffic to a stand-still.  A familiar face in the other bus in the opposite direction, an extended breezy handshake were energy-filled sights.  Upon a quick exchange of pleasantries, passengers contributed – “right-right…a little to the left and holdane…very close!” with a bang on the rusted dusty body of the red-bus to caution the driver!

Few people owned cars then and a common practice was to load up both passengers and food - home-cooked and packed picnic food-baskets.  The picnic breaks by the roadside served two purposes: an opportunity for the family to enjoy nature’s serenity and unending vastness, and two a break-time….no not for the driver but for the car itself!  A common sight then was the bonnet held ajar with a makeshift stick with little smoke and water poured into the car’s radiator, albeit mobilized from road-side streams.

My mother’s maternal uncle owned a large Dodge van.  On one such trip, we kids were squished in the back and each handed one stapled bundle of lottery tickets; instructed to get each ticket separated from the bundle and fly them out of the window; an exercise to keep us kids occupied.  The road behind with strewn lottery-tickets was a sight to behold – we were in the dark that it equated a few felled trees!  The road-trips gave us kids the freedom to influence our uncles to venture out.  The stop-over in the sugarcane fields of Mandya and the good fortune of sinking our teeth into the juicy sugarcanes, and hot ‘Maddur Vadas’ with chutney at the famous Maddur Tiffanys are images fresh even today.

The colorful Channapatna toys were for the privileged few, worth even if it meant for window-shopping.  The chitranna-mosaranna (tamarind or lemon rice-curd rice) combination along the banks of Cauvery in the historic town of Srirangapatna deserve a special mention.  As kids we relished them in the shade of a large tree, an experience quite superior to today’s generation who enjoy the burger and pizza in the snazzy huts and corners!  The garnish was never in the seasonings but in the “thutthu (small round food portions placed in our palm to facilitate a quick swallow)” that our aunts and grannies so lovingly distributed onto our sweaty and dirtied hands.

We were warned of the lurking dangers of being waylaid by thugs after sunset on deserted dark roads.  A punctured wheel-tyre or search for fuel for the car or the need to answer nature’s call – abound with challenges.  With entry into the neighboring town of Kengeri, the presence of an engineering college campus got us all excited that we have arrived; grossly miss the presence now due to overgrown concrete jungle and the traffic woes.

The Bengaluru-Mysuru drive from the bygone days indeed has left a lasting impression!  A drive-in today’s plush cars fade in comparison to the adventures and excitement of the bygone days.  Pure nostalgia!

Comments

  1. Replies
    1. Excellent Narration. Nice to recall memories of those days. Even there were no hostels also. Stop over at tender coconut shop.

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    2. You bet... tender coconut under the shade of a large tree was an ultimate experience... wish you had left your name... thanks

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  2. Excellent Narration .Mysore memories are always nostalgic.Thanks for writing this -Sujatha V

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    1. Thanks a lot... yes way too many memories of these road trips...

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  3. The Maddur Vadas & the Channapatna Toys are still the same!!
    How did you miss to mention the Sholay famed Ramanagar Rocks? Coz even now every time we pass by a mention of Sholay is inevitable 😁

    -- Sheela

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    1. You're right Sheela... and there are many more. Probably for a full fledged return journey narration
      Thanks a lot

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  4. Also there was a biscuit factory near Bangalore and the perfume of vrishabavati assaulting our olfactory nerves as we entered bangalore

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    1. You betcha.... all those are a thing of the past. Remember you and i met there on that road after many years...
      Thanks a lot Suresha

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  5. Oh...those were the beautiful days...!! Nicely captured Prasanna.... Nothing beats the joy of thuttu oota or downing maddur vades.. :-)

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    1. Yes thuttu-oota... no holds barred devouring the food...ghulum...
      Thanks Vishalakshi...

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  6. Very nice, brought back lot of sweet memories. Being an Mysurean , I understand the nostalgic memories.

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    1. Thank you Prahlad... you are lucky living in that city... the journey on this road was a different experience
      Thanks again

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  7. Real nostalgic. This reminds me of our train journey in unreserved compartment from Bombay to Davanagere, first stop of our vacation

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    1. Very true... the train and car journeys of yesteryear were rich with experience... now we zoom in our plush cars...
      Thanks a lot

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  8. Excellent write up as usual. U took us back to our childhood days. My dad, a Mysorean used to take us by train to visit his relatives. Mouth watering Maddur vada n the train. Musuru ak of Guru sweets. We enjoyed visiting Zoo, Palace. I remember having seen Sharapanjara movie in Mysuru. Don't remember the theatre name.

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    1. Thanks a lot.... the journeys of yesteryear had many experiences for us to remember now... train journeys too were fun...

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  9. Awesome article Prasanna, as kids, we used to travel by busses and trains. Trains had recently introduced coaches that were connected, where vendors could walk across compartments to sell stuff like kalle-kai and vada. We used to eat soooo much during those train journeys. It was as though we were compelled to buy from each vendor who came by :)

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    1. Without a doubt... eating was the chief pastime and the hot vadas and other stuff were consumed with no worries...
      Have we gotten sophisticated now?

      Thanks a lot for your views

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  10. Nostalgic!!! Especially the “thutthu “ unforgettable days!!!

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    1. Yes very true... sweaty and dirty but it didn't matter... it tasted the best... we would have cleaned in the running stream
      Thanks a lot

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  11. During my tenure, Our visit used to finish by Cafe coffee Day..on Bangalore - Mystery highway. Wonderful writing...Avinash

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    1. CCD is a new appendage.... our times we had alnost no restaurants on the highway....
      Thanks Avinash

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  12. Ha ha! Thanks buddy for taking us back to those days - a ritual for my father in each and EVERY trip to bangalore was to proudly point out to the semi circle police station in channapatna (which still stands tall and proud) telling my brother and me that it was built under the supervision of his civil engineer father. I continued the ritual with my husband only to receive 'sooooo what' expression which was no patch with the excitement the three of us - dad , bro and me shared over and over again........
    Thanks Pras..... i relived every second of all the trips to and fro......





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    1. Oh thanks a lot Srilatha...
      Very true what you've said and see i learnt about your grandpa... so the next time i go past chpatna I'll remember that and tell my people....
      Glad you liked it πŸ™

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  13. As usual excellent article. I didn't know about the lottery ticket story.

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  14. πŸ‘†πŸ‘πŸ‘ŒπŸ‘πŸΌπŸ˜ŠπŸ˜‡πŸ™

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    1. Very nicely written Prasanna. When I was young we used to drive down to Kannur. We would always stop in Mysore for breakfast. Later we used use the by pass and not enter Mysore. I loved the city and its monuments, eateries.

      Merci,
      Gina Vinod

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    2. Gina thank you very much. Yes Mysore has, and even then had, so many restaurants to offer lovely breakfast. Even if you don't enter Mysore, the pass by the scenic area with the hills in the background gave a nice feeling.
      Appreciate your time to read my blog....cheers

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  16. Very nostalgic! Do miss those long leisurely days!

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    1. Yes it is... thank you very much. Wish you had left your name here...

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  17. Nostalgic trips....indeed!
    Nicely recounted.

    Ramanath
    Tampa, Fl

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    1. Yes Ramanath...you may probably remember a few from your younger days. Thanks a lot...

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  18. Beautifully painted in words - brings back great childhood memories. My first "trip" to Mysore ever was as an eight-year old - when we moved from Bangalore to Mysore with all our stuff coming over on the same day by truck ! Took ~ 2 hrs 30 min then, even with a leisurely coconut drink stop. 45+ years and a few lakh kilometers later, it is still one of the most awaited stretches of travel when we hit the "last leg" from Bangalore to Mysore...though I prefer the trains today with their lovely view of the well-irrigated fields along the way.

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    1. Raghavendra Prasad... if you hadn't told me on WhatsApp it was you i wouldn't know
      Thanks a lot... wonderful memories you've reflected too.
      Yes both the train and car rides have their own charm and true even today cherished...
      Appreciate it

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