Wayanad In a Monsoon Weekend

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Photo of Wayanad In a Monsoon Weekend by Swetha Karthik

Wayanad was our well-planned weekend run away from the buzzing city to the lush greens mountains. We boarded an overnight train from Chennai and reached Kozhikode station the next morning. As per our plan, we then boarded an early morning KSRTC bus to Wayanad hills. But monsoon had a mind on its own. The bus halted at the midway at Thamarassery due to unexpected (read as "much expected during monsoon") rains, roadblocks, and landslides. We made an impromptu stay at Thamarassery and revisited our plans by removing the Chembura peak and Kuruva Islands from our itinerary since those are closed due to heavy rains. The perfect plan is the one where there is a constant change in the direction towards the destination, so amidst the setback, we had our breakfast and happily set out to explore the unplanned adventure.

Day 1 : Thamaraserry, Kozhikode

Thamarassery is a small town in the Kozhikode district. Although there were no major tourist spots or scenic places, the air was clean and ripe with the pleasant, dewy petrichor of the post-rain afternoon. So it eventually turned out to be our secluded place to take selfies and portraits in weird poses (that only stays in the mobile gallery kind of pictures).

Photo of Thamarassery, Kerala, India by Swetha Karthik
Photo of Thamarassery, Kerala, India by Swetha Karthik
Photo of Thamarassery, Kerala, India by Swetha Karthik

Day 2 : Kalpetta, Wayanad

We stayed that night at Thamarassery and grabbed an auto-rickshaw the next morning to reach Kalpetta via Thamarassery Churam. It is a beautiful mountain pass from Adivaram to Lakidi. From there again got a bus to reach Kalpetta. We walked the rest of the way to reach our homestay in Kalpetta, refreshed, and immediately set out to explore in another auto-rickshaw.

Pookode Lake

The first destination was Pookode Lake. In the dilemma of choosing between "why to visit the same damn places that all others visit?" and "What would it be to visit the most popular place at a secluded time of the year?" we started our monsoon trip to Wayanad. And it indeed paved well. Deserted lakes and parks, again made us own the entire neighborhood for some time.

Photo of Pookode Lake, Pookode, Kerala by Swetha Karthik
Photo of Pookode Lake, Pookode, Kerala by Swetha Karthik
Photo of Pookode Lake, Pookode, Kerala by Swetha Karthik

Lakkidi Viewpoint

On the way from Pookode, we stopped at Lakkidi Viewpoint to shoot (of course with the camera) the mountains that peeped from the clouds for a brief moment. The thrill of running from one point to another to catch the final glimpse of the breath-taking views before the snow covers the mountains is the real boost one can experience in the mountains during monsoons.

Photo of Lakkidi View Point, Lakkidi, Kerala, India by Swetha Karthik
Photo of Lakkidi View Point, Lakkidi, Kerala, India by Swetha Karthik

Chain Tree

Our last stop before heading back to the homestay is the Chain Tree. The myth behind the tree is that Karinthandan, a local adivasi helped the British to find the way through the ghat. The British engineer then killed him. Karinthandan's spirit was taking acts of revenge by causing accidents in the ghat. Years later, the spirit chained to the tree, and people started praying to the tree to avoid accidents.

Photo of Chain Tree, National Highway 766, Lakkidi, Kunnathidavaka, Kerala, India by Swetha Karthik

Day 3 : Muthanga & Nenmeni

We packed our bags and left the homestay early in the morning to explore our final places before we head back to the city.

Muthanga Wildlife Safari

As the saying goes untold, one should take the very first jeep ride of the day in Wildlife Safari to not to miss any wild encounters. So we took the 7 am ride that morning in the hope that we can encounter many species on that pleasant sunny day after a week's heavy fall of rain in Muthanga. As expected, the usual 60mins safari extended to 90mins and it was a mind-boggling experience. In the middle of the jungle, our guide has to turn off the engine, to make the entire crew sit in silence because we encountered a charged matriarch (the female head of the elephant tribe) as near as 5 meters from our jeep. It was a close call, and everyone had caught their breath for a brief 15 minutes.

Photo of Muthanga, Kerala, India by Swetha Karthik
Photo of Muthanga, Kerala, India by Swetha Karthik
Photo of Muthanga, Kerala, India by Swetha Karthik

Edakkal Caves

The last stop for the weekend is Edakkal Caves. It is one of the prime Neolithic sites situated at Ambukutty Mala, on the Mysore Plateau, in the Western Ghats. As per our revised itinerary, it is now the only physically demanding place (trekking in the hilly terrain for 1 km followed by climbing 380 steep steps) we visited on the trip. The sunshine attracted more people today, and we ended our trip amidst a group of crowded fellow travelers at last.

Photo of Edakkal Caves, Nenmeni, Kerala, India by Swetha Karthik
Photo of Edakkal Caves, Nenmeni, Kerala, India by Swetha Karthik
Photo of Edakkal Caves, Nenmeni, Kerala, India by Swetha Karthik

Before the sun came down, the journey came to an end. We quickly drifted from Kalpetta to Kozhikode and boarded our overnight train back to Chennai with a heart full of memories and an SD card full of photos.