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Travel-Guide
Where and When to Go to South India Travel?
Sunday, 29 December 2019
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| South India Travel Guide |
Before Traveling to South India
South India
Things to know Before
Traveling to South India | Despite its recent rush to modernity and pockets of
over-development, South India remains one of the most relaxed parts of Asia to
explore. It is also among the easiest. In all but the remotest districts,
accommodation is plentiful, clean and inexpensive by Western standards.
Delicious street food is available from nearly every roadside vendor.
While journey times can be long,
the region’s extensive rail network moves vast numbers of people at all times
of the day and night, and if a train isn’t heading where you want to go, a bus
almost certainly will be. Furthermore, South Indians are the most garrulous and
inquisitive of travellers, and train rides are always enlivened by
conversations that invariably begin with the refrain of “Coming from?” or “What is your native place?”
It is a credit to the region’s legendary capacity for assimilating new ideas
that the modern and traditional thrive side by side.
Walking through central Bengaluru,
you could brush shoulders with an iPhone-toting software developer one moment
and a trident-wielding ascetic the next, while rickety bicycles mingle with
luxury cars. There are, of course, the usual Subcontinental travel hassles:
interminable queues, packed buses and constant encroachments on your personal
space.
Yet just when your nerves feel
stretched to breaking point, South India always offers something that makes the
effort worthwhile: a glimpse of an elephant from a train window; a sumptuous
vegetarian meal delicately arranged on a fresh banana leaf; or a hint of fragrant
cardamom in your tea after a night dancing on a Goan beach.
Introduction to South India
Though
its borders are uncertain, there’s no doubt that South India, the tapering half
of the country’s mighty peninsula, differs radically from the landlocked North.
In the South, the coconut groves seem a deeper green and the rice paddies
positively luminescent, the faces are a darker brown and the vermilion marks
smeared over them arrestingly red.
The
landscape varies from tropical beaches that hug towering Ghats in the west, to
the arid Deccan plateau that descends into fertile plains in the east. Under a
sun whose rays feel concentrated by a giant magnifying glass, the ubiquitous colours
of South India of silk saris, shimmering classical dance costumes, lurid
movie posters and frangipani flowers radiate with a life of their own.
Where to Go to South India?
Your first impression of South
India is likely to be Mumbai, the arrival point for most international
flights. While the city gets a pretty bad press, and most people pass straight
through, those who stay find themselves witness to the reality of modern-day
India, from the deprivations of the city’s slum-dwellings to the glitz and
glamour of Bollywood movies.
The surrounding state of Maharashtra,
though not culturally or linguistically part of the South, has plenty of
attractions including the extraordinary caves of Ellora and Ajanta and the
thriving city of Pune, once a Raj-era retreat, and now a buzzing
metropolis with a hip eating scene.
The other major gateway to the
region is Chennai, capital of Tamil Nadu, in the deep South,
which is a slightly less stressful place to start your trip. Although it’s
another major metropolis bursting at the seams, hidden under its surface are artful
gems such as regular public performances of classical music and dance. With
regular flights and ferries to Port Blair, Chennai is also the major springboard
for the Andaman Islands, a remote archipelago ringed by coral reefs and
crystal-clear seas, over 1000 km east of the mainland in the Bay of Bengal.
The majority of visitors’ first
stop after Chennai is Mamallapuram, an ancient port littered with
weatherworn sculpture sites, including the technicolor Shore temple. To get
right off the beaten track you only have to head inland to Kanchipuram,
whose innumerable Hindu shrines span the golden age of the illustrious Chola
kingdom. Back on the coast, the former French colony of Puducherry retains
a distinctly Gallic feel, particularly in its restaurants.
Most travellers press on south to Madurai,
the region’s most atmospherically charged city, where the mighty Meenakshi-Sundareshwar
temple presides over a quintessentially Tamil swirl of life. The two other most
compelling destinations in Tamil Nadu are the island of Rameshwaram,
whose main temple features a photogenic series of pillared corridors, and Kanyakumari,
the southernmost tip of India, where the Bay of Bengal, Indian Ocean and
Arabian Sea flow together.
The dark shadows visible on the
horizon from here mark the start of the Western Ghats, lush mountains which
stretch for more than 1000 km in a virtually unbroken chain all the way to Mumbai,
forming a sheer barrier between Tamil Nadu and neighbouring Kerala. The hill
stations of Udhagamandalam (or Ooty, as it’s still better known) and Kodaikanal,
established by India’s former colonial rulers as retreats from the summer heat
of the plains, attract hordes of Indian visitors in the run-up to the rains,
but see plenty of foreign tourist traffic during the winter, too.
Heading north, a string of smaller
former dynastic capitals punctuate the journey across the eastern edge of the Deccan
plateau to Hyderabad, capital of the newly created state of Telangana
and, for the time being, still acting capital of Andhra Pradesh,
whose principal landmarks are the Charminar and Golconda fort.
Andhra’s other attractions, by
contrast, lie much further off the beaten track. Comparatively few Western
visitors ever reach them, with the exception of Puttaparthi, the ashram
of India’s most famous living saint, Sai Baba, and Tirupati, whose temple
complex on nearby Tirumala Hill receives more pilgrims than anywhere else on
earth and is an essential stop for all Hindu pilgrims, especially followers of
Vishnu.
West of Tamil Nadu, neighbouring Kerala’s
appeal lies less in its religious monuments, almost all of which remain
off-limits to non-Hindus, than its infectiously easy-going, tropical ambience.
Covering a long thin coastal strip backed by a steep wall of hills, this is the
wettest and most densely populated state in the South. It is also the most
distinctive, with a culture that sets it squarely apart.
Its ritualized theatre (kathakali),
faintly Southeast Asian architecture and ubiquitous communist graffiti (Kerala
was the first place in the world to gain a democratically elected communist
government) are perhaps the most visual expressions of this difference. But
spend a couple of days exploring the spicy backstreets of old Kochi (Cochin),
the jungles of the Cardamom Hills around the Periyar Wildlife Sanctuary
or the hidden aquatic world of the coastal backwaters, and you’ll see
why many travellers end up staying here a lot longer than they originally
intended.
If you’re not pushed for time and
find yourself crossing northern Kerala during the winter, set aside a few days
to search for theyyam, a spectacular masked dance form unique to the
villages around Kannur.
A short ride across the mountains
takes you to Mysore in Karnataka, whose opulent maharaja’s
palace, colourful markets and comfortable southern California-like climate have
made it among South India’s most popular tourist destinations. Bengaluru, India’s
answer to Silicon Valley, is a hectic modern capital, and most travellers press
on to the state’s extraordinary historic sights including the mausolea, mosques
and Persian-style palaces of Vijayapura (Bijapur), often dubbed the “Agra
of the South”, and the Angkor-like faded splendour of Hampi, once the magnificent
capital of South India’s last Hindu empire.
Only one day’s journey to the
west, the palm-fringed, white-sand beaches of Goa, formerly a Portuguese
colony, offer a change of scenery from the rocky terrain of the Deccan.
Succumbing to the hedonistic pleasures of warm seawater, constant sunshine and
cheap drinks, many travellers find it hard to tear themselves away from the
coast, but Old Goa’s Portuguese churches and splendid mansions should not be
missed.
India’s Spiritual Heart is South India - Travel Man Bytes
If the sacred peaks of the
Himalayas are Hinduism’s head, and the Ganges its main artery, then the temple
complexes of the South are its spiritual heart and soul. Soaring high above every urban skyline, their colossal towers
are emblematic of the awe with
which the deities enshrined inside them have been held for centuries. Some, like the sea-washed temple at
Tiruchendur in Tamil Nadu, are thought to be as
old as human speech itself; others, such as the Sabarimala forest shrine in Kerala, are less ancient, but attract
greater numbers of pilgrims than even
Mecca. For foreign visitors, however, the most
extraordinary
of all have to be the colossal Chola shrines of Tamil Nadu.
Joining the crowds that stream
through Chidambaram’s Sabhanayakam Nataraja temple or Shri Ramalingeswara in Rameshwaram
will take you to the very source of the world’s last surviving classical
culture, some of whose hymns, prayers and rites predate the Egyptian pyramids.
When to Go to South India?
The relentless tropical sun aside,
the source of South India’s lush scenery lies in its high rainfall.
Unlike the north of the country, which sees only a single deluge in the summer,
most of peninsular India receives two annual monsoons one sucked in from
the Arabian Sea in the southwest, and the other on stormy northwesterly winds
off the Bay of Bengal.
The heaviest rains are reserved
for the Western Ghats chain of mountains, where the first summer monsoon breaks
in June and lasts through to October. In a nutshell, you should, when planning
a trip to South India, largely avoid the rainy seasons.
The novelty of torrential downpours
and the general mayhem of landslides and flooding wears off very quickly.
Broadly speaking, rule out the period between April and September, when in turn
firstly two months of stifling heat and then the southwest monsoon grip the
whole peninsula.
From late October until April, the
weather is perfect in Karnataka and Goa, but less reliable in Kerala, where, by
November, the “retreating”, or northwest monsoon means constant grey skies and
showers. Being on the eastern side of the mountains, Tamil Nadu gets even
heavier rains at this time, as does coastal Andhra Pradesh.
To enjoy the far south and the Andaman
Islands at their best, come between January and March, before the heat starts to build up again. For more detail,
read the next post.
Travel Man Fly Bytes about South India
- South India is referred to in some of India’s oldest inscriptions as Dravidadesa, “Land of the Dravidians”, referring to the ethnically and linguistically distinct people of the South.
- The South’s Western Ghats mountain range is one of the most biodiverse places on earth with over 500 bird species and 139 mammals.
- Three of the the five largest cities in India are found in the South Mumbai (12.4m), Bengaluru (8.4m) and Hyderabad (6.7m).
- Goans consume 40 million coconuts per year and the fruit finds its way into virtually every dish.
- Languages spoken in the South include Tamil (Tamil Nadu), Telugu (Andhra Pradesh and Telangana), Kannada (Karnataka) and Malayalam (Kerala).
- India’s greatest sporting hero, the cricketing master Sachin Tendulkar was born and raised in Mumbai.
- The film studios of Mumbai (Bollywood) and Chennai (Kollywood) make more movies than any other country with up to 2000 releases annually.
Conclusion
Hope you understand this guide for the South India
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