Tag Archives: travel

A Trip to Pondicherry

    This week, we visited Pondicherry on a three days vacation.

    I started when Somya informed her plan to stay there for few weeks and she invited us to stay with her family. She informed dates in advance. I planned to visit this weekend. Later we got to know that Anjali was there as well during the weekend.

    We decided to drive by car. Ookie is now comfortable inside the car. The inflatable bed that I bought when Anu had plaster on her ankle is serving us really well on these trips. Kaalu sometimes gets pretty stressed and anxious inside car, especially during the day time traffic, so we tried calming tablets and they do wonders for her. I should use them during Diwali when the whole country turns into a loud gas-chamber!

    Driving car to Puducherry from Bengaluru wasn’t the most pleasant experience, especially in the late evening. Almost half of the route was two lane highway. Overtaking slow trucks or auto and avoiding overtaking cars and buses from the other side was also tricky. A lot of vehicles have very bright headlights these days, including small autos, which makes is very hard to see anything when these lights flash in your eyes. The roads were in good shape and except of a speed-breaker that I didn’t see, most of the travel was without any bad bump. We lost 30 mins inside Bengaluru traffic and 45 minutes in a sudden jam on highway. It took us more than 8 hours to reach Pondicherry!

    I think I got some “bio-fuel” (ethanol blended) on the way from a BP/Jio petrol pump. That made car pickup worse and it stinks.

    We reached at Somya place around 9pm and slept after having dinner. Next day, we went to a beach. Neither Ookie nor Kaalu enjoyed the beach. It was their first time and both were scared of big waves. Also, late February turns out to be a little too warm to be on the beach during day time. Unlike west coast (e.g. Mangalore, Mumbai), the beaches in Pondicherry are not shallow and waves are bigger, stronger and dangerous.

    Kaalu and Ookie didn’t like wave crashing near them! Kaalu liked the little crabs on the beach but fear of waves took the fun away. Ookie enjoyed playing in the sand though and Kaalu would dig some sand and lay on it.

    I got to meet old friends and more. Ookie enjoyed the night time at Pomegrade beach. Fortunately, city doesn’t allow vehicle on the beach road and it made all the difference. She walked freely on the beach road. We also bought a funny musical instrument from a road-side vendor. She also enjoyed playing with another toddler in the house who taught her how to jump down the bed!!

    (clockwise from top) Dilawar, Kaalu, Anjali, Somya, Anu, and Ookie

    I didn’t find Puducherry to be very exciting. But again, I don’t find cities to be very exciting. Food is good but food is usually good in all cities.

    The botanical garden was OK but has nothing worth really visiting. Great for toddlers though. It didn’t have any especial tree or plant to excite me. The flower garden was lame and poorly maintained — I’ve seen better personal garden. The aquarium was also pretty meh but much better than garden. Ookie enjoyed her time inside the aquarium. Sadly, the choo-choo train is broken and is just a show piece now. Perhaps we need the British back to ensure things work?

    Ookie and Me in a broken choo-choo train at Pondicherry botanical garden. It’s a shame that this train doesn’t work because they have pretty good track inside the park!

    Beaches are not as dirty as in Chennai but they are not clean either. Occasionally you see broken glass in the sad and put your sandals back on. Our civic senses needs to improve a lot! Also, streets are not walk-able in Puducherry as well, except for one street in Pomegrade beach where they don’t allow cars. I found too many bikes parked on the road most of the time. Bengaluru is definitely worse!

    The local food was very cheap and good and the tea was excellent. I am a great fan of tea making in both Tamilnadu and Kerala. Its a shame that Karnataka and rest of the country hasn’t adopt this method.

    While coming back, we left at 12:00pm. Diving was a pretty decent experience in late night. I didn’t feel sleepy since Anjali was awake in the car and we chatted whole way. By early morning, we were barely awake. It took us 5:30 hours to enter south Bangalore where we met with decent traffic at around 5:30am! It took me 45 minutes to reach home after we entered Bengaluru. Kaalu was pretty happy to see Jumbi and other friends.

Feb 07, 2026: Weekly Notes 2026/06

  • I am getting frustrated with a car mechanic for not fixing my Tata Nano’s gearbox. It has been with him for four months now. Unless I call him, he doesn’t provide any updates. I ended up pinging the person who recommended him who is a genuinely a very warm and nice guy!
    • Apparently (he told me), all car mechanics do this. They never proactively update you unless you ask.
    • He reassured me that the mechanic is very good at what he does and that the car should be fixed in a few more weeks.
    • I felt bad about involving him.
  • My impression of the mechanic is that he’s a good guy and understands what he’s doing, but he doesn’t keep me in the loop.
  • I’ve started migrating away from Notion to other open-source or self-hosted tools. For example, WordPress (this site) is now my platform for blogging. My notes are in Joplin now. I still need to find a good tool for to-do, web clippings, and task management—perhaps Zoho?!
  • Yesterday, we went to Aditya’s place to meet a common friend. The “Hound of Madurai” was in town and feeling extremely lovey-dovey about meeting old friends. Why not? It took only 90 minutes to drive 20 km.
    • Kaalu was so tired after the whole “meeting friends” affair that she slept the entire night in one position. Usually, she keeps changing her sleeping spots throughout the night!

20 km in just 90 minutes. Driving in Bengaluru!
  • I have interviews scheduled for a senior role early next week at Fortanix. I had a manager screening yesterday which I think went well. I felt alive talking about security and the SaaS services built around it. I liked that they started with manager screening for a senior role. So that we both could easily decide if we want to invest further time in the interview process. I had to say no to the HP Enterprise interview because they start with a technical interview first and I am not feeling motivated to prepare for it without knowing what their plans are!
  • I bought this saw for pruning branches. It’s a good saw—very sharp. The pole is quite long and the overall build is fine, but it could be much better. In particular, the grip on the loosening/tightening joints isn’t great. The saw also didn’t come with a safety cover.
  • I used it to cut most of the lantana trees growing in an empty plot next to my house and trimmed some branches from the mango and Jamun trees that were blocking light. My neighbor also enjoyed trimming branches that were blocking his security camera’s view. All in all, a good purchase.

December 27, 2025: Weekly Notes 2025/28

  • This will be the last weekly notes this year. I started writing them this year about 29 weeks ago.
  • I’ve been living by “If I am not doing it the rest of my life, I am doing it a few times” (professionally). Let’s see how it stands up to the midlife crisis I am supposed to get in a few years.
  • I had to drive to Hyderabad and back to Bangalore this week because of a semi medical emergency. Kaalu The Fifth did well in the car. My No access also did very well. It gave me ~19 km/l mileage on highway. Driving experience was much better this time. This time I drove 90-100 km/hr speed during night without any issue. Though I prefer day-time driving, but two-wheeler and auto-drivers make life miserable on the highway since they can come from any-side anytime.
  • 🏃🏾I missed three days of running because of driving, but I’ll manage to finish 1000km in a couple of days 🎉.
  • Three months ago, I won a 1 gram gold coin from Spinny when I bought a car from them. But it’s not enough motivation to drive to Tanishque store. I won’t be surprised if I won’t collect it in time. Why can’t these people just transfer the money! Who has time to run around for gold?
  • I used to complain to my co-founder about something similar a lot, who’d have preferred to hire someone “senior” who doesn’t use their hands on the code-base. It’s really sad how many “senior” folks you meet during interviews who really don’t really “work on” the project they “manage” or “lead”.

A trip to Nelliyampathy

Last week we went to Kerala for a wedding. The place of wedding was near to Palakkad. Palkkad can be a good base for further trekking. It has many cheap lodges and costly hotels (whichever you prefer). From here, one can take a bus to Nelliampathi village. It takes approximately 2.5 hours to reach the village. Last bus from the village to Palakkad is at 5:30 pm; so plan accordingly. There is small eating place at the bus-stop which is pretty good, and they don’t over-charge you for anything.

bus

The hike through tea plantation was awesome. 

tea

You can also take jeep from the village to go into the reserved forest. Inside the forest, you are not suppose to walk on foot; but we did for a little while anyway 😉.

intothewild
jkeep

If you are visiting during monsoon (July – December), do carry rain-jacket and extra socks; extra of almost everything drench-able. And heed my warning about leaches and rarely appearing scorpion.

leach
rain

scorpion

A trip to Antergange

One of my lab-mates who hikes to psychologically anneal himself — may be hiking is some sort of spiritual experience for him as doing assignments is for me — planned for a night hiking around Antergange. Oliver told me that we’d pass through some villages, I enthusiastically joined them. I like the company of a girl who promised to come for the trekking. We started from NCBS Bagalore around 4pm and reached Majestic bus station around 5pm and took a bus to Kolar from Terminal 3, platform 8. Kolar is Rs. 62 (80 Km, 2 hours) away from Majestic bus station; I didn’t worry about the direction.

We got down at Kolar bus station. I feel most comfortable in small towns and villages: feels like home among my homies. There is certain sturdiness in their life and raw humanity in their manners which I appreciate and miss in my academic life which is mostly lived in cities. Every time, I pass though a village — even mine — somehow I can’t stop thinking about M. N. Srinivas’s legendary monograph, “A remembered village”. I marvel and envy at clarity of his eye-sight. Its remarkable how clearly some people can see through “others”?

Just outside the Kolar bus-station, there is a small hotel. One can get vegetarian food there. We had dinner there. More than food, I liked the enthusiasm of owner or manager of that place: he can be found in kitchen and serving area. He told me that they make excellent Paratha and Chapathi and they are supporting BJP (no, they are supporting Modi) this year. We had no problem caused by their food during trekking.

Oliver, being a German, attracted local attentions. Some people wanted to know where he is from. They started inquiring about our native places enthusiastically. When they got to know we are going to Antergange, they advised us not to go uphill in night; its not safe. It turns out that it is safe from humans but not from animals. A cheetah was spotted by someone on the hill. You need not take them seriously, they just love cautioning strangers.

Many people (especially from North India) don’t feel safe telling strangers where they are going. Northern part of this county suffers from a lack of trust among people compared to South. I wondered what my group was thinking about me when I was telling them freely where we are planning to go during the night (with 3 girls in group)!

It’s a 2-3 kilometer walk from Kolar bus station to top of hill. First you will encounter a pucca road. There are 2-3 villages on the way, and trust me, don’t take dogs in villages too lightly. “Barking dogs seldom bite” may not be as true as you might like it to be. Get a guy in front with a stick and one at back with a stick. Others can walk in the middle. Don’t give attention to barking dogs. The dog which might bite you is most likely to come from behind silently. Its not hard to spot them if you are willing to look beyond humans. Unless a dog comes really near you, ignore it. Dogs may be training their junior members of the pack: how to bark and scare unsuspected strangers.

Once you reach the temple after crossing two villages on the road, you can fill your bottles. The water looks pure (both physically and theoretically). It did not cause anything bad to us. And there was a white puppy who can also accompany you if show him enough affection. Perhaps he is an orphan. He is very afraid of grown-up dogs and will run away if you pass through any village.

If you want to make fire, collect wood from the village or from their fields. They don’t have any crop in this month (late March, early April) so you can collect leftovers from their fields too. Don’t cut wood at the top of hill, it wouldn’t burn.

Sleeping can be tricky if you are not carrying warm clothes. Pack a good jacket and heavy pants. In night, it gets cold: blanket would be a great idea. We had tents (thanks to Oliver) but I slept outside it and didn’t feel much cold in jacket and blanket. Between me and rock was a thin chaddar with Ben10 all over it which my ex-girlfriend bought for me. In the morning, I got to know that I snore.

There are boulders on the top and people often claim that they form cave. They are not caves as I define them but let’s not worry about the pedantic. In night, finding them is not easy. Jumping from boulder to boulder can be tricky but fun nonetheless. The fall is steep and dangerous. If you get intense psychological attraction towards free jumping over boulders (as I do), control!

If you are ahead of your group and sweating a lot, take off you pants and feel the wind in your legs and butt. You can leave the undies on. Nothing gets better than this. And you might even have a non-philosophical theory why so many women are fond of mini-skirts!

Many people love to see sun-rise. There were one a two exceptions in the group. I cared very little for sun-rise, Oliver was even less enthusiastic about it. Nonetheless if you are up, why miss it? It was definitely not as beautiful as it gets in my village in late winter when you can see shining dew on the leaves of small wheat plant — I even wrote a poem about it once.

I was standing there with Avantika who seemed fond of morning. She was sensitive enough to recall a poem and recite few lines from it. Gimli from “Lords of the ring” had this to say, “You have chosen the Evening, but my love is given to the Morning. And my heart forebodes that soon it will pass away for ever.” Her voice lacked her usual firmness and certitude and her face was slightly more unpredictable. May be because she had to share those deeply felt words with and acquaintance. I liked that she could share something with me. I love evenings; they promise me home, calmness and solitude. While coming back I wondered if I can ever recite a poem by looking at sky. I could think of the last stanza of a Mahadevi Verma’s “Main neer bhari dukh is badli”. But in front of whom I can recite it?

While coming back in the morning, the first village you’ll encounter has bus services. Bus to this village from Kolar leaves around 7am and takes about 15-20 minutes to reach there. So you should get there between 7.15am and 8am. The bus stop is just outside the village near a Masjid or Dargah. One very friendly and religiously musical old man in that Dargah reminded me of Mehmood the kitemaker (a short story by Ruskin Bond). Ruskin has a way of describing the surface of his characters; one can easily notice them. I wonder if one can discover characters painted by R. K. Narayanan and Premchand just by a simple gaze?