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![]() The Silent Hills ... a few days in the Nilgiris Text and photographs: Shaheen Mulla-Feroze I open my eyes at the sound of a distant whistle. In less than a minute, the Ooty-Coonoor train will come around the hill, past our cottage at Lovedale, and as I have done for the past two weeks, I’ll run out front to wave to it.
I settle on the front steps, and look around, trying to absorb the landscape for the last time. The hills that stretch out in a huge crescent around us are bursting with life, but in the distance, they fade into a dull silvery blue mass, almost merging in parts with the overcast sky. This strange colour is an illusion caused by the millions of eucalyptus trees that grow on the hillsides, which give the Nilgiris -- loosely translated to mean "blue hills" -- their name.
Amulraj, the caretaker, has told us of an LTTE graveyard which lies in the heart of the village. We’ve wanted to pay a nocturnal visit ever since we found out about it, but being the yellow-hearted adventurers that we are, we can’t convince ourselves to leave the sanctity of home in the dark, for fear of being attacked by a wild animal or rolling down a hill.
Sitting here, I can’t help but compare the lonely serenity of Lovedale with the trappings of urbanity that are overtaking Ooty. That town has a drooping, tired look that comes with the burden of unplanned growth. The streets are narrow and crowded, the sidewalks paved with garbage. The Ooty Lake, once a famous landmark, is just a large green pool of sludge. The waterfront at Wendlock Downs, a favourite spot for songs and romantic scenes in Hindi movies, is littered with garbage. Other places, beautiful old buildings like the Fernhill Palace, lie neglected but for a couple of dogs, some rabbits and a watchman who looks as old as the place.
At our remote cottage in Lovedale, we haven’t had hot water for the last five days, and just when it's the coldest, our electricity gets cut off. Amulraj has to take the train to town just to buy a loaf of bread. These hardships add to the natural beauty of the surroundings, making Lovedale an ideal place to vacation, if an undesirable place to settle.
The real action is at the wildlife sanctuaries down the mountain.
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