After Mysore, we were headed for Ooty, which is a popular hill station in the Nilgiri Hills. Also known as the Queen of Hill Stations in India, it was the summer time retreat for the British during the colonial era.
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View of part of Ooty... the hillsides are dotted with houses and farms or tea plantations. |
From Mysore, our drive took us through the Bandipur National Park (a tiger reserve) and Mudumalai National Park, which was very relaxing and scenic. As the road ascended the hills (not too harrowing or with sharp corners), the view of the hills and the valley below got us all excited. Tea plantations started to dot the landscape, and there were small tea shops along the way. A good thing if you need a break or motion sickness gets to you, these stalls serve a mean cup of chai.
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A motorcyclist riding through Bandipur Tiger Reserve... meals on wheels for tigers? |
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The view as we ascend the hill towards Ooty. |
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Tea plantations dominate the landscape as we ascend the hills. |
We reached Ooty around 2pm local time, and headed straight for our accomodation, which isn't really in town (bummer... yeah) but located on the south-western edge of Ooty, west of West Mere. The place (Deccan Park Resort) has cottage like units surrounded by gardens and even has a tea plantation (sort of an unkept patch) that we can view from our balcony. You have to walk a short distance from the reception and dining area to reach your 'rooms' but the park along the path is cheerfully planted with flowers along the way. Couldn't resist in taking shots of the flowers around the place.
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The 'cottage' like units. |
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From the 'tea plantation' looking back to
the units |
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View of the room, quite cozy
actually. |
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Pretty blue Lupins. |
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Orange California poppy to brighten the day. |
The cool and fresh air meant it was a good time to go back to town to do some sightseeing and also to get a meal before heading back here for dinner. Now Ooty is well known for one thing... local made chocolates! in all sorts of flavours and sizes. Nuts or fruit, plain or dark, you name it, they got it... well, don't ask for Guylian or Lindt chocolates here, we are talking about 100% local stuff here.
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One of the many many shops that sells chocolates in Ooty. |
Other than chocolates... the sweets and cake shops are everywhere! Anyone on a diet and coming to Ooty, please beware. Either put a blindfold on or just give in to the temptation. The fun part is to try the various chocolates and then buy some... guarantee you will be full and would require no lunch.
There is even a shop that sells crisps (potato, banana etc) and Indian snacks. Try to buy when the crisps are fresh from the wok - delicious on a cool afternoon in Ooty.
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Shop selling crisps and snacks. |
What to see around Ooty town:
- Chocolate and sweet shops.
- The local stalls that sell flower, vegetables and snacks.
- The main market area - you can get anything here, vegetables, meat, fish and even macaroni.
- Shops along the street that sort of descend down to a small cramp space.
After a good walk, we headed back to our accomodation... where dinner was a surprise. The place is more of a health sanatorium, and the meals are fully vegetarian as they hold on to the healing principles of Ayurveda! The verdict - it was a good meal, even for a meat lover like me.
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