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Row Row Row Your Boat! Mulki Adventures- Kayaking in River Shambhavi

After a seven hours journey from Tirupur to Bangalore by train, I had to travel once again for eight long hours to reach Mulki. Never minding the tediousness, I dared to quest with excitement of what Mulki has got to offer and took a bus from Majestic.

A middle-aged aunty who was next to my seat, started a conversation in Kannada, which I didn’t understand and she didn’t know English or Tamil either. But still, out of sign language, we had our own little talk and I came to know that she is from Udupi. She did mention that Mulki is a very nice place to visit and asked me to plan once to her home for vacation. With adding one more destination in a row to my bucket list, my inner monkey, which was already thrilled, was awaiting to reach Mulki as soon as possible. I wasn’t able to answer her one question, ‘You like Tamil Nadu or Karnataka better?’. That’s one serious battle to be debated upon. So, I decided not to take a hand on that and slept.

I heard the conductor reaching out my name for the Mulki bus stop. The time was 5 am. I woke up from my half sleep, gathered my luggage, bid goodbye to that aunty and got down. There was no one on the road, except one or two auto drivers, waiting for customers. I stepped into one and reached the campsite ‘KayakBoy‘, which was my home for the next two days. It was a five minutes bumpy ride.

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By the time I reached, people were sleeping in tents pitched in the side of the river. I walked a little further and found a lot of boats lying on the ground. The place was very calm. I sat on one of the chairs put up there, facing the river at peace.

Then it was time to sunrise for the day and it was serene. I was very much moved to witness one by the river side. The golden ball slowly arose from its hiding place with pride, flaunting its wings of brightness all over the sky and that was pure magic. It was one of the best sunrises I had seen so far, I would say.

Sunrise by the River Side

I then freshened up and rested for a while. The breakfast was offered hot. The morning batch of Kayaking (8.30 AM) were ready to get into the water. I had planned to take up the paddle for the evening batch (3.30 PM) to see the sunset.

The campsite itself was pretty much enough to laze around. The tents and the hammocks were the saviors. It literally felt good, lying in them, swinging, hearing good music or reading books or doing nothing all day. It was a bit hot to admit, but the view ate up the discomfortness I faced.

View From the Tent

After quite a lot of resting time, I was called for the evening kayak. It is two and half hours of kayaking, covering a distance of how much one is capable of rowing. Ideally, it’s a 5km package. The instructors didn’t recommend the group to take any electronic items such as mobiles or cameras, since we would get all wet. But added that one can carry at their own risk. I wore the life jackets given (mandatory) and took a paddle kept neatly arranged. I was all ready to do some damn kayaking, for which I had been waiting so long.

But I was terrified when I tripped a bit while getting into the boat. For instance, I thought it was not a good start and a bad idea to do so. But, my inner adrenaline rush didn’t want me to stop and insisted on going on. With help, I got into the boat safe and sound and started to row.

Initially, I didn’t feel anything like I was kayaking. My boat went on it’s own in accordance with the current of river flow. I got confused, a lot, on which side I should row, to move left and right. But, it’s all in the game. It happens. Gradually, I started figuring out on how things work.

To move your boat left, you should row right and to move right, you should row left. To go straight, you must row alternatively, on both the sides. Yes, it sounds so simple, that one might think, how there can be a place for any such disarray. The answer is, an over excited new beginner can face all of these. (As in my case)

Kayaking in River Shambhavi

As a group, we all started moving together and after two hours of kayaking, it was time to see the sunset. It was scorching hot that I was completely tanned and sweating. We rested in one place, along the side of the mangrove trees. The sun slowly made its way to it’s den. I went zip. Like, I couldn’t express what I saw. But it was the most beautiful thing, I would wish to see again and again, my entire lifetime. I insisted on staying there for some more time.

Sunsets are always underrated. It’s nature’s way of preaching facts like what comes in must find its way back, things that sparkle will go through some darkness to shine once again more brighter, etc., etc.,

Must Read: River Rafting in Rishikesh Riding Raging Rapids

Watching Sunset

We all returned to our campsite and freshened up ourselves. I was surprised how this adventure had brought me out of my comfort zone. Kayaking was a bit tough and my hands were hurting.  But, it was all worth it. I would not get another chance like this. Maybe, I will. In future. But, until then, it’s only Mulki’s memories.

Must Read: Top 10 Attractions in India that Will Leave You Speechless

“Hello people!

I’m Arunalakshmi, a law graduate and currently an aspiring student of Journalism. I love to write, write and write. I have always dreamt of becoming a writer and so thought of trying my hands in Journalism after a tedious integrated 5 years of law degree. Because, it’s better to be late than never. One day or the other, I believe to achieve what I aim for. Fingers crossed. Travel has always given me a great confidence and a space to get to know more about myself. I’m just a beginner in this genre, getting better and better every day, learning from my experiences and mistakes”.

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Article by Arunalakshmi – Magical Music Treat in Ambukuthi Hills, Wayanad

River Rafting in Rishikesh Riding Raging Rapids

Electricity. It was running in my veins. “Can someone please tell me why in the world am I feeling so crazy since the past week?!” Every next person that walked past me or was sitting in the same room as I was attacked by this question of mine by me. I kept pacing up and down. I sat on the edge of a chair as if I would suddenly spring up and start running. I needed this teeming energy in me to take over.

Adventure sports. Yep. Just the apt activity for this unfaltering flow of energy to rush and wash over me. The town of Rishikesh in Uttarakhand, India had caught my eye on the internet’s list of ‘best places of adventure sports in India’. It offered river rafting, rappelling, hiking and even more heart-stopping activities like cliff jumping. Yeah! That sounded wild! Even today, the idea of falling off a cliff with nothing but a nylon-cased rubber band tied to my ankle makes my skin crawl. They gave it a very harmless name- bungee jumping. Know more what things to do in Rishikesh

Anyways, river-rafting was what I was going to do.

River rafting is one of the most popular adventure sport in India. The mightiest rivers serve the purpose by providing indignant rapids, daring the rafters to conquer them. And I was all set to defeat all water warriors that dared to cross my path.

The ride to Rishikesh turned out to be an appetizer for what lay ahead of me. When I rolled down the window, a medley of events occurred. Persistent currents of wind whipped my hair backwards. The force against my face forced my lips apart into my best Colgate smile. As cool air rushed into my nostrils, it gushed with a gentle force in my lungs that revitalized every cell of my respiratory tract. The car zipped straight upon the black highways, unintermittedly.

We directly reached the office where we would be getting our rides further to the bank of river Ganges. In fifteen minutes, we boarded a mini-van with a bright yellow raft waiting to brave the raging rapids.

After half an hour we reached Shivpuri, the place from where our rafting journey would commence. My mind was spinning with all kinds of possibilities of rafting disasters. Nevertheless, my legs were quivering with anticipation and the adrenaline surging through my body. I almost imagined my body bursting because of excess adrenaline charge at the time of rafting!
At last, we reached the start point of our journey, Shivpuri. Our instructor kept assuring all the pessimistic people that they would go back home in one piece.

Finally, we were all set to move. Like every stupid person on the raft (which included everyone), I expected us to get drenched in water the moment we had started. Nope, calm waters welcomed us, illustrating the sanctity of the river Ganges. The pacified flow of water explained the serene allegory of the goddess Ganga. As we rowed on, a sense of devoutness and that of being blessed surfaced our minds. It was beautiful.

We had the best instructor one could ever have. He ardently wanted us to experience the might of the river water to the fullest. After all, our raft was surging through the divine Ganga itself. It was being guided by the gentle, but steady current. The ice-cold water landed on my arm as the raft sloshed about aimlessly when we halted. As my breath was taken away for a split second, my arm stung sharply.

Next, what our instructor said made me think that too much time spent by him rafting in these frigid waters had frozen his brain. He asked us to get off the raft. Yay. Straight fifteen minutes in the bone-chilling, algid and holy waters. For the first five seconds, I completely forgot that there was an activity which was supposed to be done by me all the time– breathing. Okay, I’m gasping for air, which refused to enter my now dysfunctional lungs; and I’m finally feeling the cold of the water acting as a counterforce to calm down my electrified nerves. After a minute or two, my legs were aching. What kept me in the water for fifteen minutes was that annoying but gratifying electricity. After surging through my body with full force, it had finally curbed. But hey, I didn’t mean it was over. Then there were the rapids.

We spotted them at a distance first. It looked like the water was being churned lightly by an unseen force. Froth that was formed by the same floated on the waters for a few moments before melting away. As we came closer, I started to feel the water moving agitatedly below the raft. It felt as if it was getting exasperated; as though it was caged and was willing to set itself free. The calm and serene scenery around me started to bob up and down as the turbulence increased. My adrenaline charged painfully through my body. Then came the first blast of water. Before we could recover from the shock, another one greeted us from the side. It was as though we were face-to-face with a loose cannon. The berserk and barbaric waves of water crashed down on us mercilessly. And finally, all the electricity flowed out as I rowed, struggling to keep up with the others. Oh, the experience was purely ecstatic.

Victorious. That’s what I felt when I stepped off the raft, drenched. I could do this a thousand times over and not get bored. Every muscle in my body ached as we walked back to the minivan. As we headed back to the hotel, I realized that maybe I was too rough with the description of the rapids. It was as though they were trying to give a message through their loud ways. It was as though I had connected with the river spirit. Then I remembered something that Emma Smith had precisely said: “Life is like the river, sometimes it sweeps you gently along and sometimes the rapids come out of nowhere.”

I’ll be coming back, sweet river. You’ll know when I do.

Author’s bio:
Parishka Gupta is an amateur travel writer from Delhi, India. She is seventeen years old and has been passionate about writing as well as travelling since the age of seven. As she grew up, she fused those two together and thus, a travel writer was born. Parishka went on to secure various ranks in the Sverdlovsk Regional Public Children’s Organization ‘Lotsman’ (Russia) competition for Young Journalists four times in a row. Parishka ardently attends Model United Nations conferences as a journalist as well.

She has a travel blog of her own and is the founder and chief editor of The Red Megaphone, an initiative to pull bashful and new writers into the spotlight;

Ms. Gupta is now on her way to become a freelance travel writer and travel the world.