Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Road trip to Kodaikanal from Bangalore

Let me interpose another travelogue adding to the list of Bangalore to Kodai trip. The 500Km distance between the garden city and the queen of hills might seem daunting at the first thought, thanks to the GQ initiative by Atal Bihari Vajpayee, making the journey quick and comfortable.

It was not so planned journey to venture Kodai at the peak season (April). However we decided to set out for a trip by car(Maruti Swift). It was raining as we started and we had second thoughts to venture the long trip. However we decided to embark on the visitation.



Distance - A Line map
Bangalore
|
95 Km
|
Krishnagiri (95)
|
55 Km
|
Dharmapuri (150)
|
60 Km
|
Salem (210)
|
55 Km
|
Namakkal (265)
|
55 Km
|
Karur (320)
|
70 Km
|
Dindigul (390)
|
40 Km
|
Vatlakundu (430)
|
55 Km
|
Kodaikanal (485)

We started at around 05:00 hrs and traced the Inner ring road, Madiwala, Electronic city. We had a planned stoppage at Chinnar before Krishnagiri to reach Ghar dhaba to tank up at BP, supposedly COCO - Company Owned Company Operated and finish the breakfast at A2B. We were behind our schedule as heavy rain lashed Bangalore till Hosur.



The Thoppur ghat deserves a mention as the road has marked speed brakers and monkeys greeting the way. The road is poorly managed with unevenly settled lanes primarily being attributed by heavy truck traffic.


With better weather conditions and clear stretch ahead, we sped to mark our planned reach to the destinations.

At Salem we anticipated a heavy truck traffic but however we found the traffic was very lean and we could bypass the city quickly. You need to take a diversion here to follow NH-7 - Madurai or Kanyakumari direction


We had stopped by for tea break at Karur at around 10:30hrs. We were now well ahead of our schedule.

After crossing Dindigul, be glued to the sign boards and you need to take the service lane below the grade separator to take a right turn to touch SH-18, Vatlagundu.











Ascending the hills in the evening is not so good a decision with mist cover obstructing the visibility and hence it is better to reach Vatlagundu in the afternoon.

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Chandrachoodeshwarar Temple



Situated on a small hillock near Hosur is the Chandrachoodeshwarar temple. The temple is just as big as any small temple in Tamilnadu. I have reportedly heard and read that this temple was the reason to turn TVS Motor Co.'s fortune northwards. There is also an evidence that TVS donated the refurbished "Nandhi" to the temple.



The presiding deity is Lord Shiva with Moon on the head (Chandra-Moon, choodesh - wear) and hence the name of the temple.



This trip would certainly be an excellent getaway from the hustles and bustles. The temple does not witness big crowd except few festive occasions. The temple is well maintained and offers a pious feeling. The aerial view is one of the best one can get to see the complete town of Hosur.


Here is the view of the pond abutting the temple.


The approach road to the temple at least unto the hillock is by far the best one can experience. The NH7 section between Bangalore to Attibele (33Km) and from Attibele to Hosur (16Km) is 4 laned for one can cruise at the maximum speed limit of 80Kmph and for rushing adrenalins' one can easily maintain 140Kmph.


Adding to this to the electronic city ramp,supposedly the longest elevated highway in India, is yet another treat from motoring enthusiasts.

Sunday, January 17, 2010

Right to Emergency Care

Accident

Right to Emergency Care

Supreme Court Judgement
Date of Judgment: 23/02/2007.
Case No.: Appeal (civil) 919 of 2007

The Supreme Court has ruled that all injured persons especially in the case of road traffic accidents, assaults, etc., when brought to a hospital / medical centre, have to be offered first aid, stabilized and shifted to a higher centre / government centre if required. It is only after this that the hospital can demand payment or complete police formalities. In case you are a bystander and wish to help someone in an accident, please go ahead and do so. Your responsibility ends as soon as you leave the person at the hospital.
The hospital bears the responsibility of informing the police, giving first aid etc.,
Please do inform your family and friends about these basic rights so that we all know what to expect and what to do in the hour of need. Please not only go ahead and forward, use it too!!!!

The Background
In a Public interest petition filed in Supreme Court of India in 1988 the Supreme Court of India had declared that “ Every Doctor whether at Government Hospital or otherwise has the professional obligation to extend his services with due expertise for protecting life. The obligation is total, absolute and paramount”.
In spite of the fact that the Supreme Court had ordered that this order should be given wide publicity, neither the publicity had been adequate nor the knowledge of this order. Due to this there are still many instances of refusal by private hospitals to treat accident victims.
Further, it is a common sight that when accident occurs there will be many to crowd around and express their views on who was responsible for the accident but hardly anyone would help to rush the accident victim to the nearest hospital.

Good Samaritan Award
In order to encourage people to do so, the Association has instituted an Award called “Ravindran Memorial Good Samaritan Award” and gives it annually to a person who had so helped the accident victim. This award was initiated by the then President of AASI and former Director General of Police Late Mr.K. Ravindran, IPS. Originally called as ‘Good Samaritan Award’, after his death was named as ‘Ravindran Memorial Good Samaritan Award’.
This award instituted in 1997 has so far been given to a bank union official, a Businessman, an Auto Driver, a young school boy, a Tailor, a Driver of the Police Department, a Public Sector employee and an unemployed youth.
If you come to know of any such noble act please inform us with details so that such a person can be considered for the award which is normally given during the first week of January during the Road Safety week.
We also encourage each one of you to be a Good Samaritan.

First Aid Tips in case of Road Accidents
In case of breathing failure or trouble

CALL for Ambulance
Start Artificial breathing Immediately.

The Kiss of Life (Mouth to Mouth Resuscitation) Method:
1. The Victim should be made to lye on his or her back.
2. Loosen the clothing round the Victim’s Neck, Chest and Waist
3. Clean Victim’s mouth to remove any food particle or saliva by hand kerchief.
4. Place one of your hands under the neck and other on the forehead tilting victim’s head slightly backward.
5. To clear the airway using the hand under the neck lift the chin upwards.
6. If breathing does not start, pinch the victim’s nostrils together, take in a breath and covering victim’s mouth fully with your mouth breath into his lungs.
7. When his / her chest rises, turn your hand away and repeat the procedure three times.

In case where the above kiss of Life method cannot be used, artificial respiration can be tried.
1. Keep accident victim’s face downwards with arms bent making the head rest on his hands with head turned to one side.
2. Kneel on one knee near the victim’s head with the foot of your opposite leg placed near the victim’s elbow.
3. Place your hands on Victim’s back just below the shoulder blades.
4. Rock forward with your arms held straight at the elbows until your arms are vertical and press down to compress the chest.
5. Rock backwards lifting victim’s elbows.
6. Repeat it every five seconds or 12 times a minute.

Bleeding
If there is any glass or other material in the affected portion, put pressure along the edge of the bleeding wound and put some dressing along the edge and tie it with a tight bandage. Don’t try to remove any foreign body since it can create more bleeding. If the injury is in hand or leg and if the bleeding is profuse make the victim lie down and raise the arm or leg above the level of the heart. But care should be taken not to dislocate if any injury to the bone has occurred. In case of suspected fracture put a splint and tie so that the movement will be restored. While lifting such a patient care must be taken.

Bleeding Nose
1. Make the Victim, Sit down and tilt the head slight by forward.
2. Let the blood drip
3. Pinch the soft part of the nose
4. Ensure that the victim does not swallow blood.

Head Injury
1. Carefully the head should be supported and victim should be kept in recovery position (turned on his side) and clear airway.
2. Keep a loose dressing or hand kerchief under the ear.
3. Control bleeding by bandage or tieing with kerchief.

Source: http://www.aasindia.in/aasi/accident.htm

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Ayurvedic touch to lunch

While I always try experimenting with alternate medicines, home remedies, I was little skeptic to pay a visit to Cholaiyil Sanjeevanam Restaurant. I then decided to visit Sanjeevanam restaurant for lunch at Mugappair, Chennai. Touted as the natural health restaurant serving the meals prepared in Ayurvedic principles by trained and experienced cooks, it also showcases health products. The food is prepared only in earthen, bronze and copper vessels to reinforce that these contribute to the organic food.

The special attraction in the à la carte is the Rajakeeyam (Royal) lunch is a satvic meal. Satvic meals can be regarded as yogic diet or sentient diet, that are rich in antioxidants and leading to clarity of mind. Satvic diet is closest to natural form. However raw food may not be considered satvic owing to the impurity and microbes in raw form. So a satvic meal tries to emulate the nature food being moderately cooked with few spices and less fat added. Most of the cereals would accompany satvic diet. Honey, ghee and jaggery are also part of satvic diet. Picture this: Food that is less spicy and less oily, constituting the healthy cereals, sprouted grains, vegetable juice extracts moderately cooked is certainly proven to improve the healing response and builds the immunity, more so the digestive system is let to perform a lighter province, a heavy duty otherwise.



Satvic meal is eaten in an organized manner as the nutrients of fruits and vegetables should be absorbed by the system prior to the grains. (Courtesy: Placard placed in the serving table). The attendants would ensure to provide the order of serving to comfort yourself.

A pure vegeterian meal with 26 different varieties come at a cost little higher but yet a healthy bet

Swivel the life force by indulging yourself in a satvic diet and feel the difference swiftly. You will feel a completeness in diet but not a sense of heaviness and discomfort.


For more details visit : http://www.cholayilsanjeevanam.com/contact.htm

Friday, January 23, 2009

Infuse wisdom through materialism ?



Talk a lot about Classic Marxism and stage a big protests in the name of communism, but pay a visit to Sripuram temple to see the architectural marvels and decorations in dazzling expensive yellow metal, the gold and finally boast your spectacular glimpses to others. This is the recent fad amongst most of the big(wigs\ots) !

The temple is situated at the foot of a small range of green hills in a place known as "Malaikodi" in the city of Vellore in TamilNadu,India.

The salient Feature of Sripuram is the Lakshmi Narayani temple or Mahalakshmi temple whose 'Vimanam’ and ‘Ardha Mandapam’ have been coated with gold both in the interior and exterior.

The attainment of material pleasures is regarded the utmost stature as per the Sripuram history. This comes as a stark contrast to what Karma yoga preaches, for it focuses on the adherance of the duty without expecting any fruit in return. Karma yoga is a spinning disk of detached actions.


courtesy: http://www.sripuram.org/

The conceptualization is to embark on a journey to infuse wisdom through materialism says Sri Sakthi Amma. This would perfectly imply one to not practice detachment from the web of materialism thereby forbidding one in attaining samadhi !

A perfect negation on the preachings of Bhagavad Gita Chapter 4 (verse 10), follows as below:

Verse 10

vita-raga-bhaya-krodha
man-maya mam upasritah
bahavo jnana-tapasa
puta mad-bhavam agatah

Translation
=====
Being freed from attachment, fear and anger, being fully absorbed in Me and taking refuge in Me, many, many persons in the past became purified by knowledge of Me—and thus they all attained transcendental love for Me.
=====
Courtesy: http://www.bhagavad-gita.us/articles/497/1/Bhagavad-Gita-410/Page1.html

The core importance of the temple at Sripuram goes further to say :
" So even though the world comes to see the temple, before they reach the temple, they will see Amma’s messages also; there will be message from holy texts like Gita, Quran and Bible"
Source :http://www.sripuram.org/htmls/sripuram/importance.html

How does the holy texts from Gita hold good here in the ken of materialistic preachings?

An iconic Sripuram temple claiming to be the world's only Golden temple built of gold to its entirety, preaches towards the attainment of materialistic pleasures and fulfillment of one's needs as opposed to the preachings of Karma Yoga.


Emergence of Egalitarianism ?#?

Friday, January 2, 2009

Appeal appended and amended

It did indeed evoke diversified opinion on publishing the post titled: KSRTC e-ticket Only Original Photo ID Card ?"

I quote :
"But it also casts aspersion when it culminates to the very point that the right person is deprived of his journey merely for not in possession of the "Original" photo ID card as was entered in the ticket while booking, despite the person ready to prove his identity by many other sources including alternative Photo Identity cards."

I am indeed happy to find this concern addressed not by KSRTC but by the largely traded e-commerce site in India namely: www.irctc.co.in

Recent amendment to the online ticketing system by Indian Railways is as follows:

New Facilities In E-Ticket
AMENDMENT IN E-TICKET SCHEME:-
On and from 01-11-2008 the provision for specifying I/D proof at the time of booking an e-ticket has been dispensed with. The accommodation booked is not transferable and is valid only if one of the passenger booked on an e-ticket in a transaction presents any of the five identity cards(Voter identity card/Passport/ Pan card/Driving license/Photo I/d card of Central/State Government)during train journey in original and same will be accepted as proof of identity failing which the passengers will be treated as travelling without ticket and shall be dealt with as per extant Railway Rules.

Courtesy:
www.irctc.co.in

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

You can make a big difference

This is plausibly the most ubiquitous free consumer merchandise available in the earth. It has always been notorious for its qualities specially from the environmentalists. This has been newsworthy in many countries seeking to promulgate environmental pariah.

" The Plastic bags"

Sensationally the aggressive product that can be procured and accorded in compliment with the consumer merchandise. While it may find its use in every household, the ill-effects are least understood or bothered by most of us.

One of the most dangerous economics about Plastic bag:
"it costs $4,000 to process and recycle 1 ton of plastic bags, which can then be sold on the commodities market for $32 (Jared Blumenfeld, director of San Francisco's Department of the Environment as reported by Christian Science Monitor)."
What if plastic grocery bags comes for free, can be understood with its poor quality plastic making it bio non-degradable. Environmentalists fear that it may take 500-1000 years to decompose. The ill-effects range from land to sea, killing animals and sometimes if unattended to, even humans.

By eliminating plastic waste does not mean incinerating the plastic, as its repercussions are at doldrums. There are few options though:
1. Stop production at the source
2. reuse

The least that can be done to the mother Nature and thereby our ecosystem is to stop production at source not by confronting, but stopping the use of plastic bags in our daily chores. This would automatically stop the production.

Kerala highway research institute, India, has come up with a master plan to reuse plastic waste into Road construction. This is certainly a significant milestone by India to make the Globe "Greener". These initiatives should be taken to great heights rather than drafting on inks.

I could recall the days when my mother used to carry a jute bag along with her to shop for groceries, fruits and vegetables. Thanks to the supermarkets in the late 90's to start the 'Plastic plethora' in the minds of the consumer,thereby a devolution of environment.

A bitter pill is always for the best of its cure, so it would be the greatest feat in our life not to resort to plastic bags anymore.

Of course, it would be a step further to call for a complete ban by Judiciary.






Remember PlasTax may be needed for much sought after rejig !


Hasta la vista !!!


Plastic Bags consumed this year:




Courtesy:http://www.reusablebags.com




Need to make better, safer plastic, not shun it completely
Susan Freinkel, IHT

Source: Deccan Herald, March 23, 2011

Need to make better, safer plastic, not shun it completely
Susan Freinkel, IHT

Since the 1930s, when the product first hit the market, there has been a plastic toothbrush in every American bathroom.

But if you are one of the growing number of people seeking to purge plastic from their lives, you can now buy a wooden toothbrush with boar’s-hair bristles, along with other such back-to-the-future products as cloth sandwich wrappers, metal storage containers and leather fly swatters.

The urge to avoid plastic is understandable, given reports of toxic toys and baby bottles, seabirds choking on bottle caps and vast patches of ocean swirling with everlasting synthetic debris. Countless bloggers write about striving — in vain, most discover — to eradicate plastic from their lives. “Eliminating plastic is one of the greenest actions you can do to lower your eco-footprint,” one noted while participating in a recent online challenge to be plastic-free.

Is this true? Shunning plastic may seem key to the ethic of living lightly, but the environmental reality is more complex.

Originally, plastic was hailed for its potential to reduce humankind’s heavy environmental footprint. The earliest plastics were invented as substitutes for dwindling supplies of natural materials like ivory or tortoiseshell. When the American John Wesley Hyatt patented celluloid in 1869, his company pledged that the new manmade material, used in jewellery, combs, buttons and other items, would bring ‘respite’ to the elephant and tortoise because it would “no longer be necessary to ransack the earth in pursuit of substances which are constantly growing scarcer.”

Bakelite, the first true synthetic plastic, was developed a few decades later to replace shellac, then in high demand as an electrical insulator. The lac bugs that produced the sticky resin couldn’t keep up with the country’s rapid electrification.

Today, plastic is perceived as nature’s nemesis. But a generic distaste for plastic can muddy our thinking about the trade-offs involved when we replace plastic with other materials. Take plastic bags, the emblem for all bad things plastic. They clog storm drains, tangle up recycling equipment, litter parks and beaches and threaten wildlife on land and at sea.

A recent expedition researching plastic pollution in the South Atlantic reported that its ship had trouble setting anchor in one site off Brazil because the ocean floor was coated with plastic bags.

Such problems have fuelled bans on bags around the world and in more than a dozen American cities. Unfortunately, as the plastics industry incessantly points out, the bans typically lead to a huge increase in the use of paper bags, which also have environmental drawbacks. But the bigger issue is not what the bags are made from, but what they are made for. Both are designed, absurdly, for that brief one-time trip from the store to the front door. In other words, plastics aren’t necessarily bad for the environment; it’s the way we tend to make and use them that’s the problem.

Single-use products

It’s estimated that half of the nearly 600 billion pounds of plastics produced each year go into single-use products. Some are indisputably valuable, like disposable syringes, which have been a great ally in preventing the spread of infectious diseases like HIV, and even plastic water bottles, which, after disasters like the Japanese tsunami, are critical to saving lives. Yet many disposables, like the bags, drinking straws, packaging and lighters commonly found in beach clean-ups, are essentially prefab litter with a heavy environmental cost.

And there’s another cost. Pouring so much plastic into disposable conveniences has helped to diminish our view of a family of materials we once held in high esteem. Plastic has become synonymous with cheap and worthless, when in fact those chains of hydrocarbons ought to be regarded as among the most valuable substances on the planet. If we understood plastic’s true worth, we would stop wasting it on trivial throwaways and take better advantage of what this versatile material can do for us.

In a world of nearly seven billion souls and counting, we are not going to feed, clothe and house ourselves solely from wood, ore and stone; we need plastics. And in an era when we’re concerned about our carbon footprint, we can appreciate that lightweight plastics take less energy to produce and transport than many other materials. Plastics also make possible green technology like solar panels and lighter cars and planes that burn less fuel. These ‘unnatural’ synthetics, intelligently deployed, could turn out be nature’s best ally.

Yet we can’t hope to achieve plastic’s promise for the 21st century if we stick with wasteful 20th-century habits of plastic production and consumption. We have the technology to make better, safer plastics — forged from renewable sources, rather than finite fossil fuels, using chemicals that inflict minimal or no harm on the planet and our health. We have the public policy tools to build better recycling systems and to hold businesses accountable for the products they put into the market. And we can also take a cue from the plastic purgers about how to cut wasteful plastic out of our daily lives.
We need to rethink plastic. The boar’s-hair toothbrush is not our only alternative.