
Nothing prepares you for it. As you drive down a lonely, long winding road through the tall grass that conceals everything except the clear sky, you may want to give up. It wasn’t blossom time otherwise this entire countryside is flushed in the golden profusion of sunflowers. A short walk down a dust track and you reach a clearing.

It’s a picturesque sight - an old church, half submerged the water.


The Holy Rosary church is believed to have been built by the French missionaries in 1860. For six months in a year it gets submerged in the river Hemvati and remains above it for the rest of the year.

The best time to go there is before sunset – 5- 5.30ish. A coracle took us up to the church and around it. The indigenous basket that sat five people wobbled if we so much as took a deep breath or spoke but the experience could not be relinquished for the fear of toppling over.

As the shadows lengthened, we turned away eager to find safety, to stand on stable ground again.
The church became a silhouette at the horizon, a placid river singing inside its walls – stuff dreams are made of.









Here, Krishna effortlessly lifting the Govardhan parvat. 


Krishna and Satyabhama are shown here, escaping with the Parijat tree from Indra's garden.
The guide was tickled with what he called this – monkey business. A monkey pulling at a woman’s garment as she tries to shoo him off with a tree branch while firmly holding on to the garment in her other hand. This theme reappears in Belur.
Now this is a complete surprise – the couple on the left is drinking with straws, the third woman from the left is looking through a telescope and the men on the right are using a rocket launcher!

Belur is 20 km away from Halebeedu. The most outstanding temple in Belur is the Chenakeshava temple, meaning ‘handsome Vishnu’. It took 103 years to build. The temple stands majestically on a star-shaped platform. It has been sculpted using soapstone that is soft when unearthed but slowly hardens with exposure.
This entrance is a later addition - built by the Vijaynagar empire. The edifice below is presumably the model of the main temple!
Hoysala is the call to ‘strike the lion’. Legend has it that the first king of the Hoysalas, when a boy fought a lion bare-handed and his guru’s call, ‘Hoy Sala!’ became the name of the dynasty and its symbol too. Till now we thought it was the mobile patrol units of Police in Bangalore city!
Notice the stone sculpted like fine filigree. Notice the tubelight? Fume! Fume!


This lady is wringing her wet hair. The water droplets are colleted at the ends.
The carvings on the ceiling. 
The lady with the parrot, another well-known figure from Belur. The woman below has short hair and is wearing Egyptian-style earrings - or so we were told.
At an altitude of 1500 meters, Yercaud was a huge respite from the Bangalore heat. It’s a great weekend getaway from Bangalore. The salubrious climate, the beautiful oaks, glassy lakes, quaint homes and most importantly, the unhurried pace.

What we loved most at the hotel was this bathroom! The cottage at Hotel Shevaroys had an open-to-the-sky bathroom.
The cottage was in the middle of an oak forest.