The
last time I attempted to summit Kumara Parvatha and failed by a small margin, I
swore to myself that I will never come back to this wretched place. In my
previous attempt I got drenched in equal measures from the sweat and the rain.
Every bone, muscle and tissue in my body hurt from the 14-km inclined trek. On
the one hand where every item in my backpack felt like an extra burden apart
from my own modest body weight, in the other, I was losing weight thanks to the
depleting water levels in my body owing to dehydration and loss of blood to the
leaches. But more than a year later, here I was standing in front of Kukke
Subramanya temple with my backpack and staring at Sesha Parvatha in the
background. Such is the lure of KP.
Next morning we woke up early but got up somewhat late – if you know what I mean. And right away we headed for KP. The view offered by KP is a tad disappointment. Add to that, the peak is very crowded with a lot of overnight campers. The place chosen by us was just right. We spent about an hour at the peak before we decided to head back to the tents in the forest area. Wrapping up our tents, we started on our way back. This time however, we spent time at SP doing what we do best – monkeying around and capturing them in pixels. The descent proved to be slower than expected with our tired bodies not cooperating with our heads. Finally at noon we were at Bhattare Mane - just in time for lunch. By now I was so hungry, I could eat an elephant. Well I did not eat an elephant but I ate rice portions that probably an elephant would eat. Never in my life have I eaten so much rice at one go. The steaming hot rice, sambar, pickle and majige is like manna from heaven. A good rest and some coffee later we started towards Kukke Subramanya, thanking Bhatta for his hospitality and his quirky small talk. A couple more hours later we were on ground zero, tired and exhausted. A cold water dip under fading lights in the Kumaradhara river brought back much of the life in us.
As always KP has been a bone-crunching and energy-sapping trek and puts your mind power rather than muscle power to test and this time we emerged victorious.
Getting-there: The trek starts from Kukke Subramanyam Temple.
Must-Do: Do this trek between October to December. Watch the sunset and sunrise if you are lucky.
Must-Don't: Littering
My Rating: 8/10
As
daunting as it was, I was supremely confident of completing an unfinished task
with KP. The ease and technique with which I conquered Chembra Peak a month ago
had made me to believe that KP will fall. And fall it did, but not before all
the travails of a hard trek. Thankfully the blood-sucking leaches were no
longer in play, which also meant the Sun was out in full glory. And that really
took a toll on us once we crossed the forest cover. This time on the way up we
gave Bhattare Mane a miss since we had made it to forest office in good time.
Having reached Bhattare Mane before lunch, we gave it a miss and instead camped
at the forest office devour the lunch we had packed from home. A good lunch and
short relaxing break later we headed to the near 90 degree climb. The Sun being
merciless, we had to take multiple breaks to avoid dehydration and a possible
sunstroke. But with hardly any trees in sight to provide shade, the brief stops
were meaningless.
After
we somehow dragged ourselves to the watering hole near the Mantapa, we rested
there for half an hour. Some of us even managed a few winks. The final stretch
to Sesha Parvatha is where you start questioning yourself if you have gone completely
crazy to be doing something like this. As tired as we were, we still managed to
pull ourselves atop SP by around 6PM. The progress we made from Bhattare Mane
to SP has been slow. But considering the terrain and the Sun, it was a task
well done. With light fading away soon, we did not stop to admire the view at
SP, instead headed to the forest cover immediately after that to the place we
could set up our tents and start a fire. All of us worked in tandem – while
some of them put up the tent, some went to fetch water from the stream and the
others went looking for firewood. In about an hour we were all set to settle
down for the night. Out came all the MTR ready-to-eats and we devoured them all
in no time. With an aching body and a full stomach we sat around the fire for a
while chatting until we finally retired into the comfort of our tents to call
it a day. Next morning we woke up early but got up somewhat late – if you know what I mean. And right away we headed for KP. The view offered by KP is a tad disappointment. Add to that, the peak is very crowded with a lot of overnight campers. The place chosen by us was just right. We spent about an hour at the peak before we decided to head back to the tents in the forest area. Wrapping up our tents, we started on our way back. This time however, we spent time at SP doing what we do best – monkeying around and capturing them in pixels. The descent proved to be slower than expected with our tired bodies not cooperating with our heads. Finally at noon we were at Bhattare Mane - just in time for lunch. By now I was so hungry, I could eat an elephant. Well I did not eat an elephant but I ate rice portions that probably an elephant would eat. Never in my life have I eaten so much rice at one go. The steaming hot rice, sambar, pickle and majige is like manna from heaven. A good rest and some coffee later we started towards Kukke Subramanya, thanking Bhatta for his hospitality and his quirky small talk. A couple more hours later we were on ground zero, tired and exhausted. A cold water dip under fading lights in the Kumaradhara river brought back much of the life in us.
As always KP has been a bone-crunching and energy-sapping trek and puts your mind power rather than muscle power to test and this time we emerged victorious.
Getting-there: The trek starts from Kukke Subramanyam Temple.
Must-Do: Do this trek between October to December. Watch the sunset and sunrise if you are lucky.
Must-Don't: Littering
My Rating: 8/10
KP always holds a green flag to the trekkers. Rarely i seen people who end up their trekking to KP just one time..:-)..Good write up about the experience you had in two takes. Neatly composed trekking travelogue!
ReplyDeleteThats true. You can never go to KP just once. Lets see if there's a third time for me.
DeleteThis is an awesome trek, one of the best in Karnataka. I climbed from Somwarpet side and went down to Kukke. Nice account of your experience.
ReplyDeletehttp://rajniranjandas.blogspot.in/2013/01/vadakkumnathan-temple.html
Never done it from Somwarpet side. Both times we started from Kukke and ended with Kukke too. Maybe next time I will do it from Somwarpet side.
DeleteA 14 km hike sounds like a feat to me. Yay, you did it this time. The views must have been great, na. I'd seen pictures of this place; didn't know people camped at the peak.
ReplyDeleteYes it is an ardous task, but achievable...
DeleteThe landscape this time round was a little brown, compared to the green cover you get to witness between September to December. There's enough camping area for atleast 100 trekkers. :)
I have seen number of photos of this place, but have never been there. How many hours in total did you spend in the trek? Some more shots clicked enroute of the vegetation would have been great.
ReplyDeleteIts a two day trek to KP peak and back from the Kukke Subramanya. If you start from Kukke around 6AM you can reach the KP peak by 6PM with ample rest. You can camp for the night at the peak of KP or in the vegetation between Sesha Parvatha and Kumara Parvatha. Next day if you start from KP peak around 10AM then you can reach back to Kukke by 4 PM with ample rest and a nap at Bhattare Mane.
DeleteI haven't clicked many pictured this time round for two reasons - carrying a DSLR is a liability in such a difficult trek and two, there wasn't much of the green cover left, since we did it in Jan.
But you can check out my blogs from Oct 2011 for more pictures and a lovely green cover:
http://mudnigga.blogspot.in/2011/10/kumara-parvatha-trek-day-i.html
http://mudnigga.blogspot.in/2011/10/kumara-parvatha-trek-day-ii.html