Monthly Archives: October 2016

This Mangaluru village is walking a thin line

Residents of a village in Udupi district have been forced to walk on a dangerous path after authorities failed to make provisions for a road or a bridge while constructing a canal as part of Varahi Lift Irrigation Project.

About 250 members belonging to the Schedule Tribe community live in 30 houses in Soni village located in Siddapura village of Kundapur in Udupi district.
Speaking to Bangalore Mirror, Chitte Rajgopal Hegde, a social worker, said the village is located around a lake and there are two temples there.

To meet their basic requirements, the villagers have to reach Karebail which is about one and a half kilometres away.

“They need to walk daily to Karebail junction to meet their daily requirements that includes visiting provision stores, bus stand or a dairy unit. They walk a dangerous path that is about three feet wide on the concrete slab of a drain constructed for the flow of water from forests and hills between Soni and Karebail junction at Dyanooru. In case there is an accident, it is really difficult to conduct a rescue operation,” he said.

If not this route, they will have to travel for five kilometres to reach places like Shankarnarayana.

About four years ago, when the canal was being constructed between Soni and Karebail, people of the village had made several requests to the engineers to make a bridge across the drain.

The work for the canal began in the year 2008 and the project was inaugurated by chief minister Siddaramaiah last year. Priyanka Mary Francis, CEO of Udupi Zilla Panchayat, has assured she will look into the issue. A team is likely to visit the village soon.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City News> Bangalore / by Deepthi Sanjiv / TNN / October 20th, 2016

State Film Literature awards announced

Senior film journalist and critic, Uday Marakini’s Touch Screen, Mooru Dashakagala Cinema Shikari and Dr. Rajkumar’s Samagra Charitre by Doddahullur Rukkoji have been chosen for the Karnataka State Film Literature annual awards for 2014 and 2015 respectively. The award carries Rs. 20,000 in cash and gold medals for the writer and publisher.

Chowka Bara, by Sathish, has been chosen for the best Kannada short film award for 2015. The award carries a cash prize of Rs. 50,000.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Cities> Bengaluru> News / by Staff Reporter / Bengaluru – October 21st, 2016

Self-repairing road could fix crater mess

Thondebhavi (Chikkaballapur District) :

The last time Thondebhavi came under the spotlight was almost a year ago when a cloud of ash from a nearby cement plant enveloped it. Now, this nondescript village is grabbing headlines for becoming the first in the country to have a self-repairing road.

Thondebhavi, 65km from Bengaluru and with a population of about 1,200 people, has a 700-metre road with a crack healing capability. This road is the brainchild of Prof Nemkumar Banthia of the civil engineering department at the University of British Columbia, Canada.

This will be a game-changer in road-building, especially in a country where roads are dotted with cracks and potholes. M Suresh of the National Institute of Engineering-Mysuru, who coordinated with Thondebhavi village authorities and University of British Columbia, said: “This road has been built with high strength concrete supplemented with fibres which have a hydrophilic nano-coating. This coating absorbs water. Since most road cracks develop because of unhydrated cement, the hydrophilic coating produces silicates that closes the cracks.”

The lifespan of these roads is 15-20 years. The road, about 100 mm thick and comparatively less than the usual cement road, would go a long way in reducing road-laying cost. Since fly ash is used for these roads, the carbon output is low.

The 700-metre stretch, which connects the village with the road to nearby Gauribidanur town, has enthused residents. Kantharaj, a resident and also president of Kolar Chikkaballapur Districts Co-operative Milk Union Ltd (KOMUL), said: “Earlier, people used to have a tough time on the slushy road. This stretch has come as a boon to villagers and they can transport their agricultural commodities to various places without any hassles.”

Jyothi Reddy, president, Thondebhavi gram panchayat, said the road has been of great help to people of the village. She said she’ll convince nearby cement factory authorities to take up many more roads in the village panchayat. Aswathachar, manager, Pragathi Krishna Gramina Bank, Thondebavi branch said the quality and finish of the road is fine and it’s expected to last longer compared to the normal cement one.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City News> Bangalore / TNN / October 18th, 2016

Driving forward: First woman racer to represent India at Malaysian rally event

Life in the fast lane brings Anitha Kholay many accolades

Bengaluru-based actor, stylist and fashion designer Anitha Kholay is all set to be the first Indian woman rallyist to represent the country at the Asia Pacific Rally Championship (APRC) in Johor, Malaysia, which is to be held from October 28-30.

Declared the fastest woman rally driver of the country at earlier events in Bengaluru, Ms. Kholay, an alumna of Bishop Cottons Girls School and Christ University, began her career in rallying as a navigator at the age of 16, and was instantly intrigued by the sport. The ‘Miss Bangalore 1998’, who has been an Indian national race and rally driver since 2003, said she was elated, and added: “This is a stepping stone to aspire for greater heights, a milestone in my career.” An MRU Motorsports team from Malaysia is preparing her car, a Proton NEO 1600 CC, which will touch speeds of up to 120 miles per hour in the 3-day championship.

Long road to success

Recalling her hard work for over two decades, Ms. Kholay said she is brimming with pride to be representing Karnataka and India at the international level. “My husband, Rupesh Kholay, discovered the potential of my proficiency behind the wheel in 1994. I haven’t looked back, and crave to steer and zoom. My favourite rallies have been the K-1000, which is the Bangalore Rally, because I enjoy the terrain the most,” she said.

Nearly 50 medals gleam in her residence in Koramangala. “I started with two wheelers, then enjoyed being a navigator, and then hopped on to full-time rallying and racing. I even love my drag racing, and the defined path in the autocross race!” says Ms. Kholay, who couldn’t have asked for a better start. She was also the first woman to lead a national rally championship with a woman’s team in 2003, and she gradually gathered experience in the inner workings of motor sports to become among the most awarded women rally drivers in the country.

Passion for speed

“I won most of my racing and rallying awards from 1994-2011 in the ladies category. I took a break when I had my two children, and have been constantly taking part in national rallies from 2003, travelling mostly to Nashik, Chikmagalur, Hyderabad and Cochin, amongst other cities,” she said. She added that she relies on a “perfect support system” of a workshop and tuners to mind her car’s health.

What does the fastest woman driver behind the wheel think of her pace on traffic-jammed Bengaluru roads? “My city driving is customised with music for relaxing, which I enjoy. Race and rally fulfil my passion for speed,” she said. “As a woman, I try my best to disentangle myself from negative criticisms and drive forward.”

Bengaluru student among 20 finalists of Peta contest

Bengaluru :

Beating hundreds of others, Bengalurean Kushal Hebbar has made it to the finals of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (Peta) India’s Cutest Vegetarian Next Door contest.

Kushal is among the 20 finalists selected by a panel of Peta judges, who took three factors into consideration – the contestants’ physical features, dedication to protect animals and reasons for being vegetarian.

Now, the public can vote for their favourite contestants. The two winners, one male and one female, will be decided on the basis of the three parameters as well as public voting.

Kushal, a final-year computer science engineering student at BNM Institute of Technology , has been a vegetarian all his life. “I love animals and wouldn’t want to eat non-vegetarian just for the sake of taste,” he said.

“On an average, vegetarians are slimmer and healthier than meat-eaters. And over their lifetime, they spare many animals the horror of factory farms, slaughterhouses and fishing nets,” said Peta nutritionist Bhuvaneshwari Gupta .

“In addition to causing animal suffering on a massive scale, eating meat and dairy products has been linked to heart disease, stroke, diabetes, cancer and obesity. Also, a United Nations report concluded that animal agriculture is “one of the top two or three most significant contributors to the most serious environmental problems,” says Peta.
The winners of the contest, which was open to all non-celebrity Indian residents, will be declared on November 1

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City News> Bangalore / TNN / October 15th, 2016

Cloud-based system to study heart condition wins international prize

The Kalaburagi based software developer and innovator Rupam Das has done it again and won the first prize in the General Health Category of “Code Healthy Challenge” organised by Red Hat Linux’s Open Shift based Cloud platform by New York based website Devpost. He bagged the award for his cloud based online system “Hrydyalysis” to study the ECG signals of a patient and detect the heart condition of the patient.

Along with the award, Mr. Das has won a purse of $10,000. Mr. Das, who has developed several techniques to detect heart diseases including Myocardial Ischaemia, Bradycardia, Tachycardia, Coronary Artery, partial epilepsy, Venticular arrhythmia, T wave alternans and others, claimed that his recent invention was a major breakthrough in the heart-care system.

He said that the system can be adopted widely in rural areas where the health care facilities is still minimal. The Hrydyalysis is now being developed as a full fledged end to end system to convert it into a commercial low cost cardio solution.

As per the new online cloud based system Hrydyalsyis, the patients’ ECG signal as input can be taken and analysed for detecting if the heart condition was normal or not. In case of any abnormality, the system detects the type of diseases and notifies what kind of heart disease the patient was suffering and the severity of the condition. Any low cost ECG machine can be connected to Hrydyalsis and patient’s heart condition monitored accurately, he added.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> National> Karnataka / by Special Correspondent / Kalaburagi – October 15th, 2016

Star this week : Talented Athlete : Thipavva Sannakki

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Athletics is a global sport and is very popular in the sporting scene. It is considered as the mother of all sports. Our city athlete Thippavva Sannakki is a talented athlete who excels in the long distance running events, and has been performing consistently well in the State and National-level Meets. Thippavva Sannakki, recently taking part in the State-level Dasara Athletic Meet-2016, emerged as the Individual champion in the women’s section with 10 points (two golds) along with two other women athletes, B.M. Jyothi and Nityashree of Bengaluru City. Thippavva Sannakki, representing Mysuru Division, won the 1500m gold and 3000m gold and also was part of the Mysuru division team which won the Overall championship title. She is our “Star This Week.”

Thippavva Sannakki, a employee with the South Western Railways, Mysuru, is a former product of the DYES (Mysuru). Thippavva has represented the State in the National-level and has also represented Indian Railways in the National athletic meets.

Thippavva Sannakki won the 1500m gold with timing of 5:04.00s. She also won the 3000m gold with timing of 10:47.80s. She helped Mysuru Division finish runner-up in the women’s athletics events in the Dasara Games with two golds and also shared the Individual Championship title with two other athletes.

She has trained under the guidance of former International and SAK athletic coach Damodar Gowda while she was at the DYES (Mysuru). Thippavva Sannakki has represented Karnataka in the National-level and has won medals in the senior as well in the junior level.

Thippavva has been a regular medal winner in the long distance events in the State-level Dasara Meets every year.

She took part in the DAC Road Races for women this year and won the women’s title. She has been the winner for four years in a row in the previous years. An All-India Inter-University medalist representing Mysore University, this girl has the talent in her to improve on her performance in the National level. Thippavva is a talented athlete and with her dedicated hard work aims to perform well in the National-level in the days to come.

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> Sports News / October 09th, 2016

CM presents Ekalavya awards to sportspersons

Picture shows tennis player Dhruthi T. Venugopal of Mysuru receiving the Ekalavya award from Chief Minister Siddharamaiah at a ceremony held at the Platinum Jubilee Auditorium here yesterday. Also seen are (from left ) MLA Vasu, District in-charge Minister Dr. H.C. Madevappa and Youth Empowerment and Sports Minister Pramod Madhwaraj. Picture right shows Ekalavya awardees and Kreeda Ratna Awardees posing to the shutterbugs.
Picture shows tennis player Dhruthi T. Venugopal of Mysuru receiving the Ekalavya award from Chief Minister Siddharamaiah at a ceremony held at the Platinum Jubilee Auditorium here yesterday. Also seen are (from left ) MLA Vasu, District in-charge Minister Dr. H.C. Madevappa and Youth Empowerment and Sports Minister Pramod Madhwaraj. Picture right shows Ekalavya awardees and Kreeda Ratna Awardees posing to the shutterbugs.

Mysuru :

The Department of Youth Empowerment & Sports (DYES) presented the Ekalavya Awards to 16 sportspersons of various disciplines, Karnataka Kreeda Ratna awards to and two Lifetime Achievement Awards for the year 2015, at a function held at Mysore Medical College and Research Institute Alumni Association Platinum Jubilee Auditorium here yesterday.

Swimmer Damini Gowda, athlete M. Arpitha, tennis player Dhruthi T. Venugopal, hockey player Nitin Thimmaiah were among the prominent names who received the Ekalavya Awards.

Minister for Youth Empowerment and Sports Pramod Madhwaraj, District Minister Dr. H.C. Mahadevappa, Mayor B.L. Byrappa, MLAs Vasu and M.K. Somashekar were also present.

John Christopher Nirmal Kumar (swimming) and R. Shivanand (wrestling) were presented the Life Time Achievement awards for their contributions as coaches. Three visually impaired cricketers from Karnataka who had represented India in the World Cup were honoured with cash prize and a citation.

The Ekalavya awardees received a memento, a citation and Rs. 2 lakh in cash. The coaches who received the lifetime achievement awards were received Rs.1.50 lakh cash prize, a citation along with a memento while the Kreeda Rathna awardees took home a cash prize of Rs. One lakh, a citation and a memento.

Speaking on the occasion, Chief Minister Siddharamiah, congratulated the sports persons for their achievements and informed that the State Government was committed to promote sporting activities and sportspersons.

Minister for Youth Empowerment and Sports Promod Madwaraj said that the sportspersons who have achieved laurels have worked hard to reach great heights at the International and National level. The Department has identified and rewarded them through fair selection policy on the basis of their performance for the Ekalavya, Kreeda Ratna Awards and Life Time Achievement awards.

MLA Vasu speaking on the occasion emphasised the need for a Sports University and requested the CM to sanction the same in Mysuru which is also his home town.

Ekalavya Award: Damini K. Gowda (Swimming), Vidya B. Pillai (Billiards), Pavan Shetty (Body Building), Nithin Thimmaiah (Hockey), S. Rajguru (Kabaddi), Krishna A. Naikodi (Cycling), A. Arvind (Basketball), M. Arpita (Athletics), Mohammed Rafiq Holi (Wrestling), Meghana M. Sajjanar (Rifle Shooting), Dhruthi Tatachar Venugopal (Lawn Tennis), Anup D’Costa (Volleyball), G.M. Nischita (Shuttle Badminton), J.M. Shawad (Para Athletics), Umesh R. Kade (Para Swimming) and Kanchan P. Munnolkar (Weight Lifting).

Lifetime Achievement Award: John Christopher Nirmal Kumar (Swimming) and R. Shivananda (Wrestling).

Karnataka Kreeda Ratna Award: Rudraswami (Yoga), P. Poornima (Throwball), Amogha U. Chachadi (Atya-Patya), M.P. Ranjitha (Ball Badminton), K.C. Pradeep (Kho Kho), U.M. Sumitha (Kabaddi), Jeevandhar K. Ballal and Ananda Irvathur (Kambala), L. Ananda (Wrestling) and Moshappa Vittappa Gulabala (Gundu Ethuvudu).

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> Sports News / October 08th, 2016

Gorgeous homes & their enviable yards …

by Ambika Nagaraj

Tranquil homes with dream gardens as focal points with trails of green and bursts of colour graciously welcoming you are instant charms your eyes would love to feast on, isn’t it? There is perhaps no view more delightful than facing such lush green artistry.

Today, we introduce you to people who are into decorating the green space at their beautiful homes in city for not just one or two but for over years and decades with the same spirit and fervour which deserves all the admiration. While many of them have been constantly taking part in the Dasara Best Home Garden contest since years and consecutively winning prizes for their efforts, a few others have been into it the same way too, irrespective of their participation in the competition that the Department of Horticulture organises as part of the festival each year.

Read out to know how their passion has been driving them towards turning that dream space at home into a magical yard …

Shyamala Prasanna 

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Can you imagine being rewarded for maintaining a beautiful garden at home for not five or ten but a whopping 21 consecutive years? Yes, this lady has done it. Such is her dedication that weather she will be in town during the festival or has plans to travel elsewhere, she ensures the green space at her home is decorated well within the stipulated time with such perseverance.

Shyamala Prasanna, a resident of Lakshmipuram has a beautiful and specious garden at home that’s all of beautiful plants, shrubs, herbs, bonsais and more, each one unique from the other. Though according to Shyamala this green space always remains neat, it is specially decked up during the Dasara festival each year. “I started participating in this contest conducted as part of the Dasara festival about 21 years ago,” gushes Shyamala in excitement, “the Department of Horticulture conducts many contests as part of Dasara each year and this one has been my choice ever since it first started as I love plants. I have decorated the garden with different themes, adding new plants of new verities decked up with colourful toys and dolls every time.”

In Shyamala’s garden, one can find plants of over a hundred different verities, which include artistically made bonsais, vibrant flowering plants, cacti, ornamental plants, different types of foliages, and a well maintained lawn. “Apart from the plants, I have some permanent ornamental items which add a lot of weight to my green space. The main among those are the permanently set up waterfall and the swing which almost all my visitors love. And then comes my bonsai collection. I have made bonsai like the ages old Christmas and Banyan trees, fruit bearing trees such as those of sapota, orange, lemon and cherry, many flower bearing trees such as gulmohar and bougainvillea to name a few, which look very pretty and are very special to me,” she adds.

And during Dasara each year, Shyamala decorates her garden with different themes using dolls and idols, which add an extra zing to her special space at home. “I have a set of dolls that I arrange and rearrange differently with a unique theme every Dasara. This year, the specialities are the Rajasthani desert, the temples of South India, China Town, ‘Winter Wonderland’ around my Christmas tree bonsai, a section representing Peru around my bonsais, an area resembling the zoo with toys of animals like those present in the Mysore Zoo, the Dasara theme based dolls, the colourful terracotta dolls like frogs and swans around the water based plants to name a few” she explains. “And a verity of bonsai called Penjing is where we create decorative landscapes upon a tray. This year I have done the same on a tray hand made by me that I learnt during a workshop which adds extra value.” “And I place several toys, dolls, colourful stones and decorative items all over the garden accordingly”, he adds. And she has a special collection of decorative items that she carefully preserves and uses only during Dasara to decorate the garden.

What’s more, she also has a section dedicated to kitchen gardening where she grows a few plants that turn out to be useful for her in cooking.

Do we even need to be astonished that she has been constantly rewarded for her dedication towards her passion?

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Suma Krishna 

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Suma is one enterprising lady in Mysuru for whom her garden is her soul. So the moment you pass by the front yard of the green space at her home you will feel truly welcomed. And the same has been winning her the first place in the big home garden category from the past 27 years constantly and her efforts prove that she deserves it every bit.

Suma Krishna is a resident of Kuvempunagar who has been gardening at home since almost 30 years now. “Wherever I go, especially when on trips and tours, all that keeps constantly running in my mind is nothing but my garden and dolls that I can purchase and decorate” she grins, humbly showing off the collection of plants and hand-picked dolls from places across the globe.

“While garden decoration has been my hobby, I began taking part in the Dasara contest ever since it was started and have been winning the rolling shield each time,” she explains, She has decorated her garden with extreme vibrancy choosing every plant and using every bit of the decorative piece carefully. Having grown everything ranging from fruits to vegetables and bonsai to a wide variety of flowering and decorative plants, the speciality of her garden lies in the fact that she prepares her beautiful garden for the contest all by herself with least help from her gardener.

“I start preparations for my garden about four months before the contest begins and sow seeds, planning things according to the time they take for cultivation, as each plant takes its own time to grow rightly by the time of the contest,” says Suma.

“While the garden is well-maintained all through the year, I add decorative trinkets, toys and dolls during Dasara. That apart, I also reuse the broken pots, dry and dead wooden trunks and any unused product that can be recycled and used in my garden by painting or curing them and reusing them to plant saplings, make bonsai or simply decorate them to suit my garden,” she explains, showcasing a few examples for her work. “My garden looks more vibrant throughout Dasara,” she says, even as she walks past another corner of the yard and opens the doors to showcase her kitchen garden from where she gets to pluck for home, things like coriander, pudina, a few variety of vegetables, fruits and more.

Lastly, the trail ends with that space of her home which is full of tall trees where parrots, sparrows and many varieties of colourful birds arrive to either take shelter or and rest a while before they fly away to relish the delicious figs hanging from the tall fig tree, that the family can blissfully watch through the glass panes from the dining area within, admiring the beauty of nature in leisure.

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Prabha Subramanya 

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Do you feel a small yard means you can’t have the garden like you want at home? But Prabha can prove you wrong. As a majority of the ground space at her home has been used up for construction, the creative lady has decided to deck up the terrace atop the building, making it the most beautiful part of her gorgeous home.

With this, she has not just maximised the space for home gardening but has also been winning a prize under the terrace garden category consecutively since the last eight years now.

Prabha Subramanya is another zealous gardener residing in Vijayanagar who is an avid Bonsai aficionado. She first began bonsai gardening at home about 20 years ago, to learn which, she attended classes back then. And the lady’s passion is such that, every bit of the bright terrace at her home is now a feast to one’s eyes, filled up with over 80 varieties of plants, each one made to look unique and livelier than the other by her.

“It’s a live art like no other art on earth so no wonder any one would find it as attractive,” says Prabha, “For, though preparing a bonsai is a task full of difficult procedures, we tend to magically indulge in doing everything associated with it from pruning, re-potting, trimming, cleaning and fertilising the plants with happiness. And, especially with flowers and fruits grown upon them, they are the prettiest things any one would ever see.”

Prabha has been winning a prize under the Terrace Garden category since the last seven years and that’s when she actually first began participating in the event. “Though I attended classes 20 years ago, I wasn’t too sure about taking part in the Dasara contest as I didn’t have plants worth a display those days. It is only since the last eight years that I have had a good collection of different varieties and since then, I have been taking part in the contest and winning the first place. However, as my gardener helps me equally in the maintenance, I always send him to collect the prize,” the modest lady says.

The bonsai types Prabha has made include: Maple, Kengai (cascade bonsai), Hokidachi (broom style), Han-kengai (semi cascade), Sokan (double trunk style), Kabudachi (multi trunk style), bonsai landscape and many more.

“It is an art that requires constant attention and dedication. But once we get involved, it is an ongoing process. We keep coming up with the ideas of making new varieties. I need to spend a minimum of one hour on my terrace each day. And I start my focus on the garden about four months before the contest begins. The live art is such a passion that it keeps me going,” she asserts.

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Padmakumar  & Rohini 

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Dr. P.D. Padmakumar, a resident of the city and ardent gardening connoisseur didn’t participate in the Dasara contest this season. He was on a tour to the US during the time which came as a hindrance for participation he says. But for the veteran enthusiast, maintenance and decoration of his garden doesn’t mean special only during the festival. “My garden is well taken care of, though I do not participate in the contest. However, I have taken part for the last 11 years and won prizes continuously, which is a very special feeling,” says he.

The retired Joint Director, Department of Animal Husbandry, who spends a lot of time in decking up the green space at home says it has been passion not just for him for his wife Rohini Padmakumar too. “We plant, decorate and look after our garden together as it’s not just mine but my wife’s passion too,” the Veterinarian explains.

And ask him as to how such a busy man developed an interest in gardening and pat comes the reply “It wasn’t a sudden desire to indulge in gardening. I always loved it and during my services I got to travel and stay in many different places but the homes we stayed in lacked sufficient space for gardening though we would try to decorate as much as we could. Hence, once we came to own house here where we have sufficient space for gardening, we began planting all that we like.”

The chief focus of the doctor’s house is on kitchen gardening. “It’s a great feeling when we get to grow our veggies, pluck them fresh and cook for food. We have so many varieties fresh greens and vegetables all organically grown,” he says adding “we have over 30 varieties of plants and the kitchen section includes plants like mint, amruthaballi, doddpatre, curry leaves, aloe Vera, beetle, tulasi, pumpkin and papaya to name just a few.”

Such is their love for the lively lush greenery at home that the couple even produce vermi compost in their garden space to create a heterogeneous mixture of decomposed vegetable or food waste, bedding materials, and vermicast to make an excellent, nutrient-rich organic fertiliser for the plants in their garden.

Now who wouldn’t want to evade in a yard so full of lushness so enchanting?

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source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> Feature Articles / October 08th, 2016

Dasara Sports 2016: Pahilwan Panduranga Shinde is ‘ Dasar a Kantteerava’

Picture shows (from left) Pahilwan Panduranga Shinde, who won 'Dasara Kanteerava' title seen with Pahilwan Koli of MEG, Bengaluru and winners of Dasara Kumara and Dasara Kishora titles.
Picture shows (from left) Pahilwan Panduranga Shinde, who won ‘Dasara Kanteerava’ title seen with Pahilwan Koli of MEG, Bengaluru and winners of Dasara Kumara and Dasara Kishora titles.

Mysuru :

Pahilwan Panduranga Shinde of MEG, Bengaluru won the prestigious ‘Dasara Kanteerava’ award on the concluding day of Dasara Wrestling Competitions held at the Devaraja Urs Multipurpose Stadium yesterday. Pahilwan Gopal Koli also of MEG, Bengaluru won the ‘Dasara Kesari’ title.

Yesterday’s 38th State-level Wrestling Championship, organised as part of Dasara festival, was held in front of packed audience who had gathered at stadium from various parts of the State to witness some of the best wrestling bouts. At first, Pahilwan Panduranga Shinde (MEG, Bengaluru) and Pahilwan Anand Army (MLRC) fought their bout for about 30 mins which ended in a draw. Later, in the point wrestling Panduranga Shinde emerged victorious scoring 9 points.

In later matches Pahilwan Gopal Koli defeated Pahilwan Satish Padathare, Pahilwan Krishna (Kalasiddanahundi) defeated Pahilwan Raghavendra (Belawadi), Pahilwan Kishore (Bhoothappana Garadi) defeated Pahilwan Rajesh (Holenarasipura), Pahilwan Siddappa (Bannur) defeated Pahilwan Manjunath (Melapura).

The winners were awarded a cash prize of Rs. 15,000 and a silver mace about Rs. 1.15 lakh. Pahilwan Kishore Purohit won the Mayor Cup, Mahendra Prasad won ZP President’s Cup and Ganjam Praveen won ‘Sahukar Chennaiah Cup. The prizes to the winners were distributed by Mayor B.L. Bhyrappa and former Mayor Purushotham.

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> Sports News / October 14th, 2016