Monthly Archives: June 2018

Seed swap, a growing trend among green thumbs

Sharing a passion: A file photo of participants at a seed swap event organised at Cubbon Park in Bengaluru.   | Photo Credit: Special Arrangement
Sharing a passion: A file photo of participants at a seed swap event organised at Cubbon Park in Bengaluru. | Photo Credit: Special Arrangement

From virtual connection on social media to physical meet-ups, urban gardeners are slowly but surely warming up to the idea

Sharing food, or even ingredients, is common. Now, however, the growing number of people who share a passion for growing their own food also share an essential component of what they produce: the seeds.

Right from virtual connection on social media to physically meeting, residents of the city are slowly but surely warming up to the idea of seed sharing.

This exercise not only ensures higher germination rates and less dependence on commercial sellers, but also gives novices in the field a chance to learn first-hand from the experienced on how to go green and organic, they say.

Good response

After organising its first Seed Swap in 2017, the Backyard Factory is back with another swapping event this month. “The first seed swap event was well appreciated. We had posted information about the event on Facebook and a good number of people turned up for the event at Cubbon Park. The idea was to let people bring excess seeds from their produce and share them with people who are interested in growing their own food. It was a mutual exchange. What was surprising was most of the participants were young gardening enthusiasts,” said Lincy Inder, who conducts kitchen gardening workshops for schoolchildren.

This time, the event will be held on June 30 at Cubbon Park, and Ms. Inder expects even better participation than the last time.

While meetings are very essential for seed sharing, another group also makes good use of social media to share seeds with the community. Members of Grow Your Own Food, a Facebook community, put up details of excess seeds available with them on social media. Others can contact the group if interested. The members meet once in two months for a seed swapping event at Lalbagh.

“Whatever we grow, we save the seeds for ourself and to share with others,” said Suresh Rao, a member of the group.

Mr. Rao said the best thing about seed sharing is that there is 100% guarantee of the seeds germinating. “It is not the case with store-bought seeds. We usually share tomato, brinjal, gourd, and all types of greens during the meets,” he said. The group also promotes heirloom seeds by sharing them.

Explaining how the members store the excess seeds for sharing, he said, “It is quite easy. From two tomatoes, 100 seeds can be obtained, which can be saved for the next season. One brinjal has around 200 seeds. Though the seed saving technique for each variety differs, it is not rocket science. During the meet-ups, we share the concepts with newcomers,” Mr. Rao said.

Another city-based group, Oota From Your Thota, which encourages people to grow their food organically, also organises seed swaps among members regularly.

A common practice

While urban gardeners are just getting used to the idea of seed sharing, the practice is common among farmers, said Hemanth, farmer and member of the Facebook group Bangalore Gardening. “In our farming community, seed sharing has always been a common practice. It helps reduce farmer’s dependence on commercially sold seeds and saves a lot of money,” he says.

The Horticulture Department too gives away seedlings instead of just seeds to anyone interested. “After monsoon, we distribute the excess seedlings to interested people for free. Most are tree seedlings. In a year, at least 5,000 seedlings are given away,” said M.R. Chandrashekar, Deputy Director, Lalbagh.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Bengaluru / by Sarumathi K  / Bengaluru – June 11th, 2018

Women drivers take the road to Lo Manthang

The team comprised four women from Bengaluru and one from Pune. | Photo Credit: Handout E Mail
The team comprised four women from Bengaluru and one from Pune. | Photo Credit: Handout E Mail

It is one of the most treacherous extreme terrain routes in the Himalayas

When it comes to negotiating extreme roads of the Greater Himalayas, Bengaluru’s Nidhi Tiwari, founder of Women Beyond Boundaries (WBB), has yet again made it to the mountain range. Nidhi recently led a crew of five women drivers on a daunting expedition to Upper Mustang in northern Nepal. They drove for 13 days from Delhi to Lo Manthang and back, covering 3,000 km.

“We have now become the first crew of women drivers to reach Lo Manthang, the erstwhile capital of the kingdom of Lo,” said Nidhi.

Desolate and rarely accessed, the road to Lo Manthang is considered to be among the top three extreme terrain roads in the Himalayan belt. The 36-year-old mother of two, an outdoor educator and adventure lover, was born in Dharwad and raised in Bengaluru. “I heard the northern Nepal terrain was challenging. That’s how we had the temerity to choose something that poses a challenge to all of us. If you have a nose to drive, love to be part of driving expeditions and a strong mind to take up challenges, this is what you should do,” she added.

With an average elevation of over 12,000 feet, the area hosts two of the higher peaks in the Greater Himalayas that stand above 8,000 metres – the Dhaulagiri and Annapurna.

“We drove from Delhi and entered Nepal via Gorakhpur, and reached Pokhara in two days. From there started the off-road section into the Mustang valley. The section from Muktinath to Lo Manthang is ambitious, located just 50 km short of the Chinese border, and offers some breathtaking views,” she said.

The other participants on this drive were Bengaluru-based Rashmi Gururaja Koppar, an academician; Suneeti Sudame, an IT professional from Pune; physiotherapist Soumya Goyal and e-commerce professional Deepa Krishnan, both from Bengaluru.

“The learning curve was simply incredible, as Mustang is famous, or rather infamous, for its non-existent and challenging roads, punctuated by numerous streams,” adds Nidhi.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Bengaluru / by Ranjani Govind / June 09th, 2018

Two Indian kids to be Official Match Ball Carriers at FIFA World Cup

Sunil Chhetri, Manohar Bhat (Head - sales & marketing, Kia Motors India), Nathania John K., and Rishi Tej.
Sunil Chhetri, Manohar Bhat (Head – sales & marketing, Kia Motors India), Nathania John K., and Rishi Tej.

Ten-year-old Rishi Tej of Karnataka and 11-year-old Nathania John K. of Tamil Nadu will be two of the Official Match Ball Carriers (OMBC) at the upcoming FIFA World Cup in Russia.

One of them will carry the match ball during the Belgium vs Panama game while the other will get a chance to get onto the pitch before the Brazil vs Costa Rica match.

India captain Sunil Chhetri conducted the trials — as part of the Kia Official Match Ball Carrier (OMBC) programme — in Gurugram last month.

As many as 1600 children participated in the programme, with 50 short-listed for the final selections.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Sport> Football / by PTI / New Delhi – June 11th, 2018

Stamping home the message of orchid conservation

M. Lokeshwara Rao
M. Lokeshwara Rao

For many, retirement can pave away for new opportunities and give time to pursue forgotten hobbies. M. Lokeshwara Rao, retired Principal Chief Conservator of Forests in Nagaland who was the director of the Indian Council of Forestry Research and Education in the city, is highlighting the destruction of a species of flowering plant and the ways to conserve it. And he is doing this not as a forest service official, but as a philatelist.

Mr. Rao, who retired in June last year and lives in Bengaluru, always liked collecting stamps. “As a child, I used to collect whatever stamps I could. But once I got selected as an IFS officer, I had to give up the hobby as there was no time to pursue it. Now, after retirement I have all the time I need,” he said.

The theme he has chosen is orchids.

“Orchids are only found in the Western Ghats region and in the northeastern regions of the country. I am fascinated by them. It is no secret that we are losing forest cover. I wanted my stamp collection to represent this,” said Mr. Rao, who within a few months of starting his collection won a bronze medal at the IMPEX-2017 contest held by the Philatelic Society of India.

Silver medal

In May this year, he was awarded a silver medal at the Rocky Mountain Stamp Show in Denver, United States, for his exhibition on ‘Orchid distribution, its habitat destruction and conservation’.

At the exhibition, he displayed orchid stamps from 65 countries. “The first orchid stamp was released in 1909 by countries in the Caribbean Islands. Now I am collecting stamps representing national parks,” said Mr. Rao, who during his service was recognised for his efforts to save the Amur falcon.

He is now getting ready for his next international exhibition, in Macau in September.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu /Home> News> Cities> Bengaluru / by Staff Reporter / June 09th, 2018

Jallikattu champs, born in Karnataka

Racing bull: A Hori Habba enthusiast displays a Hallikar sporting breed at Tadasanahalli, in Shikaripur taluk. | Photo Credit: Vaidya
Racing bull: A Hori Habba enthusiast displays a Hallikar sporting breed at Tadasanahalli, in Shikaripur taluk. | Photo Credit: Vaidya

Drought-hit farmers rescued by the popularity of their bulls in Tamil Nadu

Vishnuvardhan, Sudeep, Darshan Thoogudeepa, Yash, and Duniya Vijay are not only popular Kannada film stars – all of them are also sturdy bulls from Karnataka that are taking Tamil Nadu’s Jallikattu by storm, with some of them selling for as much as ₹12 lakh, and earning their breeders a neat profit.

The bulls, reared and trained in the semi-arid Shikaripur taluk of Shivamogga district, have acquired a reputation for agility, speed and sturdiness. They are in great demand in Tamil Nadu following the resumption of Jallikattu in the State.

Shikaripur’s racing bulls are fetching almost double the money the farmers invested on purchasing the calf, and rearing and training it.

Trained for local sport

The bulls get trained in the local bull-catching sport, ‘Hori Habba.’ In Shikaripur taluk alone, more than 120 Hori Habba events are held between Deepavali and Sankranthi. The sport involves making bulls of the ‘Amruth Mahal’ and ‘Hallikar’ breeds run in the ring. Whoever succeeds in catching or taming them wins. Mr. Kumaranna, a farmer from Gandhi Nagar village of Shikaripur said that it costs him around ₹12,000 a month to keep the bull fighting fit. Four years ago, he bought a six-month old male Hallikar calf for ₹50,000. Recently, he sold it to a Jallikattu enthusiast from Tamil Nadu’s Vellore district for ₹12 lakh. Another bull reared by Zakir Saab in Narasapura was sold to a buyer from Alanganallur in Madurai district for ₹11 lakh.

Nandan Sommananavar, who is doing research on Hori Habba in Kuvempu University said that in the past six months enthusiasts from Tamil Nadu bought more than 60 bulls from Shikaripur. The bulls are typically named after Kannada films (Mylari, Raja Huli, Tagaru, Hathavadi, Saarathi) and film stars.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> National / by Veerandra P.M. / Shivamogga – June 08th, 2018

Women scale Himalayan heights

Chasing the thrill: The all-woman team of trekkers on the expedition to Mount Baradasar Pass in the Himalayas.
Chasing the thrill: The all-woman team of trekkers on the expedition to Mount Baradasar Pass in the Himalayas.

27 women from Karnataka trekked to Mount Baradasar Pass in a fortnight

They had heard exciting tales of trekking in the snow-capped peaks of the Himalayas, but were apprehensive whether they could embark upon one such expedition in view of the freezing temperatures and alien terrain.

But, a total of 27 women from different parts of Karnataka successfully pulled it off by completing a trekking expedition to Mount Baradasar Pass in the Himalayas recently.

Adventure groups Tiger Adventure Foundation (TAF) and Mountain Goat organised a trekking expedition to the Himalayas exclusively for women. During the fortnight-long expedition, the women – between 13 and 65 years of age – passed through various camps in the Himalayas before reaching the summit of Mount Baradasar Pass situated at a height of 14,500 ft on the border of Uttarakhand and Himachal Pradesh.

TAF’s D.S.D. Solanki, an adventure enthusiast, who has been organising trekking expeditions for more than two decades, said the recent expedition to Baradasar Pass by women was the first of its kind in the adventure history of Karnataka. After undergoing endurance training for three weeks, the trekkers – hailing from Shivamogga, Madikeri, Hassan, Chickaballapur, Mysuru and Bengaluru – assembled in Mysuru and left for the expedition on April 17. They reached Dehradun on April 20, where acclimatisation and orientation programmes were held at the Sankri base camp.

For Anitha Arunakshi, a housewife, who had only seen hailstones accompany rains in Mysuru, the huge hailstorm that rocked Dhal Dhal Ridge camp during the expedition was an experience of a lifetime. The entire camp site turned white after the hailstorm, she said. In Devabasa camp, the trekkers experienced large amount of snowfall, submerging them in knee-deep snow. “With snow all around, it was bliss,” said Pratibha Garla, a dentist from Mysuru.

The trekkers reached the summit of Baradasar Pass on April 26 at 10.38 a.m. and hoisted the national tricolour. They spent a few minutes on the peak enjoying breathtaking visuals of different mountain peaks, besides the valleys.

The team returned to Mysuru on May 2.

Suma Mahesh, past president, Inner Wheel Club, Mysore Central, said she was able to complete the expedition and experience the thrill of trekking after overcoming her initial apprehensions.

Riya Solanki, 13, who recently trekked to the Everest Base camp situated at a height of 17,590 ft, was another member of the camp.

Before embarking on the expedition, the trekkers, whose team was named ‘Nari Shakti’, took part in Josh Run and took out an awareness rally on voting rights in Mysuru.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> States> Karnataka / by Special Correspondent / Mysuru – June 06th, 2018

Indian rallyists win European Rally Championship, ERC 3 category

Proud moment: Indian rallyist team comprising Ashwin Naik from Mangaluru and Amitrrajit Ghosh from Kolkata won the European Rally Championship, ERC 3 category, at Athens, organised by the Federation of Internationale de lautomobile; (right) the team during the race.
Proud moment: Indian rallyist team comprising Ashwin Naik from Mangaluru and Amitrrajit Ghosh from Kolkata won the European Rally Championship, ERC 3 category, at Athens, organised by the Federation of Internationale de lautomobile; (right) the team during the race.

This is the first time the duo has won the coveted championship

The Indian rallyist team, comprising Amitrrajit Ghosh of Kolkata and Ashwin Naik from Mangaluru, on Sunday won the European Rally Championship, ERC 3 category, at Athens in Greece organised by the Federation of Internationale de l’automobile (FIA).

A release here said it was the first time that the Indian rally duo has won the coveted European Rally Championship. The debutantes Ghosh-Naik drove a Ford Fiesta R2.

The event for the Indian duo was sponsored by Ramakrishna Race Performance Management of Kolkata and Pana, a Mangaluru-based Educational conglomerate.

Quoting Mr. Ghosh and Mr. Naik, the release said it was the first time that any Indian team has made it to the top slot. The European rallyists and the FIA were awed by the victory. The international rally scenario for Indian drivers would not be the same any more as Amit-Ashwin duo have just raised the benchmark, the release said.

Congratulating the duo, Chairman of Pana educational group Prasad Hegde said the Amit-Ashwin team have brought laurels to the country and Pana group is extremely happy with the results.

This was also the first international event that any Mangaluru-based organisation has sponsored.

The Indian duo, who scripted début victory, were leading in their class right from the day one of the three-day rally that passed through some torturous terrain.

Mr. Ghosh, an ace driver was ably co-driven by Mr. Naik and his immense experience left no ambiguity about this victory when they started for the last leg on Sunday.

The release quoted them as saying, “We both drove with safety on top of our mind which gave us confidence right from the word go. We just had to bring the car to the ramp in one piece which we did with great aplomb.”

It quoted Mr. Ghosh as saying, “I and Ashwin knew that we were racing with an older generation of Ford Fiesta R2. Our goal was always to finish the rally with honourable points but we did it by winning the ERC 3 on the top slot which is so fulfilling.”

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Mangaluru / by Special Correspondent / Mangaluru – June 07th, 2018

A peep into the past! Private heritage homes in Bengaluru are opening their doors to guided tours

Bengaluru  :

Within a radius of one kilometre in Basavanagudi are a string of old bungalows, each with a story to tell. One century-old house was built by former Mysore dewan MN Krishna Rao while another stately structure belonged to M Mahadevan of the Survey of India. Two homes nearby belonged to freedom fighter Nittoor Srinivasa Rau and HAL’s former financial director CV Srinivasa Rao.

Telling their stories and what they mean to the city are a bunch of historians who, with help from the present owners of these homes, are organising tours around them.

 “This makes people aware why it is important to conserve private heritage and what it takes to maintain them. By listening to homeowners, people connect better to the city’s past,” said Mansoor Ali, whose Bengaluru By Foot has guided over 750 people through these homes so far.

 Awareness about private heritage is much needed. According to the Indian National Trust for Art and Cultural Heritage (INTACH), private structures are among the most poorly conserved in Bengaluru. In the past 30 years, the city has lost 75% of its heritage homes, with only 129 out of 510 surviving today. While the Revised Master Plan 2031 has included and listed these buildings, the provisions are far from robust.

Malleswaram resident Vardan Chakrapani said that opening out his 82-year-old Arcot House only increases his family’s sense of pride. His grandfather AL Munirathnam was an engineer for the Shivanasamudra hydroelectric project.

Likewise, MR Narendra, grandson of dewan MN Krishna Rao, is happy to indulge tourists with stories and souvenirs of his ancestor. “These are like-minded people who appreciate the value of the old Madras-tile roof, rosewood staircase, teakwood furniture and lime-mortar building. It’s all about giving them a new perspective about old homes.”

Marvelling at a colonial home from the outside gives no glimpse of the travails of its owners, the leaky pipes and crumbling roofs, said Poornima Dasharathi, whose organisation, Unhurried, also organises walks in the city. “Most homeowners are often pestered by real estate sharks. These last-remaining structures survive only because of individual will power. Owners must have a helping hand in a robust legislative framework that recognises, protects and provides some monetary concession.”

 Arjun Chaudhary, an instructional designer at Manipal Global Education, who took a guided tour recently, said these homes also give an insight into how homes could be built in a sustainable and ecofriendly way. “Preservation legislation is easier said than done. But the government must make a genuine effort to categorise them and allocate funds.”

source: http://www.economictimes.indiatimes.com / The Economic Times / ET Home> Magazines> Panache / by Divya Shekhar, ET Bureau / June 05th, 2018

‘Tree Man’ of Channapatna spent earnings to create urban forest

Bhoohalli Puttaswamy
Bhoohalli Puttaswamy

“How many saplings you have planted so far to build a green tomorrow? If you have planted any, it is commendable. If not even a single, plant at least one and nurture it. There is only one earth and we all should strive to preserve it for the future generations as well as our better tomorrows.” – This is the advice of Bhoohalli Puttaswamy to whoever he meets.

The 63-year-old retired history lecturer from Bhoohalli of Channapatna taluk is popularly called the ‘Tree Man of Channapatna’. In a little over 11 years, he has single-handedly planted around 4,000 saplings on barren lands, roadsides and government land. He has also involved students in planting over 500 saplings in and around Channapatna.

One of the tree parks created by environmentalist Bhoohalli Puttaswamy in Channapatna. He has planted over 4,000 saplings at different parts Channapatna taluk in Ramanagaram district since 2007.
One of the tree parks created by environmentalist Bhoohalli Puttaswamy in Channapatna. He has planted over 4,000 saplings at different parts Channapatna taluk in Ramanagaram district since 2007.

Tree parks

The sexagenarian has converted 3.5 acres of barren land at Bhoohalli into an urban forest by planting nearly 500 saplings of varieties of native species. He created ‘Jeeveshwara Vana’ with 500 saplings next to Mahadeshwara Temple on Channapatna-Sathanur Main Road, and ‘Vidyarthi Vana’, next to Jeeveshwara Vana, with the involvement of students of various colleges. While he created ‘Kavi Vana’ near Bhoohalli with around 1,000 saplings, he increased the green cover with varieties of saplings at Kempegowda Layout in Channapatna.

It all started with an effort to prevent encroachment of a government land at Bhoohalli, he said.

Speaking to The Hindu on Monday, Mr. Puttaswamy stated that some influential elements eyed the government land at Bhoohalli years ago and began exercises to grab it. Upon learning of this, Mr. Puttaswamy rushed to the village and trying to save the land, alerted the villagers about the incident and later planted saplings. “Nearly 800 grown trees are there now,” he said.

IRs. 18 lakh

Environmentalist Bhoohalli Puttaswamy working at Jeeveshwara Vane at Channapatna of Ramanagaram district.
Environmentalist Bhoohalli Puttaswamy working at Jeeveshwara Vane at Channapatna of Ramanagaram district.

Mr. Puttaswamy claimed that he had spent nearly ₹18 lakh to plant saplings, and has been spending ₹15,000 a month to nurture them. “I hire tankers for watering the saplings during summer,” he said.

According to Rudreshwar, a folk enthusiast from Ramanagaram, the Tree man has spent most of his retirement benefits and earnings on planting saplings. “Mr. Puttaswamy mobilises students and volunteers, digs pits himself, plants saplings and nurtures them,” Mr. Rudreshwar, who is also a close aide of Mr. Puttaswamy, said.

Retired principal

Mr. Puttaswamy retired a few ago back as the Principal of the Government First Grade College of Channapatna, after serving for 32 years. He has penned 12 books on various issues.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> States> Karnataka / by M. T. Shiva Kumar / June 05th, 2018

Little Kumaraswamy, ‘the government’s baby’

LittleKumaraswamyBF05jun2018

Abandoned baby gets a new lease of life as woman police constable tends to his needs

From being abandoned by his parents to becoming a representative of sorts for the new government — little Kumaraswamy, named after the new Chief Minister, is too young to comprehend the long journey he has already taken in such a short time.

The newborn was rescued by the Electronics City police, and found the warmth of a mother in a woman police constable, who breastfed him and saved him from starvation.

It was on Friday morning that a rag picker noticed a newborn child stuffed in a plastic bag under a bush near a house under construction in Celebrity Layout, Doddathoguru.

He alerted the shopkeeper nearby, who in turn informed the police control room. Assistant Sub-Inspector Nagesh R. arrived at the scene and rescued the baby. By then, a large crowd had gathered at the spot.

“The baby was in bad shape. He was covered in blood and the umbilical chord was wrapped around his neck,” recalled Mr. Nagesh, who took the baby to a nearby hospital, where doctors treated him free of cost.

Soon after, Mr. Nagesh brought the baby to the station, and handed him over to police constable Archana, mother of a three-month-old boy herself. As the baby was weak and was motionless, Ms. Archana’s heart went out to him. She picked up the baby and breastfed him. In a few seconds, the baby gave a gusty cry.

There was jubilation in the station. Mr. Nagesh ran out to buy clothes for the baby, who was then named Kumaraswamy. “It is the government’s baby now, and we decided to name him Kumaraswamy as it would be under the care of the government,” Mr. Nagesh told The Hindu.

The baby was handed over to the Shishu Mandir on Hosur Road.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Bengaluru / by Special Correspondent / Bengaluru – June 05th, 2018