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My lovely Grandmother on the train in 1975 |
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My lovely wife on the same train almost 40 years later |
Without a doubt one of the most charming
and exciting features of our part of Tamil Nadu is the Nilgiri mountain steam
train. From the stuffy, noisy, polluted town that is Mettupalayam the train
swoops you up into the hills away above the dust and palm trees of the plains
and into the cool clean airs of Coonoor and Ooty. The railway was first built
in 1908 by the British to provide access to Ooty (2.2 km above sea level) which
was popular with ex-pats seeking a break from the heat. The engine and its carriages
have been preserved, restored or, in the case of the steam engine, replaced
with similar though slightly updated versions as the older ones wear out. It is
evident that a lot of thought and resources have gone into preserving the train
and as a result tourists are drawn from all over India and the world to be
pushed up the hill by this nostalgic marvel.
The train also holds a special place in my
family history. When my mother was young her parents were missionaries in north
eastern India and they sent their three children to boarding school in Coonoor
and later Ooty. My mum would often tell us stories about her time in India; her
various cats, her dad's agricultural projects, (the local swear words she
learned) and the amazing steam train that would carry them up the mountain to
school over ravines and through elephant inhabited jungle. Apparently when the
train passed over a ravine and all the passengers would rush to one side to
take pictures and a little version of my mother would run to the other side to
counterbalance the carriage and prevent it tipping over the edge!
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The steam train filling with water at the staion |
Since we arrived I've been gagging to go on
the railway and finally this week we got our chance. We woke at 5:30am in a
very muggy, overpriced Mettupalayam hotel room after a rotten night's sleep.
Nevertheless we got up and out, driven more by excitement than anything else.
Booking the train is a well documented nightmare due to it's popularity. The
station was jam packed with all sorts of sight seers; young raggedy traveller
types adorned with tattoos, bushy beards and no shoes, many an older face
looking clean, composed but slightly harassed, gaggles of Indian teens with
their western clothes and Justin Bieber in their ears and hearts and
tri-generational Indian families on holiday together. Despite most everyone
having a pre-booked ticket there is a little of stress and strife over who will
be going on this train. Luckily for us we have friends in high places. One of
our church friends works on the train and managed to pull some strings to get
us a really decent window seat at fairly short notice. That being said we did
have a slightly nervous hour on the station waiting and wondering if said strings could and would
be pulled. Finally at 7:10am the trained pulled away from the station in a
cacophonous eruption of steam and smoke leaving a few disgruntled would-be
passengers abandoned on the platform, their day spoilt. Our day, however, was
just beginning.
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We ascend into the clouds |
The train takes three hours to climb the
hill to Coonoor where it waits in the station for 40 minutes while the steam
engine is replaced with a diesel engine which continues the journey for a
further hour and half up to Ooty. The track bends and twists its way gradually
up the hill making regular stops to fill up with water and let the passengers
stretch cramped legs and exercise itching camera fingers. The first half of the
journey up to Coonoor sees the track traverse rocky ravines large and small
with stone and steel bridges that rattle and creak as you pass over them.
Waterfalls can be seen tumbling down rock and filling pools before gurgling
into the distance. Flowering shrubs and trees and bindweed in many vibrant
colours grow everywhere, their colours and varieties changing as the altitude
goes up and the temperature goes down. You find yourself plunging into the
hills themselves when the train pushes you into a tunnel and the sound from the
engine is magnified and bounced off the walls while the vapour of the steam and
the smoke of the engine invades through open windows. Every window has an elbow
occupying it, and as the windows slide neatly away it's not uncommon to see a
camera wielding so-and-so leaning treacherously far out to get a better shot of
the train as it ascends (yours truly being an example of such). In fact the nostalgic
aura of the train is somewhat spoilt by the multitude of camera phones
sprouting from each window capturing inane photos of the ground or badly aimed
videos of the air but that can hardly be helped.
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Another scheduled tank fill and leg stretch |
The second half of the trip delivers some
truly spectacular views of the hills and the plains below. Gigantic rocky
outcrops soar above the jungle on the opposite side of the valley where
thousands of trees are reduced to a far off misty blur of steep vegetation.
Every now and then you catch a glimpse of the road below with it's hairpin
bends and it's fast paced jostling of road users trying to be king of the hill
and you sigh with pleasure because even though your journey will take three
times as long, it is ten times more relaxing and countless times more
beautiful. When the train gets nearer Coonoor it stops at two stations,
Hillgrove and Runnymede, who's names betray their founders nationality as plain
as day, and passengers disembark to enjoy a snack shop and avoid evil looking
Makaks. When the train finally draws level with the Glendale tea factory you're
treated to some truly idyllic views of the tea gardens spreading up the hills
and around brooks as they make their passage downhill. The patchwork of tea
plants spreading over every hill in neat uniformity is nothing short of sublime
and I doubt I will ever grow used to the sight.
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Beginning the push to Ooty |
Once in Coonoor (1.8 km up), and after the
steam engine has been relieved, the diesel engine completes the journey to
Ooty. The train quickly passes through a small village called Wellington which
was named for Sir Arthur Wellesley and climbs through a eucalyptus forest and
out onto the roof of the world. You really do get the feeling you are high as
it gets as the ground opens out and you can see hilltops spreading before you
as far as the eye can see, yet still the train continues it's steady climb. The
route takes you past evidence of another of the Nilgiris top exports, flowers.
Small communities congregate around poly tunnels and irrigation ditches to
cultivate small multicoloured allotments growing anything from gerberas to
peace lilies. As the train nears Ooty the ground levels out somewhat and the
short cropped grass, gorse bushes and bare rocks put you somewhat in mind of
the New Forest. Seemingly out of nowhere there appears a lake dotted with
pedalos which signals your arrival into Ooty (or as the stations sign
confusingly reads, 'Udhagamandalam')
The descent from Ooty is, as you would
expect, much the same but in reverse. It's just as picturesque on the way down
however there are less stops for water as the steam engines only job is to act
as a brake to prevent the carriages careering downhill out of control.
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Looking down the tracks |
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Thundering over ravines |
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Plunging into tunnels |
The whole experience of riding the train,
the chuffa-chuffa of the engine, the precipitous drops and soaring
heights, the vast views and clackaty bridges, the smoky tunnels and plunging
waterfalls, the dense forest and the oldy-worldy wooden carriages all combine
to make riding the Nilgiri mountain train a real treat. And considering a
standard ticket weighs in at a ridiculous 15p (as long as you can book it)
taking this train if you get the chance is a total no brainer. Every now and
then I would imagine a little version of my mother in the same seat, or
standing on the same platform, or more likely running away from a Makak.
Catching the train with her scruffy little brother and cute little sister all
those years ago, it really feels like we visited a small part of my heritage
today.
If you don't get s job as a travel writer upon your return there is no justice in this world.
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