Chikmagalur | Day 4
The last day of my Coorg abode; I woke up to a pleasant, drizzling morning. It was time to bid farewell to Coorg, but had one last thing to do.


Zostel Coorg
Secured the luggage and on the bike, and had a quick sip of tea with others. Exchanging Instagram invites, left the place by 9 am.
I had a coffee shop to visit, which a fellow traveler suggested the other night, to grab some fine coffee-powder. It was a small shop with a homegrown coffee 10 mins from Zostel Coorg. Well, 8 packs of Arabica and Robusta
, was too greedy for it. ( They courier too. Just get in contact with them if you want one)
Coorg Spice House
Turned out, the owner was a biker in his young days and we got into stories of his riding and touring competitions which used to happen back in those days. These people rode for 2000 km straight with no sleep, except for pit-stops to complete the race. Well, with the bikes in those days, that must have been a hell of an enthusiasm for riding.

Coffee Bean grinder. Up goes the beans, down comes the powder

Coffee machine
The beauty en route around Madikeri is too hypnotizing. Soon I was drowned in the taste of the coffee beans and could feel the tiniest flavor it had. It kept me energetic and well, Awake!
Chikmagaluris 160 km from Coorg, with not much to see around on the way there. I decided to take a longer route to avoid the highways and stayed in the interiors of the estates.

Towards Chikmagaluru
Not to my surprise, the rains started and had to take frequent stops to change into my rain jacket and pants. Irritated by these frequent stops, the only thing I could feel at large was the coffee beans twirling in my mouth, with a never-ending blast of aromas. Yes, I was all charged up with the caffeine during my entire trip! Some addiction ha ?

The road to Chikmagalur passes through small villages and crooked paths. With dense trees alongside, I rode over a snake that happened to cross the road at a blind turn. To my relief, it slithered across safely.
With the least breaks, I had to reach Chikmagalur Zostel, unload my luggage and set out to visit places around.

Zostel Chikmagalur
I reached the property around 3 – 4 PM. The place is located alongside the road and is huge with Private and bunk rooms available to stay a few hundred meters from the main gate. Checked in to my bunk room where I was the only one staying. It was not crowded and had vacant rooms due to weekdays I guess.
Post settling in, decided to spend the rest of the day at ease amidst the Zostel estate. Engulfed with pepper, shrubs, tall trees and various other plants, one can take a stroll through it like a walk in a forest.

Zostel Chikmagalur
The following day, I had planned to visit Mullayanagiri peak, the origins of coffee and Baba Budhangiri peak. These later turned out to be one of the best places I’ve visited till-date.
Rains had kicked in again a little (which btw is cool when you are in-doors), dried out few clothes and crashed into the bunk calling it a night.
Chikmagalur – Baba Budangiri Range | Day 5
Amazingly, my morning alarm was the birds’ chirping and the cozy cold. After a sound sleep, I was set to venture out the next morning. Quick into my riding gears, I took off without breakfast.

Zostel Chikmagalur
My first stop was Mullayanagiri peak, the highest peak in the Baba Budangiri range. The road up-hill is narrow but well maintained. The Ghats are thrilling with fog catching you off guard now and then. The visibility fades to 2-3 meters with strong chilling winds.

Towards Mullayanagiri Peak

Mullayanagiri Peak Parking – Some where lost in the fog up

Mullayanagiri Peak – Ganapati Temple

Mullayanagiri Peak

The way downwards was lost in the fog with a narrow road ahead. I cruised down steadily on the peak and was on my way to Baba Budangiri mountain.

Baba Budangiri range is named after the Sufi saint Baba Budan, who, according to the legends, introduced coffee in India by bringing the beans from Yemen. Yeah! The first land of our addictive coffee. (And Yemen! Any Friends TV Show Fan here?
)
Honnammana Halla Waterfalls – Towards BudanGiri

Baba Budangiri Range
Places to go from Baba Budan Dargaha

Manikyadhare Waterfalls View Point

Manikyadhare Waterfalls View Point
After a brief chat with few people there, I started my descend and the rains began pouring heavily. The mud on the road was flowing with the water and the traffic had started moving slower than a snail.
With extreme precaution and skidding rear tyre, I reached Dargah back and took a chai break. My palms were frozen even with my gloves on.

Baba Budan Dargah

Baba BudanGiri Range
I planned to go to Sringeri on my extended stay. After dinner and late-night chats with other travelers, I crashed.
Chikmagalur – Sringeri | Day 6
Sringeri is a temple town at a distance of 80 km from Chikmagalur. I decided to rest a little longer and left around 10 am from Zostel.

Towards Sringeri

Harsha Cafe – Towards Sringeri
Gliding through the Ghats, I reached the Temple. The place has decent parking with the river Tunga flowing just beside and is famous for its clarity and freshness and also many colorful fishes dwell in it. (The entrance is now banned due to huge no. of tourist)

Sringeri Temple

Sringeri Temple – Rajagopuram
Spending half an hour there, headed towards shops to buy some Papads and chips. Yeah, you do get good ones here but again it’s my liking. Often people tend to have a different opinion about it (coming from my mom’s response
). This shop named Simhas is like 100 odd meters from the temple and has a huge variety of papad and a whole lot of stuff. They have their website too – https://www.simhas.in/. Got packets of jack fruit papad and different types of banana chips.
Sringeri Temple
After a laughing outburst late night, I crashed into the warm bed.
Chikmagalur – Bangalore | Day 7
I was up early and stacked up the luggage on Joycy. Bidding farewell to everyone around, we started towards Bangalore.

Chikmagalur Zostel

Chikmagalur Zostel
Bangalore – Kolhapur | Day 8
The next day was a quick morning shopping at Nandini Milk center for sweets and was off to Kolhapur.
Zup zap zup! I covered around 620 km on Bangalore – Pune / Mumbai highway and reached Kolhapur before sunset after a scrumptious dinner from hotel Aaiyaaz.

Shree Mahalaxmi Mandir – Kolhapur
The next morning visited the Mahalaxmi Temple, one of the most renowned temple along the banks of Panchganga River

Shree Mahalaxmi Mandir – Kolhapur
Kolhapur – Mumbai | Day 9
Left Kolhapur at around noon, It is somewhat 390 km to home but usually the longest route (by feel) with an end of yet another memorable trip. Expecting to reach by 8 pm, revved up through the smaller highways of Maharashtra and soon crossed Pune and was on the old Mumbai – Pune highway. Thereafter, it was like a single step to Mumbai.

Mumbai Meri Jaan
3
Soon entered the inevitable Panvel traffic, Vashi Bridge, Chembur and there I was! After 3098 km, 9 days, Home! Touched down around 730 PM.
Sighs !! It was one hell of a trip with unexpected off-road adventures, thrilling moments that always had me on my toes. The coffee lying in my bag and taste of the purest beans was all hovering in mind.

Guess that was most of Karnataka and Tamil Nadu I have been to. It was now time to plan for the only state left untouched in the South! Yes, God’s own country.
Have you been to any distinct, unexplored places along this route that I might have missed? Do post a snip of your experience for my motivation to plan for it, because I can never get enough of it
Check out other bike trips and a whole lot of stuff here…
Ride Statistics :
Total km: 3028+ (to and fro)
Bikes: Gixxer SF
Riding hours : ~28
Fun : 110%
Route: Mumbai – Gokarna – Coorg – Chikmagaluru – Kolhapur
Riding Gears, luggage and accessories :
Jacket: BBG xPlorer
Gloves: BBG Leather Gloves and Winter Gloves
Pants : BBG Riding Pants
Helmet: MT Revenge
Tank Bag: Road Gods Zeon R1
Saddle Bags : Cramster
Cameras: SJ cam S7 and Moto g5 Plus
Bungee Cords : DMart
Stays: Zostel, Hotels
Illumination : AllExtreme U7 Fog Lights, DIY LED
Bike Parts: All Stock parts




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