Deep in the evergreen heartland of Malnad (rain
country) is a century old, sleepy railway station that has just this
single train whistling in once a day.
A little known, unsung
charmer leaves Shimoga every morning except Sundays, and takes three
hours through eight little stations to cover 75 km of the Western
Ghats. Through hill and dale, often under green canopy of trees, it
arrives at a one hundred year old railway station known as Talguppa.
The train can carry 57 passengers. It may be full at Shimoga at the
start of the journey. Some board at the intermediate stations. Some
board at the intermediate stations, some leave, but there is hardly
anybody who goes all the way to Talguppa. The station master
Nandakumar, with his cap on due to the arrival of the train. Says
This is a railbus, and we have just this one coming every morning.
It goes back to Shimoga in the evening. Ours is probably the only
tracking this state that is still operational, on a single train
system.
The story of Taluppa railway station and the tiny train form a part
of the local lore. The British had built the station a century ago
and, in 1939, it became part of the Mysore Railways. It was formally
inaugurated by the maharaja of Mysore for the purpose of being a
ferry line for the dam being constructed at Linganmakki as part of
the log project.
The
station was a busy nerve center. It was the only link in this region
around Jog Falls, India’s highest, where the Sharavathi river falls
in four cascades including the one called Raja with 253 m the
longest drop. But Talguppa station is now ignored because quick bus
services provide a more favoured link.
Passengers on this little train who go all the way to Talguppa are,
usually like me, acqu sport enthusiasts. Off at Talguppa, they are
headed along a 12 km trek towards Honnemaradu where The Adventurers,
an NGO, runs their ecology establishment, Mangalore tiled roofs on
their barn-like structures are full of Kayaks, boats, oars, rubber
rafts, parasailing and other water sports equipment. The Sharavathi
backwaters have several little islands and The Adventurers impart
eco friendly training there: swimming lessons, rowing, camping,
rafting. From all over India, the establishment draws men, women and
children, most of whom use the tiny train up to Talguppa and then
sling their rucksacks upon their backs to trek 12 km. They take care
to avoid leeches that lurk along the path to Honnemaradu.
The little train has
been in existence these past four years. Previous to that, a bigger
train on this route needed 200 litres of diesel and always ran half
full as people chose to go by road. Discontinued due to
unprofitability the bigger one was replaced by the present
train-bus. It used to run from Whitefield, a suburb of Bangalore, to
Yelahanka, another suburb nearby, but the Whitefield gauge was
converted and the two-bogie train-bus was without work.
It was again made operational with a built in diesel engine, and put
on the Shimoga-Talguppa metre-guage track. It requires only 60
litres of diesel to run. Not even as tall as a bus, it passes
through single track stations like Sagar, which is famed for skilled
carvers that are a source of most of Karnataka handicraft emporiums
wooden objects d’art.
After the arrival of
this tiny train, Talguppa reverts to its character of a little
hamlet in the evergreen forest of the Western Ghats where birds
twitter, unseen insects go about foraging. And humans are a rarity.