Sunday, 30 April 2017

The Wayanadan Dwarf Cow!

The Wayanadan Dwarf Cow.

An indigenous mountain breed, the Wayanadan Dwarf Cow, is on the brink of extinction. Slowly, but steadily, they have been nudged out by the competition. The reason is simple economics. Though these cows give milk of incomparable quality in terms of taste as well as nutritional and medicinal values, the quantity of milk is really quite less; usually varying from a liter to three a day, while a hybrid cow gives twenty to thirty. A handful of farmers still keep a few of these cows, using their urine and dung to make Jeevamrita, a traditional concoction of beneficial bioorganic organisms, which is used in organic agriculture and in nature farming, both as a liquid fertilizer and as a pesticide.

A mother with her calf.

These cows thrive on just green grass and water, though they love to have vegan leftovers from the kitchen and rice broth to drink. Like the Kasaragod Dwarf and the Vechur Dwarf, they are hardy and disease-free when compared to contemporary dairy cattle and live longer, up to 35 productive years of age. Though peaceful, they are quite bold too, in fighting off attacking wild animals. I once saw one trample a poisonous snake to death in the cowshed, while the other cows, the Jerseys and the Holsteins, just panicked. Don’t you think that these beautiful, fascinating, tiny cows deserve to be conserved?

A farmer standing next to his beloved Wayanadan Dwarf Cow.

Saturday, 29 April 2017

A Dream Called Life!


One starts walking,
On legs four, they say!
On four, the baby crawls,
Then on two, the child totters,
And walks!

Youth and middle age,
Run off on legs, twain!
Lo! It is time for three,
Legs two, and a cane!

These days, six perhaps,
Twin legs, with a walker’s quartet!
At last, it is four,
Yea, an old baby,
Back to crawl anew!

And you watch it all,
And realize, perchance,
This dream person,
This baby, not I,
Witness, I be,
The eternal unborn,
An entire life,
My dream!

Friday, 28 April 2017

To Quench the Thirst of All!


A pure and pristine flow,
I flow, to quench the thirst of all.
Ever loyal and faithful, I remain,
To bring life to all.

From the mighty, savory ocean,
To the sweet mountain stream,
The vast lakes, nature or man-made,
The little water bottle in a child’s pack.

Water vapor in puffy clouds,
Ice caps so strong and proud,
Oases in sweltering desserts,
My body makes it all!

Forgetting my importance in life,
My children abuse me all the while.

Plastic bags, industrial effluents,
Chemical fertilizers and pesticides,
Heavy metals and sulfurous fumes,
I am made to swallow them all!

Try my very best, doth I,
And rise up pure into the sky,
Your pollution in the air,
Makes me acid in midflight.

I pray, my children, forget not,
If you wish to live, to survive,
Keep me clean and pure,
To quench the thirst of all!

In solemn repentance,
Plant a tree or a seed at least,
Give not a foothold to selfishness,
Or to sloth in your mind and heart.

Remember your godliness and innocence,
Brought with you when you were born,
Keep that purity ever with you,
I promise to quench the thirst of all!

Tuesday, 25 April 2017

The Thirst!



Crossing the foothills,
Climbing the lofty mountain,
Over steep hairpin bends,
The car labors uphill!

On the left, a deep precipice,
On the right, the mighty cliff,
Imposing majestic trees,
Hide road from the touch of sun!



The grandeur of the verdant hills,
Amidst trills of colorful birds, so rare,
The scenic beauty of vales below,
For your eyes, a delectable feast!



Dance of restless monkeys,
The occasional Sambar deer,
An endless song of crickets,
Ringing upon your ears!

The green canopied tunnel,
Discretely brings you a smile of cheer.
Yet, as you gaze a bit deeper,
You see the grass, so dry.

The ferns, so lush green ere long,
Now brown, getting ready to die.
The roadsides bathed with dead leaves,
The waterfall, now a mere dribble.



The grasses, the ferns, the trees,
The insects and animals alike,
All yearn for the kiss of rain,
For long have they waited in vain!



Seeing the dark clouds float by,
All nature is athirst for release,
Like the beloved from her lover, yearning, craving,
A celebration of orgasmic delight!

Sunday, 23 April 2017

Mistake Not Aloneness for Loneliness!


Mistake not aloneness for loneliness,
For to know it is to feel the grace of God,
And when He gives Himself to thee,
It’s His empty vastness, thou feelest!

For pure awareness is He,
Ever One, without a second,
Humblest of the humble,
He is none other than thee!

The Jasmine Vine!


Daintily, she touched, she felt,
The strong and sturdy guava tree,
‘May I? May I?’, asked she.
Took his silence for a yes.

Embracing his hard, smooth trunk,
She twined herself around,
Clutching him, ever so tightly,
Never to let go, not ever!

As strange sensations gathered,
As her loving grip grew tighter,
He smiled, his being athrill!
And she climbed and climbed.

The spring sun, kissed them both,
Drawing ever closer in fervent delight,
Lo! An explosion of fragrance and of light!
Behold! A starburst of ecstasy!

Wednesday, 19 April 2017

Time Flows On!


The rickety wooden bridge,
Spans the perennial mountain stream,
Come summer or monsoon,
Her cool sweet water flows on.

Starting from the virgin rain forest,
Under tall, dense, green canopies,
Where sunlight never kisses the ground,
Starts she, and ceaselessly goes on.

The bridge, the trees and the stream,
Witness in silent communion,
As dusk succeeds dawn,
And as life flows on.

As the moon and the stars.
Quietly give way to rising sun,
The village awakens – men and women,
Laborers, chickens, school children,
Hobbling old men, stray dogs,
Cows impatient to graze,
Farmers with loads of produce,
All cross the bridge, move on.

Soon the village brats are up,
Not yet started school,
Oh, what joy to pelt stones at mangoes,
To run at breakneck speed and brawl!

Now there is a commotion,
A wheezing little lady, quite, quite old,
Lying on an armchair,
Lashed to a couple of bamboo poles.

Four hefty young men,
Quickly take her across the bridge,
Into the waiting jeep,
To the hospital, she goes.

Scarce a day passes,
When they bring her back in a coffin,
The stream whispers, “Her time is done,
To her maker she goes!

Here was I when she was born,
Playing in my waters, she grew.
The damsel soon got married,
To a young man from yonder village.

Soon, they came and settled here,
Had children, grandchildren.
Then a great grandma was she,
Eldest in the village, now gone!”

The summer dries the grass,
Except around the stream,
Everyone finds solace,
In the grace that flows on.

Then the monsoon clouds come,
Lightning, thunder, rain,
The stream swells to a river,
While the bridge just holds on.

Aware in the infinite ocean of love,
Silently, they watch, moment to moment,
The ever-changing scenes of life,
As timeless time flows on!
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