24 hours in Mamallapuram
Arjuna’s Penance relief |
From Pondicherry, we caught a local bus 2 hours north to Mamallapuram.
Trimurti Cave Temple |
Krishna’s Butterball |
We spent a good two or so hours walking around the hill area, admiring the cave temples and carvings and climbing up rocks to find the temples built on top.
Elephant relief |
Eventually – as happens regularly if you are Western traveller, visiting a tourist site filled with lots of Indian tourists – we ourselves became an additional tourist attraction.
It starts with just one small child |
I was approached by a family, who wanted a photo of me holding their baby. Soon enough, baby after baby was passed to me and had my photo taken with various members of an increasingly expanding very large family.
And then everyone wants to get involved |
Once sufficiently ‘papped’, we visited one last stone temple and headed back to the hotel.
That evening, we found ourselves in the area of town described in the Lonely Planet as ‘backpackistan’.
Entering one of the restaurants, we realised why. The relaxed atmosphere, with cushions on the floor and a hippyish decor felt very back-packer-ey, so it was perhaps not the most ‘authentic’ of places. However, the food was good enough and the beer nice and cold, which was appreciated at the end of a hot day!
Shore Temple |
Up the next the day, we headed out to see the other two key attractions in the town: the Shore temple and the 5 Rathas.
The Shore Temple is imaginatively named – it sits right by the sea shore in Mamallapuram. The stone temple is quite small, but it is a pretty little structure with impressive carvings.
We walked from the Shore Temple to the 5 Rathas. Along the way, we enjoyed stopping now and then to watch all of the stone masons hard at work, carving anything and everything from large elephants to giant Ganeshes to small trinkets.
The stone mason and his elephants! |
The town is well known for its craftsman and stopping and chatting to them for a while, it was clear how very passionate many of them are about their art.
A stone mason at work |
At the 5 Rathas, we got ourselves a guide to look around the five structures – they aren’t actually temples as they were never finished and so weren’t consecrated.
The 5 Rathas |
The structures were built in the 600s and are monoliths – impressively carved from a single rock.
Our guide was useful in explaining the different Hindu gods depicted on the different structures, although I think I need to do a bit more studying, before I can tell Vishnu from Brahma.
Draupadi Ratha |
Late afternoon, after grabbing a late lunch and taking a look at the beach, we left the fascinating little town of Mamallapurum to head to Chennai, where we got on a night bus to Ooty.
Fishing boats at Mamallapuram beach |
We really enjoyed our short visit to Mamallapuram and would definitely recommend including it in your Tamil Nadu trip.