Baralikadu, located inside the Karamadai forest range near Coimbatore, offers more than just a day in nature. From coracle rides across the Bhavani to tribal food and cultural performances, @kJeshi looks at this eco-tourism initiative that has evolved into a community-led model supporting indigenous livelihoods and promoting conservation.
https://t.co/pK1d7I9FEL
This festive season, choose a gifting experience that encourages self-care, wellness, good health, and a natural glow
✍️@kJeshi
https://t.co/WBDqMPM3Ss
Watch: Baralikadu, 70-kilometres from Coimbatore, promises a stimulating dip in river Bhavani, coracle ride and delicious greens foraged from the forest: an evidently perfect getaway from the chaos of the city
@kJeshi ✍️https://t.co/xK3lDgO9Ox
Fyodor Dostoevsky's love affair and Mudhal Mariyathai
Mudhal Mariyathai, starring Sivaji Ganesan in the lead role, drew inspiration from the relationship between Russian writer Fyodor Dostoevsky and Anna Snitkina, who was 25 years younger than him. The image of Radha using a strand of Sivaji’s silver hair to string together beads remains etched in memory.
R. Selvaraj, the story writer of the film, was well versed in Russian literature. He had read about Dostoevsky in books published by Progress Publishers and sold through New Century Book House. Memorable days indeed.
Writer R. Selvaraj recounts the story of Meena, the real woman who inspired Annakili.
The ballad of Meena, a midwife whose story inspired Annakili - https://t.co/ULfLoVuJrT For the best experience read this on The Hindu App. https://t.co/EkmwRKWlf6
On International Museum Day, Coimbatore’s museums—from natural history and textiles to police exhibits, vintage cars, and a Gandhi memorial—highlight the city’s rich heritage.
✍️@kJeshi, @AkilaKannadasan
https://t.co/Nr7m0pXPfR
From avakkkai oil fried rice and pachi mirchi kodi to mont blanc and corn milk latte, this cafe brings together coffee and nostalgia, and South Indian flavours with a global spin, writes @kJeshi
https://t.co/G7vsIkdRsx
Don’t miss this podcast by D. Suresh Kumar, The Hindu’s Deputy Resident Editor, Tamil Nadu: “Vijay, TVK and the rise of fake political narratives | Focus Tamil Nadu”: https://t.co/c1T5NMkCWs via @YouTube
Vibrant horses frozen mid-gallop, textured floral canvases, charcoal crows and Rajasthani women in colourful attire — the ongoing exhibition at Kasthuri Sreenivasan art gallery offers visitors a glimpse of the diverse artistic worlds of the Kongu Oviya Kalai Kuzhu, that consists of artists V Rajendhran, Kumanan, Murugesan, Ramamoorthy and Govindarajulu.
✍️Yuvashini S. and Anna Sebastian
https://t.co/QXicMIN4Cd
எனக்குச் சமர்ப்பிக்கிறேன்னு சொல்றதை விட, உங்க பெற்றோருக்குச் சமர்ப்பிக்க���றதுதான் சரியா இருக்கும்.
உங்களை மாதிரி படிச்சு முன்னேற விரும்புற இளைஞர்களுக்கு நீங்க ஒரு guide-ஆ இருந்து வழிகாட்டுனீங்கனா அதுதான் எனக்கு மகிழ்ச்சி.
நீங்க இன்னும் பெரிய உயரங்களை அடையவும் புகழைப் பெறவும் வாழ்த்துகள் தம்பி!
From discussing serial villains and missed episodes, Tamil Nadu aunties have now become full-time political analysts. Every house is like a mini debate studio — one TV on Assembly proceedings, another on Secretariat updates, and every family function now starts with, “So what did the CM announce today?” Politics has officially replaced prime time serials in Tamil Nadu.