April 18, 2011

5 acres near Perubakam

This land is located about 2 kms from the rustic area of Perubakkam.






The 5 acre patta agricultural land is located from Arunachala by road about 7-8 kms and as the bird flies, about 5-6 kms from the Hill.There is a good direct access road to the land.








The land in this posting is 5 acres and adjacent to a small Temple Shrine dedicated to the Goddess. Also adjacent to the land is the start of a large tract of protected reserve forest.








Edge of well viewing boundary with
Temple and priest cottage



The land is owned by a lady who has not cultivated due to personal circumstances. The land has a well and plentiful sweet water.















For information as to pricing, please get in touch at the ‘contact me’ facility on this blog.

6.4 acres at Perubakkam




This rustic, unspoilt agricultural area of Perubakkam by road is about 7 kms from the Hill, and as the bird flies, located at around 5 kms from Arunachala. There is a good direct access road to the land.




The cottage with crops belongs
to neighbouring farm





Good direct access to land




The land in this posting is 6.4 acres and comprises two sets of land being sold at one time. The smaller piece is 1 acre and has its own well, the larger piece is 5.4 acres and also has a separate well. This patta land must be sold as one parcel of 6.4 acres.





One of the wells








The soil is red loam and has plentiful sweet water. Currently ground nuts and sugar cane is under cultivation.




















The seller is ready to sell without delay. For information as to pricing, please get in touch at the ‘contact me’ facility on this blog.

March 23, 2011

Earth Democracy

“We need once more to feel at home on the earth and with each other.”



In 1984, the organisation Navdanya was started by Vandana Shiva to help India’s small farmers develop organic farming methods and ensure biodiversity.

Navdanya is a network of seed keepers and organic producers spread across 16 states in India and, so far, has helped set up 54 community seed banks across the country, trained over 500,000 farmers in seed sovereignty, food sovereignty and sustainable agriculture over the past two decades, and helped setup the largest direct marketing, fair trade organic network in the country.

Navdanya has also set up a learning center, Bija Vidyapeeth (School of the Seed) on its biodiversity conservation and organic farm in Doon Valley, Uttranchal, north India.

Navdanya is actively involved in the rejuvenation of indigenous knowledge and culture. It has created awareness on the hazards of genetic engineering, defended people's knowledge from biopiracy and food rights in the face of globalisation and climate change.

To read more about the excellent work this organisation is involved in, check out this link here.

Perumbakkam Land


A farmer at Perubakkam 6 kms south of Arunachala, is selling his five acre patta farm. Already 2 acres of this five acre parcel has been sold to a family who plan to make and live on a small farm, thus the remaining three acres of this parcel is being offered for sale.

Darshan of Arunachala is spectacular, and the area is a traditional, quiet, rustic Tamil agricultural area.






There is good direct access to the land.






And an excellent water supply.















The fencing marks the boundary of the two acres that has already been sold, the three acres adjacent to the fencing, is the land that is currently up for sale.










For details and information as to pricing, please get in touch usingthe 'contact me' at the left hand top of this page.




Purchase of Land -- Checklist


To learn about all necessary checks in connection with land transactions read this recommended article, which starts:


Purchase of Land – Legal Checklists

Owning a house is an important thing in one’s life. However, one needs to be careful while buying a property to avoid falling into legal hassles. Before buying a land, a number of checks need to be done to confirm that the land has a clear and marketable title. The legal status of the land is one of the first issues that should be addressed before confirming a property.

Title deeds

The first step is to see the title deed of the land, which you are going to buy.

Confirm whether the land is in the name of the seller and that the full right to sell the land lies with only him and no other person.

It is better to get the original deed examined by a lawyer. This is to check details like whether the seller has permitted any entry/access to others through this land and whether any other fact has been suppressed/left undisclosed by the owner of the land.

Along with the title deed, you can also demand to see the previous deeds of the land available with the seller.

In some cases, more than one person may own the land. So before registering, check if there is more than one owner, and if there is, get release certificate from the other people involved.

The article then goes on to cover the following categories:


Title deeds
Conveyance Deed or Sale Deed
Tax receipt and bills
Encumbrance Certificate
Pledged land
Measuring the land
Purchasing land from NRI landowners
Power Of Attorney
Agreement
Stamp Duty
Registration
Changing the title in Village office


To read the article in full go to this link here.


February 23, 2011

Unnatural Farming Processes


In my Bird and Ecology Blog, Arunachala Birds, which generally concentrates on matters specifically pertaining to Tiruvannamalai and surrounding countryside, I have made an interesting posting about GM crops and how they are affecting the lives and livelihood of farmers in this country. It is essential that all of us, NOT JUST FARMERS, have full, up-to-date information about GM crops and other unnatural processes.

For the first part of the narrative which is entitled:

"Is Monsanto Responsible For 200,000 Farmer Suicides?"

go to the link Eat Real Food.

And for information counteracting the remark GM supporters often make, "that bio-crops are the only way to feed the world's booming population in the future," go to the link entitled "The Problem with Franken Food."

If you have information about organic and natural farming techniques being used, or being planned to be used in the Tiruvannamalai area, please send me details so I can make a posting on this Blog. Also if you are a farmer and have organic produce for sale and would like me to mention it on this Blog, again send information to Meenakshi Ammal at the contact address, top left of this Blog.



June 29, 2010

Sharon Muench's Arunachala Memories

“I first came to Ramanashram in December 1973. In essence little has changed since then. On the surface, much has changed for better and for worse! The Hill, back then, was bare with no trees. It was covered, for most of the year, in feathery green lemon grass, as tall as a small child. Women and children would swarm over the lower hills, cut down the grass, bring it down in bundles on their heads, bigger than themselves. Even the smallest child who could walk carried a bundle. After the harvest they set fire to the Hill. It burned for a while, then turned black till the new grass grew. Now the Hill is tree-covered, delightfully green.

The Ashram has expanded. The dining-room has been extended, the office relocated to the forecourt. More traffic. More noise. More people. That winter season, there was only a handful of foreign visitors staying at the Ashram. They had all been coming for years, knew each other well. Ramana Maharshi back then, was the world’s best kept spiritual secret. Everyone stayed for months at the Ashram, but I was given only a few days. I was devastated. I’d come all the way from Guyana, South America, overland; this was my home, and I planned to stay forever. I couldn’t believe they’d throw me out that quickly; for what? Bhagavan was my Guru!

One of the Westerners stood out from all the others. He was tall, well-built, in his forties and carried himself with easy authority, and radiated a natural joy. I was shy and insecure; to me, he seemed a spiritual giant. I heard he was known as Doctor Hugo, and had lived many years at the Ashram. One morning, sitting on a large stone half-way up to Skandashram, I saw Hugo and four or five other foreign devotees walking slowly up towards me. Hugo was talking to Phillip, an Englishman with whom I’d spoken a few times. I had the uncanny feeling they were speaking of me. Indeed – when he reached me, Hugo stopped. “I hear you’re looking for a place to stay,” he said, “try so-and-so.” He mentioned a name and went on his way.





Sharon Muench at
Ramana Ashram, June 2010






A few days later I moved into Brunton’s Cottage in Palakottu. Back then there were three simple huts in Palakottu, grouped around the water tank. There was direct access to the Ashram through the back wall. None of the huts had plumbing. And we fetched water from the street taps and walked out to the Hill for our toilet.

Soon after that I joined this little group. Every morning we trooped up to Skandashram, sat beneath the Mango Tree at the top, and Hugo would talk. He was a brilliant speaker. Every word came from his heart. He spoke of the Path and the urgency of it. The pitfalls of meditation, the tricks of the ego, the beauty of God, and His Grace. He told stories. Hugo had been the personal doctor of Papa Ramdas for many years, and had many an anecdote. Often he laughed, a deep, rolling, infectious laugh that had us all laughing too. But most of all he infected us all with his deep, abiding devotion to Bhagavan.

In April 1975 I left India for Germany. I settled here, and embarked on a life in the West with all the ups and downs. That year, Hugo, with an Indian friend, bought a large plot of land on the giripradakshina roadway. It was scrubland, bare, uninviting, filled with stones and thorny bushes. A few years later it would be a paradise. They built two simple huts on it, and moved in. That was the start of what was to become The Shantimalai Trust, the most comprehensive charitable trust in the District.

It began with the early morning queues. Long before dawn they would form. By 6 a.m. there would be snakes of poor Indians squatting on the road outside, waiting for medical treatment. Hugo and his friend Kurt had been Homeopathetic Practitioners in Germany, and it was their seva now to treat the Indians. From those beginnings, big things grew: A full-blown Medical Centre offering free treatment. An English medium school offering a first-class primary and secondary education An orphanage. A child sponsorship programme. A farm. Cows were donated, sewing machines were donated, wells were dug. Women were trained in handicrafts. Young men found industrial training and jobs. Villages were restored.

Friends of Hugo, Westerners, donated whatever they could, money and time and expertise. They came in the winter, joined this project or that, helped in whichever way they could. Those were glorious days indeed. In recent years Shantimalai has scaled back its activities, passed on its projects to other sponsors.

Some of us have moved on; our lives have taken new turns. In my case, it’s been a bumpy road, with ups and downs. I’ve written novels, seen them published through Harper Collins. In recent years, my husband has become crippled by disease. As parkinsonism takes its toll, I look to the future. He now needs 24/7 care, and we’ve reached the point where it is physically impossible for me to continue. The idea of putting him in a home is unbearable, he is only 66 years old! – and more and more my thoughts turn to Arunachala.

Why not create my own facility? Not only for him but for others – Indian and Western devotees alike. A retirement home consisting of 8-10 double cottages set in a beautiful garden with day and night Indian carers. A haven and a home.”

For more information about this developing project, please contact Sharon at:
sw.maas@gmail.com

[Narrative by Sharon Muench]



January 28, 2010

Report on Housing Costs, Economic Times


I'm posting the below article which recently appeared courtesy of the Economic Times, India, just to show how much more expensive cities are in India. The below prices fairly takes one breath away! And what kind of jobs do the apartment purchasers do exactly that they can afford such prices?! And we thought it was getting expensive in Tiruvannamalai!




“An apartment on the 100th floor of 'Burj Khalifa', the world's tallest building and one of the most-sought after addresses in the world today, comes at a price of Rs. 38,000 per sq ft. But if you think that's a soaring price, consider this; the real estate price in Delhi will beat that by a mile, reports Economic Times

The apartments on Prithviraj Road and Aurangzeb Road in Central Delhi are much more expensive. While, the per sq ft rate of apartments in Marble Arch and Tata Apartments on Prithviraj Road is around Rs. 65,000 per sq ft, Ansal apartments on Aurangzeb Road have a price of Rs. 55,000 per sq ft, according to Senior Broker Hemendra Sharma.

In Vasant Vihar and Chanakya Puri in South Delhi, apartments built on smaller plots of 400-800 sq metres are commanding prices of around Rs. 45,000 per sq ft. In fact, there are not many luxury condominiums available in central and south Delhi. However, there are several bungalows on independent plots of around three acres with a permitted area of construction of 3500 sq ft to 10,000 sq ft. These plots are commanding a price of Rs. 200 crore to Rs. 500 crore. So the per sq ft cost of these bunglow comes to a whopping Rs. 5 lakh per sq ft.

Condominiums in Mumbai are even costlier. The per sq ft rate in Mumbai's NCPA Apartments at Nariman Point is between Rs. 90,000 and Rs. 1 lakh.

Gulam Zia, National Director, research and advisory services of global property consultants Knight Frank says, "In the posh upmarket localities of Delhi and Mumbai, where there is a scarcity of land, property prices have shot through the roof." Adds Zia, "Property prices in Mumbai's western and central suburbs of Worli, Lower Parel and Prabhadevi are upwards of Rs. 40,000 per sq ft."

Real estate prices in India are inverse to the country's image of a developing nation. "Mumbai and Delhi command one of the highest per sq ft rates in the world," says Anshuman Magazine, CMD, CB Richard Ellis, South Asia, a leading global property consultancy firm.

In India while the land cost itself is high, the cost of quality is even higher. If one is paying Rs. 38,000 per sq ft for an apartment in the Burj Khalifa in Dubai, for the same price or more in Mumbai or Delhi one will only be paying for the location and not for the construction or amenities. In terms of amenities and quality there is just no comparison. Magazine adds that, in the U.S. when a buyer looks to buy a home, he or she first looks for the amenities on offer that would suit his or her lifestyle, whereas in India it's all about land and location for the buyer.

While Mumbai and New Delhi are in a zone by themselves as far as realty pricing is considered, other big cities like Chennai and Bangalore are yet to see such pricing, though the rates have dramatically shot up in the recent past.”


January 27, 2010

Land Contact


Below I have just posted information on three separate agricultural parcels of land which are currently available for purchase in the Tiruvannamalai area. In all cases, planning permission for projects will be easily available. Please Right Click on all photographs to view an enlarged version. For more information, particularly rate, please get in touch with me direct at the contact link at the top left corner of this page.

Ashram or Community

Right Click to view enlarged version of all photos



The below agricultural parcel is ideal for an Ashram or Community Resource. The land is set in a very tranquil area south of Arunachala. Water is plentiful and the size of the parcel is 5 acres.






To reach the land you go down the Sathanur Dam roadway for about 7 kms and then turn right into the Arunachala countryside.



















Serene Countryside

The below series of photographs are of pristine, agricultural land located south of Arunachala. Take the Sathanur Dam roadway for about 7 kms south and then turn right into the countryside -- which lays at the back of the Samudram Erie.

The land is flat except for a hilly mound surrounded by trees in which currently stands the shell of a simple house and a cow shed.









Water is in abundant supply and can be found at an easy level.






The beginning of Reserve Forest lies a couple of fields away from the land, making the whole area open and peaceful.












The land is about 10 kms from Tiruvannamalai which means it will be spared from developers, but is only about 6 kms from the base of Arunachala (as the crow flies).





This land parcel consists of 4.8 acres.

Tharadepet Village

Right Click on photos to view enlarged version


This beautiful agricultural land is located on the outskirts of Tharadapet Village and is about 12 kms (as the crow flies) southwest of Arunachala but about 18 Kms by roadway. The land is reached by leaving Tiruvannamalai on the road to Sathanur Dam and then turning right after about 10 kms into the surrounding countryside.






Arunachala is clearly visible from the land but on the day we visited the Hill was surrounded by mist so wasn’t able to take a photograph of Arunachala from the land.






The land has two agricultural tanks (one appears in the photos). The hand drawn sketch of the land will give an idea of its location and shape. Apparently some of the land has not been farmed for several years so in places is overgrown.










The size of the land for sale is 10.40 acres.



August 5, 2009

Tiruvannamalai 18 Kms East

If you are interested in getting out of the Tiruvannamalai area, the below photographs are of a place near Kondam Village off the Tiruvannamalai-Vellore Highway. The land which is located around 18 kms from Arunachaleswarar Temple is in a peaceful setting.

The below photograph is of the Vellore Highway with ancient Tamarind Trees on both sides of the road.









Seasonal crops are being raised throughout the year. Rice, Groundnut and sugarcane are the major crops. The red soil is fertile and is maintained in pristine condition. A massive well and pump set, is used to facilitate irrigation. Under ground tubes are used to carry water from the well. A 5 horse power motor is used to pump the water from the well.





The next two photographs are of the trees framing the Vellore Highway and the 2.60 acre land parcel on offer, is located 150 metres distant.






For information about the cost of the land please get in touch with me direct at:
arunachalagrace@fastmail.fm

August 1, 2009

8 Kms from Arunachala

Am posting the below photographs of a beautiful agricultural farm comprising 5.8 acres and currently available some 8 kms from the base of Arunachala.




The access road to the land is excellent. Turn left and it takes you direct to the Bangalore Highway, turn right and it zig-zags its way through the countryside to Perumbakkam Road and Ramana Nagar.






At the entrance to the land stands a beautiful ancient Kali Shrine.





Encompassed with an ancient Tamarind Tree.






The water table at the land is around 40 feet. There are two agricultural wells located on the land and the water is sweet and abundant. The land has not been cultivated for over three years - so it has had time to divest itself of pesticides and chemicals.





Surrounding lands are cultivating paddy, sugarcane, vegetables, dhals and spices and are abundant with coconut trees.





The land is ideal for an ashram or cultivation. To find out more about this beautiful agricultural offering, please get in touch with me at:
arunachalagrace@fastmail.fm



July 26, 2009

Buying a home?

Found an excellent article entitled, 'Buying a home? 6 vital steps to follow', by Pankaj Anup Toppo., and which was originally posted in Outlook India (Money). The article starts starts:


"When the real estate sector was on a dream run from 2002-03 till around January 2008, home buyers in most cases overlooked many issues that are coming to the fore now. Avoiding some common mistakes can make the process of selecting and buying a house a little simpler.

Before you buy. Most mistakes happen at this stage.

Home search. A typical home search starts with scanning advertisements. But, this means you will have to check everything on your own - the developer's credentials, his ability to deliver on time and the approved building plan. Not easy to do. Developers aren't usually forthcoming with this information. Even if they are, analysing it is tough, especially if you are a first-time buyer.

If you find a house on your own and at a price that suits you, getting a loan from a bank or a housing finance company isn't easy. The institution will do its own due diligence before approving the loan, which means you will have to wait for some more time. And, if the lender finds a problem with the project, it may not sanction the loan.

A simpler way is to approach the bank or the HFC from where you plan to take the home loan. Most of them have a list of pre-approved properties. They include properties on which the necessary checks have been done. If you choose from this list, loan approval will be faster. The only hitch is that these properties will typically cost a little more."

The article goes on to discuss; payment mode, developer agreement, property dealers, choosing the Bank and facts to consider after the purchase.

To read the article in its entirety, please go to this link here.