Day trip to Mysore

Bangalore is a great city, however it is mostly famous for pubs and food. Hence, we ventured for a day trip somewhere not too far and Mysore is considered to be very close.

As none of us drive, and we did not fancy being stuck in traffic, we took an early morning train to get there, which takes around 3 hours. As we had previous experience with public trains in India where we had chosen ordinary tickets, we decided to book the Deluxe VIP seats and literally had no idea what to expect this time. The train station itself was huge, and there were already quite a few people at 6 a.m. in the morning.

Me in our Deluxe VIP cabin

I was also pleasantly surprised how disabled carriage was called ”For differently abled”.

disabled carriage india
Carriage for Differently Abled

Train was delayed by about 40 min, but we met some local people in another carriage and ended up chatting so time passed quickly. They were both from Bangalore, a young woman and her father. We were discussing environmental issues, different Indian cities, some cultural differences and accountancy (the dad was a chartered accountant now working for PE). It was interesting to hear thoughts of local people.

By the time we reached Mysore, the delay reduced to about 30 min. We left the train and were instantly hit with heat and humidity. We often forget how fortunate we are with the weather in Bangalore, so it was a good reminder.

Mysore is a city in Karnataka state and it used to be a the capital of the Kingdom of Mysore. The cultural ambience of Mysore has earned it a title of Cultural Capital of Karnataka and it is mostly famous for the Mysore Palace.

Mysore rail station

As we only had one day, we pre-booked a taxi driver for the whole day to show us the main sightseeing spots. Several people approached us persistently trying to offer taxi, but by now we are fairly good at being assertive with ”we already have a car booked”. Our driver got to the station fairly quickly and we started our tour.

We were rather hungry and I had no breakfast, hence first stop was food. I identified one famous place, from a book about India I found when I was in Goa. It said it serves biryani on banana leaves so I was intrigued by the whole concept. I did a quick search on google, and reviews also stated that it is one of the best biryanis in town, so we went there, to the Hotel RRR. They only serve biryani and it was delicious – fairly spicy though! I have a rather curious mind when it comes to food, and will try almost anything, so I did not hesitate to pick and try whatever we had on the table – a big mistake. I did not know what exactly it was, but I took something what looked like a dried fig. I put the whole ”fig” in my mouth and it was super spicy! I had to spit it all out and just tried a tiny bit – am normally very good with spices, but this was something else. Apparently it’s spicy dried chutney and you are not supposed to eat it whole.

It was very central so our next stop was Mysore Palace located nearby. It’s HUGE. It costs INR 70 to enter inside the palace and they also have a light show in the evening. There were many tourists, both local and international, visiting the place and we took about an hour exploring it all. You also had to pay for shoes bag and take off your shoes if you wanted to enter the palace. We did go inside, however I mostly liked the outside areas. The palace is very beautiful and well maintained. We also found some elephants and camels there and I am not too sure for what exact purpose they were kept there. Palace was definitely the highlight of the day. They also do a light show at certain times in the evening, but we did not know about it at that time and eventually we missed it.

Mysore Palace

After the Palace, we stopped for a coffee as an early Saturday train didn’t sit well with late Friday evening’s events and we needed to stay awake for a long day ahead. Driver took us to some local coffee shop where we could sit down and have some caffeine. We then headed to Chamundi Hills where we could see Chamundeshwari Temple, Mahishasura statue and Big Bull. It was about 30min drive, but the drive itself was a pleasure – no traffic, no beeping. It was a nice change compared to Bangalore traffic for sure.

Chamundeshwari Temple

The temple was fairly big and it already had a huge queue of locals ready to get inside as it was just before the opening time. We looked around it and decided that we do not want to queue and did not go inside. Monkeys were everywhere and they kept fighting among themselves. The Mahishasura statue appeared to have some work being done so I didn’t manage to get a nice shot. It also stands in a traffic circle near the parking lot, so there were people sitting around it.

The Bull statue also did not impress me, perhaps we needed to read more history behind it to fully appreciate it.

Driver then took us to the view point – it is a bit bizarre that we were taken to an area where you have to pay for several minutes to take a photo, when there are so many free areas just a bit further. Obviously we found it funny and just took photos from other areas. The view was okay, you could see Mysore Palace and I believe government building.

The view from the top

The driver then took us to a church. It was a big church and there was also an amateur wedding dress photoshoot happening, which was rather amusing to watch. It was a nice church, but it was similar to the ones I’ve seen in Europe and I preferred the one I accidentally stumbled in Bangalore – it had a big Mother Teresa’s picture. I did not even know that Mother Teresa was Indian!

St. Philomena’s Church

All the above places, apart from the eating places, were suggested by the driver. While he was driving us I noted a big posted about Sand Sculpture Museum and thought it would be fun to go there. Even though we had to turn around, it was really great. Once we entered, everyone was really friendly and although it was a very small area, the sculptures looked spectacular! It was also nice to support local artists with the small entrance fee. It is just on the way to Chamundi Hills again.

Inside Sand Sculpute Museum
The artist

After the museum, we made our way to Brindavan gardens. All of Mysore is very peaceful and clean, but these gardens were even more peaceful and very well looked after. We had to pay a small fee to enter, but it was worth it. It is about 40min drive and they do light show in the evening as well. As the day was coming to an end and we were getting hungry, we did not stay there too long.

Brindavan gardens
Brindavan gardens

I wanted to try something very local, I found on internet a restaurant called Anima Madhava Bhavan which looked very local and had good reviews in the past. However, most recent review where extremely bad – stating do not go to this place, rats are running around and food is not good. We did however go there and we were the only people, yet it was very local, food was good, service was exceptionally good (I don’t think they see many western tourist there) and overall it was a very pleasant unique dinner experience. It did not have upscale restaurant environment, but that’s what we wanted – a unique local spot. Food prices also reflected it and because we had such a good service (we could also sense that the waiter was nervous), we left a nice tip.

Dinner in Mysore

Overall it was a great trip, the most interesting things were the Mysore Palace, the gardens and the local dinner spot. We got to the Mysore train station and settled in our VIP Deluxe cabin and had a nice nap before arriving home to Bangalore.