Monthly Archives: December 2011

Can Himalaya scale new heights?

Ravi Prasad

Lifestyle diseases have boosted the Ayurvedic firm’s performance, but it needs more advertising.

India’s increasing affluence and accompanying ‘lifestyle’ diseases such as diabetes have boosted this Ayurvedic company’s performance, but it needs to do more on advertising and distribution.

Consider this: India has over 61 million diabetics according to the International Diabetes Foundation. By 2030, this figure is expected to cross 100 million. By that time, India will be second only to China in terms of the number of diabetics in the world. This is not all. Cancer is also catching up fast as a killer disease. According to the Indian health & family welfare ministry, some 5.35 lakh patients succumbed to cancer this year. Though marginally higher than the figure reported last year, the signs are clearly not good.

India is rapidly seeing the emergence and growth of lifestyle diseases. As affluence grows, bringing with it a change in dietary habits, ailments such as cancer, diabetes and heart problems are becoming the order of the day. Ironically it is throwing up a myriad of possibilities for the herbal healthcare company, Himalaya, which banks on the science of Ayurveda to develop products. The perception that Ayurveda is also safe in comparison to mainstream allopathy is what makes the prospects of firms such as Himalaya bright, say market experts.

The unlisted, Bangalore-based entity has a turnover of over Rs 1,000 crore. Key verticals — pharma and FMCG — which contribute 60 per cent and 40 per cent respectively to overall revenues are growing at a clip of about 25-32 per cent per annum, according to Ravi Prasad, executive chairman, Himalaya Drug Company, who has been with the firm for well over 20 years now. Under him, the largely pharma company, which was formed in 1930, stepped into the FMCG space in 1999. Considered a close confidant of the low-profile Manal family, who are founder-promoters of Himalaya, Prasad has driven Himalaya’s international expansion into markets such as Russia, Ukraine and Romania. Today, Himalaya products —both pharma and FMCG— are available in over 80 markets including the US, Europe, South East Asia and the Middle East.

Himalaya is also counting on its international markets to drive growth as it seeks to move to the next level in the coming years. The move to step into FMCG over a decade ago, say Prasad, was prompted by the firm’s need to grow. Driving growth in international markets is key now, he says.

Ironically, with the world increasingly moving from largely curative to preventive medication, Himalaya with its herbal heritage finds itself in a unique position: to address medical needs with patented products that are based on good, solid research. “Most Indian pharmaceuticals companies are in the generics space which is largely a volume-driven business. We do not operate in that segment,” says Prasad.

The pharmaceuticals market in India is roughly Rs 56,000 crore, growing at a clip of about 15 per cent per annum. Over 95-96 per cent of the market comprises generics players, who market off-patent allopathic products. Himalaya, in contrast, has opted to build a strong pipeline of herbal products. The journey typically from R&D to final product takes easily about eight to ten years, says Prasad.

Thanks to this, Himalaya has some notable products to its name including Cystone (for people suffering from kidney stones) and Liv.52 (for those suffering from kidney ailments). Liv.52, in fact, is ranked amongst the top ten pharma products in the country, according to market research agency ORG IMS (see chart).

Liv.52 also happens to be among Himalaya’s early success stories. Launched in 1955, the herbal product went on to become one of the most trusted names in liver care. Available in tablets as well as syrups, Liv.52 has a share of close to 46 per cent in its space, and consists of Ayurvedic herbs that helps restore the functional efficiency of the liver (check chart on Liv.52). The drug also acts as a daily health supplement that helps improve appetite and promotes weight gain.

Cystone, the other blockbuster drug in Himalaya’s arsenal, was launched in 1943. It has a share of 40 per cent, and is considered to be effective in tackling the problem of kidney stones in more than 70 per cent of patients (check chart on Cystone). Company executives say that what has worked for both Liv.52 and Cystone, and indeed, all pharmaceutical products under Himalaya, is their recommendation by not just Ayurvedic doctors, but also practitioners of allopathy.

Philip Haydon, chief executive officer, pharmaceutical division, Himalaya, says that it is this recommendation by doctors over the years that helped the company sustain double-digit growth.

The company is keen to replicate this success in other areas such as oncology (cancer-related medication), viral & tropical diseases, stem cell therapy and nutritional products. “These are some areas we are working on,” says Prasad. On the FMCG front, the company is looking to add advanced anti-ageing to its repertoire of products, which includes skincare (facewashes, creams, moisturisers), haircare (shampoos, conditioners, hair oils), footcare, oralcare (toothpastes) and lipcare respectively.

Saket Gore“There are some other vacant spots too in our FMCG portfolio such as hair colour, deodorants and men’s products. But we are not immediately rushing into these segments,” says Saket Gore, chief executive officer, consumer products division, Himalaya.

With a nation-wide presence with facewashes and lipcare, and a regional, mostly south-centric presence in other categories, Gore says that his hands are full at the moment. In face-washes, lipcare and shampoos, which are Himalaya’s most important categories, key rivals include Hindustan Unilever (HUL) and Lóreal respectively. In lip care, for instance, Himalaya is third after HUL and Lóreal, while in facewashes, it stands at number two after HUL, and marginally ahead of Lóreal.

HIMALAYA’S STAR PERFORMERS
Liv.52 Cystone
* Liv.52 was launched in 1955 * Cystone was launched in 1943
* The drug is made from Himsra (Capparis spinosa) and Kasani (Cichorium intybus) extracts * It is the only herbal drug available for treating urinary stones and positive results are recorded in more than 70% of patients
* It is the only herbal medicine to be ranked amongst the top 10 pharmaceutical products in India * The drug is made from Gokshura (Tribulus terrestris), Pasanabheda (Bergenia Ligulata) and Shilapushpa (Didymocarpus pedicellata) extracts
* Backed by 264 clinical trials and one meta-analysis study in infective hepatitis * It has undergone 90 clinical trials and is prescribed by doctors in several countries
* The drug continues to be prescribed by doctors worldwide after 56 years of launch * Cystone tablets (60s) is priced at Rs 80 and Cystone syrup at Rs 70
* Present in over 65 countries around the world
* Liv.52 tablets (100s) are priced at Rs 60 and Liv.52 Syrup 100ml and 200ml are priced at Rs 52 and Rs 75 respectively.

 

For all this, analysts have an interesting take to offer about Himalaya’s FMCG play. Unlike pharma, which is the backbone of the 81-year-old-company, FMCG is a newer business, launched 12 years ago with Ayurvedic Concepts. The latter was subsumed into the larger Himalaya brand name owing to the heft it carried with consumers. From then to now, the business has grown in double-digits, but remains smaller than the mainstay pharma business. Pharma also lands up sucking bulk of the profits on account of its intensive focus on R&D.

According to Haydon, the pharma division has a three-to-five-year-pipeline of products ready. “Our basket is full,” he says. “There are no dearth of products.”

With a total reach of about 4 lakh doctors worldwide, Himalaya’s pharma business is largely push-driven (that is, driven by medical representatives who hard sell the product to doctors, who eventually recommend or prescribe it to their patients). The FMCG business, on the other hand, is pull-driven (that means it banks heavily on consumers being drawn to products based on aggressive advertising, marketing and distribution).

While Gore declines to give investment details, he does admit that the firm has some miles to go on both brand-building and distribution.

In the south, for instance, the channel of distribution for Himalaya in FMCG is modern-trade (that is, organised retail stores), not traditional trade (that is, neighbourhood or kirana stores). Kirana stores give over 90 per cent of sales to an FMCG company so Himalaya’s limitation to organised retail stores for categories such as shampoos is a clear disadvantage. Its national categories facewashes and lipcare, in contrast, are distributed via both traditional and modern trade. “But FMCG calls for a lot of investment,” admits Gore.

With peers in the space such as Dabur and Emami spending substantially more on both distribution and A&P (that is, advertising & promotion), the task is not easy, say analysts. Adspends as a pecentage of sales for most listed FMCG companies including Dabur and Emami is in the region of about 10-12 per cent. In the case of Himalaya, it is significantly lower, say market experts. Investment in distribution is also lower than peers, say experts. For listed FMCG companies, distribution expenditure as a percentage of sales is about 5-6 per cent of sales, they say.

Gore says that the firm is working on ramping up FMCG distribution largely through modern trade. It also has its own network of 129 retail stores, largely used as information centres than points of sales.” So far this year, we have added eight stores. And we propose to keep this momentum going,” he says.

But with competition only heating up in FMCG, thanks to the entry of new players as well as the actions of existing players, opting to play in a limited geography using limited tools of distribution may not be the best strategy, say analysts. Gore responds by saying that Himalaya’s products remain strong. “The focus for us is there,” he says.

source: http://www.business-standard.com / Home> Companies & Industry / by Vicent Susan Pinto / Mumbai, December 21st, 2011

Bangalore school wins national competition

BANGALORE:

For the team of four that travelled from DAV Public School to Secunderabad, winning Upakaran 2011, the National Level Science Project Competition organised by M S Ramaiah Institute of Technology in Bangalore was thrilling to say the least.

Their project titled- ‘Generation of energy from speed breaker’, focused on generating electricity every time when a vehicle passes a speed breaker.

“We were pitted against participants from pre-university colleges in Bangalore and our project was really simple. But we think our project is a multi-purpose one, and we would definitely like to apply it in the future,” said Bhoja Ramakrishna, one of the winner, a class eleven student at DAV Public School, Secunderabad.

Using a copper coil, a magnet and a galvanometer, the team explained the viability and potential of the project to the judges.

Deepthi, Nanda, Harshitha and Yogapriya from Sri Kumarans Home Composite College shared the second place with Srinivas K N and Charitha T of PES PU College, Bangalore.

Judged by Dr Bhanuprashant, Professor, BNMIT, Prof Srinivas, MSRIT, and Dr. Venkatesh, MSRIT, winners were awarded with Rs 25,000 and Rs 15000 cash prizes.

source: http://www.ibnlive.in.com / Bangalore, posted December 17th, 2011 / Express News Service / The New Indian Expres

 

Exotic varieties of tea in Bangalore

BANGALORE:

In the series of Tea boutiques in India, Golden Tips of Darjeeling has entered the Bangalore market, launching more than 250 varieties of exotic tea.

It was officially launched at the hands of noted Kannada Actress Roopa Shree at Phoenix market city mall.

Speaking at the launch of Tea Boutique, Tea Taster and Managing Director of Golden Tips Tea Company Limited, Madhav Sarda said, ‘In order to create awareness & popularize tea as a health & wellness beverage we have conceived the idea of opening tea boutiques across India.”

The Boutique will not only allow Bangaloreans to taste the finest, purest and freshest teas but also to see, taste and purchase a large variety of Darjeeling Teas which are perceived as the World’s best.

He added,“We wish to invite the residents and corporates of Bengaluru to come, see, feel, smell, sip and enjoy this wonderful beverage.” The store had exotic teas from Darjeeling, Assam Nilgiris and also the speciality Jubilee Tea, Pride of Darjeeling, Second Pick, Queen of Hills and Jasmine Tea to name a few.

source: http://www.ibnlive.in.com / Bangalore / posted December 17th, 2011 / Express News Service / The new Indian Express

 

Tenpin bowling is right up her alley

 

If life is a bowling alley then Prathima Hegde and her husband Kannan R are pins you’ll struggle to knock down.

The couple, with endless energy and patience -one as a pro-bowler and the other as a sportsadministrator -have shown that passion for a sport, whose real potential few people are aware of, can lead to excellence that makes all the sacrifice and struggle worthwhile. “Tenpin bowling started off as a lark for us, like it does with many recreational bowlers,” said Prathima, who claimed her second national championship in Bangalore recently.

“Kannan’s French partner had come down to Bangalore in 2000-2001 and we went to G’s Lanes on Brigade Road to bowl,” added Prathima, who, like mosBANGALORE:t amateurs, began with the five-step process. “We then began frequenting Megabowl and slowly took up the sport seriously.” The seeds of an action plan for her career were sowed in 2001, when Kannan, a businessnman and the secretary general of Tenpin Bowling Federation of India, read about bowling being an Asian. Games sport with 12 gold medals on offer and took Prathima to Mumbai for the nationals to watch the action.

 

“Kannan contacted the World Tenpin Bowling Federartion president, who was a Malaysian of Indian origin, and invited him to India. The gentleman was happy to promote the sport in our country,” Prathima said. “In the 2003-2004 season I began bowling with the hook technique. Noted coach Holloway Cheah was there. After the first ball I bowled, he went up to Kannan, who also plays the sport, and said I had talent and I could be groomed,” Prathima said. “By then, I had almost given up competitive bowling. With top coaches telling me about her talent, I decided to step into the background and do what I do better,” said Kannan, who helped start theKarnataka State Tenpin Bowling Association in 2003.

Prathima, who finished ninth in the women’s masters event of the 5th Commonwealth Tenpin Bowling Championship, admitted that initial overseas trips did make her question her ability. “In India, there are not many women with the right technique. However, after having played outside India for a few years, I have gained confidence. The fact that I have finished in the top 24 in two World Cups has helped me believe I am good enough.

Now, our technique is as good as any other player’s,” she said. That confidence impacted her domestic form too and she won her maiden national championship in 2009. Prathima said her mantra is to be on par with the men. “When I play, I try to play like a guy. I try to be more of a go-getter and that makes my average go up. The game’s all about hand-eye coordination and fitness. More importantly, bowling is a gender-free sport and in some countries the men’s and women’s nationals winners face off against each other.

We don’t have it in India,” she said. Prathima, who has won 14 gold medals in 20 events in the last four national team championships, said her husband played a huge role in pushing her to excel. “He was there with me at every point of my career and manage household chores in my absence,” Prathima said. A mother to 10-year-old budding tennis player Annika, Prathima said managing a family and a successful career in sport was not easy. “There were times when thoughts about quitting the sport became constant,” said Prathima, adding things got especially tough when she travelled.

“Now my daughter is used to it and takes pride in the fact that I’m doing well,” she said. “My parents are ever ready to help me pursue my dreams and take pleasure in the fact that their daughter is doing well.” An alumnus of Kendriya Vidyalaya and Government College, Chandigarh, Prathima said said parental pressure to take up academics and negative attitudes towards a career in sport should not deter girls. “I want more girls to take up the sport.” Prathima said that the achievements of other athletes inspired her.

“I sometimes question myself about being in the sport despite my age (she is 40). However, I always think back to the Asian Games in 2006 where I watched Geet Sethi represent India with so much passion and I quickly forget those thoughts. Sometimes age has been a factor, but lately it’s not. I train regularly and work hard on my fitness which keeps me going,” she said.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / Home> City> Bangalore> Namma Metro / by ShriVathsa Sridhar / TNN / December 05th, 2011

 

Ugandan children recieve heart surgery in India

Kampala, Uganda:

Six Ugandan children will receive life-saving heart surgeries at the Narayana hospital in Bangalore India last week.


Chairman of the Indian Association of Uganda (IAU) Shalendra Kundra said the operations will be conducted by Dr. Devi Shetty a cardiologist.
“The operation has been made possible by IAU through donations from the Indian community that totaled to Ushs 200 million as charity,” said Shalendra.
Before the first decision to take the children to India, there was a possibility for the surgery to be conducted in Uganda at a lower cost but experts discovered that the facilities were insufficient to carry out such a complicated operation.
The Indian High Commissioner to Uganda S.N Ray said that the move by the Indian society in Uganda is part of the commitment to help Uganda’s vulnerable children.
“Many parents cannot afford the high costs of medication and facilitation to India for the operation and so the association resolved to give a helping hand,” Ray said.
Ray referred to the 19 year old Arinaitwe Emily who had been struggling with the heart problem for such a long time since birth because the patients could not afford the high charges.
Arinaitwe had to forego UACE exams for the surgery because it was scheduled during the same time. Shalendra added that they have embarked on consultation with the heart consultants in India to extend the screening services to Uganda.
“Screening will ease selection of worst conditioned patients because there were over 400 applications which made selection costly,” Shalendra added.
Veronica Busingye a parent of Lukuba Jeremiah aged three is optimistic that the surgery will improve the health of her child that has been complicated over the years.
The association has helped over 20 heart patients undergo heart surgery since the initiation of the project in 2008.
The surgeries that are expected to run for a month will see the patients accompanied by their guardians.

source: http://www.busiweek.com / East African Business Week / Home> Science & Technology> Health / by Eriosi Nantaba / Sunday, December 04th, 2011

Bird-Lovers Throng LINGAMBUDI Lake

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Mysore, Nov. 28 :

Braving the incessant drizzle and chilly weather, over a 100 bird- lovers including many children had assembled at 7 am yesterday at Lingambudi Lake in Ramakrishnanagar here for the bird-watching programme organised by Arivu Balaga.

Suprisingly, a few people had arrived from Bangalore and other places to have a glimpse of the exotic migratory birds.

All the bird-lovers lined up on the banks of the lake and stood in hushed silence to listen to the twitter of the birds.

Environmentalists K.B. Sadanand, Mohan Kumar, P. Guruprasad, Ravi Kumar, Rajkumar, Dr. Abhijit and Sahana were present as Resource Persons providing needed information on the birds, their habitats and food habits to the bird-watchers. An interaction was also held on the vagaries of weather at the birds’ habitats and their migratory routes.

Among the migratory birds were also seen local species of birds like cranes, owls, hornbills and bee-eaters.

ACF D

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / General News / November 28th, 2011

 

Govt. takes over JEHAGIRDAR Bungalow Yelandur

 

 

 

 

Dewan Poornaiah Memorial Museum to come up

Dewan Poornaiah’s descendant Sukanya Poornaiah and family members are seen handing over the draft lease papers to Archaeology and Museums Department Director Dr. R. Gopal. Picture right shows the majestic bungalow.

Yelandur, Dec.1:

– In the wake of the State Government giving its tentative approval to convert the historical Jehagirdar Bungalow here into Dewan Poornaiah Memorial District Museum, the 8th generation descendant of Poornaiah family, Sukanya Poornaiah, signed the draft copy of the lease document indicating the formal handover of the bungalow to the government for a period of 33 years at the office of the Sub-Registrar here recently.

Accordingly, the neglected bungalow will soon become the long cherished museum.

Background: Recognising the services of Poornaiah, who was the Dewan during the tenure of Hyder Ali, Tipu Sultan and Mysore Maharajas, Mummadi Krishnaraja Wadiyar had in 1807, after obtaining permission from the British, given the taluk of Yelandur to Poornaiah who became the Jehagirdar.

To etch the name of Poornaiah to remain permanent in the annals of history, his descendant P.N. Krishnamurthy got a huge complex constructed with ornate sculptures at Yelandur and Jehagirdar Bungalow was the prominent one.

During the signing-in ceremony, Sukanya Poornaiah’s family members Rajiv, Sanjeev and Madhav, Archaeology and Museums Director Dr. R. Gopal, In-charge Sub-Registrar Rudraiah and others were present.

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / General News / December 01st, 2011

 

Guv presents Award to City’s CHESS CHAMP

Caption: Governor H.R. Bhardwaj presenting the award to chess champ B.N. Gangamma in Bangalore recently.

Mysore, Dec. 2:

City’s chess champ B.N. Gangamma, studying in VVS Pandit Nehru High school here, was presented Prathiba Puraskar award by the Government of Karnataka for her contribution towards the game during the Children’s Day function held in Bangalore recently.

Gangamma has played and won many State-level and National-level chess tournaments.

She had secured 5th place in Under-13 National chess championship held at Pondicherry. Recently, she captained the Karnataka Under-15 girls team and won the bronze medal.

Gangamma will be taking part in the Asian school championship to be held in Delhi from December 14 to 24.

She is the daughter of Balladichanda Nachappa and Vidya Nachappa, residents of Sara-swathipuram.

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / General News / December 02nd, 2011

 

Cisco’s New Healthpresence Focuses on Rural India


A village woman in K’taka is shown using Cisco’s HealthPresence. (photo courtesy of Cisco)

U.S. technology giant Cisco Nov. 14 unveiled the second generation of its platform for telemedicine, known as Healthpresence, focusing its efforts on India where at least 175 million rural dwellers lack access to any health care services.

Healthpresence allows physicians in several countries to remotely conduct consultations with patients who may be hundreds of miles away. In India, private hospitals, the defense sector and state governments in Karnataka and Madhya Pradesh have signed on to use Healthpresence; the service is already available in 11 districts and can be accessed by up to one million people.

“In India, there’s a huge mismatch between the availability of doctors and where they’re needed,” Vishal Gupta, vice president and general manager of Cisco Global Healthcare Solutions, told India-West by teleconference from Bangalore, where he is based. Patients must often travel hundreds of miles to see a physician, he said, noting that the need for doctors and specialists is most acute in rural India.

“We want to be the ATM of healthcare services,” said Gupta, envisioning Healthpresence kiosks in a variety of rural and semi-urban settings, such as malls.

An earlier version of the product, which was released two years ago, required Cisco’s Telepresence, a high bandwidth platform. But the version of Healthpresence rolled out by Cisco last week can be used on low bandwidth platforms, including desktop computers.

Healthpresence 2.0 features the flexibility to be used across several platforms, from a high-end Telepresence-based system, to a low bandwidth version which is portable and can be used in a mobile medicine van, said Gupta, noting that bandwidth is still an issue in many remote parts of India.

The new version of Healthpresence can be maintained on a server by a service provider who provides repairs and updates to the system, eliminating the need for an in-house IT specialist and lowering the overall cost, said Gupta.

Healthpresence patients sit in a special consulting room – known as a primary health care center – which has a screen allowing them to see their doctor, and specialized diagnostic equipment including a digitized stethoscope which allows a doctor to listen to his patient’s heart and lungs remotely.

A digitized torch and otoscope allow the physician to remotely examine a patient’s ears, nose and throat.

Healthpresence can also be used by specialists.

Sunita Maheshwari, a Bangalore-based pediatric cardiologist and founder of RxDx, which uses Healthpresence to connect to patients in the low-income district of Raichur in northen Karnataka, said Cisco’s product works very well in telemedicine.

“We were skeptical at first, wondering will rural India’s villages accept such technology. But they’re really thrilled because they have a doctor out there for the first time,” the Indian American Maheshwari, who was trained at Yale, told India-West.

RxDx remote clinics provide primary care doctors from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on a walk-in basis, and appointments can be made for consultations with specialists. The clinic has a staff of 70 physicians, with a mix of specialties, including pediatrics, and serves about 600 patients a month in Raichur, which is an overnight train journey from Bangalore.

Maheshwari – dubbed the “Queen of Hearts” by India Today magazine – said she hopes to next hook up with practices in remote states such as Bihar to provide Healthpresence services there. She estimated that one-quarter of India’s 700 million village dwellers – 175 million people – currently lack access to any healthcare services.

The Osmania University alumnus said the desktop version of Healthpresence was very scalable and could be used anywhere. “I could be sitting anywhere and treating patients not just in Raichur, but also in Tanzania,” she asserted.

The need for access to healthcare in India has gone up phenomenally with the advent of chronic diseases in the population. The country accounts for 60 percent of the world’s heart disease patients, according to data released last year by the World Health Organization, and is home to 35 million diabetics, the largest number on the globe.

Cancer is also on the rise with almost 400,000 people in India dying each year from various types of the disease. The overall oncology market is growing at about 20 percent per annum, Pradeep Jaisingh, founder and CEO of New Delhi-based International Oncology, told India-West in June.

Gupta stated that the Indian government has shown its commitment to telemedicine, promising to increase funding to public health care.

And in September, Sachin Pilot, India’s young Minister of Communications and Information Technology, unveiled a plan that would lay out 500,000 miles of optical fibre throughout the country, bringing high-speed connectivity to every remote area of India within the next two years.

source: http://www.indiawest.com / News> US Indian / by Sunita Sohrabji, Staff Reporter / December 01st, 2011

‘The Romance of Indian Coffee’ released

Mysore, Nov. 30-The newly-launched book titled ‘The Romance of Indian Coffee,’ authored by the Bangalore-based senior journalist P.T. Bopanna, offers a 360-degree view of Indian coffee — the fascinating history of coffee, many charming facets of coffee culture, its symbiosis with nature and what makes coffee such a captivating brew.

The book highlights how Indian coffee is unique and stands out in the global market. Unlike the coffee produced in other countries, Indian coffee is totally shade-grown and is much in demand internationally.

The author has chronicled the contribution of Ivor Bull, the British planter from Coorg, who conceived the idea of the ‘pooling system’ to save the coffee industry during the Second World War.

For those interested in the variety of ways in which coffee can be prepared, a separate chapter has been devoted in the book on how to prepare a good cup of coffee, especially South Indian filter coffee. Recipes for other interesting and popular coffee concoctions, including recipes for making coffee liqueur have also been included.

There is an interesting chapter on how the pioneering British coffee planters spent their days in the estates in 1880s. The book also deals with the current issues that threaten planters — deforestation, climate change, fluctuating prices and man-animal conflict.

Brand specialist Harish Bijoor, who has a vast experience in the coffee industry, has written the foreword for the book. Among those who have contributed articles for the book include, agriculture scientists, Dr. Anand Titus Pereira and his wife, Mrs. Geeta Nanaiah Pereira, who have been working diligently on their model coffee farm on sustainable technologies.

The book has been published by Prism Books Pvt Ltd, Bangalore, and is priced at Rs. 270.

Bopanna’s other books include ‘Rise and Fall of the Coorg State,’ published in 2009; ‘Discover Coorg’ published in 2006; ‘Dateline Coorg,’ a compilation of his articles on Coorg in the last two decades and ‘Coorg: Land of Beauty and Valour,’ a coffee table book, published in 2010.

Bopanna runs www.coorg tourisminfo.com, the first news and tourism portal of Coorg. He may be contacted on Mobile: 93424-30141.

source: http://www.starof mysore.com / General News / Wednesday, November 30th, 2011