The British called it "the Scotland of India" and they had a point. Coorg — officially Kodagu — sits at 900–1,700 m in the central Western Ghats. It rains 300 centimetres a year, the hills are green all year, and an indigenous warrior clan called the Kodavas still wears saffron turbans and carries silver-hilted daggers at weddings. Oh, and on average it grows 33% of all coffee produced in India.
A kingdom that never fully joined India
Kodagu is a small land — 4,100 sq km, about half the size of Goa — but it was an independent kingdom for most of recorded history. The Haleri Raj, a branch of the Lingayat Veerashaiva dynasty, ruled from 1600 to 1834 from their fortified capital Madikeri. When the British defeated the last king, Chikka Virarajendra, in 1834, they merged Coorg into the Madras Presidency but granted the Kodavas a unique privilege: exemption from the Arms Act. To this day, Kodavas are the only Indians allowed to own guns without a licence.
The Kodavas are not culturally Kannadiga — they have their own language (Kodava Takk), their own animist ancestor worship (Karona), no Brahmin priests and a strict warrior code. Coorgi men and women served in disproportionate numbers in the Indian Army; the community produced two army chiefs (including Field Marshal K.M. Cariappa, the first Indian commander-in-chief) from a population of just 135,000. The biggest festival, Kail Podh in September, is a gun-festival: every household cleans and worships its firearms, then goes on a ceremonial hunt.
How one district grew a third of India's coffee
Coffee arrived in Coorg in the 1670s via a Sufi saint called Baba Budan, who smuggled seven Yemeni coffee beans out of Mecca during his Hajj pilgrimage and planted them on the hill now called Baba Budan Giri — half a day north of Coorg. By the 1850s the British had cleared sal forests across Kodagu to plant Arabica. Today the district produces around 105,000 tonnes of coffee annually — most of it Robusta, under shade trees that also grow pepper, cardamom and vanilla as secondary crops. The harvest season runs December to February — and this is when you want to be here.
What to do in three slow days
- Stay on a plantation homestay — Tata's Plantation Trails, Ibni Springs, or family-run Alath-Cad. ₹3,000–₹8,000/night including Kodava meals.
- Trek Tadiandamol (1,748 m) at dawn — Karnataka's second-highest peak, 3 hrs up, 2 hrs down.
- Visit Abbey Falls and the Raja's Seat garden in Madikeri.
- Eat pandi curry (pork in kachampuli vinegar, black pepper and curry leaves) — the Kodava signature dish.
- At Dubare, volunteer for the morning elephant bath on the Kaveri riverbank.
Combine it with south India's classics
Coorg pairs beautifully with the rest of southern Karnataka. Three hours east is Mysore Palace, the extravagant Wadiyar royal residence; another 8 hours east is the ruined Vijayanagara capital of Hampi. South, across the state border, the tea hills of Munnar and the Kerala backwaters are only 6 hours away. See all Karnataka destinations or browse Hill Stations.
“The Kodava is born with a gun in one hand and a coffee bean in the other.”
About the author
YatraJunction Editorial
Our editors are travellers, historians and food lovers who have collectively visited every state of India. Every guide is fact-checked, field-tested and updated with love.
Learn about usFrequently asked questions
- When is the best time to visit Coorg?
- October to March for clear weather and coffee-harvest season. The coffee blossom — a week-long white bloom — usually happens in early March and is one of the most magical sights in India. Avoid June–August monsoon when trekking is dangerous.
- How do I reach Coorg?
- Fly to Mangalore (150 km / 4 hrs) or Bangalore (260 km / 6 hrs), then drive to Madikeri. The nearest train station is Mysore (120 km / 3 hrs). There is no airport inside Coorg.
- Are homestays better than hotels in Coorg?
- Yes. A plantation homestay gives you guided estate walks, authentic Kodava food, and usually better views than any hotel. Book in advance for December–January — the good ones sell out two months ahead.

















