• Why did you think of writing about cycling trails in Madras?
  • We started Cycling Yogis in 2012, during the Madras Week celebrations, when we were asked to arrange cycling events around the festivity. On exploring cycling trails around Mylapore and Triplicane, I found that there was some scope for me to do something with cycling and incorporate heritage within the experience.
  • I then wondered about how cycling came to Madras in the first place. My first book, History of Cycling in Madras (1877-1977) traces a hundred years of cycling, the result of three years of compilation and research.
  • When did you focus on area-specific trails?
  • After my second book, Madras by Cycle, came out, I felt it was still unfinished. Then my friend Virajitha Chimalapati, an architect, shared that she was doing research on George Town. That got me thinking, and led to my third book, George Town Bicycle Trials, a booklet of 20 trails.
  • As I keep exploring, I come across so many more landmarks and traditional spaces that I never knew existed. Of George Town, I was sure I’d given my best. I’m sure no one has scoured through George Town like we did for this book. It was a challenge for me because I wanted to establish myself as a cyclist and a historian-writer.
  • When did you start working on your new book?
  • We started working on this book last September. There’s a lot of heritage hidden within or scarcely known of and I needed to focus on them. OMR is quite vast with so much information, natural and built, that I made an eight-kilometre cut off from it. There’s so much natural heritage, I’d just keep going and find myself in Vandalur.
  • What are your upcoming projects?
  • I’m working on my next book which explores cycling trails across North Chennai from Royapuram to Pulicat.