The Monsoon Visitor’s Guide to Coorg: Why the Rainy Season Is Secretly the Best Time to Understand Your Farm Investment
The conventional wisdom about visiting Coorg is consistent and almost universally repeated: go between October and March, avoid the monsoon, the roads are difficult, the rain is relentless, and there is limited outdoor activity. For a tourist at a resort, this advice...
Arecanut Farming in Coorg: Understanding a High-Value Traditional Crop on Karnataka Farmland
Among the high-value crops grown in Karnataka's Western Ghats districts, one deserves more attention from farmland investors than it typically receives: arecanut. Known as betel nut or supari, Areca catechu is among India's most economically significant plantation...
How to Use Coorg Farmland as Collateral: What Investors Should Know About Loans Against Agricultural Land
One of the less-discussed advantages of owning freehold agricultural land in Karnataka is that it is a recognised collateral asset — meaning you can borrow against it if you need liquidity without selling the land itself. For investors who have built a meaningful...
The Language of the Land: A Glossary of Terms Every Coorg Farmland Investor Should Know
When you begin researching farmland investment in Coorg and Karnataka, you quickly encounter a vocabulary that is entirely unfamiliar if you have only ever purchased urban apartments or financial instruments. RTC, mutation, EC, DC conversion, surki, pahani, guideline...
What Indian Entrepreneurs and Business Owners Should Know About Farmland as a Business Asset
Salaried professionals and entrepreneurs face fundamentally different financial situations — and yet the conversation about Coorg farmland investment almost always focuses on the salaried professional. This post is specifically for Indian business owners, startup...
How Working Professionals in Their 30s Should Think About Coorg Farmland as a First Alternative Investment
The financial arc of most Bangalore professionals in their 30s follows a recognisable pattern. A few years of building an emergency fund. SIPs in diversified equity mutual funds running steadily. Perhaps a home loan on a first flat, or still renting while saving. And...