Cruising past lush carpets of paddy and tall palm trees, our vehicle halted near a roadside fruit seller. He had spread on the ground two different types of mangoes, bananas and other fruits. The thick canopy provided him shelter from the heat. To our left, I could steal a glimpse of the alluring Cauvery River, the lifeline of the region. Two Hallikar bulls, native to Karnataka, were resting a few metres away from us. They perhaps belonged to the fruit seller. It is said that Tipu Sultan, the famed ruler of Mysore, had cross-bred the Hallikar bulls, identifiable by their long, vertical, backwards-bending horns, to give rise to the Amrut Mahal breed. A sturdier and more active cattle breed, Amrut Mahal was also successfully deployed during battles by Tipu till his death in 1799 in the fourth Anglo-Mysore war.