"I have to go to Keezhur which is one kilometer from our place," he told PTI. Armed with plastic pots, he narrates how there is no assurance always of getting water even after an arduous trek.
"Villagers there raise objections often when we go there to fetch water," he says, adding "problems crop up due to it, we somehow tackle such issues."
Like Ganesan's family, there are 69 other families in the hamlet who too do the same for water. The nearby village of Pudhupattu has similar water woes. They are all Scheduled Tribes, belonging to the "Malayali" (dwellers of hills) community found in the hilly terrains of Tamil Nadu.
About 48 km from Polur in Tiruvannamalai, the hamlet is three km away from Jamunamarathur, the biggest of all villages in the region and most inhabitants are STs.
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Explaining why he needs to trek for some distance and why there is no water in his hamlet, Ganesan says they are on a relatively more elevated terrain than other villages and getting water had always been difficult there.
"Finally, a well was dug up on the fringes of the forest near our hamlet and that effort too had a similar end. We only curse ourselves for it," Ganesan says with a wry smile.
For needs like bathing, they go to small streams off their neighbourhood, a distance of between one to two km, he said.
On livelihood options, he says, "we depend on cultivation of millet varieties like Samai (little millet) and ragi, which needs very little water."
All villages here fall under Kalasapakkam Assembly Constituency in Tiruvannamalai District.
On the water woes, Kalasapakkam MLAV Panneerselvam said "all people's issues are taken to the notice of our Chief Minister Amma" (as Jayalalithaa is fondly addressed by her supporters).
He said several steps, including putting up "Reverse Osmosis plants" in such villages for drinking water purposes would be taken.