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Thursday 27 October 2011

Diwali


A cycle rickshaw narrowly misses a collision with a
Roman candle

Diwali. Definitely my favourite Indian festival yet. The biggest festival in the Indian calendar, there is the same kind of hype and excitement over Diwali as there is over Christmas at home. Long strips of coloured lights are hung from rooftops and balconies, the shops are piled to the rafters with Indian sweets and temporary markets are erected selling candles of every colour, shape and size, decorations, nuts and dried fruits and…kitchen equipment. I never quite worked out the reason for the kitchen equipment, perhaps it’s just the most popular gift du jour or maybe families want to impress visiting relatives with their new set of matching plates, kettle and toaster.

Diwali is the festival of light, which in India means fireworks, which in India also means earth shatteringly loud, hold onto your newly bought kitchen equipment, teeth rattling explosions. They started about a week ago and steadily built to a crescendo last night, Diwali night. It reminded me of bonfire night at home only a thousand times more chaotic, the whole sky erupting with showers of pink, green, blue, white and purple interspersed with atom bomb style explosions and what sounds like rounds of artillery fire going off but is actually lines of firecrackers being lit in the street, usually casually thrown into the path of an unsuspecting motorcyclist or passer-by. I love fireworks but at points even I got a bit nervous, particularly when my neighbours on the rooftop behind me seemed to have eschewed the idea that fireworks should point upwards and lit them so that showers of blue sparks were arching over and onto the top of my terrace. My favourite moment was watching the family next door using the busy road as their firework launch pad. The father of the family methodically and with great ceremony went back and forth with a lit torch, from the house into the middle of road, to light what seemed to be an interminable supply of fireworks. Roman candles and rockets went shooting up into the air as mopeds, cycle rickshaws and pedestrians swerved just in time to avoid them and the family looked on from the side-lines.

Monday 17 October 2011

Mum in India. Rajasthan, a waterfall and a lot of hand sanitiser


“Go and have a look at your sink!”
Mum has been in Delhi less than 12 hours and she emerges from the kitchen brandishing a wire brillo pad and triumphantly declaring that she has cleaned the “uncleanable,” I had told her, sink. (I’m very grateful by the way mum and still marvelling at its metallic shine!)

Feeling guilty and slightly peeved after my previous day’s cleaning spree that mum had still managed to identify the grimiest item in my flat, at least I’d planned us out a travelling schedule for the next couple of weeks to ensure she’d be seeing more of India than just the inside of my kitchen sink. Our plan was to spend the first week travelling round part of Rajasthan stopping in Agra, Fatehpur Sikri, Jaipur and finishing up in Udaipur. The second week we’d planned to go up to Shimla for a few days to do some mountain view gazing and walking.

Before I go any further family as I know a few of you had your concerns about what condition I would return mum in, don’t be alarmed as you read this as, apart from a few hairy moments with aggressive monkeys, a power cut whilst walking down a busy highway and a brief night’s stay at the world’s worst hotel, the story ends well. I’ve checked and mum has since reached home safely (she arrived in India with a large supply of mint imperials, enough hand sanitiser to sanitise an army and her own supply of plastic straws so we were always safe in the knowledge that we’d never have bad breath or dirty hands throughout the two weeks).

Everyone has their own opinion of the Taj, my Keralan friend resolutely declares that she’s seen “much more beautiful buildings in Kerala” (not that she’s bias), but this was my second visit and I still found it just as beautiful. Even if giant marble mausoleums encrusted with millions of jewels and carvings aren’t really your thing, it’s difficult not to be impressed by this huge white beacon of a building and admire the craftsmanship that went into its making. That said, when mum and I visited the Fatehpur Sikri palace complex the following day I think we were actually more taken by it in comparison. The palaces are perched high up on a hill so that as you walk through, the courtyards and windows face out onto the Agra countryside. The architecture is also a curious but beautiful, I thought, mish-mash of Hindu, Muslim and Christian designs and strange Labyrinth style buildings with staircases leading into nowhere. I’m not sure what brought on our morbid fascination but, instructed by the guidebooks that one of the palaces looks onto a public courtyard where they carried out public elephant tramplings (the way to dispense with your thieves and murderers in India before the days of prisons), we spent the end of our visit fixated on finding this courtyard and triumphantly announcing, “there it is!” when we found the ring where they tied up the elephants. It’s the small things.

In Jaipur we visited a lot of palaces. The City Palace – several palaces that had been merged into one big palace, Palace of the Winds and The Amber Fort – several palaces contained within a giant fort. The Amber Fort was my favourite. Parts of it were still being used as a home until the 70’s and still contained the same furnishings, including one dubious room which had mirrored walls, floors and ceilings – Jen & Em, imagine Infernos nightclub minus the sticky floors, rugby teams and terrible music. Overcome by so much sightseeing it wasn’t long before we reverted to stereotype and sought out the nearest place to our hotel serving alcohol, not as easy as we’d hoped and involved crossing many dimly lit traffic intersections, being directed into a hotel that despite being told it was ‘open’ was still under construction, until we finally found a rooftop bar drenched in slightly seedy red lighting but with an amazing view of the city lights.

Udaipur. I loved everything about this city; waking up in the morning to the sound of wet clothes being slapped and pounded on the ghat, watching the old man going for his daily morning bath and lying on his back in the water in the lotus position, walking through the windy streets next to our hotel past houses with cows sat in the front room, watching the sun rise and set over the lake, and the Udaipur sense of humour. I’m not used to sarcasm out here in the same way that it’s an everyday occurrence at home so I was taken aback when I told the hotel manager the electricity in our room wasn’t working and he responded in a deadpan voice, “Yes, you did not pay me yesterday!” waiting just long enough for me to look panic stricken before chuckling to himself and I realised he was joking and we both laughed. That same day we went into a small shop selling silver pendants and necklaces. The woman running the store obligingly got out various different pendants from the glass case for us to look at including some that had moving parts, an owl that flapped its wings, a walking dinosaur and so on. She then passed me one which I couldn’t at first identify and then shrieked with laughter when she saw my face as I realised what it was, a kama sutra pendant complete with moving parts!

Sad about leaving Udaipur behind but excited about the prospect of heading up to the mountains, the start to the next chapter of our trip was like being prodded with a sharp Indian stick and told, “You didn’t really think you could have it that good for two whole weeks did you?” Arriving in Shimla in the darkness because our taxi driver got repeatedly lost on the way (I knew it was bad news when we’d stop for directions and he'd drive off before the person giving instructions had finished what they were saying), we finally pulled up at our hotel, the ironically named, ‘Hotel Dreamland.’ The less said about this place the better as I’ve wreaked my revenge on tripadvisor.in but unless your idea of a Dreamland is pillows coated in someone else’s human hair, a hotel manager that looks at you as though he’d like to murder you in your sleep when you ask for toilet roll and a drunk porter, then stay away. Still, no trip would be complete without such small blips and thankfully that’s all it was. The next day we arose at 6am, paid, sprinted out of the door and trekked the other side of town to a new hotel and awoke to a bright new day.

Shimla town, as people had warned me, isn’t much to speak of but it’s in a beautiful location which looks out over the Himalayan mountain ranges and pine forests. On our last day we decided to do the 5km walk to Chadwick Falls. I have a strong suspicion that we are the first two people to have actually visited the falls since they were first discovered in the early 1900’s and whoever wrote the ‘5km’ sign at the start of the walk has a cruel sense of humour. One hour of walking later we had walked at least 5km but didn’t seem to be nearing a waterfall. Two hours of walking later down steep mountain roads, still no waterfall. Each time we stopped to ask someone if we were going in the right direction for the falls they would nod and point downwards, so we went, down and down until three hours later nearly at the valley floor we finally came across a sign post pointing into the forest. We walked for another hour through the pine forest, two lone trekkers, mum screaming every time she walked into a cobweb, me tripping over pine cones and still no sign of a waterfall. We kept coming across spots where there looked as though there should have been a waterfall but was just dry rocks. The only thing that had driven us forward for four hours was the thought of this tumbling 67m high, so says the Lonely Planet, waterfall and me exclaiming with utter conviction, “Let’s keep going, I can definitely hear water now!,” but never a drop of water was to be found. Crestfallen and thinking about the four hour walk back up the mountainside we decided to turn back when an amazing thing happened, nearly as amazing as finding the waterfall that we’d trekked all that way to see except better. We emerged from the forest onto the main road and heard the rumble of an engine around the corner. During the entirety of our four hour (did I mention yet it was four hours?) walk down the mountainside only a couple of motorbikes and cars had passed us the whole way. To keep each other’s spirits up we had taken it in turns to say “Perhaps there will be a bus that passes us on the way back?” but we knew our chances were slim to none. So when, at the same split second that we emerged onto the road, this bus suddenly emerged through the dust, we both started laughing hysterically, crazy from exhaustion and heat. I waved and flapped my arms frantically to get the bus to stop and was too tired to consider how ridiculous I must have looked. The people on the bus observed us with looks of amazement, I don’t suppose they get many tourists on that part of the mountain trekking to the invisible waterfall, and amusement at these two westerners covered from head to toe in dust and grinning maniacally.