Friday 29 May 2009

Madikeri and the Coorg

Post Goa we've climbed 1300m up into the mountains in the south of Karnataka to cool off and await the monsoon, umbrellas and poncho at the ready.
This is the most beautiful place - described in the guide we picked up as 'the Scotland of India' - there are rolling hills, coffee plantations with tall tall trees, waterfalls, wild elephants and a mini Tibet - just like Scotland ;o)

View from the park in Madikeri - complete with musical fountain (son, lumiere and eau!) every evening..

It's cool enough for picnics and walks here... so we trekked the 8km back from the waterfalls one day..


and wandered for hours in the Tibetan settlement yesterday, which was quite surreal and like being in another country - the landscape is so different (no plantations, just ploughed fields and prayer flags flapping in the breeze), monks fly past on Enfield motorbikes, robes flapping and the golden tips of temples are visible from miles away.
Arriving at the Golden Temple we stumbled into a courtyard of dancing men, slow, mournful dancing, wearing such colourful costumes and surrounded by an audience of hundreds of monks - many questions clarified it as a 10 day festival to chase evil spirits... beautiful and mesmerising scenes.


We managed to wander a little further to the temple itself - ornate, sparkling gold, colours, patterns and so different again from the Hindu temples. Such silks and paintings and light.. a feast!!!!



A reminder that the Tibetan settlement here dates from the 1960s, 10 years or more after the Chinese entered Tibet... many posters and reminders of the struggles for freedom and subsequent disappearances and imprisonments flutter alongside the prayer flags.
We're off tomorrow to work on a project here in the Coorg http://www.childrensproject.org/. More news when we reach Pondicherry again in a couple of weeks!

Monday 25 May 2009

Chilling out in Goa + some culture...of course

Goa was meant to be a stop-off on the way down south, a little break and a chance to go to that nice hotel for Sylv's birthday...

It was so much more though and we were really captivated by the Portugese-Indian mix, the local specialties, the churches, verandah-ed houses, shell windows and everything.... Arriving in Goa was half arriving in Portugal for a week's holiday - women in bright summer dresses, holiday rents with kitchen and balconies, little churches everywhere and lots of bars and snack joints.

The beaches were beautiful, clean and populated with friendly dogs.


The mix of palm trees and churches surprises at every turn!


And traditional oyster shell windows.


We went for a day's exploring in the abandoned capital city of Old Goa, made up of religious buildings and a couple of arches celebrating Vasco da Gama

The Se Cathedral there is impressive and the swallows flying around inside too..

St Catherine's church was inspired by St Peter's in Rome and is set next to a beautiful old convent.

This is Bom Jesus, which houses the remains of St Francois Xavier who spent a while here on his conversions..

Then there's Panjim, the new capital, with a decidedly European small town feel, nice bakeries and beautiful old buildings..

Church of the Immaculate Conception, Panjim.

Traditional street of Panjim (capital of Goa).

Sylv's birthday luxury in Goa

We indulged in a couple of nights luxury at Siolim house in Goa for our 2nd anniversary and Sylv's birthday. Rest, superb food, gigantic room, swimming pool.... it was sooooo nice!!
http://www.siolimhouse.com/


Siolim house is a traditional Goan house with a courtyard.

12m pool! (that's H swimming).


And the room.

And the 4-posters bed ;-)

A little luxury which was very welcome after 4 months on the road...

A taster of the North

From the middle of the south, where things were beginning to hot up - 40C and counting, we decided to make a forray further north and test whether we were up to two months visiting the cities of the Ragasthan desert! We're not - not in May and June anyway - it's toooo hot! So we're back down south awaiting the monsoon and relaxing!

Our forray took us to hot and dusty Bijapur though - right at the top of Karnataka - a city once surrounded by very impressive fortifications and littered with mausoleums (is this the plural?!) which we got a very good view of from the top of the biggest one, the Golgumbaz...

Our morning tour of the sites (before retreating to the relative cool of our room) also took us through to the Jami Masjid - an enormous mosque in the middle of the town, opening onto a courtyard where local children and women were collecting water for the day and cleaning their teeth.. through the remains of the citadel and later to the combined mausoleum and mosque outside the town, the Ibrahim Rauza -

Here we met lots of visitors from around India and spent lots of time talking to them in the beauty and symmetry of the two buildings. The architecture was such a change from the temples we've visted on the way - and the detail of the painting and carving were really special, letting light into the mausoleum through the walls..

From Bijapur we made the longest bus journey ever to Auragabad in Maharastra. The landscapes changed along the way as much as the clothes and approach of the poeple we met. We were the sole foreign visitors of Bid for a stopover night and only rarely did poeple's curiosity overflow into "why are you here?!" - those we did speak to were lovely and helpful. I hope the guy I was chatting to in the bus got the job he was going for and that the man who got us on the right bus to Ellora will continue being the bus garage angel for years to come... This tempered the effects of our worst room to date (scuttler free but indescribably grim in other ways..) and helped turn our attentions back to the views and colourful turbans outside.

Aurangabad is enormous! We used it as a base to see some lovely caves and also went on a consolation trip to the mini Taj Mahal as we won't make it to the real one before we leave in June.. as you can see, it's not a bad replacement!

From Aurangabad you get a bus (eventually!) to Ellora - tiny village next to an enormous complex of caves, dug into the rocks by various religious groups over the centuries. You may think there are only so many caves one person can take in a week - but you'd be wrong here - these are soo amazing, you'd like another week to take a better look!

To give you a taster - there's this Buddhist temple with musicians gallery and church like roof..

.. there's a two storey Jain temple with communicating corridor to the one next door which has a mini temple in the courtyard..

and this one, the 'whole hindu temple and little temples round the sides, with balconies and lifesize elephant sculptures all over it' took 8 generations of craftsmen over 150 years to complete.... breath-taking.


Not yet 'caved out' and still wondering how anyone could start tapping away at the rock and think it might turn into a monastry/temple... how they got the rubble out... how they could see in there... we made our way to Ajanta, another site, this time of only Buddhist caves - temples and monastries!... all lined along the ridge of a horse-shoe shaped valley....

The temples here had windows to let the light in.. and rather intricate decorations!

Lots were painted and you could still see the forms of so many buddhas on the walls, beautiful leaves and flowers, tales and animals.. and the columns were pretty pretty too!

The caves here were forgotten for 1000 years before they were stumbled upon by a British party in the 1800s.... hard to forget though!

From the heat of Ajanta we wove our way back to the outskirts of Mumbai and raced up a mountain for a breath of cool air - we'd read about a place called Matheran where there were no cars, where the air is cool and you can roam the mountain top on foot or on horseback.... and where the nights are cold enough for a blanket...

It wasn't quite what we expected, but was a laugh anyway and we did indeed get to go for a nice walk, had afternoon tea on the verandah of a lovely colonial era bungalow... and spent a lot of time watching the crowd from Mumbai in what turned out to be a sort of Las Vegas meets Disneyworld meets the wild west...but nicer and with mango fudge on sale!

We stayed at Hope Hall with our hosts, the devout Maria and Joseph (I kid not!), home to 27 cats, numerous dogs and some lovely puppies, ate wonderful scrambled eggs and toast and felt like we were on holiday!
Quelle vie!

Sylvia gets adventurous

Crossing of a valley, 900 feet long, on a cable... and I wasn't scared ;-)

Monday 18 May 2009

Ruins...

As we settle down to a few days 'rest' here in Goa, here are a few pics and pieces from the last month or so of wanderings..

Starting in Hampi - a little village on a beautiful river in Karnataka, on a level with Goa to the West, where we spent much longer than expected. Peaceful, gorgeous setting and amazing ruins of an enormous forteress to explore. The village is the sort of place where you can wander to the river to watch the sunset, see the temple elephant being washed in the morning, stroll along the river to see the hundereds of lottle shrines and temples littering the banks - a lush and beautiful place surrounded by outcrops of boulders...



The ruined city of the Vijayanagar next to Hampi is soo big and includes royal quarters, elephant stables, temples, audience halls and so much more - it's amazing to wander round and think how it must have been, the walls themselves are incredible, blocks of stone piled high...
the site is big! with elephant stables
big stone walls and a stone chariot carved in the main temple courtyard (this temple was so big that the bazaar leading to it was almost a kilometre long - that's a lot of little shops to buy offerings before getting to the temple!
We spent a day dreaming and enjoying a step back in time...

From Hampi we set out for some little villages on the way to Bijpur, in the north of Karnataka near the border with Maharastra - sites of the former capitals of the Chalukyas (500 AD+) - and impressive ruins, some fenced in as World Heritage Sites with fancy explanation boards, others filled with kids playing cricket or just bats!
The main village of Badami was beautiful with its fort built over two rocks and a lake created 1500 years ago and still used for everything from washing clothes and people to buffaloe!

Badami
The other villages, Aihole and Pattadakal, were impressive too with space and mixtures of different north and south architecture we've picked up on en route!

the Jain Temple Cricket team!
We left Badami and the temple trail for Bijpur and its little horse carts..... more pictures to come!!!

Saturday 9 May 2009

Quiz time

It's quiz time again.


This time we need your help with a few mysteries...


1. In a restaurant, we ordered a boiled egg (and some other things!). Ten minutes later the waiter came back to say that boiled eggs were 'not possible' - did we want fried or scrambled eggs?. Scrambled it was (and very nice too).... but why not boiled, if there are eggs for scrambling?


2. The Indian hotel bathroom is not complete without a set of plastic equipment:
- The bucket (to mix water, have a bucket bath, wash feet, wash clothes, etc )
- A jug (in place of loo roll - very environmentally friendly!)
- Sometimes a second jug or mini bucket to pour water on you from the bucket.

But what's the tiny tiny stool for???


Bathroom equipment: jug, mini bucket, mini stool and bucket.



Tonight we'll be discovering the difference between a plain omlette and an egg omlette... and might even try the bread omlette for you before we leave town - with rather high cholesterol!


Otherwise, still ok and roaming caves for the moment - discovering what makes a 'holiday resort' a 'last resort' and becoming secret air-con admirers as the powers of the three-armed ceiling god meet with temperatures over 40...