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Tag Archives: Rajasthan
India day 32 – Bikaner, Rajasthan
Bikaner is a dusty city of about half a million people and we are staying slightly out of the city centre opposite the velodrome and the Dr Karni Singh Stadium both of which are just across the road. We decide … Continue reading
India day 22 – Jodhpur to Jaisalmer, Rajasthan
As we walk down the road to the station at 4.30 in the morning there are a shocking number of people laid asleep across the pavements and many more lie outside the station, on the concourse, the platforms and even … Continue reading
India day 21 – Jodhpur, Rajasthan
We had intended to leave Jodhpur today and travel west to Jaisalmer but problems making payment for the train tickets on the internet meant that had we had to delay booking for a day, by which time today’s train was … Continue reading
India day 20 – Jodhpur, Rajasthan
We are gradually coming to appreciate that in
India things never quite happen the way they should. For one thing the trains rarely seem to run on time (or not at least in our limited experience). The electricity is bit of a hit and miss affair and anyone who can afford it has a back-up generator to provide minimum power for lighting and fans when the supply fails, which it seems to do fairly often. This week there is no power in Jodhpur from 9am until midday and the Singhvi’s Haveli doesn’t have a generator, so we have been showering in the dark and sweltering without a fan. The drain in the bathroom is blocked and the shower water has formed a large puddle across most of the bathroom floor. We complained when we first arrived but it is only when we complain again today that anything is done about it. The ATMs are temperamental; sometimes paying out and sometimes not, sometimes they give 10,000 rupees and sometimes only 5,000 and we can’t work out whether the problem lies with our bank or the machines.
In India too, the centuries seem to collide; the present day with the almost medieval and anything in between. Mobile phones, broadband internet and wifi go hand –in-hand with antiquated drainage, standpipes and handcarts. Domesticated animals are a commonplace sight in the streets, not only cows scavenging cardboard and paper, but pigs too snuffle amongst the rubbish whilst dogs, a cats, donkeys and camels, horses and even the odd elephant, all take their place alongside the ‘Japanese horse’ better known as the moped, the rickshaw and the occasional car.
I read an interesting story in yesterday’s India Times which encapsulates the essence of India. Three days ago there was extensive flooding in Delhi as a result of the monsoon rains which brought parts of the city to a standstill for several hours and left people stranded in the streets. This is despite millions of rupees having recently been spent on dredging the drainage system of mud and rubbish. Why? Because the silt and debris that had cost so much to remove had been deposited alongside the drains so that as soon the rains came it was washed straight back from whence it came!
The Jaswant Thada is spectacular not only for its translucent white marble that glows orange and yellow when a beam of sunlight catches it or the fabulously carved decoration, or the array of delicate hatted towers that adorn the roof, but also for the incredible 360 degree views of Jodhpur city, the fort and the arid Rajasthani countryside beyond. This cenotaph to Maharaja Jaswant Singh II was built in 1899 on a peaceful rocky plateau just outside the city and is set in a small garden. There is an old man playing a stringed instrument with a bow that we have seen several times before while a young boy does a whirling dervish kind of dance for a few rupees.
India day 19 – Jodhpur, Rajasthan
The impregnable Meherangarh, ‘Citadel of the Sun’, built by Roa Jodha in 1459, sits perched on huge rocky cliff casting its protective presence over this low-rise blue city. The sheer walls trace the contours of the craggy rock in what must have been a formidable feat of construction. The fort now houses a splendid museum run by the Maharaja of Jodhpur. Fatehpol Gate the lower entrance to the fort is only a few minutes’ walk from the Haveli, but the climb up to the main gate, Lohapol, with its towering iron doors complete with spikes designed to prevent ramming by elephants, is steep and arduous. There is a very good audio guide included in the entrance fee which takes us on a tour of the interconnecting courtyards and palace buildings and provides historical context and information on the main buildings and exhibits. There are some fabulous collections of howdahs, palanquins, cradles and an armoury with exquisitely decorated and preserved daggers, swords and guns including Akbar’s sword. The buildings are beautiful examples of Rajput architecture with finely carved jalis (screens from behind which the women of the court could view proceedings without being seen), wonderfully carved detailing and over-hanging windows. In the Coronation Courtyard is a lovely, carved marble throne on a long dais, used for the inauguration of the Marajahs of Jodhpur. The Phul Mahal and the Moti Mohal are both fabulously ornate rooms, the latter plastered with crushed sea shells giving a mother of pearl sheen to the finish.
On our way out of the fort we pay a visit to the recently restored gardens with the intention of grabbing a spot of lunch at the restaurant there. Both the garden and the restaurant are much publicised around the fort and it sounds like it could be rather nice. There is an entry fee of 60 rupees for the garden and the restaurant is promoted on the reverse of the ticket. We wander round the garden which is quite lovely, but we can’t find the restaurant. When we enquire, it turns out there is no restaurant and the man on the gate gives no sign that there might be something ever so faintly ludicrous about advertising a restaurant that doesn’t exist.
Instead we have lunch at a rooftop restaurant in the old town which is owned by a Ajit Singh who has spent the last 20 years living in various parts of < ?xml:namespace prefix = st1 ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags" /?>
London, including Southall and Golders Green. Ajit very keen to get our feedback on the restaurant which he opened 18 months ago and to tell us his plans for improving it. It’s certainly got lots of potential, but needs some finishing touches, such as cushions for the bottom-numbing iron chairs, some more awnings and perhaps some murals to make it less spartan. He also has an arts and crafts shop on the ground floor at prices which appear to be considerably less than the emporium we patronised yesterday. He’s seems genuinely concerned about tourists being over-charged and advises to us complain backed by threats to go to the police in an attempt to get our money back, which strikes us a bit extreme since they have not done anything illegal and we did after all agree a price we thought fair at the time. Creeping cynicism makes us wonder whether his concern is motivated by a desire to see them go out of business. Unfortunately you come across so many people who just want to fleece the tourist that you begin to question everyone’s motives.
India day 18 – Jodhpur, Rajasthan
The haveli is even better in the daylight – our room opens onto a large second floor terrace over-looking the narrow lanes of the walled old city nestled around the base of the magnificent and austere Meherangarh Fort. There is an even better view of this faded blue city from the roof terrace. Down a steep flight of stairs is a large relaxation area with cushions, chairs and a Rajasthani fabric-covered swing. Down another set of steep stairs is the restaurant overlooking the inner courtyard and exotically furnished with cushion seating, low tables and sari curtains.
Two young brothers run the show: one sports a moustache which curls upwards in the Rajasthani fashion; the other is clean shaven and seems a bit too ‘smooth’. In fact, he turns out to be quite a devious character. Apparently he is going to the local bazaar where the locals shop and it would be no trouble at all to show us the way, he can even point out a place to get good quality textiles at local prices. At this point, of course, alarm bells should have started to ring, particularly as he preceded this offer with some chat designed to persuade us to change our plans and go to the bazaars in the morning and the Fort in the afternoon when both are less crowded. We end up at a large ‘wholesale’ emporium and are gradually sucked in to the sales process. Nonetheless, they have some lovely stuff and we buy a couple of bedspreads and a few other pieces. It is not until later, as we wander around the Sardar Market and the surrounding shops on our own, that we discover other places selling similar stuff much cheaper – we’ve fallen prey to the commission scammers! Ah well, they were still a bargain even at inflated prices. But it does leave a bad taste in the mouth when the management of the hotel is in on the act.
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Jodhpur is one of the pleasanter Indian cities. It’s jumble of quiet narrow lanes are frequented almost exclusively by people on foot and the ubiquitous cows. The soft blue hues that once marked the houses of the Brahmin caste give the city an attractive appearance. The bazaars that cut through the city teem with life and colour and manic auto-rickshaw drivers who weave recklessly in and out of the pedestrians, cows and mopeds missing them by inches. The open drains that line either side of the lanes run with waste water and the front steps of houses and tiny, open-fronted shops make bridges across to the street. Every conceivable item and service is available here: locksmiths, tailors, sari sellers, kitchenware, bed linen, laundries, men ironing clothes, people cooking cauldrons of food over fierce flames, silversmiths, stationers – anything and everything piled warehouse like in cramped, box-like premises. How do they ever find anything? The shops are straight onto the street, so it is possible to pull up on a moped, make a purchase and drive off without ever having to dismount. The once beautiful buildings, crumbling, unkempt and ingrained with centuries of grime, still retain a certain elegance with their intricate jails (screens) carved corbels and delicate over-hanging windows.
India day 17 – Pushkar to Jodhpur, Rajasthan
We are rather sad to leave Pushkar; it may be touristy, but it is an oasis of calm in the chaos that is < ?xml:namespace prefix = st1 ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags" /?>
India. No constant honking of horns, no traffic fumes, no crazy driving only the cows to side-step. But having re-charged our batteries we are heading further west to Jodhpur. The journey involves a taxi back to Ajmer to catch the train which takes six-and-a-quarter hours and numerous stops to cover the 244km to Jodhpur; trains don’t travel very fast in India but at least they are cheap. Even though it’s not an overnight train we are travelling in 3AC sleeper class which is one up from sleeper. Seating is arranged in groups of eight, six on one side of the aisle and two on the other which convert to 8 bunks for overnight travel and no curtains – but at least there is air conditioning. I shouldn’t think it is a pleasant overnight experience particularly if the carriage is full. There is a distinct shortage of luggage space, but today there are only two women and a child sharing our section so we have plenty of room to spread out and can stow our luggage on the top bunk.
The little girl is about two or three and is very interested in the laptop and Andy’s game of Heroes. The two women have taken up most of the available luggage space with several bags which it later transpires are mostly full of food. As the journey progresses various dishes are prepared included some peeled and salted cucumber, a plateful of which is generously shared with us.
The train, as seems to be the norm, arrives about 35 minutes late, but our pick-up waiting for us on the platform. We follow him to the rickshaw outside picking our way through the mass of people sitting or sleeping on mats on the station platform and on the concourse outside. The rickshaw wallah is forced to take a detour to avoid a brightly lit procession of decorated horse-drawn carts parading through the street and on arrival wants 100 rupees for the fare, which by Indian standards is a expensive even for a lengthy rickshaw ride. Besides the pickup is supposed to be free. When we mention to the hotel manager that the rickshaw wallah wants paying it turns out that the correct fare is 30 rupees.
We are staying at the Singhvi Haveli in the old town, in what they claim is their best ‘suite’ – the Maharanis Suite. It isn’t a suite, but it is quite stunning nonetheless with floor to ceiling murals in the traditional style and double aspect overhanging bay windows – shutters, no glass – with sills large enough to accommodate a chair. One window affords a superb view of the Meherangarh Fort perched on a rocky hill top 125m above us. The haveli was gifted to the current owners’ ancestors by the Maharaja of Jaipur 400 years ago and is currently run as a hotel by two brothers, the 10th generation of their family to live in this fabulous old Rajput building.
India day 16 – Pushkar, Rajasthan
The temple revellers were even more raucous last night with booming music starting up around < ?xml:namespace prefix = st1 ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags" /?>
10 pm and continuing well into the early hours. Surprisingly we are still able to get to sleep despite the din emanating a few feet from our window. We originally planned to be in Pushkar for three nights, but have decided to stay another night which involves moving rooms, the upside of which is that we will be at the back of the hotel where it is much quieter and hopefully out of earshot of the nightly festivities.
I’m feeling very lethargic today and although the medication seems to be improving my dodgy stomach problem we don’t do very much in the morning. We have lunch at a restaurant occupying a first floor terrace overlooking the main street – an ideal place for people-gazing and just generally watching the world go by. A young sari-clad woman squats with a bundle of cow grass on a cloth in front of her, patiently waiting for customers. Eventually she starts to attract custom from more well-to-do Indians wanting to enhance their karma. For she is selling grass to feed to the cows; and to buy for grass for the cows is to gain spiritual brownie points. Once a sale has been made she takes an arm-full of grass from the small mound and carries it to a group of cows that are gathered down a small side street. As we watch business starts to pick up and soon she is soon doing a brisk trade.
There are plenty of places in Pushkar offering camel safaris into the desert, either on the back of a camel or in a camel cart, for anything from an hour to two or more days. It’s even possible to travel from here to other parts of Rajasthan on extended camel treks of a week or more although I should imagine that’s not for the faint-hearted. Having already braved the back of a camel in Mongolia we decide to try a two-hour camel cart ride. Although, as it turns, which is the more uncomfortable is a close run thing – on balance probably the cart. The desert around Pushkar is not the sea of dunes sort; the countryside may be dry and sandy but it is still predominantly green and peanuts are grown. There is some quarrying of sand for the railway line that is under construction and much of our route has been churned up by lorries and is rather reminiscent of a building site. At one point a young boy trudges behind us for a while serenading us with a scratchy and out-of-tune rendition of Frere Jacques on a stringed instrument played with a bow. We willingly give him some money knowing that he will stop playing as soon as we do. Further on we take a break – for our benefit or the camel’s we’re not sure – and immediately we are joined, as if from nowhere, by two old men and a young boy. The old men both have stringed instruments and bows with bells, the latter providing an added dimension to the music as they tinkle in time to the rhythm. After they have performed their song and we have shown our appreciation in the time honoured fashion, we invited to try the instrument ourselves and I can confirm that even Andy can make a scratchy noise on it, but getting the bells to tinkle in time requires a bit more practice.
We continue our bone-shaking ride over ruts, potholes and generally uneven ground, passed the nascent railway embankment and several makeshift gypsy encampments where people are living in flimsy shelters made from tarpaulins and bits and pieces of cardboard, sacking and the like. Children run out to follow the cart asking for money or chocolate, but in a half-hearted sort of way not really expecting anything; not as tenacious as some we have come across. We stop briefly at a street-side mobile trolley for a cup of chai – coffee in Andy’s case – where men sit around on metal benches chewing the fat. Tea is brewed very sweet, very strong and very milky and served in expresso-sized plastic cups which are simply tossed on the floor afterwards (littering is a way of life in India, no one thinks twice about it).
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India day 15 – Pushkar, Rajasthan
The haveli may be in a small back street way from main part of town, but it is opposite a temple and we are beginning to realise that this has its drawbacks particularly at festival time. Festivals in < ?xml:namespace prefix = st1 ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags" /?>
India seem to get into full swing at night and we are woken in the early hours by deafeningly loud music, a commotion in the street and engines revving. We find out later that groups of revellers make a circuit of the temples with portable loudspeakers blaring out music with a total disregard for anyone trying to sleep. Apparently there is a law that prohibits noise after 10 at night but it’s rarely enforced. Fortunately, tonight the racket is short-lived.
We spend some time researching accommodation for our next stop, Jodhpur and settle on the Singhvi Haveli which is able to accommodate us in their best suite – the Maharani – for 1400 rupees. So we decide to splash out as it sounds as though it could be something quite special. We shall be sorry to leave Pushkar, though; it has been a pleasant and relaxing place to get away from the madness that seems to be India and enjoy a more unhurried pace and relative peace and quiet.
I’m still not feeling particularly well so we revisit the medical centre and I get a thorough grilling and a physical examination by the doctor who pronounces that I have gastritis and prescribes three lots of medication: a probiotic, anti-acid and a moss green pill which might be an antibiotic or could be something else. The consultation and medication costs about the same as a single prescription back in the UK. I’m now taking five pills a day: 2 vitamin B1s (to deter mosquitos although I’m not sure how effective they are), doxyclyline anti-malaria, a probiotic and and unidentified green tab. Hopefully I shall start to feel better soon.
We meet Mr Sharma again at 4pm, this time for a guided tour of the town and it’s temples. Mr Shrama is a Brahmin and therefore knows a thing or two about the Hindu gods and spends a large part of the walk recounting Ganesh came by his elephant head and the story of Brahma and how there came to be 52 ghats in Pushkar. We visit a number of temples, some of which are private and don’t permit non-Hindus to enter so we can only peer through the gateway, others are tiny hole-in-the wall shrines, some, like Brahma`s temple are more substantial, but all are dilapidated, mildewed and in need of some TLC. There is a Jain and a Sikh temple in Pushkar but our tour doesn`t include these unfortunately, probably because Mr Sharma is mainly concerned with the Hindu side of things.
Mr Sharma explains that the government provided 46m rupees to fund a project to dredge the lake but the money ran out before the project could be finished, which explains why the bottom of the lake is currently two distinct levels. Mr Sharma is clearly irritated by this state of affairs which he puts down to government corruption and the siphoning off of funds into politician’s and contractor’s pockets. Even more incomprehensible in his view is why the government should have provided money to start a bridge building project in Pushkar rather than provide funds to complete the work on the lake which in his view is far more pressing. Mr Sharma doesn’t appear to be very enamoured of Indian politics.
At the end of the tour we are invited into his home for a cup of delicious marsala chai and to meet his wife and daughter. This educated family live in three rundown rooms on the ground floor of their rather unprepossessing guest house and the only furniture in their main living space is a bed and two plastic chairs. The family recently acquired an attractively patterned tortoise which one of their sons found in the woods and decided to bring home and we are invited to hold it, stroke is and generally admire it. Their two sons and daughter have all been to college but his sons are experience difficulty finding good jobs and his daughter can`t get a place on a teacher training course because of a quota system that reserves places for low caste Hindus with lower academic achievements. Mr Sharma is particularly put out by this because he has invested all his available income in educating his children and one of his son`s achieved the highest mark in his exams and still can`t get a government job. Meanwhile Mr Sharma is so hard up that he had been unable to replace his worn out shoes until we paid him for yesterday`s tour. What a crazy world we live in.
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India day 14 – Pushkar, Rajasthan
I’ve not been feeling well for the last few days with stomach discomfort, so today we go to the local medical centre, but there is no doctor in attendance, only the pharmacist. I shall have to wait until tomorrow. We take a stroll round the colourful bazaars – tiny shops with goods spilling out onto the street and sun-faded clothes fluttering in the breeze, endless crewelwork and mirrored bedcovers, wall hangings, cushion covers and carved wooden trays and other such items – many familiar from ethnic shops such as Karavan where they are sold at greatly inflated prices.
As we pass an old Haveli opposite Seventh Heaven a man calls out to us from inside; it turns out to be someone who pressed a card into our hand when we first arrived in < ?xml:namespace prefix = st1 ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags" /?>
Ajmer in the hope of persuading us to book into his hotel when we got to Pushkar. He wants us to come in to look at the rooms and to find out why we decided to stay somewhere else. The rooms are huge, clean but spartan and with none of the character and charm of Seventh Heaven. Unwittingly we find ourselves drawn into a conversation with his brother about how they might improve the appeal of the hotel and after making a few suggestions about furnishings and decor and the importance of being on the internet and getting independent reviews, being in Lonely Planet etc we say our goodbyes and leave feeling slightly bemused.
At 4pm we have arranged to have a guided walk in the countryside with Mr Sharma who lives just round the corner. It’s been raining and so the streets are squelchy with a mixture of mud and cow dung – lovely! Mr Sharma is a charming older gentleman with heavily accented and not very fluent English and his commentary is a little difficult to follow. Even after two week in India we are still finding the Indian accent eludes us. Within a few minutes we are out of the town and in the green and peaceful countryside, passing through a park and then up into the hills to visit a couple of small white-washed temples; one to Shiva which has a permanent spring with a flow that never varies and a fabulous view over Pushkar and the other to Krishna with five natural pools and where a festival is in progress. Along the way, we stop to feed the black-faced monkeys who are a bit wary at first but as soon as one plucks up the confidence to come forward then a whole horde of others appear as if from nowhere, rushing down the hillside and out of the trees to make sure they get their share – youngsters, large males, mothers with babies. Two groups appear and once the food is finished what starts as a bit of minor squabbling quickly descends into fightin and Mr Sharma has to scare them off to avoid us getting caught in a full scale melee.
On the way back to the hotel, Mr Sharma suggests we call in on the owner of the Seventh Heaven Inn who has recently moved in to a new house on the outskirts of Pushkar. The house is enormous; built over several floors with balconies and terraces on each level and as we later discover, amazing views of Pushkar and the surrounding area from the roof. Anoop lives here with his heavily pregnant French wife, Jan, and their two-year-old daughter. We are welcomed with tea and coffee as if it were the most natural thing in the world for Mr Sharma to turn up unannounced with two foreign tourists in tow. Anoop has spent several years in London living in Camberwell and St Johns Wood and we chat for a while about various parts of London, the renovation of the hotel and his plans for taking paying guests in his new house as well as the danger of kidnapping in Agra which come as a surprise to us. We are taken up to the roof to admire the view and I’m sure we would have had a guided tour of the whole house if he hadn’t a meeting to get to at the hotel.
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