Monday 8 October 2012

LAST BLOG ENTRY - India Part 7 - Madurai, Thanjavur, Puducherry and Mamallapuram

Spectacular temple in Madurai

We travelled to Madurai to visit the astonishing Sri Meenakshi temple, which has an abundance of colourful, intricate carvings.  The temple was busy with pilgrims and as usual we met lots of excited Indian tourists.


Receiving a blessing


Next we travelled to Thanjavur to visit Brihadishwara temple, which was built in 1010 and is a UNESCO World Heritage site.   It was so hot here we thought we might melt!

This huge bull (Nandi) is 6m long, 3 m high and weighs 25 tonnes

Magnificent carvings


Friendly pilgrims

Nic receiving a blessing

Our final Indian train journey
Our final destination in India was lovely laid-back Mamallapuram.  We spent our days hiding from the heat in our a/c room (it was 38 degrees outside), paddling in the ocean, hanging out in the restaurants (watching 20/20 cricket) and visiting the nearby temples.

Krishna's Butter Ball - immovable but apparently balancing precariously


Stunning Arjuna's Penance, which has carved scenes of Hindu myth



Joining the school trip
On Friday 28th September 2012, 3 years and 2 days after leaving the UK, we flew from Chennai airport to Manchester. It's impossible to put into words how wonderful the last 3 years have been.  We've visited 13 countries and have had the time of our lives.  We've experienced so many incredible things and met so many inspiring people.  We spent a third of the time travelling by bicycle, a third in a motor home and a third with a backpack.  We do not have a favourite country, as they are all so different, and we fell in love with every country that we visited and had a great time everywhere we went.  The biggest disaster that occurred was me coming off my bike and breaking my elbow but luckily the accident happened in Thailand where we had access to a good hospital. 

We're now enjoying being with our wonderful family and friends and slowly getting used to being settled for a while and living in a developed country again.  The streets look so clean here and the cars drive in a straight line!  It's great to be home but we miss the chaos, the brown smiling faces and feeling like a film star wherever we go!

We hope that you have enjoyed following our escapades on the blog and that you will follow us in the future, whenever and wherever we decide to go next! 

India Part 6 - Alleppey, Kollam, Varkala, Trivandrum and Kanyakumari

We saw hundreds of wet land birds, including cormorants and herons

We continued our travels in Kerala and had a few days floating around the backwaters in Alleppey and Kollam.  We decided not to go on one of the famous rice barges but instead spent a day on the local ferries and 2 days on canoes.  The latter was very peaceful (no engine noise and no pollution) and luckily we had great weather.


Friendly villagers

An example of the famous rice barges which tourists love to stay overnight on

School trip

Tame hand-reared raptor - totally gorgeous

Local fisherman

Friendly tourists

Umbrella hats are very popular in Kerala and in my opinion they should be popular everywhere!


Chilling out in our canoe

Traditional banana leaf meal
We left the beautiful back waters and had a few days hanging out on the beach in Varkala with the Indian tourists, friendly stray dogs and Swamis.

Bringing in the catch

Playing on the beach

Our hut is on top of the cliff

Brothers or lovers?
We then headed to the capital of Kerala, Trivandrum, yet another big, dirty, smelly, polluted but very friendly city.  Then we entered the state of Tamil Nadu and had a few days in the most southern place in India, Kanyakumari, where the bay of Bengal meets the Indian Ocean and the Arabian Sea.  We went on a packed ferry to visit 2 small rocky islands 400m off shore.  We were the only westerners on board and all the Indian people were either wearing or clutching their life vests.  There was a party atmosphere on board and we felt like celebrities.  One of the islands has the memorial of Swami Vivekananda who meditated here in 1892 before setting out to become one of India's most important religious crusaders.  The other island has a huge statue of a Tamil poet Thiruvalluvar.

Kanyakumari islands

Normal Indian chaos

Meeting the happy tourists

Huge church that blasted music all day long for no apparent reason

Gandhi memorial - don't know why it looks like a cake!

Having fun Indian-style

Saturday 8 September 2012

India Part 5 - Manali, Shimla, Cochin, Wayanad Wildlife Sanctuary and Kannur


We left Leh on 9th August at 2 am on a minibus.  I think the high altitude must have affected our brains as we'd decided to get a bus that takes a minimum of 16 hours, on roads that are in horrible condition and which goes over 5 passes, most of which are at over 5000 metres.  The road had been closed for 3 days before we set off due to landslides.  Anyway, in summary this was the the scariest journey of our lives.

The buses drive shaft broke and the driver spent hours making running-repairs.  The distance from Leh to Manali is 474 km and it took us 23 hours, this is the same time that it took us to fly from the UK to New Zealand!   There was only one driver and after 17 hours we had to go over Rohtang La, a notoriously hazardous pass, in the dark.  I was terrified as we'd been told by other tourists that the road was really twisty and muddy and I knew that the poor driver must have been feeling tired by now.   Anyway, as we made out way up the pass the driver started driving erratically and was losing his concentration.  The Italian passenger in the front was keeping an eye on him and talking to him but it was a very frightening situation.  The road on the way down was horrible, there was so much mud and lots of trucks.  When we finally arrived in Manali, at 1am, the sense of relief was enormous.  The scenery on the journey was totally mind blowing but we should never have opted for such a long journey. You live and learn.

We spent a few days in Manali recovering from our ordeal and enjoying the mountain views.    Incidentally, they grow and smoke a lot of cannabis in Manali.  Maybe we should have had some to calm our nerves!!!

Huge cannabis bush in Manali

After Manali we got another bus to Shimla.  Fortunately, this journey was much shorter (only 10 hours) and incident free.  Shimla is a hill-station, where the entire government of India fled to every year to escape from the heat of Delhi.  The British built some very nice buildings here, including the Town Hall, mock-tudor post office and the Gaiety Theatre, and because of the rain we felt like we were back home.  

Gandhi in Shimla - taken on Independence Day

We then got the 'toy-train', which was constructed by the British in 1903, between Shimla and Kalka.  The journey of 100km took 5 1/2 hours and we seemed to stop at every station for an unnecessarily long time.  We had great weather and the views were lovely and it was strange being back down at more-or-less sea-level for the first time in weeks.  We then got a train to hot and humid Delhi and walked through bustling streets at 10pm to our hotel.

We spent 3 days in Delhi, mostly hiding from the heat in our air-con room and then we flew down to Kerala in the south of India.  We'd planned on getting a 50-hour train, just for the experience, but there were no tickets left, so we had to fly instead.

We spent a few days in Fort Cochin, which is a relaxed harbour town that feels a world away from Delhi.  Fort Cochin was occupied by the Portugese, the Dutch and the British and has quite an interesting history and a few old buildings.  The Keralan people have big happy smiles and are very welcoming.  We enjoyed the great weather and spent our days pottering around the town, watching the fishermen bringing in the catch with the same design of nets that the Chinese first used here in the 1400's and drinking cheap beer and eating delicious food in the Seagull Hotels with the drunk, friendly local men.

Whilst in Cochin we went for an Ayurvedic massage, which involved lots of warm oil and a loin cloth.  I was massaged by an old lady who'd been seen it all, so to speak, and I thought it was quite soothing.  Nic was massaged by a man and he did not enjoy it as much!  We also visited Jew Town (yes, it really is called this) and went to watch a Kathakali performance.  Kathakali means 'story-play' and is over 400 years old.  With painted faces and splendid vivid costumes characters from Indian epics dance a story accompanied by percussionists.  We watched the 2 performers apply their elaborate make-up and then watched the amusing and enthralling performance.
  

Chinese fishing nets

Starting the transformation

Actor showing horror?

Actor showing disgust?

Fabulous costume

Tradition states that women our played by men
We went by government (no frills) bus from Cochin to Wayanad Wildlife Sanctuary, up in the hills.  Due to the insane amount of traffic, frequent traffic jams and accidents caused by crazy drivers this journey took 2 days instead of one.  We ended up spending a sleepless night at a hotel next to the noisy bus station in Calicut, a typical busy, polluted Indian city.  We got the impression that they don't see many western tourist here and we felt like film stars and were made to feel very welcome.

The following day we got 3 more buses to Tholpetty and stayed at a lovely guest house located at the entrance to the wildlife park.  In between jeep safaris, we ate delicious food and chatted with the lovely owner and the other guests. We went on 3 short safaris with a couple from Germany and their 2 young children.  We saw elephants, deer, sambar (large antelope-like animals) and bison.  We saw lots of tiger pooh and fresh paw prints but sadly no tigers.  They only have 16 tigers in the park so you have to be very lucky to get a glimpse.

spotted-deer


The elephants had broken the electric fence and so they come and go as they please!

Next we got the bus to Kannur and spent 6 days at a great guest house next to a secluded beach.  We hadn't planned on spending so much time here but we couldn't get tickets for an earlier train and we couldn't face another long bus journey.  Whilst we were here it rained and rained and rained so we took the opportunity to relax and hang out with the manager and the other guests.

In Kannur we went to a small local temple to see a Theyyam performance.  This artform is thought to predate Hinduism and to have developed from folk dances.  There are around 450 different Theyyams each with a distinctive costume, face paint and headdress.  The latter are sometimes 5 metres tall!  We saw a man applying his make-up and costume and slowly he became Shiva.  At times the dancing and drumming was quite frenzied and the performance was mind-blowing and surreal.  We would love to come back in future between December and April, which is Theyyam season.
   
Being made welcome at the temple

Becoming Shiva





Giving blessings


We were in Kannur on the last day of Onam, a 10-day festival that is only celebrated in Kerala.  Our tuk tuk driver, Vineeth, had kindly invited us and a couple from Italy/France to his home to meet and celebrate with his family.  We were overwhelmed by the welcome we received and we spent a few happy hours being entertained by Vineeth's very musical family.  We sang songs and the 4 guests had the dubious pleasure of singing their national anthems.  Nic and I made everyone laugh because we couldn't remember the words to 'God Save the Queen'; most embarrassing!  We would like to thank Vineeth and his lovely family for the happy memories that they gave us.

A lovely Onam tradition - a new picture made from cut up flower petals is made each day - this one took 4 hours

Vineeth making his drums sing

Vineeth's daughter making my hand pretty


Portugese fort in Kannur