Monday, January 31, 2011

Nainital - The City on the Lake in the Himalayan Foothills

Warning: long and boring, but an attempt at writing a longer entry for my family to read...

So my friends Jilly, Shane and I headed up to Nainital in the state of Uttarakhand which is bordering Nepal. The elevation was just under 2,000 meters and we expect some cold so I brought a bunch of warm and dry clothes, which came in very handy. We left friday afternoon out of Delhi on the Kathgodam Express train which took about 6 hours. We spent the night in Kathgodam because no bus was going until the morning, and a taxi offered to take us for 900 rupees (the bus is 34 Rupees one way). We talked with the taxi driver a bit and he took us to a local hotel that charged 500 for the night, for the 3 of us, so that was mostly a good deal. we took the bus which did not have very many people on it and climbed up the windy road of 36 kilometers, which took a bit over an hour, including a chai break half way through. The scenery became very green and luscious, which was an incredibly nice change from the intensely polluted delhi scene, not to mention the air becoming clear and clean.

The Lake in Nainital is from a volcanic crater and was a very spiritual and secret sancturary of Hindu's long ago, which had some interesting stories about its origin (check out Nainital Lake on Wikipedia). It was awesome to see such a nice body of water, with low crowds (it is off season, apparently just as busy as Delhi during the summer months when the locals need a vaca from the heat, that I will soon come to know). We met up with our friend Noah, who had originally told us about this getaway spot and was also there at that time visiting. We had some chai and watched some of the cricket match that was going on at the time. It was interesting to see that surrounding the cricket pitch was the lake, a Hindu temple, a Gurdwara (a Sikh Temple),  a Mosque and a Church.

We meet these 3 Indian guys in our hotel who came up on a little vacation on their own and we decided to hang with them a bit. They were very generous and treated us to dinner, lunch and visit to the Hindu temple and a Zoo. The generosity of the Indians is completely overwhelming at times, and you just want to say no or actually pay for a meal, but they are so kind and nice to us, its hard not to feel bad. We had some good times. I was able to wonder off on my own into the one of the village streets and I came across a game of chess starting to commence and I quickly sat down to watch. I have only learned a little Hindi and I could not all that was being said about the game, or about me - this strange white guy watching. After watching them I knew they were good, real good. I became weary of wanting to play but after their game finished they invited me to play. I quickly lost, but the others watching helped me to lose slowly against my opponent. They must do nothing but play chess all day because they were very, very good indeed.

We really wanting to get some hiking in on the second day but a storm came in the early afternoon. First it started raining, and then the rain turned into SNOW! we had a small snow storm for about 2 hours. The snow was very big and heavy, almost like hail, but soft like snow. There were even a few streaks of lightning and clashes of thunder. It was all very exciting, and I was glad to have been wearing my warm/wet gear. My friends did not have such nice things and became very wet so we went back to the hotel. In no time at all the storm passed and there was nothing in the sky except bright blue. I still wanted to hike so we took what time we had to ride up the cable car they had there which took you up near "China" peak. There were some nice patches of snow up there, along with more people living in small huts, it was very cool. we decided to walk the trail down and at that time also the sun began to set behind the hills. It was about a 2-3 kilometer walk and it was very peaceful and a nice way to end our trip.

To our dismay we had to wake up at 6am to pack and be at the hotel lobby by 630am to catch a auto down to the bus stop to catch the 7am bus to the train station for the 9am train. the auto didn't leave until 10 minutes to seven and I literally walked out of the car and onto the bus, which had already begun to start moving!! whew. It was awesome to watch the sunrise over the hills through forests on that windy road back down. a handful of people actually vomited out the window because our driver, who was a sight to see in his own right ( i wish i got of photo of this man and his incense ), was hauling ass down the hill. I was strong though and made it and was happy to arrive at our train station with about 30 minutes to spare, which was enough time to grab some food, chai and get to our seats.

The train ride home seemed to take forever, but it was my first daytime train ride and I took in all the sights, sounds and smells throughout the day. We wandered through some forests as we left the hills of Uttarakhand and into the flatter lands of Uttar Pradesh, in which we rode passed hundreds of kilometers of what appeared to be sugar cane. Thousands, possibly millions, of sugar cane plants is all we saw between the village huts and train stations we passed. sooo much sugar.

Altogether I enjoyed the trip. I think I was expecting something a little more rough and daring than the quite town, but I came to enjoy it and took it in while I could. Now back in Delhi, the air is thick and smokey, home sweet home. I think next week most of the gang will be heading into Rajasthan to check out Jaipur.

Some photos:

Chai stop. Bus is on the the right and chai stall on left...

Nainital

Our new friends and after visiting the Hindu Temple 

The Mosque against China Peak

Storm

more storm

just after the snow cleared, blue sky and on our way up the cable car

sunset amongst the hills and prayer flags

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

More from Amritsar

Ahhh... just had a nice bucket bath after a couple of days of roaming around in the dirt. I wanted to put up a few more pictures from the trip to Amritsar, this time they are from out and around the city, and not the golden temple. We went to some Hindu temples and gardens, walked through a couple small slum type villages were lots of little kids wanted to say hi. we walked across a bridge that went over some railroad tracks, and about 30ft across it we see a sign that says: Warning-Electric Fence 25,000 volts!! We safely made it across, but it certainly was a hair-raising experience (pun intended).



yes, yes it is what you think it is. a common sight in india. 



thats your big boy.... 



advanced plumping




in other news.... 

i have started some classes already, one fluid dynamics math class and a hindi language class. i am supposed to go to one more math class, and it is supposed to start tomorrow i think (it was actually supposed to start last week sometime but....). now i am supposed to go to fluid dynamics every week, tues through friday from 1145am-1245pm... now class usually starts around noon and gets out at 1230, and we are now in the 3rd week of instruction, but have already had 5 class cancelations, which is common i guess. its really frustrating when i am trying to rush to class by taking a 40 rupee auto ride and then show up and class be canceled. ya 40 rupee is not a lot, but that can buy me dinner instead later. i think i have found the right trick to save money though. it is about 1.3 kilometers from my house to the metro station, and they have pre paid autos that run up and down to the metro for only 5 rupee, so if i take that to the metro, its only a 15 minute walk there to campus, which is how long the longer auto takes anyway because of traffic. so i think i am set on saving 35 rupees a day to get to class, which is awesome!! now i can get some good grub. 



Monday, January 24, 2011

Golden Temple, Amritsar, Punjab, India

only pictures can describe.

just got off the train about an hour ago, still bundled up from the cold trip. we took an overnighter from Delhi to Amritsar and arrived about 9am. we grabbed some breakfast and chai and headed over to the temple. its hard to described the beauty and majesty that surrounded the temple. we were able to stay in a hostel type room within the temple walls. accommodations were free and meals were also served. hundreds of Sikhs have devoted themselves to this, their most holy place for worship, and live here working day and night.

he told me i had a nice beard :) 



near the temple... I was not allowed to take pictures inside, sorry. people were always playing music inside, and they micro-phoned the music and played it around the temple were people walked... music was always playing, it was very nice and hypnotic. 

this man has been here for 4 years. everyday he comes and works/prays 

beautiful

workers at the community kitchen. all meals are free and served all the time. mostly lentils, rice, bread, desert and chai.  




we went around town and it was not as clean as inside the temple. but we did come across a kite shop and did some kite flying :)

which way?


can you spot the yellow kite?


tourist information/help clerk with nick(left) and shane (right)

suns starting to get low

a Sikh (bodyguard?) these guys were all around with those spears. 

a devotee taking a sacred dip







out on a rooftop the view was very nice

probably the cleanest water i have seen yet, still no drink though



a dagger, or a sword in this case. 

at night