India

November - December 2018
A 14-day adventure by Barry Read more
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  • Day 8

    Mysore's Finest, Part 2

    November 25, 2018 in India ⋅ ⛅ 26 °C

    Lunch time was at Poorjari's Fish Land, a Mangalorean style seafood place. We ordered 4 different styles of fish (masala Pomfret and Angel, seared Pomfret and Angel), curry with special local chickens, neel dosa, kori roti, and lemon sodas. A delicious change of pace!

    After a quick stop at home, we headed to the famous Mysore Palace. Rebuilt by the Wodeyar family in the late 1800s after the wooden one burned down, the architecture is a mix of Hindu, Islamic, and European. Lots of light blue, gold, white, and rosewood decorated the interiors.The royal family still lives in the residential part of the palace and are totally symbolic with even less power than the British monarchy. The current king ascended about 2 years ago when his father passed away.

    Since we had just under 2 hours before the weekly palace lighting, we went shopping! First we wandered thru the Mysore market and were bombarded by colored powders, fragrant flowers, perfectly stacked fruits and veggies, and shop owners competing for our attention. We only ended up with a bunch of mini bananas and a few custard apples. Looking for handicrafts, we stopped at the Kauvery Handicrafts store, a government subsidized artisans market. We found wooden elephants and a pair of earrings for Tina.

    Our final stop of the day was back to the palace for the lighting. But we were foiled! There was a 3 day mourning period for the death of a famous and beloved movie star from the 1960s so there was no lighting (he eventually got into politics and became a minister too). Instead we got some consolation ice cream and headed back for the night.
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  • Day 9

    Elephants!

    November 26, 2018 in India ⋅ ⛅ 25 °C

    Today, we woke up early to drive to Dubare Elephant Park - about an hour and a hour west of Mysore. We needed to get there early enough to be able to participate in a big event: the bathing of the elephants.

    They have about a dozen elephants there, which they keep to both train and rehab. And you can help wash and feed them! When we arrived, we took a boat to this small island in the middle of the Kauvery River where all the elephants live - and there they were, lounging in the water. Elephants!

    We waded in, splashed them and pet them. Elephants are remarkably bristly, and have leathery skin unlike anything else. They seemed to enjoy the attention and the splashing. Of course we took a bunch of pictures with them in the water. There was even a baby elephant hanging out and spraying people on the observation decks.

    When we finally got out, we walked over to the feeding stations where all the elephants were lined up waiting for food. We happily obliged with bundles of corn kernels wrapped in hay, and got more pictures there too.

    Was very, very cool to be so up close and personal with such majestic beasts.
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  • Day 9

    The Golden Temple

    November 26, 2018 in India ⋅ ⛅ 28 °C

    After all our fun with elephants, we drove over to a nearby park to wander around. We had to walk across a suspension bridge (over the same Kauvery River) to get there, which naturally attracted the bridge engineers. The park was basically a large bamboo forest with statues depicting the lifestyle of Coorg natives. It also had a large enclosed area that functioned as a deer sanctuary - we saw several more spotted deer there, but this time much closer. We also took the opportunity to wade into the river, which felt very good on such a hot day.

    We then drove to a Buddhist temple, the Namdroling Temple, also known as the Golden Temple. It featured a 60ft gold plated statue of the Buddha and two 58ft gold plated statues of two of his disciples. The main temple had dozens of paintings of buddhas on the walls - with some drawn as demons in a style more familiar in China. There were many monks there performing rites, which including banging drums and gongs and sounding horns. It was at times rhythmic, at times cacophonous. Maybe they were just learning the ropes? We also couldn't help but notice that the rainbow on the main spire was inverted, with red being the innermost part of the rainbow...

    Following our Coorg adventures, we returned to Mysore to do some shopping. Ani and his parents showed us around and helped us pick out a wide variety of souvenirs and gifts. We ended the night at Ani's favorite hangout: the Pelican, where, once again, we ate an unreasonably large amount of food. That family can sure eat!
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  • Day 10

    Goodbye, Mysore

    November 27, 2018 in India ⋅ ☀️ 17 °C

    Today, we say goodbye to Mysore and Ani and his family. To say they were extremely generous hosts doesn't do them justice. It's been a great couple days. Now we just need them all to visit us in Chicago!

    Next, we head back to North India.
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  • Day 10

    Waiting for the next flight

    November 27, 2018 in India ⋅ ⛅ 24 °C

    Ani and Ajay dropped us off at the Mysore Bus Station and we said our goodbyes as we caught a bus to the Bengaluru Airport. The bus was quite nice and the trip easy. Our flight isn't for another 4 hours though, so now we just wait.Read more

  • Day 11

    Amber Fort

    November 28, 2018 in India ⋅ 🌫 20 °C

    Akram, the same guide we used in Delhi, picked us up at 9am to take us on a full day tour of Jaipur. It was a very packed day of learning both the history of Jaipur (and by proxy Northern India) and modern Indian politics.

    We started out by driving into old town Jaipur, the part that is famously known as the Pink City. Even though it's not pink at all! The nickname comes from when Prince Albert visited Jaipur in 1877 and one if his aides wrote down that the old town was pink and the name just stuck. Maybe he was colorblind? Anyway, the color is actually terra cotta. The whole old town is uniformly this color, with seven richly decorated gates all around. Quite beautiful.

    We took a quick spot just to take a picture of the facade of Hawal Mahal (the Wind Palace), but more on this in a later post. Our main destination for the morning was the Amer Fort.

    The Amber Fort is named from the city of Amber, which itself is believed to be named for the Hindu goddess Amba (coincidentally its color is somewhat in the realm of amber). The fort and wall around it was initially built in the 12th century, and the wall grew to encircle the entire valley, and is quite reminiscent of the Great Wall of China (although obviously several thousand miles shorter and much later in history). Wikipedia refers to this as the Amer Fort in Amer, but all local references we've seen say Amber.

    While the fort was initially built in the 12th century, a new, modern, palatial expansion was began by Man Singh at the end of the 16th century. Turns out that Man Singh was the general of the Mughal Emperor Akbar. Rajasthan (the state of which Jaipur is the capital) was autonomous from the Mughals, but they had very close relations (two Rajasthani princesses married Mughals). Man Singh didn't live to see the palace completed, so work was continued by his descendents... including his grandson, Jai Singh I, who also was a general for the Mughals.

    The fort is an interesting mix of Persian, Mughul, and local Rajasthani architecture. For instance, some columns had Islamic detail bases (flowers and geometry) but Hindu tops (eplehants). It's called a fort, but it served no military purpose - there was an actual military fort nearby - it was mainly a palace.

    The fort contained multiple beautiful gardens in the Persian style, and had two main gates. The sun gate (facing east) was reserved for the royals, who actually typically entered on elephant back. In fact, many tourists take that route today. We just walked, and took pictures of the elephants instead, many of which were elaborately decorated and even had painted toenails! The moon gate (facing west) was for commoners to enter to petition and see the royals.

    The main section of the palace had two main royal residences and was ingeniously laid out. The winter palace was on the east side and mirrored - so as to capture the maximum amount of heat from the sun. We chuckled as our guide described temperatures falling as low as 9 degrees celcius (48°F). Must be nice. On the other hand, in the summer, temperatures can reach an absurd 47 degrees celcius (117°F) - so the summer palace was constructed facing west, which was a direction blocked by a hill so it got far less sunlight. Additionally, it was all white marble, and had a built in air conditioning system and water cooling. High tech for the 17th century!

    In the back of the fort were 12 distinct apartments for Man Singh's 12 wives. They were constructed in such a way to ensure that none of the wives knew which one he was visiting. Sneaky sneaky. Throughout the fort were many screen windows - windows with hexagonal open tiles so that the wives could peek out at the commoners without being seen, since they weren't actually allowed to venture out much.

    After several hundred years of rule over Amber, one ruler, Jai Singh II, decided that he had much grander ambitions. He decided he needed to build his own city, which he naturally named after himself: Jai's City, or Jaipur. The city be built is the part we now call the Pink City - which was founded in 1727. But this man was also interested in a lot of other things, like math and astronomy and even urban planning - so the city is carefully designed and laid out on a symmetric grid. He even was very careful to place specific occupations at specific points. There is a block for bangle creators, and a block for cloth weavers, and so forth. He also built his own astronomical observatory (see next post).

    We ended up spending about 3 hours at the Amber Fort, and learned an enormous amount about it - of which this post is just a fraction. But it was a great place to visit.
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  • Day 11

    Science and Architecture

    November 28, 2018 in India ⋅ 🌫 22 °C

    After spending almost 3 hours at the Amber Fort, we took a quick walk down to the surrounding city past a small Hindu temple and to a local step well. This well was larger than the one we saw in Delhi and resembled more of the traditional square type. Loved the symmetry of it all. We drove by the Jal Mahal or Palace on the Lake before lunch. This palace was given over to a private company who wanted to develop the abandoned property into a tourist attraction but politics have stalled the project. It would have been an upscale restaurant only reachable by boat. Too bad, we would have definitely gone there.

    Following lunch we stopped by two artisan shops - Emerald Palace (gems and jewelry obviously) and Ganesh Textiles (traditional block printing). We ended up buying a matching pair of custom earrings and bracelet for Tina to be shipped directly home. At the block printing shop, we watched two artisans pressing color onto a patterned piece of cloth. This company uses natural dyes, such as sugar cane, spinach, and tumeric, on natural fibers like cotton and silk. It looked so precise but tedious, very neat though!

    Now it was time for some science fun at Jantar Mantar, an astrological observatory built by Jai Singh II. There were several different types of sun dials and instruments that measured the constellations and zodiacs. They were all calibrated to that specific location in Jaipur. The sundials included the historic Hindustan time delineations, which were shorter than the current minutes and seconds (and were called something else). They were also a very different style than we were used to - convex semi-circular arches with an angled "ramp" in the center. As the sun travels across the sky, the shadow of the ramp moved along the arches to tell the time. The world's largest masonry sundial is located there and is accurate up to 2 seconds! We took many pictures with it of course.

    Another interesting time fact that we learned was the reason behind India's single time zone and the use of local vs national times. They wanted a single time zone for the national train system so that people wouldn't get confused converting between zones or by arriving "before" the departure time. India's time zone is also based on noon at the center of the country and is a half hour different from the next ones over, +5:30 GMT.

    Astrology is big in India too. Birth horoscopes and zodiac signs can tell a lot about someone or can drive their future. There were instruments that charted the locations of the constellations and subdivided the sky into 12 parts of 30 degrees for each zodiac. They could measure where we were in that zodiac house.

    Our final stop on the tour was Hawa Mahal, the Wind Palace. This building consists of 5 floors and over 900 screened windows overlooking the main road thru the Pink City. The royal women were not allowed in public so this gave them a private view of the ongoings of the city. The window screens themselves were intricately carved with floral and geometric shapes. The towers offered lovely views of the whole city and at the Amber Valley in the distance. Since it was sunset, the walls glowed with golden light. We ran across the street and upstairs to a cafe to take pictures of the palace with the sun setting behind it. It was truly beautiful!

    On our way back to the hotel, we drove by the Albert Hall Museum and saw a live broadcast interview with a state politicians. Indians are invited to attend and ask them questions in a public space. Kinda neat and different compared to the American style of prepared interviews and debates.
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  • Day 12

    Jaipur Day 2

    November 29, 2018 in India ⋅ 🌫 22 °C

    For our last day in Jaipur, we got a car to take us around to other notable sights and eventually drop us off at the airport. Jaipur may be a fairly compact city (unlike, say, Delhi), but we still didn't see anywhere near everything... we had enough time to spend an hour or so at a few more places before we said farewell.

    The first spot was the Birla Mandir. The Birlas were a big industrial family, controlling a bunch of factories throughout the country, and decided to build their own temple here. It's a Hindu temple, with similar structure to the others we've seen so far in terms of having lots and lots of carvings on the exterior. But there was one thing particularly interesting about this one: instead of simply being decorated with lots of Hindu deities as usual, one archway was decorated entirely foreign religious figures: Jesus Christ, Madonna with Christ, St Peter and St Francis, Zarathustra, Confucius, Buddha, Moses holding the 10 commandments, and... Socrates? Socrates seemed somewhat out of place there, but still pretty cool. The interior had marble engravings of various events of religious significance, but also had their eyes (and only their eyes) painted. Which was... kinda creepy. We had to take our shoes off to enter (as was common), and it cost 1 rupee each pair to store them. Unfortunately we only had 100 rupee notes, and the shoekeeper was quite unhappy in making change.

    Our next stop was the Albert Hall Museum. It was constructed in the late 19th century, in honor of Albert's visit to Jaipur, in an odd mix of Hindu, Mughal, and British architecture styles. The museum had a bunch of artifacts from the region: pottery, clothing, instruments, weapons. It had many stylized prints and murals both of historic and mythical events. It also had some random pieces from Japan, Egypt, and Ethiopia. Just a general, small history museum mostly focused on Rajasthan. Was worth going.

    Our final tourist stop was at the City Palace, which we think was private and still owned by the royal family but weren't sure. We only wandered around the exteriors and courtyards of the palace (to see the interiors cost six times as much, and we weren't sure we had the time anyway)... but there was much to see. A lot of the gates and arches were elaborately decorated with peacocks or elephants. The interior palace temple was converted into a textile display... featuring historic Rajasthani dress, including the billiards outfit of one of the kings. We didn't know there was such a thing as a specific billiards outfit... which is probably why we're so bad at it. This king was so enthralled with the game (introduced by the British in the early 19th century) that he converted several parts of the palace into billiards rooms. The palace armory featured a wide variety of weapons, including a display of daggers at the entrance arranged to spell HELLO and one at the exit spelled GDBY. Cute. Barry struggled to figure out what exactly a scimitar is... given nearly identical curved swords were labeled "Iranian scimitar" and "Iranian sword". There was also an artisan shop inside the palace at which we bought a few more souvenirs.

    Lastly, we wanted to stop at a bazaar to check out some block print clothing - think printing press, but for clothing designs. This is one thing Jaipur is known for. But our driver convinced us to go to a factory on the exterior of the city (right by the airport - and we were running a bit late on time, so it seemed sensible). Unfortunately, the factory only sold cloth by the meter - not any readymade items like shirts or scarves - and Tina didn't want to devote future time to sewing. Kind of a letdown, so we just went to the airport instead.

    Naturally, when we get through security at the airport, we learn that our flight is delayed by 40 minutes... so maybe we had time for that bazaar shop after all. So it goes.

    Our next post will be from our last destination of this journey: Mumbai.
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