Monday, March 16, 2009

Udaipur



Udaipur at sunset


Udaipur was the first stop in our tour of Rajasthan, the desert state in Western India. The city is best known for its lake, and few palaces, all of which appeared in the James Bond movie Octopussy.

For some reason, the town has almost no restaurants except those on the rooftops of guesthouses, which are twice the price and half as good. I guess the locals always eat at home. Nearly all of the restaurants show Octopussy, and we ended up eating and watching a badly pirated version with about half the movie intact. At least we got to see the places in the movie that we could see from the rooftop. That was pretty cool.

We visited the city palace and snuck around with our cameras to avoid the Rs 250 camera fee. Julia was scolded once. Me? I'm too sneaky. Otherwise the city didn't have too much to see.



A king's tire swing


Julia and I outside the palace


Eating biscuits in the royal courtyard


Some wandering brought us to a neighborhood with little artisan's studios and tons of children around. The kids went nuts when they saw our cameras, begging us to take picture after picture. They love it, and I feel much better about that than giving them the money, chocolate, or pens ("School pen! School pen!") they typically demand.


Udaipur kids


A man makes gold bangles


Working on a silver chain


A bus ride through the desert today brought us to Jodhpur. We're lucky we made it as the bus started to pull away from the roadside restaurant in the middle of the desert without us.

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Mumbai Madness: Holy Holi and Hindi Horror

(Click photos to enlarge)

A 16 hour bus ride brought me from Hampi to Mumbai, where I rendezvoused with Julia. I had the sleeper seat in the very back of the bus which meant that when the bus hit a bump (often), my head hit the roof if I was sitting, or my entire body lifted off the bed if I was lying down. Still, the bus trip was alright as a few foreigners, Indians and I played cards into the night.

Mumbai is a pretty decent city. Immediately, I was struck by how much more modern and lively it is than Delhi. Maybe that's because it's on the coast, or because Bollywood is based there. Everywhere you look there are buildings with balconies that, though I've never been there, remind me of the French Quarter in New Orleans.


Balconies



University of Mumbai


On our first day, we took a wander around Colaba, the tourist neighborhood of the city. Colaba is also where the Taj Palace Hotel that was the main focus of the 26/11 Mumbai attacks is located. We took a walk past the old building that was bombed and is now completely closed for repairs and walked through two sets of metal detectors into the new tower that seemed unharmed. The Taj, I believe, is a Mumbai institution, and had the look of a five star hotel anywhere in the world.

Day two was March 11, and the start of the Hindu festival of Holi. We didn't really know where to go to participate in the paint based food fight that the Indians call "Playing Holi," so we hopped on a random bus. Turns out we got lucky and ended up in one of the most active places in Mumbai for the holiday.

A nice family invited us to play in front of their home, and so it began:

In the beginning



The source of my green hair



After playing


Hours later, thoroughly covered in paint, we returned to the hotel find that it's not easy to get that stuff out. Four days and five showers later, I still have green and red on my skin, and a little green in my hair. Julia's hair looks like peacock feathers with the green, and she is asked dozens of times a day if she enjoyed playing Holi.

One shower later


We figured we had to see a Hindi movie while we were in the Bollywood capital, so we saw 13/B, a horror movie. Going to an Indian movie is a surreal experience. First, you pick your seats from a seating chart at the box office. The previews are each preceeded by a few seconds of a scanned, handwritten document approving them to be shown. Then, suddenly, all the metal chair backs slam as the audience arises at once for the Indian national anthem! I joked that maybe they would have songs and dancing in the horror movie. It turned out there was. And an intermission. Fun fun.

One sunset we wandered over to Chowpatty beach where locals come to put there children on thoroughly dangerous looking, human powered carnival rides, swimming in the toxic seawater and eat tasty snacks. We sat for a while, fought off hawkers, and tasted Bhel Puri, a tasty dish of puffed rice, fried biscuits, tomato, onion, lime and a whole bunch of other things.


Eating Bhel Puri



Street art near beach


We spent a little while one night in Leopold's, the bar and restaurant made famous by Shantaram, which nearly every backpacker here is reading. Leopold's is about as boring as it gets, with overpriced food and drinks, and a fully tourist crowd, except that it still has bullet holes in the walls from the Mumbai attacks. Seeing how plain Leopold's is slowed me down even more in the interminably long middle section of Shantaram.

We're now in Udaipur, but more on that later.


A man makes Pan



Train in Mumbai CST: Lonely Planet says 2.5 million people go through here every day



Food bazaar



The bazaar is a perfect place for a nap



Outside of bazaar



Cheers!

Sunday, March 8, 2009

Wrapping Up Hampi

Well I'm finally leaving Hampi tomorrow night. It's been an amazing time, relaxing, climbing, playing chess, cards, or any other game, visiting temples, jumping into the lake, riding motorbikes and overcrowded rickshaws. I made some good friends here from all over the world. Tomorrow I head to Mumbai for the Holi Festival. Julia from Germany is also heading to Mumbai, so we're going to find a room to share there.

Oh and there's the cake man, who wanders through the rocks hawking "Cakes, cakes, coconut, chocolate, pineapple, banana, everything is mixing cake." I'll miss this place.