1.30.2010

The Backwaters of Kerala



We arrived to Ernakulam in the evening after a long 30 hour train ride from Mumbai. Ernakulam is the mainland city better known as Kochi. After checking a few hotels on the mainland, we took a fairy to Fort Kochin (a nearby peninsula) and found a beautiful new guest house. Fort Kochi was a great place to spend our short stay in Kerala.



A short ferry ride and hour long bus ride took us to this nice strech of white sand known as Cherrai Beach.


We found it quite interesting and perplexing that Kerala is somehow a communist state nestled in a Democratic India. We haven't yet found an explanation of how that works.


In addition to communism, Kerala also hosts the largest Christian community in India. Although we did see a few Hindu temples, this was the only place in India we saw numerous churches.



Since our time was short we opted for a guided tour of the backwaters. It started with a canoe ride through the narrow waterways of the local villages.



We met a local villager with a wonderful smile making rope from coconut fiber. We also enjoyed seeing how the locals make Toddy, a cocunut beer brewed right in the coconut tree.

After viewing some of the local vegetation, we were treated to a Keralan style lunch. The food was served on banana leaves and tasted amazing.



After lunch we changed out the small canoes for a larger boat (but still un-motorized).



We moved out of the narrow backwaters and into some bigger canals with great views. The boat had lound chairs and shade. With full bellies and comfy seats, it was all we could do to stay awake.


After the relaxing ride we got back in the canoes and headed back home.
Our stay was short but we had a great relaxing time and would love to come back for another visit to Kerala in the future.


Quick Trip to Bombay


We decided at the last minute to try Couch Surfing for our short stay in Bombay (which is now called Mumbai by most, but we like the sound of Bombay better). Either luck or fate brought us to Fahad and his family, and for this we feel very thankful!



Thanks to Fahad and his family (pictured above and below), our trip to Bombay was much more fruitful than simply attaining a Thai visa. We had a great time talking with Fahad's dad about Dubai, engineering and cars. Even more fun was staying up late talking with Fahad and his brother Fahaq about everything and everything.



We spent three nights in the Muslim quarter of Bombay, the Azad family has lived in the same apartment in the heart of the city for over 90 years.



We spent three days traveling to and from the Thai Embassy, but also took some time to walk the bay front. The city was beautiful and fast paced, we enjoyed taking in the sights and wandering through the streets.








People watching at sunset.



Za drank chai as Josh took a quick cat nap to recharge.






The skyline of Bombay was truly stunning.



We enjoyed our time in Bombay so much that we hope to visit Fahad and his family again. Josh looks forward to talking engineering robotics and exchanging ideas with Fahad for years to come. Thanks guys!

1.08.2010

Ayurveda School in Pune


We spent the month of December in Pune (pronounced Poo-na) studying ayurveda with our new favorite Americans, Dr. Indu Arora and Montserrat (pictured below). Our schedule included daily lectures, evening clinic visits, and weekend outings.



We attended an Indian wedding our first weekend in town.



We enjoyed eating dinner in our apartment and learning how to cook Indian food from Indu. Now living in Chicago, she is from Delhi and travels internationally teaching yoga seminars.



We went to B.K.S. Iyengar's 91st birthday celebration. What a fun night!



Rickshaw rides were polluted and stinky so we took to wearing scarves for protection.



We toured two ayurvedic hospitals and pharmacies. The tree pictured here is good for skin disorders.



This carving depicts the five elements that govern the life force in all of us.



Aloe vera awaiting processing.



Pomegranate ripening



We searched for more cheap books at this cramped ayurvedic book store.



Our graduating class and some of the faculty from the International Academy of Ayurveda.



After our course, we took a weekend to sight see with Indu. We saw many impressive temples and ate delicious strawberries along the way.









Our weekend trip was the perfect ending to a month of study. We can't wait to visit Indu in Chicago when we return home!

1.05.2010

The Taj Mahal

We thought we could apply for a Thai visa by courier service in Agra and therefore see the Taj Mahal and avoid going to Mumbai. After a long, cold over night train ride from Benares, two birds with one stone became one silly trip to the Taj. It turned out the courier service didn't handle foreign passports through Agra. Oh well, we still had the last sightseeing excursion of Team Tourist (Lee, Steph, Josh and me). We had to get back on the train six hours after we arrived in Agra, so we headed straight for the Taj after taking a quick shower in our Australian friends' room. What can we say? Yes, it's every bit as stunning and beautiful as everyone says.
They wouldn't let me wear my new silly hat from Nepal into the Taj. The hat received dozens of comments and compliments as I walked through town, however.


Breath taking!
It's big.
We did it!


We pinched it!


We did some yoga around it! Until the guards yelled at us that is...








The jewel inlays were particularly stunning.



After a painfully below average lunch, we got back on the train and headed to Pune.


1.04.2010

Varanasi is Benares is Kashi




The oldest living city in the world has the modern name Varanasi, but Prem called it Benares so we followed suit. When we met Prem in Pokhara, he insisted we visit him in Benares when we returned to India. The city had been on our short list for a few months, and Prem's invitation was just what we needed to make the trip. We were excited to have someone to show us around the ancient city since we only had a few days to spare. Prem's artistic pursuits in music and film, combined with his passionate approach to life made him an excellent city steward.
In Benares, over four thousand years of continuous inhabiting creates thick history and thin veils between the physical and spiritual. The guide books report that visitors either love or hate the city, and that it's the quintessential Indian experience. Our three day visit hardly scratched the surface, but we did catch a glimpse of the relentless ebb and flow of this holy city.

We arrived dog tired from Nepal with our new Australian travel buddies Lee and Steph. Although we had been warned not to trust anyone in Benares, we followed a restaurant owner after breakfast to a nearby hotel. The Pooja's seven stories, complete with roof top restaurant, provided a great place to practice yoga and watch the ghats from above. Ghats are huge concrete stairs that lead into the Ganga River, and there are dozens lining the river in Benares. Walking along the ghats was an easy way to prevent getting lost in an otherwise confusing maze of a city. Prem invited us to dinner in Assi Ghat where he lived. Assi Ghat was the last southern ghat in the city, and we were towards the north end of the ghats. Thus began the first long ghat walk of what would turn into a half dozen during our stay.

To walk the ghats, one must be prepared to see, smell, hear or avoid stepping on virtually anything. From one ghat to the next, there is no clear pattern or path to follow. Each step must be calculated to accommodate a high stair, a broken boat, a pile of dung, a sleeping cow, a stream of water or most shocking, a burning body. The burning ghats were mesmerising. Photos weren't allowed, and depending on which locals were hanging around them, women weren't either. Bodies seemed to burn at different rates after watching for an hour or so. We discovered there were different grades of wood depending how much money was used for the cremation. Sandalwood burned fastest. We saw piles of wood hauled in around the clock, and everyone seemed to have a different job to keep operations running smoothly. The strangest part was seeing the body turned over in the fire and then the final unburned bone fragment get carried to the river.
Our few days and nights flew by. We walked the ghats several times a day, people watched and explored the city.



We toured Benares Hindu University, the largest university in Asia. Over five square kilometres, the campus is unmanageable on foot. We hired a bicycle rickshaw to take us to the museum, the Hindu temple and a few of the buildings.

The cycle of life and death seemed closer and faster than ever in Benares. Prem witnessed a funeral procession met with a wedding procession while walking down an alley a few days before our visit. There was hardly room for the two parties to pass. The irony of each element on the Ganga, whether a filthy cloth covering a child or a sparkling pooja offering, contrasted so rapidly that it was hard to take it all in. Truly an overwhelming sensory experience, the moment we saw something that made us smile, the next corner would reveal a jaw dropping gasp.

We noticed this goat outside our hotel nudging through the bathroom trash from our room. A few hours later, the trash had disappeared (thankfully).
There is nothing on the other side of the Ganga because it floods during monsoon season.
This old temple is also underwater during the monsoon.


We spent our evenings playing and listening to music at Prem's flat. He had some funny wigs and played air drum quite well.
:)
Thumbs up on this crazy town!