Anyone who has kept up with this blog might be wondering why it came to such an abrupt halt on 19th March. We had one further day with Tim and Shelagh in Dubai which was mainly spent packing, although we did manage lunch out at a restaurant on the Jumeirah Beach Walk. By the evening both of us were feeling a little under the weather and, as we had a 5.00 a.m. pick-up for the airport, we had an early night.
The car turned up promptly and everything went very well at the airport and on the flight home, although neither of us did full justice to the on-board catering. At Glasgow our luggage appeared to be last off the plane but we were soon on the road. Back in Linlithgow Alex and Craig were there to welcome us home.
The final outcome was that D felt unwell enough to visit the doctor on Tuesday and, after submitting a sample, was diagnosed as being infected by the Giardia parasite. This is now being treated with a drastic regime of 500mg antibiotic tablets and strictly no alcohol :-(. We are now waiting for R's test results.
Do not let this minor setback put you off visiting India. We had a tremendous time. There is so much to see, do and experience.
Friday, 25 March 2011
Saturday, 19 March 2011
Saturday 19th March - A busy day.
Today we planned out a busy itinerary starting with a return visit to the flamingo hide at the bird sanctuary. This was busier than it had been through the week but we were able to watch a bit more activity on the part of the flamingoes than we had seen before, as well as spotting a few other species lurking around. It is to be hoped that this reserve manages to survive the relentless development going on all around it.
After the birds we drove for an hour and a half north out of Dubai and through some of the smaller Emirates, to the Wadi Bih. This is a dry watercourse (for most of the time) but obviously sees torrents of water when heavy rains fall in the mountains. We found a shady thorn tree where we set up the folding chairs and got stuck in to our sandwiches and ginger beer. There were intersting rocks and birds to look at as well as a few fossils.
Next on the agenda was the Dubail Mall for a return visit to the Aquarium, an ice cream and to pick up our tickets for a trip to the observation platform on the Burj Khalifa, the world's tallest freestanding building. THe aquarium was especially good as a couple of frogmen appeared and started feeding some of the fish which provoked a stampede (or whatever the fish equivalent is). The ice creams were pretty good too, as was the fountain display outside the mall, even if the music was Celene Dion.
The trip up the tower took quite a while, as everybody else seemed to be in the mood to dawdle. When we got up to the viewing deck it was quite crowded and the view seemed surprisingly limited. It didn't stretch as far as the Marina area and the main visible features were motorway intersections and a few brightly lit buildings. There was a much longer queue to get down than there had been to get up but eventually it was our turn to descend.
Meeting the Jordans at the bottom we headed home via the shwarma shop where we picked up supper. Shelagh made the mistake of asking to see our Indian photos. After two and a half hours we had got to the end of week two and nobody could stay awake any longer.
The trip up the tower took quite a while, as everybody else seemed to be in the mood to dawdle. When we got up to the viewing deck it was quite crowded and the view seemed surprisingly limited. It didn't stretch as far as the Marina area and the main visible features were motorway intersections and a few brightly lit buildings. There was a much longer queue to get down than there had been to get up but eventually it was our turn to descend.
Meeting the Jordans at the bottom we headed home via the shwarma shop where we picked up supper. Shelagh made the mistake of asking to see our Indian photos. After two and a half hours we had got to the end of week two and nobody could stay awake any longer.
Friday 18th March - Picnic at the Polo
Friday is Sunday in Dubai so Tim wasn't working and we all had a lie in. Shelagh had goodies to prepare for this afternoon's picnic so we slackers went swimming while Tim went for a unicycle ride round the Marina. It was soon time to go so we loaded up the car and set off to the Polo field where various friends were already busy setting up gazebos, chairs and a bar.
The entertainment kicked off with Camel Polo - chaotic as the camels were lead around by grooms and the players were clearly not used to either camels or the longer sticks required. It doesn't seem likely to catch on as a mass entertainment.
Following the comedy turn it was time for a rather splendid picnic lunch featuring a delicious salmon and Shelagh's undoubtedly excellent apple tart. As the drinks continued to circulate the conviviality level soared and people started to kick their shoes off and party. Meanwhile various polo matches were taking place, with the standard apparently improving as the the afternoon progressed.
During the interval between matches a hoopoe appeared on the playing area. This rather amazing bird was top of R's wish list and she was absolutely thrilled to see one.
The last match was between the British Army and the Habtoor team, local bigwigs. The standard of play was impressive and for quite a while the game very exciting until the Habtoors stretched out a four goal lead. By this time it was just starting to get dark so we packed everything up and returned home, exhausted from a hard day's spectating.
Friday, 18 March 2011
Thursday 17th March - Public Transport in Dubai
Thursday, 17 March 2011
Wednesday 16th March - Pretty Flamingoes
Tuesday, 15 March 2011
Tuesday 15th March - Au revoir India
Not a lot to say today and it will only make you envious if we post more pictures of champagne and luxury dining Emirates style. All went according to plan apart from a dodgy half hour where we waited inside the hotel and the driver waited outside. The useless Ramada Plaza had given hime the wrong room number. The traffic was very sedate by Delhi standards and the airport was very quiet. The flight was on time but disappointingly Indian regulations do not permit the service of alcohol while on the ground so no champagne. We won't be coming back.
Seriously, we have had a great time and probably will return but to see other places, things and railways. Once we were airborne the champagne did arrive along with a very nice lunch and our three hour flight to Dubai flew by. Our car was waiting and we were whisked down the freeway to JBR (Jumeirah Beach Residences) where we checked in to the Hotel Shelagh. As always the welcome was wonderful, the service superb and the food exquisite.
Seriously, we have had a great time and probably will return but to see other places, things and railways. Once we were airborne the champagne did arrive along with a very nice lunch and our three hour flight to Dubai flew by. Our car was waiting and we were whisked down the freeway to JBR (Jumeirah Beach Residences) where we checked in to the Hotel Shelagh. As always the welcome was wonderful, the service superb and the food exquisite.
Monday 14th March - A Henna Party
New Delhi statiuon, where we arrive a mere 10 minutes late, is its usual chaos. We batter the porters down from 500 to 300 which is still a lot more than the locals pay and they take our luggage out to a spot on the pavement next to a dodgy taxi wallah who wants to charge us well over double the rate. We agree on 400 just to get out of the heat. Our cabby, who looks about 15, has to ask directions. It's a good job that we know where we are going. Although it is only 11 a.m they have a room ready for us - just as tiny as last time we were here - but it has a/c and a shower and that is all we want at the moment.
For a final holiday thrill we took a tuk-tuk ride back to the Ramada Plaza and had a nightcap in the bar.
Sunday 13th March - We meet an Indian Politician.
When the charts are posted we are in the wrong coach and have to move. We are listed to be sharing with an Indian MP who turns up with retinue a few minutes before departure. In the meantime we have had our luggage sniffed by a bored looking black labrador. Our travelling companion turns out to be a genuine farting, burping, slurping, phone shouting anti-social.
As we turn in another Indian man appears to occupy the fourth bunk but he causes no bother. The MP's sleeping habits are relatively silent and we get a decent night's sleep.
Saturday, 12 March 2011
Saturday 12th March
Friday 11th March - The Party's Over
We climb onto the coach, most of the party with their luggage, and take a short drive down to one of the jetties on the Hooghly River. We are taking a cruise on a rather odd double decker barge but at least it looks quite smart and has paint on it unlike the general passenger ferries. Today's paper has a front page story about how most of the Hooghly ferries are operating on forged safety certificates, as well as one about scarily high numbers of Indian airline pilots reporting for duty while drunk. We sit on the top deck at the front as we take a leisurely sail up river passing verious refuse yards, water treatment facilities and derelict warehouses.
The inevitable curry buffet lunch is served although we are warned off the salad as its provenance is considered unreliable. The rest is very tasty and we tuck in, having retired to the a/c lounge to get out of the heat. For a modest price they supply cold Kingfishers. Perfection. By this time the boat has turned and is heading back downstream and we soon get the call to assemble on the aft deck for a group photo with the Hooghly Bridge as a background.
Back at the jetty everybody said goodbyes, then we squeezed into a taxi with our guide Chompa, and Ray who was also staying on in Kolkata. As we got back to the hotel a tremendous thunderstorm broke, putting all the lights out a couple of times. R slept while D tortured himself by watching Bangladesh v England on the box.
Eventually hunger prevailed and we walked down the street to the chaotic restaurant from yesterday lunchtime. We were greeted as long lost friends and seated in front of the big screen showing the England game. Everybody wanted to talk cricket and for a while England looked like they might get back into the game but they did manage to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory.
Friday, 11 March 2011
Thursday 10th March - Oh Kolkata
In the evening we all walked about half a mile to the Bar-B-Que restaurant for yet another meal.It was still very warm and the pavements were crowded making it difficult to keep up in our crocodile. The food was excellent but we were totally outfaced by the huge portions and everybody left with doggy bags to hand out to the idle poor. There weren't that many of these despite the bad press that Kolkata gets - it doesn't seem that different to Delhi or Jaipur.
Wednesday, 9 March 2011
Wednesday 9th March - Chai Korfee! Chai Korfee!
Our train comes in about 20 minutes late and there is a frantic scrum of D@Lers and porters, who eventually give up on trying to get all of our luggage on the racks. We finish up having to stack cases in the doorway - alright until the train stops with the platform on that side.
As we moved south the variety of goods on sale increased - snacks, peanuts, coconut slices, cakes, biscuits, books, newspapers, blankets, tablecloths (!) and toys and probably other things were paraded through the train. At one point we were even treated to a dispute between two sets of chai vendors, presumably about who got to sell in which coach.
After numerous signal halts we eventually pulled into an eerily deserted Kolkata station two hours late. The coach had been waiting 5 hours for some inexplicable reason. The traffic was fairly quiet and we were soon at the Peerless Inn and having a late buffet dinner. D ordered two Kingfishers without realising that they were over £5 each! We need to find an off licence.
Everybody was absolutely shattered.
Tuesday, 8 March 2011
Tuseday 8th March - Farewell to Steam
The party on the terrace must have gone on for a while last night as the empties were still there as we went to breakfast. Most people are having a relaxed start today as the boneshakers aren't leaving until 10.15. Our destination is New Jalpaiguri station, the southernmost point on the DHR and a very busy broad gauge junction. There is the usual throng around the station and we are not helped by the fact that our local guide took us to the wrong entrance.
Our train was delayed as it was necessary for it to get a path between the numerous broad gauge trains heading for the North Assam line. Eventually it pulled in, much to the consternation of the people who live on the platform. There hasn't been a train on this bit of line for months.
The route curves out of NJP, parallel to the broad gauge North Assam line, which it crosses on the level, very exciting for train buffs.
At Siliguri Junction we had to wait for a clear path so the crew disappeared for a chai break.
Monday, 7 March 2011
Monday 7th March - A day in Siliguri
An idle day to day with a lie in. Until the chai wallah comes to knock on our door at 7.30. Today is our 31st wedding anniversary and we have decided to celebrate by having a boneshaker free day. About half of the group are taking the day trip to Kalimpong, 3 hours drive back up into the mountains but we have a late breakfast, catch up on the blog e-mail etc, then take a tuk-tuk into town.
We don't have a map of Siliguri, nor do we know the names of any of the key features apart from the railway station so we head there and start to walk. We found ourselves in a quiet, shady part of town lacking only a significant retail experience. Eventually we turned into a street complete with a local market - lots of colour but not really what we were looking for. As we follow the road we realise that we have come in a big circle back to the station.
At this point an optimist with a cycle rickshaw hailed us and offered a ride to the shops for 30 rupees. He certainly earned his money - at one point he roped in two small boys to push. We gave him a decent tip. The shops had everything that you could want as long as it was used tyres or water pumping equipment. Eventually we found a general market down a side street and succesfully purchased the extra bag that R considers needed for all of the swag that she intends to purchase. So much for travelling light.
By this time we were ready for a drink so we t-t'd back to the air-conditioned splendour of the Cindrella for a beer, a dosa and a siesta. Our next official duty was the 11th Annual DHR Lovers Conference, definitely a must for the hard core enthusiast. Most people just went for the free beer, a master-stroke on the part of the organisers.
Afterwards D had an interesting chat with a retired Indian Railways general manager about the possibility of loaning a B Class to Glasgow for the Commonwealth Games. Festivities concluded with a few more beers on the terrace and the screening of a couple of classic Bollyrail numbers.
By this time we were ready for a drink so we t-t'd back to the air-conditioned splendour of the Cindrella for a beer, a dosa and a siesta. Our next official duty was the 11th Annual DHR Lovers Conference, definitely a must for the hard core enthusiast. Most people just went for the free beer, a master-stroke on the part of the organisers.
Sunday, 6 March 2011
Sunday 6th March - The second longest day
A quick breakfast back at the lodge then it is time to board the boneshakers for a ride back to Siliguri through rural North Bengal. It is difficult to decide whether being able to see the oncoming traffic hazards is preferable to playing Blind Man's Buff in the dark as we did on the outward journey. Back at the Cindrella preparations are in full swing for a wedding. Boneshaker 1 manages to tear down part of the welcoming arch. We grab a not very quick lunch as we watch South Africa turn the screw on England in the ODI.
The thing is done with a certain amount of style as we enjoy a four course meal and a seemingly endless supply of beer. One forgets the joys of eating soup on a lurching train.By the time we reach our destination it is dark and we are treated to the sight of a Darjeeling B class running with its headlamp on main beam.
We did not want to outstay our welcome so left the main party but were ambushed by the paan stall where we were talked into sampling their wares, R had silver leaf added to hers. Very interesting! We had a nightcap on the terrace with some of the group and all agreed that it had been quite a day.
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