Wednesday, September 28, 2005
Wednesday, September 28, 2005 9:45:15 PM (India Standard Time, UTC+05:30) ( India Trip )

I am off to Kolkata tomorrow. Normally a trip to my favorite city in India would be a welcome event.  But tomorrow, the Communist Party of India (Marxist) has called for a general strike. 

I nearly called off the trip. I set two guidelines for traveling: 1- that the State Department had not issued a travel advisory and that the hotel would send a car to the airport to pick me up.  I had to change hotels, but both conditions were met.

The plan is to fly in, hurry to the car and get to the hotel quickly, without running into a protest or rally. Then hang out in the hotel and wait out the strike.  Our office, and our vendor office will be closed on Thursday, on account of it being too dangerous for staff to travel to the office.


Shawn

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Monday, September 26, 2005
Monday, September 26, 2005 10:39:07 AM (India Standard Time, UTC+05:30) ( )

After a very interesting and relaxing weekend, I am off to the hill station of Kodaikanal.  It is four hours away by bus.  

I will write later about my experiences this weekend. I stayed at the home of Samuel and Ebenezer Benjamin. Samuel is a Pastor and he and Ebenezer are doing many good things in and around Madurai.

I also took a few snaps around Madurai that I will post when I get back to the hotell.

My plan is to stay in Kodai tonight and be there until about 4 PM on Tuesday, then back to Madras on the Pandian express, picking the train up at Kodai Road.

On the road to Kodai --


Shawn

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Saturday, September 24, 2005
Saturday, September 24, 2005 6:46:28 AM (India Standard Time, UTC+05:30) ( )

I think I am in Madurai, and I think I survived the night on the luggage rack.


Shawn

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Friday, September 23, 2005
Friday, September 23, 2005 11:33:23 PM (India Standard Time, UTC+05:30) ( )

The rumors of a special express train kept me at the station. My rationale was that any seat on the train would be better than a seat on the government bus.

I persevered in numerous lines at Egmore Station for 3 hours before ending up with an "Open Ticket". Total cost: 117 rupee (about $2.50).  What did this great expenditure get me?  I am writing this while reclining on a hanging wood plank luggage rack at the back of a train that reeks of old urine.

I haven't slept more than 4 or 5 hours a night since arriving, except for 1 night in Pondicherry.  I think I will either fall fast asleep and have a sore back tomorrow or be so exhausted I won't be able to do anything.

Not sure if this is better than the bus...

Maybe I will try to snooze while remembering Yuri from Doctor Zhivago riding across Siberia in a very similar train car.  If only I could trade the oppressive heat for the Siberian chill. 

Shawn

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Friday, September 23, 2005 11:15:43 PM (India Standard Time, UTC+05:30) ( )

When someone you know, trust and can clearly communicate with (ie Jasper) says "Go to 'Current Booking'". -- Go there, not 'Booking'.

When you ask someone "Is this Current Booking?" And they give a weak "yes",  ask 3 other people. 

At Chennai Egmore, Current Booking is on the outside front of the srtation, along the terrace.   The sign says " Current Reservation Counter".

Hoping that the rumors of a special train to Madurai are true.


Shawn

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Monday, September 19, 2005
Monday, September 19, 2005 9:25:38 AM (India Standard Time, UTC+05:30) ( )

I highly recommend the Villa Pondicherry. Previously in Pondy I stayed at the Executive Inn and the Hotel Suruguru.  Both are excellent in their own right, but neither compare in ambience to the Villa Pondicherry.

On arrival I was greeted my the housekeeper and shown a room on the ground floor, just off the dining area.  The room was comfortably furnished with chair, bed and table you would expect to find in a home.

I was given a padlock for the room and a key to the front door. 

Throughout the house are paintings by the proprietor, Prichaya Manet (a very fitting surname).

The following morning I sat around the table with Pichaya and the other guests (teacher from France, retired couple from Switzerland, aid workers from Belgique).  Though most of the conversation was in French, it was a wonderful way to spend the morning.  The highlight is when the Swiss couple sang a Canadian song (in French), a capella

I found Villa Pondicherry in the Lonely Planet Guide, but the map of Pondicherry shows it closer to town then it actually is.  The map indicates that it is 60m down Ambedkar Salai, but it is closer to 600, past the Sports Complex and across the railroad tracks.   Most autorickshaw drivers will know where it is.

Shawn

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Sunday, September 18, 2005
Sunday, September 18, 2005 7:41:49 AM (India Standard Time, UTC+05:30) ( )

Note: I am typing this paragraph last, after hammering out the details below on my Blackberry's tiny keyboard. It occurs to me that I get just as much joy out of the logistics of travel and raw existence in India as I do in the historical and natural wonders.


After a long week of work I wasn't feeling like doing anything except sleeping over the weekend.   I had just enough desire/energy to call and get a room in Pondicherry, just in case.

I wasted a few good hours Saturday morning with indecision as I debated going to the beach in Chennai instead.  Finally at 10:30 I threw a few things in my smaller backpack and took a 3-wheeler taxi to the Koyambedu bus terminal.  

Once there I settled into the TT's seat in the rear of the bus.  My hope was that the TT (ticket taker) would sit up front and not mind and that sitting here would prevent me from getting squished into a bench with 2 other guys.

About 25 people were already on the bus, including 2 French women, 1 who looked completely comfortable, the other completely nervous.  This bus was very dilapidated, with several broken benches and a thick layer of grime over every spot that didn't come into regular contact with a passenger.

After a few more minutes some backpackers (German by the sound of it) got on heaving enourmous backpacks. I smiled, remembering being in that same situation before at almost this exact spot (that day in February I was on the Pondy bus, right next to the bus I was currently on. That day the TT was very frustrated because there was no place to put my pack except on the seat, reducing his revenue even though I offered to buy it a ticket).

I don't know why, but I was slightly annoyed at sharing the bus with a bunch of other tourists.  That soon ended though when a man who had been in the seat ahead of me poked his head in the door behind me and said "That is the bus for Mahabalipuram".  "That bus" had backed out of its stall and was about to leave.  I grabbed my gear and ran off, as I pushed through the German backpackers who were standing outside the rear door smoking.  The french woman called out "Sir, is that our bus?".   With a quick "I think so!". I sprinted off, the bus was starting to pull away.  I shouted "Mahabalipuram?" To the TT of that bus was leaning out the back door. He wagged his head in that Indian gesture seems to mean "you can think that if you want".   I caught up to the bus and hauled myself on just in time to look out the back window and see one of the French women standing behind the other bus. I guess her nervous companion couldn't make up her mind.

Two hours later we had covered the 50km to Mahabalipuram.  Since my true objective was Pondicherry, I decided to make quick work of this place and catch the 3:00 express.  That gave me just over an hour to sightsee.

I will post pictures in a later post. The shore temple and hill caves, the "5 Rathas" where pretty impressive. Especially when considering their age.  One informational sign said that Roman coins. Had been found on the site.

Back at the bus stand I checked again for the bus. This time I was told "3:40". And just as quickly a taxi driver came over and asked if I wanted a taxi to Pondy.  Why spend 300 when you can wait 45 minutes and spend 30.  An auto-rickshaw driver came over and told me that an ECR express bus passes by on the highway every 10 minutes and will stop if people are waiting at the turnoff to this town.  20 rupee to avoid standing around for 40 minutes seemed like a good value proposition.  A few minutes later the driver turned around and said "my sister" as he pulled over.  Three schoolgirls quickly ran up, their excitement at a free ride quickly changed to fear as they saw me.  The sister claimed the shotgun seat upfront, the quicker thinking of the other two climbed in the back and slid as far away from me as she could and motioned for the third to sit in the middle.  That poor girl just stared at me in what was either terror or disgust (I had been sweating in the humid Indian heat for 4 hours, and probably had a disgustingly foreign odor about me). 

Finally, I was standing by myself on the side of the highway.  A couple minutes later two more guys were dropped off as a bus approached. The two men climbed on board. I asked the driver if he was going to Pondy. He said "Yes, yes, Pondy" and I took one step on board.  I couldn't get any farther on because there was no room.  The bus was jammed full of people. Eventually I pushed back enough (because more people got on the bus) to watch a Tamill movie that was not too bad, even though I couldn't follow the dialogue.  That made the 2 hours standing on a careening bus, pressed between 5 other people a bit easier.   With the exception of being thrown forward when the driver slammed on the brakes to avoid rear-ending an elephant, the trip was tolerable. My one wish is that they would have made the ceiling 1 inch higher so I could have stood up straight.


Shawn

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Tuesday, September 13, 2005
Tuesday, September 13, 2005 8:08:36 PM (India Standard Time, UTC+05:30) ( )

To belabor the point from my previous post I saw the following on a sign this morning:

370 New (636 Old) Anna Salai (Mount Rd.) Chennai (Madras), Tamil Nadu. 

Sure makes things complicated to have two names for everything, on top of two languages.  They had the same address written write below it in Tamil.

That is the last of my words on this topic.

But one other thing that caught my curiosity:  Haven't seen a single cow in this city. Odd?


Shawn

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Monday, September 12, 2005
Monday, September 12, 2005 11:06:51 PM (India Standard Time, UTC+05:30) ( )
I am constantly getting drawn into (or inciting) heated debates about the relative merits of West Bengal (north) vs. Tamil Nadu (south).   Now that I am a 3 day veteran of Chennai, let me throw the following into the mix:
 
Roads:  Chennai/Tamil Nadu definitely win this one.  A few hours on the road in Kolkata and I have back aches and bruises. In Chennai the major roads are as good as many in the US.
 
Directions/Taxi Travel:  I never had a single problem going anywhere in Kolkata (and I went all over the place).  In Chennai I have a hard time getting anywhere.  One of the main streets (if not the main street) is Anna Salai.   NOBODY seems to have heard of this street.  It runs straight through the city.  It is visible from miles out in space.  None of the 6 auto-rickshaw drivers I have employed so far have had any luck finding and address on this street.  Most had to be guided to it.   Some could only refer to it by the British name (Mount Road).  The building numbers were non-sequential, with some building having a hard time which number was the old or the new number.
 
Government:  A tangent of the above point is that in Kolkata they seemed to have properly moved on from the British period.   Names were changed and life went on.  In the south, it seems the government renamed everything from the name of the city down to the numbers on buildings, but nobody seemed convinced that the change was for real, so everything has either a double name or a double number (old and/or new).   It seems that the Bengalis really trust or like their government.  They plant communist flags all over the place unhesitantly praise it, even in the face of corruption.  Additionally, they treat Chandra Bose with more reverence than any other bureaucrat I have ever heard of.
 
Am I wrong?
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