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Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon

a travel blog by The Happy Couple


Michael's view on the trip. This blog is really mostly for me, so that I'll have a clearer memory of the trip when it's done, like a journal, so please forgive me my obsessions like sampling and photographing all the local food and the booze. It's just my thing!

Also please forgive all typos, spelling mistakes and grammar mistakes. I'm usually doing this in a rush, and most of the time it's on such a slow PC that it would take even longer to check for mistakes and correct them.

The blog is usually 2 to 3 weeks behind, but I try to keep next few locations on the map up-to-date. You can see the schedule dates associated with the map if you go to http://blogabond.com/TripView.aspx?TripID=4517 and click "Show Newest First" or, if the maps are causing problems try http://blogabond.com/TripView.aspx?tripID=4517&slow=1
view all 2953 photos for this trip


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Bollywood Stars!

Mumbai, India


We were up early for our Bollywood appointment. I was hungover from the strong beer and Joanne had been bitten all over by bed bugs, despite the fact she had slept in her silk sleeping bag liner, which usually protects against insect attacks. Joanne counted nearly 50 bites. Now we realised why Johnny's skin was looking so bad: his face had been covered in bedbug bites. While getting ready to go, Joanne noticed something on the floor. Is it a bat? Yes it is! Rather than wake it up and risk it biting us and giving us rabies, we decided to leave it there, assuming it would be gone by the time we returned, after all we were expecting to be back after dark, by which time it would be out hunting. Our pick-up time meant that we would miss breakfast at the guesthouse, but we had been promised free food and water on top of the Rs500 we would earn for our day's work.

We were picked up on time by a minder in a taxi, arriving outside our guesthouse with the scout who spotted us the day before. Joanne asked him if she was still OK to work, as she had several bites on her face, and two below her left eye were starting to make her look like she had a black eye. He said it was no problem and they dropped us at the Central Train Station, where we met the three other Westerners working as extras with us: three Dutch school-leavers, one boy and two girls. Our minder got us tickets for “general class” and we got on the train. The train was busy. I gather Indian train are almost always busy, after all there are an awful lot of people in India, so we squashed into the carriage, and by a small miracle we managed to get seats. Rather than squashing the rest of us up more, one of the Dutch girls, Milou, sat diagonally opposite us all, clinging onto some European idea of personal space. Of course at the next station more people poured on the train, some squashing in next to us, some squashing in next to Milou. The Dutch girls had obviously not done any research into acceptable dress in India, or even read the “Women Travellers” or “Culture” section in their guidebook. If they had they would have known that, for example, you are likely to attract a lot of attention if you expose your shoulders. In Milou's case she was wearing a spaghetti strap top, which was also very low cut. So shoulders and and tits exposed, here she was sitting on her own in general class on a rush hour Mumbai train. As the men filed on and sat around her they took turns staring right at her cleavage. In the West, the top would have had the same effect on men, of course, except that we would have taken quick furtive glances, but that isn't the way it works in India: the men just sit there a gawp. As the train got busier, the men next to her really started staring right down her top, then the men on each side appeared to be afflicted with arm problems that needed rubbing. Mere circumstance, of course, would have it that the problematic part of their arms was located right next to her breast on the men's respective sides. Just as she swatted one set of probing fingers away and shifted to prevent another attack, the one on the other side would grasp his chance. I felt very sorry for her but I couldn't help also thinking “what a silly girl”. In India this behaviour is known as “Eve Teasing”, and this kind of sexual harassment is quite common in crowded places, particularly trains. While not really considered a serious sexual assault in Western culture, Indian men seem to see this as quite innocent. Of course any guide book about India warns about this, and explains that you can reduce the risks by dressing conservatively. Being white probably makes you more of a target, but Indian women are also victim to such behaviour. When we stopped at a station and our minder indicated it was our stop, Milou made an understandable bolt for the door, and as we got on to the platform and I was thinking “poor silly girl” again, Joanne said “Oh!” and looked back scowling. Apparently someone had just groped her bottom, despite her conservative dress. Less than 24 hours there and I was already brewing a strong dislike for India and Indians.

We arrived at the set and I started to become slightly suspicious about the “Bollywood” credentials of the film company. It was a screen set alright, but it looked very basic, whereas I had been under the impression that Bollywood was all about big productions. As soon as we entered the place a pushy man I assumed to be gay took custody of us, leaving our minder behind. Thankfully he arranged for plates of food to be brought to us, so at least we had breakfast. He seemed in a hurry and, before we had really finished, ushered us to the dressing area, which was really just a small room in a concrete hut. We were to be Hare Krishnas; the structure on one side of the set was a Hare Krishna temple, it was explained. What a load of Europeans were doing as Hare Krishnas in India was left to our imaginations; apparently they just like to give their productions an “international feel” by having some whites in the background. The girls were dressed in Saris, and the Dutch boy and I were put into wrap-around trousers and long shirts. The finishing touch was a paper clip, dipped in yellow paint, then daubed on our foreheads between the eyebrows to create our religious markings. Then the true final touch: a little bag to place over our right hands, apparently an essential part of the Hare Krishna uniform. I've always wondered what they are for, and always joked that Hare Krishnas are avid Scrabble players, constantly shuffling letters in the bag, however these bags were empty. As soon as we were dressed we were urged onto the set. I was last dressed and I had apparently missed everyone else's first scene. My first, and the others' second required us to stand around outside a fake shop front, pretending to talk. I was a bit put out that I was asked to turn around and make conversation with Joanne, denying India a view of my face.



To begin with it was very confusing and nobody really told us what was happening. But soon a pattern emerged: before the started filming each shot the director would shout “passing people” at which point we would all have to rush to corners just off set then, once everyone was in place, he would shout “rolling” then “passing” and we would all have to start walking across the set, and shortly after he would shout “action” and the real actors in the centre of the set would begin their scene. As if it wasn't absurd enough that this meant the same people appeared in the background of every single shot they filmed that day, including some easily recognisable white people, I'd have thought, when we got to the other side of the set, we would be asked to turned around and head back across the set in a slightly different direction, sometime crossing the set four times in the course of a thirty second clip. Now I'm prepared to believe that the audience attention is so focused on the actors that they don't pay much attention to the passing street scene behind, but surely when a white Hare Krishna with dreadlocks walks by four times in one shot and appears in each other shot in one day's worth of filming, people are going to notice! That was our job for almost the whole day: lots of standing around in the hot sun between cuts, as the director and actors reviewed on monitors what had just been shot, before, more often than not, reshooting the same scene. The director is a perfectionist, one of the actors told us. As the day wore on everyone relaxed more and more and we spent some time chatting to the other, Indian, extras in between scenes. Most of them were extras full time, and they had been on this set for a couple of weeks already. They were very nice and friendly, which was a relief as we were beginning to get the impression that all Indians were unfriendly and unpleasant, and could not understand why we were not planning to return to the set the following day or, indeed, for the next several weeks. “We want to see lots more of India”, I explained.

During that day I realised that nobody in India has the slightest clue where Scotland is. They know England; they know South Africa, so Joanne was OK; they know Australia, New Zealand, and anywhere they are good at cricket. Actually, since a couple of Indians have told me that Scotland has qualified for something or other in cricket for the first time; could it be the World Cup? Seems unlikely, but apparently they have done something small in cricket recently, so a few Indians have now heard of the country. In Europe people say “yes Glasgow Celtic, Glasgow Rangers” when you say you are from Scotland; in South East Asia most people said “Braveheart”, but in India they only really watch Bollywood. I've now started saying “Scotch Whisky”, which is what people in Thailand new Scotland for, and which drops the penny for some Indians as they love whisky too, but so many of them don't drink I usually have to resort to “next door to England”.

We finally got a lunch break about half past two after a particularly harrowing scene involving the actor appearing most that day, lifting a young boy on his shoulders to retrieve something from the shop roof. I'm sure all actors can allow themselves to indulge in prima donna behaviour from time to time, but this scene brought it all out. First of all, the young boy seems to be something of a star and was pampered terribly from the moment he appeared on location: he was constantly offered sweets and drinks, was having his costume and makeup re-arranged for him, and he was followed everywhere by flunkies carrying a parasol over him. I gathered the man who seemed to be playing his father is a big star, as he arrived just before his scene, was also followed everywhere with a parasol, and left immediately after. The boy was very badly behaved and we watched him have several tantrums, start crying, demand things be brought to him, and caused each of his scenes to be reshot several times. When it came to lifting the boy on his shoulders the “main” actor who seemed to be in every scene that day had clearly had enough. He didn't seem to be a big enough star to get the parasol treatment most of the time, although he was during this long stretch of shooting in the middle of the day. After several attempts at the scene being messed up by the, frankly overweight, spoiled little brat, the actor with the boy on his shoulders took a very dramatic swoon, causing everyone to run after him with water, a fan, and chairs for him to rest on. I think he was just upset because the boy had knocked his wig off, although he had clearly had enough of the boy. After a substantial break, shooting resumed using clever camera angles to enable to useless little boy to stand on a ladder instead of sitting on the beleaguered actor.

After lunch the extras had relaxed even more and by the end of the day, nobody was really listening to what they were being told to do. Everyone was just having fun and walking this way and that, and taking turns being driven by the “passing” rickshaw drivers. The rickshaw drivers had been a bit of a pain all day actually because it's not that easy to turn one of them in the confined space they had on set, just to drive it back across set again, especially when the people driving them are not real rickshaw drivers, I suspect. By the end the sound engineers, the stage hands, and even the guy who had dressed us (who actually seemed to be something to do with money and paying people) were all taking turns as extras and being driven on a rickshaw in the background. After a bit of asking I discovered that it's definitely not a Bollywood production (I got plenty of laughs for asking that), it's a new soap opera called Swarg, which is Hindi for heaven, starting on the 16th June on Colors TV. Anyone who is able to track this down please record it or download it for me as I want to see just how often we appear in our episode. I estimate that I appear about forty times in what can't be more than fifteen minutes of footage, and some of it I'm right in the foreground, between the camera and the actors.

When it all finished we changed and were paid and taken back to the train by our minder. This time he said to the girls, “you get on here”, pointing to the “Women Only” carriage. What an indictment of Indian society that women are so abused on the trains they need their own carriages! Afterwards Joanne told me that even on the women's carriage Milou was getting plenty of stares, this time highly disapproving rather than ogling. After the train our minder flagged down taxis and said goodbye. He handed me a twenty rupee note and said something like “the fare should be 18 rupees but just give him 20”. I didn't completely catch what he said, but I was a bit worried that 20 was too little. When we arrived the driver asked for Rs80. I had been expecting it, so I told him that we had no money and our Indian friend (who had already discussed the fare with the driver) had given us only 20. OK, sixty, he said, then soon after, OK, fifty. I was trying to explain that I was serious, and that I wasn't bargaining, when I remembered I had the number of the scout from the day before, so I called him. “No way!”, he said, “Do not give him any more than twenty”. I told the driver this, but he wouldn't go lower than fifty. Just then two obviously drunken Indian guys came up to the taxi and joined in the argument. They said they were taxi drivers they told me that 80 was a fair price and since I didn't want to pay it they reached in and locked down the door and said “right – drive to police station”. I wasn't certain whether the Bollystars guys or the taxi driver(s) were lying to me, but someone was, and given taxi drivers' record I was inclined to believe the twenty fare, but it was all getting a bit intimidating, so I told him I'd have to go upstairs for the money. When I came down, the other two were gone, so I said “there's the 50 you agreed” and handed it to him. He grumbled but drove off. Later we met up with the Dutch people and discovered that they had been charged 25 for going slightly further than us so it, in fact, the greedy taxi driver, going back on the fare our minder agreed and trying to rip off the foreigners. The Dutch were also told the fare was twenty, but a small tourist rip-off like 25% extra is something most people can live with; our 300% however is a bit cheeky!

While we were on set, the kiosk our SIM cards came from called sounding concerned that we hadn't yet produced the mountain of documentation required, but they seemed reasonably happy when I explained we were working and would bring it the next day, but it was already closed when we passed it anyway. We bought some insecticide before returning to our room to try and get rid of the bedbugs. The bat was still there. It seemed to have changed position, so I didn't think it was dead, although I couldn't explain why it was still there as it was well after dark. We called the grumpy concierge, who swept the dead bat up with a brush. There was a blob of blood under where the bat had been, so I think it must have been mauled by a cat or something, then just managed to make it through our bedroom window where it had its final writhing moments of agony. In the dorm it sounded like there was a bit of a party, so we wandered through to find lots of people drinking or smoking dope, with absolutely no regard for the rules, apparently. Every single person we spoke to in the whole place had bedbugs, we discovered, so stuff their rules! Joanne sprayed the room and our mattresses thoroughly with the insecticide then we brought our Glen Livet through to the party and had a few drinks.

permalink written by  The Happy Couple on May 21, 2009 from Mumbai, India
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Escape from Mumbai

Mumbai, India



After spraying loads of insect spray the night before, Joanne only had a few suspected new bedbug bites. This time we were able to enjoy the delights of the Red Shield included breakfast. Terrible! Three bits of white bread, a small banana, and a plate of cold, watery beans. And lunch had been so nice as well. We got chatting to Matthew and Jessica, the couple who had arrived at the guesthouse just after us. They, of course, had bedbugs as well. Their plan was to go to Nepal after a longish stay in India. They had messed it up a bit, they said, because they've discovered that India wasn't exactly their favourite place, but now they were stuck here. How so, we asked. Apparently they were waiting for the “correct” time to go to Nepal, which starts in September, but is primarily October and November, after the monsoon has finished in late August to early September. At this point I despaired. We had originally planned our trip to stay ahead of the monsoon, which is why we were in India after South East Asia, where it hits earlier. We had been plagued by early monsoon in SE Asia, compounded by the fact we kept staying longer than scheduled. And now we were in India, people had told us that Goa has already “shut down” for the monsoon and the rain has started; it's already been raining in Kerala for a few weeks; and now we were learning about the monsoon in Nepal. For some reason I had not thought about monsoon in Nepal at all, perhaps because I thought that being mountainous and away from South West coasts it would escape the South West Monsoon. Our plan had been to head south from Mumbai to Goa, then onto Kerala, before heading northwards, eventually into Nepal. I asked to borrow Matthew and Jessica's Nepal guide and read that the monsoon is generally considered to start mid-June, although the season is considered to run from October to April. I also read that the Anapurna Circuit, which I had intended us to do, takes about three weeks. I hadn't realised it was so long. Maybe I should have done more research! There were some shorter suggested treks, but ten days seemed to be about the shortest of the decent ones. That decided it: we had spent far too long in SE Asia and all the delays had now truly caught up with is. We discussed it and quite quickly came to the conclusion that we should forget about Southern India and head straight for Nepal. We could see Northern India in the rain when we returned, but trekking in the rain in Nepal would not be fun (the leeches are awful apparently), and Nepal was one of my “must do” places when we were first planning our route.

So that decided it: get a train to Gorakhpur for Nepal, according to the Trains at a Glance book belonging to the Red Shield, and get out of Mumbai as soon as possible. The booking office wasn't too far away, so we walked, getting constantly harassed to take rickshaws, buy hashish, buy milk for baby brother, as we breathed in the air thick with pollution. We eventually found the booking office, where the queues were a bit difficult to understand. At one end we noticed a counter for foreigners to buy an Indrail Pass, which we didn't want to do, so Joanne stood in that queue while I stood in the information queue. There was quite a bit of jostling but I got to the front, where I was told that the train we wanted for Gorakhpur via Lucknow was full “because of the holiday”.

Or was it just the foreigners' quota that was full? I couldn't quite understand because, having not quite yet tuned into Indlish, I couldn't really follow with all the background noise everyone else seemed to feel compelled to produce so much of. The next train she could offer us was in three days and there was no way we were staying in Mumbai that long. I gave up and joined Joanne in her queue, where she was speaking to a guy from Brazil who told her how unhappy he feels in India because it seems so dangerous. There are plenty of things to dislike India for, but being dangerous I think would be near the bottom of my list, and this guy was from Brazil, for goodness' sake! We got to the front of the queue and discovered it's not just for Indrail passes. Apparently the school holiday is on, so the trains are very busy. She was unable to find any route to Gorahkpur leaving in the next two days, so we thought on our feet and tried via Agra instead of Lucknow. Yes she could get us a ticket to Agra tomorrow, but we couldn't travel onwards for a couple of days. Brilliant! OK, so this would get us to Nepal no earlier, but at least we'd be stuck in Agra with the Taj Mahal, instead of in Mumbai with the high prices, the filth, the poverty, and the harassment. We weren't sure what class to book but Matthew and Jessica had told us that it's worth splashing out on Second Class A/C because you get a lockable compartment to yourselves so the security is much better. We had heard some really good things about Indian trains, but security is a concern, so we asked about 2nd Class A/C and it was much dearer than we'd been expecting. We didn't really want to be frozen half to death by the aircon, so we asked about ordinary Sleeper Class, and was it just the same, just as secure, but without the aircon. Yes, yes, just the same she assured us, and at about a third the cost we were very happy with the price too.

When we got back Joanne had to lie down with a sore back, probably from standing so long in the queue at the booking office, but maybe from all the standing around doing our “passing” work the day before. I headed out to take the photo, passport copies, visa copies, and hotel receipt to the SIM card kiosk who had phoned to nag again. I decided to check out another of the drinking places nearby as I was curious; Mumbai seems to have more places to drink than I remembered Delhi having from my last visit, or maybe Indian culture was changing. It was ostensibly a food place, but it was the usual drab Indian place, set up like a cafe, with no atmosphere. Men (only) were sitting around, not speaking to their companions and drinking sullenly. Again I was the only white there. At the table next to me I watched an incredible display of what in Britain we would these days call binge drinking. Two mean sat opposite each other and they literally did not say a single word the whole time. They each had an empty and a half-full “peg” of whisky, which is about a quarter bottle, which they seemed to be drinking with coke. They also had a whole bottle of vodka which was about two-thirds full when I sat down. In the space of no more than twenty minutes the whole lot was gone. The vodka was the most incredible; Indians sharing water do not put their mouths to the bottle or jugs: instead they just pour it in from above their mouths. One of the two guys was doing this with the vodka: pouring a large mouthful in then putting it back on the table then, as he was swilling it around his mouth and swallowing it, his friend was pouring a large amount into an empty glass and downing it. Then the first one would take another large mouthful. They repeated this until the vodka was gone, at which point they got to their feet and left, in a bit of a hurry I thought, perhaps hoping to get home before they blacked out, or just outside before they puked! While all that was going on, the atmosphere in the place had actually lifted because the first election results had started coming in and there was a bit of a buzz; and I had ordered a very nice masala papad to go with several Indian whiskies, working my way down the list in the hope of finding a palatable one. I tried four and they were all terrible. I decided to keep a note, giving them a mark out of ten, in case I ordered one of them again in the future. Haywards Fine got 0, Officer's Choice got 1 as did Bagpiper, then the champion, Green Label got a fabulous 2 out of 10. I suspected there might be a bias as the score seemed to be increasing with alcohol consumed, but I did start with the cheapest as well, and surely four units wouldn't cloud my judgement too much!

After unsuccessfully trying to change to a cleaner room, get the hostel to pay for our laundry or show any kind of contrition for the terrible state of Joanne's skin, we gave up and sprayed more chemicals around our room, deciding instead to write a comment on the “India Mike” website, from where the glowing recommendations for this hovel had come. When we checked out and paid the next morning, the horrible concierge just said “show downstairs” when he handed us the receipt; no smile, no thank you, no sorry about the disgusting state of the place. The guy downstairs on the door was actually quite friendly and managed a smile. Outside we were crowded by taxi drivers, but they were all really greedy. We were now certain the fare could be no more than Rs20 as the station we were going to was much closer than the one we knew the fare to be Rs20 to; maybe Rs25 including a charge for the luggage. Nobody would go lower that Rs80, and most realising that we were getting a local train, wanted to take us all the way to the main train station instead for Rs250. In the end we just said “you're all greedy!” and walked. The train was only Rs12, meaning that we'd already saved over Rs300 by the time we got to the main train station, with an hour still to spare before our train for Agra departed.

It turned out that the woman at the ticket office had been talking nonsense: the compartment was not lockable and there seemed to be half again as many people on our carriage than there were seats for. So much for reserved seating! On the train we phoned ahead to book Shanti Lodge, which is place I thought might be one I remembered from my last day visit to Agra, which had an incredible view of the Taj Mahal from its rooftop restaurant. I remembered it looked like it might be an OK place to stay too and the food wasn't too dear. On that journey we learned quite a bit about Indian culture: people sneaking onto the section they're not allowed, one friend buying a more expensive seat so the rest can share with him, and the litter. Most of them sat the whole time eating snacks then, as soon as they are finished, the wrapper goes straight out the train window. It doesn't matter if you're in a station on in the countryside; it doesn't matter if it's paper or plastic; it doesn't matter if it's just a little sweet wrapper or a whole plastic bag full of rubbish: just chuck it out. When one guy noticed that Joanne and I were keeping our empty plastic water bottles, he indicated the open window with a confused look on his face. “Just throw it” someone else said, then another “why are you keeping that?”. They actually laughed at us for not littering. We didn't reply, but really I should have said “because we don't want to contribute to this country being any more disgusting than it already is; don't you mind that your country looks horrible and filthy, and smells disgusting?”. These were not children; these were not rebellious teenagers; these were normal, apparently moderately wealthy families and businessmen, I'd guess. The more I get to know India, though, the more it occurs to me that they do behave like children; Matthew had offered the explanation for the “Eve teasing” as sexual immaturity in Indian men caused by keeping the sexes so separate as they grow up, so that even grown men have the sexual maturity of teenagers; now it seems like they act as if some parent will pick up their rubbish after them too. At least we learned why the country is so filthy. Some people did get off before it came to sleeping time, but when the seats converted into beds, there were still some people sharing and a person sleeping in aisle between the bottom berths. This made me a bit nervous about our belongings, but I reckoned since I was on the bottom berth I'd be able to keep half an eye on the bags below my bed / seat. All night people swapped seats for floor and vice-versa, presumably some sharing pact, but it didn't do much for our relaxation or quality of sleep.


permalink written by  The Happy Couple on May 23, 2009 from Mumbai, India
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Agra, India




permalink written by  The Happy Couple on May 24, 2009 from Agra, India
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Arrival in Agra

Agra, India


A couple of the guys sitting opposite us on the train from Mubai were Hare Krishnas, complete with little Scrabble bags over their hands, and they had suggested that we should visit the Krishna temple in Mathura, which is the most holy of all Krishna temples. Mathura was the actual destination of our train, and where we were going to have to change for Agra. After our restless night's sleep and, in my case, getting my feet battered every time someone walked past, we didn't feel like doing anything at all when we got to Mathura apart from going to bed. We changed for Agra with little difficulty and a prepay auto-rickshaw took us to Tajganj, where the Taj Mahal and our hotel were for fifty rupees. My memory had been correct and it was the hotel with the magnificent views of the Taj Mahal. Our room was much cheaper and much nicer than the hole we'd been staying in Mumbai.

We had been wondering what the temperature was since we arrived in India, but had not remembered to find out in Mumbai. Joanne looked it up online in Agra and found out it was 39C. It felt about the same as Mumbai, where we were standing around in the sun all day in silly costumes. For me India has actually been more comfortable than Bangkok because, although the temperature is much higher here, the humidity is only about the 45% mark. I think what happens is in dry heat I sweat a lot and it keeps me cool as it evaporates, but in humid heat I just get really sweaty and greasy and hot. Joanne, however, not being much of a sweater, finds India much more uncomfortable. Our auto-rickshaw driver had sold us a tour of the things apart from the Taj for Rs350 down from Rs450. We told him that we needed to get some sleep first, but he could pick us up later. I thought a wee drink before bed would be nice but we couldn't find alcohol anywhere and the hotel told us that they didn't serve alcohol until evening time. In the end we tucked into a bit more of the Glen Livet and dozed for a wee while.

We came down to meet our driver, but it turned out he'd sent his “brother” instead. After some hesitation we decided to go anyway. First he took us to see “Baby Taj”, really called Itimad-ud-Daulah, which in fact predates the Taj Mahal, and much of the Taj's design was based on it. Next he took us to Agra Fort, which he persuaded us wasn't worth going inside, so we just took a couple of photos from outside. Later we read in the LP that it is one of the finest forts in India, so he was just trying to save himself time. Then he took us across the river for a view of the Taj, then to several other places where the point always seemed to be the view of the Taj, rather than where we were. At one temple a man dressed in saffron cloths came towards us saying “I am holy man. Give me money!”. He was a Sadhu and apparently this is what they do. We didn't give him any.

Then we got to what seemed to be the real point of the tour: the bit where we earn him a hefty commission. He spun it all as learning how local craftsmen work, but really it was just tourist curio factories. Joanne seemed quite uncomfortable by this part of the tour but, as soon as I clicked, I didn't mind at all because I knew I wasn't going to buy anything and they were all wasting their time. I had decided some time ago that I would never buy anything in a situation like this, because you always pay over the odds thanks to the commission. Also in a place like this it's bound to be the high-end ultra-touristy expensive places you are taken. I decided just to enjoy the details of how they make all this stuff and taken for its own value, it was actually quite nice. We went to a carpet factory – I mean learned all about how it takes days on end to make these fantastic woven carpets one stitch at a time. The demonstration and explanation we very interesting and they were lovely, but my mind was made up before we entered the workshop. Joanne seemed tempted, and the salesmen sensed this, so we wanted to enter a bartering match which I was not prepared to play. Sure that their prices we going to be massively inflated I said that I was too embarrassed to say how much we could afford, but we really needed to make our money last, so I was sure I couldn't afford one of their lovely carpets. He implored me to say some price, so after more apologies and declarations of embarrassment, I told him a figure. It is low, sir, he said. Of course I knew it was, as I had no intention of buying, but if he'd gone for that price I reckoned it was a bargain, especially since it included credit card surcharge, DHL shipping, and insurance. I had plumped for Rs4500 for a carpet he was trying to sell me for Rs16000. Remarkably he told me that for that price he would be able to let me have the slightly smaller one he'd been showing me earlier originally at Rs12000. So I think I was only slightly low. I was quite impressed by the discount, but I was still sure we'd be able to get carpets cheaper elsewhere. And we didn't want the small carpet. Next it was onto a workshop where they make various marble items with semi-previous gems inlaid, just like the work on the Taj Mahal itself. These we, of course, the direct descendents of the people who worked on the Taj Mahal, and their families had been doing this for thousands of years. Again the stuff was gorgeous, but again it seemed rather pricey. They indicated their willingness to drop prices, but I was a bit worn out from the carpet psychological warfare, so we just took their card and said we would be back the next day after we'd worked out how much we could afford. Last was a jewellery shop featuring “star rubies” and “cross of Agra” very prominently. Both these semi-precious stones catch the light in a way that shows their crystal symmetry (I assume) at the surface: star ruby appears to have a six pointed star floating inside, and the cross of Agra has two bands of light at right angles. Truly gorgeous, but we'd had enough and it was obvious they were over-priced again. With no energy to barter, we just palmed them off again by taking their card.

We were deposited at home and finally got a beer on the rooftop restaurant. The view of the Taj Mahal from Shanti Lodge really is superb. There is obviously something a bit funny going on with the licensing laws, though, because my beer arrived in a teapot: “Special Tea, sir”. We got chatting to an American girl who was also on a protracted trip and had just come from Nepal. She told us we were too late already, and the last Everest attempt had already been, and that there were already leeches everywhere. She was wanting to get rid of a Nepal LP guide and had some fantasy of exchanging it for an Eastern European guide, where she was going next. She said we could buy it from her and went to fetch it. She wouldn't sell it for anything less than Rs600 which I thought was a very unfriendly price, considering how little we'd been able to sell our guides for in Thailand. I had thought we'd be able to reach a mutually beneficial arrangement, say about two or three hundred rupees maximum, but she obviously had no idea at all. In the end we wished her good luck and said good night. Joanne decided she wanted more beer and, since it had been rather expensive at the hotel we went out looking for the off-licence the hotel were bringing it from (you had to tell them in advance how many beers you were going to want). We failed to find it, but some helpful youths working in a shop offered to sell me some hashish then, when I said I wasn't interested were happy to go and buy me beer for Rs80 instead. A small profit, I thought, but much cheaper than the hotel. Meanwhile an old woman got talking to Joanne and persuaded her to pay to have her arms covered in henna patterns. I drank most of the beer waiting for Joanne, constantly getting pestered by people selling hash, and when she reappeared the henna work was awful.




permalink written by  The Happy Couple on May 24, 2009 from Agra, India
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Agra Fort

Agra, India


After drinking all of my beer and Joanne's the previous night, we slept too late to get up for the sunrise view of the Taj we had planned, and I woke with a hangover. So we had to slightly reschedule. We had been planning to see the Taj and Fort in the same day, which saves Rs50 per person because of some portion of the ticket that applies to both. We decided Rs50 wasn't that much, so we would just see the Fort today and Taj the next day. John, with whom I was last in Agra, had sent a couple of text recommendations of places to stay, so when we passed one of them I suggested we go in for lunch. The food wasn't up to much but an old guy appeared while we were there; in fact the very same old guy who John and I had spoken to more than three years previously on the roof of Shanti Lodge. He sold essential oils. I can't remember if he said his name, but he has such a nice, calm manner that his presence is almost hypnotic. I wonder if some of this is due to the essential oils, which he spreads liberally over his potential customers' arms. I'm told essential oils can be quite powerful substances and should not normally be used neat on the skin like that. So after a few dabs of opium poppy and a splash of lavender I was feeling quite well disposed towards the fellow again, and I was very happy to see him again because he had seemed pretty old the last time and I had wondered if he would still be around; he didn't seem to have aged at all. We bought a couple of little bottles and left on a little cloud. I'm not sure if it's his personality or the oils, but what a nice old man!

We found a book shop and, after convincing the proprietor that we were only interested in his Nepal Lonely Planet and not his hashish, we managed to bargain him down to Rs500 from what he originally said was a fixed price, set by the Indian government of Rs800; Indians don't seem to value the concept of truth in the least. I had a little chuckle for the American girl who thinks she's going to be able to sell her book for Rs600. If they are willing to sell at Rs500 there is no way they are buying for more than Rs150.

Next we went to the fort. Outside, a sign said “Entrance: Tourists Rs300. Indians Rs20”. A Sikh man and his family were stading next to us and he looked us up and down, then read the sign out loud. “You have far too much money” he proclaimed after he finished the sign. As if we enjoy paying far more for things! As if we had any choice other than not to bother seeing it! Inside it was quite obvious that the foreigner price is too high because we were almost the only whites there. The fort was interesting and very impressive and, if I wasn't expecting Indian prices, a pretty good deal. It is huge, however about three-quarters of it is off-limits because it is occupied by the army. So it's an actual still-in-use fort. As we were leaving we were rounded on by various unfortunates begging or selling things. After buying some postcards, we were tailed by a guy selling a “marble” elephant carved inside an elephant. It was almost certainly soapstone, but it looked quite impressive to me, although I had no need for one and I couldn't think of anyone who would want one as a present, nor how I would get it to them. He started somewhere around Rs600, although I wasn't paying much attention at the beginning so it may have been higher. As we walked, he dropped the price again and again. We were heading to a market Joanne wanted to go to for clothes and it was easily within walking distance, but the man kept following us. I was curious just how long he would go, but unknown to me Joanne was annoyed and upset by him badgering us. I am happy to filter these things out as long as I'm not in a bad mood. Joanne flagged down a cycle rickshaw, to get out of the situation she explained later, although I hadn't even realised there was a situation. As the old guy peddled off I heard the elephant vendor say “fifty rupees”. An interesting demonstration of how the prices work around an international tourist magnet like the Taj Mahal: down from Rs600 to Rs50 without me even having to open my mouth!

On the rickshaw the driver suggested we go to a different market. We had agreed Rs20 which seemed reasonable as it was practically across the road form where we got in, but this other place was further away. First of all he told us the market we wanted was just old second hand army clothes, the he told us we could go to both markets and then back to our hotel for Rs20, but when he mentioned shops we said no, we'd seen enough shops yesterday. Shortly after he set off he said he wanted to give us a rickshaw each “because Agra is very hilly – same price: ten and ten”. I thought he was maybe just giving a young guy, his son (or grand son) maybe, a chance. But as we cycled past the market we'd asked to go to, I could see the old guy saying something to Joanne, in front, and Io realised we'd been split up to prevent conference. I tried shouting to Joanne, but it was too noisy and she was too far ahead. He just kept going and going, and when we were far past where we wanted to go he stopped and my young guy caught up. OK, we can go to such-and-such shop, he said. “We agreed no shops”, we responded. Apparently he'd told Joanne that our market was “closed on a Monday” but it was nonsense; I'd seen the market up side streets we passed. Again and again he said just this – or just that – only looking and so on, but we told him we'd had enough of looking and we knew that it isn't really “only” looking; it's sit down for enough time to justify his commission and then endure hard sell for even longer. Eventually I offered him Rs10 extra to replace his commission, just to take us where we wanted to go, but he said that it wouldn't even cover his costs. We had had enough, so we looked at each other an got out and started walking. We were ages away from where we wanted to be, but we were in a corner with yet another Indian cheat. He came running down the street after us shouting “give me my money! Give me my money!”. I didn't want to be arrested or lynched, so I prepared Rs10 to give him, which seemed about right for the distance given that it was the wrong place. In the end I felt a flush of anger and swapped it for a Rs5 note, which I turned around and gave him, It was enough, and the disappeared. Really he should have given us money, since we were now further from our destination than we had started! We actually had a very interesting walk through a part of Agra with no tourists, which is quite unusual there. We had people staring at us the whole way back, but Joanne didn't find what she was looking for at the market anyway, so the walk back was really worthwhile, and all down to a cheat. Back at the fort we got an auto-rickshaw, “Direct” I said after saying where we wanted to go. That's the keyword. That night we had dinner on a neighbouring rooftop restaurant, where the view of the Taj is not so good, but the food was very nice, and bountiful.




permalink written by  The Happy Couple on May 25, 2009 from Agra, India
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Finally the Taj

Agra, India


After the second night's rooftop dinner we went looking for an off-licence again, because the restaurant beer prices were really high and, although it's a novelty drinking beer out of a tea-pot, it's not all that nice as it all foams up. After an extensive search we finally found a place selling beer and I asked for a couple. In India, most retail products, in particular all alcohol, it marked with an MRP: Maximum Retail Price; occasionally, especially in supermarkets, things sell for less. The MRP for alcohol varies from state to state, and I knew from the label on the beer the young guys had bought for me the previous evening that I should be paying Rs60 for a “mild beer”. At the off-licence I saw it coming: he took the two bottles out of the fridge and quickly wrapped them in newspaper before I had a chance to look at them. Then he asked me for Rs180. I was becoming impatient with constantly being ripped-off, so I said “I don't think so”, unwrapped one of the bottles and pointed to where it said “MRP 60/-”. “Sixty rupees”, I said. I was sure, having been caught out, he would back down, but Indians do not seem to feel embarrassment or shame and he persisted: “Yes, that is the old price. The new price is 90”. Unbelievable! Here I think is where SE Asian and Indian culture differ substantially; in SE Asia they will happily over-charge in a bartering situation, where it is up to you to fight for a better price but I think a Thai, for example, would die of shame to be caught out in a bare-faced lie like that, whereas Indians lie constantly; they have no shame. I said “You are kidding! Forget it.” and to his surprise we walked off, followed by his voice saying “OK – 80 rupees”.

It really is very frustrating and wearing, and you constantly have to be on your guard. Every time you have any kind of financial interaction with an Indian, it's an opportunity to rip you off. Matthew had been absolutely right that first day in the Red Shield Guesthouse. The previous day, during our auto-rickshaw tour of Agra, I had run into another problem relating to the MRP. We stopped off at a kiosk to buy some water as it was very hot. I decided to buy a couple of soft drinks as well. With each item I asked the vendor how much it was; each time he told me a price higher than the MRP; each time I said no and, pointing to the MRP, said the correct price; each time he said OK and repeated the correct price. Then I stated the total, to which he said OK, so I handed over a Rs100 note. At this point a child came over to me and started harrassing me to buy some postcards, so I hurried back to the rickshaw. Only as we pulled off did I realise that the bugger at the kiosk had given me the change according to the prices he had originally said, rather than all the prices he had agreed to afterwards. Indians!

Maybe it's as well the off-licence tried to cheat us, because we were up bright and early for sunrise at the Taj the next morning. We actually got to the gate just as it opened at 6am. Again there was a huge price difference between what Indians and foreigners have to pay to get in: Rs25 vs R750. Not much you can do about these official price differentials, but it is annoying to think that an Indian (or a Cambodian for that matter) who can afford to get to Scotland can then go into any art gallery or museum absolutely free of charge; they can go and look at waterfalls for free; they can go on treks in the hills for free; and so on. I think the time has come to start charging exorbitant fees in Scotland specifically against the nationalities whose countries impose these yawning two-tier tariffs on us! To be fair, Indians aren't given with their ticket, a free bottle of water and shoe covers, which mean you don't have to remove your shoes and walk around on scorching marble barefoot. We were searched on the way in and I was told I would have to check in my camera tripod at the lockers before being allowed in. For some reason tripods are not allowed, just as they were not allowed in the Fort. The only reason we could come up with for this is that tripods take business away from the professional photographers. Joanne's search resulted in far more exclusions: her MP3 player, her book, and her head torch were all inadmissible. Apart from the apparent lack of logic in any of these, I had been allowed to take in all of these things although Joanne's book was Ben Elton's Gridlock, so maybe there was some sense to it after all. Or maybe it's just not becoming for a women to be reading, listening to music, and looking after herself in the dark; who knows?

Inside it was already starting to fill up and we tried to take our opportunity to snatch a couple of clear photos of the Taj Mahal and us in front of it. But pushy Indian photographers were getting in the way of almost every attempt and even had the gall to demand that we move out of their shot when we had been there first. Of course there is no such concept as “there first” in Indian culture; it is dog eat dog and fight your way to the front. Joanne had had enough and started refusing to get out of the way, or asking Indians to get out of her shot. This is, I believe, the correct way to react, except that she was also getting upset and annoyed by how rude it all seemed. To them, though, I don't think any of this is seen as rude, it's just what you have to do in a country where there are far too many people. Of course the Taj Mahal is lovely and Joanne was really enjoying seeing it, but her patience with Indians, which had been even shorter than mine all along, had run out. Lucky we were heading to Nepal! Only afterwards did I admit to Joanne that I had been a little bit disappointed when I first saw the it; it's a lot smaller than I had expected and there isn't much at all to the inside, but we were here for Joanne and she thought it was amazing.

After the Taj we had lunch in a little place nearby, where the owner told us we could have beer for Rs70 if we came back for dinner. And the off licence had tried to sell me it for Rs90! Unfortunately we had a train to catch and hurried away to catch it.

There is of course a huge danger of taking too many photos of the Taj Mahal, after all what else are you going to do once you are in there? I did, but I've spared the blog from most of them. If you want to see more you can click on an image then go through the photos.




permalink written by  The Happy Couple on May 26, 2009 from Agra, India
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Gorakhpur, India




permalink written by  The Happy Couple on May 27, 2009 from Gorakhpur, India
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Sunauli, Nepal




permalink written by  The Happy Couple on May 27, 2009 from Sunauli, Nepal
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Transport Trauma

Sunauli, Nepal


The direct train from Agra to Gorakhpur is only once a week, so we had to get to Delhi first and catch the sleeper from there. We remembered from the guide book that trains from Agra to Delhi were frequent, which I took to mean several times an hour, which would give us plenty of time. After sitting at Agra station for more than an hour with no sign of a Delhi train, we found a kiosk selling the Trains at a Glance guide and started looking through it. Dismay set in as I looked through the many possible trains from Agra to Delhi and started to realise that they all seemed to leave in the morning or the evening, but none in the afternoon. There was one option which meant that we would maybe just make it, but it didn't seem sensible to leave such a small margin. We thought we were going to have to quickly change plans and take the bus, which was slower, meaning that we would have to leave for the bus station immediately. Before we left, we thought to ask at information, just to make sure. It turned out there was an express train arriving quite soon, and the reason we had missed it was the station it terminated at, Nizamuddin, did not say “Delhi” in the name. We would still have to change to New Delhi Station, but it would be no problem to get a local train. Apparently.

The train to Nizamuddin was nice and fast and it the nerve-wracking seemed to be behind us. The station was impossible though. After waiting for twenty minutes or so in a “queue” with Indians pushing in from all sides and Joanne getting increasingly annoyed, we made it to the front, where we were told we were in the wrong place; it was general class, downstairs. In the queue-cum-scrum we had got chatting to an Indian who was back on holiday after living in New Zealand for five years, and we saw him again in the downstairs queue. When we got to the front of that, we were told again that we were in the wrong queue and we had to go upstairs. At this point the NZ-Indian saw our frustration and stepped in to help. After a few minutes of heated Hindi he turned around, exasperated, and admitted that he had not been able to make any sense of the situation either. He had obviously forgotten what India is like, did not seem to be able to believe how impossible everything is. He suggested we should just get a taxi, but I was not ready to give up and you always have to look after the pennies on a trip this long. I had a flash of inspiration: every Indian railway station has an office with a sign above it saying “Station Superintendent's Office” and I thought it had to be worth a try, so we went in and I explained that we were trying to get to New Delhi Station, but neither ticket desk was able to help me. He stood up and looked past us and told us there is a train on platform three now and it leaves in two minutes. “But where do we get a ticket? Can we get one on board?” I asked, to which he replied “Don't worry about that – nobody will check”. So there it was from the superintendent's own mouth. The train was very crowded as it was now rush hour, but nobody asked for a ticket and we made it to New Delhi in plenty of time

The train to Gorakhpur was already very very busy. We had booked the top bunks for this trip, so after the two journeys we would know which option was better. After our first journey we were fairly convinced that the top bunk was going to be better: peple had been able to go to sleep when they wanted because you don't have to wait for the seats to be converted into beds if you are on the top. However this train was so busy that the top bunks were already full of other peoples luggage when we got on. There were far too many people in our carriage and where there were eight berths there were about fifteen people. There was some grumbling but a man assured everyone that the three girls with lots of luggage were getting off in just an hour, which would have been 9 O'Clock, the time that seats are supposed to be converted to beds. At 11 O'Clock they were still on the train and we were exhausted, having got up so early to see the Taj Mahal. Every day I become more certain that Indians hold no moral value in the truth. However they did get off shortly ater that and we went straight up to bed, allowing the other people in the carriage to put their beds down too. Now that we were there, the top bunks were definitely better, as you are less aware of the constant movement below, although this means your belongings are more in danger of course. Also it is only occasionally when someone goes past carrying something on their shoulder or head, that my feet were bashed instead of the constant pummeling they got below.

The next morning at Gorakhpur we faced the next part of our journey: we still had to get a bus to the border then, over the border, get a different bus to Kathmandu.Gorakhpur looked like a horrible place so we were happy when we found a local bus leaving just after we arrived. It was very cheap and not too uncomfortable and deposited us about 200 metres from the actual border post, although all of the auto-rickshaw drivers who met us off the bus seemed inexplicably convinced that the distance was two kilometres. We were wise to them though, and the small collection of foreigners who had gathered on the bus made our way on foot. The border was a fairly casual affair which you could easily have walked through without dealing with any officials or paying for a visa, but the risk of being caught inside the country without one and the fact that hotels like to see it means that most people would be happy to walk in and pay the fee. In the Indian immigration office they told us that Rs1000 and Rs500 Indian notes were illegal in Nepal and they could be confiscated on the other side, so I had to change quite a lot of money across the road. Nepali currency is soft and is pegged to the Indian Rupee at a rate of 1.6 Nepali Rupees. However the money changer explained that, although 1.6 is the official rate, Rs500 and Rs1000 notes only attract a rate of 1.5; this is also official he said. I suspect this was just another con, but I didn't want to risk all my money being confiscated, so I handed it over.

The other side of the border was even more relaxed and the idea of someone from customs going through my stuff to confiscate high-value Indian notes seemed farcical. The guys at Nepalese immigration seemed unusually nice and friendly, smiling and chatting with us as we organised our visas. We were planning to stay about ten days, but when it came to filling in how long we planned to stay on the form, I asked how much the various visas cost. There was a 15 day visa for $30, a 30 days visa for $45, and another, maybe 90 day visa, which was far longer than we would be staying. So, I filled in 15 days, since it would cost the same as ten, deciding that this would give us a reasonable margin if our trek ran a bit late. Joanne saw what I had written and did not seem happy: how can we stay 15 days when we don't even have seven weeks for India and Nepal together? I explained that it cost the same, and it was just a safety margin, so she went along with it.

The border town is called Belahiya on the Nepal side but, confusingly, most people seem to call it Sunauli, which is the town on the Indian side. There isn't any gap between the two, so I suppose it would all be one town were the border removed. We discovered the next bus was leaving soon, but would get into Kathmandu about 2am, asssuming it ran on time. We decided it would be better to wait for a later bus, and arrive about 6am, saving us one night's money for a room, as well as being more convenient. After a bit of haggling we were able to get the fare down to Rs400 Nepali. They even took us to the bus to show us that it was worth the fare. It looked OK. Most insistent haggler was a guy called Al I first took to be a Scotsman, although an Australian girl was talking about him as “the Irish guy”. We made use of our time waiting for the bus to have something to eat. Disappointingly it just seemed to be Indian food. At dinner we discovered that everyone was planning trekking, but everyone else was planning on trekking in the Anapurna region, which we had ruled out because the treks there were all too long for our schedule. Al only had a vague plan. Apparently the reason his accent was so hard to pin down was that he had lived lots of places, including, most prominently, Derby followed by Edinburgh, but occasionally Cornwall would come through on a long “a” like “paaassport”.

When it came to bus leaving time, it soon became obvious that the bus was not OK. It was sufficiently plush for them to call it a deluxe bus, but there was less legroom than I've ever encountered before on transport. Even Joanne was having trouble. Evidently Nepalis are very short, or else they have armour-plated knees. Not long after we were wedged into our seats, some locals came on, apparently with the same seat numbers, and we were dismissed to the back of the bus. The road was not very good and the suspension on the bus was not very good, and at the back of the bus you could feel every stone. Going over big holes we were bounced off our seats so that our heads hit off the roof. Needless to say we did not get much sleep on that night bus. In fact we got none at all. Joanne cursed herself for moving and said that next time she would stay where she was and the local could go to the back, after all it was our seats.

We arrived in Kathmandu exhausted.

permalink written by  The Happy Couple on May 27, 2009 from Sunauli, Nepal
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Kathmandu, Nepal




permalink written by  The Happy Couple on May 28, 2009 from Kathmandu, Nepal
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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