Friday, September 25, 2009

Taxis, Rickshaws, Walking (Caminar), Buses (colectivos) and Trains (Trenes)









































Oh, btw- the next day I found out there was actually another bathroon with plenty of showers. Duh, yeah, I'm an idiot- anyway, my first shower was fun. Jane arrived, taxi situation was all good. Day 2 we walked around, didn't see much- where ARE the tourists in this city?!?!?. We went into the Taj Hotel- nice and cool, but funny we had to go via metal detectors and stuff to get in. Had lunch at Leopold's (again, wtf are the tourists?!?). We went up to have a look at the laundry area in the city- it's an open area, massive areas full of wash basins and the guys basically beating the holy crap out of clothes (and beating the dirt out as they do so as well). I then had a haircut at this dodgy little shop next to the station (the women there were as excited to have foreigners in the shop as we were to be seated in an A/C room). Traffic was hell, so we didn't get to the Mosque. Then went to the famous Chowpatty beach- yeah, dirty! And indians harrasing the only 2 whities in the whole place (I lie, we did see 1 more white guy walking past). Indians STARE. Nice sunset, and 2 minutes later the sky went pitch black and it started pissing down! Went back to the hotel for a shower and then caught an overnight train to Aurangabad- men STARED and I think we didn't make many friends when we asked them to move off our beds/seats cause we wanted to sleep. We arrived the next morning at 4:30 am, waited around the station for day to arrive, and caught a local bus to the Ellora Caves- sculpted in 3 styles: Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jinaism- Buddhist ones kicked ass! And Indians STARE. Back to Aurangabad where we got stared at for a couple more hours until we got an overnight bus to Ahemadabad. We got in at about 7:30 am and basically just organised another bus, to take us to Udaipur (Rajasthan)- we left 10:30am, arrived 5pm. So yeah... basically 8 1/2 hours train, 16 hours bus, and another 6 hours bus, a whole heap of rickhaws, but we are here in Rajasthan now YAY! City is nice, hotel is cool, and we have a real shower- oh!! and a toilet seat, not just a letrine, and get this- it actually flushes! God (or should I say Ganesh) this is paradise!

Ah, si! Al dia siguiente descubri que habia otro banio en el hotel lleno de duchas... Uhm, si, soy una idiota, y bueno, igual estuvo divertida mi primera ducha! Jane llego anoche, todo bien con el taxi. El segundo dia en Mumbai caminamos mucho, y no vimos mucho- donde mierda estan los turistas en esta ciudad?!?!? Entramos al Hotel Taj- fresquito con aire acondicionado, pero tuvimos que pasar por controles de seguridad y detector de metales para poder entrar. Almorzamos en Leopold's (donde estan los turistas?!?). Fuimos a ver la zona donde lavan la ropa en Mumbai- es al aire libre, un area enorme llena de piletas de piedra donde basicamente golpean la ropa hasta que se le va la mugre a la fuerza. Me corte el pelo en una peluqueria de porqueria cerca de la estacion, y las minas en la peluqueria estaban tan felices de tener extranjeras en su negocio como nosotras estabamos felices de estar sentadas en un lugar con aire acondicionado. El trafico era de terror, asi que no fuimos a ver la Mezquita. Despues fuimos a la tan famosa playa Chowpatty- una palabra- sucia! Y los indios rompiendole las pelotas a las unicas 2 blancas en todo el lugar (mentira, en verdad tambien vimos a un pibe blanco pasar caminando). Y los indios MIRAN FIJO. Lindo atardecer, y 2 minutos mas tarde el cielo se puso todo negro y empezo a llover torrencialmente. Volvimos al hotel a baniarnos y despues nos tomamos un tren a la noche hasta Aurangabad- los indios nos miraron fijo, y me parece que no les cayo muy bien cuando les pedimos que se corran de nuestros asientos/camas porque queriamos dormir. Llegamos al otro dia tipo 4:30 am, esperamos en la estacion hasta que se hizo de dia, y nos tomamos el colectivo hasta las cuevas de Ellora- son cuevas que las esculpieron en 3 estilos- budista, hindu, y jianista- las budistas una masa. Y los indios siguen mirando fijo. Volvimos a Aurangabad donde los indios nos miraron fijo un par de horas mas, y despues nos tomamos un omnibus a la tarde hacia Ahemadabad. Llegamos tipo 7:30 de la manana al dia siguiente y basicamente solo organizamos otro bondi, que nos llevo hacia Udaipur (Rajastan)- salimos a las 10:30am, llegamos tipo 5pm. Asi que si... 8 1/2 en un tren, 16 horas en un omnibus, 6 horas en otro omnibus, un monton de rickshaws (unas motitos con techo, con 3 ruedas y motor, y asiento adelante para conductor y atras para pasajeros), pero finalmente aqui estamos, en Rajastan, yuppie! La ciudad es linda, el hotel esta bueno, y tenemos una ducha- ah!! y un inodoro, no solamente una letrina, y escuchen esto, tan tan tan, trompetas: la cadena funciona! Por Dios (o mejor dicho Ganesh) esto es el paraiso!

3 comments:

  1. Hey Ale, be careful out there :o) I saw this report in the Sydney Morning Herald...:

    US tourist hitches rickshaw, weds driver in a week: report
    September 25, 2009 - 5:40PM
    A 26-year-old American tourist travelling in India hitched a ride in a rickshaw last week and married the driver a few days later, a report said today.

    Whitney from Chicago met her prince charming in Jaipur in Rajasthan, a state west of the capital famous for its stately palaces, after hailing a motorised rickshaw and hiring the driver for her stay in the city, the Mail Today newspaper said.

    "On the third day, he surprised me by popping the question," Whitney told the paper. "'I want to spend the rest of my life with you', he told me. I fell in love."

    After meeting last Saturday they were married on Wednesday in a simple ceremony. Whitney was pictured in the paper, standing with new husband Harish Hotala, wearing a traditional sari that covered her head.

    The paper said Hotala was "a cabbie with a difference," however. "Though a school dropout, he is fluent in English and owns three autorickshaws," it said.

    Whitney, whose surname wasn't given by the paper, is to fly back to the US on September 30 to face her parents.

    "My father was surprised but my mother took it sportingly," she said.

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  2. Hahaha thanks for that Eoin! Hopefully it won't happen, but I'm gonna be in Jaipur in about a week, so I'll let you know how I go:)

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  3. It's very brave to have your hair cut in that place! I shouldn't complain about the chinese lady in Chatswood any more...

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