India travelogue 1996 part 1
By Justin Tuijl
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This covers my second visit to India 1995/6 (6 months over Xmas) the first visit was 1994/5 over Xmas. You can read about that visit on me website
This travelogue is about the journey I took in 1996 from Goa to Goa via Darjeeling, and the rest of India. The text originally appeared on my personal website and was there for a long time, however this is a complete re-write.
In 1994 I was a fish out of water, and I had no idea what I was doing, by 1996 I was very savvy on how to move around and exist in India. Being very bored of Goa I decided to see India. The target was Darjeeling via the rest of India, clockwise around the country.
Leaving a quiet Anjuna (yes, it was quiet in 1996) via Mapusa (pronounced Map-sa) for Pune (Poona) on a 12 hour overnight bus ride nightmare, I witnessed the terror of lorries leaving survival up to the Gods when they pull out and overtake. The driver was pretty disturbed by it too. I avoided Bombay going north and Pune is the quickest bypass route as Bombay is best avoided for travelling through (when I wrote this it was still called Bombay). Coming down the hills into Pune through the mist was quite magical.
It was a staging post for me, hotels were thin on the ground. The hotel Ritz was out of a Dickens novel with the men running it all sporting huge white beards. The bathroom ensuite was as big as the bedroom. The light was dim and you couldn’t see the mosquitos to swat them. There was an open area at the back in a balcony for the dining room, reached by wacky external stairs on stilts. I shunned the cell block rooms with no windows at the station restrooms but in hindsight there might have been less mosquitoes in them.
To get away I took an early morning luxury bus 7 hours to Aurangabad. And here we can see the Taj Mahal, well no actually, it is the Bibi-ka-Maqbara built in 1679 the 'poor mans Taj', still: a pleasant place and it does look like a mini-Taj Mahal. The Panchakki (water mill) was well worth a visit, very calming in a hectic city. Aurangabad was a nice place and the locals were friendly. The roadside omelette with chilli powder was to die for. I met some other tourists here and for some reason other tourists were very friendly in Aurangabad. The hotel Natraj was thick with mosquitoes, but good value. The mosquitos were so bad though, they would pour in through the vents in the bathroom. I slept with my hammock pulled over me, head and all, like a body bag.
The Ellora caves are a short trip by local bus from Aurangabad through stunning scenry. They are many temples carved into the hillside, of which the Kailasa is the most over the top and unlike the others open to the air. The Buddhist temples by contrast are calm and considered. Ellora is a totally fascinating place. The temples just go on and on, many are exuberant and unfinished. Unfortunately catching the bus back from Ellora was impossible. In the end I shared a jeep back with other fellow travellers.
I took a local bus from Aurangabad (3 hours daytime) to Ajanta caves. It’s the same style as Ellora, but in my opinion nowhere near as impressive. Ajanta is more about painting the walls rather than carving things out of them. I saw it in a very short time, unlike the whole day spent at Ellora. I then went on from Ajanta to Jalgaon by local bus (short daytime journey). The hotel at Ajanta was always full I was told, and expensive. It is not really worth staying there anyway, you can see Ajanta in no time.
Jalgaon is an industrial city, I found quickly getting a luxury bus away was best method (9 hours overnight).
I arrived in Indore and had a mad ride with a rickshaw walla after getting off the bus at 6:00am. He took me to far to expensive hotels or ones that looked like squats. In the end I decided to pay out for a nice place at 300 rupees. The hotel Tulsi, which I would recommend. TV, hot water, soft bed, good restaurant, well I needed a splurge. I managed to get a long time here for only one night’s payment due to arriving early in the morning
Next day I moved to the Hotel Shalimar at 45 rupees a night. Indore is a good place to have a walk around, the local museum is interesting.
The Rajwada is the gateway of the old palace, there is not much to see beyond the gateway, only a courtyard, as the palace has burnt down many times. Even so it was a quiet refuge.
Disappointment awaited at the Lal Bagh Palace. The place was in a bad state of repair and the features were unviewable due to being herded along a set narrow route around the building. As the actual building is whitewashed and quite modern looking it was less than eye candy. The saving grace were the quiet gardens. Even these were thin but quiet.
I tried to get to Mandu from here but it was impossible to travel there and would have meant returning to Indore afterwards. So I took a lux bus (10 hours overnight) I found myself being violently sick at each stop, had a bad Thali in Indore: nice.
Ahmedabad (pronounced Am-da-bad) was like a small Delhi, smelly and noisy. At the time I did not like it here. Food was quite hard to find, so was good transport away. I had to hang around at the hotel Naigra for a few days to recover from my bad Thali. They had bad earthquakes there several months after I was there, and I worry for what happened to the city. To get away I took a nice train, 7 hours overnight to Bhavnagar. This was a cute quiet town with inquisitive locals! Probably they saw very few foreigners in those days.
I then took a local bus to Una (near Diu) 7 hours daytime and then a rickshaw to get into Diu. Diu was supposed to be another Goa, it wasn’t. Interesting but mostly unremarkable, it is a little island tacked onto the side of Gujarat state. The fort was very good though. Nagoa beach was worth a look but not very exciting. Food was a hit or miss affair in Diu. I arrived late at Diu and found the hotels full. To get away I took a 9 hour daytime lux bus (well they called it a luxury) but there was a distinct lack of leg room.
In Rajkot I saw little. The Watson Museum was closed on a Wednesday, so I failed to see inside it. I spent too much money on my hotel here. Next day took a 5 hours daytime lux bus to Bhuj.
Bhuj was an Interesting town, quite in the back of beyond. The Kutch Museum was interesting and also full of stuffed animals. The Aina Mahal (old palace) was good but I got a warehouse feeling as all the exhibits were a laid out in rows on the floor.
They had big earthquakes there after my visit, and I worry for what happened to the town.
It was very hard to get away from Bhuj as transport was a little shady, the trains were no good and the station was hard to find. I took a overnight lux bus back to Ahmedabad! Could find no other way. Then on to Jodhpur on a lux bus 10 hours overnight. That was the last of Gujarat for me. There was something very honest about Gujarat. A poor state, was mostly a salt export county but the locals let me be, I had no trouble there and good memories of the place.
Jodhpur has two interesting things: the amazing fort and the name! The Mehrangarh Fort towers over the city. A really fine lump of bricks. In the streets here it was not unusual to come face to face with the odd working camel. I fell into a tourist trap here, the Lonely Planet guide book said I had to try the “special lassi” as it was the best drink ever. I walked into the place it said and the man called “ah special lassi!”. It was foul, nice joke Lonely Planet! To get away I got a 7 hours early morning lux bus booked from the tourist bungalow.
At first I thought Jaisalmer was going to be a flop. Arriving at the tourist bungalow the touts were held at bay while we were farmed out to jeeps going to hotels. I was charged a very small amount for the hotel but told to leave when I didn't want to go on a dessert 'safari'. I then moved to another hotel that was very nice.
The huge fortified town is quite something to see and a trip to the Sam Dunes is a slice of 'genuine' dessert. Got away on a 11 hour daytime lux bus to Pushkar.
Then Pushkar was a very nice place. The holy lake had half dried up, but it was a nice place to stop a definite place to relax. Great food and excellent bookshops. Here I met other travellers again for chats at dinner time. I’d been the only traveller for sometime until that point. One thing to watch there was when you book a luxury bus they dumped you on the a state bus. It is only a 3 hour journey to Jaipur.
Jaipur was a total tourist trap. The rickshaw drivers latch onto me and charged to much. They also think they can become your personal guide. I think the 'sites' are here are vastly overrated. I just couldn't wait to move on from the place. I took a 6 hour daytime lux bus.
Bharatpur was the next stop. It’s next to the Keoladeo National Park: a bird sanctuary, one of the most amazing places I have ever been, the birds were there because they wanted to be and there are so many it blew my mind. Best time was early morning, but I spent all day from dawn to dusk there. Painted Storks, Cormorants holding out their wings to dry, Vultures, Deer, Crested Great Tits, Kingfishers diving into the water, Pelicans at a distance, Coot and the constant calls of thousands of birds. The birds were so close. Stunning. I don’t know what happened to Keoladeo as I heard the water was diverted away for farming, The lakes were man made in the days of the Raj so they could shoot the birds. There is a big plaque in the middle which lists the shoots and how many birds they killed. Also the people who did the shooting, Kitchener was one of them.
I seem to remember the town wasn’t very interesting. I stayed in a dorm. At a café near the park I met some other travellers I’d met previously in Aurangabad. I got away on a 3 hour daytime lux bus.
Next stop: Agra. O.k. so I had to see the Taj didn't I? One thing I never realised was the fact that the walls are inlaid with jewels. I never realised that the Taj is a big tomb. The gardens and buildings around the Taj add as much to the place as the main building itself. The Taj really is a 'must see'. All the other places in Agra can be safely overlooked and the 'torn money' scam was simply annoying. This is where they will not take a note if it is slightly torn, which was a description of most Indian notes.
I took a short lux bus journey to Gwalior. I came there to look at the Jai Vilas Palace Museum, it was interesting, but perhaps not worth the diversion. 'Leda & the Swan' is a very kinky statue. Seeing how the Raj used to live is the experience to be gained there.
Gwalior was another nice place to simply walk around. When I first got there I was taken on a mad ride with a rickshaw walla. I told him the hotel I wanted and we went round and round. There was some sort of carnival that evening going on with loads bands with lights walking the streets. They were carrying mains powered fluorescent tubes. My rickshaw walla kept showing me dreadful, cheap, hotels and then we’d be back in the streets with all these bands. I thought he was going to fleece me. But in the end we arrive at the hotel I had asked for originally and he charged me very little. Odd. I think he felt guilty for the mad ride.
To get away I got a daytime train 9 hours. When in the station the Indians kept asking me if I was there for the cricket as the world cricket match was on.
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Comments
Sounds full of interesting
Sounds full of interesting memories. You must be glad you managaed to do it when young. Rhiannon
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The bird sanctuary sounds
The bird sanctuary sounds amazing!
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I think I was there at the same time for my work
I remember taking a flight from Bangaluru (Bangalore then) to Mumbai. India were playing Pakistan. All through the flight the captain was giving updates on the match, and as we aproached the capital the captain slowed the plane over the pitch, where the game was still on, and circled it so we all could get a view of the pitch.
I was kind of thinking perhaps it was a good idea to concentrate on landing the plane, but we arrived safe and sound. As we made touch down the captain announced India won the match and the whole plane erupted with cheers.
I flew a lot in India, despite the jokes Indians make about Air India and Indian Airlines, on the whole Indian pilots seem to be very good.
I envy your trips. I was on business and although I saw places tourists never go to, I did miss some of the famous landmarks like Mysore, Taj Mahl and Jaipur. Fascinating country, fascinating people.
The one place I really didn't like seeing was the Gateway to India, I didn't realise it was a British Imperial monument dedicated to " His Imperial Majesty" George V.( as it says on the front).
I was with a couple of Indian colleagues who went out of their way to take me to see it. When I saw it I felt so embarrassed. I told them that, but they said I was being over sensitive, They were really great guys to work with.
I think you were very brave taking overland buses, I heard some real horror stories form my colleagues there about long distant bus trips. Certainly travelling by road was pretty hairy.
Good memories Thank you so much.
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