Showing posts with label india. Show all posts
Showing posts with label india. Show all posts

Thursday, 17 June 2010

Kerala India

This is the final part of our journey through Asia. We’ve left Bali and now face the monsoons of Southern India. Naively, I assumed the rainy season in Kerala would consist of a short burst of rain once a day with glorious sunshine and blue skies the rest of the time. In fact we were both counting on good weather, as we’ve only just started to get tans after 3 months of travelling, and lugging a year’s supply of aloe vera gel doesn’t feel worth it if its constantly raining.

We considered taking the surfboard with us over from Bali when we found out there was good surf during the monsoon season, but out of laziness, decided to leave it behind thinking we could always rent a board if it looks good (real reason is we’re both crap). Looks like it was the right decision as the sea here is like nothing I’ve seen before: gargantuan waves break haphazardly, some far out at sea and others smashing into the sand churning the water and making it murky and green. The sound of the waves crashing into the cliffs can be heard a mile off and I’ve not seen a single person go in. On the way to the beach, a girl gutting a bucket of small Pomfret told us her dad was a fisherman, but that it was a very dangerous job and they made no money.

I am now on to my third pair of flip-flops, which works out at one pair per month. It’s a mystery as to what happened to the last pair. As normal I left them outside the door of our hotel room to keep the sand in the bed to a minimum – a sandy Laura is not a happy Laura. The next day I woke to find one of them was missing. A wave of sadness swept over me as it became apparent that someone or something had stolen it. I felt genuine anger that I would have to buy another pair of flip-flops and wanted to lash out. A kid must have run off with one of them as a dare. There were no kids around to strangle, probably for the best, as I’m no warrior and would have come away worse off. The hotel manager thought it was most likely that a dog had gone off with it, which is probably true, as there are at least 10 dogs for every person here. If this is the case in the rest of India, that makes approximately 10 billion dogs on the subcontinent.

Anyway I have some new flip-flips now, they rub and my feet feel like they are slowly being grated away with each step. I reckon they’ll be perfectly broken in, in a month’s time.

Travellers tash

In the maul-like queue for the flight to Trivandrum I noticed that every man had a moustache. I’d forgotten that virtually all men and quite a few boys in India have moustaches, and if I was to be taken seriously and not appear like a boy on a school trip I would need one too. So far I have shaved my chops and am now the proud owner of a faint shadow on my upper lip. According to Laura, my micro-tash looks a bit ‘Mexican’, but once I nip the ends off and it gets a bit thicker I might just have the makings of a young Edwardian gentleman. Bravo I say!


(Pre-tash photo)

Sunday, 28 February 2010

Goodbye Les Arcs


After finishing off my season in Les Arc with Skiworld, I am now preparing to head off to the land of Dehli belly and nan bread breakfasts with my lovely girlfirend Laura. My time in Les Arc was a rather chaotic series of counciling sessions for chalet hosts and resort reps combined with my actual job of resort accountant and then when I managed to get some free time I'd popped out for a quick run through the fun park to scare myself so much that I forgot about the intense hardship that the chalet hosts and reps had to endure on a daily basis - talking to guests taking them ski guiding and many other hidious tasks.

Almost nothing has been planned for the trip except that we have booked flights to New Dehli for the middle of March and are keen to do some serious relaxing and then maybe once the relaxing has been fully maximised then perhaps do some of the touristy stuff like buy rugs woven by children who should be in school and almost certainly are getting paid in chick-pea flour.

Everyone I speak to is saying the same thing: that when you arrrive in Dehli we will experience the biggest culture shocks of our lifes. There is poverty on every corner, people sleeping on dusty curb sides and smells are so intense it is like sticking you nose inside a cows third stomach. Laura & myself will attempt to capture these sights and smells in this blog, so maybe one day Skiworld chalet hosts will realise that the hardship of changeover day isn't so bad after all..
All for now.
Joe XX