Short Version:
Monkeys! Naughty monkeys!
Long Version:
From the Pashupatinath Temple, we sidled around the bottom edge of the Deer Park and into a cluster of small temples.
Linga abounded.
And there were monkeys.
The first one we saw was stealing and eating the orange and yellow flowers that devotees had left as offerings. Naughty monkey!
The second and third appeared together; a baby clinging to its mother. They too were snacking on religious offerings. More naughty monkeys!
And then they were everywhere; in the trees, not in the trees... everywhere! Big ones, little ones, raw-bottomed ones. Squabbling, grooming each other, staring into space, eating. Lots of eating. Flowers, bits of tree, dirt, unidentifiable objects, shoes. Nom nom nom nom nom. Delicious shoes.
We descended a series of switchback corners and were spat out onto a broad, tree-lined avenue. With more monkeys. One tried to steal an old man's flower necklace. Failed. Lucky not to be hit with a stick.
A bridge took us back across the river towards a bright orange monkey-god statue, at and near which groups of women were worshipping and bathing. Monkeys, too, were frolicking in the waters, and operating in competition with the human trash scavengers for prime - and especially edible - discarded items. Nom nom nom nom nom.
Thursday, December 22, 2011
Wednesday, December 21, 2011
God's What?
Short Version:
We explore Kathmandu, and check out the Pashupatinath Temple
Long Version:
Our first night in Kathmandu was a noisy night in hard single beds, with a no-hot-water bathroom attached. This was followed by a room-change negotiation with hotel management, which in turn led to a sunny rooftop penthouse room. With hot water. And views. And, as Lovely Wife put it, if you have to be sick*, better to be sick in a nice place than in a grim, unpleasant, noisy one.
From our rooftop perch, we** did some eyeballing of people going about their daily business. Said business bore both similarities and differences to life as lived in other places; brothers scrapped energetically across multiple rooms until halted by their spoon-wielding, baby-carrying, sari-clad mother; a small child watched Kung Fu Panda on a small TV in a dimly-lit furnitureless room above a combination restaurant/grocery store where chain-smoking men sat talking deep into the evening. No nudies spotted, unfortunately.
The tourist bit of Kathmandu is called Thamel, and it's quite nice. Especially compared to other bits of Kathmandu. We spent a few days in Thamel, getting gear sorted for the trek, wandering from overpriced trinket store to overpriced trinket store, familiarising ourselves with the location and operating principles of the Indian embassy (more on that later), and getting to know our guide-to-be while seeing the sights of Kathmandu, starting with the Pashupatinath Temple. As non-Hindus, we weren't allowed inside the temple proper, but the gatekeepers were more than happy to take our money (again, significantly more for tourists than for locals) and the parts of the sprawling complex on the far side of the Bagmati River were open for us to wander at will. The complex climbs uphill*** from the river in a series of ramps and steps, from terrace to terrace, and eventually to the lower edge of the Deer Park, where various deer spend their days stuffing their cute little faces with bits of greenery handed through the fences by tourists.
The hillside terraces housed various temples, smaller and less holy than the main attraction. Many of the smaller temples had one or more of the following:
- bells, for ringing or taking photos of, depending on your ethno-religious background
- statues of cows, weatherworn and often kind of cute
- statues of the Shiva Lingam, for worshipping or tittering at****
- holy men (sadhus), for sneakily not paying to take photos of
- beggars, for not giving moneys to
We managed some sneaky unpaid photos of sadhus. And some sneaky unpaid photos of crippled, arthritic, leprous beggars. But none of the funerals, despite the fact that there were a lot of them happening, and that they were quite far away from where we were, meaning the chances of being caught snapping something we oughtn't were pretty low - unlike the beggars and sadhus, who yellingly waved mutant club fists and gestured benevolently, respectively.
We saw funerals at many stages from our perch on the far side of the river, from the decoration of the platform and the preparation of the body, through the participatory, wailing and gnashing of teeth stages, to the dissipation of the last wisps of smoke rising from the expired pyre. People were bathing, clothed, in the waters of the Bagmati. Most of them seemed to be men - the women, as it turned out, were upstream, near the monkeys.
* = Delhi Belly is real, and unfun. It's not dissimilar to the Montezuma's Revenge we encountered in Mexico
** = May have just been me
*** = At the time, we thought it was quite steep. It's likely that our guide was more than just a little horrified by our reaction
**** = Shiva Lingam is one of the most commonly found worship symbols throughout the Hindu world. Literally translated, it essentially means "God's Cock." Someone in rural southeast Auckland, NZ, decided it would be a good name for their cattery (Shiva Lingam, that is, not God's Cock. I'm not entirely certain that the NZ Companies Office would allow the registration of "God's Cock Cattery," or, indeed, "God's Cock [any type of business]." Can someone please try, and let me know how you get on? Thanks), which has always been a great source of amusement on Hunua bike adventures.
We explore Kathmandu, and check out the Pashupatinath Temple
Long Version:
Our first night in Kathmandu was a noisy night in hard single beds, with a no-hot-water bathroom attached. This was followed by a room-change negotiation with hotel management, which in turn led to a sunny rooftop penthouse room. With hot water. And views. And, as Lovely Wife put it, if you have to be sick*, better to be sick in a nice place than in a grim, unpleasant, noisy one.
From our rooftop perch, we** did some eyeballing of people going about their daily business. Said business bore both similarities and differences to life as lived in other places; brothers scrapped energetically across multiple rooms until halted by their spoon-wielding, baby-carrying, sari-clad mother; a small child watched Kung Fu Panda on a small TV in a dimly-lit furnitureless room above a combination restaurant/grocery store where chain-smoking men sat talking deep into the evening. No nudies spotted, unfortunately.
The tourist bit of Kathmandu is called Thamel, and it's quite nice. Especially compared to other bits of Kathmandu. We spent a few days in Thamel, getting gear sorted for the trek, wandering from overpriced trinket store to overpriced trinket store, familiarising ourselves with the location and operating principles of the Indian embassy (more on that later), and getting to know our guide-to-be while seeing the sights of Kathmandu, starting with the Pashupatinath Temple. As non-Hindus, we weren't allowed inside the temple proper, but the gatekeepers were more than happy to take our money (again, significantly more for tourists than for locals) and the parts of the sprawling complex on the far side of the Bagmati River were open for us to wander at will. The complex climbs uphill*** from the river in a series of ramps and steps, from terrace to terrace, and eventually to the lower edge of the Deer Park, where various deer spend their days stuffing their cute little faces with bits of greenery handed through the fences by tourists.
The hillside terraces housed various temples, smaller and less holy than the main attraction. Many of the smaller temples had one or more of the following:
- bells, for ringing or taking photos of, depending on your ethno-religious background
- statues of cows, weatherworn and often kind of cute
- statues of the Shiva Lingam, for worshipping or tittering at****
- holy men (sadhus), for sneakily not paying to take photos of
- beggars, for not giving moneys to
We managed some sneaky unpaid photos of sadhus. And some sneaky unpaid photos of crippled, arthritic, leprous beggars. But none of the funerals, despite the fact that there were a lot of them happening, and that they were quite far away from where we were, meaning the chances of being caught snapping something we oughtn't were pretty low - unlike the beggars and sadhus, who yellingly waved mutant club fists and gestured benevolently, respectively.
We saw funerals at many stages from our perch on the far side of the river, from the decoration of the platform and the preparation of the body, through the participatory, wailing and gnashing of teeth stages, to the dissipation of the last wisps of smoke rising from the expired pyre. People were bathing, clothed, in the waters of the Bagmati. Most of them seemed to be men - the women, as it turned out, were upstream, near the monkeys.
* = Delhi Belly is real, and unfun. It's not dissimilar to the Montezuma's Revenge we encountered in Mexico
** = May have just been me
*** = At the time, we thought it was quite steep. It's likely that our guide was more than just a little horrified by our reaction
**** = Shiva Lingam is one of the most commonly found worship symbols throughout the Hindu world. Literally translated, it essentially means "God's Cock." Someone in rural southeast Auckland, NZ, decided it would be a good name for their cattery (Shiva Lingam, that is, not God's Cock. I'm not entirely certain that the NZ Companies Office would allow the registration of "God's Cock Cattery," or, indeed, "God's Cock [any type of business]." Can someone please try, and let me know how you get on? Thanks), which has always been a great source of amusement on Hunua bike adventures.
Thursday, December 15, 2011
Kathmandu! (Is Not a Shop)
Short Version:
Kathmandu has its own filth
Long Version:
Tribhuvan International Airport is made of red bricks. That was unexpected.
The queue for visas was long. Two women appeared at intervals and walked up and down the line, stapling photos to application forms for people. One was lovely, the other scary. Pretty sure the scary one deliberately put the staple in the middle of the Puppet forehead.
Visas acquired, it was outside, where a man holding a PHARO sign bundled us into a van and drove us through various bits of Kathmandu to our hotel. There was a lot to take in - we'd been warned that we were going to be hard-pressed to determine whether buildings were in process of being built or knocked down, and that was not only true but applied to almost every building we saw, although not the Royal Palace, where in 2001 Crown Prince Dipendra massacred nine of his family before putting an end to himself as well (his uncle, Gyanendra, succeeded the throne, and remained in power through to the end of the monarchy - replaced by a form of democracy - in 2006). The palace is now a museum.
We also passed the most polluted river we've ever seen. Holy heck, the water was FILTHY! Dark grey and semi-solid, with chunks. Ewwwwww!
And then the streets got cleaner, the number of pale faces in the hordes of people we were passing increased, and then we arrived at the International Guesthouse, where we were staying for a couple of nights before setting off to walk around/up/down some hills...
Kathmandu has its own filth
Long Version:
Tribhuvan International Airport is made of red bricks. That was unexpected.
The queue for visas was long. Two women appeared at intervals and walked up and down the line, stapling photos to application forms for people. One was lovely, the other scary. Pretty sure the scary one deliberately put the staple in the middle of the Puppet forehead.
Visas acquired, it was outside, where a man holding a PHARO sign bundled us into a van and drove us through various bits of Kathmandu to our hotel. There was a lot to take in - we'd been warned that we were going to be hard-pressed to determine whether buildings were in process of being built or knocked down, and that was not only true but applied to almost every building we saw, although not the Royal Palace, where in 2001 Crown Prince Dipendra massacred nine of his family before putting an end to himself as well (his uncle, Gyanendra, succeeded the throne, and remained in power through to the end of the monarchy - replaced by a form of democracy - in 2006). The palace is now a museum.
We also passed the most polluted river we've ever seen. Holy heck, the water was FILTHY! Dark grey and semi-solid, with chunks. Ewwwwww!
And then the streets got cleaner, the number of pale faces in the hordes of people we were passing increased, and then we arrived at the International Guesthouse, where we were staying for a couple of nights before setting off to walk around/up/down some hills...
Really, I'm a Lady!
Short Version:
Onwards and upwards, eventually.
Long Version: Delhi was fun, but we were ready to leave by the time it was time to leave. Old hands at Delhi after four days, we watched with interest as an increasingly excited mob formed around a newly-arrived and rather bemused-looking Westerner seeking transport, and then we were retracing our steps over the railway tracks and down to the Metro station for the journey to Indira Gandhi International airport.
We travelled by Metro a lot while in Delhi. It's easy, convenient, and cheap. They even have one car per train reserved for ladies only! It is possible, we discovered, for men to travel in this car. However, one becomes the target of many, many staring eyes. It's a bit uncomfortable, even when one's been spending most of one's time with many staring eyes following one's movements because one is a) not Indian AND b) have tattoos OR c) are attractive. In the ladycar, some of the stares were glares, others seemed amused at the not-very-brightness of the foreigner.
Delhi is a hazy-aired city, and the Airport Metro Express affords some grand views of various towers marching into fog/smog/other-shrouded distance beneath a big orange sun. Birds of prey wheel overhead in many places, engendering wonderment about just what - or who - they might be eyeballing from above and preparing to rend and devour.
And then we reached the airport, and made it as far as the doors, where we queued before a gun-toting, moustachioed soldier who wanted to see passports and tickets before we were allowed in. Once we produced the documents, he told us we had to go to the next door along, because the check-in desks for our airline were in that direction. Given that a) there was a queue at the other door and b) once inside the door we could have walked across to our check-in counter in well under a minute, we contemplated an objection. Briefly. Then we queued at the other door. The gun-toting, moustachioed soldier at the head of that queue looked good and hard at both of us before allowing us through, probably on one hand trying to reconcile the clean-shaven, short-haired passport Puppet with the hairy version in front of him. Suspect that on the other hand he was just checking Nene out.
Check-in itself was comparatively painless, especially compared with the multituinous security checks and red-tape we then had to endure. One of the security goons decided he did NOT like the cut of the Puppet jib, and it took three walks through the sensor gate, one extra-throrough pat-down, and various clothing-removals before we were through to the departing passenger area, where we found... MORE SECURITY CHECKS!
Finally, they let us onto the plane, and into the sky, and back to earth at Tribhuvan International Airport in Kathmandu, Nepal
Onwards and upwards, eventually.
Long Version: Delhi was fun, but we were ready to leave by the time it was time to leave. Old hands at Delhi after four days, we watched with interest as an increasingly excited mob formed around a newly-arrived and rather bemused-looking Westerner seeking transport, and then we were retracing our steps over the railway tracks and down to the Metro station for the journey to Indira Gandhi International airport.
We travelled by Metro a lot while in Delhi. It's easy, convenient, and cheap. They even have one car per train reserved for ladies only! It is possible, we discovered, for men to travel in this car. However, one becomes the target of many, many staring eyes. It's a bit uncomfortable, even when one's been spending most of one's time with many staring eyes following one's movements because one is a) not Indian AND b) have tattoos OR c) are attractive. In the ladycar, some of the stares were glares, others seemed amused at the not-very-brightness of the foreigner.
Delhi is a hazy-aired city, and the Airport Metro Express affords some grand views of various towers marching into fog/smog/other-shrouded distance beneath a big orange sun. Birds of prey wheel overhead in many places, engendering wonderment about just what - or who - they might be eyeballing from above and preparing to rend and devour.
And then we reached the airport, and made it as far as the doors, where we queued before a gun-toting, moustachioed soldier who wanted to see passports and tickets before we were allowed in. Once we produced the documents, he told us we had to go to the next door along, because the check-in desks for our airline were in that direction. Given that a) there was a queue at the other door and b) once inside the door we could have walked across to our check-in counter in well under a minute, we contemplated an objection. Briefly. Then we queued at the other door. The gun-toting, moustachioed soldier at the head of that queue looked good and hard at both of us before allowing us through, probably on one hand trying to reconcile the clean-shaven, short-haired passport Puppet with the hairy version in front of him. Suspect that on the other hand he was just checking Nene out.
Check-in itself was comparatively painless, especially compared with the multituinous security checks and red-tape we then had to endure. One of the security goons decided he did NOT like the cut of the Puppet jib, and it took three walks through the sensor gate, one extra-throrough pat-down, and various clothing-removals before we were through to the departing passenger area, where we found... MORE SECURITY CHECKS!
Finally, they let us onto the plane, and into the sky, and back to earth at Tribhuvan International Airport in Kathmandu, Nepal
Sunday, December 11, 2011
Sights, Sounds, and Smells
Short Version:
Stuff we did/saw/heard/smelled in Delhi
Long Version:
Raju had a moustache, and pants that he kept pulled up high. He drove us around Delhi in his little silver hatchback, which backfired and stalled at irregular intervals, severally in the middle of major intersections*. The radio turned itself on and off at random intervals. When on, it played a fairly random assortment of more or less musical music. With and without him, we did/saw/heard/smelled some Delhi stuff, including...
...a motorbike v car crash. The car driver took the motorbike keys so the bloke couldn't disappear. The motorcyclist seemed unsurprised and remarkably relaxed about that.
...a snake charmer became less-than-charming when the fat middle-aged Australian woman refused to pay him for the photograph she'd just taken of him and his charming charmed snake. We were hoping he'd encourage the snake to attack her, but he didn't. Boo, hiss!
...many, many schoolchildren, many of whom wanted their photos taken with us. Nene was especially popular with teenage boys, possibly because the top button of her shirt kept falling open.
...kids weeing in gutters
...men weeing in gutters and against walls
...swastika symbols galore
...people throwing orange and yellow flowers at statues of gods and goddesses
...the Continental Surgical Emporium
...many monumental edifices, historical buildings and complexes, some of which were actually quite cool. Statesman House was rather excellent, as were India Gate, the sprawling Humayun's Tomb complex, the tranquil Lodi Gardens, the Qutab Minar complex,and the memorials to the variously assassinated Gandhi statesmen and women
...special queue systems for non-Indians. We joined the lengthy queue for the shoe storage counter at the Laxmi Narayan Temple, for example, but were spotted as the infiltrators we were and redirected to a separate Westerner-shoe-storage environment, with padded seats upon which to sit while removing one's Westerner shoes, lockable lockers for storing one's Westerner non-shoe valuables, and direct access to the gift shop, where one could spend ones Westerner moneys.
...many governmental buildings, all of which are huge (suspect grandiosity = prestige in some inter-departmental importance war). The Engineer Corps building was next door to the Tuberculosis Hospital
...our second huge, striking, beautiful, nonagonal Ba'ahai House of Worship in as many months, after the one in Samoa. The Delhi House looked like a symmetrically improved Sydney Opera House, and is beautiful
...statues of mutant animals
...special entry fees for non-Indians. Many places that were charging for entry did so on a multi-tier cost basis. Usually this meant 10 rupees for Indians, 250 rupees for others
...flower sellers thronging the streets early in the mornings
...the sun rose and set hugely and redly in a murky sky
Also in Delhi, we:
...took a free and exciting high-speed pillion ride on a scooter through the Main Bazaar at Pandar Garj (Lovely Wife didn't attend this event, despite the South Asian penchant for multiple passengers on mopeds)
...met some Canadians, an Australian, and a Persian. The Persian was one of the most unique-looking people either of us had seen for a long time
...had to get our shower drain unblocked by a minion on a daily basis.
...drank coffee that was "enriched by the goodness of mushroom extract"
...paid to wee in a nice, clean toilet with relaxing music
...took tuk-tuks, but not as often as we should. The walk from the Metro to Qutab Minar was shit, although the mad guy was entertaining. The tuk-tuk ride back was quick, fun, and cheap. And the driver had a good beard
* = NZ has no major intersections. Delhi has major intersections!
Stuff we did/saw/heard/smelled in Delhi
Long Version:
Raju had a moustache, and pants that he kept pulled up high. He drove us around Delhi in his little silver hatchback, which backfired and stalled at irregular intervals, severally in the middle of major intersections*. The radio turned itself on and off at random intervals. When on, it played a fairly random assortment of more or less musical music. With and without him, we did/saw/heard/smelled some Delhi stuff, including...
...a motorbike v car crash. The car driver took the motorbike keys so the bloke couldn't disappear. The motorcyclist seemed unsurprised and remarkably relaxed about that.
...a snake charmer became less-than-charming when the fat middle-aged Australian woman refused to pay him for the photograph she'd just taken of him and his charming charmed snake. We were hoping he'd encourage the snake to attack her, but he didn't. Boo, hiss!
...many, many schoolchildren, many of whom wanted their photos taken with us. Nene was especially popular with teenage boys, possibly because the top button of her shirt kept falling open.
...kids weeing in gutters
...men weeing in gutters and against walls
...swastika symbols galore
...people throwing orange and yellow flowers at statues of gods and goddesses
...the Continental Surgical Emporium
...many monumental edifices, historical buildings and complexes, some of which were actually quite cool. Statesman House was rather excellent, as were India Gate, the sprawling Humayun's Tomb complex, the tranquil Lodi Gardens, the Qutab Minar complex,and the memorials to the variously assassinated Gandhi statesmen and women
...special queue systems for non-Indians. We joined the lengthy queue for the shoe storage counter at the Laxmi Narayan Temple, for example, but were spotted as the infiltrators we were and redirected to a separate Westerner-shoe-storage environment, with padded seats upon which to sit while removing one's Westerner shoes, lockable lockers for storing one's Westerner non-shoe valuables, and direct access to the gift shop, where one could spend ones Westerner moneys.
...many governmental buildings, all of which are huge (suspect grandiosity = prestige in some inter-departmental importance war). The Engineer Corps building was next door to the Tuberculosis Hospital
...our second huge, striking, beautiful, nonagonal Ba'ahai House of Worship in as many months, after the one in Samoa. The Delhi House looked like a symmetrically improved Sydney Opera House, and is beautiful
...statues of mutant animals
...special entry fees for non-Indians. Many places that were charging for entry did so on a multi-tier cost basis. Usually this meant 10 rupees for Indians, 250 rupees for others
...flower sellers thronging the streets early in the mornings
...the sun rose and set hugely and redly in a murky sky
Also in Delhi, we:
...took a free and exciting high-speed pillion ride on a scooter through the Main Bazaar at Pandar Garj (Lovely Wife didn't attend this event, despite the South Asian penchant for multiple passengers on mopeds)
...met some Canadians, an Australian, and a Persian. The Persian was one of the most unique-looking people either of us had seen for a long time
...had to get our shower drain unblocked by a minion on a daily basis.
...drank coffee that was "enriched by the goodness of mushroom extract"
...paid to wee in a nice, clean toilet with relaxing music
...took tuk-tuks, but not as often as we should. The walk from the Metro to Qutab Minar was shit, although the mad guy was entertaining. The tuk-tuk ride back was quick, fun, and cheap. And the driver had a good beard
* = NZ has no major intersections. Delhi has major intersections!
Tuesday, December 6, 2011
City of Things
Short Version:
Chaos. Carnage. Things.
Long Version:
Our hotel room had no windows. It did have a fishtank though. Probably better than a window, to be honest, given the chaos taking place outside at all hours of day and night.
Even the animals were pulling loopy moves; from the hotel's rooftop restaurant, beneath a sky chock-full of wheeling, diving black kites*, we watched a slender cat attack a long-tailed chipmunk. It missed, nearly falling off the roof. Then a dog tried to eat the cat, but was chased by another dog. Bemused, we ate curry.
Eventually, we braced ourselves for the chaos and the carnage and set off out into the madness again.
There were a lot of people with things to sell. To us, preferably. Some of them were quite vehement about it, despite repeated avowals of extreme disinterest. And as soon as one extricated oneself from the clutches of one thing-seller, there was invariably another right there, ready to sell you THEIR things. And another. And then three more. Not waiting politely for their turn, either, because the only people who wait politely for their turn for anything in Delhi are newly-arrived NZers.
So, things. For you, the things. Cheap cheap. In fact, special price for you, my friend, because you are my friend, because you are from New Zealand, special price New Zealand, very nice country, Black Caps, rugby. You have very nice tattoos, my friend. Come look my things, best things, cheap cheap for you.
No. Fuck off. Don't touch me. Go away. Don't want your things. No. No. No. No.
Luckily, there was not-dying-from-traffic to concentrate on, to take minds off thing-selling people. Anyone who thinks the driving in Tauranga, or Auckland is bad, you're... well, actually you're absolutely correct. NZ drivers are appalling. Delhi traffic is different; it's bigger and scarier, and stinkier and generally mayhemic, but once past the initial pants-shitting stage, it starts to make sense, and then it starts to seem like an almost rational system. It'd never work in NZ, though - NZ drivers, cyclists and peds are all too selfish and too arrogant.
And all through the madness, cows wandered serenely, stopping at intervals to eat... well, things. Not grass, for grass there was none. Things. Some identifiable, others... not so much so. Some raw, some... you get the picture.
Delhi - City of Things
* = Birds, not string-controlled human-constructed flying items
Chaos. Carnage. Things.
Long Version:
Our hotel room had no windows. It did have a fishtank though. Probably better than a window, to be honest, given the chaos taking place outside at all hours of day and night.
Even the animals were pulling loopy moves; from the hotel's rooftop restaurant, beneath a sky chock-full of wheeling, diving black kites*, we watched a slender cat attack a long-tailed chipmunk. It missed, nearly falling off the roof. Then a dog tried to eat the cat, but was chased by another dog. Bemused, we ate curry.
Eventually, we braced ourselves for the chaos and the carnage and set off out into the madness again.
There were a lot of people with things to sell. To us, preferably. Some of them were quite vehement about it, despite repeated avowals of extreme disinterest. And as soon as one extricated oneself from the clutches of one thing-seller, there was invariably another right there, ready to sell you THEIR things. And another. And then three more. Not waiting politely for their turn, either, because the only people who wait politely for their turn for anything in Delhi are newly-arrived NZers.
So, things. For you, the things. Cheap cheap. In fact, special price for you, my friend, because you are my friend, because you are from New Zealand, special price New Zealand, very nice country, Black Caps, rugby. You have very nice tattoos, my friend. Come look my things, best things, cheap cheap for you.
No. Fuck off. Don't touch me. Go away. Don't want your things. No. No. No. No.
Luckily, there was not-dying-from-traffic to concentrate on, to take minds off thing-selling people. Anyone who thinks the driving in Tauranga, or Auckland is bad, you're... well, actually you're absolutely correct. NZ drivers are appalling. Delhi traffic is different; it's bigger and scarier, and stinkier and generally mayhemic, but once past the initial pants-shitting stage, it starts to make sense, and then it starts to seem like an almost rational system. It'd never work in NZ, though - NZ drivers, cyclists and peds are all too selfish and too arrogant.
And all through the madness, cows wandered serenely, stopping at intervals to eat... well, things. Not grass, for grass there was none. Things. Some identifiable, others... not so much so. Some raw, some... you get the picture.
Delhi - City of Things
* = Birds, not string-controlled human-constructed flying items
Thursday, November 3, 2011
Delhi? Of Course We Can!
Short Version:
We make it to the hotel, which is quite an achievement
Long Version:
Off the plane and on to a terminal bus, along with the rest of our fellow passengers. Full bus. Slight delay in actually setting off for terminal as official chap stands in doorway shouting about a black mobile phone which has been found on the plane. For quite a while. Woman sitting near our standing place pipes up, volunteering the information that the phone was found at seat 24. Wait a minute... That'd be ours then... Thank you, nice shouty official man! Thank you, nice phone-finding woman, who is from Nepal, is en route home from a migration conference in the Phillippines, and with whom we chat as the bus navigates the tractors and other vehicles swarming according to some master plan indecipherable from our perspective.
Into the terminal and up to the Visa-on-Arrival counter. Interesting assortment of countries listed as eligible, including New Zealand, Vietnam, and Finland. No Orstralia, no Canadia. It took a while to get our stamps, partly because the two men manning the counter had to handwrite our details in umptiplicate into many ledgers, but mainly because the one who spoke discerned that our travel plans involved a return to Delhi post-Nepal. This, it transpires, is not a viable course of action, as on-arrival visas are one-time entry only. Rats. Suggestion is that we apply to the Indian Embassy in Kathmandu for a transit visa, which we promise to do, several times.
We are then whisked through Immigration, bypassing queues galore, escorted by a young official chap who rebuffed all challengers to our whisking, to find our bags waiting, already loaded on a trolley. Nice!
Next stop: the Delhi Airport Metro Express, a new metro* link from the airport to the heart of New Delhi. Signage directs us part of the way, and then vanishes. We ask a venerable army gentleman, and he directs us with his cane towards a descending ramp, which we follow to the ticket booth, and then past the multiply-manned machine-gun emplacement and down to the platform. Train arrives within minutes and we embark, onto a clean, predominantly empty carriage for the 20-minute journey into the heart of Delhi.
So far so easy.
I continue feeling rather pleased with myself right up to the point where we exit the metro station, and enter three or four of the circles of hell, which have been munged together to produce a cacophonous, seething, megahell, reeking of piss and shit and filth, and thronging with people, who are completely indifferent to our existence, or are determined to accost us for random, ill-communicated and doubtless nefarious - or at least avaricious - purposes. We have no idea where the fuck we're supposed to go, so we go left. The smell of rubbish decreases, or is overwhelmed by the odours of piss and shit, which are becoming more intense. Crippled, broken people lie on the ground in the filth. Their feet are quite dirty. Massive puddles - which in NZ would be a) fixed pretty quickly, and b) made of water - turn out on closer inspection to be of piss. There is reason to suspect that the liquid lies atop a layer of shit. The smell is incredible. Rubbish is everywhere. People are everywhere.
It feels like hours but is probably only minutes since we reached the outside world. We see a clustering of taxis and tuk-tuks and feel relief, which is dispelled by the fact that the operators refuse to take us to our hotel. Someone tells us we need to walk up and over the pedestrian bridges to the far side of the railway complex. Hooray! A destination! An achievable goal!
We walk to the stairs, are greeted by frenzied blasts on a whistle by a khaki-clad stick-brandishing policeman, who bars our way onto the descent-only staircase and directs us elsewhere. As far as I can tell he's just stopped us using the only stairs there are, and there's nothing in the direction he's sending us except thousands and thousands of people.
Bags are heavy. At least mine is an actual pack. Nene is carrying a duffel so heavy the straps pull free of the clasps unless reef-knotted in place. Even so, she's handling this better than I am. We walk past a queue, of several hundred people, who are clamouring for entrance to a large old building. By NZ crowd definitions this queue is a young and enthusiastic riot. A helpful chap - who I greet with extreme suspicion - tells us that there's nothing in the direction we're heading except car-parking. He says we need to go inside the building to get to the stairs. Hearts sink as the concept of joining and navigating that queue is contemplated. We ask one of the many army guy queue-wranglers if this is how we get in to go across to the other side. He is distracted enough for long enough that queue-jumping opportunism becomes rife, and somewhere between twenty and fifty people are past him and in through the doors before he clicks. When he does, he begins lashing out indiscriminately with his beating stick, cracking people across waists and shoulders and upraised shielding forearms. The scurrying past becomes scurrying into line, and the persondamburst is quelled. He turns back to us, ushers us in through the gap between people and doorframe. He's learned his lesson, though, and spends more time eyeballing the crowd than he does looking at us. We flee inside.
We are in the New Delhi Railway Station. So are thousands of other people. The smell inside the building is different from that outside, but no less potent; here it is the people themselves giving rise to the reek, except for occasional patches of overwhelming urine stench where clouds of fetid mist billow out from pissoirs formal and not.
Beggars lie on the floor. So do entire extended families; babies and children are watched over by the elderly while the middle generations keep close eye on towering piles of luggage. No-one is trying to speak to us here inside the station, which is a nice change, but our shoulders are starting to hurt rather a lot. Either that or being free from external harrassment is leaving us more capacity to notice the pain.
Pretty soon we're heading downstairs. It's hard to see where feet are landing with a backpack on the front. I'm lucky to avoid standing on the trailing edge of an old woman's sari. I do some imagineering, and figure that if I DO stand on it she'll end up naked at the bottom of the stairs, and I'll be running from an angry mob.
The decision not to stand on the old lady or her clothes proves to have been a wise one, as we make it to the bottom unmolested. Then we're well and truly molested, by a swarm of people who enjoy shouting. Nene and I employ different strategies at this point; she engages with a sub-horde, enlisting them in her quest for transport to our hotel; I say "No!" and stride away purposefully. This confuses everybody, including me, and eventually we find ourselves in a clear(ish), quiet(ish) space, which would be glorious except that we still have no idea where the hotel is or how to get there.
Nene espies what appears to be a fifty-plus car pile-up comprised solely of taxis. On closer inspection, this turns out to be a taxi rank, and we head for it. We're intercepted by a gaggle of men exhibiting various levels of clean but a near-universal level of yell. One knows where our hotel is. We are pleased. He leaves. We are sad. Heated discussion continues all around, as more and more taxi- and tuk-tuk drivers, nosey-parkers, and other hangers-on join the group. We sneak off. A small, grim man nods at us and we follow him to his tuk-tuk. He manages to cram us and all our luggage in, and takes off into traffic the likes of which I have never seen before in my life. I am agog at the madness unfolding on all sides, although I am especially taken with that on the side I am on, because it is so close to me. So very, very close. It's exhilarating, and completely insane.
There are so very many vehicles crammed into every available inch of space. Every one that has a horn is sounding it, and at first I think it's because we've just cut all of them off at once by driving straight out and onto a main road in front of a free-flowing stream of traffic. I am convinced that if we don't die in an accident, we'll be ripped limb from limb by a mob of angry motorists, enraged at the effrontery our driver has displayed. But wait! Everyone else is pulling rancid maneuvres also! And we are doing some tooting of our own! I'm starting to think this may just be the way it's done here, and then we hang a sharp right across an onrushing wall of cars, buses, tuk-tuks**, rickshaws***, and pedestrians, and begin driving up the middle of a street market, fast, tooting at pedestrians to get out of our way. This is like a scene from a film, except we're not being chased by gun-toting evildoers intent on laying hands on our drugs/diamonds/stolen moneys. And we're not actually knocking over fruit stalls in spectacular cascades of colour. And then we're swerving to avoid a rickshaw coming the other way, and then another one, and a car, and we realise that this, too, is just the way things are, and then we're outside the hotel and paying the still-silent little chap about five times as many rupees as we should have and we don't care because we've made it to the hotel and it really probably is time for a nice cup of tea and a lie-down.
* = That's light rail, partly underground, for all those who live in places bereft of this basic metropolitan necessity.
** = Auto-rickshaws. Three-wheeled vehicles that look like the back half of an old green Mini with a yellow canvas roof bolted to the front part of a Vespa. Run on CNG. Wonderful.
*** = Previous century's version of tuk-tuk. Massively steel single-speed tricycles. Wonderful from the outside, bumpy from in.
We make it to the hotel, which is quite an achievement
Long Version:
Off the plane and on to a terminal bus, along with the rest of our fellow passengers. Full bus. Slight delay in actually setting off for terminal as official chap stands in doorway shouting about a black mobile phone which has been found on the plane. For quite a while. Woman sitting near our standing place pipes up, volunteering the information that the phone was found at seat 24. Wait a minute... That'd be ours then... Thank you, nice shouty official man! Thank you, nice phone-finding woman, who is from Nepal, is en route home from a migration conference in the Phillippines, and with whom we chat as the bus navigates the tractors and other vehicles swarming according to some master plan indecipherable from our perspective.
Into the terminal and up to the Visa-on-Arrival counter. Interesting assortment of countries listed as eligible, including New Zealand, Vietnam, and Finland. No Orstralia, no Canadia. It took a while to get our stamps, partly because the two men manning the counter had to handwrite our details in umptiplicate into many ledgers, but mainly because the one who spoke discerned that our travel plans involved a return to Delhi post-Nepal. This, it transpires, is not a viable course of action, as on-arrival visas are one-time entry only. Rats. Suggestion is that we apply to the Indian Embassy in Kathmandu for a transit visa, which we promise to do, several times.
We are then whisked through Immigration, bypassing queues galore, escorted by a young official chap who rebuffed all challengers to our whisking, to find our bags waiting, already loaded on a trolley. Nice!
Next stop: the Delhi Airport Metro Express, a new metro* link from the airport to the heart of New Delhi. Signage directs us part of the way, and then vanishes. We ask a venerable army gentleman, and he directs us with his cane towards a descending ramp, which we follow to the ticket booth, and then past the multiply-manned machine-gun emplacement and down to the platform. Train arrives within minutes and we embark, onto a clean, predominantly empty carriage for the 20-minute journey into the heart of Delhi.
So far so easy.
I continue feeling rather pleased with myself right up to the point where we exit the metro station, and enter three or four of the circles of hell, which have been munged together to produce a cacophonous, seething, megahell, reeking of piss and shit and filth, and thronging with people, who are completely indifferent to our existence, or are determined to accost us for random, ill-communicated and doubtless nefarious - or at least avaricious - purposes. We have no idea where the fuck we're supposed to go, so we go left. The smell of rubbish decreases, or is overwhelmed by the odours of piss and shit, which are becoming more intense. Crippled, broken people lie on the ground in the filth. Their feet are quite dirty. Massive puddles - which in NZ would be a) fixed pretty quickly, and b) made of water - turn out on closer inspection to be of piss. There is reason to suspect that the liquid lies atop a layer of shit. The smell is incredible. Rubbish is everywhere. People are everywhere.
It feels like hours but is probably only minutes since we reached the outside world. We see a clustering of taxis and tuk-tuks and feel relief, which is dispelled by the fact that the operators refuse to take us to our hotel. Someone tells us we need to walk up and over the pedestrian bridges to the far side of the railway complex. Hooray! A destination! An achievable goal!
We walk to the stairs, are greeted by frenzied blasts on a whistle by a khaki-clad stick-brandishing policeman, who bars our way onto the descent-only staircase and directs us elsewhere. As far as I can tell he's just stopped us using the only stairs there are, and there's nothing in the direction he's sending us except thousands and thousands of people.
Bags are heavy. At least mine is an actual pack. Nene is carrying a duffel so heavy the straps pull free of the clasps unless reef-knotted in place. Even so, she's handling this better than I am. We walk past a queue, of several hundred people, who are clamouring for entrance to a large old building. By NZ crowd definitions this queue is a young and enthusiastic riot. A helpful chap - who I greet with extreme suspicion - tells us that there's nothing in the direction we're heading except car-parking. He says we need to go inside the building to get to the stairs. Hearts sink as the concept of joining and navigating that queue is contemplated. We ask one of the many army guy queue-wranglers if this is how we get in to go across to the other side. He is distracted enough for long enough that queue-jumping opportunism becomes rife, and somewhere between twenty and fifty people are past him and in through the doors before he clicks. When he does, he begins lashing out indiscriminately with his beating stick, cracking people across waists and shoulders and upraised shielding forearms. The scurrying past becomes scurrying into line, and the persondamburst is quelled. He turns back to us, ushers us in through the gap between people and doorframe. He's learned his lesson, though, and spends more time eyeballing the crowd than he does looking at us. We flee inside.
We are in the New Delhi Railway Station. So are thousands of other people. The smell inside the building is different from that outside, but no less potent; here it is the people themselves giving rise to the reek, except for occasional patches of overwhelming urine stench where clouds of fetid mist billow out from pissoirs formal and not.
Beggars lie on the floor. So do entire extended families; babies and children are watched over by the elderly while the middle generations keep close eye on towering piles of luggage. No-one is trying to speak to us here inside the station, which is a nice change, but our shoulders are starting to hurt rather a lot. Either that or being free from external harrassment is leaving us more capacity to notice the pain.
Pretty soon we're heading downstairs. It's hard to see where feet are landing with a backpack on the front. I'm lucky to avoid standing on the trailing edge of an old woman's sari. I do some imagineering, and figure that if I DO stand on it she'll end up naked at the bottom of the stairs, and I'll be running from an angry mob.
The decision not to stand on the old lady or her clothes proves to have been a wise one, as we make it to the bottom unmolested. Then we're well and truly molested, by a swarm of people who enjoy shouting. Nene and I employ different strategies at this point; she engages with a sub-horde, enlisting them in her quest for transport to our hotel; I say "No!" and stride away purposefully. This confuses everybody, including me, and eventually we find ourselves in a clear(ish), quiet(ish) space, which would be glorious except that we still have no idea where the hotel is or how to get there.
Nene espies what appears to be a fifty-plus car pile-up comprised solely of taxis. On closer inspection, this turns out to be a taxi rank, and we head for it. We're intercepted by a gaggle of men exhibiting various levels of clean but a near-universal level of yell. One knows where our hotel is. We are pleased. He leaves. We are sad. Heated discussion continues all around, as more and more taxi- and tuk-tuk drivers, nosey-parkers, and other hangers-on join the group. We sneak off. A small, grim man nods at us and we follow him to his tuk-tuk. He manages to cram us and all our luggage in, and takes off into traffic the likes of which I have never seen before in my life. I am agog at the madness unfolding on all sides, although I am especially taken with that on the side I am on, because it is so close to me. So very, very close. It's exhilarating, and completely insane.
There are so very many vehicles crammed into every available inch of space. Every one that has a horn is sounding it, and at first I think it's because we've just cut all of them off at once by driving straight out and onto a main road in front of a free-flowing stream of traffic. I am convinced that if we don't die in an accident, we'll be ripped limb from limb by a mob of angry motorists, enraged at the effrontery our driver has displayed. But wait! Everyone else is pulling rancid maneuvres also! And we are doing some tooting of our own! I'm starting to think this may just be the way it's done here, and then we hang a sharp right across an onrushing wall of cars, buses, tuk-tuks**, rickshaws***, and pedestrians, and begin driving up the middle of a street market, fast, tooting at pedestrians to get out of our way. This is like a scene from a film, except we're not being chased by gun-toting evildoers intent on laying hands on our drugs/diamonds/stolen moneys. And we're not actually knocking over fruit stalls in spectacular cascades of colour. And then we're swerving to avoid a rickshaw coming the other way, and then another one, and a car, and we realise that this, too, is just the way things are, and then we're outside the hotel and paying the still-silent little chap about five times as many rupees as we should have and we don't care because we've made it to the hotel and it really probably is time for a nice cup of tea and a lie-down.
* = That's light rail, partly underground, for all those who live in places bereft of this basic metropolitan necessity.
** = Auto-rickshaws. Three-wheeled vehicles that look like the back half of an old green Mini with a yellow canvas roof bolted to the front part of a Vespa. Run on CNG. Wonderful.
*** = Previous century's version of tuk-tuk. Massively steel single-speed tricycles. Wonderful from the outside, bumpy from in.
Wednesday, November 2, 2011
The Drowned City
Short Version:
Bangkok, even when flooded, partially evacuated, and judged solely by a manky airport suburb, is awesome.
Long Version:
Original Plan:
4 nights in Bangkok, 3 in a cool riverside downtownish hotel, 1 in an airporty transity one. Various excellent, exciting adventures, including riverboating, eating delicious foods, and table tennis action*.
Spanner/Fly for your Ointmenty Works:
Flooding. Visit timed to perfection to match the arrival of peak floodwaters. Bangkok partially evacuated, commercial activities suspended, mild panic ensues. Riverside downtownish hotel underwater and closed.
Revised Plan:
Leave Bangkok for Delhi earlier than planned, stay in Bangkok airport.
Actuality:
Leave Bangkok airport, eventually. En route to leaving airport, acquire the following:
- 6 passport photos each, to supplement existing collections, for Thai and Indian visas. Puppet looks like a jihadist. Nene looks like she's been photographed on the mortician's slab, or in the cells after a lengthy, enthusiastic, and eventful meth binge
- 1 mild heart palpitation when Visa-on-Arrival booth guy says "Where from? New Zealand? New Zealand no eligible Visa-on-Arrival. Go Immigration, get Visa." Fucksocks.
- 2 improved understandings of the difficulties involved in attempting to explain what a Samoa is to a Thai Immigration official who speaks little English, and who has interestedly thumbed through the Puppetpassport peering at the stampage.
- 0 visas.
We ended up in a riverside airporty hotel. Sandbags and pumps and other temporary flood barriers were abundant. So were fish. In the water, out of the water, climbing all over each other in pursuit of the bread being tossed their way by a variety of people**. Similar size to the salmon we saw in Canada last year***, but with catfish-style barbels sprouting from their mouthparts. Suspect they taste like mud, but a bunch of people were fishing for them, so I guess either I'm wrong about their flavour or mud's better than the alternative. Which is possibly nothing.
We, on the other hand, had plenty of food options at the cafe we found: duck with noodles, or duck with rice... One of each, please!
We napped, promenaded along the riverbank, were barked at by a grumpy dog, and eventually settled in to a riverside table to eat and drink well into the evening. Well, into the evening at any rate; 730pm saw us tired and drunk and ready to start the sleep that would take us through to 230am and airport o'clock.
We made a friend at the airport. He was sleeping on a bench, up to the point when a trolley loaded with puppetbags was driven into his legs with some force. Sorry! Maybe it's time we left...
Wait, not so fast, tourist scum!
First we had to experience some Bangkok airportness:
- A massive orchid display
- 50% of passengers on our flight were checking boxed flatscreen TVs in as luggage
- An angry passport control woman. She yelled at Nene. I'd be angry too, if I were that ugly, and that old, and had a zit that MASSIVE in the middle of my forehead.
- The space on the far side of passport control at Bangkok airport is HUGE. We wandered for ages, watching the high-end fashion stores coming to life for the day.
- Fresh-baked big soft pretzels. Why are all the pretzels in NZ the small, crisp ones? These ones are way better. So much so that we had two.
- Every security, passport, and airline staff member we spoke to asked us if we smoked
- Cheesy Thai pop music from every store, sometimes competing cacophonically with them next door
- Additional security check at departure gate. The woman with the wand**** became angered by the seemingly mild-mannered but ineffectual old man in front of us, who failed to understand that she was finished with him. We were pleased that we'd had the opportunity to observe, as we'd most likely have roused exactly the same ire if not forewarned.
- A middle-aged Indian woman made it as far as boarding the plane with all her luggage, which included a full-sized suitcase. When - finally! - challenged, she removed a large doll (a European-looking baby about 2ft long) from the suitcase, handed it to the airline staff, and tried to set off again into the plane. Eventually they repacked the doll and removed the suitcase from her possession for - I assume - transfer to the checked-in luggage compartment
...and then we were aboard, and the pianomuzak versions of "Love Lifts Us Up Where we Belong" and "Didn't We Almost Have it All?" were playing, and then we were airborne, and [CENSORED - see note ***** at own risk], and then the stewardess was walking up and down the aisle, spraying disinfectant from a pair of cans, and it was like we were arriving in NZ in the 80s! But we weren't, we were arriving in Delhi, and the madness was about to begin.
* = Use your imagination. Or google "Bangkok + ping-pong balls" with SafeSearch off
** = Our favourite was the older gent with the up-high slacks beltline, who was very seriously ripping hunks of stale bread and throwing them to the fish then gesturing as though conducting their movements
*** = The fish, not the people
**** = Not a fairy. Maybe a witch.
***** = One of the expectations of our Bangkok sojourn was that we'd see some nudity, and some unusual nude activities (see note *). The floods put paid to our visit to the centre of the perviverse, and by the time we were airborne en route to Delhi these things were far from our minds. It was with some surprise, then, that upon opening an unlocked, "Unoccupied" toilet, Puppetvision captured a Thai woman, urinating frenziedly. Who was more surprised? Possibly a tie. Puppet almost certainly more amused, although the steward who had watched the whole thing abruptly closed the curtain to seal off the kitchen area, and one suspects he may have been privately chortling, heartily.
Bangkok, even when flooded, partially evacuated, and judged solely by a manky airport suburb, is awesome.
Long Version:
Original Plan:
4 nights in Bangkok, 3 in a cool riverside downtownish hotel, 1 in an airporty transity one. Various excellent, exciting adventures, including riverboating, eating delicious foods, and table tennis action*.
Spanner/Fly for your Ointmenty Works:
Flooding. Visit timed to perfection to match the arrival of peak floodwaters. Bangkok partially evacuated, commercial activities suspended, mild panic ensues. Riverside downtownish hotel underwater and closed.
Revised Plan:
Leave Bangkok for Delhi earlier than planned, stay in Bangkok airport.
Actuality:
Leave Bangkok airport, eventually. En route to leaving airport, acquire the following:
- 6 passport photos each, to supplement existing collections, for Thai and Indian visas. Puppet looks like a jihadist. Nene looks like she's been photographed on the mortician's slab, or in the cells after a lengthy, enthusiastic, and eventful meth binge
- 1 mild heart palpitation when Visa-on-Arrival booth guy says "Where from? New Zealand? New Zealand no eligible Visa-on-Arrival. Go Immigration, get Visa." Fucksocks.
- 2 improved understandings of the difficulties involved in attempting to explain what a Samoa is to a Thai Immigration official who speaks little English, and who has interestedly thumbed through the Puppetpassport peering at the stampage.
- 0 visas.
We ended up in a riverside airporty hotel. Sandbags and pumps and other temporary flood barriers were abundant. So were fish. In the water, out of the water, climbing all over each other in pursuit of the bread being tossed their way by a variety of people**. Similar size to the salmon we saw in Canada last year***, but with catfish-style barbels sprouting from their mouthparts. Suspect they taste like mud, but a bunch of people were fishing for them, so I guess either I'm wrong about their flavour or mud's better than the alternative. Which is possibly nothing.
We, on the other hand, had plenty of food options at the cafe we found: duck with noodles, or duck with rice... One of each, please!
We napped, promenaded along the riverbank, were barked at by a grumpy dog, and eventually settled in to a riverside table to eat and drink well into the evening. Well, into the evening at any rate; 730pm saw us tired and drunk and ready to start the sleep that would take us through to 230am and airport o'clock.
We made a friend at the airport. He was sleeping on a bench, up to the point when a trolley loaded with puppetbags was driven into his legs with some force. Sorry! Maybe it's time we left...
Wait, not so fast, tourist scum!
First we had to experience some Bangkok airportness:
- A massive orchid display
- 50% of passengers on our flight were checking boxed flatscreen TVs in as luggage
- An angry passport control woman. She yelled at Nene. I'd be angry too, if I were that ugly, and that old, and had a zit that MASSIVE in the middle of my forehead.
- The space on the far side of passport control at Bangkok airport is HUGE. We wandered for ages, watching the high-end fashion stores coming to life for the day.
- Fresh-baked big soft pretzels. Why are all the pretzels in NZ the small, crisp ones? These ones are way better. So much so that we had two.
- Every security, passport, and airline staff member we spoke to asked us if we smoked
- Cheesy Thai pop music from every store, sometimes competing cacophonically with them next door
- Additional security check at departure gate. The woman with the wand**** became angered by the seemingly mild-mannered but ineffectual old man in front of us, who failed to understand that she was finished with him. We were pleased that we'd had the opportunity to observe, as we'd most likely have roused exactly the same ire if not forewarned.
- A middle-aged Indian woman made it as far as boarding the plane with all her luggage, which included a full-sized suitcase. When - finally! - challenged, she removed a large doll (a European-looking baby about 2ft long) from the suitcase, handed it to the airline staff, and tried to set off again into the plane. Eventually they repacked the doll and removed the suitcase from her possession for - I assume - transfer to the checked-in luggage compartment
...and then we were aboard, and the pianomuzak versions of "Love Lifts Us Up Where we Belong" and "Didn't We Almost Have it All?" were playing, and then we were airborne, and [CENSORED - see note ***** at own risk], and then the stewardess was walking up and down the aisle, spraying disinfectant from a pair of cans, and it was like we were arriving in NZ in the 80s! But we weren't, we were arriving in Delhi, and the madness was about to begin.
* = Use your imagination. Or google "Bangkok + ping-pong balls" with SafeSearch off
** = Our favourite was the older gent with the up-high slacks beltline, who was very seriously ripping hunks of stale bread and throwing them to the fish then gesturing as though conducting their movements
*** = The fish, not the people
**** = Not a fairy. Maybe a witch.
***** = One of the expectations of our Bangkok sojourn was that we'd see some nudity, and some unusual nude activities (see note *). The floods put paid to our visit to the centre of the perviverse, and by the time we were airborne en route to Delhi these things were far from our minds. It was with some surprise, then, that upon opening an unlocked, "Unoccupied" toilet, Puppetvision captured a Thai woman, urinating frenziedly. Who was more surprised? Possibly a tie. Puppet almost certainly more amused, although the steward who had watched the whole thing abruptly closed the curtain to seal off the kitchen area, and one suspects he may have been privately chortling, heartily.
In Brunei, You're Too Fat To Use The Intertubes
Short Version:
Brunei is probably more exciting outside the International Transit Lounge.
Long Version:
We had, essentially, no idea what happens in the Kingdom of Brunei before we got there. The view from the porthole as we flew in gave us some clues; they spend their time puttng gold domes/roofs/canopies on buildings. Having subsequently spent several hours in the International Transit Lounge at Bandar Seri Begwan Airport, I can now report that other things that happen in the Kingdom of Brunei include:
- people arrive on aeroplanes
- people leave on aeroplanes
- people wait for a aeroplanes to arrive so they can leave on them
- white birds of the heron/crane variety browse the grassy verges of the runways when aeroplanes are not howling hither and yon upon them
- people attempt to get the internet to work on the "Free Internet! (Brought to you by [sponsor's name removed]!)" terminals... The very short man in the red shirt succeeded. The bald guy with the neck-beard failed. The advance contingent of the Thai student horde succeeded. The really ugly woman who queue-jumped me* failed. I failed. The many-chinned British-looking man failed. The irritating Australian boy** failed. The very short man in the blue shirt failed. The rearguard of the Thai student horde succeeded. I thought for a time that perhaps it was a site-related success criteria at work, but I had a crack at the facebook page of one of the previous users and had no joy. Possibly a weight sensor in the stool that blocked anyone over 50kg.
The fish in the fountain pool were pretty cool, the aircon was cranked to the point that the window glass was covered in condensation, and the intercom announcements were so quiet as to be borderline inaudible. Certainly not loud enough to be heard over the nincompoopery of the Thai student horde. Luckily, we had a Thai student horde to follow to our Bangkok-bound aircraft, where we found ourselves crammed into the kind of seat-space you'd expect on a sub-hour domestic flight in NZ. That kind of sucked, but more so for Janine's neighbour, who was so fat that he had difficulty lowering his tray-table, which pretty much bisected him once it was wedged in place. He also didn't read, watch visual programming, or otherwise indulge in any form of extraneous entertainment throughout the 4-hour flight. Either a great imagination at work, or... not.
* = She felt the hate, I assure you
** = Seriously, just fuck off, you little twerp
Brunei is probably more exciting outside the International Transit Lounge.
Long Version:
We had, essentially, no idea what happens in the Kingdom of Brunei before we got there. The view from the porthole as we flew in gave us some clues; they spend their time puttng gold domes/roofs/canopies on buildings. Having subsequently spent several hours in the International Transit Lounge at Bandar Seri Begwan Airport, I can now report that other things that happen in the Kingdom of Brunei include:
- people arrive on aeroplanes
- people leave on aeroplanes
- people wait for a aeroplanes to arrive so they can leave on them
- white birds of the heron/crane variety browse the grassy verges of the runways when aeroplanes are not howling hither and yon upon them
- people attempt to get the internet to work on the "Free Internet! (Brought to you by [sponsor's name removed]!)" terminals... The very short man in the red shirt succeeded. The bald guy with the neck-beard failed. The advance contingent of the Thai student horde succeeded. The really ugly woman who queue-jumped me* failed. I failed. The many-chinned British-looking man failed. The irritating Australian boy** failed. The very short man in the blue shirt failed. The rearguard of the Thai student horde succeeded. I thought for a time that perhaps it was a site-related success criteria at work, but I had a crack at the facebook page of one of the previous users and had no joy. Possibly a weight sensor in the stool that blocked anyone over 50kg.
The fish in the fountain pool were pretty cool, the aircon was cranked to the point that the window glass was covered in condensation, and the intercom announcements were so quiet as to be borderline inaudible. Certainly not loud enough to be heard over the nincompoopery of the Thai student horde. Luckily, we had a Thai student horde to follow to our Bangkok-bound aircraft, where we found ourselves crammed into the kind of seat-space you'd expect on a sub-hour domestic flight in NZ. That kind of sucked, but more so for Janine's neighbour, who was so fat that he had difficulty lowering his tray-table, which pretty much bisected him once it was wedged in place. He also didn't read, watch visual programming, or otherwise indulge in any form of extraneous entertainment throughout the 4-hour flight. Either a great imagination at work, or... not.
* = She felt the hate, I assure you
** = Seriously, just fuck off, you little twerp
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