Jiapur onward

Jaipur is my favorite city so far. One of the aspects of India is the inherent knowledge how to drive in complete chaos. Going around the round-about is very interesting. There are cars, bicycles, tut tuts, push carts, dogs, cows, people and who knows what else moving around the center statue in all directions. If you are coming in you could have some alongside of you, you could also have some driving straight into you, while others are about to T-bone you on the side. I do not think that anyone actually goes around in the right direction.

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The walls around the city are pink in color (although I think they are terra cotta). There are many archways signifying the entrance to the city. Another interesting feature are the shops. It is the first place we have been with covered sidewalks. When the shops were built, they were built up off the street with a covered walk in front of the shops. The merchants live above. That way one can walk without fear of getting run over by a vehicle.

The Amber Palace is not to be believed. The Maharaja of the area built this palace for he and his 12 wives. He also had 300 concubines. The craftsmanship is spectacular. His meeting room is called the “Hall of Mirrors” and there are reflecting mirrors, sparkling mica and at one time there were jewels all inlaid in marble. The view sweeps over the whole valley. A wall sits on top of the hills much like the Wall of China. At the top of the mountain is a fort. I loved the columns with the elephant heads holding up the floor above.

Since everyone told us that Jaipur was the place to shop, we spent the afternoon doing so. The fabrics are beyond your imagination. For someone like me, this is like going into a candy store. One piece of cloth after another was more beautiful than the next. It just amazes me these fabrics are not used more in styling clothes. The women of India wear the most engaging combinations of fabric. I am so envious that I do not get to have such style to wear every day.

We ended the day with a cooking class that was delicious. We cooked lamb and chickpeas in two separate coconuts and use the whey for the chicken marsala. We made naan and a delicious eggplant dish. We also cooked bread in the ashes and the coconuts. Our meal was delicious and it was fun to cook.

We went to a block printing village, Bagru, where all most all of the block printing in India is done. The Hindu people dye and print the fabric while the Muslims carve the block design. Designers will send designs to the village, a block will be made according to the design and will be printed, and sent back to the designer for their approval. Then the cloth will be produced all in this village. This village sells to the wholesaler. The material will be sent elsewhere to have things made from it.

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And now to the reason we came: THE CAMEL FESTIVAL, We Can’t Wait.

Agra and the Taj Mahal

Days have been spent traveling. The pollution was so bad in Delhi that our flight was an hour late. We drove to Agra which is a five-hour drive, we did not arrive until after 6 pm. By the time we ate dinner we were all exhausted. However, on the way to our room we passed a puppeteer. Never one to pass up a puppet show, Shap and I watched while the puppets belly danced, danced with snakes and flipped from female to male. I am always fascinated by puppeteers and their ability to use all the strings. People were passing him by, but Shap and I laughed at the antics of the puppets as if we were kids. It was a relaxing gem after a long trip.

Up at 5:00 to get to the Taj Mahal before sunrise in order to avoid the crowds. I think it was also to beat the pollution, known as fog in India. The sun is barely visible all-day long. When we finally got to the Taj Mahal, it is truly one of the seven wonders of the world. The colors and angles that reflect the light are exquisite. Of course, if it were me I would have wanted this built before I died so I could enjoy it.

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The craftsmanship is breathtaking, but the setting is what draws you to it. If it were not for the garden and water feature leading the eye to the building it would not be as dramatic.

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Headed for Jaipur we spent time in a roadside market. We were quite the attraction and had many requests to have out picture taken or to take pictures.

We stopped at a city residence of the third Mogul in the 16th century. He was the first to have three wives with three different religions.  This was quite an amazing residence and we ended up spending more time than we had expected.

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Back in our van we will arrive late in Jaipur. I think we will need more than two nights here but it is on to the camel festival. Time is flying by and the sounds of India will forever be honking horns and the sound of breaks as a cow decides to cross the main highway. But then we arrive off a busy street in the wholesale area of Jaipur through a gate where the road in looks as if it were some dark dirty alleyway. In front of us is the Hotel Dra Mandawa a beautiful inn with a charming courtyard and rooms so large you could live in them as an entire house. Even an upstairs balcony with a meditation room. Charming wall stencils, block printed covers and an enormous padlock on our door. It could not have been a more perfect end to our day.henna hands copy

Choat Puga

It is 3:30 AM when I am woken with what I thought was a gunshot. This is the beginning of the sunrise ceremony of the festival called Choat Puga. Last night was the start of the festival. From 3:30 AM there were fireworks and drums and people swarming to the Ganges. Lying in bed listening to the various noises and trying to identify what was going on, I thought this could be equivalent to a war zone. My ears rang from the cherry bombs.

Once up and dressed we arrived out in the balcony looking down on this sea of humanity while dodging the sparks from the fireworks and breathing in the heavy smoke created from the offerings, guns and general fires.

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Masses of humanity lined the banks of the Ganges River with lines of people going two different directions at once, pushing and shoving to get where they want. Sky lanterns were lit and floated slowly over the people. It is hard to imagine this scene, even if you have seen a million pictures of it. Until you actually see it, you cannot understand it. Taking a boat ride along the river was the best way to see everything.

 

Afterwards we walked to the golden temple, pass the cremation site, and into an area restricted from pictures, the Golden Temple. You walk through ancient streets where you share the street with cows, pedi-bikes, garbage and cow dung All of this is not bad compared to the constant honking of horns blasting your eardrums until you wish and wish for the quiet of Vermont. No wonder everyone meditates, the temples or mediation areas are the only quiet area.

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Later in the afternoon we walked through the main streets into a central square while cars, motor scooters, bikes, rickshaws went in every direction at once. A mother cow, with her calf was not going to let us pass. She pushed past us with a toss of the head reminding us we were visitors, and this was her territory. Crossing the street was a major fete, timing a break on one side of the road while dodging our way to the other side. Something akin to bumper cars. Markets were just as crowded.flower market copy

We successfully completed another day without injury and look forward to moving on to Agra. Varanasi is one of those places in the world that you cannot comprehend until you visit and then you can only observe as an outsider, knowing you could never belong. The Ganges is polluted and judging from the amount of trash, and sewage going into it, plus the factories that contribute, I wonder if India will be able to save it.

Varanasi

“You will never want to miss Varanasi, ” is the comment we have heard from so many people. I was not sure that I would want to experience the Ganges River scene with all the stories I had heard. The polluted river, the burning of bodies, the bathing rituals all seemed a bit barbaric. Yet, there is a certain sense of curiosity.

Driving into the center of Varanasi was certainly exciting with every form of transportation crowding into narrow streets,speeding around cows in the middle of the road, and braking at the last minute as  motorcycles with a family of four or five riding on it,cuts in front of our van, quarter inches from the bumper,  Streets so narrow that we had to walk the last couple blocks to get to our hotel. As in many other countries, the streets are dug up leaving large holes, animal excrement, old debris, trash and other indescribable objects littered along the way. One must hop out of the way as a scooter swerves to miss you, one false step and you may or may not be on the ground. Having been this route other times I knew when we finally got to the hotel it would open up to a beautiful courtyard and lovely rooms. We were not disappointed.

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Varanasi was in the throes of a festival, one I could hardly spell here. It is the time when people come to the Ganges to ask for a blessing for their sons. Gifts of flowers, sugar cane and candles in tin pie plates are sold or brought to the Ganges and floated there or lite on shore. Thousands of people come to embrace this tradition and stay until after sunset. Then tomorrow they will come back to bring an offering to the sunrise. We photographed all of this and will tomorrow morning too.

After experiencing this outside our hotel,we headed for a boat and began a trip down the Ganges to the cremation sites.  This was rather an interesting scene as it looked like something out of the movie “Apocalypse .”  But the ritual does not seem any more bizarre than out burial rituals. In many ways cremation in this form is more intimate than our way of cremating. And the traditions have stories that are comforting to loved ones.building during boat ride cremation

I felt that we were lucky to experience this holiday,the cremation and the holy site where pilgrim come to cleanse themselves in the River Ganges.

Old Delhi

Sights and sounds of Old Delhi assault you as you move toward the main market area. Streets are narrow, and dirty, cars push to move forward while pedi bikes dart in and out containing more people than you could possibly imagine in one small space. It reminded me of the seventies when trying to get a record number of people into a telephone booth was the rage. What is even more startling are the electrical wires which hang dangerously from buildings and a single telephone pole. It is such a maze of wires, there would be no way to fix the electricity if it failed. L1100501

Within the streets are many vendors and shops, so small you wonder how anyone was able to get their wares in there,much less themselves. People, bikes,cars,scooters all vying for the same square footage. One false step and you are done for. Colors manifest themselves in the clothes being worn, hanging in shops, by the various herbs  and decorations. People are buying food, and baubles, young and old are yelling, pushing, communing for the same space. Scene from above you would think of a maze with small figures darting in and out. An amazing experience for sure.

L1100516And then we have the shops:

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Day 3 Cusco

We arrived by plane in Cusco in the dark so we could not get a look at the mountains but the ride was bumpy. We are close to the central plaza and out hotel ” El Mercado” is an old market place with a center courtyard. Charming rooms and plenty of room for the girls to run around.

I feel like I never left Bhutan or Tibet, I can’t breathe , I  have a headache and I now know how people with COP ,or whatever it is called , feel. The elephant is sitting on my chest going up hill. I have been drinking copious amounts of coca tea but it is not helping much.

I did not know that Peru is known for a huge variety of corn and potatoes and actually serves ver healthy meals..I have been eating lightly as I am sure a full stomach does not add to the altitude problem. Meanwhile the four little girls are racing around like pixies with no hint of feeling the stress.

Cusco is an amazing city with beautiful old buildings, Inca ruins and Catholic churches galore. We got a tour of many of the ruins, but the highlight was the natural slides in the rock that all of the grandkids had to try. Thank God we had the older ones to take the little ones. What a joy to see them all playing together young and old with adults mixed in.

I love the baby llamas and alpacas that are being dressed up and roam the streets with women all dressed in their traditional garb. I don’t care that they want money for a picture because I explained that this is the way they made a living and one should not shun them and say they don’t want to pay them for their picture. We took one with all the little girls, the Peruvian women and baby llamas,, all of them loved it including the women.

I can’t express what a joy it is for me to be on this trip with my family. I look at them all interacting and feel so blessed that I have been able to provide a venue like this and see them all so happy, laughing together and enjoying everything. I know that each of them will take back memories that will sustain them in their lives ahead, but what they will really know is each one of them has the other’s back and they get to truly understand and feel the bond of our family. No one cares that it is a blended family, as far as they are concerned we are all related. And as I have said many times, you don’t have to be blood to be each others brother and sister, cousin, aunt, uncle, parents or grandparents.

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Peru

We are off with the entire family to Peru, all 18 of us. The range in age is 2 1/2 to 73. The Vermont contngency left at 6:00 AM and we are now sitting around the Newark airport waiting for our 2 PM flight. We got an incredible deal for business class, thanks to Maggie, I believe we will be taking over the business class section.

We have brought along a llama for our trip as we want to do as the Peruvian’s do. However, our llama is very spoiled because he insisted on business class. We had to make him promise he would not spit green globs all over the airplane. Right now he is sitting in the United Club enjoying the Internet.

We arrive around 10 pm tonight and will join the Seattle four tomorrow morning. They will have arrived at 3:15 in the afternoon in Lima. Tomorrow begins with a tour of Lima and a promise to the kids that we will see mummy’s in the catacombs (maybe).

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Stockholm

 

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Is there a city that could be cooler than Stockholm? Probably, but of all the cities that I have visited in the last six weeks, this one is my favorite. With ferries buzzing here and there, public transportation and a host of rental bikes positioned everywhere in the city, it is easy to get around. The long evenings with museums open until late add to your days agenda. The Old Town sports a town square that could not be more charming where one can enjoy the sounds of a guitar. His notes soar to the heights of the old stone building and descend to your delight, soothing your weary body and calming your soul. The town square was full of tourists, but this music was so melodious that the crowd seemed to have come under its spell and all was quiet.

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It was a holiday our first day here. Shap and I have now experienced three national holidays and two or three religious holidays. I can no longer keep them straight. We were treated to marching bands, and the King’s horse brigade. Swedish flags flew everywhere and people lined the banks of the many canals, lakes and the Baltic Sea. A particularly sunny day and warm the Swedes were rejoicing and taking advantage of it in a climate that hosts a lot of cloudy, raining days.

The ferry system is great; your bus card also allows you to get on the ferry. From our hotel we can grab the ferry and zip over to Old Town or the Amusement Park where many interesting museums reside. The Vasa museum, which holds the largest sailboat ever made in 1628, was built around the boat. It sunk almost immediately upon launching due to a squall and the weight of the cannons. The King and all the townspeople were there watching as it slipped into the harbor in full sail and within minutes keeled over and sank, killing 50 people. Imagine the reaction to that debacle? It was raised between 1958 and 1961 and eventually this museum was built.

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A storybook museum was also part of our agenda, or at least a few of us. This proved to be as charming as you would imagine, complete with a troll hanging out observing everyone that passed by.

The Nordic museum housed a collection of Swedish history through the folk art and traditions. Replicas of rooms through the ages, folk art, textiles, jewelry, all of it was fascinating. Since it was raining most of the day we did spend our time in the museums gathering a lot of visual information. There are many more that we can visit and we look forward to exploring the city for one more day before we take off.

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Traveling for six weeks has been a wonderful experience for us. The combination of traveling alone as a couple for four of the weeks and then as a group of seven for the remaining two weeks has been a great time for us. We accommodate each other very well, allowing for individual preferences. Most interesting for me is to see the influence of art and architecture transcending from one country to another. Also the indigenous tribes of many country seem to have experienced the same profiling against them as the American Indians. But they have not only survived due to their ability to keep the stories alive, but also because the younger generations demonstrated their power to take back the culture and let it become alive again. The Sami’s of Norway, Sweden and Finland have their own parliament and elections, although they are still under the rule of their country. We think that the U.S. is the only country to have treated our indigenous people poorly, but we are not alone.

Oh My God, I just looked out the window of our hotel and there is a party on the front lawn with a silver duvet covered bed accented with pink cushions, and a “woman” (not sure about that) in 4 inch heels, a lace body suit with just a corset over it and enough make up to convince me that she is a he. Meanwhile everyone else is walking around kind of frumpy looking. Can’t figure out what is going on but it sure is interesting.

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Tomorrow we are back to Vermont, to my Green Mountains and my family. It has been a great experience but I will be happy to settle down, to no longer live out of my suitcase and enjoy the summer to come. Thanks for following the Smith’s.

 

Midnight Sun

midnight sunI thought I would not be writing another blog until we got to Sweden but I could not resist the temptation of sharing the “Midnight Sun” with you. After being out on the water yesterday experiencing the malstrüms swirling by our Zodiac, I thought this area could not get any better. That is until, I experienced our trip into the Fjords guided by the midnight sun.

At 11:30 we turned into a fjord in the Lyofoten Islands, cruising at a gentle speed with the hillsides almost touching our ship. This is exciting to have the mountains so close, but it was nothing compared to the spectacular color radiating through the clouds which are creating the most enchanting colors of oranges, magenta, yellow, purple, blue and white. The sun did not shine into the fjord, but danced along the tips of the snow-covered mountains, and played hide and seek behind large bilious clouds. As if a spotlight was turned on behind the clouds, the sun would burn a blazing hole through them, or in the next minute create a dramatic effect by illuminating the edges of the cloud.

It was hard to know which side of the boat to be on, as the light show changed from orange, blue, and yellow, to pink, baby blue and white. In the first case, the view created a symphony of brass instruments, while the other side was a quiet melody of violins.

Until 1:00 in the morning the sky erupted into one scene after another. Just as you thought you had the perfect picture, another cloud formation would show its beauty. Slowly the light on the mountain tops began to disappear but dusk never came, the sun stuck it out all night while we gave up and went to bed.

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