Homeward bound

When Mood Music
2006-08-24 23:00:00

Back in Medan overnight. Tomorrow I fly to Calcutta via Singapore. I have two nights there to make my luggage meet whatever the latest UK-bound-flight requirements might be, then fly to Heathrow via Mumbai.

more ramblings
I’m sad to be leaving Sumatra. Obviously, I’ve only just been able to infinitesimally scratch the surface but it’s been fun and pretty in places. It’s also more organised and cleaner than India in some ways.

However, vegetarian food can be a bit harder to obtain. For instance, I ordered what I was told was fried noodles and vegetables: It arrived with fried egg mixed in. Since when is an egg a vegetable?

Similarly, watch out that your nasi goreng (fried rice) doesn’t contain anything you don’t want. To make up for this, a dish of tempeh and tahu (tofu) stir-fried in sambal with some freshly-steamed vegetables and rice makes me a very happy Bruce.

Sumatra’s sungais and beaches can be beautiful, Bukit Lawang and Danau Toba ARE beautiful and the people here can be a lot of fun. So I want to visit again.

Meanwhile, the lunghi and I hope to see Scotland-based near and dear ones in September and England-based near and dear ones a bit before that (simply because I’ll be arriving (and initially living) in England.

See you soon, space cats!

IT plea

When Mood Music
2006-08-22 10:11:00 blah

On behalf of one of the staff here. He had some important photos on one of the PCs here but somehow they ended up in the recycle bin – which then got emptied.

With a bit of luck, the files are still on the hard disk. He doesn’t have Norton SystemWorks or any similar tool for retrieving ‘erased’ files. He could download a trial version of NSW and install it on the PC’s other hard disk then use this to try to retrieve them. However, this would involve a 56MB download over a 4.8kbps connection.

Can anyone out there suggest anything better, please? The PC is a Pentium 4 beast, running Win XP Professional Version 2002, Service Pack 2.

Thanks indeedly!

Tuk Tuk temporising

When Mood Music
2006-08-21 20:21:00

Just now my lunghi and I are in Merlyn guesthouse-cum-restaurant on Samosir Island in the middle of Lake Toba (Samosir’s not quite an island but Indonesians call it Pulau Samosir so who am I to argue?) I have a cute-looking bungalow with ensuite mandi and slightly patchy hot water. The restaurant/bar is big but currently deserted apart from me, the staff and some up-beat but relaxing Latin guitar music. The place is briefly mentioned here.

Plans include hiring a bike and/or a canoe and having a trundle or paddle around the island’s coast for as much as I want, swimming in the lake and generally making the most of my last few days away. All very touristy but I know I don’t have a chance to even begin to get into local life in Indonesia this time. Maybe next time?

OK, some fried bananas are calling me. Time to munch them before they get bored and walk away!

Indonesia inanity

When Mood Music
2006-08-20 15:27:00

Last time I blogged, I was briefly in Bukitinggi, a fairly popular tourist destination in the Bukit Barisan mountains of west Sumatra. I’d been taken there by Nova, along with his daughter, Nurul, who wanted to get a new skin for her ‘handphone’ (bahasa Indonesia for ‘cellphone’).

Sunday 13th
Bukitinggi is a pretty town with a fantastic bridge across the main drag. An open-air rock gig was in progress in the clock-tower square when we arrived. Not really Nova or Nurul’s thing so we ate at a local restaurant, I blogged and burnt piccies to CD (the CD is back at my lodging, so I don’t have many of the pix of Bukitinggi with me just now) and then went to Danau Singkara so I could swim in an Indonesian lake. It’s so lovely to be able to swim in warm open water. Then we went back to Batu Sangkar (bahasa Indonesia for ‘stone cage’) and crashed out very early.

"" A minangkerbau roof in Bukitinggi
"" the clock-tower in Bukitinggi
"" Nurul
"" Nova and Nurul
"" Nova and Bertin with Bertin’s parents

 

Monday 14th
Nova took me to istana (palace) Silinduang Bulan. It was the palace of the king of kings of the Minangkerbau region and is absolutely beautiful. I can’t get over these Minangkerbau-style roofs.

"" The istana
"" detail of the entrance
"" embroidered(?) cloth inside the Istana
"" curtains separating a bed-chamber from the main room
"" the main hall
"" a model of a perahu
"" more curtains
"" practice for the independence day celebrations

We rushed around because Bertin, Nova’s wife, had a hospital appointment in Bukitinggi. So they took me there and loaded me on a ‘travel’ (a people carrier) bound for Padang.

I was met by friends of Nova who run a honda shop. I can’t remember many names (a too-common fault of mine) but two of the family, I and Aji, took me around Padang. This included a trip to the beach so I could swim in the sea, a visit to the local chinatown and eating roast corn on the cob on a bridge which is a local meeting point.

"" perahus on Padang beach
"" chillin’ on the bridge
"" Aji and Bruce
"" I and his fabby t-shirt
"" temple in Padang’s chinatown
"" wall of a temple in Padang’s chinatown

We then went to to a pub in the Bumiminang hotel and shook various bits of our stuff to a rock band. The band asked for requests – all I could think of that might have been in their genre was from 20 or more years before they were born. I’m a bit puzzled that a rock band didn’t even know of the existence of AC:DC, Led Zeppelin and Pink Floyd. They did do a reasonable version of sweet child of mine but there’s not yet an south-east asian to rival An-GUS! Maybe I really am orang kentut tua (an old fart)! I hope ensures that refrains from commenting on that!

Tuesday 15th
The highlights of today were a visit to Universitas Andalas’ anthropology department (I is studying anthropology and Aji is studying political science)

"" Universitas Andalas’ main entrance

and a long journey in a ‘travel’ back to Pekanbaru. I had hoped to fly but absence of direct connections made the travel the only worthwhile option. The travel picked me up at 1.30, dodged around Padang picking up other panssengers and finally got under way around 3pm. The other passengers were a giggly lot and I’m sure my enjoyment of a CD of what sounded like trance music with samples of Abba’s Dancing queen, Depeche Mode just can’t get enough and other highlights of my misbegotten youth (all remixed by Aqua with contributions from Pinky and Perky) added to their fun as well as relieving me of some of my boredom and ischial bursitis. The travel dropped me back at Da In (Adriani’s oldest brother)’s house around 11pm so nothing else happened that day.

Wednesday 16th
I was taken back to Pekanbaru’s main mosque so I could get some photos that had been prevented by my camera batteries running out again on my previous visit. I’m a convert to Islamic art and architecture, even though I don’t think I’ll ever enter Islam. I’m happy to be a kafir!

"" in the entrance to Pekanbaru’s grand mosque
"" X and Dita in the entrance to Pekanbaru’s grand mosque
"" detail of the entrance to the main prayer area in Pekanbaru’s grand mosque
"" don’t look back in anger? It’s far to serene for any such emotion.
"" Well, I like it!
"" I wish my photography and writing did justice to the grandeur and emotions this building inspired in me.
"" On the other hand, Indonesia’s militarism leaves me cold.

I also found there were no direct flights that day to Palembang and the thought of a 14-hour journey by road left me cold. I knew that Independence day was being celebrated all over Indonesia so I asked if I could stay and see what Pekanbaru would do the next day. Da In and Uni Ai and their family were happy for me to stay and took me to a local sportsground where local women (the community/area is called Tangkeran Utara) played volleyball: in the full heat of the afternoon tropical sun, some while wearing full clothing and jilbabs!

"" volleyball!

 

Thursday 17th
We weren’t allowed into the official celebrations, despite trying our best to win over some Permuda* who were part of the event’s guard. This refusal of ordinary Sumatrans annoyed Dita, In and Ai’s oldest daughter who was our main bahasa Inggris/bahasa Indonesia translator and guide to Pekanbaru. While Indonesia has a very violent and military history, I can see her point that Independence is for all of them, not just the far-too-powerful military.
*Permuda were the freedom-fighters against European (mostly dutch) colonialism. These people are their offspring who like to keep this ‘tradition’ alive.

After this, we went to one of In and Ai’s relatives to surprise her on her birthday. The local tradition is to break eggs on the celebrant’s head, surprising them as much as possible. The birthday girl is a sister of Refni (wife of Riko, a teacher, and mother of Geelong) but I’m not sure how Refni is related to In and Ai. (I think either Refni or Riko is one of Ai’s siblings but I could easily be wrong!)

Riko then took us for another swim – this time in a glorious open-air 25-metre pool. It was just right for swimming 4 by 1 individual medleys. I’m very happy to report that my shoulders have become flexible enough to allow me to swim a full length of butterfly with a reasonably good arm action. (Well it felt good to me! Before now I haven’t been able to manage full extension over the water in the recovery part of the action. I still can’t master the two-beat kick but I want to get back into swimming. It’s been too long since I swam regularly. Please kick me into joining a club!)

We then went to watch Tangkeran Utara’s celebratory games. The events included a relay -fill-the-bottle-with-water-sucked-from-a-bucket-race, musical statues, tug’o’war, greasy-pole-over-stinking-mud fights and the highlight was a game of football between the local women. Again, I’m amazed they played full-on while wearing full ‘Islamic uniform’ with sarungs over this.

My participation in some of the events (well, how could I resist an opportunity to act my mental age in public?) were appreciated: one of the organisers turned up at the house with some participation prizes for me. I was choked with emotion: I’d turned up on spec, took part in their celebration, had to be hosed down in the family’s car-wash business because the mud stank worse than durian fruit* and they rewarded me. What? Another time where tears trickled…
*I’m sure the smell is from phosphorus pentasulphide. If you don’t know this, imagine the smell of a dump your partner would leave on your pillow upon finding out you’ve been repeatedly unfaithful to them with the entire Berlin Philharmonic, all of their instruments and their pet dachshunds and you’ll be about halfway to the utter awfulness of this chemical’s smell.

Friday 18th
A tearful departure from Pekanbaru. I’d had such a good time with In, Ai, Dita, Icha, Uul and their family and colleagues (they run a restaurant as well as a car wash) and I want to go back! I also want to show any of them as good a time if they ever get to the UK. They’ve set me a very high standard but I hope and belive that the UK can provide a good time. Jenni, can I enlist your help please?

Mandala Airlines whisked me to Medan and a beaten-up taxi took me to the northern bus station. A very beaten-up bus (whose conductor tried to charge me for three seats when my bags and I were only using two) bounced me to Bukit Lawang. On the journey, I got talking with Eru Cakra, a guide at Bukit Lawang, and a frenchwoman who’s been in Sumatra for about eight years. She now runs a restaurant there, after spending six years doing I don’t-know-what in Berastagi.

Although almost all the accommodation in Bukit Lawang was taken, Eru found me a place in a rumah tangga (a room up a ladder) and we agreed that he would take me first to the orang utan feeding station and then on a trek through the forest, followed by tubing back to the accommodation down the sungai (river) Bohorok.

Saturday 19th
Getting close to my cousins was very engaging. The visitors were taken across the sungai in a canoe lashed to some overhead guidance wires, then taken up a steep hill to a platform where new arrivals (mostly rescuees from zoos and areas that have been felled for farming) are fed bananas and skimmed milk. The aim of this diet is to encourage them to fend for themselves in the jungle so that they can learn independence. Orang utans are solitary creatures so this has to be done carefully to avoid overcrowding of territories. They can also apparently be aggressive, especially if they think you have food. (According to my guidebook, some guides cache food in the jungle so that their guidees are guaranteed close-up encounters of ‘wild’ orang utans, despite the damage this does to the independence programme. Fortunately, Eru wasn’t like this and made me run away when Minah, a particularly aggressive female dropped down 10 metres from me during the trek. I didn’t have time or inclination to stop for photgraphs and I promise you that the word ‘monkey’ was nowhere near my lips.

We also got some glimpses of gibbons high in the canopy and I’m very pleased with my experience of Indonesian jungle. I’d have liked to go on a two-day trek but I hadn’t enough money with me. Bah! Still, it’s hard to see what could have been better on the second day. I also throroughly enjoyed tubing back down the sungai with some other brits and if I had gone on the two-day version, I’d have missed the saturday night mash-up at the Jungle Inn.

On getting back to my place, I washed myself and some clothes in the sungai (it’s what the locals do, so why not me too?), slept for a couple of hours, donned my lunghi and a clean shirt, ate nasi goreng (fried rice) at a nearby restaurant, played a couple of games of pool with one of the women who’s somehow involved with the restaurant* and then went to find the source of the music further up the track. Many of the guides and visitors were partying in a nearby bar. After a couple of Bintang beers, I was up with them. (OMG, I even danced to crazy frog, a firm favourite of the Indonesians.) I’m sure you can imagine the scene (and those of you who’ve known me for more than ten years will probably have similar images burnt into your brains. Ooops!) and I don’t have the words to describe it but it was a lot of fun and I finally crashed out about 2 am this morning.
*’spots’ are kecil (‘small’), stripes are besar (‘big’), minang is ‘winner’ or ‘victorious’ and ‘gift’ can be translated as kado

Sunday 20th
Well I paid for the energetic day by being woken with a bad dose of Imam Bonjol’s revenge. Uurrgghh. Water and immodium seem to have controlled it and I’ve returned to Medan by tourist bus. (I couldn’t stand the thought of another three-hour journey by public bus with my guts threatening to rebel.) I’m staying in a small but cute family-run guest-house that provides mozzie nets and will be back here on the 24th (after going to danau Toba tomorrow) so I can start my return to the UK on the 25th. That’s going to be a bit mad: flights from Medan to Singapore, then Singapore to Calcutta on the 25th, followed by flights from Calcutta to Mumbai, then from Mumbai to London on the 27th. I’m not quite sure when I’ll get back to Worcester. I think by the time I’e been to danau Toba I’ll have been away long enough. I do want to return both to India and Indonesia and I want to keep up the friendships I’ve made in these two countries but it’s time to keep up with my UK friendships too, and time to find productive sources of income!

I’m now in a reasonably trendy cybercafe, listening to Indonesian attempts at hip-hop, trance and garage and trying to upload photos.

[Er, can’t do any more tonight]

I’ll add more into this entry if and when… So, for almost the last time from Asia, see you later, space-cats! And thanks to this, I can say Selamat tidur, orang asing kuching!

peripatetics encore

When Mood Music
2006-08-13 06:59:00

Well, I got to Batam, got my flight (and into a heated argument with a queue-jumper) and got to Pekanbaru ok.

beautifully bloated
I’ve been stuffed with rice, tofu (they call it tahu here), tempeh and sambal until I felt nine months pregnant with triplets and learnt how to use a mandi (a squat toilet with attached water tank which is somehow a bit nicer than a south indian equivalent, mainly because you can shelter behind the tank when ‘flushing’ the toilet and so avoid splashing yourself with unmentionables).

I spent a day shopping in and seeing around Pekanbaru, then was taken by Adriani’s brother to his logging kampung in Siak area of Riau province: I’ve spent three days there, thinking that text messages were getting out but no, apparently not.

Yesterday we got by bashed-up rental car, minibus and motorbike via Kerinci (not the famous Kerinci but another one) to Pekanbaru, then around 5am this morning to BatuSangkar where Nova’s wife and daughter live. The nearest big town is Padang, in West Sumatra. Just now I’m in a cybercafe in Bukitinggi, also in West Sumatra.

The plan is as follows:

  • 13th. stay in Batu Sangkar, go swimming and clothes-washing in a lake
  • 14th. go to Padang, eat padang-style tofu there
  • 15th. depart Padang, go back to Pekanbaru
  • 16th. depart Pekanbaru, go to Palembang
  • 17th. watch independence day boat races in Palembang
  • 18th. depart Palembang, go to Medan. Use Medan as a base to visit danua Toba and Bukit Lawang
  • 24th. final night in Medan
  • 25th. fly from Medan to Singapore and thence to Kolkatta
  • 26th. slump in Kolkatta airport and make sure I check in OK
  • 27th. fly from Kolkatta to Mumbai and thence to Heathrow.

Of course, I’m sure it will go wrong somewhere and that the latestest security thingies will land me in deep shit. So look out for blog entries entitled got those old kozmik-incarceration-with-a-kris-up-my-arse blues again mama

peripatetics

When Mood Music
2006-08-08 10:55:00

First, a huge thank-you to all who have texted, commented, spoken, telepathed or otherwise communicated good wishes.

I’m out of hospital but have a few meds to take and a schedule that to take them on. Also, my main complaint (too yucky to blog about unless you really want to know!) is gone, gone, gone. Hoorah!!!!!!

Stramash starts here
So, you know I was trying to get to Pekanbaru in Sumatra (instead of Medan – aarrgghh). OK, so there are today no direct flights from Singapore to Pekanbaru and the Jakarta-to-Pekanbaru flights are all full today. So rather than risk being stuck in Jakarta, I’m risking getting stuck in Batam.

Batam is an Indonesian island 45 minutes by ferry from Singapore. From there I can get a flight to Pekanbaru (with Merparti [risk of an aarrgghh there too]). So I’m in Singapore’s ultra-modern ferry terminal. What a change from India! Roads are smooth as a baby’s bum, systems are organised and ferry staff are informative. Plus this cybercafe sells food. So, gonna sign off with the following: this is the flight I should be taking:

Depart Batam 1540, Arrive Pekanbaru 1630: Flight MZ 225.

Failing this, I’ll come back to Singapore and take a direct flight tomorrow. I hope I don’t have to do this because folk have arranged to meet me in Pekanbaru today. Yibble! Will let you all know, probably via getting my dad to put up an entry, when I do. (And to make it even more fun, he’ll be in Germany so I’ll have to text him, then the Rheinheitsgebot will insist that he has to write the entry in in svitzer-dootch.) Gotta love it!

Bruce@s Progress

When Mood Music
2006-08-07 18:52:00 pleased

Hullo everyone,
Just a short entry to let you know that Bruce is out of hospital, on the way to the airport to take a flight to Singapore & thence to Sumatra. He is more or less O.K. after the treatment for Delhi Belly. Cheers, Jack Ryan

When Mood Music
2006-08-04 11:58:00

Hullo everyone. Bruce has asked me to let you all know that he is sorry about not communicating but is not able to get on to computer at the moment. He is in a clinic receiving treatment for the Indian strain of accute Montezuma’s Revenge. There is no prognosis as yet re time to dong the disease. His cell phone is working but please only use Text Messages if you wish to contact him. Phone number is 07909504328. At the moment he is well p’d off with himself & the situation in general. Cheers, Jack Ryan

I may have found my ideal location in India

When Mood Music
2006-08-01 14:31:00 bitchy

It’s in Mumbai and it’s an air-conditioned cybercafe with fast PCs running XP, flat screens, reasonable keyboards and accessible USB ports and CD-RW drives. They even have a scanner, which will be very useful for me just now.

Downstairs, they have a clean sit-down toilet with a handbasin and soap. It doesn’t have one of those nasty taps at mid-shin level which is for filling a bucket to manually flush away the goodies and which always leaks, soaking my trouser leg. (This has happened 3 times today to me at toilets in Mumbai station.)

Thank goodness for LJ. I can vent my spleen and sphyncter into it and no-one need get hurt. The alternative might be a Bruce ready to inflict physical violence. So what’s been happening?

Most of Saturday 29th was spent on trying to sort out my Sumatra visit. I had thought that my Sumatran friend’s family live near Medan. They don’t – they live a couple of days by bus south, in Padang and Pekanbaru. So I tried to find direct flights from Singapore to Pekanbaru (this is maybe 100 miles!), where the relatives who speak english live. No joy:

  • Merpati’s website was down. (My guidebook did say ‘it’s Merparti and I’ll fly if I want to’.)
  • Singapore airlines would have to cancel my current bookings and give me new ones to Singapore – overall this would cost me an extra 200 pounds and still not get me to Pekanbaru.
  • Garuda’s website only mentiones flights from Singapore to Padang via Jakarta. Their call-centre wasn’t answering.
  • Silkair doesn’t touch Pekanbaru.
  • Other Indonesian airlines either have websites in bahasa indonesia or don’t have websites at all.

So I’m going to get to SIngapore and then bugger around getting a flight to Pekanbaru, then phone my friend so she can tell her rellies when I’ll arrive. The fall-back is to get a boat to an Indonesian island and then another boat up the Batang Hari river to Pekanbaru. This has some appeal but getting me and my grot to a freindly place appeals more.

After blogging and getting as much of my adminstrivia as possible done, I called John, Suriya’s friend who has a cellphone. His english, combined with the vagaries of cellphones, meant that I could only make out something about Suriya having been in hospital (or maybe still being there) and that I should visit tomorrow. I pondered this over a couple of masala dosas at the Kamat hotel and decided ‘sod it. Even if Suriya isn’t about, her daughters and neighbours will tell me what’s been going on and if I need to go elsewhere to visit her. So I’m going now!’

The bus to Colva was fun – usual overcrowding ameliorated by rock and roll in Konkani. I asked if the music was on CD and was told that it was from a casette. I then asked the conductor if he’d sell me the cassette. So now I have some konkani rock and roll/party music and am quite pleased.

There was a light at Suriya’s house and she came out to greet me as I approached. It turns out she’d been in hospital the previous night but was now home, feeling OK. Suriya gave me some sweeties that Gautami, her grand-daughter, had insisted were kept for me from Gautami’s birthday. I had sent a card but it hadn’t arrived so I’m very choked with emotion that Gautami wanted to give me something. Suriya, Priya and I chatted for an hour or so and arranged to meet up with Bobby (her oldest daughter) and Bobby’s family the next day, after her church service.

I took an auto back to Margao. Margao autos have passenger doors which prevented most of the soaking I’d have got if I’d been riding a Keralan auto. I think I was in bed and asleep by 10pm.

BTW, there’s a call for an L&L out in Madhya Pradesh. A new syllabus has been implemented in the school year that began 4 months ago. However no-one has yet brought out any suitable text books. Over to you, guys – or should I return to India and do it myself?

Sunday 30th
I first woke up about 2 am with Mughals’ revenge churning my stomach and cricket blaring out of the TV. Tossing, turning and other, less savoury, activities kept me occupied for a couple of hours. I fell asleep eventually, being roused just before the alarm I’d set yelled at me. Although I’d arranged to meet Suriya at 11.30, it took me until then to get into a state where I felt like moving from my room.

At Suriya’s house, nothing was moving, not even the foot-long grass now providing ideal cover for the wild pigs that like to meander in and munch her mangoes. I asked at her neighbour/landladies house – Suriya and Priya had gone to the room she’s arranged for Bobby and family to stay in while Ravi’s looking for a better job. (He’s a trained horticulturalist but currently working as a waiter in a local hotel. He works from 7am to 11am, then from 6pm to midnight or later. He has two days off each month. GRRRR!)

I didn’t quite succeed in creeping up on Dhanush, Bobby and Ravi’s 4-year-old son. He saw me at the last moment so I grabbed him and carried him to the house. He’s still as delightfully hyperactive and mad as I remembered. (I realise that this is a strain on Bobby and the others but I’m sure he’ll settle down soon enough.) I was even more pleased that this room had a flushable sit-down toilet.

Bobby had cooked brinjal curry, rice and rassam. I changed into my smart shirt and dhoti so I could make like a south indian gentleman (did I say I’m missing south India by any chance?) and ate one portion with Suriya and the children. When Ravi returned from work, I was encoiuraged to eat some more with him and bobby. My tongue said yes and I just over-ruled my stomach. The one difference between this meal and a typical tamil meal was that Suriya likes white rice, not ‘red’ rice. (It’s rusty brown when uncooked and cooks to white with flecks of red. The grains are much larger than other rices I’ve eaten.)

I went with Suriya to set up an email account for Priya. This was when I discovered that at least one of my CDs of photos is, er, problematic and the backup of this CD is, er, non-functional. I’m slightly sad that I couldn’t show Suriya some photos then (I’ll print as many as I can and post them to her) and annoyed that I may have lost some photos altogether.

Oh yes! My triumph – I got Margaret Mary (Raju’s wife) to smile! She doesn’t speak english at all and seems not to have much to say to even in Tamil.

Some playing with the kids and rain-dodging later, Ravi went to work and the rest of us made our way to where Rajesh’s family live: I’d been invited for a farewell-to-Goa meal by Rajesh. (This Rajesh is a friend of Suriya’s from Karnataka who came with us to Raju’s wedding back in early May.) I had thought India couldn’t shock me any more but I was wrong. Get this: Rajesh’s family have moved here to Goa because they can live better than they did in Karnataka. ‘Better’ for them means Rajesh’s father the family’s accommodation is a brick and roofing sheet lean-to on the side of Rajesh’s father’s employer’s house. This lean-to is maybe 3 metres wide by 8 metres long and houses all of these people.

"" Mariam, Tayappa Chandrasekar, Rajesh
Chandrasekar, Somia, Tayamma, Malaman
Deepa

What the hell can Karnatka be like? You may quibble about the size of the family but all the same…! I don’t understand: in their place I’d be consumed with anger at living in shit like this while visitors conspicuously spray cash around on beer and other substances. I don’t think I could have a friendly greeting for a tourist, especially a foreign tourist, if I wasn’t forced to glue on on by working in a tourist industry. Yet I was invited in and given a lovely dinner because of a tenous connection to one of the family who wasn’t even there. What’s going on? Why aren’t (more) people in open revolt? To make my position clear, please understand that I don’t believe in violent revolution. It hurts people and rarely, if ever, achieves its objectives. (‘Each revolution sews the seeds of its own downfall.’) But I can sure understand why many others do believe in it.

Dinner was cooked on an open, twig fire in an awning of roofing sheets at the front of the lean-to. Mariam used a tube to direct her breath onto the flames – much more efficient and less condusive to smoke inhalation than normal blowing. Dinner was tapioca chips (fried in front of me on a hotplate), chapattis, a bean curry and two types of chatni (both based on peanuts rather than coconut.) All delicious, apart from the red-chilli chatney which was even hotter than Jaya’s red-chilli pickle and defeated me. All lovely apart from Rajesh not being there – he’d had to go to work before we could get there.

I said goodbye to Bobby, Dhanush and Goutami and walked with Suriya and Priya to their house. After a brief chat and another visit to her facilities, it was time for me to go. I walked along the path, waving and nearly crying. I don’t like to think that it could easily be three years before we meet again.

The night was again interspersed with mughal’s revenge. What did I ever do to him? I’m so glad I hadn’t gone for a cheap hotel!

Monday 31st
Waking up with continuing stomach issues persuaded me to take the last two pepto-bismols a cybercafe owner in Pune had given me. They seemed to help and I was moving by 11am. My first call was to the hotel’s cybercafe where Mrs Khan had offered to make me a bag for posting stuff home. She said that it would be ready shortly so I filled up the time by buying a couple of notebooks and some stuff from a nearby pharmacy.

The pharmacy has a good system. You tell an assistant what you want and it’s pile up in front of you, then entered into a computer. The assistant then prints a two-part invoice which you hand over to a cashier in a locked box well away from the goodies. The cashier takes your payment, stamps the invoices and hands them back to you. You then go to another counter where your goodies are checked agaisnt the computer and the invoice, then bagged up by a third worker. You finally recieve a nice package with one copy of the invoice attached to the outside.

Back at the hotel, Mrs Khan’s contacts had made a lovely drawstring bag and we packed the stuff into it, then I set off to the post-office to get posting prices. Resistered airmail seemed the best value but I wanted to get another cover and to add in a few more things so didn’t post it there and then. MISTAKE!!! See later for why.

I had a fun time trying to sort out the photo CD non-back-up issue and then finally left the hotel for the station. There, I met with Suriya for the final time – she wanted to reclaim an umbrella she had lent me and to give me a contact in Kolkata and food for the journey. Again, I’m overwhelmed.

The jorney was OK – I even got a lecture on the uses of venturi tubes in pneumatic-powered aeroplane gyrocompasses. I was on a ‘sleeper’ car. I think I’ve described these before in detail but just in case, they are divided into little alcoves. On the side of each alcove are three padded bunks, perpendicular to the direction of travel. The middle one folds down to be the back of the seat. (The seat base doubles as the lower bunk.) Across the aisle at the foot of each set of bunks are two seats whose backs fold down to form another lower bunk. Above them, at the level of the top bunks in the alcoves is a final bunk. The occupants are kept cool by three noisy but servicable fans in the alcove ceiling.

The difference between sleeper carriages and ACIII carriages is that ACIII carriages have fixed doors and glass windows to keep the heat out and the aircon in. ACII carriages only have two layers of bunk and so much more headroom.

‘Chair car’ carriages have one level of padded seat and second-class carriages have one level of wooden slatted seat. Unreserved have one level of wooden slatted seat and luggage racks, all heavily occupied as previously described. So now you know. I recommend sleeper if you want comfort and unreserved if you want fun!

Anyway, I slept for most of the journey, blessing the person who’d chosen to make one of my carriage’s toilets a sit-down one.

Tuesday 1st August
I arrived here around 6am and immediately had to run to the toilets in the waiting room. Aarrgghh! They’re filthy and my trouser leg got soaked. The cisterns are all bust and the seats removed. You either have to hover or squat on little footrest built into the seats.

I dumped my major bag into the luggage deposit and went to the post-office (blessedly near the station). A wonderful packer from UP made an extra cover for my parcel but left the top open. He warned me that speedpost might be a better choice – it would cost about half as much again (compared to registered airmail) to post but I would get no hassle in the process. I wish I’d followed his advice. Here’s what happened!

  1. The post office opened at 9am. Mr packer had been working since 8am.
  2. The parcels office opened at 10am. This meant I could go into the parcels office (which had been locked, with a wax seal on the lock until 9.55) and sit, watching the workers straggle in and start yelling at each other.
  3. I was given a photocopied form to fill in in triplicate. When I’d completed half of the first copy I was given some carbon paper.
  4. I was then told to sit in various places until 11am when the customs people turned up. They had to check the parcel before it was closed.
  5. They had just started dealing with me when a bloke came into that office to mop the floor. Everything stopped again for 20 minutes while he used a mop (which badly needed to be shoved up the office-manager’s arse and then replaced) to dampen the floor and move the grot about.
  6. The customs people then insist on opening every sub-parcel within the packed parcel, thus destroying the arrangement of cloth sub-parcels protecting the fragile ones and buggering all the labels I’d made saying who was to receive each sub-parcel.
  7. I told them that this has never happened before* and they kept saying ‘no problem’, utterly deaf to my response that
    while they might have no problems with me or my parcel, I have a lot of problems with their tardiness, inefficiency and the fact that I’m always before been able to hand over a sealed parcel to the post office and just get it sent.*
  8. The parcel was sewn together again, nowhere near as neatly as it had been, once I’d re-sealed and re-labeled all the sub-parcels.
  9. Other workers then sealed the parcel with hot wax. I don’t like to think what that did to the contents.
  10. At the payment counter, I handed over the parcel, the forms, the requisite cash and got a receipt. This whole bloody charade has took 2 hours from finding Mr packer and should have taken 10 minutes! My guts were in uproar and I had to run again to the station toilet.

* Whether using registered airmail or speedpost (which could have been dealt with at the main counters at 9am but would have cost over Rs1000 more) from India before now (at Pune, Maharashtra, Margao, Ottapalam and other places), I’ve never been through this charade. Can’t they buy a fucking X-ray machine and a sniffer dog?

At the station toilet, I put my rupee on the counter next to the bloke who I thought was the attndant and waited for a cubicle. It turned out the bloke wasn’t the attendant but simply another punter who was ahead of me in the queue for the cubicle. The real attendant returned, scooped up my rupee and then tried to make me pay again. I told him he’d just picked up my payment and that I wasn’t paying twice for a filthy toilet and certainly not paying Rs2 when the sign on door said Rs1 per visit. The cubicle had a squat toilet and another tap at shin-level that quirted onto my trouser-leg.

When I came out, the attendant again tried to ask for money. I was in no mood for this and walked past him, ignoring him.

I’m now in a nice cybercafe, venting my spleen and occasionally my guts. I think I’m getting better but I’m going to take immodium tomorrow if it doesn’t clear up. BTW, the cybercafe is Jenisys Computers and is at Jiji House, Ground Floor, 17 Raveline Street, FOrt, Mumbai-4000 001 (tel/fax 2207 5213, email jenisys @ hathway.com)

I think that’s all for now. Gonna log out and ask if I can just sit here until I need to go to the station. See you later space-cats!