Day 10- 11, – Pushkar – Jaipur & Amer Fort

This afternoon we explore Jaipur, one of the best-planned cities in India, built of rose-pink sandstone by the great astronomer-king Jai Singh II in 1727. The City Palace stands in the centre of the city. Part of it is still the Maharaja’s residence, while most of the complex has been developed into a museum containing rare manuscripts, fine specimens of Rajput and Mughal paintings, royal apparel and an armoury. Jantar Mantar observatory was built by the founder of Jaipur, Maharaja Sawai Jai Singh. The huge stone instruments were devised to study the movements of the sun, moon and planets and are incredibly accurate. Hawa Mahal (Palace of Winds) is the landmark of Jaipur. Built of pink sandstone with a delicate honeycomb design and rising five storeys high, it is composed of semi-octagonal overhanging windows, each with its perforated screen, which allowed the ladies of the court to look onto the main street without being seen.

Today  visit Amer Fort (also sometimes written “Amber”), the capital for 6 centuries before Jaipur was built, 11 km north of Jaipur. Rising majestically on the slopes of a hill, this 11th century fort and palace complex is a blend of Hindu and Muslim styles — the earlier constructions in the inner apartments designed by the Hindu founder are austere, while later constructions abound in the rich flourishes characteristic of Muslim influence. Experience the thrill of riding up to the fort on gaily decorated elephants, in the manner the Rajputs of old made their royal ascent centuries ago.

After visiting the Wind Palance we went up to Forr Amer where we mounted the elephants and rode to the top. After visiting Fort Amer, which is gigantic, we took a Jeep back to the bus and the elephants, who had finished their shift, we are the same street. One came up to the back of our Jeep and was against it with her trunk, surprised the hell out of us! Just for an understanding about the elephants day, they only go up and down 5 times and then return to their home.

The wind Palace
The wind Palace look closely at the monkeys!
Note the slight tilt back.
Note the slight tilt back.
Jim and Joan getting set for the ride to the top!
Jim and Joan getting set for the ride to the top!

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Good friends, Berniece and Barb
Good friends, Berniece and Barb
Subash took a hat from a vendor! This acted like magnet and took the pressure off of us?
Subash took a hat from a vendor! This acted like magnet and took the pressure off of us?
The big elephant ride!
The big elephant ride!

 

Loved it!
Loved it!
Fort Amer
Fort Amer

 

Money..specifically currency!

Today is Monday and we checked out of our hotel this morning with a resolve to force the manager to accept our old money. What we had failed to understand was the the 500 and 1000 Rupee notes were no longer legal tender. Somehow we had all thought they were good until the end od December…wrong! They were worthless unless you exchanged them at a bank. The lineups were unbelievable !

Bank line ups!
Bank line ups!
And more line ups!
And more line ups!
Frustration would be an understatement.
Frustration would be an understatement.
Evening the ladies waited in line albeit a separate line.
Evening the ladies waited in line albeit a separate line.

Day 9 – Udaipur – Pushkar

After breakfast we depart on the drive to Pushkar. On arrival check in at the resort, set amidst orchards of Indian gooseberry and fields of roses. (As Pushkar is a holy town the resort serves no alcohol or non-vegetarian food, though a wide variety of vegetarian delicacies from around the world are on offer here.)
In the late afternoon we visit the Brahma temple. This town boasts of the only temple dedicated to Lord Brahma in the world. Lord Brahma is the Creator in the Holy Trinity of Gods. You get a chance to walk through the winding lanes of Pushkar before reaching the lake, which is magical at sunset.
An aarti (Hindu prayer ceremony) is arranged specially for you at the banks of the lake today. After the ceremony we enjoy a cup of tea on the banks of the lake before starting our journey back to the resort. Enjoy a traditional thali dinner at the resort.
Chaos is define as utter confusion and disorder and that is what the market place in Pushkar looks and feels like, seriously overwhelming. But in spite of the original impressions you begin to feel a sense of rhythm and purpose to this apparent madness. The shopkeepers, merchants, camel drivers, tractors, motorcycles, jeeps all seem to work in harmony much like when you watch an anthill in action. There is serious poverty for sure but we also observed happiness at a different level. We are solitary by comparison because, as in the rest of India, family and friends provide wealth that we seem to have lost sight of. The Hindu prayer experience was good…not necessarily great…yet we would not have wanted to miss the ceremony for anything. Participation provides insight that observation alone cannot provide.
The tents where like camping but they are at least 5 KLM away so we were transported in a trailer pulled by a tractor, on the way back it was a camel cart. I hope the pictures gives a sense of the dust but we are in a desert after all.

It is a fair after all, even in India you need a ferris wheel
It is a fair after all, even in India you need a ferris wheel
Heading for the market.
Heading for the market.
The auction grounds for camels
The auction grounds for camels
Not a market without a cow!
Not a market without a cow!
Steve looking back at the chaos.
Steve looking back at the chaos.
Sugarcane market.
Sugarcane market.
This is the way we got home from the fair.
This is the way we got home from the fair.
We think there was about three hundred tents in rows like this.
We think there was about three hundred tents in rows like this.
Waiting for our porters.
Waiting for our porters.
Photo share time at breakfast but most importantly...Terry's daughter just got engaged in Whistler!
Photo share time at breakfast but most importantly…Terry’s daughter just got engaged in Whistler!
The market in Pushkar
The market in Pushkar
Camel  taxi
Camel taxi
Our porters!
Our porters!

Weddings!

As many of you already know most Indian marriages are arranged. Seems rather foreign to us but after it was explained I can appreciate the custom.

The arranngement is primarily made by parents but other relatives can, and in many cases do, get involved in the process. As Subash, our main quide, explains it; when partners are considered the birth information is given to the priest  to chart the astrological alignment  to determine if the two are compatible. If so each is given a picture of the other and in some cases the male is given several women to chose from.

After the male has chosen, or accepte, the possible candidate the process begins.

Our guide MAnish, might not be the right spelling, told us about his marriage and here is his story as I heard it:

” When I was 25 my father approached me with a picture of a women that he had arranged for me to marry. I insisted that I meet her first since, as I explained to my father, I want to make sure she isn’t crippled or speechless. After a lot of argument he agreed and it was finally arranged. When we got to her house her father was sitting between us. I wanted to speak to her alone but her father would not let me. I said if I can not spend a few minutes alone to talk to her I am leaving and the wedding is off. That seemed to break down the barrier and I was given 5 minutes alone, (although the father watched from behind a curtain).

The first two minutes I sat staring at her, sweating and nervous because I had not had this situation before. Finally I asked three question:

1. Can you cook? A quite nod… yes

2. Do you like me? Again a nod…. yes. Now I start to worry because maybe she can’t talk so last question:

3. Do you speak? She shyly replied ” yes I do”.

So we got married and now she talks like a radio and you can’t turn her off! Like a parrot!”

Of course much is lost in the recap because it was hilarious. Never the less marriage is  a very big thing in India and a lot of money is spend on it. They were setting up in the City Palace courtyard and on Jag Mandir for a wedding that will cost in Canadian dollars around $600.00. Have s peek!

Seating for the wedding banquet
Seating for the wedding reception!
Wedding flowers
Wedding flowers
More bouquets, all handmade from real fresh flowers
More bouquets, all handmade from real fresh flowers
More preparation for snacks and drinks
More preparation for snacks and drinks
Wedding preparation on Jag Mandir
Wedding preparation on Jag Mandir

 

Money …money …money

As the world watched the election in United States; India made a bold move to curb the money laundering that has plagued this country and financed the terrorists that move between India and Pakistan.  Essentially the 500-1000 Rupee notes will be worthless in two months. Together they comprise about 85% of the circulated currency.

We are caught up in all of this as most of us brought a serious amount of Rupee rather than use the  ATM machines here. Now almost all the retailers do not accept these notes even though they can still be deposited in their bank accounts. Everyone is allowed to exchange the old for new up to a maximum of 4000 Rupee a day, about $80.00 Canadian, so there are line ups at all of the banks.

So as you read about this current situation in India, we are living it and it is very interesting!

Trying to exchange their 500 & 1000 notes
Trying to exchange their 500 & 1000 Rupee  notes

Day 8 – Udaipur: City Tour

Our morning sightseeing in Udaipur includes a visit to the City Palace, which stands on the crest of a ridge overlooking Lake Pichola. The largest palace in Rajasthan, it was built at various periods but still preserves the harmony of design, enhanced by massive octagonal towers surmounted by cupolas. Now a museum, it is a labyrinth of courtyards richly decorated with inlaid mirror-work, galleries covered with frescos, temples and roof gardens, which afford a wide panorama below. The Jagdish Temple in the old town was built in the mid-17th century and has a remarkable bronze statue of Garuda, the mythical bird, facing his revered master Lord Vishnu. Sahelion-ki-Bari (Garden of the Handmaidens) is a good example of the Hindu art of landscape gardening on a princely scale. Ornamental pools with finely sculptured cenotaphs of soft black stone are surrounded by a profusion of fountains. The afternoon is at leisure. The shops and craftsmen’s ateliers in the narrow streets of the bazaar justify endless walks. In the evening take a boat ride on Lake Pichola. The steel blue waters of the lake, artificially created in the 14th century, reflect the white phantom Jag Nivas Palace, now the Lake Palace hotel which was built in 1746 as the summer residence of the rulers, and Jag Mandir said to be built by Maharana Karan Singh for his friend Prince Khurram, who was later to become emperor Shah Jehan. Huge seamless stone slabs of translucent thinness where used. The rooms were embellished with inlaid stones — onyx, jade, carnelian, jasper and agate.

There was a big wedding going on so we had to change our tour of the City Palace and did the lake trip early. Interestingly,  Lake Pichola was the setting for 007 Octopussy with Roger Moore and equally interesting is that the The Most Exotic Marigold Hotel also did a fair bit of recording here.

Entrance to the Garden of the Handmaidens
Entrance to the Garden of the Handmaidens
Local women working in the Garden of the Handmaidens
Local women working in the Garden of the Handmaidens
Home of the current King of India
Home of the current King of India
City Palace
City Palace
Joan coming down the steps of the City Palace
Joan coming down the steps of the City Palace
Enjoying the day on Lake Pichola
Enjoying the day on Lake Pichola
A normal day on the street in Udaipur
Last minute changes in schedule
Normal day in Udaipur
Normal day in the streets in Udaipur
Carol, Barb and Maggie with the exclusive hotel in the background. Hotel was used in the 007 movie Octopussy
Carol, Barb and Maggie with the exclusive hotel in the background. Hotel was used in the 007 movie Octopussy

Day 7- Ranakpur – Udaipur

En route, we visit the famous Jain temples of Ranakpur which lie buried in a shady glen and cover a vast area. The central temple is called Chaumukha (four-faced) and is the most complex and extensive of Jain temples in India, covering an area of over 40,000 sq. feet (3600 sq metres). Its 29 halls are supported by 1,444 pillars, none of which are alike. Subsidiary shrines in the shape of side alters throng around in all directions, including a temple dedicated to the Sun God which displays erotic carvings.

We stop at a small village, first we look at the simple means of irrigation which is a water bucket wheel. Interesting and with a little effort from Steve and Subask were able to get the water flowing pretty good.

Just in time for school! We had the opportunity to be there for the mourning prayer. As always when we see this it is a wonderful experience.

The Jain temple was a great interesting and we took a lot of photos but in the end the temple experience seems to run into each other yet I would not have wanted to miss it.

Finally we arrive in Udaipur and we will be here two nights…laundry time for us!

Jain temple
Jain temple
Jain temple
Jain temple
    The Jain  templeThe Jain temple
My charming wife!
My charming wife!
The lake from our hotel room.
The lake from our hotel room.

Day 6 – Bishnoi Village Jeep Excursion

After breakfast, we will visit the Bishnoi village by jeep. The Bishnois are a fascinating community which follows the 29 (bish-noi) tenets laid down by the 15th century Guru Jambeshwar. They fervently believe in the sanctity of animal and plant life so all animals live near their villages without fear. When a Bishnoi dies, he is sometimes buried in the sitting position and often placed at the threshold of the house or adjoining cattleshed. A Bishnoi believes he will later be reincarnated as a deer, hence the herds of blackbuck often seen near their villages.

The nature excursion was interesting, catching a glimpse of two Blackbucks fighting and some of the local birds. More interesting was the people and the simplicity of their lifestyle. The women were busy making bread and cooking on the cow dung fueled stove. That takes a little getting use to but when you are here it is important to respect and admire how they live and enjoy their simple life as farmers. Water and electricity are still unavailable to most of the rural areas but the government is working hard at making this happen. The water is capture and put into a cistern plus of course they use wells. They enjoyed our visit, especially the kids when Norm was showing off his grandchildren. Having said all of that we looked for and found their little solar charging station for their cell phones.

From here we went to another village a watch a potter making different pots etc. but I think the main event was the visit to a local making opium. Did we try some you might ask? Well you decide, do you think we did? After that he have us a demonstration on tying a turban, which is very interesting…get this 27 meters of cloth! Of course he picked one of us to model the finished product, yes indeed it was me, but of course of us fine men got our own for pictures, LOL.

Finally a mountain resort to finish off our day,  we had a ” little” sing song around a fire plus some dancing! Great way to finish a fabulous day!

Beautiful baby and mom at the farm
Beautiful baby and mom at the farm
The black bucks enjoying the morning
The black bucks enjoying the morning
Working mother
Working mother
Potters skilled hands
Potters skilled hands
Delicate touch
Delicate touch
Opium demonstration
Opium demonstration

 

The ceremony is very important!
The ceremony is very important!
The right pick, LOL!
The right pick, LOL!
Handsome kings!
Handsome kings!

Day 5-Manvar – Jodhpur – Luni

En route we stop at Jodhpur. This is the land of the valiant Rathore kings, whose courage was a match for the tyranny of the Thar Desert. A bleak scarp rears up 120 meters from the desert valley. Straddling the rocky crevices is the massive Jodhpur Fort, its sheer walls reflecting the strength of its warrior builders. The fort is entered through seven gates, each a formidable barrier. The museum within the fort is one of the finest in Rajasthan and displays royal apparel, ancient paintings and manuscripts, fabled treasures of the royal household and an armoury. An interesting section displays folk musical instruments from different regions of Rajasthan. Delicately latticed windows and pierced screens worked in sandstone form the dominant motif within the rugged casket of the fort and the palaces are exquisitely decorated.

it is difficult to describe the Jodhpur Fort, I will simply let the photos do the talking.ecud0287ecud0302ecud0319ecud0278

I wanted you to see the vehicles load with straw traveling along the road. This is just one of many examples. Several things are very apparent to us about traveling down the roads in India, first, this is a developing country and some highways are quite rough and in various stages of construction, secondly the drivers ar unbelievably good at the jobs. Everyone seems to know what is going on and finally everyone and everything uses the road from cattle, camel carts, bikes, motorbikes, you name it they are here and all seem to be in harmony with each other in spite of speed and size differences. Respect, patience and cooperation are very apparent!

Big load!
Big load!

 

Day 4, a setting fit for a king!

After breakfast we drive to Manvar, an ideal base to explore the Indian desert life, culture, wildlife and natural beauty. On arrival, we check-in at our comfortable desert resort in time for lunch.
This afternoon we enjoy the unique desert atmosphere for which this region is famous. Keep an eye out for the chinkara — a shy gazelle — as they make way across the silent sands. Watch the children trotting off to school, while their mothers prepare their afternoon meal on dung-fire. Our village tour by jeep will allow us to share the fascinating culture of these friendly people and enjoy the beauty and tranquillity of this vast desert.
The evening is enlivened by a campfire, mashaals (traditional songs), and local musicians and dancers. With stunning sunrises, mesmerizing sunsets and dazzling night skies, life in this peaceful wilderness is spectacularly elemental — and extraordinarily silent.
My comments: look closely at a Camel…it has a big hump on its back it is so high off the ground that even Gene Autry would have had to use a spring board. To me it’s says” I am not a horse, don’t ride me” Well we did and this is how it is done: first it lies down then you get on it, one in front of the hump one behind. Then it lungs backward to get its on its front legs then lungs forward to get up on its back legs. This only takes several frightful seconds. Both riders receive a $100.00 chiropractic treatment. Now you take off..feeling quite unstable but you do get kinda use to the gate until you begin to go uphill where again you feel you are going to be on the ground abruptly falling backwards. Up hill is only trumped by the process of going downhill, which is like hanging your body over the edge of a cliff. Dismounting is the opposite of mounting except it that it undoes the former chiropractic treatment. Like I said there is no animal that has made it clearer…don’t ride me! But it was a great experience and the sunset spectacular.
Now the tent inself was surreal, it is a re-enactment of the days when the kings went hunting except’ of course these were permanent . The evening entertainment was stunning and the meal superb! Luxury at it’s finest all the while enjoying the desert life and the local attendants. This was a wondeful day.

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Steve, Terry, and Barb on their camels
Steve, Terry, and Barb on their camels

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