Monday 19 October 2015

Arriving in India and Jaisalmer

DELHI        14th October

Flight Tashkent to Amritsar to Delhi
Very smooth passage through Delhi airport.  NO cueing for passport check.  This has never happened anywhere and this is meant to be one of the most populated places on earth.  From landing to exiting airport would be lucky to be ½ an hour.

Picked up by intrepid staff.  6 crowded lanes of traffic each way.  They drive on the left – first time I’ve seen that for a few months.  The driver pointed out that Delhi has around the same population as the whole of Australia?

Dropped at Hotel Perfect.   Had to walk the last 150 metres as it is a festival and couldn’t drive right to the hotel.  Felt very overwhelmed by the crowded narrow streets.  Lots of sari shops. 

Checked in to the Hotel Perfect.  The wi fi password is “allisperfect”
How Marigold hotel is that?

Sorted my washing and thins to be posted home.  The Time Of India newspaper has a half page of ads placed by the police.  Some people are missing/kidnapped and others have been found dead and they are seeking identification.  They publish a photo of the persons face in the hope that someone will identify them. – The reality of a city like this.   I feel very privileged and naïve.

Thursday – packed up the textiles I purchased in Uzbekistan. 
Finding it very hard to go out onto the streets – it is just so crowded and narrow and “too much”.  The men on Reception kindly had the porter go with me to change money and told me what to do to post things home.  They organised a bicycle rickshaw and told him what I would pay etc.  Before you go into the post office you take your goods to a shop to pack them.  They sew a calico bag around your things and you write the address.  You then go back to the Post Office, produce a photocopy of your passport and complete a customs declaration.  The power went out twice while the woman was processing my package – so everything stops … and you wait.

Met the Intrepid group of young people and our guide Naveen.
Walking tour of old Delhi.  Crowded and life is lived on the streets. 
Visited the Sikh temple.  They feed 20,000 people a day for free.  You walk through a footbath on the way in and some people are actually drinking the water of the footbath! 

Also visited the largest Mosque in Delhi.

Diwali the festival of light is coming up on November 11th and there are fireworks for sale in many places

Walked through narrow crowded streets. Not feeling as overwhelmed but Delhi isn’t for me.

Left Hotel Perfect at 3pm to catch the 5.30 train.  Was in the biggest traffic jam.  About 8 cars across then you throw in cycle rickshaws, People carrying products and a cart being drawn by a Brahman bull.  Travelled 40 metres in 35 minutes.
We were going to miss the train so we got out of cars and had to run to metro – Naveen had to talk people into letting him push in to the line to buy metro tickets, go through security at a couple of spots, change stations, negotiate numerous steps and escalators, and find the platform.  We just made it.  Think I would have cried if we had to stay in Delhi another night.  Saw all sorts of poverty on the way to the train.




Have now experienced Indian trains – second class with air conditioning.  17-hour trip to Jaisalmer. In a compartment with 3 others from the group.   It was all a bit of fun really – lost of talking rubbish and not too bad sleep.


JAISALMER

Founded  1156.
In 1570, daughter of ruler was married to Moghul ruler.  Important position in Silk Road between Delhi and Central Asia.  (Goods such as silk, opium spices and the city grew rich on the proceeds.  This allowed some merchants to build huge Havelis.  (Merchant houses with intricate carved sandstone exteriors).
Partition put an end to Jaisalmer’s position on the trade route.  – Only 75 kms from highly sensitive Pakistani border.   It is now a major military outpost.
Jaisalmer is built of soft yellow Jurassic sandstone and the fort is crumbling due to all the water being used (especially with increased tourism)

Many many wind turbines on the way into Jaisalmer.

Staying in the Fort -



Deepak  Guesthouse.  Great room.  The fort and architecture is quite stunning. 



The door to my room – Deepak Guesthouse



Time for shower and then jeep ride to pick up camels for 2 hour trek to where we stayed for the night.  It was fine – once I got used to being up so high.



Sunset at the That Desert



Good sunset, dinner and sleeping under the stars.









Jaisalmer – looking to the outside town from the walls of the fort




Part of the fort.



The Prime Ministers Haveli, built in 1885

Cows wander around town ….. and sometimes decide to sit in the middle of the road.  They belong to people who milk the cows in the morning and let them forage in town during the day.










































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