Tuesday, August 28, 2007

On the lam with Tibetian Buddhist monks

We decided to spend a few days at a Tibetan Buddhist Monastery a couple hours from Mysore because it sounded cool in our travel book.

The place is called Bylekuppe and it is currently home to over 5000 monks.

We came to see the Golden Temple (an incredibly beautiful building with three enormous golden Buddhas). Here's a shot of one:


When we got here late last night, though, we learned that foreigners need a special permit to come here (hmmmmm interesting...) and that any foreigner found without a permit faces five years in jail and a large fine (never been to an Indian jail before...). The locals told us that the cops purposely hang out around the temple to bust foreigners.

Dan and I actually had a conversation that went something like this:

So, if a cop finds us, how much do you think is an appropriate bribe? Five dollars? Ten? Do you think they would let us make a stop at an ATM?

If we did get sent to jail who could we call with connections? (you'll have to guess if you made the list)

I convinced Dan to stay since I think the likelihood of jail time for Americans visiting a monastery is slim....it would just be bad PR. I mean, it's not like we're smuggling crack...we're hanging with holy men.

Last night we watched monks "debate." I know several of you reading are Tibetan Buddhists, so perhaps you can explain what was going on to the rest of us. There were about a thousand robed monks in the courtyard of the temple in pairs. In each pair the "debater" yelled, stamped his feet and clapped his hands at the other guy. The whole thing was fascinatingly bizarre. And then all at once, they all stopped and lined up to eat.

Here's a monk in an awesome hat!


We're leaving tomorrow, and we're keeping a low profile until then. The people here have been very nice at advising us when it's safe to go out and when we should just hang out at the Monastery.

So while we are avoiding the "po-po", here are some more pictures from Mysore:


Flowers for sale at the market


The colored dyes

Sunday, August 26, 2007

Dirty Clothes and Palaces

We've hightailed it out of the big city of Mumbai and are now spending a few days in Mysore.

One of the cool things we did in Mumbai was check out the "Dhobi Wallahs" which are the dudes who wash ridiculous amounts of clothing for pennies (ok rupees). There are hundreds of men washing clothes at these concrete vats.
They beat the sh*t out of the clothes on concrete slabs, pour bleach on things and dip the whites in lovely blue chemicals. We are still amazed, that both here and in Africa, there are hundreds of jobs that have been eliminated in the West by the use of machines like, oh a traffic light, washing machine, lawn mower (in Africa, a common job is hacking grass with a machete).

Mysore is a pretty cool town. Today we went to Mysore Palace which was spectacular. Plus...note my cool new Indian outfit in the picture (I'm trying to blend....hahahahahahahah)


The food here is great, we've been gorging on thalis, dosas and chai. Dan has discovered "barfi" a milk and sugar sweet that he's eating by the pound. We are staying at a hotel that costs a grand total of $6 a night -- I think it's a step above the now infamous "19 bars of soap" hotel that my brother Mike and his girlfriend Jackie stayed at a few weeks ago in Central America (If you haven't checked out their blog about the bike trip there is a link on the right).

The other big news is that my parents have decided that since 2 out of 3 kids are out of the country, that they should join the fun. They just booked a flight to India to join us for a while at the end of October.

Finally, I know that many of you have been to India before. Please post comments with your favorite places, hotels etc. We love travel advice.

P.S. Dan and I have both now finished reading Harry Potter... so let the on-line discussion begin. Will there be another book? Are all the people who are dead, really dead? Who would name a child Hugo?

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Keep on Scrollin'

I started a post in Africa and finished posting pictures from a much quicker internet connection here in India. My blogging skills are limited, so I can't figure out how to move it to the top.

Scroll down if you want to read it. The title is "Round and Round the Merry-Go Round."

Mumbai (Bombay)

Mumbai is not at all like we expected. We thought we would be crushed by people, that it would be unbearably hot and humid, and that it would be dirty and hectic. It's actually pretty relaxed, the heat/humidity isn't that bad, and no one's hassling us at all. Maybe we're just jaded after being in Tanzania, where touts were very aggressive and we couldn't walk more than 5 feet without someone trying to sell us a safari or a painting of giraffes. There's beautiful architecture here (lots of European/gothic style buildings with grand facades), good shopping, and nice people. Plus the food is great: today we had thalis (an all you can eat lunch for two -- all vegetarian -- with several different dishes, breads, rice, etc.) in a nice, air conditioned restaurant for about $11. I was so stuffed we had to wait a few hours before getting our gelatto next door. In the meantime, I got my hair cut -- for $1.50 ($2.25 with a nice tip). Oh yeah -- we also went to court today. (Stop laughing -- it's a beautiful building. Though this does mean I've been to court in Kenya, Tanzania, and India (oh, and Ireland, too, just not on this trip).)

It's pretty expensive here by India standards, though -- about $26 for our air conditioned hotel room -- and we still have not been "discovered" by Bollywood scouts (even though we're trying to look as pretty as possible -- hence, the haircut), so we will probably be moving on at the end of the week.

Monday, August 20, 2007

Kwaheri and Namaste

Just a quick note to let y'all know that we've made it safely to India. We flew from Kenya to Addis Ababa and then on to Mumbai on Ethiopian Airlines. The airline was fantastic -- our first flight was only an hour and forty minutes long, but we got a full meal (and they remembered our vegetarian requests); plus, we got to watch Everybody Hates Chris. We got a second dinner on the flight to India. The plane could've crashed and it still would've been better than Continental.

We arrived in Mumbai a little after 5 a.m. local time. Our taxi ride to the city center, which normally takes an hour and a half, took about 30 minutes because today happens to be a minor holiday (yea for no traffic!). We've just eaten a huge meal, and we're heading out to shop for designer clothes and to try to find a way to get ourselves into a Bollywood movie.

And in case you're wondering, we're now 9.5 hours ahead of east coast time. That's right, nine and a half.

Saturday, August 18, 2007

Who says the romance is gone?

Y'all might think that, after Deb and I have been together for more than 11 years, the romance
is gone.

Not true, my friends.

On Monday, August 13, Deb and I celebrated our 1-year GetDown-iversary.

We forgot. (Thanks, Mike L. -- aka Shaggy -- for sending a congratulatory e-mail reminding us.)

Instead, here's how we spent our anniversary:

We woke up and ate breakfast (included in the $13 we paid for our hotel room).

So far, so good.

We then attended court proceedings for an hour and a half.

Romantic, right?

We were in Arusha, Tanzania, where the International Criminal Tribunal Rwanda (prosecutions of those responsible for the 1994 genocide) is located. We attended the trial of the former Minister of External Affairs (accused of conspiring with other government officials and media outlets to perpetuate the genocide). We saw the defendant's attorney give opening remarks (in French, with a translation in English via headsets) for about 90 minutes, at which point there was a recess and we left. Here's a brief summary of what happened, though: the former Minister did nothing wrong. In fact, the defendant is a saint: he worked tirelessly to ensure democracy and human rights; every time something bad happened or some decision was made to execute people, the defendant was making speeches before the UN Security Council for food aid. But the most convincing arguments were those about the prosecution's lack of evidence. According to the defense attorney, the prosecution's witnesses were, by and large, illiterate. Therefore, not credible. Case dismissed.

We ate lunch, then got in a "shared taxi" (a beat-up old station wagon carrying 8 people, with about a dozen live chickens in a basket strapped to the roof) and hurled towards the Kenyan border. For some strange reason, the strong smell of gasoline did not dissipate the entire time, so we arrived at the border a little lightheaded.

We made it through immigration and arrived back in Kenya.

On the other side of the border, we took a matatu (shared minibus) to Kajiado -- about 65 miles away (which, naturally, took us close to 3 hours). When we got just to the edge of town, there was a loud "clang" and the brakes no longer worked. Everyone else got out, but the driver told us he'd take us to a hotel. We drove slowly. Luckily, the town was pretty flat.

We arrived at the recommended hotel. It was full. Walked to a nearby hotel. Also full. Walked a little over a mile, with our bags, to another hotel on the outskirts of town (escorted by an employee of hotel #2, who wanted to make sure we found a place).

I'll pause for a moment to describe this hotel. We walked in, and there were a few people at the bar. We found some guy with keys, and he told us that the price was 1700 shillings (about $26) -- very expensive. Then he said the price for Kenya residents was 1100 shillings. Here's how the conversation went:

Him: "Are you Kenya residents?"
Me: "No, not yet."
Him: "Because I can give you the residents' price if you are."
Me: "Okay."
Him: "So are you a resident?"
Me: "No, not yet."
Him: "Okay, I'll give you the residents' price."

We paid, and he showed us to the room. Then he said there's no water in the room (he then brought a 5-gallon bucket for us). When we got there, it seemed like no one had stayed in this room in quite some time: there were cobwebs in the sink, ceiling panels were missing, paint was peeling, etc. Whatever. We've stayed in worse.

We went out to find dinner, but since it was dark and we were more than a mile from the center of town, we tried to find something close. We made it to a little restaurant a few hundred yards away and ordered ourselves some beans, cabbage, sukumo wiki (kale cooked with salt and onion), lentils, and chapatti (a kind of bread, like Indian naan but greasier). The meal cost about $2.50. And that included entertainment: a DVD involving a Kenyan man, on a quest in the wilderness, who's attacked by snakes and nagged by his wife.

We went to sleep.

But wait, there's more.

The next morning, I wasn't feeling so well. Not well at all. I spent the next three days sleeping, communing with various squat toilets, and doing my best to force one or two bites of food into my mouth. But I'm getting ahead of myself.

When we left our room at the hotel, we went to find breakfast (which, according to signs in the hotel, was included with the room rate). Unfortunately, there was not a soul in sight. No one at the restaurant. No one at the bar. No one at reception. No one anywhere. Remember "The Shining?" Kind of like that. We started wondering whether the hotel existed at all and whether the people we thought we saw were, in fact, ghosts.

So in case you're wondering how we keep the romance alive: an anniversary with court, a five hour fume-filled drive, a cholera-filled meal, and a ghost hotel.

Round and Round the Merry-Go-Round

As you are well aware, we are now in India. However, I wanted to let you know what I was up to last week in Africa while Dan was lying, sick with a stomach bug, moaning in pain. I went to a party! I know that you are all shocked that I didn't sit around and nurse him back to health. (LOL)

We decided to spend our last few days in Africa in a remote part of southern Kenya at a community environmental project called Kudu Hills. We learned about Kudu hills bout from another traveler.

Kudu Hills is about an hour in the back of a pickup from the nearest town. It's in Masai land and the kind of place where you schlep out all your food and water. And yes....be shocked people.....since Dan was sick, I cooked for 3 days....over firewood and a little propane stove.

While out in Kudu Hills, we got invited to attend a community ceremony for a 17 year old Masai boy who had "graduated" to his next level. The Masai boys go through a series of stages where you have to prove yourself in various ways. This boy had recently been circumcised etc.

Here's the young warrior.

Since the men were going to get together and shoot the shit and hold this ceremony, the "mamas" (everyone over the age of 15 is "mama" 'cause presumably you have at least one baby on your back) decided to hold a "Merry-Go-Round."

A Merry-Go-Round is when all the women get together, cook a big lunch and raise some money to help with the school expenses. Each time it is at a different woman's home and she gets the money.

I spent the day cooking with all the women, while the men sat in the shade and drank tea. Hardly any of the women spoke English, but they had no problem bossing me around in Masai telling me to peel potatoes with a machete, (I should note I got pretty good and I think even my grandma Bella would be proud of my peeling abilities with a knife), chop onions, hold babies and stir huge pots cooking on the wood fires.

The men's job was to kill 3 goats. Then the old women hacked the goats to pieces with a machete...nothing like being splattered with goat in the middle of the bush.

Here is the goat (yum)


A few photos of some of the women.





I drank a lot of chai, ate a whole bunch of goat and had my hair played with by about 40 little girls.
Here's one more picture of me and Choo the dog at Kudu Hills (Dan tried to steal the dog and take it with us)

Sunday, August 12, 2007

Hippos and Cheetah and Gnu....oh my!

We just got back from our 2 day safari to Lake Manyara and Ngorongoro Crater. We went with a couple of teachers from Belgium and a professor from Germany who we met in Arusha.


Despite having possibly the worst guide ever --- he was hung over, and acted like he was annoyed that he had to drive us around all day --- we had a great time!

In Lake Manyara, the elephants were practically in our car. One time, I shut my window because a tusk was getting a little too close for comfort.

We also saw a lion charge at some zebra heading to a water hole. We're still not sure if the lion wanted to eat the zebra or just scare it away from its nice water...but it was cool.


Ngorongoro Crater was also spectacular! We saw a cheetah eating something, hyena and lions having a feast, baby hippos and tons and tons of Gnu. (Gnu is capitalized in honor of Gary Gnu from Great Space Coaster)


Unfortunately, our trip to see the ladies making cheese today didn't happen. Today was not the luckiest of days. Everything we tried to do was closed, not happening or not quite right. Dan got pickpocketed (only a few dollars, so no big deal) and even our attempt to see a movie failed since they were only playing Shrek 3. So tomorrow we head back up to Kenya.


The good news is that we got some great photos that I'll post soon and I scored a copy of Harry Potter 7!

Thursday, August 9, 2007

A quick update...

Deb and I are in Arusha, Tanzania, after spending 2 days not seeing Mt. Kilimanjaro in Moshi (it's cloudy). We were hoping to see some of the Rwanda Genocide War Crimes Tribunal, but they're in recess until Monday. So we got gelato instead (it was fantastic).

Tomorrow morning, we head out on a two-day safari to Lake Manyara and Ngorongoro Crater. We hope to see tree-climbing lions at Lake Manyara and lions, cheetah, and black rhinos at Ngorongoro. The day we return we're heading to a nearby village for an overnight stay; we (meaning Deb) are particularly excited because the village residents make cheese....

We hope to post some more photos in a few days.

Tuesday, August 7, 2007

Hard Core

Ever see "School of Rock"? If you haven't, you should. If you have, then you'll remember Jack Black's super-awesome song, with the following lyrics:

No you're not hard core
Unless you live hard core.

This is the theme song for this post.

After our Zanzibar adventures, I convinced Deb it'd be a fun idea to (a) spend two days traveling to the middle of nowhere in order to (b) take a 3 day, 2 night camping/hiking trip in the mountains. So after a ferry ride from Zanzibar to Dar es Salaam, then a bus trip from Dar to Kilombero, then a daladala (mini-bus) ride to Mang'ula, we arrived at Udzungwa Mountains National Park. We signed up for the hike, then went grocery shopping with the guy who'd guide us for the next three days. We stocked up on beans, rice, eggs, vegetables, tea, cooking oil, and enough other food to sustain four of us (Deb, our guide, our armed ranger, and me) for three days. (We had to buy all the groceries, which were relatively cheap. But park fees ($20/day per person, plus $30/day per person to camp, plus $10 a day each for the guide and the ranger) meant that "roughing it" was considerably more expensive than staying at a nice hotel, getting a massage, and eating gourmet meals. Deb's skepticism began to grow.) Luckily, we didn't have to carry water, because our trail followed a river the whole way (mmm, iodine tablets are tasty!).

Our first day, we hiked 13 kilometers (a little over 8 miles) -- uphill (an elevation gain of about 1500'), carrying all our things (tent, sleeping bags, clothes, and -- oh yes -- beans, rice, raw eggs, etc.). My bag weighed over 40 pounds, and Deb's wasn't far behind. We also had to walk an additional 2 kilometers (with our things) from our hotel to the park gate. Deb and I spent most of our six-hour hike just putting one foot in front of the other and trying to avoid the elephant dung all over the trail.

(This last comment is not further evidence that I am obsessed with poo. It is an essential detail, for it shows you, the reader, that we were surrounded by elephants. Now you may ask, "Why doesn't he just say, 'We were surrounded by elephants'?" Well, that's because we didn't actually see any elephants. But the people we saw coming out of the forest told us that, the previous day, the ranger actually had to fire his gun to scare away an elephant because the elephant was getting too close to them. So you see, my dung-filled prose has purpose and is not included for the sole purpose of making Zysmans giggle.)

We arrived at camp and unpacked. Of the 16 eggs we'd purchased, 11 made it intact. The other 5 showed how entropy works in the real world (luckily, the plastic bag holding the eggs kept most of the goo in one place). We set up our tent, then "bathed" in the river next to the campsite. (See Deb's post for more photos.)

It was chilly.

Deb reminded me that, for less money, we could be at the spa.

I told her she's hard core.

The hiking was pretty nice, but we saw almost no wildlife and we were exhausted from carrying all our things. We were sure the next day would be better, since we wouldn't have to carry our things.

Nope.

The next day was a day hike to the peak of one of the mountains -- somewhere around 8000 feet (we started somewhere around 3000 feet). We were told that the hike was 5km (3.1 miles) to the top, then back to the campsite.

Usually, Deb and I hike at around 2 miles an hour. But after 2 hours of hiking straight up, our guide informed us that we were still "very, very far" from the top.

Deb: "What's at the top?"

Guide: "A nice view."

Deb: "Is it that much different than the view we have right here?"

Guide: "No."

Both of us: "Well then, I think we've had about enough for today -- down we go!"

So we turned around and hiked back down. This actually took almost the same amount of time as hiking up -- hiking straight downhill is really, really difficult, and Deb and I were both incredibly sore.

End of day two: still no wildlife. Very sore legs. Cold river bathing. Beans and rice for dinner, PB&J for lunch.

Day three: we pack up camp and hike back, this time minus 20 pounds of food. Plus it's downhill. Plus it's sunny. Plus we finally see some wildlife: five different kinds of primates (including the Sanje Mangabey, found nowhere else in the world), brilliant butterflies, and the bizarre buffalo spider). We also stopped to swim in a waterfall pool. It was absolutely beautiful, and (at least for me) made the whole trip worthwhile.

Still, Deb says I have to pay. In India, she's going to make me do some three-day spiritual centering meditation workshop. Yikes.

We made it back to the hotel at around 3pm, utterly exhausted and hungry. But our next destination was Moshi (at the base of Mt. Kilimanjaro), and Moshi is very far from where we were, but we heard that if we made it to the next town over (about 15 miles away), we could get a bus very early the next morning that would take us directly to Moshi.

We ate, packed up our things (we'd left a bunch of our stuff at the hotel), and tried to find a daladala to take us from Mang'ula to Kilombero (the next town over). We went out to the road and sat down. An hour passed, and only one very full daladala went by (luckily, we were entertained by yellow baboons in the trees and a very chatty lady who wanted to be Deb's friend).

At about 5pm, along came a lorry -- a large truck (maybe 20' long in back, about 12' tall), open in the back, carrying a whole lot of cargo and about a dozen men. We decided to get in -- Deb and her chatty friend in the cab, me in the back. To get in the back, I had to climb up the side of the lorry -- luckily, the driver waited until I was most of the way up the side before driving off.

The lorry, as I quickly discovered, was carrying several hundred cow hides, along with the aforementioned dozen men -- none of whom spoke English, and none of whom seemed willing to recognize that I didn't speak Swahili (just like in America: if someone doesn't seem to understand your language, just speak more slowly and louder, and they'll be sure to get it...).

I made friends in the back by showing everyone our digital camera -- these are very novel little gadgets here, and people love having their pictures taken and seeing the results immediately.

That was fun until the batteries ran out, about five minutes later.

Then my new friends tried talking to me, telling me that Osama Bin Laden lives in the Udzungwa Mountains.

Then my new friends said something in Swahili, and I didn't understand, but they pointed towards the front of the truck. I was standing in the back, and I turned around just in time to see some tree branches dangerously close to my face. I ducked.

Did I mention that we were only going 15 miles? Yeah, well, lorries don't go that fast. We finally made it about 2 hours later. Not exaggerating: 2 hours. Deb and I stumbled into a guest house, dirty, exhausted, and prepared for an all-day bus ride the next day.

But wait, there's more.

We went to go buy bus tickets. The direct bus, however, was sold out. So we bought tickets for 6:00 a.m. for a town several hours down the road, where we could get a bus to Moshi.

We went back to the guest house, took cold showers, and went to sleep.

We got on our 6 a.m. bus no problem. The first few hours, we drove through Mikumi National Park. Lots of giraffes and zebra (and various gazelle-like things, collectively referred to as "meat" or "prey" by Deborah and me) by the side of the road.

As we're admiring the wildlife, half-asleep, the driver slams on the brakes and swerves off the road. Why? Because we almost hit a giraffe.

We carry on.

We make it to our first stop and buy tickets for Moshi from "SuperFeo"; Deb and I giggle. (For those of you who didn't take Spanish in high school, "feo" means "ugly.")

The ticket agent points us in the general direction of about 100 buses, all painted various shades of every-color-there-is. We try to find the correct bus, and a group of men tells us to get on one of them. This bus, of course, says neither "SuperFeo" nor "Moshi." We start talking to a woman who speaks some English, who explains to us that this bus is not going where we want it to go. We get our bags and get off the bus, which severely confuses the men who told us to get on in the first place. They tell us to get back on, and since the bus is leaving, we do. We're then told (in Swahili, of course), that we're on the correct bus, but we have to change again. Okay, no problem. Deb and I settle into our seats and enjoy our breakfast (all of which could be purchased out the bus window -- 4 hardboiled eggs (60 cents), two packages of roasted cashews (80 cents), an orange that's been cut open (8 cents), and some bananas (8 cents for a small bunch)).

Two hours later, we're instructed to get off the bus by Dennis, our new friend from the bus company. A moment later, another bus pulls up, and Dennis tells us to get on that bus. He gives us his cell phone number in case we have any problems. And no, he doesn't speak any English. But here's what he had tried to explain to us: the third bus -- the one we'd just gotten on -- was the "Islam" bus comany. Although we'd purchased tickets with "SuperFeo," "SuperFeo" is actually owned by "Hood," which is pronounced "who-dee." Hood and Islam are affiliated with each other as well.

Deb and I thought that Dennis was trying to have a religious discussion with us, telling us that Jews and Muslims share the same past. We are trying to mime this in broken English and Swahili. Instead, he was trying to tell us that Hood and Islam are the same bus company and that we should get on the damn bus.

We arrived in Moshi at 5pm -- 11 hours on 3 different buses. We then did what anyone else would've done: took a cold shower and went for pizza.

Women in East Africa

All ye women in the Western world, kiss the ground you are standing on and thank your good karma for where you were born.

I've been meaning to write for a while about the status of women here. I should note that many people say that things are "improving."

So, here's a few reasons why I'm glad to live where I do:

  • Female circumcision is still very common here.
  • Most places it is illegal for women to inherit property.... even where they are legally allowed to, the custom is that the first born son inherits everything.
  • Brides are still purchased. The minimum price for a women is 2 cows and 2 goats. Price is set based on beauty and "how many men she has known." People we talk to here, don't seem to understand how you could get away with not paying for a good woman?!?!?
  • Polygamy is still common. It's becoming less so, but not because people think that it's not a good idea to have several wives, but rather because with the economic situation here, most men can only afford one.
  • Abortion is 100% illegal.
  • It is far more common for a boy to be sent to school than a girl.
  • Most people believe that it's ok to beat a woman for a wide variety of offenses.
  • We have heard of at least one incident where a European medical student doing an internship here for the summer witnessed a doctor performing a tubal ligation on a women while doing a C-Section with no consent. The doctor didn't even inform the women because "she has 7 children and is HIV positive....it's for the best"
  • Even the day to day things ---- Women cut and carry all the firewood for cooking, then they cook the meal. Then the men eat first and anything left over is given to the women and children.

Photos From the Beach to the Bush

Lamu Town -- note the donkeys


Our favorite chai shop in Lamu....we miss the caffeine buzz already.




Dan and the owner of our favorite chai shop in Lamu. He insisted on putting on his watch to pose for this photo.






Me at the beautiful white sand beach in Zanzibar....this is the beach where Dan briefly had his iPod stolen :-)






Zanzibar Red Colobus Monkeys --- these aren't found anywhere else in the world.
Relaxing in a "refreshing" Udzungwa mountain waterfall (fun but freezing cold)

Treking in the Udzungwa Mountains