Sunday 5 June 2011

Pig Turpin

So I'm going to skip out pretty much everything I've done in the past month in Thailand and Malaysia, but who wants to hear about swimming with gay sharks and silly ting like dat anyhows? I'm in Singapore and fly home, at the end of my 4 month sojourn in Asia, in 3ish days (I should probably check when my flight is, oh and what the day is today... i think it's the weekend...). More about Singapore perhaps in my next post, but for now the tale of how I fought mother nature and her jungle minions; mammalian, insectosoidal and otherwise:

'Twas a warm and ravenously sweaty day in the not so distant past when our charming and hunklicious hero, Squire Gordon, squeezed his finely toned buttocks into a wooden long boat beside a not-unattractive french girl. The motor up the river was uneventful, disappointingly the pretend machine gun and grenade launcher he had packed were not needed, the documentaries 'Sharktopus' and 'Mega Piranha' were apparently not the definitive authority on water dwelling creatures that their high production values would have one believe. He ditched the scantily clad extras in the river, it looked like he wouldn't be needing their sloppy acting talents after all, though it was a shame to see the eye candy go to waste.

That evening in Kuala Tahan, a shoddy jungle village where there was not a gram of tuppence nor a crumb of 'Parle G' to be found anywhere about, he chumbled upon two unlikely gents. "Greetings fine gentle folk! I seek accomplices in my quest into the jungle where I intend to find and capture the fabled Crockosaurus and make my fortune. You two unlikely gents fit the very outer percentiles of acceptability of the bill and will thus, as they say, do." They were clearly not upstanding gentlemen of the British Empire (Hoho! Wearing sporting jackets, and this not being grouse shooting season! The plebs!) and showed no signs of comprehension so he repeated his request in the apelike bastardisation of his noble mother language so often found conversed by non native englishmen in backpacking hostels throughout the world. "I going to the Jungle, no? forest? woods? you know ... with the trees (gesticulates wildly). you are wanting to go with me also?". The Canadian and the Frenchman accepted, though the later's was more of an acquiescence. This reluctance would later manifest itself in a dark and most undelightful moodiness that would move the party (maybe like 1/2 an inch) toward mortal jeapordy.

The next morning they stood, already soaked in sweaty sweat, like a bucket of pungent sponges, facing the sign proclaiming "proceed no further without a guide". A warning to foolhardy tourists, which they certainly were not, chuckling the party partied on. In a tree high above, a monkey with round white eyes looked on, a twinkle of a foreboding smile remained momentarily as he faded away, Cheshire Cat-like into the darkness.

The jungle was a bitch. That much was rapidly apparent. The terrain was tough as nuts, the men fell down muddy banks and stumbled over roots. At one point Squire Gordon lost his entire leg to a termite ridden log. Worst of all were the leeches that wiggled and flopped from all around - a hoard of miniature horror movie monsters. They clambered over the adventurers' shoes and slipped through their socks. Home, they sucked on flesh, swelling in size until finally, gorged on blood, they fell away leaving small gushing wounds all over our heroes' lower limbs. They were unstoppable. The tiny terminators clung to the nail of a flicker or the sole of a stamper and proceeded, heedless, on their way. After a couple of hours this was enough to flap flappable Clement into a cursing rage. "Not cool bro" thought a passing grasshopper.

Despite the necessity to keep an eye or two on the treacherous terrain Shaun proved his worth with a new found talent for spotting wildlife; lizards, a preying mantis, a dead scorpion and a monkey or two were among his visual conquests. This perhaps explains why he slipped more frequently than the other two onto his muddy buttocks. A sacrifice The Squire was willing to make.

In the words of (/sampled by) Jack Beats in 'Get Down' (Tuuuuuune!) "And then it happened"; a black jungle pig covered in dry mud, with a glint of fire in his eyes materialised on the path ahead. The brave chaps hushed one another lest they scare him away. Unnecessarily. The confident pig sauntered first past Clement then The Squire, he stopped and sniffed Shaun's bag which the chap held between him and the porky mammal. He sniffed again, then, quick as a flasher, grabbed the satchel in his teeth turned and pelted down the steep bank towards the river. Without hesitation The Squire chucked himself down through the foliage after the thieving sack of sausages yelling obscenities at the top floor of his voice. Shaken out of his shocked state Shaun made chase, jumping down in adrenaline fueled excitement, straight onto The Squire who lay in a muddy ball, having tripped over a branch a moment earlier. In fear or perhaps mirth the notorious highwaypig had dropped his swag. The chaps retrieved it and its spilt contents and climbed back up to a nonplussed Clement. Pig Turpin was all the while hovering at the fringe waiting for a repeat opportuinty, he followed them for a while but finally conceeded defeat when the party picked up defensive sticks and The Squire pulled a really scary face at him.

Too many hours later they arrived at the hide where they were to spend the night. It was a wooden structure on stilts. The Squire cursed the current post modern design fashion when he stepped inside; filling the hut with live wasps was not an aesthetic choice he agreed with. The evening was spent looking out into the jungle watching fireflys doing an amusing impression of what it would be like if the stars above had adhd. Crockosaurus did not appear. Tired after a restless night spent fending off rats from their wooden bunks, the fellows headed back to civilisation. Exhausted but glad of the adventure they arrived at the village to great excitement, and later acclaim, they brandished photographic proof of Crockosaurus! Ever the prepared scout, The Squire had knocked up a photoshop a couple of days earlier.

The moral of the story: 'Megashark vs Giant Octopus' is a corker of a movie film.

x

Sunday 29 May 2011

Massage? Let me rub you?

I stepped out of Bangkok airport into the sweatbox climate, onto the airport bus headed towards the centre of town. Air-conditioning! Quite the novelty! Three months in India and Nepal had really skewed my sense of normailty. 4 hours flight had whisked me 75 places up the IMF 'list of countries ordered by GDP per capita', and it was apparent! - the wonders of 'civilisation' flew past the window. Moving traffic, unobstructed by cows! Pavements! Rubbish bins! Shops selling products other than 'Parle G' biscuits! On stepping off the bus - the air! Where was the choking dust? The smell of s**t? I made it all the way to a guesthouse only being heckled once for a taxi. Once! And he wasn't even persistent... Of course all this comes at a price some might describe as 'terrible'...  Capitalism (the relentless b*st*rd) along with His slick protégé, Comercial Tourism, had their glossy claws into the region where I'd disembarked (alighted? can you alight a bus? or is it just trains? regardless i love that word - oh yeah, just so you knows "regardless" is totally the new "whatever", eg:
Cleggers: "Davey C, you like totally promised you'd read my new policy proposal if I got you that skinny frappa mocha latte yesterday"
Davey C: "Yeah, Regardless! Hey Haguester you old poondog! Grab your gashcard! We're off Queefing down Spicy Club!"
Haugester: "Too easy Brew! You know dem dames can't resist my 'muffliato' charm!"). Sloganed T-shirts and tattoo shops peppered the tourist ghetto of 'KoSan Road', a guy was hawking fried bugs, cockroaches and scorpions to passing sunburned mugs (just because the local people have slanty eyes doesn't mean they eat rancid insect gutter vermin (they eat Maccy D's and Kentucky Fried Kitchen like the rest of us - though they don't have Gregs. Wahwah, unlucks!) you shirtless cocksickle!).
Despite this, walk a few streets away (too far for the bucket-drunks to stumble) and a bit of local Bangkok can be found. The sheen only mildly dulled by globalisation, a powerful local charecter still shines through -This was most apparent in the food culture. One market (which I refuse to describe as bustling) was particularly memorable; I put myself at the mercy of some stall holders and proffered some Thai Bhat in exchange for various dishes; some fishey smelling and of irregular consistency (pink rubbery ball filled with kidney bean paste anyone?) others delicious but un-chopstick-able. The food was certainly one of my favourite parts of visiting Thailand. Further down the market I saw a stall selling f*ck-off massive knives, machetes and baseball bats (no gloves or balls), another with heaps of pirate pornography - all the blokes browsing as naturally as a forehead, flipping through boobs and misc fetish material as one might Dickens at Berkhamsted library (Great Expectations being the most modern book you can find there, Harry Pozzle 1 being perpetually out for rent, the waiting list for which I've been on since before I was born).

This was about the point where I discovered one or two of the disadvantages of travelling alone, principally exposure to crazybag wierdos. A friend is a wonderfull ally in any campaign against unwanted company; "What's that? Oh yeah we had those plans that I remember that we agreed on, to go to that place where nutbags aren't invited. Yeah... so see you later mate". Without a companion you can be vulnerable to almost anyone whos fancy you take (I'm not knocking it completetly, quite the reverse, meeting new people has undoubtedly been the best thing about travelling alone, but in general it's probably best to be the chooser, not the choosee...) And so it was that I came to be stood in the corridoor outside my room being verbally accosted by an Iranian international criminal telling me the best ways to obtain passports for the purpose of forgery (solicit junkies aparently). SQUISH! He ruthlessly flipflops a passing cockroach and continues telling me about how his Thai 'girlfriend' (prostitute) keeps robbing him, but why he wont change his safe combination code becauase he trusts her... Tit. (I really hope he doesn't read this...).

This chappy was typical of the holiday makers in the next town, Hua Hin, where I unwittingly strayed en route to the sunny southern islands. Sex tourism is not cool - the sorry balding men with their tiny haggared looking Thai 'girlfriends' in tow, wandering along the grubby seafront are probably one of the saddest, lonelyest things I've ever seen. Even the most wonderfully jolly lady, her fried banana selling cart parked in the middle of the hooker bar district, women leering and giggling all around, wasn't quite enough to get the "Let me rub you"s and "Sucky sucky"s out of my head that evening.

Too many words for now...

Laterz Potatoes!
x

Thursday 5 May 2011

Kathmanpoo

It's Mr Gordon's last day in Nepal.
My stomach is thankful; one's dietary requirements cannot be fulfilled on chowmein and buff momo's alone,  despite what Mr Momo Man in the cafe over the road would have the world's press believe. Indeed the consistency of my bottom toilet droppings has been wavering around the 1-2 mark on the ten point viscosity scale for sometime now.
Calum and Chris have gone back to sunny England, a place where rivers are for punting as opposed to Kathmandu where any such endeavor would lead to even the most able Cambridge puntsman being drawn inexorably downwards into an oozing channel of septic effluence. Waste disposal seems to be a big problem here, as in India, people drop all their rancid rubbish in piles on the street and wait for the rain to wash it onto somebody else's doorstep. It's as much to do with individual's attitudes as it is lack of civil waste disposal facilities. Mum, I'm sorry to report that for every Waitrose carrier bag you save with your beloved 'Onka bag' there's 100 million south Asians tossing a crisp packet out a bus window and spitting on it for good measure. It's not because Nepali people are particularly heartless, on the contrary, I've never met a nation of people so accommodating and friendly. There's clearly a necessary job for the government/authorities to educate the populous. I'm sure they would, smiles wide, welcome a new friend, Ms Environment, if only they could see she was down there, under their feet, choking on all their plastic waste.
My next report on 'waste disposal around the world' comes from Thailand. I know you can't wait.


Overall my experience in Nepal has been hugely positive. The country has fantastic natural assets from the Himalayas, to the national park forests. Among other things we hiked up to Everest base camp, and visited Chitawan National Park where we were almost brutally savaged by a rhino (if he'd been like 300m closer and in a rage he probably would have done someone a mischief). We rented motorbikes in Pokhara, and rode up the most funnest winding hill ever. My bike chugged to a halt half way up, certainly not a result of karma for earlier when cackling with glee, I ragged it like a dishcloth past Chris, his bike struggling with his heavier frame. On freewheeling down I gave a local man a lift. I've never been so terrified in my life. I'm pretty sure the guy had a boner, I was seriously considering trying to flip him off with a well timed front 'wheelie'.
We finished our trip with a canyoning excursion. Canyoning is a pursuit for those who find abseiling by itself just isn't wet enough. One makes one's way down a river, abseiling down waterfalls, swimming, sliding and jumping into pools. I've done it before in Germany, this time was different, in a way that can only be described as notably 'Nepali'. The harnesses and rope were, to put it kindly, 'retro'. On the positive side was our guide who was so jolly I thought he (or I) might explode, there was a canister of laughing gas plugged into one his orifices I'm sure. He found it a particularly hilarious joke when, after implying that he would lower me gently down, he subsequently dropped me from about 3 meters onto my bottom. This added to our unease when he told us to leap, 6 metres diagonally down into a pool only 1.5 metres deep. "It's fine" he said. It wasn't. My bum landed on the bottom of the pool, taking a beating worse than Calum's on a typical Friday night.


Gluteal blunders aside Nepal is a brill place. You should totally visit.
Laterz Geeks
x

Sunday 17 April 2011

Dangerous Flight To Altitude Fight - A Trek To Everest Base Camp Amoung Yaks And Japanese Nutters

Kathmandu, Nepal.

In spite of the camera-wielding crowd of wierdos our 10 day trek to Everest base camp was a suitably rumbunctious adventure.

I arrived amongst the multitude of shops touting fake 'North Face' gear in Thamel, Kathmandu to meet up with my old pal Calum and his Uni chum Chris. Despite my best efforts they were still determined to 'do' Everest base camp. Even citing the wierdly chummy 60ish year old ex-army guy I'd been socially abducted by that morning who'd said that Anapurna Circuit was a 'better' trek wouldn't sway them. In hindsight, perhaps the reference might have carried more weight had I not mentioned that the advice had been imparted moments before sargent crazybags earnestly introduced me, quite unprovoked, to his 5"0 tiny-fiddle-playing Nepali drug dealer, insisting that he "look after me".
Knowing that the tide of general oppinion was, as it so often is, against me I decided to jump on board the Lad wagon (no euphamism intended). Worryingly the vessel being boarded was a severely crappy 2nd hand (I know this because 'Agni Air' hadn't bothered to paint over the 'airtasmania.com.au' on the wing) airplane headed towards the world's most dangerous airport at Lukla, in the Himalayas. The thought that "At least if I'm horribly disfigured I can become a masked super DJ" held my hand as the plane plopped onto the 460m long runway, only letting go when it wheeled away from the impending cliff-face, off into the parking bay.

The next few days saw us taking an overdose of the prescribed pace up several thousand metres to Luboche, a town one day's walk away from our famous destination, so that we arrived less two acclimatisation days. This was, of course, fine as Calum had only a slight headache, nothing a little 'manning up' couldn't fix.
The journey up had been tiring but superb, we had crossed wobbly bridges suspended over gushing crystal rivers, slowly struggled up rocky paths past unnecessarily cautiously clad Japanese tourists and through Yak Traffic (incidentally also the name of the band we formed, our first album title being 'Emaculate Ejaculate'). We slept and ate in wonderful lodges with beautiful wooden detailed kitchens and not so pretty plywood board bounded rooms. At night we were barely bearably chilled to highly negative temperatures, the freezing haughty coughs of the malevolent snowy mountains creeping through the gaps in our cheaply rented sleeping bags, cruelly pinching the sensation from our unwashed feet. I combated the cold by eating as large a second helping of dahl bhat (THE Nepali meal, by which i mean, almost literally, the only thing they eat) as possible, while 'Bum Piss' Chris tried to retain some noodle nutrients, Imodium being his only ally against the food poisoning he couldn't escape from.
Our attempt at base camp on day 7 did not go to plan; after a 3 hour walk, and only an hour away from our destination, Calum finally decides to tell us that his headache is 'pounding'. He tries to muscle through but after ten minutes he's delirious with the altitude, staggering about like a drunkard. On an unrelated note, I'd crucially run out of biscuits and couldn't go on, it was gutting to be so close and have to turn round, but the lack of biscuits was really quite a serious health concern. Calum must have followed us down because he was there in the lodge later discussing with an apparently well informed Pakistani man about whether to go down further and give up on base camp or risk the headache and try again tomorrow. Being a Lad he of course decided to gamble. It paid off; in the morning he was fine(ish).
The following day we make it all the way to the boulder strewn temporary settlement where people with too much money (an expedition guide told me it cost 50,000 pounds) prepare to be dragged to the top of the world by a team of hardy Sherpas. We celebrate a successful struggle with an 'Everest' Beer. Our headaches worse and maybe slightly drunk, being (as I may have mentioned before) LadZ we get a little bit naked for a photo, pop our freezing selves back into our clothes and peg it back down towards Kathmandu.

Hello warm(ish) shower and 40rupee Buff MoMos!

Monday 28 March 2011

A Rifle In The Face Is No Substitute For A Moustache

Jaisalmer, Rajasthan.

I set off from the magnificent golden city of Jaisalmer into the wilds of the Thar Desert, completely alone (apart from 2 guides, 4 companions and 8 flatulent camels). A challenging voyage, seeking an image in the mirror of self discovery that can only be reflected in such a hostile and solitary wilderness. Like the warriors of old (or a least that guy in the film '300' - the one where he kills the wolf by punching it in the gooch. Or was it a tiger with a glare? Or his lawyer with a Biro? I forget... ) I went away a mere boy and came back... still a boy. I survived an encounter with a crazy man and his rifle and pooed in a hole, but it doesn't count unless you have a moustache, apparently.

Our guide Padma is a 60year old self confessed 'camel man' with a neon orange turban and a penchant for the word 'crazy'. The man has a magnificent moustache, the upturned ends droop only a little as water drips from it down into his smiling mouth, his superbly accurate impression of a camel drinking now complete. He carefully pulls the ends back into place with weathered fingertips, the upper-lip broom is again a perfect bushy 'w'. 

Uninterested in my grossly macho-ified tale about how I had to flee the desert man who showed me his rifle (steady ladies...) then pointed it at me saying "India, England, Fighting" Padma interjects saying "No moustache: no man".  His comment aimed directly at the centre of my consciously naked philtrum. It will hamper my chances with the Indian ladies he tells me. It might make things harder for him to arrange a wife for me - a task he's set upon with vigour since I unwittingly unearthed that his only son wanted a love marriage (Tchu! Kids these days!) and that I had no current marriage plans.

The 'tash culture is, to me, an interesting study in evolution. Indian men have truly grand moustaches, everywhere you look they sit, obese hairy leeches, mimicking in unison the laughter wobbles and word wiggles of their host lips. I saw a boy, no older than fourteen, on the train today who had one that reached down to the floor (- he tripped over it at one point and fell in a bucket of chapattis). This unequivocal prowess on the facial hair front is surely a product of genetics. That the culture dictates that a man with a good moustache is more so than one without, and hence presumably more attractive to females of that culture means he will be more successful in the mating rink. And hence the great moustach is perpetuated, becoming ever larger, more bushy and luxurious with the generations. My prediction: a race of massive moustaches with consciousnesses terrorising the planet looking for something hard to find, err say, 'Unobtanium'... the film title? err, "Moustaches On a Plane"?...

Bye for now poppets!

Wednesday 9 March 2011

"Where you Goa?" "I Agonda Goa to Goa"

Agonda, Goa.
This small village is a beautiful cliche of paradise, an Ad-man's idyll. White sandy beach and Photoshop palm trees breeze to the roll of a menacingly blue ocean. The beach-front is littered with cobbled together huts. Yes, the place is touristy (touristic if you're an English speaking foreigner) but it's not kitsch (Not every thing is kitsch Lonely Planet! Just like not all parks are shady! What do you even mean shady? Shady like a viola dealing class A rosin to underage violins? Or shady like the perpetual eclipse produced by Johnny Borell's massive ego?)
The village is in the south of the tiny state, away from much of the hubub(/fun?) of the (it pains my skinny indie fingers even to type this word) mainstream {*shudders} north. The beach, (that's essentially all there is here) is smattered with white, rapidly-browning bodies belonging to various genres of owner.
There are: The 20-30 something romantic couples, stuck like flies in the sickly honey of each other's company;
Solitary hippie pensioners grinding thier joints to the beat from beach drummers - one drunk Scottish man wiggles his wife-beater-ed torso as if to free himself from a long repressed sense of self respect;
The ocassional middle class Indian couple, stroling unsure like childrem finding themselves in a forbidden sweet shop after hours;
And, of course, the 'alternative' crowd, the Travelers with a capital T, (which they reject due to it being a pseudo-eponymous product of the capitalist system). They're clad in the standard issue uniform - dredlocks, baggy pants and 'meaningful' tatoos (like the guy with the monkey from Gorillaz on his leg - he probably got it as a Dare. Or maybe it made him Feelgood inc... I don't even like gorillaz why am I advertising their songs in pun form?? Spending all day in the sun on the Plastic Beach must be getting to me. ahhh! Beach. Beach. {*shakes head to clear it of all the plastic sand})
Seperate from but closely related to this later group are the 'Yogis' - those learning yoga. We spoke to one such lady persuing her new spiritual calling as a yoga instructor. She enthusiastically prescribed Emily some alternative remedies for her cold. Frogspawn and unicorn hair procured at midnight blended into a pepsi I think it was...
I was dubious at first, but suffice to say emily was bounding around, happy as a poodle in a puddle the following morning. A lesson well learned from the guru; it looks like Yogi bear's not just a ruggedly handsome face.

Cheery bomb.
x

Friday 4 March 2011

Ode To A Warm Shower

I didn't realise how much I'd missed you dearest,
I've endured an ice age to find you,
Here in this unassuming grubby little room,
Waiting, unlikely temptress, can it be you?
These weeks past hope has faded with your memory,
Unloving, the touch of alien harlots has chilled my skin,

'Till now. 

Tentative at first, but sweeter than ever I remember,
Your caress envelops, warm, unbridled joy,
A cuddle that takes me home.

You whisper something... a spiteful cough in my ear...

AAHHRGGH The bloody thing's stopped! How am I supposed to get this f***ing shampoo out my hair?!?!




Saturday 26 February 2011

"You Country Coin"

We're in Munnar in the Western Ghats in Kerala, south India. It's cold and rainy and we're surrounded by tea, it could be home except for how amazingly, almost scarily, friendly many people are. Yesterday a milk salesman (as far as I could gather) invited us into his house for some tea, much to the amicable confusion of his severely elderly mother.
   We met the chap whilst sheltering from the rain under the roof of a tiny 'temple' (This may make me sound like an uncouth pleb but it was literally a shed with a rock wearing a colourful skirt inside. I'm yet to understand Hinduism...). The whole area we were walking in is owned by a company called 'Tata' and most of the land is given over to the tea plantations (the tea is supplied to Tetley - as I found out when our new friend produced a branded bag from his shirt pocket - I didn't ask where he stored the milk). The tea trees slide in wobbly green lines down the hill and are tended by an army of fast-snipping edward scissor hands (little Indian ladies - is there any other kind? - I'm pretty sure the only way all the gazillion members of an Indian family can fit in their house is to store grandma under the floor boards) it's all very picturesque. Our new friend plied us with tea and a strawberry washed in a grotesquely brown puddle before inviting me to ride his little motorbike, something I think he may have regretted from the look on his face when it dragged me to a soggy stop in front of him a wobbly five minutes later.
On the walk back a school boy persistently dogs us, asking for "you country coin". He doesn't know any other English. I don't think he even knows what what he's saying means. This doesn't provide a very satisfying reply when I engage him in my usual conversational game (see previous post); The only questions I can make fit make me look just as silly as he does on reply: "where's a picture of a woman who's knickers you'd like to sniff?". "uh that's disgusting! And you'd probably be liable for treason or something...".

No time left, err .... in conclusion Western Ghats Good. 

Laterz
x

Tuesday 22 February 2011

I'm A Clebrity (Because I'm White): Get Out My Ear

I've been in India for about a week and a half, and I'm starting to think that there may be something conspicuous about my appearance. It's not a bogy, i checked. It's not toilet paper on my shoe, it couldn't be - in India, a damp left hand is the ubiquitous substitute for 'fancy western bum tissues' (and that would be a really creepy thing to be trailing from my trainers...).
People's eyes whirl round like fruit machines and settle, with the sound of bells and rattling coins, on two big dollar signs when they see me.
I think it's because I'm white....
To be fair, this is completely unreasonable, not everyone is a houseboat tour operator or a not so subtle rickshaw driver. (Who's sales pitch involves driving up carefully behind you and, you guessed it, throwing a HONK!! down your ear holes). We visited a park in Puducherry on day two and couldn't sit down for groups of people wanting a photo or a chitchat. This was exceptional even for me, I mean, even in Berkhamsted play park (where I am wont to spend many a spring evening soaring gleefully on the swings) Gordon (aka 'The Incredible Hunk') gets a truck load of attention from the all the babes, but this is beyond that, like grammar's beyond the guy at Berko market yelling about his "panda bananas" (whatever they are). After overcoming the initial unease at being so conspicuous in a foreign culture, I've grown to enjoy the attention at times. Yesterday at Allepy beach, out of interest, some guys (wearing swimming nappies - the Keralan equivalent to boardies) came over to say hello, though they didn't know the word for it. As I've found typical, a mutual understanding was formed that language differences weren't to get in the way of our communicating. A short babble in Malayalam (the language of Kerala) from them is met with a reply to my own invented question, usually concerning my snappy dress sense. - "Why yes this is a fine example of topman indie tailoring! I'm glad you can see past the unendearing sweat patches!", "Yes you do have a big moustache", "No, don't be silly, it doesn't make you look like a peado, you're not white!". People on trains will often smile and/or start a conversation, it's been a brilliant way of learning about Indian people's perceptions of their counrty and ours. For example Sathish, a software programmer, isn't happy about all the rubbish littering the countryside but, "what can I do?" he says. I've also found that a mention of "The Beatles" is met with a vacant stare, (reminiscent of those from any typical musically vapid Durham student when confronted with a comment about a 'wired niche' band like Arcade Fire), but that Kevin Pietersen is our most famous (imported) export. A tragic knowledge gap in my oppinion, a pickle short of a Thali (Indian meal) if you will.

I'll try to write more about what we're actually doing next time (I know Mum!).

Laterz!
Gordon
x

Wednesday 16 February 2011

Chapatti!

A mosquito just bit me on the spot on the head where you go bald from. Oh god there's another one! Eugh it tried to go in my ear. I've got biriani belly, my water tastes like chlorine and this computer is old enough to be confused by how grandmas work. That's right, I made it to India alive! (even more impressive when you consider that I've had to cross the road SEVERAL times in order to get here).

Stepping out of Chennai airport it's immediately obvious that we're in somewhere completely foreign. The humid air presses all around, much like the crowd of taxi drivers, vagabonds and a hoard of other staring brown people. After making several passes through the throng we eventually find our driver man. He quotes a mega rip off price, fine, it's what I was expecting. What came as a far greater shock was the liberal approach to any form of traffic rules followed by one and all. HONK HONK HONK HONK HONK honk-honk HONK etc. Smaller vehicles give way to bigger, (please don't mess with that bus brave little tuktuk man), and a honk of the horn is a sufficient warning that you're about to career through a junction between pedestrians and heavy perpendicular traffic. (Someone motorbiked on my leg today, painful but he only really gets dickhead points in my little book of 'notes for revenge: a tally of naughty points for all the silly people' for this for not honking. The positive side is that the tyre marks, of course, look pretty hench). Other than this anything goes. To cross the road is to run a gauntlet through honking weaving wheels and metal. (I have adopted the approach of waiting for the biggest of the busses to pass and to shuffle forward slowly and allow the river of tiny 'honda hero' motorbikes and rickshaws to wash around me and pray that I come out the other side alive. I usually do.)
At the hotel the bell boy demands a tip. Yes, demands. In confusion over exchange rates I accidentally give him about 20 times too much. probably a couple of days wages. no wonder he's so eager to part foreign chumps from their cash.
Next day we manage to navigate the queues at the train station and catch a train to Puducherry.The ticket costs about 50p for a 3 hour journey. Hear that London Midland? 50p! no not GBP 50 you money hungry waistcoated mini-ogres.Though in fairness I would have paid a little extra to avoid the smell of wee wees...

I've no time for more - another train to catch! I shall continue next time I can find an internet cafe.

Cheerio for now!

Gordon


Thursday 10 February 2011

Introduction

Hi,

This blog is where I'll be writing and posting pictures about my year-long trip around Asia (among other things).
I'm off to India tomorrow, wish me luck and I hope you enjoy the blog!
Rupeeeeeeeees!

Gordon
x