Indian Friday: Last Day at the Rainforest Retreat

I rather enjoyed re-visiting India via my blog the other week. So I went and dug out the diary I faithfully kept. The events it describes have never yet seen the light of day. For the first ten days I was with the group of people my ex-brother-in-law had put together, to explore aspects of rural Indian life, focussing on small producers working in traditional and organic ways. We had no internet access during that period.

I’ve decided to share my diary with you. This will take several Fridays. I’m pleased that I kept such a detailed record of a piece of personal history, and of a country I’d never visited. I wonder how dated this account would seem to the current traveller?

Last Day at the Rainforest Retreat

Wednesday 14th November

Dhosas with potato curry and scrambled egg Indian style (i.e. spicy) for breakfast.  Then off with Ravi and Nak for the Ridge Walk.  This involved serious climbing through the rainforest till we rose above it to the hilltops with pasture, bracken and smaller foliage plats.  Wonderfully bright acid green paddy fields below – such a contrast with the darker green of the plantation trees.  One or two cattle here too. More of the same, passing a few settlements on the way down……

….. Later, M, C, L  I had a few jobs to do in town so we had a lift in.  We enjoyed pootling around.  I left an answerphone message for Malcolm and spent Rs60 on a hat (about 54 pence).  We bought chocolates for Sujata and A (Cadbury’s, made in Poona and unavailable in England) and waited and waited for our photos to be downloaded.

…and waht you can buy there

It was dark by now, and we started to worry we wouldn’t be back for 8.00 and our farewell dinner, but M made friends with someone in a shop who took my letter which I’d found no postbox for, and got us an auto-rickshaw.  Well! Health and Safety need not apply.  4 of us plus luggage somehow squeezed in with L on M’s knee and all of us bulging out all over.  We admired the artificial flowers decorating the driver’s dashboard while M negotiated the price (Rs 150 – £1.35 – for a 10 km. ride) and off we hurtled, through puddles and over potholes (easier perhaps in a rick, with its smaller wheelbase) only grinding to a halt once.

Home just in time to make the journey up the hill to S&A’s house where we sat round a bonfire with A’s blues music in the background, eating dish after dish of all kinds of curry.  Ludwig was there too.  Home by 10.30, looking at a sky fuller by far of stars than we can ever manage in light-polluted Europe.

the barbecue

Indian Friday: From an Elephant Camp to Madekeri

I rather enjoyed re-visiting India via my blog the other week. So I went and dug out the diary I faithfully kept. The events it describes have never yet seen the light of day. For the first ten days I was with the group of people my ex-brother-in-law had put together, to explore aspects of rural Indian life, focussing on small producers working in traditional and organic ways. We had no internet access during that period.

I’ve decided to share my diary with you. This will take several Fridays. I’m pleased that I kept such a detailed record of a piece of personal history, and of a country I’d never visited. I wonder how dated this account would seem to the current traveller?

From an Elephant Camp to Madekeri

Monday 10th November 2007

Elephant day.  So we were up good and early and set off in two taxis.  On the way, we enjoyed seeing school children going to all their various seats of learning – they all looked so smart in their English style uniforms c. 1958 (that was the year I started grammar school, and I looked smart at first too).  Dubare Elephant Camp however, was a disappointment. We  arrived at about 9.30 to find the washing of the elephants nearly over.  Nevertheless it was good to give that hard leathery hide with hard bristly hair a good scratch. 

We went to watch them have their breakfast.  There’s a sort of cookhouse where they boil up an appetising concoction of jaggery (a traditional caramel coloured unrefined sugar), millet and vegetation, and roll it into gigantic balls which the men feed to them.  And sadly, that was it really.  They went off into the forest to work, and we went off in our taxis, and fetched up at Sujata’s summer house (she owned Rainforest Retreat).  Rest, tea, relaxing in the garden full of pepper plants, hibiscus, coffee, poinsettia.

Then a country walk down to the River Cauvery.  It’s just what you see in all the travel documentaries.  Tall palm trees, intricate knotted tree roots, and little islands set among the fast-flowing currents of the Cauvery.

We walked through the paddy fields – the green of the young plants is so green, vivid and vibrant: and then with some difficulty, we waded through the waters.  We were glad to get down to our cozzies and plunge into the river – muddy, but otherwise clean.  There was quite a current, but staying close to the edges was ok.  The stronger swimmers swam across to the other bank, but I had a go and wasn’t up to it.

The picnic was something special.  Great metal pails were clanked down the hillside by the ‘staff’ at Sujita’s residence.  Rice, sambal; a wonderful bitter curry made out of some dark green tree leaf also used to dose children who have worms; chicken curry; a sour and bitter dark red chutney; curds and a gorgeous buttered cabbage curry.  Further swimming after, further baking in the sun, then back across the fields, and taxis home.

The walk back home

A stop-off at Madekeri.  It’s a largish town, with rows and rows of tiny shops – the usual mixture.  Indian shopping streets are standard in their own way: no MS, Boots and Costa Coffee certainly, but still a uniformity in the small shop fronts with goods stacked and hanging outside, and with pedestrians, bullocks and auto-rickshaws and cars all jockeying for position in the crowded streets.  I got all my photos onto a CD so was well pleased even though I had to buy a CD holder separately( Rs 17! About 15p) and had 10 minutes at an internet centre.

Got home to find them building a BBQ outside – BBQ chicken, and for us two veggies, potatoes in the embers.  Two new guests appeared – a Swiss monk and his mum.