Unforseen adventures!
Manail.
God it seems like such a long time ago that I arrived in Manali. The town is pretty far north in India within the state of Himishal Pradesh. I got the bus with the two English girls I had met in Dharamasala (and Rajisthan)- Rhian and Kim. We arrived at about 5 in the morning and it was bloody freezing, the first thing we did was find a room and sleeeeeeeeeep. The day was pretty much a wash out! The main purpose of me being in Manali was to get a bus to Leh (about 20 hours north). On arrival I was told that the road was still snowbound and in all likely hood would remain so for the next two weeks. Which was annoying because I had hoped to be in Leh by mid-May. I would have to wait it out and see what happened.
Picture 1 - A view od Manail drom my hotel room.
In the mean time I would have to occupy myself - day two in Manali was thus was rather more adventurous than day 1. To be honest there isn't really that much to do in Manali. The only form of activily (apart from chilllllling) is adrenaline filled adventure sports, in the winter it's India's premier ski resort (not really that advanced by European standards) and in the summer there is paragliding, zorbing, mountain biking, rafting, climbing etc etc etc. So I (and a girl I had met called Lucy) decided to get involved. We headed off to get a bit of paragliding in- it was a very strange experience and it of course had a bit of an India twist. Firstly, we had to climb up the mountain that we were going to fly down from, and then the 'pilot' realised he had forgotten to bring the correct paraglide - I was fully confident... not! however when we actually took of the experience was very tranquil, it wasn't as adrenaline filled as I thought it would be in fact it was very serene, a bit like flying. My pilot also threw in a free zorb ride for me and lucy... zorbing- think washing machine with person inside it. amusing?!
Pic 2: A self portrait!
Apart from that there really is little to say about Manali, I did nothing. I spent four nights there waiting for the road to open and then got bored. I actually found myself missing the dirt, grime and squallor of 'real' India- Manali was simply to easy- the food was too good, there were too many tourists, I was to clean etc. I decided to take the plunge back into India... real India.
With two weeks on my hands I decided to head south again to an Intriguing city called Chandigarth! Another over night bus and back to the heat of the plains.
Chandigarth.
Described in the guide book as 'Indias cleanest and greenest city' Chandigaeth was built in the 1950's by a french architect as the new capital of Punjab. My personal view is that Chandigath is the strangest city I have ever been to (certainly in India). It was partly because I had had no sleep and had been dumped of the bus 30Km out of town at 4.30am but my day in Changidarth seemed like a surreal dream.
It is certainly clean and green. There are wide boulevards with bougainvillea growing everywhere, big air conditioned shopping malls, brand new buses, a car free city centre and none of the chaos normally associated with India cities; at the same time, just from walking aroung the place the city seemed strange for some unidentifiable reason. I guess the best way to describe it is artificial, it had not evolved into a city it had been purpose build, and it was evident for example, the whole city was gridded off (like in US cities) into squares which were called 'sectors'. It had a specially created city centre (and sub-city centre) - must admit I simple couldn't get my head around it, It lack colour, it lacked character, it lacked India. It looked and felt like a warped neo-fascist version of LA. Totally weird. Pic 3: Chandigarth- and all of it's sectors!
I went to Chardigarth on an impulse, I didn't actually know what I was going to do when I got there, what I ended up doing was leaving my bag in left luggage and walking around in a strange daze for about 6 hour (partially to do with the lack of sleep). when I did come around I found Chandigarth's main attraction- The rock garden. Created by a random man with to much time on his hands the rock garden fits right in with Chandigarth's strangeness. It's main totally out or waste and rubbish, and it is basically a maze of waterfalls interspersed with a zoo of moulded animals (rubbish description, sorry, see photos). The Lonely planet describes it as- akin to stepping through Alice in wonderland's looking glass. Spot on! I have to hand it to the man, they were really really cool gardens. I had a great snooze there as well!pic 4: some od the 'zoo' in the rock gardens.
After some breakfast I headed out of town to some Mougul gardens (which were wholly unimpressive) I had a nice sleep on the bus though! On my arrival back in the city I think I was just a bit overwhelmed by the city, I couldn't take any more or the weirdness, so, since I hadn't yet checked into a hotel I jumped on a bus and headed back to the hill station of Shimla.
Shimla.
Shimla is the capital of Himishal Pradesh and once upon a time it was the summer capital of the whole of India. The British Raj moved the instruments of government up to Shimla every year when Calcutta got too hot! The city reminded me of a quaint English town like Bath or York. It was absolutely full of tourists (no foreigners, all Indian tourists). Also, it was full to the brim with Georgian and Victorian architecture, fashionable shops, beautiful views of the hills and ice cream licking holiday makers! I must say, I absolutely loved Shimla, the whole atmosphere of the town was fantastic, the people were so friendly and (best of all) there was no traffic in the main bazaar.
My top 10 favourite things about Shimla...
1) The shopping- I spend vast amounts of rupees (very few pounds) buying a chess board, a watch- which broke within 3 hours (I did get a replacement which still works now after almost a week), a knock off jumper, statues of Hindu gods and a wallet to name but a few things.
2) The history- I took a trip to Visigal Lodge the headquarters of the former Raj. I saw the table where the agreement for partition was signed. All very interesting.
3) The food- There was the best street food in India, I didn;t eat in a restaurant the whole time I was there. Also, there were the best ice creams ever (From Baskins and Robbins)
4) The weather - perfect, except for the hail stones as I left.
5) The lack of tourist- I got bored of backpacker chat in Manali
6) The awesomeness of the locals- so friendly, even the touts who found me the cheapest hotel room in town!
7) Real coffee, in an Italian coffee chain called barista Pic 5: Real coffee!
8) The atmosphere- No traffic, No hassle, no worries
9) the old school arcades- ever wondered where all the old pacman machines are. They're in Shimla
10) The funnier haircut in the world- A guy who looked about 105 year old snipping wildly at my hair, and it actually looked alright in the end (ish). It did only cost 50p!Pic A slice of history- The table (and chairs) from which Mr Jinna and Mr Nehru decided where the India- Pakisthan boarder would be!
So there we go, top marks to Shimla, the problem was that I had run out of thing to do and the road to Leh still wasn't open. I didn't really know what to do or where to go. I checked out of my hotel on the morning of my 4th day in Shimla, I was going somewhere, I just didn;t know where!
In the end, after much deliberation (I actually made friends with the guy in the bus enquiry booth because I asked him so many questions about the buses) I decided to make the 23 hour mission to the slightly unstable Srinigar, Kashmere.
In the next blog find out why made the decision to go to Srinagar, what the place described as 'the most dangerous place in the world' (Bill Clinton, 1998) was like and whether I finally made it to Leh!
Laters Folks!