August 30, 2010
Ambulances
Well today the confusion was cleared up, it was not an ambulance we were seeing, but rather an ambulette. Now, I'm not entirely positive that it was named for its size - it could be a gender thing, but it certainly was a petite ambul.
August 29, 2010
I would've thought this was obvious!
August 28, 2010
Why did the chicken cross the road?
August 22, 2010
The Garden City
I look around and wonder whether anyone is thinking of their children and the city they will inherit. Will it simply be a concrete jungle? Or will someone stand for the trees and give them a chance to enhance the lives of the next generation with their green grandeur? Do people not realize it takes generations to grow those stately giants? It is so unfortunate to see the beauty of Bangalore lost to greed and lack of foresight. -Allison
August 18, 2010
Breakfast Biking in Bharat - redux
All righty then, when we first did this ride in April 2009, Christopher labeled it as epic, and today that label still seems appropriate. Six of us went on a six hour thirty minute ride / trudge covering 47 km (Palm Meadows gate to gate), which included three punctures, two broken chains, everyone was out of water, one rider ran into an auto outside Whitefield mall, and the most important fact was that I did not fall into a rice paddy this time proving that old dogs can learn new tricks. The intrepid six were myself, Arun, Siva, Alan, Vallari, and Niraj. And, lest I forget, we had originally planned to do this ride as Alex's last ride on July 12, but it was too wet that day. Since Alex is now back home in MSP, we can only say "this one was for you, dude".
At about ET 2:44, Siva reported a puncture. Pretext: Siva announced early on he was riding without a spare tube, which just meant that the gods had him in their cross hairs awaiting the moment for a lesson in humility. While repairs were made, I attempted to scout the path because another issue with the ride was that 16 months had passed since we originally made the GPS recording, and we found that the trail disappeared in several places for various reasons. As I have noted many times, for all we think nothing changes in India, change happens constantly. Several new fields have appeared, and the trail has been plowed and planted. The sluice boxes in the sand pits are active, and none of the fun trails we rode a year ago exist today. Anyway back to Siva's puncture. Repaired with Alan's spare tube, Siva got 50 m before announcing another puncture; so back to the shade of the eucalyptus for another repair marathon - this time including some nifty, no glue required, patches Arun supplied. More on punctures later.
I have used the term "trudged" several times in this report, and that is with purpose. The original trail had been obliterated in several places due to farming activities, and to navigate these changes in attempt to preserve the crop, we trudged along the edge of the field. [Note: The soils are predominately sand / clay mix, and when recently tilled, you ride through about four inches of loose sand, which is a really hard slog; so, we trudged.] Also, the sand pits have changed, and in a few places, trudging seemed the appropriate (safe) thing to do. And, I almost forgot, in several places the forests were being harvested, and the debris of harvest required yet more trudging. However, even with all the false starts, the trudging, the on the road repairs, we did complete the ride pretty much as planned.
The ride came to an end as it started with all of us crossing the stone bridge carrying our bikes. At the end of the ride the Sunday wash group was on the bridge, which required us to carry our bikes while stepping over piles of laundry being beat on the two foot wide granite bridge. Traversing successfully, we headed down the familiar track to civilization. However, the last event was to come.
Halfway back to Palm Meadows from the stone bridge, Niraj rides up to me to ask if his tire was going flat, which it was. Using my tire pump, we pumped it up hoping he could get home before it was totally flat. While I was stowing the pump, Niraj took off in order to get home. I headed towards home as fast as my tired muscles would allow. Upon reaching the Whitefield Main Road, I turned left into the midday Sunday traffic for the last sprint home. As I was passing the Whitefield Mall I noticed Niraj up ahead, and thinking he needed more air, I stopped to assist.
It turned out that Niraj had clipped a auto rickshaw and scrapped off some paint, and he and the auto wallah were having a rather animated discussion regarding the missing paint. I walked up, asked Niraj the circumstances, concluded it to be just an accident - no fault of anyone according to Indian road rules, and I told Niraj that we should get on our bikes and leave. Well, the auto wallah thought different about that action, so I puffed up my chest, straightened my back, walked over to him and explained that the little bit of missing paint did not come anywhere near to the major scrapings and dents already present on the vehicle. Giving a pretty good glare, I turned, got on my bike and rode off. I suppose there is an auto wallah out there with my picture on his dash; oh, well.
I caught up to the group in front of Arun's complex where the coconut vendor is. Vallari needed a coconut, and since my smallest money unit was a Rs. 100 note, we enjoyed two each - the vendor would not accept Rs. 100 for two coconuts. I guess she had some high ethics to live up to.
And with that, we disbursed to our respective homes and activities.
And the epilog to the official report:
A bit of news from Alan - Alan is retiring in November and returning to the UK. 2010 will also be his 60th, and he his hoping for a geeser ride sometime in Oct. After hearing this, Alan and Arun exchanged ages, and as I am 58, it seemed to me that the geesers did the ride today having survived yet another epic journey into Bharat, and what started as Alex's last ride (in absentia), could possibly be labeled the geeser glide, but that would be a misnomer as today was not anything like a glide - it was a trudge.
August 13, 2010
"A Mother Died Wednesday" or "Hang Up and Drive": A true life story
Seeing the rake, the basket, and the thoroughly worn pair of sandals lying askew on the street corner was a poignant reminder of the tragedy that happened the day before. A woman, a mother of three, was taking a little break from yard work when a distracted driver took the corner a bit too wide jumping the curb. The car was going slow. After all, this is a quiet, gated community with plenty of speed bumps. What so many fail to realize though, is how briefly a distraction can take place and how slow a car can be moving and still kill somebody.
That young mother had multiple broken backbones and a cracked open skull. She died less than 24 hours later. Three children have lost their mother and undoubtedly the driver's family's life has been changed irrevocably too. He is in jail.
Please, hang up and drive. No telephone conversation can possibly be more important than somebody's life. You think it won't happen. But, it does; in an instant that can never be reclaimed. This week it happened right across from my house on an average street, on an average day, in an average neighborhood. It could have been you.
August 7, 2010
It'll Only Be 10 Minutes, Sir...
We ran into some beautiful wood, called North Indian Rosewood, at a restaurant recently, and we thought it would be nice to take home a small square table and four chairs made from this wood. So, a new quest was commissioned to find somewhere in South India, in Bengaluru to make, sell, import, whatever, a table and chairs. The wood is also known as Seseme or Sheesham, and it is only available in North India.
So, Imtiaz and I set out in search of said table and chairs. The plan was to visit some furniture dealers on Ring Road towards Manyata, and then to go towards Commercial Street to see if a vendor in the furniture district handled this wood.
As soon as Imtiaz heard we were going to Commercial Street, he indicated that he wanted to go to the beef market - "it'll only take 10 minutes, sir". Ok, no problemo, not realizing what the beef market was, and having been there I'd be willing to bet that the majority of the ex-pats have never been there - with the exception to Tom Murphy who was everywhere.
Friday is the holy day for the Muslim community, and Commercial Street are has 4-5 mosques in close proximity, and this day was the last Friday before Ramadan begins, which makes it especially important. Needless to say, finding a parking spot took a long time, and by the time we got parked at Russell Market, and hoofed the 100 meters over to the beef market, we were into "lunch hour" and everything was shut down. So, we needed to kill 30 minutes.
The beef market is an old brick building with two entrances, which lead to rows of stalls on either side of the entry way. The stalls are constructed of elevated granite platforms, and each has a large (24" diameter x 20" tall) log that is the "butcher block". Not all stalls have vendors, and you really are thankful that the whole place is dimly lit so you cannot see what might be living in the abandoned stalls. The vendors display their meat on a wooden platform facing the walkway, in the open air. There is no refrigeration. This is not a clean place, and at least one stall had a very mangy looking cat sitting at the feet of the butcher.
Outside, the entrance to the market is protected by a corrugated cement roof overhang, which keeps out the rain, but I am at a loss as to why that would be an issue. It could be that it's true purpose was to keep the 200 or so Pariah Kites from snatching the beef from the display areas. And the overhang seemed to provide at least one sleeping cat a spot in the noontime sun.
Next to the beef market is the "pet market", and this is about as vile a place as the Western mind can imagine. Kittens, puppies, pigeons, parakeets, rats, bunnies, you name it, they've got it, are all housed in wire cages pending sale. I cannot imagine the health conditions for the cage inhabitants. I suppose if they do not live through the experience, they become the evening meal for the kites who inhabit the roof tops waiting for the butchers to toss the leavings onto the ground in front of the beef market.
We took a walk through the vegetable market and then trough the textile market and looped back around to the beef market, which took about 30 minutes. All the while each of the mosques loud speaker systems were blaring out the days sermon and pilgrims were scurrying about, and one middle aged lady in a Saree meditating with her back to the lamp post in the center of the circle, her eyes closed with her face and hands held high as if reaching to heaven, with the traffic swirling about her. As we walked, two wheelers and three wheelers were all vying for space on pathways barely wide enough for foot traffic. It was a very busy place.
By the time we got back to the beef market, the doors were up, and business was underway. Entering, Imtiaz was immediately accosted by two butchers claiming to have the freshest beef. I still did not know what Imtiaz wanted beef for, so I stayed out of the interaction as I was pretty sure this beef would damage my fine tuned Western intestinal tract. The butcher cut some meat, and had his assistant, probably his son, cut into smaller chunks. Then the kid put it in a bag and disappeared. He reappeared about 10 minutes later giving the bag to the butcher, who was now thinly slicing some other meat for Imtiaz.
It turned out that the kid took the meat to the grinder to mince it, which I cannot even visualize that after witnessing the market - I do not want to know. And it turned out that the plan Imtiaz had put in place that morning was to make a fresh batch of beef kabob for me as a gift. Upon our return to the house many hours late, he set about mixing the ingredients he had acquired into beef kabob mix.
I tried to cook over a charcoal fire on kabob rods while Imtiaz went to Manyata to fetch another ex-pat and return them to home, but I could not get the rod hot enough to cook the inside of the kabob. Upon his return, I explained this to Imtiaz, and the importance of cooking this mixture well to avoid E.coli, whereupon he set about frying little kabob patties in oil on the stove. These were well cooked, and they were quite tasty. I'm am now waiting to see if there are side effects.
So, if anyone wants some very fresh beef kabob mixings, c'mon over, I've got some, and like I said, it is very fresh batch.