8.16.2007

Yep...




So here are a few of the pictures from the flight. They certainly don't capture the experience but I take some video with the camera while I was up there. It already seems like a distant memory compared to the sensation of actually being there.

I bet Mel will post some more pics from the ground. Probably some embarrassing ones with me in my wedgie-harness so those should be worth checking if only to use against me later. But don't hate, you wish you were me.

Last Day in Vashist





One more wonderful town. Our hotel was again built onto the side of a mountain with a very daunting staircase leading up. The view was at times overwhelming and even at the height of our room we could still hear the running white water below. The first day we trekked down to the river to spend a few hours with our feet in the water, taking it in. We found a very chill roof-top restaurant with a good menu, awesome view, and a big screen T.V. that we watched Spider Man 3 on while chillin' with some drink and asking myself how I got this life.

The next night we hit a new roof-top spot and I ate my fist piece of fish in a while. Trout from the local river (I'm Hoping). We met a local guy who approached us about Paragliding the next day and we woke early to make it happen.

Mel turned it down due to her budget so it was just me up there. We caught a rickshaw about a half hour out of town through some very remote villages and up into the mountains. Once we got to the spot it was another 7oo meter hike almost directly up the face of the mountain. Brutally unworn terrain was the trail and the travel made just a little bit worse by my wearing flip-flops. At least I wasn't carrying all of the chutes up to the top like the grunts.

So forty-five minutes later we reached the top, threw on the harness, strapped in, and ran off the side of an amazing Himalayan mountain. I can't describe how incredible it was to be up there soaring above the tree line, going higher, seeing more and thinking Holy Shit! I'm Paragliding in the Fucking Himalayas!

So then about fifteen minutes later it was over and we landed. Caught the rickshaw back, took a shower, and now we have about four hours 'til our bus leaves for a 12 hour ride to Chandigarh. Woo Hoo!

8.14.2007

A Strong Contender for Worst Bus Ride of My Life




We are currently in the very small town of Vashist. Yesterday we came by bus to Manali from McLeod Ganj where Melissa and I parted ways with Andrew. We had spent a week there and I certainly could have stayed longer but Mel only has a week left in India so it was time to see more. Andrew on the other hand was going into an 11 day Vipassana retreat three days later so he stayed behind. I hope that he'll be O.K. by himself. When I first found him in Delhi he was filthy, had shrunk to only six foot, and was barely able to feed himself. He was disoriented and had trouble forming sentences in English. He spoke in some sort of pre-consciousness, hippy speak. Over the weeks though he grew to his normal 7'5" and we began to dialogue about the "outside world". Hopefully he'll be alright.

We all loved the atmosphere of McLeod and the minuscule villages neighboring it. On my last day there I was leaning on the ledge, looking out into valley and knew that I would miss that place for the rest of my life.

But it was time to go and we had decided to go South East. We purchased some tickets for an overnight bus whose route skirts narrow mountain passes for most of the 10 hour ride, caught a taxi down part of the mountain to the bus station where the driver tried to charge me a luggage fee of ten rupees to stick the bags in the cargo bay. I almost fell for it but realized pretty quick that this was just another India scam. No way was that guy gonna get my twenty-five cents after I just paid eleven dollars for a ten hour luxury bus ride.

So shortly after we were off and nail-biting. We had all of these visions of rough, unpaved roads wide enough for a small Geo Metro and a medium sized goat but that would inevitably be forced to accommodate two large bus's and possibly a herd of goats. It was all true and worse. The rain started after an hour or so as we barreled along through the thickness of deep clouds. The Xanax helped me to come to terms with my mortality in a fairly La-de-da fashion.

So the events that follow are as I remember them. I was dozed off when we came to a stop around 3 a.m. in the pouring rain for what I thought would be one of the pee-brakes. it turned into the driver drinking Chaya and mentioning almost in passing, that we would be there for an hour. I had already refused him ten rupees for tossing my bag into a wet bay and just didn't have the nerve to question his work ethic. An hour later the driver stepped up into the cockpit, turned the key, The engine whined, and we all got out again to stare blankly into the black rain.

Now it's three hours later, people are sleeping where they can, it's 6 a.m. and the engine turns over. Fuck Yeah!. We enthusiastically jump back onto the bus, smiles around and another bus employee states that this will be a great place to stay unitl the roads are cleared. What? So the story goes that the roads were washed out, landslides were up and down the mountain pass and we were to wait until the rain subsided and the roads could be cleared. It was turning into a hell. The rain stopped, the sun broke, and the flies gathered. The place we were stuck at had drinks but no food and there was no word on the roads.

O.k., hell. At I don't know what time but certainly hours after we were scheduled to be in Manali, the bus was moving with the pasengers and their flies. It was true about the roads and the wash-out. The going was slow and a bit nerve-wracking since I had slept off the Xanax. It seemed to be taking forever to get there. Mel was CRANKY, and I was hot and sticky. O.K. I was cranky too, but not as a bad as her. Don't let her tell you different. So anyway, it was four in the afternoon when we finally reached the bus staion, ten hours after schedule and twenty after we left McLeod. We went and had a beer.

8.09.2007




Just one small view from our room. The clouds do roll in and cover every piece of this hill side until nothing is seen but a white out.

The other pic is just a shot down the road. I haven't been taking many photos so these are about it.

McCleod Ganj

Five days ago we escaped the miserably hot state of Rajasthan and began our way North to McCleod Ganj, (Hippies raise your hands), in the state of Himachel Pradesh. In order to get here we first took an overnight, 10 hour train back to Delhi. We arrived around 6 a.m., caught a rickshaw to the main bazaar and bought tickets for another overnight 12 hour train that left the station at 9 o'clock that night. When we hit whatever town we hit, we then caught a 4 hour bus up steep narrow mountain roads to Dharamsala. Where we then caught another 30 minute bus to McCleod Ganj. I had sea legs (or train legs?) for the next day. I constantly felt that the ground I was walking on was incredibly unstable, swaying in the breeze, and doomed to collapse at any moment. It didn't.

It is so pleasant here. It's home to the Dalai Lama and serves as a refugee city for fleeing Tibetans. There is a peace here that we hadn't encountered elsewhere. It's mostly filled with Buddhist Monks and western tourists. The food is Delicious and the air clean. The city is built on the side of a mountain and the clouds drift in throughout the day, sweeping up and covering our view of the Himalayan foothills. Our room is centrally located, looks over the valley below and to the granite peaks above.

There is a small moviehouse that seats maybe twelve people to watch films on a big screen T.V. which is propped up on a two foot high table. So far we've seen 7 years in Tibet and a shitty bootleg copy of Pirates of the Carribean
3.

8.03.2007

Desert Madness Takes Hold

This is what politically incorrect looks like. Toilet paper turbans.

No Time for Love Dr. Jones

So we made it to the rat temple of Kali Mata. Not as many rats as I had hoped for. I guess I was picturing monster rats covering the floors and scurrying over my feet. Probably when the monsoons hit it would resemble that a little more.

We had a little tag-a-long, which was more Melissa's admirer that was vomiting unsolicited information the entire time. The kid would not leave us alone. Mel kept encouraging him though. At one point, he looked at Andrew up and down and with a slight disdain for him asked "how did you get this body"? As if to say "You are tall and weak". Maybe he thought that Andy was Mel's man. I don't know but Andy should have wrestled the dude.

The little kid in the picture is not Andy's nemesis, just a cute kid that liked to have his picture taken.