Showing posts with label tourist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tourist. Show all posts

June 23, 2011

India Stories Sent from Canada


even though I'm back in Canada I've been reflecting on and writing up more of the India Adventure. For those of you still interested I'll be posting these stories up in instalments.. to keep the creative process rolling. Happy Reading.

Change: One More Day in Amritsar (part 1)

When I arrived at the Departures at 3pm, seven hours ahead of on-time the same station façade greeted me with nothing overly memorable as it had three days prior. There was general chaos of hundreds of Indians bustling about the Amritsar train station; an abode for eight platforms of nomadic track not content with being housed so constantly running off into the horizon. And I was here alone, just trying to find a luggage locker so I could take advantage of my last day in the city of The Golden Temple, but being shouted at “ma’am! Ma’am! Hello!” I was no novice to the calls of unwanted sales persons, tour guides and photo-mongers. I kept walking towards my soon-to-be incorrect assumptions of the location of the luggage lock-up.

I didn’t expect anyone would remember me let alone see me off. Especially not him… how could he recognize me? I was without my original distinguishing feature. Granted I had a few other subtle differences from the mass around me: solo blonde-foreigner with too much luggage and the wearing-the-same-clothes-as-yesterday well-travelled look. But what I did not have was the Girl-Who-Has-No-Change look. The only reason I had assumed myself to be memorable yesterday. Something that had been accurate for fifty four of my fifty eight days in India. At the Amritsar train station this Saturday it was decidedly untrue. So it was with only the slightest of annoyances and very true scepticism I halted apprehensively, turned my head and readied my negating reply to “ma’am, do you remember me? We met yesterday!”

I was on guard. I was wary of the old “we met yesterday can I take a photo?” and “we met yesterday, 10 rupees please” ploys. Despite my best intentions to be disinterested I looked around for the source of the voice. The man’s face looking eagerly at me from a long white tunic and baggy white pyjamas smiled to help my recognition process. I hesitated to reach into my memory bank for fear of being caught off guard looking pensive in a stolen photograph or being perceived as an interested customer for wares I had no interest in.

Surprising only myself two minutes later, I had found a match for this man. Luckily, only to me, it was only because he had the sense to inform me where it was exactly we had met yesterday. He had been the friendly one just outside the Maharaja Ramjit Museum (of battle-scene dioramas) at the gate of the Company Gardens who was thrilled to find out I was from Canada and laughed that I didn’t have the correct change for the entrance fee. It was he who had organized a bicycle rickshaw afterwards too, and insisted on sharing lists of Punjab natives who were now experiencing great personal and professional success in my home country. In the words of the rickshaw cyclist he recommended and I hired, “he has beautiful English, doesn’t he?” I had to agree. The well-informed and good-humoured fellow was the sweetest old(ish) stranger I met in all of India (in my rather limited scope of it). It appeared as though he was a cycle rickshaw operator too. As he stepped away from his bike I gave him a smile, acknowledged the commonality of our previous day’s paths, and then caught up on the last 24 hours since we’d last spoke. Mr. Rickshaw asked me what I’d seen and wanted to know where/where my train was headed, “10:15pm, Dehradun.” I almost had a chance to say I was looking for the luggage lock up when my newest friend exclaimed with an untranslatable mix of shock and delight, “Oh! Oh, you have a whole day left in Amritsar! You can still see so many things! Oh! You must lock up your luggage and come with me. I will show you all of Amritsar!”

Since that was precisely my plan, I was happy to have it validated with such exuberance. My next steps were, instead of struggling lost, directly escorted to the chaotic-looking but ridiculously orderly Luggage Lock. And I only had to step over two piles of gushy garbage to get there! That’s when I learned the 7 Rules* of Luggage Lock-up-ing:

1)      Must have OWN lock (double check)
2)      Must show passport (no prob)
3)      Must pay 10 Rupees per item upon pick-up (fine)
4)      Must provide a COPY of passport (in #2)
5)      Must carry own bag to designated, dirty shelf
6)      Bags are assigned a number for itemization
7)      Bags are tagged with the number (as per item 6) with semi-permanent or permanent ink (permanency directly proportional to owner’s fondness of said bag)

*note: these are not actually, officially listed but rather are learned-as-you-go rules.
Further to item 4) photocopies can be procured at the bag/passport owner’s hassle, expense and bafflement of the improbability of locating a photocopier in the area of the parking lot that was indicated by the Luggage Lock-up official with a vague wave-of-hand.

Exit Lyndia with all her bags.
Enter Mr. Rickshaw. Both meet in the photocopier-free parking lot.

Mr. R – Why not leave your luggage? What happened?
Lyndia – I need a photocopy of my passport. I don’t have a photocopy.
R- Oh! Is that all? I know where just come with me.

Lyndia is cycled through the parking lot (see! NO photocopier) across one busy street and is let off in a haphazard strip of parking and led down a side street, turned down an unmarked unlit alley and through a door that has “ICP, STD. FAX. CELL. PHOTO STAT.” stencilled on it.

We go in.

They have photocopiers (two). I pay 2 rupees and my problem is solved. It is also explained to me by the ICP, STD. FAX. CELL. PHOTO STAT. owner that the passport copy is for Verification, Authenticity and Security – all words I appreciate on the topic of Me and My Luggage.) Back down the alley and across the main street, I am re-dropped off at the Luggage Lock-up. Over garbage pile #2, since I found a way to avoid the first fetid puddle, and learn lesson number 7. It went a little something like this:

I passed over my newly acquired passport photocopy and answered three questions about the bags I wished to drop off I was made to fill out a little slip of paper. I was required to write out all the information from my passport and visa (exactly what was ON the photocopy I’d just handed-over) into the little government boxes on the sheet. Next I looked up to see the results of Authenticity, Security and Verification and ran smack into Lesson 7. I was surprised when I noticed that my black backpack had a chalk 212/2 on the bottom and I couldn’t help but shout when I noticed that my purse had been tagged with the same number but in black permanent felt marker. Needless to say, I was shocked and demanded an explanation along with “THIS IS NOT GOING TO COME OFF!” However, due to language barriers and bureaucratic functioning in place of actual intelligence the only clarification I received was a shrug, a smug smile and an ambivalent power-wielding, “compulsory.” With that, I downtroddenly transported my 2 212/2s to an empty dirty shelf that, I mumbled under my breath, “had better be Verified, Authentic and Secure.” At least my purse and I would never be subjected to the oh-so-common dinner-party problem of identical-purse-identical-contents, thanks to my Bag-Tattoo of 212/2.

Lyndia Without Luggage finds Mr. Rickshaw and hops back onto his cycle with only the essentials: camera, wallet/passport (with a Medusa-face pin as a criminal deterrent) and my journal with a third class train ticket bookmark. I am free to explore! Even more than that I am happy to have a friendly transport operator/tour guide that also assisted in my current luggage-free status. I’ve already determined I will buy this Cyclist-in-White a chai. And ask him his name… again? I can’t believe I’ve already forgotten, but then again so much has happened. Since I’m already on the back of the bike and we’re back on the road again, it seems I won’t be needing his name just yet anyway.

April 17, 2011

What the (Taj Ma)hal?!

Today I took on Agra. And 'sensation over-load' might be an accurate description. Instead of regaling you with a long prose piece I made my single goal (besides seeing the Taj itself) as making three observations per hour of this adventure and using them as "poetry notes." As such, here are the (first draft) hourly-poems I crafted about my excursion:


4:00-5:00am
today felt ripe for a double dose
of anti malarial pills
as if they'd bring me stamina.
Along with addition to the morning routine
of sunscreen,
purple t-shirt the only thing clean.
My room with a view
of the early morning market
shops closed
guarded by owners sleeping on their rooftops.

5:00-6:00am
frightened at the first corner
by the motorcycle ghost
but found comfort in barren morning bazaar.
Walk to the once-daunting train station
Mystery cyclist dismounts to escort me
then vanishes into the dark crowds.

6:00-7:00am
Too early young foreign lad?
His platform vomit.
My platform mantras.
Captured
by the dedicated-to-authenticity
Japanese couple
each with a video cam.

7:00-8:00am
Bhopal Stbdi departed on time
Coach 8 seats me backward
Chair 74 treats me kind.
As neighbour no. 75 inspects newspaper adverts
with such intensity they must predict his life.
Ripened wheat fields blow past us
Tea is served.
Tea is removed.
Making room for two rifle-toting guards
to sweep through.

8:00-9:00am
Free in First Class?
Breakfast toast, red jam
that is not Red Jam.
A bite of contentment at Kosi Kala
to the no-charge song of Hindi PSAs
with all the money I just saved
I'll buy myself three extra photo-opts.

9:00-10:00am
Your wrinkled arm
her block-print sari
trying to tell me a story between the train seats.
A tale cut-off by the HindustanTimes
and chair 84-occupant snores and sleeps
as we race past people-blurs whom I'll never meet -
Express train
where passenger 12 insists on standing.

10:00-11:00am
Disembark from my chauffeured A/C chariot
for which I bartered well.
Agra-guide with grandkids
cuts long-lines and 
takes copious well-poised portraits of me
in front of towering domes
empty minarets
"The Taj has lots of angles"
and stories of marble inlaid with precious stone.
Most unforgettably told 
by the baby in the security line
who punched me in the left eye.

11:00a-12:00p
Shopping sprees well-planned
not by me.
Mosaic demos, local jewels
Cottage industries explained.
All my guides get kick-backs
every time I contribute
to the web of Agra-tourism

12:00-1:00pm
Solo dining at a table-for-four
 beside one likewise table
accentuates the Lonely Luncheon
delivered with delicious food.
Where napkin wrapped fresh-lime-soda
sliver serving dishes
don't come cheap.
Next time omit the private butler and
stock the soap in the bathroom!
The punjabi hip-hop was nice though,
it took up at least one empty-plate-space.

1:00-2:00pm
with the Yamuna river trickle
inexalted Taj-face
hanging as my backdrop
I'm the tourist making faces
for (the kinds behind) the camera
who already thought me strange-
might as well make their tale worth telling.

2:00-3:00pm (at Agra Fort)
  Rosewater fountain in the Jasmine Palace
Kashmir-imported garden soil for vineyard grapes.
You'll know you're Daddy's Favourite
when he renovates your room in marble.

3:00-4:00pm
After ticket-counter chaos
in the safer (?) Ladies' Line
preserving queue integrity
with English arguments and backpack barriers
To secure my second ticket
for a train I'll never board
and earn my questionable seat
on the Train Station floor.
"A/C Here" sign is fallacious
when the power is on Strike.
Dazed by smells and flies and unnamed spills beside me
as my skin is liquified.

4:00-5:00pm
A free pass to be invisible 
 at the product-less cafe.
Its empty tables. Empty chairs.
Brief respite for this tired traveler.
Until there's eight freeloaders at my table
the unsavoury seven watch me 
as they buzz and fly.
Waiting in the dark
for a milkshake
or a cold drink
or just the power supply.

5:00-6:00pm
At the same sweltering snack-bar
my tour guide finds me:
a final lesson, last farewell.
Agra pyramid-scheme education
that now I'm mixed up in.
For my information,
if his compensation
could be quoted as "200"
he explained with gratitude,
he'd avoid a reprimand &
could take home the cash in-hand
I had paid to him  
and not his over-seeing boss-dude.

6:00-7:00pm
Eating figs in relative-silence to pass the time but
Platform 2 has conversation:
family values and bank exams.
Until I board in the Second-Class cram
I never anticipated.
"Seats 6" holds 10.
but a reservation saves me
(plus my sex and novelty).
So I'm pried in W-55
as centre-attraction- soon too see
just how boring I can be:
sipping water, gazing outside
wedged in hip-to-hip, knee-to-knee.


7:00-8:00pm
Cool outside circulation now humid
turns to rain, 
soaks my window-side
provokes a train-wide chanting cry
when we try
to close the window.
The ventilated Train-Wash.

8:00-9:00pm
Just as I found comfort and the perfect scheme
to be friendly, to be me
all co-seat-dwellers exit our fair train.
Mathura Junction is their stop.
Spaces quickly turn-over
company changes face and name
forcing me to re-plot and wait
to share my cookies.

9:00-10:00pm
First attempt failed
all the coconut treats still mine.
But I have time.
When the hoarse voiced chai-walla comes 'round
he brings me success:
I produce the cookies
and the Indian chaps've got the rest.

10:00-11:00pm
 A photo-shoot requested
by new, live, Facebook friends
professing the Internet is perfect
for linking people 'round the world, both ends.
With the train's REAL late arrival
my eyes are tired...
but my smile still sends.

11:59pm (seriously, to the minute)
this Princess of Endless Journeys
is back at the Prince Palace Hotel,
the nick of time
to avoid turning into a squash of some kind... 


as I'm sure you can assume these were actually finished/posted the next day but let's just pretend I had the capacity to do it all in 24 hours.

And, of course, photo-proof of the Taj-visit (with many MANY others poses too):
Lyndia & SpongeBob storm the Taj

The Silly-Face from "Hours 1-2pm"

photos and poetry property of LyndiaP April 2011

March 31, 2011

Stories

After a long drive from Almora to Dehradun (13.5 hours to be exact) I had many ideas for "blog posts" and "stories" but I am having a very difficult time trying to figure out which is which and what will be what.

One really great one in my mind's blog post category (from Amritsar actually) has now become much longer than the length suitable for a respectable post and it's more of a short story. Sadly, I do not (as of yet) have a venue for said stories and so will be writing them down without a definite home for them. My point though is that I don't want to write about it on the blog in a half-hearted way and spoil the story. Make sense?

So this is kind of like an apology of sorts... I have a few great stories to tell you but really don't feel like

a) the blog is the right place for them
b) I have time to finish/polish/type them to share yet
c) I want to make two versions of all these adventures since then I wouldn't actually have time for more adventures/reflections.

Why am I telling you all this now? Well... on the Almora trip there were at least three new adventures that I started to write in my journal, then lo and behold! They all turned into stories. Sorry.

What I WILL say about the trip was that it was really great to spend time with some of the boys (and two girls) from Tata House and Oberoi House who I didn't know before. AND to be able to travel to a new and slightly remote part of Uttarakhand to see some breathtakingly beautiful scenes and some amazing people passionately working to make their lives better (with the help of other amazing, passionate people who are selflessly working to ensure that first set of wonderful people can get the support, training and encouragement they need. USNPSS is quite the organization and I KNOW I will be taking a great deal from this trip towards my future endevours.)

p.s. I also have some GREAT pictures!! But  you will have to see me in person for those.

March 29, 2011

One step forward...

...two steps back... towards the Indo-Pakistan border. The rest of the trip is planned (and train tickets are booked/paid-for/planned/scheduled). From here on out no more "big" decisions to make... well not about what place to experience. And NO "one-day-per-city" stops*. I am so excited!

Here's the run down for anyone singing along or placing bets:

- three days in a village of the Almora-region of Uttarakhand for a social service project. (I am currently there but pre-wrote this since there is definitely no Internet here)
- five days in Jammu and Kashmir (Jammu) for a Goddess-related festival (this is in the Pakistan direction again)
- seven days in Dharamsala (at least three of which I intend to have in silence)
- three days in Delhi (then off to Germany!)

So there you have it. No, there I have it. I can't believe it's already down to the last four or so weeks of my trip. I also can't believe that I think four weeks seems like very little time, most times four weeks is an amazing length of holiday time! :)


*I am still asking The question - to Agra or not to Agra? (which, for anyone not fluent in Wonders-of-the-World-associated-with-geographic-location, means the Taj Mahal. I've had VERY mixed reviews about it. AND I don't want to do the ultra-touristy things - but I will be in Delhi and the Golden Temple WAS breath-taking and I love it... plus I've only ever been awe-struck by things like the Eiffle Tower, Great Wall, Coliseum, Panama Canal (Miaflores) and the Blue Mosque... ah well I have three and a half weeks to decide. Com'on Flow! I'm going where ever you take me!

March 23, 2011

SUPER AmritS(T)AR

Yes, it is actually Amritsar but for some reason (and far too long) I referred to it (mentally, verbally and awkwardly) as Am-rit-star... nope. I might as well call Canada something like Ken-add-aye. Anyways my Amritsari experience has been so awesome I'll never pronounce it incorrectly again!

Seriously the only bad thing (which may have more to do with Mother Nature than the city) has been the excessive amount of mosquitoe bites I've gotten... in one night while I was sleeping* I got at least 12. And I know I was sleeping because the little devil bumps of swollen itchy-ness are in practical places like between my toes, on the sole of my foot, THREE on one elbow, on the back of EACH hand and on the knuckle of my right index finger. Yes, I have an itemized list!

What makes it a Super Star? Well for one I stumbled across one of the best hotels of all (which was even recommended in my Lonely Planet guide I left at home - see how good my instincts are?!) and have had a great time with Hotel Grace as my home base. It's only a few blocks* from the Golden Temple, they are well connected for info and tours and the like and I AM EATING LIKE A QUEEN AN ARMY OF QUEENS!

*the concept of blocks does not really exist here but it's the easiest way for me to describe. I doubt the more accurate descriptions of "five cows" or "18 souveiner shops" will paint a very exact picture.

Since I am feeling a bit tired after all my adventures today (and, honestly, I was just invited for an Indian whiskey so that trumps extended blogging, sorry folks).

March 21, 2011

And for my next trick, I mean trip...

Today is Monday. March 21st. I say this for myself and to acknowledge, for the first time that my blog-timing is a bit confused. Sometimes I am posting for "today" in Canada and sometimes I am posting for "today" in India. TODAY I did both. One post for Canada-today (Holi) and one post for India-today (travel plans). In the future when these are read there will be no confusion, but for today... confuse away! (Well, only to me).

I digress...

But I do want to announce my next travel plans today... Canada-today. I am going to be boarding my first India Railways train (originally in 3rd Class A/C but now half the journey will be in First Class... long story)! When you in Canada read this I will already be on the train and half-way through my re-location. Tonight (of India-today) I'm on the Express Dehradun-Amritsar. I will be spending three days in the Punjab state.

What is in Amritsar you might be wondering... well I am too - that's why I'm going. But I'm also looking forward to seeing the exquisite Sikh monument The Golden Temple. I read somewhere that it rivals the Taj Mahal. And then there's museums about the Punjab history and Sikhism that are sure to be informative and interesting. Of course the cuisine: I've got to eat some Punjab foods (close proximity within the Old City).

Another stop on most Amristar-tourists' lists? The Indo-Pakistan border! Apparently they have a bit of a show with the changing of the guards and a formal gesture of peaceful greeting between one sides guards and the other.

Mostly I am just eager to get out on my own for a couple days and see what another state of India is like. This may not QUITE fit in my "in-depth" and "meaningful" intention of Lyndia's India but as if I wasn't going to mention ANYTHING about it. I hope to give another update soon after my return, but there may be limited time as I will be off on another adventure the day after... Doon social-service project in west Uttakarhand.

One excursion at a time Lyndia. One excursion at a time. Don't forget about The Moment. Don't forget to Go-With-the-Flow.

March 18, 2011

F.R.I. on Fri

I went to my first museum in India today: the F.R.I. on Fri(day). I like it.

The F.R.I. has some beautiful natural sculptural works (that you aren't supposed to take pictures of) that they label as diseases with latin names - trees, fungi, bugs... but it does make sense since the Forestry Research Institute is just covering their mandate.
Natural Sculpture on display
 The shapes and textures and colours... were amazing!

This beautiful area and stupendous building (not only a museum but a large campus with a few different schools and a University that has M.Sc and Ph.D. programs in forestry and environmental sciences) were a great early afternoon adventure!

F.R.I. building (one of three wings)

Fuls (Hindi for flower) in the garden posing for a picture
Fools (English for those who wear goggles*) posing for a picture
(*note: googles are the Hin-glish name for Sunglasses)
 It was already well over 23C degrees at 10:30am when we started our adventure to the F.R.I. but that didn't stop me! Oh no! I was definitely going to see the uhh... at that time I did not actually know what the place was called... uh... the... um... National Forestry... something... say "Department" was the only way I could help poor Banita as she asked for directions. But in our defense it seemed that two of the five guys who could indicate our course of travel thought it was called the F.I.R. and one of them had no clue what we were talking about (and we were less than 1 km away from the place).

NWFP = Non-wood forestry Products
What did I learn today? Well... there is a lot of great information, beautiful design and important history associated with the forests in India and, by default all over the world. As one sign I saw yesterday said "a Tree is an International Smile." Awww. But really, after seeing the "Social Forestry Museum" and the vast array of non-wood products I hadn't even considered when I thought of forests... I was amazed!

I think this poster says it best...

word.


March 16, 2011

St. Patrick's Day at the Hill Station

Ambassador

Helpful signposts

Hill Station view

The Library (aka. bazaar)

The Mall (aka. Main Street)
This and next year's Saint Patrick Days will be unique. This year will be celebrated with the least amount of fanfare possible. Ever. No green beer. No "Kiss Me I'm Irish" t-shirts. No four leaf clovers. No jigs or drinking songs.

I am frightfully sure that next year will more than make up for it. I'm sure I will be shocked.

However, today I am just waiting for an Ambassador (hopefully white!) to take me up to the Hill Station. How much more British Raj can it get? I will stop for tea and hope to brush up on my accent at the very least. Maybe I should also find a white safari hat and suit and ivory walking cane to tour around with? I think St. George* might be the closest I come to celebrating any Saints today...

Mussoorie here I come!
Former misunderstandings, busted:
NOT Missouri, USA
NOT a restaurant in Dehradun.

Fast facts I just armed myself with:
Altitude 1880m,
aka Queen of the Hills,
snow-ranges to the North East and the Doon Valley in the South.

In 1832 was intended to be the termination point of the great Survey of India to set up a new office for the Surveyor General (not the Surgeon General...)

The name Mussoorie is attributed to a derivation of 'mansoor', an indigenous shrub. As of 2001, there are about 26,000 people living there.

*Home to Woodstock (school) and St. George's college.

Camel's Back road is a point of interest along with Bhatta Falls, Nag Devta temple to Snake-God Shiva, the Municipal Gardens, the Library Bazaar and Sir George Everest's house (yes, the mountain was named after THIS Everest).

And the town is also home to India's largest roller skating rink.

March 14, 2011

Week off...from Vacation?

So this is Mid-Terms week at Doon School... and that means no classes. I am doing a bit more social service work but mostly art and trying to plan a few tourist-y portions of my India Adventure.

I have several exciting places to ponder but have no definite plans yet. Well, I guess that's a lie. I do have one train ticket booked, but I will save that for another Blog post (it's a solo-excursion for a few days next week). However, I am still enjoying things in Dehradun! Yesterday I managed to replace my alarm clock and this new one is definitely an upgrade! It has 9 different tones to choose from for the alarm sound, lights up and has a timer and thermometer - which means I can now tell you that's it has officially reached 30C degrees here (since when I got the clock back home it was 29.5C and that was already after 5pm).
Yes, it even has a "Birthday Reminder"

Back to trip planning for the post-April 11th (and then off to a day/residential program for children who are differently-abled for social service today).

Oh and on Sunday March 20th it's Holi. For those of you who kinda know... it's the festival of colour! Sounds like a good time :)

March 11, 2011

The Urge to Plan

As I am trying to practice contentment and living in the present moment AND going with the flow... I am feeling an overwhelming urge to PLAN SOMETHING. Oh no. Not now... There have been lots of intersting events going on in and around Doon and I have been having both fun and inspiring experiences - for which I am truly grateful but the last two days have started to sound like a ticking clock and I feel I should be "Making Plans" for the rest of my time here in India (1 month and 7 days to be precise).

I am no longer so sure I will be making it all the way out to Bodh Gaya on this trip as I have come across and been accepted to a different Silence Meditation course that is both closer to Delhi/Dehradun and will be a habitable temperature at the time of said course. The fact came to me that in Bodh Gaya around the beginning of April it can be will be HOT. We are talking a minimum of 27 degrees Celcius and highs more like the mid 40s. I have faith in my ability to be silent for 10 days... but not to spend 10 days in plus 43 degree temperatures. No. No thank-you. So this other retreat (which also allows for laying meditation, walking meditation and some silent morning yoga - none of which were permitted in the Bodh Gaya one) it is! As it turns out the Doon School is also going (for the four days prior) to work in a small village in the exact same area of Nainital! Coincidence?

Best part of it all is that the organization that Doon will be working with is AMAZING and I am just starting to learn more about some of the amazing and truly inspirational work they have done in fostering community, supporting women and educating children through their Badwali program (more about that later). Anyway, it is totally the kind of thing I'd like to see first hand and OF COURSE be able to help out with!

So maybe I'll just stick around here a little while longer and join in on these other projects in different areas of Uttakahand and plan two or three mini-trips (i.e. Agra, Delhi, Corbett Park) and then leave March alone. Ironically/coincidently/appropriately my alarm clock also broke last night. I take it as a sign to give up on the over-planning and go with the flow.

February 27, 2011

a slightly famous Ashram

Here is a bit of a famous place - even if you don't know it you could guess why - play the game and follow the little journey we had this weekend.
Last Open to the public in 1988. Now? 50 Rupees at the Gate

Impromptu guide. What a Character! But not Maharishi Mahesh Yogi

Meditation Dome once home to some famous Bugs? 

There were hundreds and they had GREAT acoustics

Formerly the Main Yoga Hall... bit of a fixer-upper - but the ceiling tiles look like an inspiration for an Album of the same colour...

the LEVITATION Hall for Transcendental Meditation (we are all amazed!)

Old Water Towers on the Apartment complexes. I DID climb up but had my camera with me... (also great acoustics!)

Now do you know why this is a famous Ashram?
If you have no idea... click here - Wikipedia will explain it to you.