Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Tale From Before The Trip

My stomach had been hurting for a few days and I thought it was just some digestion problem until a doctor came over for dinner. He casually said that I could have some sort of worm or parasite in my stomach, no big deal. He was so shockingly calm about it saying how his family did a three-day course of some worm-killer every couple of months. Personally, I was freaked out by the thought of worms in my tummy, so I took the medicine and said bye bye to the nasty thing. 

But by no means was that the end of my bug trauma. The very next night i couldn't go to sleep so I was stretching, hoping to release some serotonin and my knee hurt more than it should, so I investigated. I removed my comfy sleeping pants and shook them; out fell a big black two-inch-long centipede (or something related). Aghhh the way it slithered back into my pillow with those pincers and legs totally gave me the creepy-crawlies. Completely freaked out at this point, I knew I would never go in that room again as long as it was possible the creep was in there so between itching and rubbing some Anti-bite stuff on my poor knee I spastically shook the bed covers and took apart the mattresses. I was hard-pressed not to scream at the top of my lungs. Finally after a half hour of building up the courage to search through my various bed parts (it was three in the morning by now) I found the little bugger and trapped it under three layers of tupperware and made sure it wasn't going anywhere before sleeping on the couch, still itching. This was three weeks ago and I am probably being melodramatic, but I still haven't gotten over it. Definitely a downfall of India... bugs. Thank God there aren't cockroaches in this house or I would totally lose it. 

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Gone on a South India tour
Back in two weeks
Happy Thanksgiving!!

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Ooty

I was worried at the beginning of our little trip to Ooty because it was pouring cyclone rain again and was worried about the possibilities of a dirt road. Luckily, the rain didn't last long and the road was nicely paved with beautiful scenery and monkeys on the railing waiting for food remnants to be thrown their way. I was fascinated by the exotic trees and mountain shapes out the window, but also very aware of speeding around the hairpin bends recklessly. We drove through a collection of towns called Coonoor, which was my first sighting of these amazing areas. The towns were composed of small houses painted all kinds of vibrant colors, and were nestled in the hills surrounded by agriculture. There were squares and rectangles of every kind of vegetable or tea you could think of, arranged in tiers flowing down the hills. It was quite spectacular to see so many shades of one color ranging from yellow to emerald to sage to brown and everything in between.

Our destination town, Ooty, was more of a city than I expected. It was spread over the tops of a few hills and stretched far far back on muddy potholed roads which of course we explored during our one day stay. The beginning of the winter season here was made very apparent in the high hills, and I almost froze with three layers and a blanket. This is the part where I regret not bringing at least a little fleece. I got a nice sweatshirt with PUMA written all across the chest, as did my little bro, and we became the Puma team (sometimes pronounced peuma). There's not much to tell about the city other than, like Coonoor, it was made of small very colorful houses and was surrounded on all sides by acres and acres of vegetable farms.

The drive back to Coimbatore gets first place for the most terrifying drives of my life. We left just as it was getting dark so we were driving down this windy road in the dark which shouldn't have happened in the first place. The longest stretch of straight road was about fifty feet, and we averaged 30 mph around hairpin bends and all. The oncoming buses and trucks were less of a problem compared to passing them on this road because the entire car had to be on the outer edge of the lane going the opposite direction and just pray that no one would come into that lane before you passed the bus. Everyone in India drives with their brights on at night, and Pa, the driver, had to wear sunglasses in order to reduce the glare. I also was wearing sunglasses and was still blinded by the oncoming bus' brights. The motorcycles were the craziest to be on that road I thought, because they just flew down passing everyone and were hard to see. Indeed, about halfway down we had to come to a sudden complete stop because two of the enormous busses were trying to pass each other on the thin road. Unfortunately the moto behind us didn't stop fast enough. After crashing into our car they ended up in the ditch on the side of the road. I was sure that we would slam into one of the brick walls or fall off the unprotected bridges, but thank God we made it down alive. My right hand made REAAAAL good friends with the "Oh shit" handle. I thought we were cool and daring speeding down Independence Pass at 50 mph, but now that seems like baby stuff. For those of you in the Roaring Fork Valley I guess it would be like the pass but with hairpin bends so close together you can't even hardly straighten your car, half blinded by the brights of buses and cars. All I can say is I'm happy it was a good road. Any potholes and we would have been through the roof in seconds.

The Festival of Lights

Deewali (pronounced Deevahlee and spelled any number of ways) has been THE thing I've been told to look forward to most since day one in India. It goes for roughly 10 days, depending on who you talk to, and is a time to celebrate with family and exchange sweets and chocolates and light fireworks. Each house has literally piles of boxes of sweets on their kitchen tables just waiting to be eaten. All workers get paid a bonus- usually of about one month's salary- and most go back to their villages and celebrate with their families for a few days. The whole country basically shuts down for that Thursday through Sunday.

We went to a few Diwali parties, and my favorite was last night where I lit a string of 5,000 crackers. We had a ton of fireworks which we have been setting off for 4 days- SO much fun! After each time my night vision is permanently damaged and my ear drums need at least 2 days to recover. The sweets have been the biggest problem because they have finally achieved what I promised myself wouldn't happen- the gaining of the Exchange Student 15. They are so yummy though!