The purpose of going to Haridwar was to see the Ganga river arthi that took place there. It's at the higher, cleaner part of the river, and throughout the entire day you can see people dunking themselves. I can't even begin to explain how great it felt to touch water again, because rivers don't really exist in the South. Julia and I bought straw baskets filled with flowers, incense, and a lamp to float down the river when it came time. At six thirty there was a relatively large crowd around the section of river which they do the arthi. There was a man every twenty feet yelling prayers about the Ganga, although to us it just sounded like we were being scolded in Hindi. Then, they spent ten minutes collecting donations before they let us light the candle and incense and put our baskets in the river. It was so beautiful to see all the floating lights, but also kind of crazy. Everything was loud and confusing because there were people everywhere shoving things into our faces and asking for money and it was just a circus! The main thing is everyone wanted money. Haridwar is a touristy place, and where there are tourists there are beggars. It was unfortunate and sad, but it's a total Catch-22. Do we want to be the stingy foreigners, or the people who get taken advantage of? And then if we give money to one person there will be a swarm around us two seconds later. So we went back to the hotel with our pockets considerably lighter.
Rishikesh was the place I was looking forward to most on the entire trip, because I would get to be in a river again! I was expecting the raft guide to bring us on some lame rapidless stretch of river, but I was pleasantly surprised to find enormous waves and tons of cold splashing! The river is probably 30 feet wide and 30 meters deep, which means there weren't any rocks or obstacles to avoid. It was just 20 foot waves and screams of laughter. Towards the end we got to float in the Ganga for a while with our huge life vests and goofy-looking helmets. The water was moving really fast so it was easy to get away from the boat, and also freezing cold. I have to admit that I was worried about a skeleton hand reaching up and pulling me under forever, but thankfully our trip was dead body-free. At the take-out we cliff jumped 15 feet into the freezing holy river. I keep telling everyone here about how much I miss the Punchbowl and other adrenaline-creating things, so true to form I climbed up to the top of the cliff and showed all the other scardies how it was done. Unfortunately, at the end we opened up the dry bag and my poor camera came out covered in soggy cookies and completely water-logged. Major Bummer. But still a fantastic day, and a fantastic trip.
Rishikesh was the place I was looking forward to most on the entire trip, because I would get to be in a river again! I was expecting the raft guide to bring us on some lame rapidless stretch of river, but I was pleasantly surprised to find enormous waves and tons of cold splashing! The river is probably 30 feet wide and 30 meters deep, which means there weren't any rocks or obstacles to avoid. It was just 20 foot waves and screams of laughter. Towards the end we got to float in the Ganga for a while with our huge life vests and goofy-looking helmets. The water was moving really fast so it was easy to get away from the boat, and also freezing cold. I have to admit that I was worried about a skeleton hand reaching up and pulling me under forever, but thankfully our trip was dead body-free. At the take-out we cliff jumped 15 feet into the freezing holy river. I keep telling everyone here about how much I miss the Punchbowl and other adrenaline-creating things, so true to form I climbed up to the top of the cliff and showed all the other scardies how it was done. Unfortunately, at the end we opened up the dry bag and my poor camera came out covered in soggy cookies and completely water-logged. Major Bummer. But still a fantastic day, and a fantastic trip.