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You are here: Home : Community : Travel Writers : Disaster Dave Part3

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Travel Writers: Diary of Daring Dave Pt 3: Pamplona, Rajastan by Dave Lowe

     

Location: Jodhpur, North India

Walled, medieval and awash in blue paint, Jodhpur resembles a town in Mykonos lost in a sea of golden sand. In it’s meandering, cramped passageways, you come across turquoise veiled women leading their kohl-eyed children to the local school, wrinkled saddhus with tridents sitting under Banyan trees, packs of dogs dozing in the shade, and massive cows freely wandering about, accepting ‘donations’ from passer-bys who offer them leftover food. The occasional roaring of motorbikes tearing through the alleys is about the only indication of the time or date and you feel like many centuries have vanished.

And high above the town, perched on a cliff, is the Fort, just one in a string of defences that were built in Rajastan by the Maharaja’s to protect themselves from attack. Handprints at the spiked gates were made by all their wives who committed suicide when their husbands died in battle, and whole rooms are filled with three meter guns, swords and daggers. The whole state is rich in feudal history, some bloody, some amazing, and many of the towns there resemble something you’ve read in Arabian Nights.

Just as I was thinking what a relief the town was to anywhere I had been in India, and that the place resembled the safety and security of a clockwork Swiss village, I heard a strange rumbling and thumping approaching from up ahead of me in the alley.

Suddenly four men appeared, all wearing Metallica and Marilyn Manson t-shirts, running as fast as they could towards me, shouting and yelling blue murder. One of the pointed at me and screamed in a British accent, ‘Run man, run! You with the black shirt, run!!!!’’

And right behind them were four huge irate bulls, running as fast as they were, their heads bowed and sharp horns ready to gore.

Looking down at my shirt, I remembered the Swiss man who I had seen get his chest viciously butted by a massive steer in Varanasi because he was wearing a black T-shirt.

The alley was too narrow to avoid the enraged bulls, there were no doorways to hide in or any safe alleys to duck down into. It was run, or be trampled by the 300 kilo beasts….shoving my camera into my bag I turned and ran as fast as I could, joining the four who were now nearly out of breath, and suddenly the five of us, all dressed in black, eyes widened in acute fear, were running down the twisting blue painted alleys of Jodhpur, chased by some of the meanest angriest bulls I had ever seen, in some sort of Indian Pamplona!

We ran as fast as we could for about 300 meters; dogs howled, children screamed, and traffic stropped as we flew down the alley, desperate for somewhere to hide. Fortunately the alley widened, then split, and we were able to lose the behemoths by ducking into the courtyard of a large house that doubled as a restaurant. Panting, and wide eyed with terror, we watched with relief as the bulls thundered past, no doubt searching for other prey dressed in black.

‘This place is mad!’ said one of the four.
‘Bloody hell, ripped my jeans,’ said one of the others.

They turned out to be cousins from the UK, visiting family in Delhi and who had decided to come to Rajastan without them to escape the suffocating rules and regulations put upon them by their distant relatives. Between us there were two scraped knees, a gashed elbow and a partially twisted ankle. As we laughed off the experience, an old man shook his fist at us and yelled, ‘You should never wear black in India!’ before slamming his window shut.

India Lesson #4,502 learned…


After that introduction to Rajastan, camel trekking was next on my list, and I caught a night train to Jaislmer to start one. In my compartment traveled a French photographer with his niece, who happily flipped open his laptop to show me his latest work, an exhibition on the burning ghats in Varanasi, featuring revealing, and sometimes gruesome, scenes of peoples last moments before their bodies were reduced to ash. As we watched the slide show, a rich Indian man sleeping in the next row sat up, furiously shoved on his shoes, and pointed at the Frenchman:
‘I am disturbed!’
‘Yes, you seem to be,’ said the photographer a moment later with a laugh, looking him up and down, smirking at his enraged expression.
‘I am BEING disturbed!!!’ shouted the rich man, his gold chains jangling around his neck. He lunged towards the photographer, and poked him in the chest.
‘Turn off your machine! I sleep now!’
‘No, we are watching theez show. You can go to sleep over there, without being, how you say, DISTURBED,’
the Frenchman shouted back, waving the man off with a Parisian flick of his arms.

This set off the rich man like an open flame to a stick of dynamite. He pushed closed the laptop, dragged the Frenchman up to his feet, and began wagging his finger up at him, screaming in Hindi, while the Frenchman started an irate string of French swearing, brandishing his laptop like a shield. A pitched battle ensued, and just as I was imagining filling out a police report detailing how an Apple Power Book was used as a murder weapon, along waddled in the conductor, who pushed the men apart, snatched the rich man and the Frenchman’s tickets, scrawled new berth numbers on them, banishing them to opposite ends of the carriage, before killing the lights, sending everyone to sleep.

In Jaislmer, I left with a couple of Austrians on a pre-dawn jeep to Philoda, a village 45 kilometers away, where I was matched up with a petulant, moody camel named Raj. I was later to find out, Raj was horny as well. He tried to buck me off immediately.

‘Oh, he don’t like smell, you know, soap,’ explained the guide. ‘No worry, it will be windy soon.’

We then took off, traipsing across sand dunes, walking across rubbly cliffs, visiting remote water wells where women carried brass pots on their heads back to their villages, and others came to chat and exchange gossip. The mood was somber though, there was a drought on, the monsoons had failed, and widespread suffering was imminent.

We rested most of the middle part of the day at a dry creek bed, where we watched peacocks forage for lunch, and hawks circle the sky.

At sunset, we pitched camp on sand dunes that stretched to the Pakistani border. When we unrolled our blankets, the guide started to make strange finger motions with it.

‘Finger puppets?’ asked the unsmiling Austrian with a hint of Schwarzenegger in his accent.
‘I think he means scorpions,’ I translated.
‘Yes. Scorpions. Cobras. Snakes, Spiders.’ The guide smiled, and happily stowed away his finger.
What?!!” cried his girlfriend, a Swiss Miss look alike with shoulder length blonde pigtails.
‘Scorpions. Cobras. Snakes, Spiders,’ he repeated, making that finger gesture again.

Schwarzenegger and Swiss Miss exchanged pained looks and began rapid fire exchanges in German that flew right over the guides head like a hail of bullets.

‘Lets go up on the dunes,’ I ventured, hoping that might be less of a risky spot to sleep. So the three of us dragged our stuff to the top of the hill, and made a makeshift Bedouin tent up there, that without a roof, was perfect for watching the Milky Way spin and shooting stars streak across the sky.

At about 3 AM I woke to dead silence. Except for some weird thumping. Groans. More thumping. Louder groans. Swiss Miss sat up, her pigtails sticking out sideways Pippi Longstocking-like in the darkness. Schwarzenegger sat up too, and the pair rattled off more worried German.

‘Don’t worry,’ came the guide’s voice out of the darkness. ‘Its Raj, he likes to find new girlfriend. He will be quiet soon.’

Schwarzenegger and Swiss Miss were unconvinced, and continued to sit up, listening as the two camels bumped pelvises down below us. At least their heavy hoofs would scare away the cobras, spiders, snakes, and scorpions.

The next morning we found our guide cooking breakfast with eggs that had been left out in the sun in a box that had baked in the 120 degree heat for over a day. Was he forgetful, or was he deliberately trying to poison us? Swiss Miss and Schwarzenegger exchanged machine gun German again, and by the time the food was ready, we had our story perfectly rehearsed.

‘Sorry, in our country, we don’t eat eggs,’ said Schwarzenegger.
Swiss Miss nodded her head sagely. ‘No eggs.’
The man looked at them strangely. ‘Australia, people eat eggs. I know.’
‘AUSTRIA! We are not from Australia. Austria,’ growled Schwarzenegger.
Swiss Miss threw back her pigtails and added,’ Yes, Austria, no eggs.’ She made the sign of the cross for emphasis.
The guide turned to me, with a disappointed look on his face, eager for me to eat. I smiled and said, ‘My country, no eggs, too. Our religion.’
He shrugged and muttered some Hindi under his breath.
Turned out, the guide didn’t eat eggs either, and he gave up and tossed them to the camels. Even they wouldn’t touch them. Maybe it was against their religion, too.

(I ran into this couple again in Dharmsala, and told me when they had gotten back to their hotel in Jaislmer, they had asked that the vegetarian sandwich they had ordered be warmed up again, because though toasted, it had been sent to them stone cold. The staff smiled and took it away, and returned 15 minutes later with it, grilled, grinning broadly as they watched them dig in. When Swiss Miss got suspicious, she peeled back the bread and found pulverized cow dung mixed in with the tomatoes and onions.)

The temperature got hotter as I moved around Rajastan, and by the time I left Jaislmer, it was 40 degrees in the shade. My bus to Bikaner was scheduled to leave at 4 PM, but a breathless man came running to my room and pounded on my door: the bus was now leaving at 2.30.
It was just past 2.20.
‘How far away is the station?’ I asked calmly, as though I had been expecting it.
’20 minutes.’

The familiar head shake roll reared its head again and I threw everything into my bag and hopped into the back of the jeep that idled outside. By the time I got there, the bus was pulling away, and the jeep pulled up next to it and the driver hung out and slapped the side. The driver stopped, I hopped out, and ran around to the door.

Suddenly Annie Lennox popped her head out of the window, and screamed in a Swedish accent: ‘Don’t pay for the bags! Whatever you do, don’t pay for the bags!!!”

Annie withdrew her head and I was left standing in front of two touts, who with their turbaned heads and gold rings in their earlobes, looked like extras from Pirates of the Caribbean. They held the key to the baggage compartment and shooed Annie’s comments away with their hands, like flies, hoping for some fat baksheesh. I threw my bag in, refused to pay them any money, and asked for a receipt. They laughed ruefully, their stained teeth exposed, and said before spitting out a torrent of betal nut juice, ‘No guarantee sir! No guarantee!!’

I jumped on the bus, grateful there was a bus and not a dust cloud as it tore off towards Bikaner without me, and found my seat, but it was the one for the 4 PM bus. Turned out Annie Lennox, her sister, two Dutch travelers and a lone Turk were also supposed to be on the 4 PM bus as well, and this proved to be the challenge of the ticket collectors career…

First, he took our white tickets away, and handed us a blue one with the same seat number written on it. But then, chaos reigned as passengers for the 2.30 bus began getting on, so he reissued us with red tickets for the few empty seats remaining on the bus. He sweated profusely as he furiously scribbled new tickets, confiscated the old ones, and motioned us with his fat hairy arms.

When even more people boarded, he threw up his hands, muttered some hideous Hindi, kicked out the two scragglers sleeping on the bus’ last row, and ordered all whiteys to the back. So off the six of us went, filling the back row like some comic dreadlocks-blonde-redhead police line-up, this time without tickets at all, where the ticket collector could keep an eye on us (except for a petite Korean girl who sat near the front, who the conductor had overlooked; she sat still and catlike, looking wild eyed with terror, back at us, as though she were in some Iraqi hostage crisis).

Within 5 seconds the conversation turned towards what it always did, the can-you-believe-this-is-happening-to-us-in-India-thread that by now I was getting really tired of. But the mood quickly changed when a ticket blew out of a woman’s hand, and the ticket collector bent over to pick it up, revealing a butt crack as wide as the subcontinent. This brought the house down, with the Foreign Contingent roaring with laughter, right along with the last four rows of the bus who had seen the man’s ass up close and personal, and the mood swung towards camaraderie and friendliness all the way to Bikaner. Babies were happily loaned to sit on our laps, the Turk’s dreadlocks were admired by all, and Annie Lennox’s blonde locks were the subject of intense scrutiny by some grandmothers with gnarled hands who tugged at it to see if it was real.

A half an hour outside of Bikaner, sits the Karni Mata temple, a rodent’s Nirvana, Mecca, and Heaven all rolled into one. If you’re a rat, and you’ve won the lottery, this is Beverly Hills, too, and while most rats around the world are battled with poison, traps, and cats, these rats are sacred, so special in fact, that eating, or drinking, any food or water chewed or slurped by the rodent’s teeth and tongues is deemed to give luck and good health.

As soon as you enter the inner sanctuary of the temple, your bare feet slide across the marble floor, as dozens and dozens of scurrying rodents, their mangy tails dragging behind them, run between your feet.

The entire temple is decked out to pamper and feed these animals, and large aluminum tubs filled with milk and water are placed along the walls, where huge wet, matted furred rodents cling to the edges, their tongues furiously lapping up the free food and drink. Small holes in the walls lead to dens and burrows, and fierce fights break out all the time as the rats wake up and come out to feed. Most of them are so full of food they lie around unconscious, with women stooping to kiss the floor where the rat is sleeping, motioning for their children to do the same.

I hadn’t been at Karni Mata for more than ten minutes, taking in all these animals, when I nearly dropped my camera: a violent, involuntary shudder took over me, a massive, unstoppable attack of the willies.

‘What happens to the dead rats?’ I asked a man few minutes later when I had recovered a bit of my composure, there with his wife and two daughters. ‘You know, the ones that get old and die?”

I imagined some miniature burning ghats somewhere, like in the Frenchman’s photos from Varanasi, solely for rats, with tiny funeral pyres and midget garlands draped across their furry bodies before they were cremated. Maybe there also saddhus that rolled in the rat’s ashes, like the ones that rolled in human ashes for enlightenment.

‘Die?” the man asked, his eyes widened. ‘Oh no sir, these rats don’t die, when they get old, they disappear in a puff of smoke, and are taken straight to heaven.’

The fact that I had seen several dead rats lying in a corner didn’t seem to phase him.

’They are sleeping,’ he answered coolly, the subject closed. ‘After enjoying too much food.’

All around us squirmed, squeaked, and scurried rats that squeezed through tiny holes in the temple walls to where their dens were.

‘These rats are very special, very special indeed,’ the man went on.

‘Can you feel the power?’ he slurred, his mouth now full of betel nut, as we watched his wife bend over to pet one, revealing generous folds of fat that oozed out of her sari.

I nodded my head weakly, and resisted an urge to yell out: a rat had just run over my foot, and I froze to the spot.

‘You are blessed, my good man!’ he said, slapping my back as I stood as still as a block of marble. ‘You will be rich!’

On my last day in Rajastan, I went to a museum housed in the Majaraja’s palace, it was crammed with relics from the Maharaja’s life: photos of him posed next to his Cadillac in 1960, having dinner with Jackie Kennedy in Udiapur, and lots of photos posing next to dead elephants, tigers and rhinos he had killed.

As I walked around, looking at photos, and cabinets filled with vintage motorcycle goggles, and business cards filled in with ‘The Maharaja of Bikaner, and Member of Parliament,’ I got chills up my spine. I looked behind me, but there was no one there.

Then, I went into Room Number 13, where three carved chairs faced the deceased Maharaja’s throne. Huge portraits of the dead man looked at me from three walls. The hairs on my neck stood on end again, and suddenly one of the windows slammed shut. Only, there was no wind.

It was time to go.

 

"Disaster" Dave is travelling around India and Nepal - bringing us regular installments of his most insane adventures. Dave is a professional travel expert and regular contributors to the Pilot Guides.com travel guides, most notably guides to California, Argentina and Rio de Janeiro. He is currently working in the Maldives. Read more of his tales of bravery, daring and stupidity in Ian Wright Live's Travel Tales.

Text © Dave Lowe 2004, All Rights Reserved

 
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