Delhi and Agra
After our hectic ride across the city to our hostel, we
exchanged some money and hit the town.
We got in around 2pm so we had some time to kill. First order of business food!!! We’ve been eating Kyrgyz food for the past 8
months and it is not the best… Truthfully probably the worst food out of the
countries I’ve been too. We were all
stoked to get to India and largely just for the food. We found some random restaurant and were
blown away. We had low expectations
going in. The first day we met up with
one of Kara’s friend’s from back home who is now working in Mumbai and one of
her local friends. We spend the day
visiting a couple of temples and taking it easy. That night we headed to one of the nicer
parts of town and had some rooftop drinks and enjoyed our first night out of
Kyrgyzstan. The stomach problems began
the next morning. 2 out of the 6 of us
were not feeling up to par the next morning.
Becca headed off on her own to explore, she had quite the list of things
to see and do and the rest of us were not feeling up to that level of
dedication on day 1. Drake, David and I
headed out to see the fort and whatever else the day had in store for us.
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The Delhi traffic... it just don't make no sense |
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The crew at a Hindu temple |
Turned out the day had a lot in store for us. Unfortunately it is very hard to ask someone
for directions and get an honest helpful answer in Delhi. We were attempting to walk a little ways to
our destination and upon asking for some clarifying directions someone says
follow me I will take you to a place and they can help you. He lured us in with his personality. We ended up following him 10 minutes to some
tourist center that just wanted to sell us stuff. When we finally procured a
map and figured out where we were he had taken us the complete opposite direction
of where we were trying to go… After we
headed to the metro station and got to the closest stop near the fort. When we first stepped on to the metro
something was strange… it was all women.
3 ignorant American guys stepped into the ladies only car of the
metro. We quickly realized our mistake
and went to the more crowed general seating area.
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Running around in the Delhi Traffic |
We got off at our stopped and were quickly swarmed by
numerous bike wielding rickshaw drivers.
Our first order of business was finding David a belt. We found a bazaar area and a belt, the whole
time being followed by a fellow I’ll call Rick for now on. Rick originally told us we wouldn’t even find
belts here, we showed him. After Ricks
pursuit of us and following us for probably 20 minutes we finally agreed to let
him pedal us around but made it very clear we would pay 30 rupees and no more.
He agreed and we headed off to the fort.
Being the smallest out of the 3 I got the please of sitting on the back
of the bike cart thing, and to say the least me getting onto the back was not
my smoothest move. At one point I
attempted to climb over the front and slide down in which gave everyone on the
street watching this white kid try and sit on bike cart a good laugh. One guy even came up to me and simply says,
“You are awesome.” I like to pretend it
was not entirely sarcastic but I know better.
So Rick takes us through some sketchy alleys, busy streets and
maneuvering through traffic on his little bike to the red fort. He tells us, he will wait for us no problem,
take your time. In my mind I am thinking
well we are going to have to pay more, but we never talked more about it. We explored the fort and he then took us to a
mosque. After this we made a stop by
McDonalds and then it was time to head back to meet up with our group so we
could catch our next train. We asked
Rick to take us straight to the metro station and nowhere else. During this
time he was asking how he did all day, and if we enjoyed our time, he was
setting up the price negotiation. During
this time he also took it upon himself to take us the wrong way to his friend’s
scarf shop. We explicitly told him not
to take us but he did anyways. Now it
got awkward. He stopped at the shop and
told us to go look, we said No, and told him to go now. He kept trying to get us to go look. We were pretty annoyed at this point and he
was too so it was mutual. When he
finally left he took us to the metro station.
We had now been with Rick for almost 4 hours and not once after saying
we’d pay him 30 rupees talked about the price.
This was set up to be a mess.
When we stopped there was tension in the air. We initially offered a small amount more, and
he said no way. We then asked him what
he would charge us, and he mention 200 a piece.
We laughed in his face. For that
price we could have gotten a taxi to drive around all day. We told him we’d give him 100. He was not happy, he talked with some other
biker guys around him and not one of them came to his defense or said anything
to us. We paid him and left. In retrospect we should have paid the guy a
little more. It was both of our faults
for not talking about during the day, and it was pretty lame for him to take us
out of the way to places when we explicitly told him we were running late and
needed to get back. After feeling kind
of bad about ourselves we got back to the hostel and met up with everyone.
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Rick... |
Off to Agra.
We head over to the train station and with no problem find
our train and it was even on time. After
a 3-4 hour ride we got to Agra. It was
pretty late when we got in and we headed straight to our hotel for the
night. Our hotel was in a great location
within walking distance of the Taj. Our
friends had all recommend that we get up early and go see the Taj at sunrise
before it gets real busy. Sounded great
and a couple of people we met at our hotel had the same idea. We got way too early the next morning and
headed out. Turns out the entrance we
stayed really close to did not sell tickets and you had to walk 15 minutes in
the opposite direction so we headed to another entrance all together. We got through the security and were off to
see a wonder of the world! Except we
couldn’t see it… The mixture of fog and
pollution meant we had zero visibility when we first arrived. It was a bust. It was very quiet, peaceful, and not crowded
when we got there so that part was a success.
We took our time and checked out some military museum and some other
museum with old pictures of the Taj. We
were trying to kill time so the fog would clear up a little bit. Fortunately it did clear up a good little
bit. We got our stereotypical pictures
with the Taj Mahal then headed out for some breakfast.
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There it is! |
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Kara and I on the Princess Diana bench, the Taj is in the background! |
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The Crew in front of the Taj, you can even see it now! |
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We found this guy in the airport, he made the rounds. |
After the Taj we headed to Agra Fort. Agra Fort was huge and very impressive. The red sandstone contrasted with other rooms
of white marble was truly incredible. I
hate to say it but the Taj was quite a disappointment. I think we all thought Agra Fort was just as
neat if not better than the Taj. We
spend about an hour or so running around the fort, the guys started taking
pictures large groups of locals, we all had a small photo shoot in one of the
crumbling areas of the fort. After the
fort we had time to kill and nothing to do.
By default we found a bar on a roof with a view of the Taj being blocked
by some other bigger building… Either way it was very relaxing and we got to
watch the monkey frolicking around causing trouble. One stole some person’s clothes and through
them off their roof, another snuck up on some woman that appeared to be praying
until she started yelling at it and chucking her flip-flops at it, and others
were just target practice for the kids throwing rocks at them. It seems like it would be fun to live around
monkeys, but after witnessing it forget it, squirrels are bad enough.
Overall Agra was a success even with the Fog
Mahal and my first minor round of stomach problems.
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Agra Fort |
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Agra Fort |
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Agra Fort photo shoot |
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Posing with the locals |
In part 3 this success will end, we will visit Jaipur and
then head to Mumbai!
Good Day Andrew!
ReplyDeleteSorry to bother you. My name is Ray Blakney and I am a RPCV from Mexico. I am working on a 3rd goal project with the PC regional offices and the main office in DC to try to create an online archive to keep the language training material made all over the world from getting lost. I have created a sub-section on the website my wife and I run - http://www.livelingua.com - with all the information I have been able to get to date (from over the web and sent to me directly by PC staff and PCV's). I currently have close to 100 languages with ebooks, audios and even some videos.
The next step for this project is that I am trying to get the world out about this resource so that it can not only be used by PCV's or those accepted into the Peace Corps, but also so that when people run across material that is not on the site they can send it to me and I can get it up for everybody to use. I was hoping that you could help getting the word out by putting a link on this on your site at:
http://theselflessnomad.blogspot.com/
so that people know it is there. There should be something there for almost everybody. It is all 100% free to use and share. Here is the specific page of the Peace Corps Archive:
http://www.livelingua.com/peace-corps-language-courses.php
Thanks for any help you can provide in making this 3rd goal project a success. And if anybody in your group has some old material they can scan or already have in digital form, and want to add to the archive, please don't hesitate to pass them my email. Thanks and have a great day.
Ray Blakney
blakney.ray@gmail.com