Friday, September 21, 2007

Indian news #5


This is possibly the most disturbing. Not only did a witch doctor decide who was guilty, but the lynched dude wasn't even him.

Thursday, September 20, 2007

Feeling poorly?

Tents like this crop up on the side of the road here and there. Must be holy-men or something. The sign text is copied here:
Ideal treatment is given for both gents and ladies. Good treatment is given to infertile couple with sexual problems suffering from 10-20 years. Permanent relief for the patient suffering from renal disease, gastric, paralysis, jaundice and ulcer etc. Patients are successfully treated asthma, hernia, appenditis, hypertension, neurological & gynaeclogical without any side effects. [checking of pulses rs20 only]

There is a possibility he is saying that being together for 10-20 years is the cause of couples sexual problems.

A dingo stole my baby!


Keep the children away from the street dogs. Thanx to Tom.

What to do when you have a puncher

There is a little blue shack on the side of the ring road that has fascinated me for 4 weeks. Hand-painted on the wall are the words "Puncher Shop". I wondered what they punched? 4 weeks of daily travel later I finally saw a new addition to the shack - a big tyre balanced on its edge out the front with the same words painted on it. AHH A PUNCTURE SHOP. Vehicles and bikes go there to get their punctures repaired. Makes perfect sense.

There are many hilarious english spelling errors here that I have failed to record. At our previous-favourite restaurant, there is a (quite good) drink called a 'throat buster'. One assumes it is meant to mean 'thirst buster'. Otherwise it could have been a form of masala-cola. Yes such a thing exists. You can get spice-flavoured apple juice etc and the packaging is similar to the real stuff. Very horrible, very traumatising to drink if you accidentally buy it.

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Indian news #4


Yes, I always wear pants.

More news (thanks George)

Monday September 10, 2007
Ravi Shankar Singh, 46, of Hasanpur, India, has launched a campaign to stop people answering the call of nature outdoors and start using toilets. He goes out on patrol each night searching for people squatting in fields or by roadsides. When he catches someone, he shines his torch at them and lets loose with a blast on his whistle.

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Indian news #3



And now for the video

Marathalli Goes Off


People everywhere, music, dancing, yada yada yada. Awesome. We were the only white people there. The locals were fascinated by our camera's and our interest in the event. The children on the balconies kept motioning for us to come up but there is no way we could get there even if we wanted to.

The search for Ganesh pt2


So then we walked back the the theatre complex (15 mins) to find our target restaurant was not open for another 30 mins. Not trusting the post-mix at the theatre, the only place for a drink was at the Marathalli food world shop (15 mins walk). After that, it was back (15 mins) to the restaurant. After dinner it was dark so we headed back to Marathalli (15 mins). Fuck. I estimate we walked 15 kms that day. Here is a neon Ganesh over the ring road from the Innovative Multiplex.

Evidence!


Walking down a side street we found the coolest light-tunnel display I've ever seen. Watch the video. Plus a huge Ganesh. Bingo. But nothing was happening yet...

The search for Ganesh pt 1


We went for a walk on Saturday afternoon looking for evidence of Ganesh festival festivities. We started walking south along the ring road onto Sanjapur road, looking for a temple complex we knew was about 5kms down the road. Nothing happening there, we got the bus back to Marathalli.

Sunday, September 16, 2007

Human conditioning

The power goes off here quite regularly some days but people don't even seem to notice. The computers at work run off a UPS consisting off a gigantic bank of lead acid batteries in a back room. I won't even go in there. No-one comments or looks up from their work when the lights and AC switch on and off.
At lunch with 4-500 other complex employees in the food court, when the power goes off, there is absolutely NO change in the noise levels or people's behaviour. NO-ONE looks up from their conversations or even stirs. Except us white guys who can't help it EVERY time.
Amazing how our cultural conditioning is at complete opposites.

All this food for only $A8

If I hadn't bought western sweets and meals-ready-to-eat the price would have been even lower.

Friday, September 14, 2007

Home map


Map where we are living.

Indian news #2


Just amusing this time. And cute.

Indian news #1


Click on image to enlarge. Hopefully it is readable. Horrible and amusing.

Restaurants

Notes on restaurants.
Asking for water gets you the bottle presented to you like wine, where you can approve the bottle before it is opened and poured for you.
Every restaurant gives you feedback forms after dinner. Obviously all their owners have done MBAs.
They are big on mocktails here coz so many people dont drink. Some aren't very good.
The ratio of staff to customers is usually 3 or 4 to 1.
As you leave about 20 waiters ask say 'good bye sir' and ask you how the food was.

Monday, September 10, 2007

Busy Marathalli

Waiting for a bus to the city saturday morning. A little taste of the chaos that is Marathalli. (Mara village?) Despite all the poverty nearby, this area is full of brand-name shops that aren't particularly cheap.

A lesson in politeness

I find everyone is so dam polite. Especially when confronted with people doing things for you you don't expect. (see gajin factor). I've kinda learned how to be polite all over again. I feel like I have to acknowledge every little thing with a thankyou. Asking nicely with a smile gets you far here, especially when you approach people whose command of english you don't yet know.

The white-man factor #2 (gajin factor)

The security guard saluted Tom today as we walked into our apartment complex. It kinda mentally knocked him sideways and the word "jesus fucking christ" came out of his mouth quietly amongst others. That kinda thing doesn't really happen often but it is quite confronting to us Aussies. I'm still not totally comfortable getting in the back of the car for each trip. I don't want to be different (not that different - I like being driven).
When you enter shops with security guards, they often open the door for you and I'm not totally sure in all instances if they do that for locals. I don't get it. Does the guy think I expect it? Does he think something bad will happen to him if he doesn't? Does he think its his duty? I really hate it.

Wednesday, September 05, 2007

I hope they home-deliver


Just the thing to pick up with your weekly vegtables.

So many flowers



With the wedding season coming up and also the Ganesh festival, it is flower garland season. Whole floors of the market were taken up with people selling flowers and threading them onto threads to make long garlands.

Inside City Market


Inside was a warren of dark alleys and shops that ranged from flowers to mechanical parts, to picture framers to coffin makers. I loved these cones of powder - I think they are spices - that many of the sellers had. Very hard to get photos coz of the light level inside and we were a bit cautious of taking photos too openly unless we got chased for payment. This was probably an unwarranted fear though.

City Market


Tom and I took the bus from Marathalli into town. The first time we'd done so. You just hail every bus that comes past and ask if it goes to the the central bus stand. We got off somewhere in the city and walked to the city market following the signs and our noses. Pictures follow.
We didn't see any other westerners all day but strangely the people in the market either 1. ignored us and did not stare as I expected, 2. were very friendly and just asked "hello, where you from". Tom's standard response was "Australia, you know 'MCG!'". While the scene was confronting and crowded, it was actually more pleasant then being in MG Road or the tourist areas.
Here are the vegetable sellers outside the market building.

Sunday, September 02, 2007

The white-man factor

Being a foreigner seems to get you a fair bit of status here. By definition, they know you are much much richer than they are. Even if you don't flaunt your wealth like the rich Indians do, the colour of your skin is all thats required. Probably hollywood imagary of Americans also goes a long way to forming their opinions. I'm also not sure how much of it is a hangover from colonial rule. The more educated ones aren't as succeptable to white-man worship but you still get a huge amount of respect.
We are meant to show ID at our work vehicle entrance and I dont have a photo ID but when we drive in: white-man with a laptop sitting in the backseat, they don't challenge you. They *WILL* do so however for any Indian, even if he is being driven in like us. In stores where they ask bags to be checked in before entering, they never challenge white folk either. You can walk pretty much wherever you want and there is a reluctance to apply the rules to you. The poor ones sometimes call you 'boss' too. I wont get used to that.

Video trial

This is a first attempt at uploading a video. Actually this is from our city explorer afternoon that I've yet to write about. We were god-knows where in the quiet backstreets and came across this cow? and cart.

When Rome burns


When our 8 story tower at work catches fire, this is the firefighting equipment on hand. Don't panic though, they are kept pre-filled! That means its quicker to throw your four buckets of water on the fire and put it out. If thats not enough to put out a burning office block..I guess its a run off to find the nearest river...
BTW our office has no fire escape and only one entrance. :) Looks nice though.

Brigade road


This is the tourist 'centre' of Bangalore. It's absolutely horrible. Crowded, narrow, full of pushy street salesman, beggers, full of all the tourists and non-Indians of the city. Postings about our trip to find the 'real' Bangalore sometime soon.

Little temple thing


These are all over the place.

Funny traffic #3


Like sands through the hour-glass. When the traffic stops, the cars fill in all the voids between the trucks, the auto-rickshaws move to fill in all the voids between the cars and the motorbikes make their way through any gap they can find.

Auto-rickshaws (tuk tuks)


These a pretty identical to Thai tuktuks, they variably run on 2 stroke, diesel, and some lpg apparently. They are either metered or priced by negotiation. These guys will turn their engines off in stopped traffic or at traffic lights to save gas and restart them via a crank handle down on the floor on the left hand side.
When the traffic starts moving or the lights go green you get a symphony of all the auto-rickshaw driver furiously cranking their handles to get started before the traffic gets moving. The motor bikes and some vehicles do the same.

The head-wobble

Move your chin to the right, and the top of your head to the left. Now reverse and repeat quickly.
In India this interchangably means:
Yes,
Maybe,
Sorry,
Thanks,
I don't know what you are talking about.
Also used as a conversation ender. Its kinda infectious though. I caught myself doing it at McDonalds the other day. Rather embarrassing. A smile also goes a long way here and can get you out of most situations.