Well we have had a busy few days, sometimes we have felt
like we are winning but other times India has nearly beaten us.
We had a few more days in Mumbai, and as much as I love that
city it is almost impossible to get anything done. We originally planned to get
the boat to the ‘Elephanta’ caves one day but as we got to the place to get the
boat from we discovered that there was an army day and it was closed that day.
There has been various times we have wanted an item that we have seen in many
shops and places before but as soon as we decide we need it then magically all
the places seem to disappear. We were also sent on a goose chase from the train
ticket booking office to get photocopies of our passports which took about 40
minutes to find a photocopy shop, and when we returned to the ticket office
with photocopies in hand the guy said he didn’t need them….im sure they had a
great time laughing at the silly tourists running around.
We did manage to get a few bits done though, and did return
2 days later to the ‘Elephanta’ caves. This was recommended as a must do in
Mumbai and although the caves were impressive with giant statues of the hindu
gods carved into the walls, the whole 200 steps and path leading to the cave
was surrounded on both sides by souvenir stalls, which kind of took away the
magic of the place. I know nothing says that you have visited a beautiful
historical site like a carved wooden snake but the plastic ‘ben 10’ water
pistols were a bit far.
We also went to visit the lovely Raju and Shilpa Ram, who
have a project in Mumbai called ‘Way True Life’ which is funded by the
Ashtead/Leatherhead based charity Rianna’s Fund. Way True Life have set up a
children’s home, a slum pre school and education project, a tailoring programme
for girls who are ‘rag pickers’ (people who sort through rubbish and collect
plastics and other items they can sell on for recycling) to enable them to
learn a skill so they can have a better vocation, and other outreach programmes
across the slums. Raju and Shilpa met us and took us to visit the pre school and
the tailoring project. The room was a small hut, about 2 by 5 metres but they
managed to get quite a few children in, and the children recited numbers and
the alphabet in English and were given chalk boards to practice writing. Jonno
did not do very well in the lesson, and instead of concentrating on the teacher
he was getting distracted by the naughty village boys hanging around the door.
Shameful behaviour Jonno! Way True Life is an amazing project though and Raju
and Shilpa are the nicest people you could meet and are so passionate about
what they do, so it was lovely to be able to go and visit them on our trip.
Our time in Mumbai was ending, and we had got tickets for an
overnight sleeper train from Mumbai to Goa. Booking a train journey is not as
simple as in England though, where you book a ticket and get on the train.
Trains in India can be booked and cancelled at short notice without charge, so
they have invented the wonderful ‘Waitlist’ system in which you can book a
train but not actually have a ticket unless someone else cancels, which might
or might not happen the day before or the day of the journey. We had booked a
train to Goa before we left England, but Jonno was put on Waitlist 1 (so if one
person cancels he has a space) and only found out that he had got a confirmed
place a few hours before the train was due to leave. We had to try and get back
from the city centre to our hotel to collect our bags to get back to the main
train station to get a train to the station where the sleeper train left.
Mission begun: many taxi drivers either
refused to take us to the hotel or wanted to charge us a lot of money as it was
rush hour, so we had to start walking, and did eventually manage to find a taxi
that would do it and use the taxi meter. But yes it was rush hour and we had to
drive through the area of the biggest marketplace in Mumbai, so it wasn’t a
quick journey. After collecting our bags and finding a taxi to negotiate us
back through the rush hour traffic to one of the central main stations, we got
into the station to find that all the signs and announcements were in Hindi, so
there was a bit more panic and darting from platform to platform to find the
right train. We boarded the train, and were lucky that the train started from
that station so we had seats and tucked our bags under the seats. However, as
we went through the first few stations more and more people got on until it
became the typical heaving Indian train, Jonno and I started to give each other
nervous looks. How were we going to negotiate getting ourselves and all of our
bags through the mass of bodies to the exit when it was our stop and the train
only stops at the station for 10 seconds? For a few more stops we prayed that
lots of people would get off before our stop and when that did not work we had
to talk tactics.
The only real tactic we came up with was to start getting
ready the stop before and when the time comes- we push. So that’s what we did,
and luckily we were successful. The other Indian passengers on the train were
so helpful and even helped us put our bags on before leaving the train, which
gave us a fighting chance. Once we had got to the station where we were getting
the sleeper train we had 45 minutes to spare, which we had planned to use to
get some drinks and a few snacks for the train, and generally relax. The only
thing we had to do first was get a ticket printed that had our confirmed ticket
status on, so we walked up the platform in search of the ticket office. The
first office we found the man behind the counter told us the train would be on
platform 6 or 7, but did not seem to know where we could get our ticket
printed. We went up to a few information desks who pointed us in the direction
of another ticket office, who did not know what to do either but suggested
there was a different ticket office on the first floor we could try. The time
was ticking and we were frantically running up and down the station looking for
this other ticket office with all our bags piled on us. We found the first
floor ticket office who told us we did not need another ticket to be printed,
so all our efforts were fruitless. The next issue was finding out the platform
number, which nobody knew and there were no announcements or boards with any information.
It was at this point Jonno exclaimed-‘ I am done with this country!’ So I sat
him down with the bags and found a nice old Indian couple with suitcases who
told me they were going to Goa too, so we followed them which was lucky because
the platform changed last minute. The train was delayed by an hour after all of
that, and with one final sprint to the other end of the train to find our
carriage, we were on.
The train journey itself was relatively uneventful apart
from the fact that I have developed a heavy cold so did not get much sleep at
all, and I felt sorry for the other people in the carriage having to put up
with a whole night of coughing and sneezing. We got to Goa with an area in mind
but no accommodation booked, and thankfully the second set of beach huts we
asked had a room free. So here we are in Goa which feels like a completely
different world to Mumbai, the crazy traffic and horn beeping replaced (mostly)
by the sound of the waves and the crowds of people replaced by tourists sitting
on the beach or in cafes by the beach. Just a shame I don’t feel well enough to
appreciate the beach right now. I am surrounded by tissues, breaking out into
coughing fits and jonno is sleeping…..yet again! How that boy does it I don’t
know!
It all sounds frantic but fun. Remember to stay safe guys. X
ReplyDeleteLol! You have to laugh or else you'll cry and come home! Atleast you can write about your experiences and see the funny sides in all of this... plus it makes for great reading material. Keep it up guys! X
ReplyDeleteAh, makes me miss India. I hope you obeyed the rules and did not spit on the floors, walls or windows! So pleased you got to see Raju and Shilpa and the wonderful children crammed in to that Nursery school. Sunshine, some very cheap massages and a bit of yoga will sort out that cold!. Love to you both. Mumtaz Muva xxx
ReplyDeleteGlad to see you are both safe in Goa but bad news about your cold, Diana, I hope you are well soon. Keep up the blog, it's become my bedtime reading now. Love, Dad xxx
ReplyDelete