Grand Canyon, nature’s beauty beyond words

The official way the Grand Canyon is described is ‘a wide, deep gorge’. Though that description isn’t entirely untrue, but the Grand Canyon is much more than just that. There’s only so few words to describe something as overwhelming as the Grand Canyon. Nothing can prepare you for the true immensity and beauty of the Grand Canyon.

First impression Grand Canyon

First impression Grand Canyon

Whatever you see on any picture of the Grand Canyon, what you see in reality is infinitely more colourful, bigger, further, deeper, wilder, Grander.

Grand Canyon greatness

Grand Canyon greatness

Grand Canyon

Grand Canyon

The Grand Canyon is 446 km in length, at some points in 30 km wide and it reaches depths of almost 2 km. Standing on the rims and the lookout points, it’s not always easy to realise you’re looking down into a gorge, it feels a lot more like you’re standing on top of a mountain instead.

Grand Canyon depths

Grand Canyon depths

 

 

 

 

 

 

The large variety of colours covers the walls of the Canyon as a silent witness of millions of years of erosion. It is believed that water started to erode the rock-formation millions, perhaps even billions, of years ago. Around 17 million years ago the Colorado River started to form its way through the canyon. Today a (relatively) small strip of water down in the depths of the canyon is left of millions of years of erosion.

Grand Canyon

Grand Canyon


 

 

 
By the time you have soaked in the natural beauty of the Grand Canyon, it’s time for the grand finale: sunset. Already an hour before the sun sets the hues and colours of the rock-formations in the canyon start changing.

Grand Canyon sunset

Grand Canyon sunset


Grand Canyon sunset

Grand Canyon sunset


Grand Canyon sunset

Grand Canyon sunset


Unfortunately our stay in the Grand Canyon area was only 1 day/1 night, and the next day we had to continue our USA West Coast road trip. We’ve only seen the Grand Canyon from the top, but I’d love to follow one of the multiple-day trails down into the canyon and/or go camping and rafting in the Canyon.

 
To help plan your trip to the Grand Canyon, please visit GrandCanyon.com. If you would like more background information about Grand Canyon National Park please visit the US National Park Service website.

You can also help the Grand Canyon becoming one of the New 7 Wonders of Nature by voting for it on New7Wonders.com. On 11/11/11 the 7 Wonders of Nature will be declared.

Posted in America, Arizona, Grand Canyon, Nature, Photography, UNESCO World Heritage, USA | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Petra, rock city of the ancients

It starts with a road trip

Our trip begins early in the morning in Amman. On today’s program is one of the new seven wonders of the world, Jordan’s main tourist attraction: Petra. We leave Amman at 7am, taking into account that the drive from Amman to Petra is about 3 hours. Whatever happens we hope to be there as early as possible so we can spend as much time as we like in Petra. Also, by arriving early we hope to beat the bigger tourist crowds as well as the burning heat on the middle of the day. With rush hour coming up, leaving Amman takes quite some time. Once we leave the congested city behind our moods instantly rise, we’re going to see Petra!

Barely an hour on our way and trouble hits is. Or to be more precise, a flat tire. We’re stranded somewhere in the middle of the desert with a flat tire. Our rental car doesn’t have all the equipment needed to change a tire. With help from a trucker we manage to change the tire and we’re off to the closest garage where we’re being told two other tires need some changing too. Great. Just what we needed on a day like this. With 1,5 hour delay we continue our drive to Petra, singing along with the radio, trying to ignore anything that might indicate more car-trouble.

We have no road map of Jordan, not by choice, but simply because there is no road map (believe me, we looked everywhere). But, Petra is about 250km south of Amman and 150km north of Aqaba so we just take the King’s Highway between Amman and Aqaba and hope for the best. If there’s anything special to see/do along the way, a sign will direct you there. Otherwise just keep driving ahead.

After all, I even wonder if there’s a need for road maps. First of all it’s the desert. If there’s anything special along the way, signs will suffice. Secondly, Jordan is heavily building and developing. Amman, for instance, looks like a mash-up of a construction site and a metropolis. I can imagine there isn’t much use in printing a map that will be outdated within 12 months. And finally, of course, there’s satellite navigation, for those who really can’t live without directions.

Our exit indicates that we’re approaching the world famous rock-city Petra. After a near 2 hr drive, and one-and-a-half hour flat-tire-drama, we’re finally near one of the new seven wonders of the world. Or so we think… In reality we still need to drive almost an hour to get to the parking lot of the visitor’s center, but the views we have on our way seem promising.

Petra in sight!

Panoramic view, approaching Petra

Panoramic view, approaching Petra

An estimated 4 centuries BC, the Nabathaeans carved Petra, their capital city, almost entirely out of the enormous rocks in and around Petra. To the Nabataeans, Petra was of vital importance, as it was located along many of the Nabathaean’s most important trading routes between Egypt, Israel, Syria, Irak, Saudi-Arabia and Ethiopia.

In the early nineteenth century, a Swiss explorer rediscovered Petra, guided by a Bedouin. After this (re)discovery, Petra quickly gained fame in the west and tourism towards Petra began. In 1985 Petra was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage site, and in 2007 it was officially listed as one of the New 7 Wonders of the World.

Besides being a world famous ancient city, Petra is also a small town with busy traffic (mostly tourist coaches), narrow roads and lots of turns. Finding our way to the visitor’s center of ancient Petra isn’t hard though, it’s simply a matter of following the car/taxi/bus in front of you. 99% chance they’re going where you’re headed. We park our car at the visitors center, where we try to aim for a spot in the shade of a small tree (upon our return we discover, as expected, our efforts were in vain – thank goodness for airco).

And then… our tour in Petra finally starts!

My walk through Petra (blue line), map from Wikipedia (click for large version)

My walk through Petra (blue line), map from Wikipedia (click for large version)

The trail we follow is simple, considering we arrive at noon (hottest time of the day), I don’t think we could’ve picked an easier route to walk. Like all other visitors, we too first walk from the visitor’s center to the well known Siq, a walk that takes about 20 minutes. During this appetizer our gravel hiking path passes along some Djinn blocks (a Djinn is a magical creature of some sort in Arabic tales, much like a genie or a demon), until suddenly our path stops in front of a huge rock with a relatively narrow slit running through it.

Inside the siq

Inside the siq

The path continues through the slit, also known as the Siq. The enormous size of the rock formation makes the passage seem smaller than it is, though at some points the gorge is no more than 3 meters wide. You have to understand that the walls on both sides of the Siq are between 90 and 180 meters high, so a 3 meter wide passage does feel pretty narrow. The Siq is a natural phenomenon, created centuries (or perhaps even millenia) of water erosion. In that way the Siq bears some similarities with Antelope Canyon in Arizona, USA.

The walk through the Siq takes about one and a half kilometer of twists and turns in between these huge rocks, walking here is an expeirence in itself. Along the walls we can see the remains of what used to be the Nabathaean’s water supply system, bearing much similarities to the Roman systems. Every now and then there’s a hole carved in the side, and sometimes we pass a vague/eroded figure of a person. Towards the end of the Siq the first and famous sight of a bright, sun-lit Al Khazneh/The Treasury dooms up in front of us (this is the most famous sight of Petra (and perhaps of Jordan) that appears on all postcards, brochures etc.).

Al Khazneh, also known as the Treasury

Al Khazneh, also known as the Treasury

Al Khazneh offers every visitor a first glimpse of what Petra has to offer, and it sure is impressive to stand in front of this magnificent 45 meter tall ‘building’ (can you still call something a building if it isn’t actually ‘build’ but ‘carved’?). It’s not sure if this structure was actually used as a treasury, but many legends have been told about treasures of Egyptian pharaos being hidden here, as well as many bandits and other passers-by who would hide their loot here. True or not, the bullet holes around the Treasury indicate at least someone believed treasures were kept here.

Between Treasury and Street of Facades

Between Treasury and Street of Facades

Our main trail continues on the right side of the the Treasury, past the street of facades. The street of Facades is a row of tombs, both the tombs and the decorations are carved out of the rock.

While we’re walking past the big rocks with so many holes and decorations, I’m trying to imagine how a group of people decided about 2400 years ago to sit out there in the burning sun and to carve this out of the rocks. It must have taken them ages (literally) to carve out all these detailed and decorated tombs, theater, treasury, temples and houses. There must have been so many easier ways to build a city.

Petra

Petra

Petra

Petra

Collonnaded Street

Colonnaded Street

Our trail continues along the Colonnaded Street, past the Nymphaeum (fountain) and Great Temple. However, these are nothing but ruins. The Colonnaded Street is paved, which makes it look/feel very different that the sandy/gravel paths we’ve walked on so far, but perhaps that’s a result of the Roman influences on the Bedouins who have been living in/around Petra for all these centuries (up and until today).

At the end of the Colonnaded Street is a restaurant where we sit in the shade for a bit, while admiring the view we’ve left behind us.

View back on Petra II

View back on Petra II

Ahead in the distance some donkeys carry tourists further uphill to some of the tombs and monuments, but we decide not to follow any other trails. The outside temperature is getting too hot and we still have a long walk in the sun to go back to the car. The water in our backpack is now warm, but after a refreshing drink we’re ready to go. This time I’m amazed how long the trail is we’ve walked so far. The fact that the way back is slowly going uphill doesn’t really make it any easier for me to walk back, once we’re out of the Siq I refuse to walk back to the visitor’s center by myself. A horse saves the day, and while my feet and legs are taking a break, I sit back and enjoy these mystical surroundings.

You can find more information about visiting Petra on Petrapark.com and VisitJordan.com, both sources contain a lot of information to help you prepare your trip.

If you’d like to lean more about Petra, I’d suggest you to read Petra: The Rose-Red City written by Christian Augé and Jean-Marie Dentzer. Of course Jordan’s Lonely Planet Country Guide contains a lot of information about Petra as well as many other touristic sights in Jordan.

Posted in Amman, Aqaba, Architecture, Car, History, Jordan, Nature, Petra, Photography, Rum Valley, Transportation, UNESCO World Heritage, Walk | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Travels ahead!

Keep an eye out on my blog, the coming two weeks I’ll be visiting Istanbul and Jordan!

Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments

Casa Milà/La Pedrera

Waking up in Barcelona

A small beam of light enters my bedroom through the window shields. Outside I hear the city breathing while the rain ticks its lonesome rhythm on the aluminium chairs on the balcony. It’s a Friday morning in May and I’m waking up in Barcelona in an apartment I’ll share for a few days with about 15 friends. Most of my friends are still asleep, but luckily one of them is awake and we walk out into the city in search of breakfast.

Our apartment is located in the Gothic neighbourhood of Barcelona. Walking around the narrow alleys that magically lead to bigger squares, some with fountains others with bars and restaurants, I soon discover this is one of the few parts in the world that has it all. With about 1,6 million residents and over 5 million visitors per year, Barcelona is without a doubt a true European metropolis. However, Barcelona is in no way similar to London or Paris, where most people spend their days stressing and rushing from A to B, but it’s definitely not a quiet, boring city either. Barcelona seems to fit right in the middle with a relaxed vibe and Spanish/Catalan attitude towards life. Add the comfortable climate, the beach, cultural heritage, unique architecture, markets and shops, the wonderful food and drinks and you never want to leave. Whatever you heart desires, you will find it here.

The neighbourhood we’re in is a small scale of Barcelona’s variety. Below our apartment is Starbucks, opposite us a church that’s used for jazz concerts, and, as we discovered on an early Sunday morning, also for processions, oxcarts included. The rest of the street in front of us is filled with bars and a few shops. Somewhere between the McDonald’s and an Irish Pub is a small bakery that produces a lovely bread-smell the whole day through. A few doors down is a Kebab-joint that also sells sunglasses and flip flops. Why would you stick to selling one product when there’s a market demand for more?

After a chocolate croissant and a vanilla-cinnamon roll I take a metro from Ramblas to Diagonal where I meet up with another friend. We’re going to Casa Milà, one of many architectural outbursts of Gaudí, the man responsible for designing Barcelona’s most popular touristic attractions. His work in Barcelona includes Park Guell, Sagrada Família and Casa Milà. As part of “The works of Anton Gaudí”, Casa Milà is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The works of Anton Gaudí were added to the World Heritage list in 1984.

Casa Milà on the outside

Casa Milà on the outside

I’m not sure if it’s Gaudí’s buildings, but wherever I go in Barcelona, it feels like the city, just like Gaudí, doesn’t make any effort to live up to the existing status quo. Both the city and the architect have set their own standards for what they do – as unconventional that may be, it’s probably what makes them so interesting and attractive at the same time. If you think about it, not living up to the architectural and cultural standards of a metropolis is exactly what distinguishes Barcelona from all those other cities.

Casa Milà / La Pedrera

On the roof of Casa Mila/La Pedrera

On the roof of Casa Mila/La Pedrera

Casa Milà is also known as La Pedrera, which means The Quarry in Catalan. Building started in 1905 and finished in 1912. Because most of the building is used today we can’t visit inside, but via a normal staircase (boring) we walk up towards the roof, which is like a sci-fi landscape hovering over the city.

There is no 360-view on this rooftop, because the roof is structured like the waves of an ocean, and there are chimneys looking like Stormtroopers everywhere. Later I discover these chimneys may have inspired Star Wars for the Stormtrooper helmets after all, guess I wasn’t too far off.

Stormtrooper chimneys on top of Casa Mila

Stormtrooper chimneys on top of Casa Mila

The best thing about not having a 360 view is that you see something different wherever you are on this building. On some points you’ll see the Sagrada Família guarded construction cranes in the distance, while a few meters away you see nothing of the church. Another position will give you a peek inside one of the two patios in the building, where it becomes obvious Gaudí didn’t just express his creativity on the outside of the building. It’s impossible to spot a straight wall or two windows placed on the same height. Staring down for a moment I’m starting to wonder if I’m drunk or if this building is dancing around me. The latter is true and I’m relieved.

Windows and roof of La Pedrera

Windows and roof of La Pedrera/Casa Mila

After wandering around this strange landscape with a pretty view over the surrounding city we go back downstairs. It’s down on street level where I realise how normal the world looks after visiting the Gaudí House, everything is straight in the real world. Before we walk away I take one last look at this surreal building, still wondering if I walked out of a dream world or not.

The truth will be somewhere in the middle I guess.

Posted in Architecture, Art, Barcelona, City, Europe, Photography, Spain, UNESCO World Heritage | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Lac Rose, the journey and the destination

For pictures of Lac Rose, please scroll to the bottom of this page.

One of the best things about travelling isn’t as much the places you visit, as much as it is the journey towards those places. Wherever you go in the world, transportation is different than what you’re used to back home. Whether it’s driving your own (rental) car, riding on a train, using a taxi or trying to figure out a bus schedule; transportation is the first and continuous part of your stay abroad that constantly reminds you that you’re somewhere else. (Actually, sanitary facilities also constantly remind you you’re in a different place, but I’d rather not be reminded of that particular aspect of my travels).

As a European travelling in Senegal, using transportation is an adventure by itself. During my stay I was able to see and experience various modes of travel, sometimes feeling like a small child in a theme park, at other times feeling like a sardine stuffed in a can. Either way, it’s never been boring and thanks to the teranga (hospitality) that’s so typically Senegalese I’ve always felt safe.

On the 4th day of my stay in Dakar, my friend Yacine had planned a trip to Lac Rose, which is located about 30 km (25 miles) north-east of the Dakar peninsula. Known as Lac Rose (Pink Lake) or Lac Retba, this area is best known to the world as the finish of the (in)famous Paris-Dakar Rally. The race used to finish in a wide-spread area with sandy dunes next to the lake. However, due to safety concerns, mainly in Morocco and Mauritania, as well some other controversial issues, the race hasn’t taken place between Paris and Dakar since 2007.


View Larger Map

Getting there…

First we travel by bus to Sandaga market in the centre of Dakar. From there we take a bus Malika, on the edge of Dakar. The bus ride from Sandaga to Malika takes a while, especially because of the general busyness on the streets. Whenever we stop somewhere due to congested traffic, the windows of the bus are approached by street sellers ready to supply the passengers with anything they might need, ranging from small bags with roasted nuts to fruit, and from soft drinks to a various newspapers. The man behind me buys a newspaper and I’m intrigued by how this happens. Dakar’s street life passes by my window as a movie. There are sheep and goats on the street, as well as some children playing, women carrying baskets on their heads, people selling all types of products to anyone. The city is so warm and vibrant.

The bus is caught up in the busy traffic for a minute. A newspaper seller walks past the bus displaying his different newspapers, waving them in the air. A passenger behind me waves back. They shout a bit back and forth, judging by the pointing gestures I think they’re talking about which newspaper Mr. Bus Passenger wants to buy. A hand with the newspaper reaches toward the window, the other man hands over a few coins at the same time and the moment the paper and money are exchanged the bus pulls up and drives on. The whole deal happened so quick and smooth, I sit back in awe, wondering if it ever goes wrong and one of the two don’t meet their end of the deal before the bus pulls up. Guess it’s one of those mysterious ways you can only observe as a tourist, without ever really getting a grasp on the what and how of what you’ve just witnessed. Completely normal to locals, a complete mystery to me.

Dakar bus stop

Dakar bus stop

In Malika we get on a car rapide, probably Senegal’s best known form of transportation. There are two sorts of car rapides; colourful open minibuses and plain white minibuses. Logically, I assume that the white vans are new(er) than the coloured car rapides, and whoever drives them around simply hasn’t had the time to paint them yet. What’s logical to me seems to be the silliest and most hilarious conclusion I’ve shared with Yacine so far. After she’s done laughing, she explains that the colourful car rapides are owned and operated by one person and the white ones are shared by several people. Willing to believe her explanation, I think my idea makes more sense. The colourful ones look a lot nicer on the road as well, it simply makes the busy and vibrant life on Dakar’s streets a bit more colourful – literally. Somehow the colourful car rapides fit in the typical Senegalese street scene, whereas you could easily find one of the white versions in Germany or Spain too. Feeling like a total tourist I’m secretly happy we travel in one of the coloured ones, it somehow feels more “real”.

The car rapides don’t look too big on the outside, and during the ride I quietly count the number of people inside. There’s a total of about 20 people, and that doesn’t include the driver and the baby’s strapped to their mother’s backs. I’m amazed at how easily 20 people can fit into such a small vehicle without having to sit on each other’s lap and poking in each other’s sides with their elbows. In Holland you even have to fight your neighbour off to get some leg/knee-space in a spacious two-seater in the train. Either the Senegalese are thinner than the Dutch or they’re less territorial when it comes to a place in public transport. Or both.

Within what feels like a few minutes the car rapide has taken us to Keur Massar, from where we have to hunt for a taxi. What I see of Keur Massar is a busy crossing / square with a gas station, where cars, buses, taxis, car rapides and a donkey cart are randomly lined up in something that looks like a circle. For a moment I feel like we have ended up in the middle of a circus, animals and all, until suddenly Yacine pulls me to the side. Just in time, because apparently I was standing on the road when a car approached. Yacine asks a bit around and finally finds us a taxi to take us to Lac Rose.

What follows is probably the most adventurous taxi ride I’ve been in. Though it also could have been a roller coaster ride. Or a suicidal taxi driver. Or all of the above.

I’m not sure if the driver was trying to avoid the potholes in the road, or if he was trying to avoid the road in general. Part of the trip he’s driving in the loose sand on the side of the road, to suddenly turn his steering wheel, resulting in the car ending up on the other side of the road. Or should I say the other side off the road? For a moment I think this is a one way road, until a truck rapidly move towards us. Our driver’s solution to this problem is to drive even further left, this time definitely off the road. All of this happens in a –relatively- high speed, I don’t think the driver realises there’s a brake in the car. Or is there? A few moments later I notice we’re back on the asphalt again, and I try to resist wondering how long we’ll be on the road. the record, this car is not a 4 wheel drive, but some average 10+ year-old sedan.

Finally we’ve reached our destination and while Yacine hands over the money I wonder if we are paying for the fact we just had a crazy roller coaster ride, or if we hand over money for the mere fact we survived. It doesn’t really matter, we’ve reached our destination for the day: Lac Rose!

The suicidal taxi driver drops us off in front of Hotel Ker Djihné where we’re allowed on the compound. I get the idea the security man is slightly reluctant to let Yacine in, but seeing she’s with me, the obvious tourist, we’re allowed on the terrain. We can eat our lunch there and use the pool, and when we go to the lake we can even leave our luggage there and he’ll watch it for us. Not only the hotel, but also the “shopping square” in front of the hotel are deserted. Clearly April isn’t the tourist month here.

After a refreshing splash in the pool and our tummies filled with yassa poulet we walk towards the lake, of which could already see a bit from the pool side. A bunch of local guys are hanging out at one of the souvenir stalls and Yacine arranges for one of them to give us a tour.

The Pink Lake

Pile and bags of salt

Pile and bags of salt

Lac Rose owes its name to the pink colour of the lake, caused by the high concentration of salt and minerals in the water. The water has a salt concentration of 40%, is about 10 times saltier than sea water and similar to the concentration of the Dead Sea. Unfortunately for the people here, the other minerals and bacteria in the water make the salt not even half as valuable as Dead Sea salt. Nonetheless, the lake is used for salt collection.

Salt collected at Lac Rose

Salt collected at Lac Rose

Even around the lake there are hardly any people, besides some men at yet another souvenir stall. As far as the eye can see wooden boats are lying alongside the lake, though they look more like wooden crates to be honest, used by the salt-farmers to get on the lake. A bit further away from the water’s edge are piles of salt in different colours, depending on the stage of purification. For a moment this scene of a deserted salt landscape with endless rows of wooden boats covered in faded colours is starting to feel a bit eerie while the wind and sun are playing a game to slowly peel and burn my skin away. It’s truly incredible and saddening to think the salt collectors work about 7 hours a day – in the burning sun and incredibly salt water. They make 400 CFA/€ 0,60 per 25kg of processed salt (the white piles), they get even less for salt that still has to be processed (the black and grey piles).

Yacine and our guide walk past the boats used to collect the salt, bags of salt are stalled a bit further away

Yacine and our guide walk past the boats used to collect the salt, bags of salt are stalled a bit further away

Amadouye, our guide, suggests we can use one of the boats to sail over the lake a bit. On the water it’s easier to distinguish the pink colour. The inside of the wooden crate-boat is covered with chunks of salt, caused by the salty lake water in the boat to evaporate, building up lumps of salt over time. To push our boat forward, The lake has a surface of about 3 km2, we only sail a small circle, but that’s enough for us, and everywhere the lake is about 1,5m deep, followed by a 1,5m layer of salt. Amadouye uses a long stick like a true gondolier.

Amadouye, our guide, preparing the boat

Amadouye, our guide, preparing the boat

When we walk back to the hotel I try to imagine how much physical work and waiting is involved in collecting 25kg’s of salt, or just a mere € 0,60. Of course the standard of living here is different than it is back home, but sometimes it’s hard to understand that people have to work so hard, in such harsh conditions, to get so little money.

Deserted boats

Deserted boats

Boats and salt, as far as the eye can see

Boats and salt, as far as the eye can see

A few boats and endless rows of bags of salt

A few boats and endless rows of bags of salt

After visiting the lake we enjoy a delicious chocolate mousse and one more dive in the pool before we decide to head back home. One problem; there’s no taxi. Luckily there are a few guys who are willing to give us a ride to the next bus stop and once again it’s quite an experience. Luckily we only have to share the backseat with one other guy, only to discover a second later that the passenger seat in the front perfectly fits two adult guys. It’s all a matter of relativity I guess. We sit crammed in the back of a car filled with laughter and there’s a guy with a wet plant on his lap. The whole scene seems so surreal that for a moment I wonder if I didn’t end up in a Senegalese version of Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas. Surreal or not, I have no idea what’s going on but it sure is fun.

From the car-filled-with-people-and-wet-plant we get on a white car rapide, this must be my lucky day! This car rapide doesn’t leave until all seats are occupied, which is again a very efficient way to maximise the capacity. Both buses as well as car rapides have found a clever way to utilise their space to the max. There are no two-, three-, or four-seaters, there are just benches where you can fit as many people as possible. Once a bench is filled on both sides there’s a seat that folds down to cover the empty space of the aisle. So instead of four people on a row you can actually fit five or even six people!

We miss our last bus in Keur Massar so there’s no other option than to share a taxi back to Dakar. Somewhere in the middle of nowhere we get stuck in a minor congestion because of a car rapide with a flat tire, and even though we’re in the middle of nowhere and it’s late at night there’s someone walking past the vehicles to sell something.

By the time we get home we’re exhausted, but the trip was absolutely worth it!

Posted in Africa, Awareness, Bus, Car rapide, Dakar, Lac Rose, Nature, Photography, Senegal, Taxi, Transportation | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Old Delhi – one of India’s hidden gems

Our guide prefers not to take us there. He has never been there with another group of tourists, nor does he know of any other guide or organisation that will take tourists there. His reluctance only makes us more curious to the hidden gem that’s Old Delhi.

With a population of over 12.5 million people, Delhi is the 4th most populated city in the world (after Shanghai, Mumbai and Karachi). New Delhi is the part of this city that most people will have been to or heard of, it’s where most of the shopping and sight-seeing takes place. We’re visiting Delhi with four girls from all over the world and one of our Indian friends told us we should visit Old Delhi.

No matter what Mr. Guide tells us, Old Delhi is where we want to go. Period.

Finally Mr. Guide agrees, but because the streets are so busy we’ll go through Old Delhi by foot, and we’ll get there by metro. Security is serious business in India, especially since Mumbai was under siege for 3 days in November of 2008. The attacks, which left 173 people dead, took place in a school, a cinema, a hospital, hotels and a (metro)station. Not surprisingly, India has taken serious safety-precautions in all (top) hotels and metro stations. Before we enter the metro station, our hand-luggage is scanned and we have to go through a metal detector. Using the metro in Delhi requires security-checks quite similar to that in airports.

When we walk down the stairs towards the platform I try to take a picture, but 3 security staff members hysterically jump in front of me to tell me that’s not allowed. Safety. Pity, I wish you could’ve seen how it goes there, people in Holland can learn a lot from it.

The platform is filled with people neatly waiting in lines for the metro. As soon as the metro arrives everybody politely waits until all passengers have exited the vehicle (Dutch people: read and learn!). Once the carriage is empty, the queues calmly walk into the metro, everyone finds their place and within seconds the metro is emptied and refilled and ready to take off to the next station.

When we get out of the metro at Chawri Bazaar station, we find ourselves in a whole new world.

The first thing we notice is a big cow slowly wandering through the massively packed crowd. Shopkeepers try to keep the cow out of their shops by throwing small buckets of water – they’re not allowed to touch the animals, not even to keep them out of their shops.

Wired world - I don't envy Delhi's electricians

Imagine being an electrician in Old Delhi...

About 4-5 meters above the streets thick knots of wires are tied together. I received emails with pictures of this, but I always thought it was Photoshopped. I never even thought there were places where electricity was actually really provided like this. Being an electrician in Delhi must be a hell of a job.

Upon my arrival in Mumbai I thought I ended up in a crazy world, but Old Delhi proves to be even more of a density/hygiene shock than Mumbai. We join the crowd walking into the shopping street. Even today I’m not sure if the street was unpaved or if there was just a lot of dirt on there. There seem to be some cobbles here and there, and also some piles of trash and piles of dung…

This is one of the alleys leading to/from the street we were walking in

This is one of the alleys leading to/from the street we were walking in

It doesn’t take us long to realise why Mr. Guide brought us here by foot. If you travel with anything bigger than yourself, you’re guaranteed to wait for hours (literally: hours). In the middle of the street are cyclists, rickshaws, oxcarts and men with handcarts waiting. Or, to be more precise, they’re in a congestion, which is so common here that it’s not even considered a congestion anymore.

In the beginning of the street the shops don’t really get our attention. First of all we’re still too busy looking around and secondly we’re too busy preventing each other from stepping in a pile of cow dung (or something similar). Unlike most places in India we’ve been, this is the first place where I don’t constantly feel started at, which is quite surprising if you take into account that this is the least touristic place I’ve visited in India.

Old Delhi offers more than rickshaw-congestions

Old Delhi offers more than congestions

It’s quite obvious this isn’t a rich shopping street, far from it, but people here seem to be more genuine and happy than I’ve seen in any other market. Wherever we walk people are talking, laughing, smiling and waving at us. Some kids walk a bit with us. They’re slightly dirty from playing around. A few meters ahead a woman is doing her utmost best to clean them up – one by one – after which they go back to playing and getting dirty again.

Barber show

Barber show

This is the first time during our trip we’re surrounded by kids that don’t come to us to beg for money, food or pencils. One of my friends takes a picture of them, and while I expect the kids to turn around and ask for money in return for posing, they smile and run back to their games again.

A bit further away a barber is helping out a customer on the pavement in from of his shop. The whole scene looks like it could be from a painting in a museum about authentic crafts, but it’s reality and it’s happening right here, right now on the streets of Old Delhi. Like the children, both the customer and the barber can’t get enough of posing for our cameras, they even hold a little dramatical play, without asking money or anything else. Just waving, smiling and wishing us a beautiful day. Sometimes life can be so uncomplicated.

Magically food appears everywhere around us. Mr. Guide tells us that the food is being prepared for Iftar, the evening meals Muslims have after sunset during the Ramadan. Wherever we look we see stacks of bread, piles of fruit and someone is frying something that smells good. From a distance it looks irresistibly tasty, but up close we see most of the food is covered in flies and other bugs. Goodbye appetite.

Food prepared for Iftar

Food prepared for Iftar

Indian version of "The Nutcracker"

Indian version of "The Nutcracker"

After the food-stalls come some kitchen utilities and then it’s spice-time. So far there have been some spice stalls every now and then, but now we’ve ended up in Spice Heaven. The endless rows of huge bags with colours and scents, are so tempting. I regret being Dutch; there are so many wonderfully looking/smelling spices that I can buy, but I wouldn’t know for the world what to do with any of them.

Spice Heaven

Spice Heaven

Spices

Spices

We walk back to the metro station through another, parallel street/alley. This alley is definitely not paved, and rain (or something else) created small puddles of mud and filth here and there. By now, all our shirts are soaking wet from the humidity, but I’m as excited as a kid in a candy shop and I don’t feel the least bit sticky/sweaty/smelly.

The small, dark alley appears to be another hidden gem. Even more spices, more food, more smiling people. More filth. Two of the girls from my group hate it, they’re afraid to touch anything and on top of that they are constantly bothered by flying bugs, much unlike the third girl and I who can’t get enough of taking pictures and looking, feeling, smelling everything we can.

Spice dealers

Spice dealers

Spice dealer

Spice dealer

Spice dealers

Spice dealers

After a while Mr. Guide saves my two travel-mates and brings us to a paved road which is broader and cleaner than the previous streets.

Note here: cleaner doesn’t mean it’s actually clean.

We pass a few sleeping rickshaw drivers and we see men with hardcarts that have a HUGE pile of bags with leaves and spices stuffed on there. Again, only scenes I’ve seen in pictures in emails.

Handcart man

Handcart man

We take a rickshaw back to the hotel. While I look back at the tons of pictures I’ve taken, the two girls take a shower to get rid of Old Delhi’s dirt.

Old Delhi has definitely left an impression on all of us.

Spices for sale

Spices for sale

Posted in Asia, City, Delhi, Food, History, India, Indians (India), Market, Metro, People, Photography, Rickshaw, Shopping, Transportation | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Malaria (via Ltumu14′s Blog)

Something for you to think about…

Because Malaria deserves more attention, I re-blogged this post from a friend:

I was diagnosed with malaria yesterday. That, in Africa, is like saying you have the flu. The doctor leaned back on her seat, took a deep breath and said, ‘You have malaria’. She gazed at me steadily like she was expecting a response from me. ‘Thank you’. ‘I knew it!’ What are you supposed to say to that?

Anyway, as I was taking my drugs, I noticed that they were made in Switzerland. Switzerland? Come on. I bet less than a fifth of the Swiss population knows how to spell malaria, let alone the fact that it is spread by mosquitoes. Honestly, why don’t they transfer that technology to Uganda so we can make the drugs ourselves seeing they’ve become part of our required dietary supplements? Am sure 100% of the malaria drugs manufactured there are exported to Africa and Asia.

Read More via Ltumu14′s Blog

Come on. I bet less than a fifth of the Swiss population knows how to spell malaria, let alone the fact that it is spread by mosquitoes. Honestly, why don’t they transfer that technology to Uganda so we can make the drugs ourselves seeing they’ve become part of our required dietary supplements? Am sure 100% of the malaria drugs manufactured there are exported to Africa and Asia.

Some facts about malaria from the World Health Organisation:
About 3.3 billion people – half of the world’s population – are at risk of malaria. Every year, this leads to about 250 million malaria cases and nearly one million deaths. People living in the poorest countries are the most vulnerable. One in five (20%) of all childhood deaths in Africa are due to malaria. Every 30 seconds a child dies from malaria in Africa.
Early diagnosis and prompt treatment are two basic elements of malaria control. Early and effective treatment of malaria can shorten the duration of the infection and prevent further complications including the great majority of deaths. Access to disease management should be seen not only as a component of malaria control but a fundamental right of all populations at risk.
Malaria causes an average loss of 1.3% of annual economic growth in countries with intense transmission. It traps families and communities in a downward spiral of poverty, disproportionately affecting marginalized and poor people who cannot afford treatment or who have limited access to health care. Malaria has lifelong effects through increased poverty and impaired learning. It cuts attendance at schools and workplaces. However, it is preventable and curable.

Posted in Africa, Asia, Awareness, Health, Personal, World | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments