Saturday 14 December 2019

Delhi, India


 Hi and welcome if you have followed over here from my Wood Fairy blog where I posted about Kerela, I will duplicate that post over here too and try and keep all my travels in one safe place on this blog.   We have so many photographs, probably thousands, and some videos but it's taking ages to sort them, download and make into blogs or videos so I will do short posts as and when in no particular order :)  I might have to do more than one post on Delhi as we went there twice and did so much...

On arrival in India, our first night was spent at Surayaa Hotel, we got there very late, ate a fabulous curry and took a quick walk round the vicinity to check out surroundings.  Lots of stray dogs, market stalls of flowers, traffic, dust, fumes and noise.

New Delhi, Surayaa Hotel area


fresh fruit juice outside the hotel
Day 1 we had curry breakfast at hotel, Indian masala tea (cardomon, cinnamon, milk) and ventured out.  A 15 minute walk across ridiculously heavy traffic, negotiating tuktuk, rickshaw, cars and lorries, not to mention mopeds driving on the wrong side of the road and cows sleeping on roadsides, walking across traffic or standing and staring into space.  We made it in one piece to the Metro, bought tokens in the automated machine, (having Googled the metro route we carried a list of stops/3 changes for route to Connaught circle and on to Chandni Chowk in the heart of Old Delhi).  Connaught was mainly expensive designer shops ( not our thing) so after walking round the entire perimeter to get our bearings, we moved on to Chandni Chowk market area which was much more interesting.  I really recommend using the Metro in Delhi as it is very clean and efficient, they have women only carriages and the ticket machines are easy to operate.  You can see the route displays inside the train in English and  many people are friendly and helpful if you are lost.



We went to Chandni Chowk to see the huge market constructed of a labarynth of alleys and lanes running off the main route full of sari silks, Indian clothes, shoes, trinkets and onwards to the fruit and street food area.  We saw monkies running along the tops of traders shacks and swinging from electric cables.  Cows were everywhere and many dogs.  It is sad to see some people and animals that are homeless, hungry and sometimes injured, but this is very much a part of India, not something a lone tourist can change and something we had to learn to accept.









There is huge poverty here and we were constantly approached by a range of begging children, disfigured adults and touts wanting to show us places to shop, all just trying to earn a crust any way they can.  We saw a long queue of poor migrant workers and homeless getting curry and rice from religious, charitable organisations.  There is food available daily from these food stations, not everyone is homeless though, some people are visiting family in the nearby hospitals and are displaced/sleeping outside.  No doubt these food stations are a welcome help.




We found the food market full of stalls laden with fruit and vendors cooking up various deep fried spicy delights, rolling bread dough and stirring pots of curry.  We were warned by some locals though that the oil used to cook streetfood in the markets is often recycled from restuarants so not particularly clean or healthy.

Getting the metro was fairly easy with the help of locals, fun,  and the best way to get around, also a welcome bit of air con away from the smog.  The week we visited New Delhi had been on the news due to the high smog caused not only by traffic fumes but the burning of crops nearby which the Government had banned but were unable to enforce.


Metro smog advisory

Schools were closed due to the smog and we took the precaution of wearing dust masks when we were in traffic.  There was a smog indicator at one of the metro stations which was displaying 463 on the 500 scale of severity.  We found that riding the tuk tuks also exposed us to traffic fumes and poor visibility.  That said, it's an experience not to be missed and the smog was unavoidable.



Day 2  we took a guide for the day and an air con car and saw Humayuns tomb
On which the taj mahal was modelled 85 years later.  This tomb is smaller in scale but displays all the familiar features and design of the Taj Mahal.  Built in 1562 by the moghuls it was influenced by Persian architecture.

Lunch was bananas


Qutab Minar.  A Unesco world heritage site, this is the oldest brick minaret in the world built on the remains of an earlier hindu temple, any human images were defaced by the muslims when they took the temple over and built their minaret,  but other detail remains.  The minaret contains in its structure an iron which does not rust.  Our guide, Sunny, shared my interest in Eric von Daniken (Charriot of the gods) and we discussed theories on the possibilities of alien influence, he found a video on his phone of what appears to be a human form flying around the minaret which was seen only a few years ago.  My imagination was captured by the strange iron that does not rust and, for me, made the excursion take on a new dimension - were we looking at alien influence during those times?


structure contains iron that does not rust



We took a rickshaw ride around the moslem quarter for a bit of fun and headed back to our hotel for a sauna, tea and cake and a freshen up.



Our evenings were spent in the Upgrade bar, a short potholed walk from the hotel where we negotiated our beers down to half the hotel prices and so came back again.   We found Mcdonalds and Domino Pizza when in need of some carbohydrates!  but mostly relied on a large hotel breakfast and evening meal as we didn't have time to search out restuarants .... Delhi was exciting and hectic, riding on tuk tuk's was essential.  The smog was awful but we had a great time!


2 comments:

  1. That takes me back - can't believe it's nearly been a year since we visited Delhi.
    Like you i was hugely impressed with the metro and how helpful and friendly the staff were.
    Isn't Chandi Chowk fascinating? Lodi Gardens is gorgeous, isn't it? A little pocket of calm amid the prevailing chaos! xxxx

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  2. That was a lovely tour! Thanks for sharing the photos, though it's sad what you said about the poverty.

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