BootsnAll Travel Network



an India update

I can’t get my little gadget hooked up to the computer, but I wanted to post to let everyone know we’re alive and a bit of what we’ve been up to in India. I’ll post the rest when I can. but in India, internet, like everything else, is sketchy.

We did a tour of the so-called Golden Triangle (Delhi, Jaipur and Agra) with Anna’s Mom and we arrived back in Delhi yesterday. We saw a bunch of Mughal architecture and, of course, the Taj Mahal, which I gushed about in one of the posts that I can’t post right now. The Mughals were the Muslim rulers of Northwestern India from the seventeenth to the nineteenth centuries, when they were displaced by the British. The tour was great and we had many adventures that I’ll detail later.

Anna’s mom flies home tomorrow morning and Anna and I are flying to Sringar, in Kashmir, on the fringes of the Himalaya. Everyone we’ve talked to has said that Sringar is beautiful, maybe the most beautiful place in India, but it’s hard to know if they’re telling the truth or not.

It sometimes seems like everyone in India has something to sell. The Indian people are warm and welcoming, but sometimes it’s difficult to know if they’re being so nice because they want you to buy something from them (or through them) or if they’re genuinely being nice. We’ve met touts on the street who will walk us to the places we’re looking for, asking us all sorts of friendly questions, and then when we arrive, they try to get us to book our onward travel through their agency, so they can get a commission. I can’t blame a person for trying, everyone’s got to make a living, but it’s frustrating when you don’t know who you can trust.

The other thing that is difficult about India is the intense, brutal poverty that much of the population lives in. We had the same driver for our whole tour and, while he wasn’t fluent in english, he could speak enough so we could converse and we grew fond of him. He was 28 years old and basically lived in the car he drove, sleeping in it each night as he took us from Delhi to Jaipur, Jaipur to Agra and Agra to Delhi. He made 2000 rupees a month, which works out to about $50 or $600 a year. He was about average as far as income goes, I’d guess, maybe a bit on the low side.

He really is one of the lucky ones, though, because at most stoplights beggars weave their way through the throngs of cars, knocking on windows, showing their infant children and generally looking very pathetic and sad. Some of them are horribly disfigured, with limbs that were broken years ago that never healed properly or other stomach-turning medical issues. It’s difficult to say no, because I want to help, but quite honestly, any amount of money we give them wouldn’t be enough to get them off the streets and only insures that they’ll still be beggars tomorrow. Still, I can’t visit here and do nothing, so Anna and I have decided to donate to a charity in India that works specifically with the poor. I think whatever money we have will be put to much better use there and will go much farther. In the mean time, though, it’s difficult to be constantly turning away beggars.

That being said, all three of us have loved India. It is a beautiful (if hot) country that has a rich cultural history that is fun to learn about.  Anna and I will be here for another two weeks or so and we’ll barely scratch the surface of the country. We won’t see anything south and east of here, but we’ve learned that you can often see more if you see less.

Stay tuned for future updates, which will appear below this entry.



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-1 responses to “an India update”

  1. Joshua says:

    Hey, it sounds like you are having a blast, it is always interesting to read about your adventures in a far away land. I have to tell you Aaron, I picked up a game this weekend for Jonathans Birthday (wink*wink*) called Guitar Hero 2. I have to say WOW man, i can’t wait till your back so you can give it a try. This game is crazy nuts, you get a little guitar shaped controller, and you just go to town and rock out. I couldn’t help but think of you when I was playing it. For as difficult as it is, I may as well be learning real guitar… but it is a blast, you will have to check it out. It even has possum kingdom… hell yeah… cool ,well i will let you get back to doing cool, exotic world exploring. Until, my next random comment…have fun.

  2. admin says:

    hey Josh,
    wish Jonathan the happiest of birthdays, i’m sure he’ll be a little rocker in no time with guitar hero as his trainer. i played the first one once or twice and found it to be much fun, i’m sure #2 is even better.
    give our best to the family and take it easy, Aaron

  3. Justin says:

    Josh, you’d best be practicing up, because next time i’m in duluth i’m commin’ over and giving you a guitar heroo lesson or two. finally a video game i might be able to beat you at!

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