Friday 29 March 2019

India (Part 2) - Trip to Agra to see the Taj Mahal and the Red Fort




Hello and welcome to our first real big adventure in India. 


This series of blogs are part of a massive trip that we are currently on through India then a quick stop off back home in Australia and then off Thailand.


Picking up where we left off in our last blog, we had only arrived in India the day before and we just starting to come to terms with our culture shock. 


So today we are off on a tour that I had pre-booked before we left to see the Taj Mahal and the Red Fort which are both located in the City of Agra which is about a 3 hour drive from where we were staying in Delhi. 


The day started with buffet breakfast that was included with our stay at the Suryaa Hotel in New Delhi. Then we needed to meet our driver by 7:30 am ready to start the drive to Agra. 

As this was our first time to India we told the driver that if there is anything that he felt that we should see to please do go ahead and point it out and tell us about it. 


But as it turned out EVERYTHING was interesting to us!

From the moment we got in the car and there were not seat belt plugs for the back seat! Then how the traffic works/ doesn't work was a shock! we must have taken so many videos and photos of the traffic. 
There were lines on thee road but no one seemed to take any notice of them. If there is a gap in traffic and your car will fit in that gap, then you could just get right in there! and for good measure beep you horn to let all the cars around you know what you are doing! I think beeping your horn means 'I'm coming up behind you' or 'move over' or 'watch out' or any number of other things as there seemed to be long beeps and short beeps, but then there was also the constant beeping.😂

As we went along the trip became a giant game of 'I spy' - in that everywhere you look there was someone weird doing something that you never thought you would ever see.

So why not start you off with the top 10 things that we saw in India that we never expected to see:

1. A random adult walk into the bushes and went to the bathroom right where you could still see them. Pants down and full squat! in broad day light!


2. A feral dog walk into a ladies toilet like it was no bodies business and start eating used sanitary napkins out the bins 😖😲


3. Vehicles driving the wrong way up an off ramp - it seems that you are allowed to access the road by any means necessary, if there is a gap in fence on the side of a road you can go all terrain to get on that road through that gap.


4. Backing backwards on a highway - This is along the lines of the same as above. If you miss your exit you can just hit the breaks and put the car in revers and get back to that exit that you missed (see Below - black SUV). 




5. Buildings that are finished, but they leave the rebar hanging out the top just in case they want to add another level in the future. Literally building with wires poking out the top all rusty and bent.


6. Mega ghost cities in the middle of no where half built and abandoned looking. 

I think this is part of India coming up in the world and getting mega infrastructure upgrades. 
I would describe them as 'satellite cities' but I think the driver called them sectors. In any case the thing is that there are huge sky scrappers all half built heaps of them!! but there didn't seem to be anyone working on them. It was a weird site to see almost like a post apocalyptic event had occurred. 
So a rich developer buys an area and then just starts sprouting as many skyscrapers as possible in that area all at one time. There was not just one or two of these sectors there were heaps just popping up in the middle of nowhere!




7. Cows and dogs just sitting in the middle of the road and people just driving around them. The cow thing is because they are sacred animals so they are left to their own devises if they are not producing milk or working. The dogs for the most part are native and just keep to themselves and people leave them alone. So as a result you see these two main animals sleeping in the streets. 





 8. The toilets - They do seem to have a proportional amount of normal western style toilets with these other 'hole in the ground' style toilets. 
To add to the toilet confusion I didn't ever work out which way you are suppose to straddle these things let alone what to do with the hose that seemed to replace toilet paper. Do you spray front to back? or back to front? and what direction do you face while you are doing all this???!!!




9.The brick making:

As we got to a particular point along our journey we started to see these smoke stacks popping up everywhere and then straight away there was a brick making venture just there off the side of the road with bricks laying out drying, other bricks are stacked up to one side while I guess they keep making bricks. 



10.The Max max trucks
They really like to decorate their vehicles over here and all the trucks were decorated to some degree or another. 




Well that is the list for what we saw in general from our time in India not just this trip specifically even though most of it did happen on this trip to Agra, and of course we will elaborate of some of the stories further as we get to them.

Ok back to the trip 


Because we told the drive to point out whatever he though was important and because we kept taking heaps of photos out the window the driver did stop a few times for us to get out and take photos of the things that we were looking at. 

So here they are:

The Mud Huts:

There were these straw type of hut structures that we first saw in the middle of fields but then we came across what I could only assume was a village and that the hut were the houses. 
To go not 1 hours drive from a city where people are walking around with smart phones to a field where people are living in grass huts!! **mind blown**



In general the assumption that these were dwellings was correct, in this part of India the structures were huts. But as were later learned there are also similar looking structures that are used for wheat grain storage and we can come to that later as well, but for now here are the huts in the village(Above and Below). 



The Cow Pats:

You can also see in the photo above the pile of cow pats  that are stacked up in the village. 
This is a funny one for me because if you don't see it you don't understand it. 
India has a massive population and is not yet very advanced in the world. So in order to cook or stay warm they still use fire (in some cases they do have gas for cooking). But with so many people with the same needs there are not really any trees in India. I mean you have private plantations but as far as we could see no forests etc. 
People still need to cook and stay warm so what they do is to use the cow poo and they mix is with straw and then set it out to dry (See Below) so that they have little 'log' type patties that will burn but not too quickly. 

Interesting hey!!

Above: The Cow pats drying, but also a working cow pulling a wagon


The Nilgai - The "blue bulls" :


While driving along the highway to the Taj Mahal we spotted some strange animals and got some photos of them. They are called "Blue Bulls"/"Blue Cows" by the locals, their Hindi name is "Nilgai" (which literally means blue cow).  They are actually a species of antelope native to India (northern regions mostly) and are protected by the same laws as cows are. They are pests, which roam around and destroy farms and annoy the farmers. We really liked seeing these exotic beasts roaming around in the grassy scrubby plains, just doing there thing unmolested. The females are a brown colour with black and white striped feet, whereas the males give their species their name with their blue-grey coat and they have horns (see Below). 




Ok well we better skip to what we actually set out to see or this blog will get too big very quickly.

The Taj Mahal  - the "Crown Palace"

So we finally made it to the Taj after a what should have been 3 hour journey but ended up being longer due to the multiple stops we made along the way. 
As we arrived into Agra we stopped and picked up our tour guide who was a well spoken older gentleman that I really took a shine to straight away. He was no nonsense he told us straight away what the plan was and how everything was going to go. It was also good that he was happy to take photos of us while we did our tour and he told the locals to bugger off when they all started to ask for photos with the 'white people'. 

Background:

The Taj Mahal also known as The Pearl Mosque at Agra, was commission by the Mughal emperor Shah Jahan ('the romantic') after the death of is third and favorite wife the empress Mumtaz Mahal [1593 AD – 1631 AD] as her mausoleum.

Quick detour for those interested - Who were the Mughals? They are a dynasty formed of people from Central Asia with Mongolian and Turkish/Persian(Iranian) background, who conquered India in the 1500's and introduced their Arabic/Persian culture. The Empire started in Kabul, Afghanistan, and pushed south into India. 

Construction on the Taj began about 1631 AD and is said to have finished in 1648 AD (17 years) although the gardens were not finished until 5 years later in 1653 AD (22 years total). It took approximately 20,000 workers (of various skills and professions) almost 23 years to make this amazing monument. 


As you will see as we go into the different features of the Taj Mahal as a whole, this was all constructed using thousands of artisans and craftsmen, whose skills you will come to be very impressed with!



Above: The marble entryway with inscriptions from the Quran in black, inlaid semiprecious stones forming intricate floral artwork, all a beauty to behold! 

The Taj has a 'no pollution zone around it so we were not able to drive straight up to it. The reason for the 'no pollution zone' was that at some point some one noticed that the Taj was starting to change colour. So in 1996 the Supreme Court of India delivered a ruling banning the use of coal/coke in the Taj Trapezium Zone (TTZ) which is an area of 10,400 sq km around the Taj Mahal. See map Below:


Instead the surrounding industries had to change to using natural gas or relocate to outside the TTZ. The TTZ comprises of 40 protected monuments including three World Heritage Sites - Taj Mahal, Agra Fort and Fatehpur Sikri. 

whc.unesco.org/en/list/252   

As a result we were dropped of outside the TTZ and then walked until we went past some barriers where there were battery powered vehicles or bikes. 

We got on one of these battery powered vehicles and it took us right to the entrance to the Taj. 




The map above shows a rough layout of the Taj Mahal. The site is not just one building but a combination of a few different components within the site area, and every component of the area is perfectly aligned and in relation to every other component! 

It's amazing, but let me tell you all about it!

The Symmetry:
It is hard to see it too much from the rough map above but the site is exactly symmetrical if you drew a line through the middle of the Taj to the middle of the Great Gate you will find that everything is mirrored all the way to the other side of the river where the king had intended to build a black Taj until his son told him to retire and took over power.  

From the centre of the Taj Mahal itself, 8 imaginary lines come out radially in an octagonal pattern and all the buildings, tiles, artwork, and almost everything else about the site are aligned with, or mirrored about, these lines. There is a North-South major axis line which is what the main symmetry of the site is based on, where the left and right sides of the site are mirrored using that line. The left and right Mosque style buildings on either side of the Taj itself are a good example of this. The Western Mosque faces towards Mecca, so is a functional mosque, and the Eastern one doesn't, so acted as a guest-house and general extra building -  but it had to be there in order to maintain the symmetry.  The gate houses follow similar patterns of symmetry.  


The Foundations: The Taj Mahal site is built on a raised platform made of Ebony wood to make it flat, and this platform was built over a set of deep wells to allow it to be stable and avoid disturbing or eroding the nearby river Yamuna's banks. This also made it more stable in the case of earthquakes. The wood doesn't rot, because the water is covering it and without air exposure the wood is stable - these wooden foundations and wells have stood the test of time, lasting 350+ years so far!


The Gate house / The Great Gate:


This is the building that you can see at the bottom of the map above (also image Below) and the first structure that we saw upon entering the area from the right. It in itself is a very impressive building but it does combine the same skills and techniques that are used in the Taj but rather then being constructed out of marble like the Taj it contrasts as does the other building on the site by being constructed out of red sandstone, similar to what was used in the Red Fort.





The Taj itself:

     Design:
As I promised the beauty in the Taj is in the details so I would like to go into them really quickly so that you get an idea of how mind blowing it is!

     The Pillars (Minarets)
The pillars that you see that flank the Taj in the photo below serve no purpose except to 'complete' the Taj. That is to say that if you took them away wouldn't the Taj look a little naked? So no one can go up in the pillars or anything, they are just aesthetic pillars, that is it.

Fun Fact: The pillars actually lean slightly outward so that if they were ever to fall they would not fall and damage the Taj!

          The engraving

The detail that you can see in the photo below of flowers and writing etc. is not painted on. 
If it had been painted it would fade and flake as time passed. So all the details that you are seeing are all semi-precious stones that are slowly and painstakingly worked into each individual shape and then inserted into equal painstakingly carved recesses that have been etched out of the marble to fit the stones perfectly. This process is calling "inlaying". They use a special glue to hold the coloured stones into their recesses, and have survived 350+ years. 
Here are some of the different features that show the extent of the work that was done for each and every detail across the site - including the Great Gate all the way across to the Red Fort that we will go into soon. 

Below: Do you notice that it is all one slab of marble and that every colour change in the design means another stone. 


Below: To zoom out a bit you can see the details from the image above bordering the photo below, where you can also see each and every detail of these flowers has also been carved out of the marble. No Mistakes, no white out. This is absolute perfection! it blows my mind! and this is just one corner of one wall. This detail is all over the Taj!



 After we had seen the Taj and the Red Fort we were actually take to a place were these guys that do this work actually still do it to this day using the same tradition methods. So I will elaborate on this process now so that it can really sink in. 

Above Left: You can see each part/petal of this flower that has been shaped perfectly to fit with every other piece.
Above Right: You can see how the parts all come together exactly. 

This is only half the story though you can also see that the white and the green bits in the flower are distinctly different stones that have been shaped to match the colour, shade and  grain that is needed to give the specific effect. 


Below: See the changes in colour - look closely at the colour changes in the center. Each colour change is a whole new stone that has been worked to that very specific tiny shape!




Below are some other projects that are further along. Here you can see that the marble has been washed with an orange pigment so that the design can be scratched into it, and then once finished the orange will be washed off.




Below: This is the machine that they use to grind away the stones to the exact size. Do you see how far the technology has come?! do you have a greater appreciation for the work?

OK, I will stop with the detail now as I know that I could go on and on as it just blows my mind and for that reason the Taj is at the top of my list of architecture that I have seen in the world!

Our experience
I though that it might be nice to do a quick summary of what we though about the Taj, I mean you all ready know that I was mind-blown, but perhaps Kyran wants to say something.

Well, I reckon the Taj Mahal is the coolest monument I've seen so far, in terms of the engineering and architecture, the period it was built in, and the overall impression that it delivers. The Mughals certainly knew what they were doing and knew how to build impressive buildings to stand the test of time. I bet the designers and craftsmen would be proud to know their work still brings joy to so many and is in such good condition to this day! We had a lot of selfies with the locals while there - apparently they don't see white people much haha. 


Ok well let get to the last thing that we had to see on this tour and that is the Red Fort in Agra. 

The Red Fort in Agra:


This Red Fort is a Historical Fort that was the main residence for the emperors of the Mughal Dynasty (until 1638) when Agra was the capital of India (before it was moved to Delhi). Later it was used by the British administrators for the region, as the administrative headquarters - evidence of which can be seen by the sarcophagus of a British administrator for the North-West provinecs John Russell Colvin located on the site out in front of the main palace entrance. It was made to it's current design and appearance between 1565 and 1573 during the reign of the Mughal king Akbar. It has a magnificent red-brown colour, from its red sandstone construction.

Above: An interior building within the fort - the red sandstone colour like the outer walls also the local monkeys gave it a 'jungle book' feel. 

The outer walls are up to 70 feet high, with double story battlements. The gate houses are multi-layered with excellent design of the entry to the fort, to make it really hard for the enemy to breach it. Between the two main gatehouses is a 90 degree turn (see below), to prevent the enemy from using elephants to bash it down as they need a flat, long stretch of area to build up momentum. 

At one of the main entrances, after the second gatehouse there's a long sloped ramp going up to the inside of the fort (see below), which also hinders attackers. I imagine it could be used to roll heavy objects down to crush the enemy, and make any siege equipment or elephants trying to go up the hill much slower and more difficult to control while being rained down on with arrows and stones. 



It was truly and impressive fortification in its own right, including the beautiful marble palace-like buildings built inside by the Mughal emperors. 

The Emperor Shah Jahan ended up retiring and living at the Red Fort, supposedly spending the remaining years of his life in a marble "penthouse" with a view directly across the landscape to the Taj Mahal (where his wife was buried) only ~2km away. The son of the emperor took over after the Taj Mahal was finished, but before Shah Jahan would get too carried away with his plan to make an opposing mirrored site on the other side of the river for a black version of the Taj Mahal. 

Below: The marble mini-palace built in the Red Fort, where supposedly the retired emperor Shah Jahan lived out his remaining days, mourning his lost wife Mumtaz and watching over her resting place.




Above: The view from the Red Fort out over the plains to the Taj, about 2km away.

Below: At the entrance to the marble palace area within the fort, there are some iconic archways similar to what we saw in Spain in the Moor-ish architecture, popular in the Arab world and architecture


Well that brings us to the end of this one-day adventure out to see the Taj Mahal and the Red Fort in Agra. 

After everything it was time to make the 3 hour drive back to our accommodation and get moving on to Amritsar the next day! 

This is where we get into the famous Indian wedding!

Before we go I should mention (because you will hear more about it later) that on our way back to Delhi there was actually a huge storm that we didn't find out until the next day. We were heading to the airport and our guide guy was saying that "hard snow" had come down in the storm and that he had never seen anything like it before. We had to explain what hail was and the video that he showed us was actually some pretty crazy hail - it did in fact cover the ground like snow does. 

Extra Fun Fact Photo Below: This is how they cut the grass at the Taj Mahal


OK well that brings us to the end of this blog. 
I am sorry that it was such a long blog, but we were super excited to see everything and learn about it all and just wanted to let you all know how impressing it all was. 

Specifically the Taj Mahal! If you are an avid follower of us you will know that about 2 years ago we went to France to see 'The Palace of Versailles'  and that was supposed to be the palace of all palaces! Well for me I thought that the Taj Mahal (merely a tomb) far out-classed the Palace of Versailles, so that is saying a lot. The "Crown Palace" Indeed!

Any way I had better let you all go thanks again for reading and stay tuned for our next blog where we arrive in the Punjab province to get started on preparations for the exciting Punjabi wedding!


Below: The amount of stamps that we had to get just to catch a domestic flight in India

Until next time, stay curious! 



Monday 11 March 2019

India (Part 1) - Overview and Impressions

Welcome the the first blog in our series of blogs from our exotic adventures in northern India. To be specific we have been in the Punjab region of India. 

We have been here for 12 days in total and thought that before we started publishing all of our adventures in chronological order (9 Parts) we would give you all a summary of what the country is all about and it might help you get some context for the rest of our blogs.


The main reason why came to India was to be a part of/ witness a traditional Punjabi Sikh wedding.  I was lucky enough to met my friend (the bride-to-be) in Canada about 3-4 years ago and when she invited me to the wedding I knew I couldn't miss the opportunity.


So lets get straight into it!


FOOD


Above: Street cart with food! Breads and sweets, these were a common sight in both Delhi and up in Punjab area.

I think this is a topic that Kyran is better versed to elaborate on, but I will give you a quick introduction first. 

When we first decided to come to India I was worried that the food would be too spicy and that I would spend 10 days slowly starving to death or burning a flaming trail through my digestive tract. But much to my delight there is a variation in food between Northern India and Southern India. Northern India is a lot less spice-happy then the fiery South. 

But that is as far as I will take you with the food, I will let Kyran take it from here. 


Hi yea Kyran here. The food is something that I was really excited about where I was told we were going to India. I love Indian food and if I could eat it all day every day I would be a very happy boy!
I don't mind spicy things but poor Mercedes on the other hand was worried that she would not be able to handle the spice. So our first meal in India was a bit hit and miss because we were not sure what we were in for. Just to be on the safe side, we made sure to specify 'not too much spice' when we ordered.

The Indians had lots of fresh fruit and veggies, seasonal ones for the most part. In the small towns, as we drove past there was always big fruit and veggie stalls full of tasty looking produce for the locals to buy. We never directly bought any so we can't comment on the prices but it's probably nice and cheap. 

Below is an assortment of pictures with details and then we'll talk about the vegetarianism vs non-vegetarians in Indian culture, and some general commentary on the foods and ingredients we came across during our stay. 


AboveRed Carrots! Fresh fruit and veggies were sold in large amounts at the local farmer markets and street stalls.

AboveMaking sweets for the wedding! (they bring in cooks especially for the occasion)


AboveTypical sweets to have with Indian tea (also sweet). The slabs of creamy coloured stuff at the front is like a semi-solid mass of condensed milk and sugar, it's called Barfi.


AboveHere is a photo of the cooking set up in the house that we were staying at. It was different to see the food be prepared off the floor and not at a bench. 


AboveYou can see there process of making, rolling and cooking, to make Chapatti/Roti flat breads.  The method of eating is using a spoon to put the curry onto the bread, or to use the bread in small pieces formed like little scoops to grab the food or fill the scoop if its a dal-style curry, and eat it that way. The bread also acts as a starchy food to help fill the belly like rice would.

Vegetarian vs. non-Vegetarian
India has a significant population who follow a vegetarian diet, mostly for religious reasons. The vegetarians eat vegetables, dairy, and eggs (although eggs seem rare). Therefore it was very easy to find vegetarian foods to eat, but being vegan was almost impossible as there was cream, butter, "ghee", or milk in basically every dish imaginable. There were often vegetarian-only food stalls and little eateries on the sides of the roads called "Dhaba". 

In India, vegetarians are typically also abstaining from alcohol, for the same religious and cultural reasons. So if someone drinks alcohol, they typically also eat meat. There was an interesting situation where we were telling them we are vegetarian, but the second we had alcohol they were like "oh would you like some chicken now too?" and couldn't understand that we are vegetarian BUT also like some alcohol sometimes haha.


When someone does eat meat in India, it's usually fried or crumbed chicken and fish. They also eat 'Mutton', which in India not only refers to sheep meat but also goat meat (unlike in Aus/NZ/Canada/UK where the term "mutton" is specifically for sheep only). 


No eating of beef or buffalo is allowed, due to Indian law protecting them as sacred animals.  Even if a cow dies on the side of the road, the corpses are taken away and used for leather and other products, but the flesh is never eaten. Interesting huh!?

Let me (Mercedes) add another very important thing here:

In my life as a white female I have usually been able to hold my own to men and have been able to live mostly unaffected by any racist/sexist/other discrimination of any kind. But I learned that in India only men are allowed to drink alcohol and eat meat. Not to a level that is like "oh it is preferable you didn't partake", rather these things were not offered AT ALL to any female. 

At parties and events men were segregated from the women and children, where they are served alcohol and buckets of chicken while the women are left to talk about the weather in another room un-catered for! This makes my blood boil but I will leave it here for now. I will however be bringing it up again in a later blog where I will elaborate further as it caused some minor friction at the reception party! 

Main Foods Eaten

In the northern Punjab region we encountered almost no rice, most curries were watery 'dal' style foods, and almost always eaten with thin Roti/Chapatti breads rather than rice. Rice seems to be a fancy food for these guys. The food was usually sweet, or very lightly spiced, rather than the super-spicy we were expecting. There was also plenty of sweets with the tea and between meals!

The main vegetables eaten were cauliflower ("Gobi"), potato ("Aloo"), green capsicum (peppers, not sure on punjabi word), carrots and cabbage. Maybe it's not the season for it right now, but they also have a lot of mustard and spinach ("Saag" and "Palak") based curries. 


As mentioned most of the curries we had were rather watery, not many were 'dry' style. There was an interesting Indo-Chinese food called "Manchurian" we had at various events for the wedding. The vegetarian version of "Manchurian" is battered cauliflower cooked in a sweet and sticky brown sauce, and has a unique flavour to it. Apparently Indians really like it, and despite being super popular in India it doesn't really exist in China. 



Above: chapatti being cooked on a big hot plateBelow: Video showing the Chapatti flipping, pressing, cooking in general!




Above: Prepared ingredients for a big cook-up for the wedding parties
Above: A big plate of chillies, ready to be processed and turned into some tasty curries!
Above: Leftover food from the party cooking, the family got to keep the un-used ingredients and went on to give away or re-sell them the day after. 
All the usual ingredients were used like garlic, red onion (saw almost no white onions being used), and spice powders. Milk, ghee and yogurt were everywhere. Green chillies were used in large amounts, yet the food in North India wasn't particularly spicy. 
Radish and cucumber were very common for salads. Capsicums (usually green) were pretty common to add to curries.  

Indian tea is almost entirely just hot milk, but some tea leaves tossed in to get a milk 'tea' flavour. Indian coffee is also strangely very weak, and very sweet, they basically boil milk and chuck some weak coffee in and lots of sugar.  Sometimes, they go all out and just have hot milk as a drink, usually before bed!


DRIVING

I did not see any traffic enforcement at all in our time in India. 
They drive on the left side of the road like Australia and Britain do. 
The general rule in India is "there are no rules"! Traffic is chaos, with people, cars, rickshaws, cows, dogs and motorbikes contending for space on the road. 

I think that seat belts only needed to be worn by the front passengers/drivers. That seems to be the only thing enforced by the Indian police or worried about by the locals. 


It's perfectly normal to see people driving up highways in the wrong direction (in order to turn off somewhere further back, or ultimately slip across to the other side of the highway with a gap in the middlestrip). 


Here's a video I took to demonstrate the crazy situation, unfathomable to us westerners:




There were road police, but they mostly just stand around. There was even 5-7 people piled up on a single motorcycle! The most common motorcycle we saw was a "Hero Honda" with only 100-150cc sized motors. 


Auto-rickshaws holding upwards of 7-8 passengers plus the driver were common. Backs of cargo trucks (lorries), were often seen with the backs open and full of people. 

Fun note about "Hero Honda" brand - Hero group in India and Honda motors made a joint venture in 1980's to bring the Honda motorcycles into India, and they are very very popular!  Since then it's just Hero now. The most popular motorcycle models from Hero we saw was the "Splendour" and "Splendor+" (100cc). 




POLLUTION

This is a topic that is deeply ingrained in the culture and politics of the area. 
India had a massive rubbish problem. So much so that when you see how bad it is, you start to wonder if your recycling and composting back home is even making a difference - as these guys seem to be counteracting any good that you think we are making. 

The streets are covered in rubbish! Plastic everything is just thrown on the ground. 


I believe this problem to be two fold: 

1. There were no rubbish bins that I saw anywhere. I don't even think there is a waste disposal system in place. The house that we had been staying at seemed to accumulate their rubbish and burn it.  But any time that we were out and we had rubbish and I ask what to do with it, I was told to just throw it on the ground.


2. Plastic is a massive social/cultural thing, on the level where plastic is cheap to produce, durable and lightweight. It is then interesting to learn the Indian Government seems to have outlawed the use of the cheap single-use plastic bags in almost all states (read about it on Huffington Post here ) but still all their candy for example still comes individually wrapped in plastic wrapping. Plastic packaging is the bane of modern society for sure, and has large impacts on up-and-coming countries with not many public bins and poor rubbish collection/recycling infrastructure. 


As India is a very colourful country other common plastic uses are, plastic flowers, glitter, party decorations sellotape/tape in general - I am sure that I can make this a very exhaustive list but you get my point. I feel that the rest of the world is aware of the issues with the above mentioned products. For plastic in general I feel that we are all having to have a look at how much we do actually need to use plastic, while India is over there either happily oblivious or lacking the education/motivation for alternative product packaging and recycling methods.


ANIMALS
There are two animals that spring straight to mind from my time in India, cows and dogs! 


Above: Street cows and dogs, donkeys, buffalo.. the list goes on. On the busy streets of Delhi

For those for you who do not know cows are considered sacred animals in India and thus they do not kill them. They do however use them for milk. 
The issue here is that if you have a cow and it stops producing milk they just turn the cow out to the street as it is of no use to them and would be expensive to keep for no reason. The same goes for the bulls, as they do not produce milk they are of little use (with the exception of the working bulls that pull carts etc.) so they are also turned out of home. 
So now they have random cows roaming around cities and or farms. The city cows are so comfortable around humans and cars that they just lay down in the roads an relax for the day. The country farm cows try to eat the crops of the farmers so you will see farm hands chasing the cows from their farm to the neighbour's farm - and then that farm's worker will come and keep chasing them further on to protect the crops.



Above: Street cows walking along nonchalantly

Dogs - well from what I can tell they are native. Or at least some of them. You can see that other breads have been introduced and cross-bred. The street dogs kind of reminded me of Australian Dingos.


The dynamic between dogs and humans is a new one for me. The dogs, like the street cows, just chill out in the middle of wherever they want - the road, the rubbish piles, the sand piles. Anywhere! But people seem to leave them to their thing and they leave people alone too. It is a relationship not unlike that between humans and pigeons.  





Above x 3: Street dogs at rest stops on the way to Agra and around the Hotel in Delhi. Puppies playing in the detritus and rubble. 
  
THE OVERALL EXPERIENCE
Mercedes
For me India started off as a culture shock from all the guns and security everywhere. It made me think 'what is wrong with this place if there is so much security?' but after a good sleep and time to absorb it all I was OK. After that India stole my heart, the culture, the people, the family that seemed to adopt us from the very beginning. By the end of our trip I can say that it has been an emotional roller coaster and that I am once again suffering from culture shock. 

Writing this blog has been a tricky thing to do for me. On the one hand I came to India for my friend to be there for her special day her family has done nothing but love and care for us and we have felt welcomed and loved. But on the other hand there are things about India that I feel need to be said so this blog series has been tricky walking the line between hurting people's feelings and exposing the truths that I feel need to be said. 


 
Kyran 
For me India was a magical place, with wonderful food, people, and animals. The culture was very inclusive and supportive, and really helps you understand how they are able to deal with overpopulation in some areas because they are all so nice and helpful to their neighbours and they work together on a problem within the community rather than say "oh that's your problem, deal with it". The food of course is my favourite, there is no better source of tasty vegetarian food in the world than Indian food (in my opinion). 
The landscape and farming was interesting to see - the little thatch huts and cow-poo discs everywhere was interesting, how people live like medieval peasants right next door to a modern street of shops and brick houses.  

The chaotic driving had me a bit stressed out, and I certainly wouldn't feel safe driving in India myself - the unwritten rules and being able to judge the intent of other drivers around you is very unusual to me. 


I highly recommend that everyone should go visit India and see what it's like out in the villages, meet the kind-hearted people, and absorb the culture to see its beauty!


That's it from me!

***
Well that is it for this Introduction blog. I hope that this has been a good general summary for you and that you are ready to dive into this series adventures with us.

The next blog will be of our trip to the Taj Mahal so stay tuned for that. 

Until next time thanks for reading!