Saturday, March 25, 2017

Taj Mahal Overland (3 days & 2 nights) – Cochin/Delhi/Agra/Goa, India


            Friday, 17 Mar 2017 – Happy Birthday Jesse!  In order to be at our meeting place onboard the ship by 4:15 AM, we awoke to our alarm at 3:00 AM – no, that’s not a typo!  After a brief snack & coffee, we disembarked from the ship to board our bus, where we met our guide, Kapin.  Since our trip through Cochin was in the dark, we didn’t see very much of that city.  At Cochin airport, we received boarding passes and at 7:10 AM we boarded a plane (Air India), on which we were served breakfast.  Our tickets were for an aisle and middle seat, for which we were grateful.  However, an Indian family who filled two rows across the aisle asked if their boy (of 8 to 11 years) could sit in the aisle seat in our row (though his ticket was for the window seat; we reluctantly agreed, so that we were stuck in inside seats! 

At 10:56 AM we landed at the Delhi airport, where we met our Taj Mahal tour guide, Sunil, and boarded the Group 3 bus.  There were 26 people in Group 3, and we assume there were similar numbers in Groups 1 and 2.  A fourth bus was also present; it might have been a spare for emergency, but we believe it also carried some of our suitcases.

From the bus, we viewed some of the city of Delhi, capital of India.  Also, we each received a box lunch.  From Delhi, our buses traveled on the new Yamuna Expressway to Agra, which allowed wonderful views of India’s vast farming countryside.  We passed some small groups of cattle, which might have been raised mostly for their dung (used for fuel or fertilizer).  More often, we saw rather barren areas with holes being dug for clay, which was used for making bricks.  We passed numerous smokestacks close to the ground, which our guide said were used in the brick manufacturing process.  From the smokestacks rose black smoke, obviously polluting the air.  Our guide told us that such smokestacks had been removed from near cities; however, we noticed some air pollution throughout India.  And some areas were covered with small fields separated by hedgerows, much like in England.  Occasionally we saw a few people working in the fields.  Indian women wear colorful clothing, which includes often beautiful dresses that hang nearly to their feet.  We were very surprised to see women sometimes working in the field, perhaps even standing in water, but still wearing their beautiful clothes!

At about 4:30 PM we arrived at our hotel, Double Tree by Hilton, in the city of Agra, where we immediately received room keys to our very large, luxurious room.  Sally immediately fell asleep for a short nap, but our luggage arrived at 5:30 AM.  At 6:00 PM we all gathered in the large dining room.  After a demonstration of the classical dance form of Kathak by three dancers, we enjoyed a huge buffet dinner.  By 9:00 PM we were in bed!

            Saturday, 18 Mar 2017 – All three groups gathered in the hotel lobby at 5:15 AM for coffee, juices, & small cookies.  Then Group 3, led by our guide Sunil, boarded our bus to the parking lot for the Taj Mahal.  Although this viewing was supposed to be at sunrise, the sun was well up by the time we lined up for entry.  Security is extremely strict in India, even at our hotel entrance in Agra.  At airports, men and women line up in separate lines because everyone experiences a “pat down.”  It was the same at the Taj Mahal entrance, but apparently, the woman security guard was slow in arriving to start frisking the women; therefore, the women probably stood in line for about an hour, wondering what was going on, while the men moved right along in their line nearby.  (Since we couldn’t carry in any objects larger than a small purse – and we didn’t know then that even that was allowed – Sally didn’t have her fold-out seat that Jesse always carries like a backpack!)  Of course, Jesse and many men were waiting for women to enter. 

Taj Mahal, Agra, India
However, the Taj Mahal was definitely worth seeing.  With its incredible lacy white grandeur, it is perhaps the most perfect example of an architectural monument in the world.  In memory of his [favorite] wife, the Moghal emperor Shah Jehan planned this most extravagant and incomparable monument built for love.  Amazingly graceful from any angle, it is the close-up detail that is really astounding. 

Back at the hotel at about 9:00 AM, we enjoyed breakfast.  We intended to go to Fort Agra with our group at 10:15 AM, the next scheduled event; however, when the two of us arrived at the meeting place about three or four minutes late, the group had already left!  Although we were surprised that they hadn’t waited, our feelings weren’t hurt; we were perfectly willing to spend the time relaxing in our room.  However, the tour organizers in the lobby insisted on getting us to the Fort and called for a small automobile to take us there!  Our ride in that car to the Fort turned out to be an unforeseen, exciting adventure as the car wove in and out of traffic.  Driving in any city in India would be a scary experience and, although the two of us sat in the back seat, we held our breath for much of the distance!  Our guide, Sunil, later told us that three things are required to drive in India:  “a good horn, good brakes, and good luck!”  Very few stoplights exist; instead, vehicles attempt to work their way into traffic in frequent, disorganized roundabouts.  Lots of motorcycles weave in and out; usually no lines show on the road; and sometimes people or dogs walk very close to moving traffic.  (A few times when we were on the bus, we saw a cow next to the road in one of the cities, but fortunately not on that ride to Fort Agra.)  After that wild ride, we arrived safely at Fort Agra, where we met up with our guide and the rest of the group.

Agra Fort is a World Heritage site, credited to Emperor Akbar, India’s great visionary.  His sons and grandsons added to this imposing structure situated by the banks of the Yamuna River.  The palaces, mosques, and audience halls contained within its massive walls of red sandstone were embellished by the artistic fusion of Islam and Hindu tradition.

Later in the afternoon there were opportunities to visit the Tomb of Itmad-Ud-Daulah or to go “Shopping,” at some very expensive stores.  We opted out because we were very tired.  There was also a second visit to the Taj Mahal scheduled for a viewing at sunset, but most people (perhaps all of Group 3) chose not to return; it was a Saturday, and our guide told us that it would be even more crowded than it had been in the morning.  We felt that seeing it once was sufficient!  Dinner was at 7:00 PM, another bountiful meal; and we were asleep before 10:30 PM.

Sunday, 19 Mar 2017 – We arose at 4:00 AM; packed our bags which we left by our hotel room door for pickup; and then had coffee, juice, & rolls in the lobby.  By 5:30 AM we were on our Group 3 bus, and soon each of us was given a “box breakfast” (made by the hotel): ground chicken sandwiches, two boiled eggs, small roll, small banana, apple, cookie, and mango juice.  By about 8:15 AM the buses were in the outskirts of Delhi, and arrived at the Delhi airport at about 9:45 AM.

Since our fight was not scheduled to depart until 12:15 PM, we window-shopped at the various stores in the airport before boarding an IndiGo Airline plane.  This time we both had aisle seats, across from each other, which was fine.  We discovered that food was not necessarily provided on this plane, only if the ticket included payment for a meal.  The flight attendant took our flight tickets, tore off the end portion that entitled us to a meal, and then gave us a choice of three items plus a soft drink or water.  Since we soon discovered that all food choices were spicy, Jesse enjoyed two lunches, while Sally snacked on the cashew nuts that she had brought in her carryon bag!  At 3:00 PM the plane landed at the Goa airport, and our group split up to board the three buses for the relatively short ride to the pier. 

In our cabin, there was a cupcake and a note for Jesse’s birthday.  Though very tired, we went to dinner, sitting with a new friend from Group 3, along with his wife and friends who all live in the Vancouver area.  He was born in Canada, but the others were originally from Hong Kong.  For our exhausted bodies, dancing was out of the question; soon we retired for the night.

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