…… Princley, the organizer, said in his welcome speech the first day, and that is exactly how it is! The driving is completely crazy, a little scary but also absolutely amazing and exciting. But to survive you need to honk as much as you can and to find all the shortcuts between cows, mopeds, buses and cars. Read More
Our first day in our wonderful flower power rickshaw is over and we have had so much fun. The rickshaw race is not only about driving, it also consists of bonus challenges and we have to do different tasks along the way to gather extra points. It can be about dressing up (yourself and your rickshaw) in the best way, here are a few examples from this first day, or to complete some missions along the roadway, for an example to refuel at a particular gas station (good luck finding it 🙂 and to cope with various problems with your rickshaw in the best way.

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Now we have arrived in Chennai and will soon start our great adventure – a rickshaw race where we will drive our own rickshaw around the state of Tamil Nadu. The race is 1000 km long and we will do it together with 10 other teams. Our nice rickshaw is painted in a ”flower power” theme – which was prepared from our design before we came to Chennai. And it looks absolutely fantastic!!

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We often think about the tremendous difference between travelling in India (and everywhere else) today compared to how it was when Christel traveled around the world 28 years ago. What we remember is that things took so much longer time in the good old days, everything from booking a train ticket to keep in touch with family and friends back home in Sweden.

It is  especially the Internet that has made the difference so big, but also the smartphones. We use the Internet for everything. We are booking train and plane tickets online and we book hotels in advance when we have decided to visit a city. We remember the long queues at train stations in the old days where we never really knew for sure if we were in the right queue and the many phone calls we got help from the hotel staff to call to book or rebook a flight. Hotel we often found by reading the Lonely Planet books and sometimes by following a tuktuk driver at a train station. And many kilometers we walked, but never knew for sure if we would get a room when we arrived.

 

We do not very often use our smartphones to make calls, except that we sometimes use Skype for talking to our children back in Sweden, but they can be used in so many other ways. We have downloaded  maps of India that means we will never ever get lost, the phone always knows, thanks to the GPS, where we are and help us to find out where we’re going. (We can also check that the taxi drivers are not fooling us.) They can also tell you how far we have walked every day, and as we actually strive to move as much as we can each day it spurs us on. We often choose to walk instead of taking a taxi when we get to a train station and want to go to our hotel just to get a few extra steps. Another feature that we have used many times in India is the built-in flashlight in our smartphones. Considering how many cows there are in the streets of India and how few street lamps they offer (and those that are seems to be not working a lot of the time due to electrical power cuts), it helps us not to step in too much cowshit.

When  you stay for some time (more than 3 nights) in the same hotel/place it is easy to get and keep up some daily routines. Every morning and evening we have exercised in some way. Christel has done yoga, we have walked or jogged together in the morning and we have taken long and pleasant swims in the ocean in the afternoon.

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In Palolem you can shop till you drop… There’s so much nice stuff, especially table cloths, wall hangings and bags but also musical instruments, clothes and jewelry.

Christel has explored the possibility of sending stuff home to Sweden by mail but realized that the package may not be delivered before Christmas and then we do not want to risk it. Instead, we have decided that we will stay in Palolem once again before we go home in December and fill our bags with as much as we (she) can carry. We have checked the cost of overweight on domestic flights as you only may bring 15 kg per person without charge, and it is quite reasonable. Christel is OK with throwing all her old stuff out to make room for as much as possible of these things you can not live/leave without. Read More

We had planned to stay for only one week in Palolem.  Our original plan was to head up to Anjuna beach located in North Goa, where a hippie market takes place several times a week, and stay there for another week. But at the end of the first week in Palolem we did not want to take the risk of going to a new place when we actually live in kind of a paradise here. The idea we had was that we would move to another hotel after the first week because Palolem Inn where we stay is a little bit in the outskirts of the village but then we realized that we got on too well with our clean room with air conditioning and hot water to take the risk to relocate. Yes, we pay a little more to stay in this place but we think we deserve a little luxury after a hard first month in India.

Palolem beach = paradise!!  We do not know if our bad experiences in Majorda reinforced the positive impression of Palolem beach but it really felt like we arrived in a paradise. After a taxi ride for just over an hour (1600 rupees) and a nice welcome at our hotel, Palolem Inn, we put on our swim wear and went to the beach. It was only a few hundred meters away and absolutely gorgeous.

 

A long, beautiful white sand beach – no sun beds and charter hotels, just a few cows and dogs.

Palolem beach is in a bay surrounded by hills dotted with palm trees and on the beach there are a few beach restaurants and a lot of lifeguards. The tourist season has not yet started in Palolem so many bungalows and houses are still dressed in tarps, often yellow or blue, and some bungalows have not yet been put together. Read More

After a short airplane ride from Udaipur to Goa we were picked up by a pre-arranged hotel taxi which drove us to our hotel at Majorda Beach. We had booked this hotel in the very last minute, as we had decided that we would like to see something more of Goa before getting to Palolem beach, where we knew we would want to stay for a longer period.In the pictures in booking.com our hotel “The Treehouse Blue” looked like a real luxury hotel and it had received great reviews. Read More
Udaipur was really just what we needed after the messy cities of Jaipur and Agra.

The beautiful waterfront, the many nice restaurants near our hotel, quiet alleys made for long walks and a boat trip to watch the sunset. On top of this, the hotel was really good – not luxurious but very homey and we had a beautiful view from our room (See waterfront above.). And we really enjoyed the meals we had at the hotel rooftop restaurant. Read More