Elephants, last in the India series
My mum used to live in an old farmhouse with a few acres out back that she rented to the dairy farmer next door. He used the land as pasture--his herd would come over for light snacks in the afternoon. Before going for walks I would always check out the kitchen window to see if the Holstein girls were in sight. They pissed me off, those cows. Dropping big pancakes of soft poop in the grass, turning the ground all lumpy with their hooves. The worst of it was the way they would gather around in this slow, knowing, Far Side sort of way, and then start to follow me on the walk, like they were showing me to the damn door already.
I'm sort of afraid of large grass-chewing mammals. I wouldn't call it horrifying, just that, well, they worry me. The long lashes and the sideways chewing. The girth, the weight . . . You could be trampled or gored at any moment. Naturally a place like India isn't a great place for the bovine-phobe. Ditto, the flip-flop aficionado. I am both.
This photo was taken in Rajasthan. It's my friend Dutch screenwriting friend Stephanie. My complaints about elephants were similar to those pertaining to cows above. Only bigger.

A few days after this photo was taken, Steph and I got whacked on bhang lassis, then wandered the back alleys of old Jaisalmer, bumping shoulders with each other, looking for the front door of our guest house. After a few hours of slogging, when the sun had gone down and the brick facades were starting to ooze together, we found our door. It was locked. After having this stoned, loud and, I'm sure, pretty retarded debate about the appropriateness of knocking, the door squeaked open and a swathe of household light fell upon us. It was the proprietor, a very tall old man with two front teeth shooting off at odd angles like the walking fingers in the Yellow Pages logo.
I must say at this point that we were stratospherically high. High to the point of hallucinating, so that this man seemed to grow even taller as we were standing there looking up at him with dilated Mickey Mouse pupils. Like Dad, like God even. He let us enter, then gave us a lecture on walking the streets at night, which seemed extra hilarious given the secret-code, multi-tiered sense of irony we'd been honing to a sharpened point on the walk home. Then he started psychically probing our minds, which really blew our brains out. He knew exactly what countries we had visited and what we'd eaten for dinner a few villages back and even the bored, loopy, traveller-thoughts that had been cycling through our heads like clothes going around in a dryer.
Later, when Steph and I went to bed in our side-by-side bunks, we fell asleep with our eyes wide open, trying to think the cleanest, blankest thoughts possible. It took us until the next afternoon to sober up. And to figure out that the old man had rummaged through all of our belongings--including our journals--while we'd been out getting high.
I'm sort of afraid of large grass-chewing mammals. I wouldn't call it horrifying, just that, well, they worry me. The long lashes and the sideways chewing. The girth, the weight . . . You could be trampled or gored at any moment. Naturally a place like India isn't a great place for the bovine-phobe. Ditto, the flip-flop aficionado. I am both.
This photo was taken in Rajasthan. It's my friend Dutch screenwriting friend Stephanie. My complaints about elephants were similar to those pertaining to cows above. Only bigger.

A few days after this photo was taken, Steph and I got whacked on bhang lassis, then wandered the back alleys of old Jaisalmer, bumping shoulders with each other, looking for the front door of our guest house. After a few hours of slogging, when the sun had gone down and the brick facades were starting to ooze together, we found our door. It was locked. After having this stoned, loud and, I'm sure, pretty retarded debate about the appropriateness of knocking, the door squeaked open and a swathe of household light fell upon us. It was the proprietor, a very tall old man with two front teeth shooting off at odd angles like the walking fingers in the Yellow Pages logo.
I must say at this point that we were stratospherically high. High to the point of hallucinating, so that this man seemed to grow even taller as we were standing there looking up at him with dilated Mickey Mouse pupils. Like Dad, like God even. He let us enter, then gave us a lecture on walking the streets at night, which seemed extra hilarious given the secret-code, multi-tiered sense of irony we'd been honing to a sharpened point on the walk home. Then he started psychically probing our minds, which really blew our brains out. He knew exactly what countries we had visited and what we'd eaten for dinner a few villages back and even the bored, loopy, traveller-thoughts that had been cycling through our heads like clothes going around in a dryer.
Later, when Steph and I went to bed in our side-by-side bunks, we fell asleep with our eyes wide open, trying to think the cleanest, blankest thoughts possible. It took us until the next afternoon to sober up. And to figure out that the old man had rummaged through all of our belongings--including our journals--while we'd been out getting high.
January 18, 2007
Caffeine & sex, the missing link
This photo still slays me. I'm entering an establishment called the Hot & Stimuliating (sic) Cafe in Darjeeling. Also, I seem to be wearing Hammer pants. My travelling companion, Vicky Lear, took this photo. (Vick, if happen to Google yourself to this post, get in touch! I've still got a killer photo of you wearing a British Airways blanket--peanut-brown, Burberry-tartan-gone-wrong--as a winter coat).
The Hot & Stimulating is perched on a high spot in town with tea gardens visible on the mountains across the valley. The owner, in my memory, looks like a Nepali David Carradine with a fu manchu. I ordered Darjeeling tea. It tasted like shit. Then he served us momos, a Himalayan sort of dumpling--deepening my belief that every human being needs the starchy comfort of a perogy. He didn't speak English very well, but Vicky and I nevertheless tried to explain to him the multiple nuances of the phrase "hot and stimulating." I came away from the experience understanding just how difficult it is to pantomime the words "sexy" and "porn." Oh, yeah, and looking stupid, like every other tourist sent there by the Lonely Planet who has ever attempted same.
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January 14, 2007
Victoria, where even the birds beg
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January 9, 2007
Newsy bits from a warming world
1) The Tyee has a piece on a rumored energy plan for B.C. that raises the hopes--not the eyebrows (hard to believe, I know)--of environmentalists:
2) Then this from an informative if enviro-ranting newsletter to which I subscribe:
I went to the Powerpoint presentation and found this interesting flow charty thing. I think what they're going for is more accurately "sort-of-clean-seeming energy, if you get the spin just right." Maybe should have dropped the flow chart. Maybe should have hired an editor.
3) Then this, which I think is totally awesome, from Norway: wooden snowmen protesting global warming in front of the Parliament building.
From Morgenutgaven. View the entire photoset.
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January 8, 2007
Human trapped in a dog's body
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January 5, 2007
January reading
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January 4, 2007
Yay, Nancy!
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Snow removal, Indian-style
Kumaun is in India's western Himalaya where the
TibetChina border meets Nepal. If you've been to the mountainous parts of India then you probably know how relaxing this kind of travel can be. I watched most of it blur by through my fingers while gripping the seat vinyl underneath my ass. (Hence the pharmaceutical mention in the previous post.) I do remember many summit stops at roadside shrines so passengers could do a kind of oh-shit puja before the brakeless descents into the valley. After awhile I just started walking between villages.I ran into these guys on a road just outside of Almora travelled by little Nepalis in three-piece suits carrying refridgerator-sized loads on their heads, ladies in saris, toe-socks and sandals, kids with tiffins, goats and herders, etc. I'm not sure why these men were shovelling the road, given it was plastered with two feet of mashed-potato snow for 5 kilometres in either direction--and totally impassible by vehicles in any case. What interested me was the snow-removal method, which involves a main guy for the spade work and an lackey with a rope to assist with heavy lifting. Never seen anything like it. Not even in Vancouver, where we don't know snow from styrofoam peanuts.
BTW, I have a license to pick on Indians. If you want to verify it, just go to the white pages and look up "Gill." In Vancouver at least, you'll get two hundred pages of Harminders and Parminders. My dad used to wear scarves in the turban-like arrangement favored by the rope lackey, and for years I just thought it was my dad being weird. Not until I got to India did I realize there are another billion people who like winter headgear fashioned like this. And also to gag themselves while brushing their teeth.
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January 3, 2007
Indian archives, first in a series
In the process I found a giant shoe box (Simard, boot-sized--luscious leather for which I probably paid a freaking mint. Where are the boots now? I have no idea.) full of old photos. Being a Pisces, I never give up an opportunity to turn household entropy into newfound forms of chaos. Instead of organizing these photos into some sort of useful array, I sprayed them all out over the kitchen table for a stumble down good old Memory Lane. I rediscovered a bunch from a trip to India I took exactly ten years ago. Which swept me up in a wave of nostalgia for bel poori, Thums [sic] Up!, and over-the-counter Valium.
Here is one:
I took this photo at dawn in my favorite Indian city, Varanasi. It's on the banks of the Ganges, which I came to use as a regular walking route after narrowly escaping death under the hooves of a bull in flagrante delicto on the sidewalk of the main thoroughfare. The smiling child featured above is wearing a T-shirt as a babushka and is indeed collecting cow shit on a sort of hors d'oeuvre platter. Poor Indians use sundried dung as cooking fuel. And we pick up our dogs' poop with plastic shopping bags.
posted by Charlotte at 10:58 AM | permalink | email it |0 comments
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