Travelling Worm

A bookworm's travelogue

Category: India

  • Colour and sound on Indian roads

    This is the blog of Mark Wordsworm, the travelling worm. I’m a 25-year-old bookmark and can proudly boast my own Hallmark serial number, 95 HBM 80-1. You’ll probably want to read all about me and my Travelling Companion (the TC).

    Today’s travel notes

    Me and the TC spent the last week or so in Bangalore and Mysore, India. I’ve already posted my impressions of the two cities. Now for a wrapup about the traffic. Trust this worm, the traffic is a topic all on its own.

    My impressions? Communication is key. Follow the sage advice on the back of the truck: toot when coming through; toot when it’s safe to make a move; toot when in doubt.

    The book I’m in

    Zero’s Return, by Sara King. This is part 3 of the Zero chronicles. This worm is enjoying this story as much as the first two, and is impressed with the change in theme. Sarah King has managed to retain the magic of the Zero character even while throwing him into a completely different situation. Sink or swim, again, Joe Dobbs.

    Recommended garb

    Wear something comfortable and adaptable. Be ready to toss a scarf over your shoulders (this is a tip from the TC, of course, since this worm’s shoulders are adequately covered by my academic jacket) or discard your sandals at the drop of a hat.

    Travel tip

    Hire a driver, at least for your first foray or two into Bangalore traffic. The drivers know a thing or two.

    The photos

    Experience a ride in a car with a hired driver. Note the expert use of the horn to let everyone know where we are and what our intentions are.

    The next video is longer, and shows some interesting roadside scenes. We’re driving along MG Road in Bangalore for most of the way. In two places (around 15 seconds into the video, and another at 1:21) you’ll notice an auto rickshaw travelling in the opposite direction to the rest of the traffic. This is a not uncommon sight. In other countries, you might say the vehicle is on the wrong side of the road. In Bangalore, you’d say it’s in exactly the right place to get where it needs to go.

    At 30 seconds, the car passes a laundry business on the left. See all the sheets and other washed items hanging out to dry. One of the TC’s acquaintances visited the laundry, and was amazed how the staff keep track of every single item without written records.

    Here’s the video:

    There’s quite a variety of vehicles on the road. The TC, bless her cotton socks, was taken with the colourful decorations on the trucks:

    Colour and traffic on Indian roads

    Another:

    Colour and sound on Indian roads

    This one’s a Tata, like the first. Tata is a very big auto manufacturer in India:

    Colour and sound on Indian roads

    And another colourful truck:

    Colour and sound on Indian roads

    And another. Yes, the TC has a fondness for trucks:

    Colour and sound on Indian roads

    On the rear of the trucks, it’s very common to see pleas and encouragement to hoot. That’s right, hooting is part of the system, and truckies ask you to do it to let them know you’re there:

    Colour and sound on Indian roads

    This one has tassels too:

    Colour and sound on Indian roads

    As well as trucks, there are carts:

    Colour and sound on Indian roads

    Coconuts:

    Colour and sound on Indian roads

    Pedestrians – the TC took this photo for the scaffolding in the background as much as the people strolling past:

    Colour and sound on Indian roads

    Auto rickshaws – this one with a colourful view of Bangalore:

    Colour and sound on Indian roads

    Scooters – with an interestomg background of stalls:

    Colour and sound on Indian roads

    Bikes:

    Colour and sound on Indian roads

    And more bikes:

    Colour and sound on Indian roads

    That’s all for today, folks.


  • Mysore or Mysuru in India

    This is the blog of Mark Wordsworm, the travelling worm. I’m a 25-year-old bookmark and can proudly boast my own Hallmark serial number, 95 HBM 80-1. You’ll probably want to read all about me and my Travelling Companion (the TC).

    Today’s travel notes

    Me and the TC are visiting the city of Mysore, in India’s state of Karnataka. Mysore, officially named Mysuru, is about three hours’ drive from Bangalore, up into the hills.

    My impressions? Bright air and fresh colours.

    The book I’m in

    Zero’s Return, by Sara King. This is part 3 of the Zero chronicles. This worm is enjoying this story as much as the first two, and is impressed with the change in theme. Sarah King has managed to retain the magic of the Zero character even while throwing him into a completely different situation. Sink or swim, again, Joe Dobbs.

    Recommended accommodation

    Radisson Blu Plaza Hotel, 1 MG Road, Mysore. It’s comfortable, and the staff are very pleasant and attentive.

    Travel tip

    Drive up Chamundi Hill, or walk up if you can manage a staircase of more than 1000 steps. Stroll around the temples at the top of the hill. It’s beautiful and peaceful up there.

    The photos

    Me with part of Mysore city behind me:

    Mysore or Mysuru in India

    Here’s the same view of Mysore, without this worm embellishing the foreground:

    Mysore or Mysuru in India

    A busy street scene in Mysore:

    Mysore or Mysuru in India

    A quiet side street:

    Mysore or Mysuru in India

    Mysore Palace is full of activity, and the buildings are attractive and interesting. Here’s a temple near the palace gate:

    Mysore or Mysuru in India

    Mysore Palace:

    Mysore or Mysuru in India

    The palace courtyard:

    Mysore or Mysuru in India

    An alleyway behind the main palace building:

    Mysore or Mysuru in India

    We drove up Chamundi Hill, just outside Mysore, and walked the circuit at the top of the hill. This is a view of Chamundi temple:

    Mysore or Mysuru in India

    Chamundi temple from a different angle:

    Mysore or Mysuru in India

    A closer view of the temple. Click the image to zoom in:

    Mysore or Mysuru in India

    Back in the city of Mysore, Gothic huddles up close to telephone lines, carts and auto rickshaws. St Philomena’s Catholic church, built in 1936:

    Mysore or Mysuru in India

    That’s all for today, folks.


  • Bangalore peace and traffic

    This is the blog of Mark Wordsworm, the travelling worm. I’m a 25-year-old bookmark and can proudly boast my own Hallmark serial number, 95 HBM 80-1. You’ll probably want to read all about me and my Travelling Companion (the TC).

    Today’s travel notes

    Me and the TC are in Bangalore, India, for a few days. It’s an amazing place. Energetic, frenetic, hectic.

    My impressions? Bangalore traffic is a metaphor waiting to happen.

    In fact, traffic was used as a metaphor in two of the conference sessions that the TC attended this week.

    The book I’m in

    Railsea, by China Miéville. Moby-Dick meets steam punk, as told by a master of language. This worm has seldom been as impressed by a writer as I am by China Miéville.

    Recommended accommodation

    ITC Gardenia, 1 Residency Rd, Bengaluru, Karnataka 560025. Actually, though that’s the official address, the entrance is on Vittal Mallya Road.

    Recommended restaurant

    K & K restaurant at the ITC Gardenia hotel, for excellence of Indian cuisine and friendly attentiveness of service.

    Travel tip

    Take a stroll through Cubbon Park, during daylight hours, for an oasis of peace and coolness.

    The photos

    Me at the railway station on the well known MG road:

    Bangalore peace and traffic

    Next is a rare glimpse of the TC, snapped as she was watching a Bangalore rickshaw. These little three-wheeled vehicles are also called auto rickshaws, to distinguish them from the hand-drawn rickshaws. When this worm was in Bangkok a while ago, we travelled in a similar vehicle, called a tuk tuk. On the TC’s left, behind the green and yellow rickshaw, is the Vidhana Soudha, which is the seat of the state legislature of Karnataka, the state in which Bangalore is located:

    Bangalore peace and traffic

    Communication is an art in Bangalore traffic. Know where you’re going, make it clear to those around you, and toot to let people know you’re there. If you’re on foot, just pretend to be a vehicle:

    For a puddle of peace in the swirl of traffic, take a stroll under the trees of Cubbon park:

    Bangalore peace and traffic

    That’s all for today, folks.