Delicious Dinner of Cauliflower, Rice, Chicken with Spinach
Our hotel / Spa, Ananda in the Himalays
Ananda's Restaurant
Nothing could have prepared us for today. Cathy looked out
of the window and saw a man hanging by a rope on a wing of our building,
swinging from window to window like a monkey. He was washing windows! I guess
India doesn’t have OSHA. We watched this daredevil window cleaner for a while
and were amazed. Here is a short video I took.
We checked out of the Imperial Hotel (which we love and
always stay at in Delhi) and flew to Rishikesh, a city in the Himalayas. This
is the center of Yoga in India. This is where the Beatles spent 2 months with
the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi back in the 60’s. This is where Cliff and Cathy
sweated like they never had before.
We left the airport and drove through the jungle towards
Rishikesh. All of a sudden we were in a wild elephant reserve, with warning
signs. I wasn’t expecting elephants in the Himalayas. I thought they had yaks.
I didn’t expect to see monkeys everywhere. Warning do not look a monkey in the
eye when are near one, they see it as a challenge.
It was hot, it was humid (so what else is new?), the driving
was ridiculous. I expected winding twisting roads, I expected rain (but we
haven’t encountered any monsoons yet), (oh I wasn’t expecting a power failure -
it just happened now as I write this – hey the lights just came back on). What
I wasn’t expecting was the constant viewing of helicopters bringing stranded
and injured people from the floods into Rishikesh as they rescued them. I
wasn’t expecting cows pushing their way in front of us on narrow streets, I
wasn’t expecting motorcycles zooming down the same narrow streets honking their
horns and narrowly missing the cows and us, I wasn’t expecting to walk on
across the Ganges River on a narrow foot bridge with monkeys on either side of
me ready to steal anything I was carrying. Most of all I wasn’t expecting to be
driving on narrow mountain roads with landslides covering half of the road, or
major portions of the road washed away by the monsoons. But don’t despair this
story will have a happy ending.
Rishikesh was in a festive mood. Today is Lord Krishna’s
5126 birthday! What a cake with all of those candles he must be having! He is
the blue god often shown with a flute. Our guide took us to a huge Ashram where
we bought some books on spirituality, taking advantage of the Ashram special
humid summer sale. Everyone has an angle on sales in India. We spent some time
talking to a lady monk about her spiritual path that led her to spend her life
at this Ashram.
We went to a Krishna Temple, and spent about 30 minutes
inside it, listening to singers sing “Hare Krishna, Hare Krishna”. We knew the
lyrics thanks to George Harrison. It was quite pleasant, even with the bats
hanging from the ceiling. The marble floors kept the temple quite cool.
The temple had a very clean, air-conditioned restaurant
attached, it was a perfect spot for light lunch. We then returned to our car
for a harrowing ride up the mountain and then back down and across the river on
a bridge to get to the other side of the Ganges for the Aarti Ceremony. The
Ganges, is of course India’s most sacred river. Rishikesh is down river from
the melting glacier start of the river. It is swollen now, from the monsoons.
This is a good thing, India’s agriculture depends upon the very polluted
Ganges. Modi has promised to clean the river up. We will see. Rishikesh is
considered a sacred city and like Varanasi, farther down the river, is a
pilgrimage site for Hindus. At sunset, just as the sun sets over the Ganges,
people gather on the steps leading down to the river and priests in their
saffron robes chant and pray and light golden candelabras which they hold up as
an offering the Ganges. It is quiet a spectacle.
Here is a short video I took.
After the ceremony we
proceeded with the long, extremely hot and humid walk back across the bridge to
our car. We were drenched and exhausted.
One thing about the humidity, living in California we don’t
have humid weather. We aren’t used to being soaked with sweat. You basically
learn to give into it. It evaporates very quickly. 15 minutes after we are in our
air-conditioned car we are dry again.
We then proceeded to drive up the mountain towards the
resort / spa we will be staying at for the next few days. The ride was just
like the other mountain rides: curvy narrow roads, landslides, washed out
sections of the road. There was one new element for us - it was dark, the sun
had sent during the Aarti ceremony. A thing about driving in the Himalayas – it
is an experience I don’t want to ever have to do. But wait, there is good news,
I don’t have to do it! We have a driver. That’s what his Dharma is: to safely
drive people in the Himalayas. That’s what he was reincarnated to do. To our
driver and guide this is absolutely no big deal. They do it every day. They
even would be driving us if it were raining.
The higher we climbed on the mountain, the cooler it got. We
eventually reached our destination: Ananda in the Himalayas – one of the worlds
great Spas. This Spa is set towards the top of a mountain in what used to be an
old palace. It is a beautiful setting, it is cool, it doesn’t have mosquitoes,
it has wifi, it serves wine, it has a great kitchen. We are in for a few days
of ultra-spa treatment, yoga, massage, wine. We are warned however not to leave
our patio door open, for monkeys will come into our room and reek havoc. We ate
dinner outside in the cool weather, on a deck high above the jungle floor. You
could hear the typical sounds of the jungle. The food was wonderful: we choose
from an extensive menu, my favorite gobi (Cauliflower) and chicken in a spinach
sauce. A bottle of rose wine, and I had forgotten how we got up the mountain.
Life in the spa was looking good. It was enhanced when Cathy read to me a
passage in the hotel guide book that stated they have a private helicopter
landing pad for use to evacuate us if a landslide closed the road. On the other
hand, who would want to leave this place?
1 comment:
Shumon Mamoon
said...
Ananda Looks Beautiful..... Glad that you are coping with the humidity!
1 comment:
Ananda Looks Beautiful.....
Glad that you are coping with the humidity!
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