Lotsa people wonder how much it costs. If you figure the air tickets out, you can live like a king in Andamans compared to costs in any city. Here are our costs/ person for the whole trip (Sat afternoon - Tue morning):
Air tickets (Chennai-Port Blair): Rs. 10,000
Stay: Rs. 2,500
Food: Rs. 1,500
SCUBA diving: Rs. 3,500
Local travel: Rs. 1,500
Misc.: Rs. 500
That's it.
Wednesday, March 24, 2010
Quja, the man from Helsinki
The previous evening we noticed a sign to "Kala Patthar" and wanted to check it out. We learnt that it had an elephant park. Hoping to spot elephants, we drove to another forest area. Walked for about a kilometer to discover yet another beach. Nice. Very nice actually. It had several uprooted trees, glorious sea shells and nearly isolated. Pradeep read. I swam. No elephants. However, on our drive back we did see four elephants - one of them chained but taking the royal piss.
We stopped again at El Dorado that announcing to all passersby: chilled beer. A bald, tatooed man was sitting quietly and sipping Golden Eagle beer. He was dressed in a colorful bottom wrap, a necklace, several piercings and nothing else. I learnt that he was from Helsinki and his name was Quja (you-ha). We seemed to have common tastes in movies. I think I've seen those absurdly melancholic Finnish movies by Aki Kaurismaki (there's one where every character's name is Frank). He'd been in India for 2.5 months (his third trip) and in Andamans for 2.5 weeks. He was into fishing and was so excited about the meter-long Barracuda that he caught a couple of days ago. While he freelanced now, he worked as TV producer and had done several gigs from website design to photography to writing. Of all the places he'd been (which are very many - he didn't have a count), he found Laos near Thailand to be the most honest and nicest. Quja told us about his unfinished 3-round kickboxing fight in Bangkok - the blood and sweat got him a Thai girl friend. He left her after three weeks to head back to Helsinki because he had work to complete. North of where he lived in Finland is the Lapland region (that extends from the Norwegian Sea to the White Sea and lies within the Arctic circle) and he said that that was the best place in the world for him - provided its summer and he was there when the sun never set for three pleasurable days.
We wrapped up Havelock with our lunch at Rony's - great cook! Hurried to the Jetty and barely made it to the ferry to Port Blair - we were the last ones to get on board. Later on the boat, I sat down and laid down and sat down again and laid down on the roof of the boat watching the blue sky, remote clouds, the passing water all around, a setting sun, a rising moon, and stars and constellations. Before long, Port Blair arrived. It was city.
We stopped again at El Dorado that announcing to all passersby: chilled beer. A bald, tatooed man was sitting quietly and sipping Golden Eagle beer. He was dressed in a colorful bottom wrap, a necklace, several piercings and nothing else. I learnt that he was from Helsinki and his name was Quja (you-ha). We seemed to have common tastes in movies. I think I've seen those absurdly melancholic Finnish movies by Aki Kaurismaki (there's one where every character's name is Frank). He'd been in India for 2.5 months (his third trip) and in Andamans for 2.5 weeks. He was into fishing and was so excited about the meter-long Barracuda that he caught a couple of days ago. While he freelanced now, he worked as TV producer and had done several gigs from website design to photography to writing. Of all the places he'd been (which are very many - he didn't have a count), he found Laos near Thailand to be the most honest and nicest. Quja told us about his unfinished 3-round kickboxing fight in Bangkok - the blood and sweat got him a Thai girl friend. He left her after three weeks to head back to Helsinki because he had work to complete. North of where he lived in Finland is the Lapland region (that extends from the Norwegian Sea to the White Sea and lies within the Arctic circle) and he said that that was the best place in the world for him - provided its summer and he was there when the sun never set for three pleasurable days.
We wrapped up Havelock with our lunch at Rony's - great cook! Hurried to the Jetty and barely made it to the ferry to Port Blair - we were the last ones to get on board. Later on the boat, I sat down and laid down and sat down again and laid down on the roof of the boat watching the blue sky, remote clouds, the passing water all around, a setting sun, a rising moon, and stars and constellations. Before long, Port Blair arrived. It was city.
Legal aliens on an island - the man at Powerfull restaurant
As dusk fell, we got back to our Village 5 or was it 3. Had dinner at El Dorado, another spot in another resort. Pradeep ordered the most amusing chocolate pancake I've ever seen. No chocolate but it had some crushed cream biscuits (cookies). I ate an Israeli Lafa - basically, a big roti with salad and fries on top.
I thought I didn't sleep very well that night for some reason but Pradeep said I snored through the night. I was up early and went to my favorite digs for tea. It was closed so walked a little further to a food shack called Powerfull (yes, the extra L is not a typo). Got back and read for quite a bit lying outside on the bench across our cottage. We returned to Powerfull later for breakfast - omelette and toast and a debate on Obamacare. The Bengali cook at Powerfull wore blue pants and a white vest. He had a somewhat large belly and an unshaven face that looked older than his years. He told us about changing regulations and how a food inspector now drops by unannounced and can shut the place down for hygiene if things weren't clean. I always asked people where they were from. People answer this question in different ways. Originally, he said, Andamans. When I probed, I discovered he moved here 28 years ago from West Bengal as a 12 year old boy. He had come to work, married a local Bengali girl and now has a family. He never went back to Kolkata but always thinks of going. He reminded me of V.S. Naipaul's family that moved generations ago to Trinidad and Tobago. It's the same thing. The Powerfull man's travails, needs are exactly the same as those I know who are in U.S. and mean to move back to India. His eyes looked at same distant past.
I thought I didn't sleep very well that night for some reason but Pradeep said I snored through the night. I was up early and went to my favorite digs for tea. It was closed so walked a little further to a food shack called Powerfull (yes, the extra L is not a typo). Got back and read for quite a bit lying outside on the bench across our cottage. We returned to Powerfull later for breakfast - omelette and toast and a debate on Obamacare. The Bengali cook at Powerfull wore blue pants and a white vest. He had a somewhat large belly and an unshaven face that looked older than his years. He told us about changing regulations and how a food inspector now drops by unannounced and can shut the place down for hygiene if things weren't clean. I always asked people where they were from. People answer this question in different ways. Originally, he said, Andamans. When I probed, I discovered he moved here 28 years ago from West Bengal as a 12 year old boy. He had come to work, married a local Bengali girl and now has a family. He never went back to Kolkata but always thinks of going. He reminded me of V.S. Naipaul's family that moved generations ago to Trinidad and Tobago. It's the same thing. The Powerfull man's travails, needs are exactly the same as those I know who are in U.S. and mean to move back to India. His eyes looked at same distant past.
The swampy Elephant Beach
We were immersed in deep conversation with Adi on several things including the island life. At around 1.30, we headed for lunch at Cafe Del Mar, a restaurant that's part of the Barefoot resort in Village 3/ 5. It's cool. Laid back like everywhere else. You get Tiger and Frosters and a whole range of seafood. I ate and slept on the bench where I was eating. It was nice to do that. Felt life was really simple. I don't know how long I snoozed amidst other backpackers engaged in random conversation. Pradeep was writing on borrowed paper. After my siesta, we decided to go to the Elephant Beach on the way to the Radha Beach (Village 7), which turned out to be a totally unexpected, down-to-earth (literally) experience.
If you want to find signs to Elephant Beach, you'll never find one. You have ask and go - like everywhere else on the island. You take a right somewhere along the way to the Radha beach. The only indication is you might see a couple of scooters parked. We saw two paths - one to the left and another to the right. Wondering which one led to the elephant beach, we decided to take the one on the left which seemed more trodden. The path took us deep into the rain forest. It's green, bright and dark intermittently, birds chirping all around, crickets doing their thing, broken branches, animals rustling leaves and hooting. There was a sign from the department of forests that said, "Don't play with nature." They seemed right - when I played the fool with Pradeep, ants bit me? (where did they come from?)
The entrance to elephant beach appears like some place in outer space! It's dark grey sand and slush all around. Grasshoppers (or were they sandhoppers?) and several insect swarm the place. Dried trees show shamelessly display their bottoms. If you close your eyes and then open them - you'd feel you've landed on some martian moon! It's absolutely quiet except for the gentle gushing of the sea in the background, some birds and crickets chirping and bugs and insects quickly making their way through your feet. Wherever there were small puddles of water (really small), there would
We walked through the greyish-brown slush to find the beach. Were we on earth? I mean the whole place seemed so, so fragile that I felt compelled to throw back the sea shell that I picked up for keeps. Quiet. Tranquil. Very calm. Everything doing its thing. Nothing interfered with anything. Everything had its place and seemed to be there for some unknown reason but it seemed important that it was there. There was a tree - uprooted, whitewashed by the water. There was a dog that seemed interested in my Kindle. There were these little white spiders that popped up from burrows in the sand. They seemed really busy coming out, going in, coming out again. The water was lukewarm, salty, full of pebbles, shells and calm. It was nice.
If you want to find signs to Elephant Beach, you'll never find one. You have ask and go - like everywhere else on the island. You take a right somewhere along the way to the Radha beach. The only indication is you might see a couple of scooters parked. We saw two paths - one to the left and another to the right. Wondering which one led to the elephant beach, we decided to take the one on the left which seemed more trodden. The path took us deep into the rain forest. It's green, bright and dark intermittently, birds chirping all around, crickets doing their thing, broken branches, animals rustling leaves and hooting. There was a sign from the department of forests that said, "Don't play with nature." They seemed right - when I played the fool with Pradeep, ants bit me? (where did they come from?)
The entrance to elephant beach appears like some place in outer space! It's dark grey sand and slush all around. Grasshoppers (or were they sandhoppers?) and several insect swarm the place. Dried trees show shamelessly display their bottoms. If you close your eyes and then open them - you'd feel you've landed on some martian moon! It's absolutely quiet except for the gentle gushing of the sea in the background, some birds and crickets chirping and bugs and insects quickly making their way through your feet. Wherever there were small puddles of water (really small), there would
We walked through the greyish-brown slush to find the beach. Were we on earth? I mean the whole place seemed so, so fragile that I felt compelled to throw back the sea shell that I picked up for keeps. Quiet. Tranquil. Very calm. Everything doing its thing. Nothing interfered with anything. Everything had its place and seemed to be there for some unknown reason but it seemed important that it was there. There was a tree - uprooted, whitewashed by the water. There was a dog that seemed interested in my Kindle. There were these little white spiders that popped up from burrows in the sand. They seemed really busy coming out, going in, coming out again. The water was lukewarm, salty, full of pebbles, shells and calm. It was nice.
SCUBA diving in Havelock
Pradeep was already up by 7.30am when I got up the next morning. He was nice enough get me tea. With tea in my belly, I walked down to the beach behind Gold India. It was nice - small but nice. There were only some dogs around. Next, we went to the neighboring shack for breakfast - omelette and toast. Joy the taxi driver showed up early and asked what we were planning to do. We said we wanted to scuba dive. He said he knows exactly the right place and would make all the "arrangements." After our rather slow-breakfast which involved playing with a kitten, we headed to Village 1 (close to the Jetty) to find scuba diving place.
At the scuba diving place, we met Adi and his wife Vanessa who had just taken over 2.5 weeks ago. They moved to Andamans six months ago. Adi is a professional scuba diver and has been diving for six years in Goa, Bangkok and elsewhere in Thailand. He was very knowledgeable and took us through everything in a systematic manner, explaining and answering all our questions. The whole experience was novel. For example, it was an aha for me to learn how to breath through my mouth from a 15 kg cylinder while my nose was shut inside a mask throughout. Very novel!
It's a beautiful world underwater. No amount of images on Discovery or National Geographic can ever make up for the real thing. I just couldn't believe that I was seeing fish above my head, next to me, below me. I couldn't believe the kinds of colors and corals I saw, the plants inside water. I hesitated but ended up touching several corals. The purple colored clams that closed shut when they saw us approaching - just amazing! Once we reached the bed of the sea, I picked up the soft sand. It was so interesting to see my hands touching all this. I just felt one with Nature and very complete. In the muddy dust, I saw a clam embedded into the surface. You wouldn't realize it until you approach it - it quickly opens and shuts when you do. I saw a plant - a lightish brown one with white spots (I don't know the biological names). I touched it with both my hands and felt the softness. It was more moist than merely being wet. It was like swimming in a forest. Imagine an exotic forest filled with water and you floating through it and figuring it out, looking up and down trees and the living things on them. In some other ways, you feel as though you are inside an aquarium. There were a zillion things, breathing, moving about, just living - I mean, all this stuff right next to us occupying three-forths of the planet and somehow, we have this perception that we are the only ones here and our lives are the only things that matter. We on earth are indeed very naive.
At the scuba diving place, we met Adi and his wife Vanessa who had just taken over 2.5 weeks ago. They moved to Andamans six months ago. Adi is a professional scuba diver and has been diving for six years in Goa, Bangkok and elsewhere in Thailand. He was very knowledgeable and took us through everything in a systematic manner, explaining and answering all our questions. The whole experience was novel. For example, it was an aha for me to learn how to breath through my mouth from a 15 kg cylinder while my nose was shut inside a mask throughout. Very novel!
It's a beautiful world underwater. No amount of images on Discovery or National Geographic can ever make up for the real thing. I just couldn't believe that I was seeing fish above my head, next to me, below me. I couldn't believe the kinds of colors and corals I saw, the plants inside water. I hesitated but ended up touching several corals. The purple colored clams that closed shut when they saw us approaching - just amazing! Once we reached the bed of the sea, I picked up the soft sand. It was so interesting to see my hands touching all this. I just felt one with Nature and very complete. In the muddy dust, I saw a clam embedded into the surface. You wouldn't realize it until you approach it - it quickly opens and shuts when you do. I saw a plant - a lightish brown one with white spots (I don't know the biological names). I touched it with both my hands and felt the softness. It was more moist than merely being wet. It was like swimming in a forest. Imagine an exotic forest filled with water and you floating through it and figuring it out, looking up and down trees and the living things on them. In some other ways, you feel as though you are inside an aquarium. There were a zillion things, breathing, moving about, just living - I mean, all this stuff right next to us occupying three-forths of the planet and somehow, we have this perception that we are the only ones here and our lives are the only things that matter. We on earth are indeed very naive.
Enter Havelock
After lunch we headed to Havelock without any idea what to do or expect. We just headed there. It was a darn good decision.
We reached Havelock in the afternoon along with other backpackers - most of them European. I recall seeing a family with 4 little kids with long hair - thought they were cute. As you approach the island you see the surrounding water in various shades of blue, green and blue-green.
The laid back culture (I can call it that) was apparent when we asked a bus driver for a free ride instead of taking a rick. He simply nodded asking us to hop on. It was a private bus taking a group of Gujarati families into the island. We got off at the village's only main market. The market looked like a market from any small town in India - a cluster of shops, busy, people standing, sitting and doing whatever. I recall seeing a tourist sitting on a stool and reading her book in front of a shop.
We decided to rent a scooter. Pradeep purchased cheap sunglasses and toothpaste for us. The shop window had a display of the most curious condoms one would imagine. The rental guy wanted to no papers, nothing - he asked for a nominal deposit and gave us the keys. It's a little hard to believe. People in this village trusted each other and strangers by default. He just told us that we'd have to fix if he broke something. He also told us that if the scooter stalled somewhere to give him a call. That's it.
We headed to the Radha beach on village number 7. Whole of Havelock's villages are numbered - 1 through 7. Asking around we found a gas station. It isn't a gas station really. It's again a shop with an asbestos roof that stored petrol in a big container and sold it for Rs. 50 a liter. Amusing.
Village 7 is a longish drive (for Havelock yes). You cut through a forest and then finally approach a small market that signals the arrival of the beach. It was nearly sunset and we saw the yellow sky gently turning darker. Having decided to stay at the Barefoot resort, we walked through the tall, tall trees that seemed have been there since eternity. It was quite dark by the time we got to Barefoot. To our disappointment (which was great actually!), we found that Barefoot had no rooms left. A taxi driver that Pradeep befriended (Joy Fernandes from Trivandrum) directed us to the Gold India resort on Village 5. Alright, we said and we started to village 5 - both of us sweaty, hungry and a little tired. Gold India had rooms for Rs.600 a night; we took it, bathed and headed to the Venom bar for beer and dinner. I slept well and didn't know the passing of the night.
We reached Havelock in the afternoon along with other backpackers - most of them European. I recall seeing a family with 4 little kids with long hair - thought they were cute. As you approach the island you see the surrounding water in various shades of blue, green and blue-green.
The laid back culture (I can call it that) was apparent when we asked a bus driver for a free ride instead of taking a rick. He simply nodded asking us to hop on. It was a private bus taking a group of Gujarati families into the island. We got off at the village's only main market. The market looked like a market from any small town in India - a cluster of shops, busy, people standing, sitting and doing whatever. I recall seeing a tourist sitting on a stool and reading her book in front of a shop.
We decided to rent a scooter. Pradeep purchased cheap sunglasses and toothpaste for us. The shop window had a display of the most curious condoms one would imagine. The rental guy wanted to no papers, nothing - he asked for a nominal deposit and gave us the keys. It's a little hard to believe. People in this village trusted each other and strangers by default. He just told us that we'd have to fix if he broke something. He also told us that if the scooter stalled somewhere to give him a call. That's it.
We headed to the Radha beach on village number 7. Whole of Havelock's villages are numbered - 1 through 7. Asking around we found a gas station. It isn't a gas station really. It's again a shop with an asbestos roof that stored petrol in a big container and sold it for Rs. 50 a liter. Amusing.
Village 7 is a longish drive (for Havelock yes). You cut through a forest and then finally approach a small market that signals the arrival of the beach. It was nearly sunset and we saw the yellow sky gently turning darker. Having decided to stay at the Barefoot resort, we walked through the tall, tall trees that seemed have been there since eternity. It was quite dark by the time we got to Barefoot. To our disappointment (which was great actually!), we found that Barefoot had no rooms left. A taxi driver that Pradeep befriended (Joy Fernandes from Trivandrum) directed us to the Gold India resort on Village 5. Alright, we said and we started to village 5 - both of us sweaty, hungry and a little tired. Gold India had rooms for Rs.600 a night; we took it, bathed and headed to the Venom bar for beer and dinner. I slept well and didn't know the passing of the night.
Enter Andamans
I'm sitting in a ferry back to Port Blair with sleeping passengers all around. The heat makes everyone sleepy. I can't believe that Havelock is gone - it seems like a long and short trip - both at the same time.
48+ hours ago, we landed in Port Blair's small international airport. I was quite amused at how immigration officials filtered passengers based on skin - brown, go here..white, go get a permit. Without checked in bags, we were free to step out in five minutes and were approached by several taxi and auto rickshaw drivers. We selected a lanky man with glasses who indicated that bargaining the Rs.80 for 10 min down was impossible because they had to pay Rs.25 for parking themselves.
Our driver, Alok turned out to be very interesting. Like several of his townsmen, he hopped on a ship and came to Andamans several years ago. He noticed the very many cultures and how everyone lived peacefully and thought, "What's this? This is unlike Kolkatta!" He said he saw his vision of India here - 28 states and even two more countries (Nepal and Bangladesh). He liked it so much that he got a livelihood and settled in Port Blair.
Port Blair itself is an interesting city where people give right of way for pedestrian crossing and wait a full foot away from the stop sign at the signal -- very unlike anywhere else I've seen. He pointed us to a small corner lunch spot and we had a thali meal, which was functional.
48+ hours ago, we landed in Port Blair's small international airport. I was quite amused at how immigration officials filtered passengers based on skin - brown, go here..white, go get a permit. Without checked in bags, we were free to step out in five minutes and were approached by several taxi and auto rickshaw drivers. We selected a lanky man with glasses who indicated that bargaining the Rs.80 for 10 min down was impossible because they had to pay Rs.25 for parking themselves.
Our driver, Alok turned out to be very interesting. Like several of his townsmen, he hopped on a ship and came to Andamans several years ago. He noticed the very many cultures and how everyone lived peacefully and thought, "What's this? This is unlike Kolkatta!" He said he saw his vision of India here - 28 states and even two more countries (Nepal and Bangladesh). He liked it so much that he got a livelihood and settled in Port Blair.
Port Blair itself is an interesting city where people give right of way for pedestrian crossing and wait a full foot away from the stop sign at the signal -- very unlike anywhere else I've seen. He pointed us to a small corner lunch spot and we had a thali meal, which was functional.
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