Tag: Bangalore

  • Hoyle goes to India – Day 20 – Friday Morning – last day in BLR

    So, I did a blog thing.  Yesterday before work (and a bit last night, and again this morning) I set up a wordpress site, which is where you’ll be reading this.  Prior to this update I’d done everything on Facebook as updates just for my friends, but I keep getting asked by others here to see it, and I figure one or two things I said might be entertaining outside my circle of friends, so here you go.  Of course I had to do it the hard way, with hosting and such.  I hope people enjoy it.  Maybe it will inspire me to write more or travel more or both.  I plan to go back into these posts and edit them to include photos, and maybe add some detail here  and  there.

    Today is going to be a  really long day.  I’ve got a lot to do at work, then the guys are taking me out for a party/dinner.  Around midnight I’ll come to the hotel, shower, change, pack and head to the airport.  The flight is around 4am to Dubai, then a 1:45 layover and another long flight home.  I really hope I’ll be able to sleep on the plane.

    Last night we went to Vapour, a rooftop brewpub.  I had a flight of  beers including a Basmati beer, which actually tasted like basmati!  It was very light though and not my style, so I wouldn’t order it again, but I was glad to have a few ounces of it.   The others were an OK ale, a “premium” which I didn’t like, and a stout which was quite good.  We also continued our trend of trying and sharing appetizers/tapas and had paneer tikka Zafrani, whose skewers were intermixed with bell peppers.  We also had really amazing chicken tikka Hyderabadi, that were very juicy.

    We also had Mutton Galouti Kebab, which was a tender patty on top of a triangle of thin bread.  I tried eating it with a knife but the bread was tough and I decided it was finger food.  We had asked for “less spicy” and got what we wanted.

    A soccer match was on TV but it was Dortmund against someone else in Europe and no one was watching  It was 1-1 and we remarked that soccer would be a lot more fun to watch with more scoring.  Maybe they should make the goal bigger.

    I walked back from Vapour which was about 3/4 mile in a straight line down 100 feet rd, which sounds silly until you realize it’s 100 feet wide.  There’s an 80 feet rd too nearby.

    Saving this and heading down for breakfast.  I’m not sure  if I’ll be able to provide another real update between now and the plane, but I’ll probably want to kill some time in flight so I may write something long then.

     

  • Hoyle goes to India – Day 19 – Thursday morning in BLR

    Last night we went to a big and shiny new mall for dinner and drinks with one of the teams from work. Of course the entrance is a mess of smashed concrete and dirt, but once inside it was really very nice, and would fit in anywhere in the US. I wouldn’t have minded walking around some, but we were basically still working. 3 Monkeys Brewpub is big and nice inside, with shiny brewing equipment displayed centrally.

    There were at least a dozen of us, and I got a chance to talk to a few folks. I mentioned I like board and card games, and showed how to play No Thanks, though we couldn’t play since the ziplock that held the chips broke open and they got separated from the cards. But Shanib is a wizard with card tricks and impressed us all.

    There were lots of spicy tapas dishes, a coordinated mix of veg and non-veg for those with various food restrictions. Also there were pitchers of a good IPA.

    The ladies talked them into changing the music from pretty crappy 80’s music to dance music, and there was a little bit of dancing before we cleared out at the usual 11pm. David and I shared a tuktuk because we are both staying in Indiranagar and we ended up in a blinged out one with an LCD screen and stereo system.

    When I got back I decided to wash the clothes I was wearing so that I’d have one more set for Saturday. I’ll have enough time after dinner friday night to go back to the hotel, shower and change for my long travel day, so I wanted one more fresh set of clothes.

    This morning was Masala dosa, machine coffee and watermelon juice again. I took some videos on the commute to try to give an idea of what the roads are like. I just missed a picture of a guy on a scooter carrying 6 boxes of copier paper. David suggested we mount a gopro to someone’s scooter and turn it into a ride.

    Time to get some work done.

  • Hoyle goes to India – Day 18 – Wednesday in BLR

    Last night we went back to the place in UB city, the fancy mall next to the JW Marriott downtown. This time there were four of us, adding Carol and Dennis who arrived while I was on vacation. The idea was to bring Dennis somewhere that was new for him, but he had come on his last trip! Anyway we had a pile of Indian tapas under the pounding beat of house music… The place was much quieter last time, but I guess they turn up the music after about 10.

    There of us rode back with Dennis’s driver who had heard I went to Goa and told me that’s where he is from, specifically Vasco de Gama. Dennis thought I had switched to Spanish, but I explained it was a Portuguese colony. We talked a bit about my trip a little and he told us David is staying in a bad neighborhood, near a slum where Tamil people stay.

    I washed my last set of laundry in the sink and hung it out on the rubber clothesline on the balcony, then went down for an egg sandwich, cooked panini style with tomato, cucumber and onion.

  • Hoyle goes to India – Day 17 – Tuesday in BLR

    I got a decent night’s sleep overall, though there is a loud dog nearby that woke me up a few times. I booted my laptop and joined the Star Wars RPG for about a half hour, and it was nice to see friends. I still had some time to kill so I listened to the Dice Tower podcast, which amounted to another sort of grounding activity.

    Breakfast was tasty springy iddli and an omelette, with watermelon juice and coffee again. The two breakfast attendants are helpful but don’t have much English. One wears his cap flat and his black jeans with styled bleached parts low on his hips, like a rapper in white flip flops.

    Off to work

  • Hoyle goes to India – Day 16 – Monday back to work

    Last night was fun. David and I took a tuktuk to a nice college area and ate at Dice and Dine, a board game cafe. I taught him Splendor and we had fried breaded things that looked like mozzarella sticks but didn’t have lava inside. We also had a chicken tikka pizza. Both were good. David left a generous tip of over 500 since we had been there so long.

    I chatted with Jos and went to bed early, setting my alarm for 5 am to watch the Superbowl. By around halftime I was considering going back to bed as we were down 28 3. But I stuck with it and saw one of the best games of my life. One thing that was disappointing was that none of the commercials make it over here, so I saw one for a watch and one for UFC every single break. Also they have an annoying habit of overlaying crap on every channel taking up screen space like it was Headline News.

    Washed the Hampi sweat out of two shirts and last night’s smoke out of another and hung them up. Then breakfast in the hotel lobby of an omelette and a stuffed bread whose name I already forgot. Plus watermelon juice and coffee.

    David will bring the car by around 1110 so I am packing up the laptop and going to start planning my day.

    Had a good day back at work with a bit different perspective. The car that picked us up was a not nicer, a high end Suzuki, which I didn’t know was a thing.

    Dinner at Toit, downstairs this time in the non smoking section. Much nicer. Had two IPAs and two pizzas, one artichoke and sun dried tomatoes, the other a meat special. Took the last of both back to put in my mini fridge at an unexpectedly early hour of 11pm. Heading to bad after a long day.

  • Hoyle goes to India – Day 15 – Sunday back in Bangalore

    Finally got checked in at the promised noon, so I can’t complain I guess. I read the newspaper in the meantime. Once I got upstairs I knew I had made a good choice. This is a one bedroom apartment and there really isn’t anything wrong with it. I did some laundry in the sink, hung it on my clothesline on my private monkey-free balcony and had a nap.

    Next up, David will bring over my laptop and I will kick off a sync of the photos to the cloud, then we will go to the board game place where I hope to find something decent to teach him. The library doesn’t look great from the photos and most games are best with 3 but I expect it will go well. It looks like a decent area to hang out anyway and the roads seem good.

  • Hoyle goes to India – Day 1 – Boston to Dubai to Bangalore

    I was in the air when Trump was inaugurated on an Emirates 777-300. I had a window seat, so I got to see russia and Scandinavia. We crossed between the black sea and the Caspian, I think, then over Iran and the gulf. The sun rose and the gulf was peppered with hundreds of ships of all sizes and descriptions.

    Overnight I slept about an hour and otherwise watched the new Ghostbusters, which was better than expected, and felt more like an homage than a remake at times. I saw Guardians of the Galaxy, which was pretty great. They had an eclectic mix once you got past the new releases, and I finally saw Spinal Tap. I wrapped up with Finding Dory, which was cute.

    I had expected to need the dozens of podcasts I had downloaded to my phone, or my kindle, but the entertainment system was amazing. There were 5000 “channels” apparently but once I found the movies I just stuck to that. They had limited live tv, and scrolling headlines, which I was trying to avoid. I think there was Wi-Fi but I only messed with it for a couple of seconds. I still enjoy the disconnection that is becoming increasingly rare and enjoy it when I can.

    I took some bad photos and a video from my phone during landing in Dubai, trying to spot the Burj on the way in. It turns out I was facing the wrong way but I saw a landscape totally unfamiliar to me. The airport itself is enormously long, with three matching terminals in a line. They are each giant buildings with floor to ceiling windows shaped like elongated diamonds. I wondered about their AC bill. I did spot the Burj as we taxied.

    I cleared security again on the way in, after a brief disagreement about my tiny multi-tool. Then I made my way up the stairs to the main terminal. I put my belt back on and THEN realized I had left my work laptop in the xray tray. I ran back down and it was still in the tray.

    With that heart attack averted I went back up, and sorted things back into their various pockets before wandering around the terminal and deciding to go to the other one to kill the next few hours of layover.

    Banks of huge glass elevators run constantly down to the train which also bounced back and forth. A woman spilled a drink but somehow had enough paper towels handy to clean it up. Really everything was very clean and organized. The third floor seemed to contain the lounge for those with status, and a hotel. The sides of the huge walls provided views up and down with glass walls serving as balconies.

    The thing that struck me most was the amazing variety of dress in the airport. We have all seen the Saudi style of flowing white, but I had forgotten many of the diverse outfits I had seen in various media, and there were many more still that were new to me. I wanted to photograph them all but my agenda was to mind my own business and avoid an international incident. I was particularly aware of the Orange Hitler and wondered how many others had the same thought as they saw me.

    I found my gate and verified then looked for nearby restaurants. After wandering past a few places including a steak house with a US style western theme, I sat down at a place called Giraffe.

    There were several good meals on the flight, but I needed to kill a few hours so I started with coffee. They didn’t have drip, only the annoyingly named and functionality deficient Americano, so was only after I had a latte that I noticed there was turkish coffee available at a place across the walkway. The attendant there was subtly dancing to the pop music being played as he worked.

    I had a Croque Giraffe, since that was a specialty, which had turkey ham, beef chorizo an egg and a ton of cheese over pretty decent bread. The crust was a bit tough and the blunt (but metal!) knife had trouble with it. It was delicious, and the small potato wedges were well seasoned. They had a wide array of condiments in a wooden box with a handle, like a tool box. I chose heinz without looking too much. In hindsight I probably should have been more curious but my overwhelming feeling was exhaustion since it was my bedtime.

    I still had some time before the flight, so I visited the restroom. The wooden doors on the stalls reached an inch from the floor so I didn’t spot the squat toilet till the door opened. It was steel and had an automatic flush the whole floor was wet. It is probably TMI but although I squatted my body was apparently not ready to fully unlock this achievement. I spotted a huge Gshock watch hanging on a peg but forgot to bring it to the lost and found. I think I saw the guy before me come back in as I was leaving, so maybe he got it back. I try to avoid eye contact in men’s restrooms, and also in foreign countries, so I wasn’t sure, but I was definitely sure it was not my problem at that point.

    I went in again after a while to brush my teeth, not sure of the water quality, but I took my chances and didn’t swallow any. On returning my fellow passengers were lining up, but I wasn’t sure if it was general boarding yet. I got in the back of the line anyway and chatted with an indian guy whose name I didn’t get. He had come from Dallas and his friends had sent him with rupees to exchange for the new notes. We made our way down to the lower level and then into another waiting room, with enough seats for the whole plane as well as a restroom.

    I decided to sit near him and we continued our chat. I got confirmation of how to pronounce Hampi, and agreement that it was a good choice, and a good place to bring cash..We talked about the cash economy and while I had heard most of what was going on already, it was interesting to hear about the demonitization. He let me photograph the two “bad” denominations of notes, which I wanted to have handy in case someone tried to pass them off in change.

    We went down a long access path to board, but this time first class had their own entrance. The plane was the same type as before, but the entertainment system was different, with an even bigger screen and a game controller which could pop out. I took pictures as we circled, marveling first at the artificial islands, then the Burj and that hotel from the tennis comercial, next at the bustling city, then at the many palace compounds in the desert. The compounds got less palace-like as the dunes increased in size. There were huge areas with removed sand and flat bottoms, and I wasn’t sure if this was a sand mine or something else.

    Next we passed over the mountains of Oman, which reminded me of flying to las vegas. I watched the end of the Arabian peninsula go by before turning Captain America, Winter Soldier back on. I pulled out my pillow to sleep, but food appeared so I dealt with that instead. This menu was more limited, with a choice of a curry chicken or vegetarian. I had the chicken and it was good. I avoided the beet based dessert because I think I am allergic to them and didn’t want to test it. They ran out of vegetarian dishes and the guy in front of me had sone extra discussions with the apologetic flight attendant. Emirates sure had a good hiring policy, with very pretty hosts with many different accents. Our french pilot bragged that the crew was from eleven countries and spoke ten languages.

    The Bangalore airport was less impressive but functional. I went through security yet again, but the lady running the xray machine wasn’t paying attention and at least 3 bags went through while she was asking one man to bring his bag over. Nearly everyone beeped going through the metal detector and with no attendant there everyone sort of shrugged and kept walking. I didn’t beep but shrugged anyway.

    There were plenty of porters standing around though clearly identified by their vests. I ignored them and got my small checked bag and was greeted by name by what I thought was my driver. He brought me about a hundred feet to meet my driver, who had a sign with my name on it. I tipped the first guy with $3 which was probably way too much.

    The driver also tried to carry my bag, and both were confused by my small luggage. We chatted as he terrifyingly navigated what was sometimes a 3 lane road (usually with four cars abreast and a motorcycle or two) and sometimes a city street with SPEED BUMPS. I wanted to photograph the many shops but my cell camera wasn’t having it, and I didn’t want to break out my bigger camera.

    Nearing the hotel I mentioned I needed a SIM card and the driver offered to take me to get one. We ended up at his “brother’s” shop where I exchanged $40 at a passable rate and fought off efforts to sell me scarves, rugs, jewelry, etc. The SIM guy showed up and took me aside to discuss pricing. The first offer was like 2000 and there was way too much back and forth about minutes and data and I was pretty much done. I realized this deal was turning out to be pretty shady and apologized for wasting his time before jumping back in the car with the driver.

    The hotel staff opened the back of the large car looking for luggage and many others tried to help me with my bags. At the front desk I was greeted by name and checked in. I was walked to my room and showed the amenities, including the schedule of every restaurant. I was more concerned with the dance party going on outside and decided I would need to stay up a few more hours.

    I had a shower and tried to meet up with my team but settled on dining alone on some excellent italian food after confusing the staff by looking for them. They showed up for a drink and I gave up fighting the Wi-Fi.

    After dinner I did get it working and had a call with Jos and fell asleep.