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Overland to London - Ephesus to Anzac Cove

  Celsus Library, Ephesus Day 87 (London Day 3)    Wed 20 August     EPHESUS – ANZAC COVE After a night-drive through from Pamukkale we a...

Tuesday, 24 October 2017

Images through a Traveller's Lense - Kathmandu, 1970

My first impression on arriving in Kathmandu in February 1970, was that I was stepping back several centuries - even though I had arrived by air, & had been transported to my hotel by bus. But in the centre of Kathmandu there was little in the way of modern transport to indicate that it was the second half of the 20th century, At first nervously, then with more confidence, I wandered around the city, rubbing shoulders with Newaris, Gurungs, Tibetans, Indians. I was fascinated with this polyglot mixture of races and religions. It was here that I first came upon Hinduism & Buddhism, although I couldn't then differentiate between the two. I was approached by beggars, hashish salesmen  and a flute saleman. Money changers offered good rates for foreign cash - even travellers cheques.  In those days there were still officially sanctioned hashish shops, especially in hippy haven of Freak Street. The sights, sounds and smells were all alien to me and I loved it. Even then I knew that I would be back.


                           On my first afternoon, as I walked around the bustling streets of Thamel
                          with some fellow travellers, a porter carrying a bundle of half-cured hides
                           pushed passed us.


                            In 1970 Rickshaws were the main form of transport around town.


                             Street vendors fascinated me. This man, along with his daughter, was
                             selling skeins of brightly-coloured wool.


                             The uninhibitedness of life in the streets amazed me. I had not
                              experienced this before. Here passers-by nonchalantly walk by
                              women washing their hair, & cooking utensils. Children play while
                              pi-dogs & their puppies scavenge for tidbits,


                               In a back street I came across this husband and wife, she wielding a
                               large sledge-hammer while he, presumably the technical brain,
                                slowly turned  a red-hot piece of iron on an anvil.
 


                              In a quiet town square a man shuffled past with two water containers
                              hooked up to a yoke across his shoulders.


                             Naked & semi-naked children play in the dust by some large clay
                              water jars.


                             My perambulations took me to iconic Durbar Square in the centre
                             of  Kathmandu. Unfortunately many of these temples were badly
                             damaged in the powerful earthquake of April 2015.

Text & photography © Neil Rawlins

Full accounts of my travels can be found in my two Kindle ebooks:
                     see my books:   One Foot in Front of the Other: First Steps   
                           and:              One Foot in Front of the Other: Full Stride
      'First Steps' tells the story of my early travels on the Overland routes in Asia & Africa. 
       'Full Stride' recounts my experiences as a tour leader on the Asian Overland routes and elsewhere
              in Rajasthan, Kashmir, Turkey & Tunisia.




Friday, 20 October 2017

Images through a Traveller's Lense - Singapore 1970

Singapore was the first truly foreign city I visited.  I arrived to a cacophony of sound - fireworks, bands, lion dancers, on the eve of the Chinese New Year in February 1970. I was a little bit taken aback and somewhat nervous. In 1970 none of the modernisation that has characterised this maritime crossroads had taken place. Atmospheric Chinatown, with its fascinating street life, still existed. I was staying in the iconic New Seventh Storey Hotel in Rochor Rd, the tallest building in that part of the city which afforded great views over Singapore. 


                          From the restaurant in the upper floor of the New 7th Storey Hotel I
                          able able to view the Dragon dances & fireworks in the Rochor Rd below.

                   
                            In 1970 Singapore was much different from the Singapore of today.
                            From the top floor of the New 7th Storey Hotel there was a clear
                            view of the Sultan Mosque above the old shops of Chinatown.

Next morning, armed with my camera, a Ricoh SLR I set out into the teeming streets of Singapore, at first tentatively, but as time rolled on, with much more confidence. All was new and my biggest regret was only having a limited amount of slide film as I was continuing on, Overland to London over the next couple of months. Although I never saw the result until I reached London, I was generally happy with my photos considering the only film I used was the very slow Kodakchrome ASA25.
                             
                           

                        One of the first sights I saw in the Singapore streets was this late model MG                                       impaled on lamppost in Beach Rd. Perhaps the result of the previous night's binge!

                           

                           The street life in Singapore fascinated me, and I was especially surprised
                            to see well-made fancy coffins being made in a back street.


                             Hawkers stalls & food shops were an eye-opener. The shop, with 
                              smoked chickens hanging for sale did not disappoint. 

         
                           Outside spiral-staircases were a common feature on many appartments
                           in Singapore in the early 1970s. Modern high-rise apartments have now
                           replaced these precarious constructions.

By the time I returned to Singapore 18 years later most of this had disappeared and although I have not been back since, I have be told that all this, including the New 7th-Story Hotel in Rochor Rd has now gone forever.

© Neil Rawlins  text & photography
                      see my books:   One Foot in Front of the Other: First Steps   
                           and:              One Foot in Front of the Other: Full Stride
      These books tell the story of my early travels on the Overland routes in Asia & Africa & also my experiences as a tour leader on the Asian Overland and elsewhere.

             


Monday, 16 October 2017

Images through a Traveller's Lense - In the Beginning

I was given my first camera the year I left school. This was a little Agfa ISO-Rapid IF - one of the first point-and-shoot instamatics that revolutionised picture-taking. Until then the only camera my family had had was the ubiquitous Kodak Box Brownie which took fuzzy black and white snaps. With the relatively high development costs this camera was only used sparingly, at holiday time and on special occasions. My new little Agfa opened a new world for me and after the first tentative, and mainly blurry black and white photos, I soon began to take an interest in colour slide photography which seemed to provide better results and although these little square photos were basic, they did have a sharpness not seen in the printed black & white images.
                     In late 1966 I was fortunate enough to be sent out to  Little Barrier Island,
                     a wildlife sanctuary in the Hauraki Gulf off Auckland, New Zealand and I
                     took this black & white photo of the rocky South Landing with my little Agfa.

 After about 18 months I purchased my first 35mm camera, a Minolta Hi-Matic F, and although I was happy with these early results, I had my heart set on purchasing a single lense reflex camera.
                       The cliffs of Fisherman's Rock, Whangaparaoa, New Zealand taken with
                        the Minolta Hi-Matic 7 in mid-1967

I used the Minolta for about 6 months until my cousin and I travelled by ship to Fiji and when we arrived in Suva I purchased my first SLR, a Ricoh Singlex TLS which was to give me good service through my early travels in Asia, Europe and Africa. The basic lense was 55mm - no zoom in those days - and I bought a 300mm lense a couple of years later. The most common slide film I used in these early days was Kodachrome ASA25, by today's standard a very slow film, but results were good, although camera-shake was not uncommon. This slide film included pre-paid development & mounting by Kodak so I never saw the results until a couple of weeks later - even longer when I was on a long trip.
                      A tropical pool near Apia, Samoa in January 1968. This was one of the
                      first photos taken with the Ricoh SLR. that I purchased in Suva.

I saw  the camera as a means of recording not just events in my life, but also places as I saw them. I had set my heart on travelling and have been fortunate to have visited many parts of the world which have changed considerably due to political upheavals, war and the forces of nature. But these photos are indicative of how I saw the world over the years.
                 The 'banana-boat' Tofua off the island of Niue in January 1968. Passengers
                  & goods had to be transferred ashore on small barges.


                    Formula One drivers of yesteryear, Graham Hill, killed in a plane crash
                    in 1975 & Piers Courage killed during the Dutch Grand Prix in 1970, at
                    the New Zealand Grand Prix, January 1969. Incidentally I have the
                    programme for this race & the first prize money for an overseas-based
                   driver was just NZ$400 - won in 1969 by Chris Amon. The prize for 1st
                   local NZ driver home was NZ$1200!!

I have owned several good  film cameras over the years  but I have always had a soft spot for the hardy little Ricoh which I still have - looking a little bit the worse for wear!
The digital age has. of course, dramatically transformed  the way photographs are taken. No longer do we have to wait and see if photos are blurred or out of focus or if the lense-cap was left on. No longer is the cost of development a consideration and we can now experiment with impunity. 'Film' speeds are now above ASA6400, a far cry from the extremely slow ASA25 transparency film I used to use. Camera shake is now no longer such a big issue and photos can be taken successfully in low light.
 In successive articles I will be highlight photos I have taken over the years & relate some of the stories attached to them.    See my photographic website - www.antipodeanneil.com

© Neil Rawlins  text & photography

Travel books by the author available on Amazon



Monday, 7 August 2017

A Hike Up Mt Marum, on the Island of Ambrym, Vanuatu

The fuggy tropical heat was becoming increasingly oppressive as we jumped ashore, onto the rugged lava coast. It was a humid sultry day typical of this area of the tropics. We had journeyed by small boat about half an hour from the northern Ambrym village of Ranon to the even smaller village of Ranvetlam, passing a small local steamer loading a bags of the locally produced copra.
A small copra boat off  the island of Ambrym
The day before we had travelled in the same small boat, across the Strait between Ambrym and the neighbouring island of Pentecost. Here, on a remote beach, we had been met by a lone young man, proudly sporting a T-shirt with the inscription of ‘Ponwaha Assoc. Tour Guide’. Shyly he announced that his name was Arthur (Ata) and he was to lead us to the village of Wanur and he would be our guide for the day. Chief Paul, wearing just his ‘namba’ or penis sheath, greeted us on behalf of the people of Ponwaha District and we were then led to the ‘naghol’ site. This ceremony, precursor of the modern bungy-jumping craze, has been enacted on Pentecost since time immemorial. A structure, an intricate scaffold of branches and saplings, lashed tightly together by strips of hibiscus bark, is erected, probably 20-30 metres (up to 100 feet) high.
The 'naghol' tower from which the Pentecost Island 'land-divers' will jump
There are platforms of varying height on this structure culminating in a single platform right at the very top. Here young men of varying ages, out to prove their manhood, tie flexible vines around their ankles and leap off, plummeting head-first towards the well-dug earth at the base of the tower, trusting that the vines will soften the impact with terra firma.

Village women, enthusiastically cheering and singing, provide the encouragement. No stigma is attached to any young man who is unable to jump – we saw one youth abort that morning. Only one man can leap from the highest platform, and after the successful completion of his jump, he is carried triumphantly, shoulder-high, around the gathering. We felt privileged being the only outsiders at this particular ceremony and after a meal with Chief Paul, of chicken, laplap (the local specialty of grated manioc or taro, wrapped in a banana leaf and cooked with chicken, vegetables, coconut milk etc. – ingredients do vary) and rice (no fresh fruit was available at the time of our visit as a recent hurricane had devastated the island's fruit trees), we embarked on our return journey, across a ‘lumpier’ sea to Ambrym.
Landing on the soft ground after the jump
Today our experience was to be quite different. We were to climb up the 1334 metre active volcano of Mt Marum. As our boat arrived off Ranvetlam, the landing on the rocky coast, by way of a small surge pool, was the first obstacle. The last big eruption on Ambrym which had affected the coastal villages was in 1913, although there had been several smaller eruptions involving lava extrusions since then. The striations and swirls of classic pahoehoe lava flows are still very apparent in the coastal rock. The two volcanoes, Marum and Benbow, rest, brooding upon the skyline, fumes and ash often spilling down to the coast and out to sea. The rising and falling of the oceanic swell assisted our disembarkation, although great care still had to be taken, but was overcome without mishap. The village of Ranvetlam is about a hundred metres from the coast and we soon found our guides. After a short delay we were led out of the village by our guides accompanied by their dogs. The path wove its leisurely way through the village taro gardens, and small banana and pawpaw groves. In the largest coconut grove was the village’s copra-drying oven. Although copra is not as much in demand as it was in the past, a small amount is still produced, hence the small ship waiting offshore. After crossing a small stream the path became steeper and we began the climb up to the caldera rim and the ash plain of the interior of the island. As we struggled upwards the day become hotter and the intense humidity did not help. Very soon we were strung out, the fitter members of the group keeping pace with the guides, the rest of us strung out, huffing and puffing, behind. After an hour or so a halt was called at the site of an old village. The clearing, now being reclaimed by the rainforest, showed little evidence that it had once been a vibrant village. All that was now left were a couple of deteriorating tam-tam (slit drums) lying in the undergrowth. Refreshments were by way of green coconuts cut from nearby palms – even the dogs were treated to coconut flesh which they ate with gusto. We pressed on and every so often, through gaps in the forest we could see the coastline of Ambrym opening out before us, but we also couldn’t help noticing the heavy clouds gathering around the summits of both Marum and Benbow – and soon the rain came, a heavy, warm tropical rain which, although making the track greasy and slippery, did bring a welcome respite from the high humidity. Eventually, after several further stops to catch our breath, we crossed the ancient caldera rim and descended onto the black ash field which covers the inner crater of Ambrym. We passed isolated islands of vegetation, scattered over this mainly desolate black stony plain, as we walked on.

After an hour or so walking across the black lava we reached a spot that our guides had decided would be our overnight campsite. Fortunately the rain had now stopped and tents were erected. After a welcome rest for an hour or so, we set off again at about 4.30pm, this time carrying just a small day bag and a camera, now heading towards the summit of Mt Marum. Every so often fumes and smoke would drift in our direction, but on the whole a gentle breeze kept the fumes away. After half an hour we began more serious climbing, or perhaps clambering would be the operative word. Vegetation became sparser and the crumbly lava rock steeper and sharper. This was not helped by the fading daylight, but as the light faded, up ahead we could see the ethereal glow cast by the fires within Marum. The last few hundred metres seemed to take forever and a final encouragement before finally we all stood atop the crater rim. The view before us was hard to describe. A brilliant red glow lit the night. As we inched closer to the crater rim, the red intensified, becoming bright, turning to orange and yellow with touches of purple until right at our feet, some 500 metres below, we could see a seething mass of molten magma, surging, bubbling, boiling, roaring, a sight somewhat reminiscent of the final scene with Gollum in the Lord of the Rings when he falls, clutching the 'One Ring', into the fires of Mt Doom. The site was both terrifying and fascinating - there appeared to be nothing between us and these subterranean fires, not even a ledge or outcrop to break a fall. Every so often, pungent chest-tightening fumes would drift towards us. Instinctively I moved back, but still felt drawn to look over the edge once again, to peer deep down into the vent known as Mbwelesu. Perhaps this was the entrance to Hades!

After 30 minutes on the crater rim we felt it was time to head back to camp – a slow process, scrambling carefully down the steep lava escarpments, scoured out by the recent heavy rains. The night sky behind us was lit, more brightly now, by the angry red fires of Marum. No other light split this dark night, few stars could be seen through Marum’s smoke, but it was a welcome camp that we finally reached. Tomorrow was another day and we would retrace our path back to Ranvetlam on the coast.

© Neil Rawlins  text & photography
From my ebook A Stone from Anzac Cove & Other Travellers Tales, available from Amazon ebooks





Friday, 19 May 2017

Islands in a Turquoise Sea

Islands in a Turquoise Sea Picture a great trireme, three banks of glistening oars slapping gently in an oily sea while a great square mainsail decorated with the stylised head of the supreme god Zeus or the sea-god Poseidon, flaps gently in the evening breeze. On the port-side lies a rocky island, perhaps it is Ogygia the home of fair Calypso, or Aeaea, island of the enchantress Circe, waiting to waylay, in a Cycladic paradise, the wily – and often gullible – Odysseus. Ever since I read Homer’s Odyssey many years ago, and listened to the lyrics of Tales of Brave Ulysses by the rock group Cream:
"And the colours of the sea blind your eyes with trembling mermaids And you touch the distant beaches with tales of brave Ulysses How his naked ears were tortured by the sirens sweetly singing For the sparkling waves are calling you to kiss their white laced lips"
my mind has tended to conjure up this image whenever I think of the Greek Islands. One can dream of splashing along a pristine foam-fringed beach where "… you see a girls brown body dancing through the turquoise" or to dive into the crystal-clear waters where "tiny purple fishes run laughing through your fingers". Of course today the reality is quite different with many of these fascinating islands now overflowing with tourists and the modern trappings that come with them, although traces of these islands’ classical heritage do, of course, still remain.
hat in ancient times invoked images of treacherous Scylla and Charybdis, or the ‘Clashing Rocks’ that so impeded both Odysseus and Aeneas, as well as Jason and his Argonauts during their quest for the Golden Fleece. There are about a 100 islands, excluding the large island of Crete, grouped geographically over 1000 kilometres into six archipelagos in the Aegean, Ionian and Myrtoan Seas. The easternmost island, Kastellorizo, lies just a couple of kilometres or so off the small Turkish Mediterranean port of KaĹź with which there is little contact. The westernmost island is Corfu in the Ionian Sea off the Albanian coast and for 50 years in the 19th century was in the British Empire, even producing its own postage stamps with an image of Queen Victoria. For a student of classical mythology many of the islands feature prominently in the Greek myths. Delos was the birth place of Apollo; the inhabitants of Aegina were created from ants by Zeus at the request of King Aeacus who had seen his original people destroyed by Hera; Euboea was the island of Posiedon, God of the Sea and Ithaka was the home of Odysseus and his wife Penelope. For the student of classical poetry Lesbos was the island of the romantic poetess Sappho; "
Ah, what art thou but a fern-frond Wet with blown spray from the river                              Diffident, lovely, sequestered,                                                                                                Frail on the rock-ledge?                                                                                                   Yet, are we not for one brief day,                                                                                 While the sun sleeps on the mountain,                                                                           Wild-hearted lover and loved one,                                                                                   Safe in Pan’s keeping?
Hippocrates, the father of modern medicine, was born and practiced on Cos; Rhodes had its Colossus, one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World; Santorini was, perhaps, the site of Atlantis and Salamis saw the greatest sea battle of ancient times which guaranteed the Greeks freedom from Persian suzerainty. In recent times
Hydra was where the modern Greek navy had its beginnings during the Greek War of Independence in the 1820s; Corfu still has a cricket pitch, a relic of the 19th century British occupation and on Skyros the British poet Rupert Brooke was buried on the eve of the Gallipoli campaign in 1915 in:
"some corner of a foreign field That is forever England."
One of the most interesting islands is Santorini in the Cyclades. Sometime around 1500BC a massive volcanic eruption blew out the centre of what, until then, had been, more or less, a circular island. Today the result of that eruption has left a fascinating multi-coloured rim around a turquoise bay. Small, whitewashed villages cling precariously to the volcanic breccia overlooking Nea Kameni, a newly forming scoria cone in the centre of the bay, evidence that the fires of Hephaestus have not yet gone out. That Santorini was the site of ancient Atlantis is a theory first advanced by the Greek archaeologist Professor Spyridon Marinatos who excavated, and met his untimely end, at Akrotiri, a pre-eruption Minoan settlement on the island. Professor Marinatos suggested that the legend of Atlantis quite possibly stemmed from the eruption which, along with the succeeding tsunami, completely devastated not only Santorini, but the surrounding islands and parts of coastal Crete. The devastation of the eruption was such that the early Minoan civilisation on Crete suffered an irrecoverable decline and soon after was assimilated by the Mycenaeans from the Mainland. A apocryphal story relating to the founding of the ancient city of Troy could be related to this tsunami. It is said that a prince named Dardanus escaped from a great flood which swept over his home island of Samothrace by clinging to a raft of wood which carried him to the Kingdom of Teucer, Dardanus married Teucer’s daughter, founded a city on the slopes of Mount Ida which he named Dardania from which was derived the name Dardanelles, the strait of water separating Europe from Asia. Dardanos had a grandson named Tros from which the city of Troy took its name.
Santorini, with its two main villages of Thira and Ia is justmade for walking. Typical whitewashed Cycladic houses grace the narrow, steep lanes. At each corner something new springs into view. Ia, particularly, is most interesting and a photographers’ paradise. Part of the old village was destroyed in an earthquake early in the 20th century and the ruined buildings still remain, giving the village an air of mystery. Panoramas across the bay, particularly at sunset, are among the best in the Mediterranean and to sit in a tavern in the fading. rosy light of the setting sun with a plate of kalamari, a Greek salad and a glass of retsina, contemplating the words of Lord Byron, epitomises all that is appealing in these classical Mediterranean isles:
"Where burning Sappho loved and sung,                                                                               Where grew the arts of war and peace,                                                                       Where Delos rose, and Phoebus sprung!                                                                   Eternal summer gilds them yet,                                                                                       But all, except their sun, is set."


© Neil Rawlins  text & photography





Thursday, 15 December 2016

The 7.8 Earthquake in Kaikoura, New Zealand

It was raining when we left Picton and had been for most of the previous day when we had arrived on the Interislander ferry from Wellington. We were driving south and by the time we reached the small town of Seddon the rain had eased. We turned off Highway 1 onto Wakefield Street heading to Yealand Estate for an early Sunday morning vineyard tour and wine tasting. I was leading a group of 15 English tourists and today was the 12th day of a 25 day New Zealand tour. Over the previous days we had been to the Bay of Islands, as far north as Cape Reinga and driven down through Rotorua to Wellington before crossing Cook Strait. The weather had, in the main, been pretty good and everything had gone according to plan. At Yealand’s we were escorted around the vineyard by winery guide Nanette who talked to us about the diminutive babydoll sheep being bred to keep the grass down, had shown us the extensive expanse of neatly rowed vines, the solar-powered speakers that played classical music to the growing grapes and the chickens ‘employed’ to keep insects at bay. After tasting samples of Yealand’s excellent export-quality wine we were on our way to Kaikoura for lunch.
'Music in the Vines', sign on Yealand's Winery, Seddon

    After passing the salt pans of Lake Grassmere where most of New Zealand’s salt, both commercial and domestic, is produced we drove through the rolling grassy hills which lead to the spectacular coastal highway to Kaikoura. The South Pacific washes, at times violently, upon this rugged rocky shore and it is somewhat sobering to think that the next land out there is the coast of Chile, over 9000 kms away. Today the sea was relatively calm and the weather had improved considerably as we passed the interesting little stone church of St Oswald at Wharenui. As we drove towards the Kaikoura Mountains I gave my clients a basic insight into the tectonic forces of nature that are at work here – both on land and off-shore. The Kaikoura Mountains have been created by a series of active faults that join up with the rifts in the Awatere and the Wairau Valleys to form the Alpine fault that runs 600 kilometres down the western side of the Southern Alps. Not too far off-shore is the deep Kaikoura Marine Canyon where sperm whales hunt giant squid and seals and dolphins feed on other sea creatures that exist on the up-welling of nutrients from the cool waters of the canyon. I told them that these tectonic forces moved frequently on a geological time-frame, but only very slowly on a human scale – we would, of course, be safe but I could not guarantee it!
The rugged interior of the Seaward Kaikoura Mountains - pre-earthquake

    We crossed the Clarence River, which follows a fault between the two ranges of the Kaikoura mountains, then proceeded down the more rugged coast to Ohau Point, where there is a seal colony close to the road which was always a good place to introduce my groups to the kekeno, the NZ fur seal - Arctocephalus forsteri. Closer to Kaikoura we passed the famous Nin’s Bin which for about 40 years has been one of the cheapest places to purchase crayfish, the NZ rock lobster, which breed abundantly on this coast. It had been a couple of years since I had last visited Kaikoura but the town looked pretty much the same, although there was a new council building with a rather distinctive ‘craypot’ feature still under construction. The ‘Why Not’ cafĂ© was as busy as ever as was the ‘Cray Pot’ next door.
The new local council offices & the Fish Tank Lodge, 10 hours before the Earthquake, Kaikoura

    We left Kaikoura around 2pm and drove out past the airfield. George, our driver, and I had decided to continue along the coast highway rather than take the Inland Kaikoura route and after a few kilometres drove through the first of the two road tunnels that can be tricky for a large vehicle to manoeuvre though. George muttered under his breath and made a comment that some fool in a car had made a partial attempt to overtake the coach as he was lining up the first tunnel. He said this was quite a common occurrence. There were plenty of seals on the beaches and rocks just off the road but no sign of the dusky dolphins which is one of the attractions of Kaikoura. In the distance I could see one of Denis Buurman’s Dolphin Encounter boats but we were too far away to make out any splashes caused by frisky antics of the duskies. In the past I had often seen them fairly close inshore. We drove along Goose Bay and through Oaro before climbing up into the Hundalees, a winding section of road that took us away from the coast. George and I both had memories of the old road the wound even more through these hills until re-alignment took place in the early 2000s. At Parnassus we turned onto the narrow Leader Road which follows the river of the same name through very attractive hill country and past the large hill station of Woodchester which even has its own small church. We stopped for a photo on Waiau Hill which overlooks the town and the braided river of the same name before making a stop at Brenda’s on Lyndon. All my group had large ice-creams, being amazed at just how much there was in a ‘single’ scoop for just $2.50. Next door is the Waiau Lodge Hotel where I had stopped for lunch on earlier tours. I had a quick look at the hotel while I was eating my ice-cream, it was pretty much as it had always been and I took a photo of the door to O’Malleys Garden (the hotel garden) where: ‘All ye who enter must wear a smile.’
Ice-creams at Brenda's on Lyndon, Waiau - 8 hours before the 7.8 Kaikoura Earthquake

        We crossed the long one-lane bridge over the Waiau River as we left town and after passing through Rotherham turned onto the road to Hanmer Springs. Hanmer Springs is just off the Lewis Pass Highway and the road crosses a narrow one-lane bridge high above the Waiau River Gorge. There is a sharp turn through a couple of cuttings in the crumbling schist rock before the road flattens out for the final few kilometres to the town. It was about 5.30pm when we pulled up at the Heritage Hotel in Hanmer Springs where we were staying for two nights. After an excellent dinner in the hotel we all settled in for the night. 
    I had probably been asleep about an hour when suddenly I was jolted awake. It was pitch dark and everything was shaking violently. I immediately knew it was an earthquake, and a very powerful one at that. The shaking and noise went on – and on! Lots of thoughts went through my mind – in an earthquake seek shelter – in doorways, there was just a bathroom which was not of a particularly strong wood, but then there was no way I would be able to stand up. Crawl under something – there was no table and the bed was only a couple of inches off the ground, so that was out. Well, I thought, as nothing was falling on me, it was best if I just stayed where I was in the bed. Eventually – it seemed like an eternity but it was in fact just two long minutes - the shaking finally ceased. I jumped up – there was no electricity but my cell-phone which was on charge provided sufficient light. The time, I noted was 00.04 on Monday 14 November. I pulled on some trousers, pulled on my jacket and raced down stairs. The hotel‘s emergency generator had kicked in pretty promptly and the stairs were well lit. I had no shoes on, but fortunately there was no glass. It suddenly crossed my mind that here was history repeating itself. In 1981 I had been involved in a coach accident in Poland when  a jerrycan of petrol in the boot of the vehicle we had collided with caught fire under our vehicle. We had had to evacuate quickly then, and again I had had no shoes on. My flip-flops were somewhere under the coach-seat. As I came out of the hotel I saw several of my passengers already outside. A hotel staff member saw me and suggested I race back and put on some shoes and something warmer. There was no evidence of structural damage to the hotel and there was nothing in imminent danger of collapse so I took his advice. Once back outside I rounded up my group. Half were already there and slowly one by one the rest appeared out of the darkness. Everyone was out of the hotel with no injuries and surprisingly in good humour – maybe it was the good old British stiff-upper-lip in the face of adversity! George went to the coach and brought it round to the front of the hotel, where, besides my group, other hotel guests climbed aboard and the running of the engine kept us all warm while the hotel staff, the local Civil Defence and the fire-service checked everything. It was then that we heard that initially it had been a magnitude 6.6 earthquake only some 15 kms from Hanmer Springs and at about the same depth. It was, of course, not then known how much damage had been caused or how widespread the quake had been, but everyone agreed that it had certainly gone on for a long time. The local fire chief appeared and told us that all seemed to be OK in the town but that we could not go back into the hotel until after daylight when any non-obvious structural damage would be seen. He also told us that the road out of town was blocked by slipping before the bridge, so everyone had no choice but to stay put – there is only one road into, and out of, Hanmer Springs. 
     After an hour or so, the hotel staff came up with keys for the hotel villas, privately owned but administered by the hotel. The long Canterbury Anniversary weekend – Friday, Saturday & Sunday – had just ended and many owners had gone back to Christchurch, so thankfully we were all able to move into these 3-bedroomed houses. We were told to try and get some sleep, which was easier said than done as aftershocks of varying intensity were occurring every few minutes. I managed to doze off for short periods, and I could hear George snoring in one of the other rooms. I got up at daybreak and walked through Hanmer Springs at just after 6. I was amazed that there was remarkably little damage – the quake had now been up-graded to magnitude 7.5 which meant it was even larger. The 4-Square supermarket had all goods shaken off shelves and I could see other businesses had items lying over floors but there was no apparent damage to structures, however the town was without power. The roads in town were all ok and as I walked back to the hotel I wondered if it had just been a dream. Just after 7am the hotel staff allowed us to collect our gear from our rooms and we were told we would be staying in the villas until our departure the next morning. At 8.30 the staff had cleared up the kitchen – there had been a lot of broken crockery – and provided a very good cooked breakfast.
The Heritage Hotel in Hanmer Springs, the day after the Earthquake - undamaged

    Power was restored to Hanmer by about 11am which was sooner than we had expected. Aftershocks were still continuing with the strongest, a magnitude 6.3, occurred as a few of my group were having a light snack on the deck of one of the villas. By now we were becoming a bit blasĂ© about the aftershocks. We knew this was quite a big one but no one batted an eyelid. One of ladies was skyping from her ipad to a relation overseas when it struck. He asked what the noise was, to which he received the reply: “Oh, just another earthquake!” Late on the afternoon of the earthquake, the road and bridge out of town was re-opened for a couple of hours but was closed through the hours of darkness. By the time we left Hanmer Springs at 6.45 on the second morning the road was open and we were fortunately able to keep to our planned itinerary and catch the TranzAlpine train at Springfield for our journey into the Southern Alps to Arthur’s Pass. By this time we had heard just how widespread and devastating this earthquake – or earthquakes – had been. Kaikoura had been completely hammered. The spectacular coast road had been badly damaged with numerous massive slips, the tunnels were completely blocked and the seal colony at Ohau Point had been destroyed, although fortunately the New Zealand fur seals are night feeders and most would have been at sea and it was just before the calving season.  It has been estimated that the seabed had risen about a metre with paua (New Zealand abalone), crayfish and beds of kelp now exposed. Around 11,000 tourists were isolated in the town itself to which there was now no road access. The effects of the earthquake, up-graded first to 7.5 then to 7.8 was felt as far away as Picton and Wellington, both of which suffered considerable damage. The small town of Waiau, which was closest to the epicentre, suffered badly and the Waiau Lodge Hotel was all but destroyed. The approaches to the bridge had dropped around 40 centimetres, but the bridge structure survived intact. Geologists all agreed that this had been a major seismic event with at least seven active faults making their presence known. There were massive ruptures in the roading infrastructure and fissures of varying lengths and depths zigzagged across farmland. There had been over 80,000 rock falls, some huge. As the reports, along with pictures, came in, we realised just how lucky we were. Hanmer Springs was not much further from the epicentre than Waiau yet there was remarkably little damage. As I walked around town I noticed one section of carparking on the main street had been cordoned off with just three stones from a decorative building support lying within. Rather ironic I thought when compared to the damage in Kaikoura, Waiau, Seddon, Picton and Wellington but I was not complaining, Hanmer Springs had been on the right side of the fault lines, the force of which went in the opposite direction, away from the town.

© Neil Rawlins  text & photography

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Sunday, 23 October 2016

Bikaner: a Desert City in Rajasthan

“Almost there!” “You said that half an hour ago.” “I mean it this time. Look, you can see the lights of Bikaner.” Sure enough, from the dusty gloom of the carriage the distant fairy-lights of Bikaner twinkle in the distance. It has been a long train journey from Delhi and we are glad to arrive. The railway station in Bikaner is reasonably new and nowhere near as chaotic as that of Old Delhi. Porters carry our luggage to the waiting taxis and soon we are installed in the relative comfort of the Dhola Maru Tourist Bungalow. Bikaner is very much a frontier town and, as the border with Pakistan is not so very far away, the town is the head-quarters of the Border Security Force, originally known as the Bikaner Camel Corps. The town, although modernised by the more recent Maharajahs – once among the wealthiest in India – still retains much of its unspoilt ethnic charm. The centre is dominated by the massive Junagadh Fort which dates from the latter part of the 16th century.
Junagadh Fort, the Royal complex of the Maharajah's of Bikaner, Rajasthan
The entrance to the Fort is through three heavy iron-lined wooden doors, adorned at elephant-forehead height with rows of vicious metal spikes, each about 15 centimetres in length; no doubt an effective deterrent against a pachyderm battering-ram. On the wall to the left of the second door is something far more sinister. These are the Sati handprints, now embossed in stone, left by the unfortunate royal widows of Bikaner whom, on the death of their royal husbands, have calmly elected to join the ranks of the divine and condemn themselves to self-immolation. Although this practice was outlawed in British India in 1829, sati persisted for much longer in the Indian princely states. I once met a Rajput, a member of the Royal Family of Jodhpur, who told me he had witnessed ‘Royal sati’ as late as the mid-1950s and incidences, particularly in rural India, still occasionally occur today. Once a woman has become sati she becomes a sati mata or sati mother, a fertility goddess. Every morning at the Bikaner Fort, a Hindu priest performs puja on these sacred handprints. Each is splashed with ghee, or clarified butter, a tikka blessing is daubed in red in the centre, and sticks of sweet-smelling incense are lit.
Embossed sati handprints at the entrance to Junagadh Fort, Bikaner
Junagadh Fort is a delightful example of the decadent splendour of the India native princes who once controlled large areas of India under the protection of the British. Now fast falling into decay and all but deserted by its former inhabitants, the fort has been preserved as a museum. Although many rooms have been stripped of their original fittings and adornments, one can invariably speculate on their former splendours. In some rooms portraits of former rulers glare sternly down upon the itinerant visitor, while in others the god Krishna and his milk-maids perform their eternal celestial dance of love across the walls and ceilings. Floral and gilt ceilings still impress and bejewelled thrones still await the returning Maharajah. One small balcony is completely decorated with what appear to be a mixture of Delft and Chinese willow-pattern porcelain tiles.
Painting of a Maharajah & the 'willow pattern' balcony, Junagadh Fort, Bikaner
In the gloomy Hall of Public Audience moth-eaten relics of the hunt gaze sullenly from between ceremonial and sporting elephant-howdahs and camel-saddles. At the far end of the Hall lie two tattered canvas-covered frames sporting R.A.F. roundels. A fading sign tells us that these are the only two Bristol Bulldog fighter aircraft left in the World, a gift from the grateful British to Maharajah Ganga Singh of Bikaner in recognition of his services as the Indian Commander-in-Chief during World War I. The aircrafts’ wings lie neglected in a nearby passageway. Another room is devoted to memorabilia of Ganga Singh; the ox-plough with which he inaugurated the construction of the Ganga Irrigation Canal, an ambitious project which had far-reaching economic benefits for Bikaner; an oil painting of Ganga Singh receiving a decoration from King George V at Buckingham Palace; a print of Ganga Singh at the Treaty of Versailles – he was India’s signatory; a caricature of delegates, of which he was one, at the 1930 Round Table Conference on the future of India held in London. Even outside the Fort the memory of Maharajah Ganga Singh lingers. There is a fine equestrian statue of him in a nearby park. In the afternoon we travel by taxi to the locally important shrine of Karani Mata in the small village of Deshnoke, some 35 kilometres from Bikaner. This temple is better known as the ‘rat temple’ and is said to be the only one of its kind in India. To the devotees the rather diminutive species of the genus rattus that exist here in their thousands are rather less important than the spirituality of the goddess, Karani Mata or, to use her full title, Bhagwati Shri Karniji Maharaj who is believed to be an incarnation of Durga, wife of Shiva and the Hindu goddess of anger and destruction. The temple, situated in the centre of Deshnoke, is built like a small fort. The entrance is of the most exquisitely sculpted white marble. The sculptor has intertwined vines, flowers and trees with peacocks, rats, gods and goddesses. To enter the temple visitors must remove their shoes. “You’re joking!” “No way, I’m staying in the bus”: “Are rats rabid?” “Can you get rabies from rat-droppings?” “No, at best, they just trim your toenails!” Somewhat warily most of the group enter. At the entrance to the inner courtyard, also a paragon of the marble-sculptors art, the first rats are encountered at close quarters. Inquisitive rodents investigate white toes, but one or two quiet screams and a quick shuffle or two keep them at bay. The entrance to this inner courtyard is flanked by two beautifully worked silver doors depicting Karani Mata in her earthly historical form. According to local tradition she lived in Rajasthan from the end of the 14th until the middle of the 16th century dying, or as she was a goddess incarnate, disappearing in a brilliant flash of light at the grand old age of 150. Karani Mata was renown throughout Rajasthan as a miracle-worker and was adopted as patron goddess by the Rathor Rajputs who ruled Bikaner and the neighbouring state of Jodhpur.
Guardian of the Hindu Temple of the Rats & a silver image of Karani Mata, Deshnoke, Rajasthan
Within the silver doors one crosses a small courtyard to reach the innermost sanctuary, the sanctum santorum. Here rests the sacred image of the goddess. Local legend states that this image was commissioned by Karani Mata herself from a blind carpenter. She revealed herself to the carpenter just long enough for him to form a perfect visual image which he then transformed into stone. The goddess had reasoned that as the carpenter had been born blind no other outside influences were likely to sully the work in hand. Once Karani Mata had accepted the blind man’s completed masterpiece she restored his sight permanently. In front of the image large platters of grain have been placed, food for the myriad rats, believed to be the souls of holymen, that squabble and scurry throughout the temple complex. The sighting of a rare albino rat is regarded as a good omen. By now nerves are beginning to crack and rather gingerly we retreat to where we had left our shoes. The sun was now lowering in the dusty desert skies as we arrive at the National Research Centre on Camel on the outskirts of Bikaner. Formerly the breeding centre for the Bikaner Camel Corps, the centre is a small Government run establishment dedicated to the improvement of local camel-stock and research into all other aspects of camel husbandry. Workers proudly show visitors around the breeding and feeding pens. In one row of pens a number of large males are tethered, awaiting expectantly their turn to service one of the many ovulating females, known as cows. The then director of the Centre, a Dr Chaudhuri, who had obtained his agricultural degree at Lincoln University in Christchurch, New Zealand, is an amazing wealth of facts and figures concerning ‘his’ camels, even down to the number of spermatozoa per millilitre of seminal fluid of which, incidentally, the camel has less than most other mammals.
'You want see camel make love?' National Camel Research Centre, Bikaner
We are just about to leave when a staff member excitedly asks us if we want “to see camel make love”. Who could refuse such an offer? This was a bizarre and somewhat frightening ritual in which it is surprising to learn that modern domesticated camels require human assistance to mate successfully. With the male frothing at the mouth and hideously inflating his soft palate and the kneeling female roaring loudly and attempting to bite the neck of her paramour, we are amazed that baby camels are ever conceived at all. The rays of the setting sun are now mingling with the desert dust and the smoke from a thousand cooking fires. A lone vulture, perching in a thorn tree, is silhouetted against a reddening sky as we leave the Research Centre to return to Bikaner.

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