Saturday, December 26, 2009

Christmas lunch

Not fancying the idea of cooking Christmas lunch with my limited kitchen utensils, nor knowing where to find a turkey, we decided to eat out again this year. I'd heard of a restaurant, Cafe Oz, which was advertising a Christmas lunch menu. Rod and I went to check up on the menu on Tuesday because, well because it's India! It looked so promising, as we went down the Middle Lane of upmarket Khan Market. Cafe Oz had a sign on the door saying they were having a Christmas buffet, booking advisable. So we climbed the stairs and asked if we could see the Christmas Menu. Yes, they assured us, they would have a special Christmas Menu. The waiter didn't know what it would contain, but it would be special. He was sure of that. We asked if there would be turkey. I don't know Ma'am, he said, but there would be salads and fish and other things. We told him we needed to be certain there would be turkey. If there wasn't turkey we did not want to eat in his establishment. He said he'd go and check with the manager. I was hoping the manager would know whether they were going to serve turkey at Christmas or not, what with it being three days before Christmas...

The waiter came back with two A4 sheets of paper, outlining the menu. We scanned down, past delicious sounding salads, cheesy ravioli, and the traditionally festive lemon pepper sole (?), and found turkey breast and cranberry sauce. Further still, plum pudding, rum balls, tiramisu, icecream. We were happy. Can we reserve a table, says Rod. We can, the waiter tells us, and smiles. Do you want to get the reservations book?, suggests Rod. The waiter looks a little bemused. I don't think they have a reservations book. I'm so pleased "bookings advisable" was on the door...So Rod wrote on the sheet of A4 paper, confirmed table for six, Fairweather, and got the waiter to sign it. The waiter gave it back to Rod. So we had a confirmed booking for six...we knew it, but the restaurant didn't really...

So on Christmas day, armed with our sheet of paper showing we thought we had a confirmed booking, we stepped into the Middle Lane of upmarket Khan Market.
It looks even more upmarket in this picture, because you can't see the broken manhole covers... The waiter recognised us when we got there, and had to make a table of six for us. Weren't we glad we'd booked ahead! But the food was lovely, and plentiful, as was the wine. And we didn't have to cook or wash up afterwards! Result!

I did take one of my Christmas CDs with me, just in case they had Boney M on a loop, but thankfully it wasn't needed.

Friday, December 25, 2009

Christmas Eve

My baby's nine! It's hard to believe. When I asked him how he got to be nine, he looked thoughtful, and replied "I've been alive for nine years". So there goes it, the philosophical musings of Keir! Being born on Christmas Eve, Keir has never been able to have his birthday party with his school friends. So we held that party after school at the beginning of December. 100 helium balloons and 100 regular ones filled the house. The helium ones didn't stay up very long, but we've still got a few straggler regular ones. Very useful for balloon throwball.
Fast forward to Christmas Eve... The request had been for yoghurt cakes, so I got baking. Candles were tricky to source, as they had been last year, but given the choice between relighting ones (we so don't need any help in burning the house down) and these ones, well, these ones won!
We got all crafty after that, with a couple of Christmas ornament making kits. Thalia and I made planets...


and Claire made shooting stars.

We won't say what Aaron made!



Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Twilight Zone, or just crap stuff?

Ferret has suggested maybe I live in the Twilight Zone. Unfortunately, I think I live in the manufactured (badly) in India zone. As an example:
This is the inside of a power board, the kit that turns one power point into three or four. This is the one that had our fridge and washing machine plugged into it. As it had to deal with heavy duty appliances, we chose the most expensive one in the shop. This is what it looks like after the wires have caught fire. The power boards don't work very well once that's happened. The blue wire fed the indicator light. I'm going to use the light inside the fridge for an indicator light in the future. It's more reliable.

The thing I really like about this most expensive power board in the shop is the judicious use of cardboard as a packing device. Yes that's cardboard, well known for its insulating properties, at the top and bottom of the power board. Cardboard, that rarely catches fire, inside a power board less than a year old that's obviously tried to catch fire already...

Cracking up

Strange thing happened the other day at D59. Iwas laying the table for dinner - placemats, napkins, plates, cutlery. I went back to get the food from the kitchen when Keir said, this spoon is broken. I thought he had it all wrong, I mean, how can it be? It's a metal spoon. It came in a wooden box with 100 other pieces of cutlery. And it came from a proper department store in India. But no, he was right and I was wrong.
The spoon truly is broken. I have no idea how Santosh the maid managed it. If we had a dishwasher I'd understand, but Santosh is the dishwasher and she's Thalia sized! She might be small but she's obviously mighty powerful! Or Uri Geller came to visit and I did not notice. Do you think I've been hypnotised?

Sunday, December 20, 2009

Saturday at India Gate with the Surrey Posse

Hanging with our visitors, Claire and Aaron, at India Gate.

Claire and I are obviously not as cool as all the young dudes... though some dudes are younger than others :-)

Peace...brother.

What should you do when the soldier with the rifle outside the Parliament buildings doesn't want you to take his photo? Take a different photo...




Sunday, December 13, 2009

Tree's made

There are no sleigh bells ringing. It's just the sound of the wedding brass band at the illegal wedding hall around the corner. For not only is Christmas coming, it's also the marriage season! An important part of the marriage ceremony is the Baraat, or marriage procession. This is where the groom, in his wedding finery, rides a white horse, often for the first time in his life, to meet the bride at the wedding venue. To keep him company, and possibly give suggestions to the amateur equestrian on how to ride the horse, his friends and relatives and a brass band (including men with gas powered chandeliers on their heads so everyone can see where they are going) follow him. I am sure the bride's heart swells with joy when she hears the band. Ours, however, do not, because it generally means the band is going to block the road for at least half an hour and cause traffic chaos! And they're going to be playing "Man Dole Mera Tan Dole", a huge hit from 1954. Possibly more than once. Who can tell...

Today we put up the Christmas Tree. Longtime followers of this blog will note it is much bigger than last year's tree. Rod and I discussed whether we should put some of the Diwali lights on the tree. We felt considering the high standard to which they had been manufactured (not!) we could be pushing our luck. The fire engine's not going to be able to get past the band...

Saturday, December 12, 2009

A mighty big quilt

Just to prove I am still quilting I thought I'd show you the latest quilt I've finished. It belongs to Anju from my quilt group, and is the largest quilt I've done on my new 10ft table. The top was 93" by 101". Rod had to unscrew the rubber endstop so I could park the machine clear of the backing. Even with it gone I only just cleared the needleplate. It's one of Anju's smaller quilts, and she only made it that small because I told her I couldn't quilt it if she made it any bigger. You can get away with saying things like this when you're the only longarm quilter in the country!

Christmas cards - tick!

Today I wrote and sent my Christmas cards. Was this an exercise in futility, as the cards are unlikely to ever reach their destinations, or a reaffirmation of the "glass half full" optimist in me? I suppose time will tell!

Writing the cards wasn't difficult. I admit to not putting too much blood, sweat and tears into the messages inside, after all, there's no guarantee they'll ever get to someone who can read English, let alone the person named on the envelope! I had a dozen to do, and Rod six. He barely manages to write cards to more than his immediate family each year, and getting him to complete this task always feels like drawing blood to me. He asked if I needed him to write a little letter to go in the cards. I want to post them today, I replied, which was the answer he wanted, and within an hour we were done. This was really good going, I mean, it was still December 11th. I don't think getting the cards done had ever been so quick, or pain free. Then Raju and I drove to the post office. Things went downhill here...

We've used the post office in Sarojini Nagar before. It looked like a relic from the 1960's, which, on previous visits, was when it last appeared to have been painted. But it was a relatively efficient and straightforward post office, much more orderly than the one I used in Gurgaon once. Some of the cards I sent last year even reached their destinations. But this year...well...someone had taken a big pot of paint to the building and spruced it up. It was white and shiny, with red trim and a white, gleaming floor. Unfortunately, the improvement in the surroundings was matched by a decrease in the service provided...

When they painted the hoardings above the counters they forgot to paint in which counter did what. In the past there was a counter for stamps, one for parcels and international mail, one for postal orders and railway ticket bookings. Every post office has a counter for railway ticket bookings. No idea why, they just do. There were still three counters, but no indication which counter was the right one. The tellers behind the counters weren't very interested in explaining which queue was the right one. Actually the tellers behind the counters weren't interested in doing very much at all. The soldier, the uni student, the three wideboys (one wearing pinstripe trousers), the man trying to get a postal order filled, a couple of regular guys, Raju and me were left trying to get served at a post office which looked like it was trying to shut up shop for the night, even though there were still four and a half hours of trading time left, if the newly painted sign on the wall was anything to go by. We queued at one counter for a while, then the teller packed up her bags and left. So we all shuffled to the next counter and waited. The teller here was working, but not really working. He certainly wasn't serving anyone. Then he sold a stamp to the soldier, I suppose it's important to get him out of the post office and back on the streets. If he's in the post office he can't pick up Pakistani terrorists, which according to Raju are everywhere.

Now that the soldier has gone, Raju, not really one for authority figures, has managed to get to the front of the queue, if it could be called one. The queue doesn't form in an orderly fashion, single file, back from the counter. It sprawls along the counter, a barrier to keep the masses away from the stamps the post office isn't trying very hard to sell. But Raju is dead centre, and waving my 18 envelopes. Raju asks how much to post to Britain and Australia. The teller hears, clocks he might have to do a little bit of work to determine the correct answer, and decides to serve the uni student. Raju persists, and the teller takes my card and weighs it. Rather than finish with my transaction, he begins to serve the wideboy with the pinstripe trousers. Money, Ma'am, Raju says, in the hope that flashing some notes will help the teller work out what price the stamps need to be. He needs to tell me what it costs, Raju, I say. I can't get the money for him until he tells me how much it will be. Wideboy laughs. It is decided, I am not sure how, that postage will be 25 rupees for each of my cards. I have 18. If any of this discussion had been in English I could have done the sum for the teller far faster than he. Raju and the man trying to get the postal order filled tell the teller the stamps cost 450 rupees. He takes my money, serves one of the regular guys and gives me my change. I still don't have any stamps.

Raju turns to me and asks do I want to put stamps on every envelope. He hasn't posted many letters in his life. He'd never been inside a post office before I needed to send last year's Christmas cards. Then another discussion takes place, between Raju, the postal order guy and the teller. The only bit I understand is "panch" - five. "Panch panch", the good guys on my side of the counter keep repeating. Eventually teller guy either decides they do know what they're talking about, or decides he doesn't care if they're wrong, and gets out his sheet of stamps. It's a big sheet, 100 stamps, 10 rows of 10. With his finger he counts the rows across, and then the rows down. He carefully detaches the row at the bottom. I think, that's 10 stamps, I need another eight. But he counts the stamps across the sheet again (it's still 10) and counts the stamps down one side (now it's 9). He counts the stamps down the other side, just in case it's a different number. Is anyone shocked to know it isn't, it's 9 too? Then he keeps the strip of 10 and gives me the sheet of 90 stamps. It turns out he only has 5 rupee stamps, and I need five for each card, hence the "panch panch".

So Raju and I retire to a bench and I try to separate these poorly serrated stamps into strips of five for Raju to stick to the envelopes. I get the glue stick out of my bag. Indian stamps aren't very gummy, and UHU glue stick makes a much better bond. It makes it harder for the postal workers to peel the stamps off your letters once you've handed them over and left the post office, to be resold to the next customer. We both take turns making sure the stamps are well stuck to the envelopes. Then we take our nearly posted cards to the "delivery area" around the back. We get directed to the desk of the man who has the cancelling stamp. Once the stamps are cancelled they cannot be reused. This reduces their resale value somewhat, thus increasing the chances of the cards getting out of the post office. The man tells us to just leave them on the table, he's busy now and will cancel them later. He does not realise I've been in India for 18 months now, and I know this scam. We'll wait until they're done, I say loudly and clearly. Amazingly he gets less busy rather quickly, and cancels the stamps. Raju and I both counted each card, him in Hindi and me English, as they were cancelled to make sure each one was done. This is not our first experience of the Indian postal service...and we know at least some of their tricks!

So Christmas is coming. Maybe cards are coming too. Who knows!

Friday, November 27, 2009

Call in CSI, I need to dust for prints...

Isn't technology marvellous? Back in March, the Municipal Corporation of Delhi started tracking the attendance records of it's 127, 094 employees biometrically. When they turned up for work, they had to sign in with their biometric cards or give a thumbprint impression. What's remarkable is that in the last eight months, 22,853 of these employees failed to turn up for work once. Do you think it's possible these 23, 000 employees, who have paper records only, never really existed? The paper says, and I quote "there seems to be a scam as the MCD is spending 20 million rupees (more than a quarter of a million pounds) every year on the salaries of ghost employees". I'm not sure the phrase "seems to be " really sums up the situation fully...

The Mayor of Delhi has declared the introduction of the biometric cards a grand success. Not only has he found he employs 23,000 people fewer than he thought he did, those who do actually exist have become so much better at timekeeping. They are more punctual than they've ever been. Not only can they turn up in time now, they don't seem to need to work overtime either...

Thursday, November 26, 2009

If you're happy and you know it clap your hands

But be careful if you're in India. It might be misinterpreted...

This afternoon, on the way to collect the kids from school, I saw something new...

When our car stops at red lights, I am used to people coming up to it, trying to attract my attention. Sometimes it's kids selling magazines; sometimes it's women, in dirty clothes and holding a baby partly clothed in rags; sometimes it's urchin children. They knock on the car window in the hope that I will pity them, wind down the window and give them some money. The urchin children usually repeat the mantra, "No Mama, No Papa, No Chapatti" (My friend Kehi tells me the correct reply to this is "No Country Club Membership"). But today the person trying to attract my attention didn't fit into any of these categories.

While waiting for the lights to change on Lodhi Road, a lady wearing a long woolen shawl walked elegantly down between the rows of cars. Her face and clothes were clean, she was wearing lipstick and her hair had been brushed. Between the fingers of her left hand she had notes folded lengthways, 10 rupees, 20 rupees, 50 rupees. Alongside every car she clapped her hands once. After she had passed our car, I asked Raju if she was a beggar. Yes Ma'am, he says, she's a beggar. But, I say to Raju, she doesn't look like a beggar, and she doesn't act like one. The beggars knock on the car window and, because we're white (therefore wealthy, and possibly a pushover), they wait until they are sure we won't give any money. Raju waits a moment. Ma'am, he says, she's not a beggar. And loading as much innuendo into his voice as he could muster he added, Ma'am, I think you know what she is.

Oh, I say, just a little surprised. I check my watch, it is 3pm. Isn't it early, I say, for the ladies of the night to be out? Raju replies with a laugh, Ma'am, she isn't a lady. *

The lights change and he drives on, still chuckling to himself. After a minute or so he looks in the rear view mirror, catching my eye. Ma'am, he says, she was fresh. I take this to mean not all the clapping ladies of Lodhi Road are as pretty, and wholesome looking, as this girl.

* However, I would put money on her being a woman. I've seen hijras (the Indian third gender, neither man nor woman) and this lady was incredibly feminine compared to them.

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Lana's Bananas

I feel like I've fallen into Cafe World...

Today I've been attached to the stove, just like the little cartoon me in my Facebook Cafe, Lana's Bananas. While the little Lana cooked Triple Berry Cheesecake and Spitroast Chicken, the real Lana (a great deal bigger but still little, to be honest), cooked up a huge pot of basic meat sauce. I knew I was on to a good thing when the kids got home from school and rather than "School. Moan. Boring. Can I have some money?", Thalia's first words were "Mmm, smells like Bolognese". Not quite right, because I'd decided the first batch of basic sauce was going to be Chili Con Carne. Tonight, Matthew, I'm going to be... The freezer is now stocked with plastic containers, ready to be turned into Bolognese sauce or Shepherd's Pie relatively easily. And there was enough Chili made with the other portion of basic sauce to pop another family meal in the freezer as well. It's a little like trying to keep enough food available to serve in Cafe World. I'm not sure this qualifies as life imitating art, though...

Monday, November 9, 2009

Got a light?

Having dinner by candlelight is old hat. To be truly cutting edge, you have to cook it by candlelight! Okay, so it's not really a candle, rather our emergency light. But the effect is about the same...

We had a power outage just after 5pm. These outages are less frequent than they were in the peak of summer, and usually don't last more than five or so minutes. The longest ones are about an hour. But 6pm came and went, and the power still hadn't returned. I knew dinner, chicken and vegetable pie with a filo pastry topping, would need to cook for at least 45 minutes, so I couldn't risk leaving it much later. I'd found one packet of filo pastry in the supermarket, something I'd not seen since Tesco, July 2008, so nothing was going to get in the way of me using it. Not even not being able to see. So I took the emergency light into the kitchen so I could distinguish between my fingers and the vegetables. Luckily the hob and oven are gas, otherwise the lack of light wouldn't be my only problem! Power came back just as dinner was ready.

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Success at last!

Finally we have an in focus picture of one of our elusive geckoes. I'd like to introduce Gurshagun.

Tommy and Gurshagun are camera shy. Actually they're people shy too. Late at night, when Rod and I are on our way to bed we often catch them in the hallway or kitchen out of the corners of our eyes. But then they run and hide, under the fridge or underneath the front door. Trying to catch them on camera has been really rather tricky. But last night, when I put my tea cup in the kitchen on the way to bed I didn't turn the light on, because there was enough ambient light from the dining area. And that's when I spotted Gurshagun. I know it's Gurshagun, because she is smaller than Tommy. Don't ask me how I know she's a girl gecko though!
Amazingly she was still there when I returned with my camera. Geckoes, like puppies and four year old boys, aren't very good at listening to directions from photographers, so I was surprised she stayed still long enough for me to take a number of snaps. Everyone, say hi to Gurshagun.

Saturday, October 24, 2009

Sign your name...

One of the things that's distinctive in the area we live, is signs outside houses showing the name of the people who live in the house. These name plates would also be really useful for the postman, except the mail for these houses has probably already been redistributed, probably to people whose names were not the same as those on the envelope. So on our street we have signs saying, among other names, Chakrabati, Mirchandani, Batra and Gupta. Actually most of the signs in our street say Gupta. Our landlord is a Gupta, a cousin lives on our top floor, and his mum lives across the road. And they're just the connections I've made already. Our house has one of these nameplates. It says Gupta, Mehra and Institutio Hispania, the Spanish Language School. The space next to Ground Floor is blank. We could add Fairweather, or Fairweather Dragicevich to it, but
a) proper paint is not cheap (so says our friend, Shireen)
b) the space isn't large enough for all those characters
c) Indians often get confused between forenames and surnames, so Rod is often Mr Rod, and I am Mrs Rod, so maybe the sign should read Rod or Rod Lana instead
d) we're the only white people in the street and everyone knows where we live already
and e) no mail really ever arrives anyway, because it's been nicked!

But we can't be the only white people in Hauz Khas, because I saw this name plate around the corner from the market.
Short, sweet and identifying enough!

Saturday, October 17, 2009

Happy Diwali

"A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away.…"

King Rama was exiled in the forest. He fought a lengthy war against Ravana, the demon king of Lanka, and kidnapper of his wife, Sita. King Rama slays Ravana, rescues Sita, and together they make their way back to Ayodhya, the capital of Rama’s kingdom. But finding their way home is not easy in the dark. So the people of Avodhya lit rows of lamps, called diyas, along the way to light their path through the darkness.

This is the story of Diwali. It celebrates the triumph of light over darkness, goodness over evil and knowledge over ignorance.

Today Indians decorate their homes, inside and out, with fairy lights and diyas to help Rama and Sita on their way. It is believed lighting diyas welcomes prosperity and well-being into the home. This pleases Lakshmi, the Goddess of wealth. I’m sure we could all do with pleasing Lakshmi at this time :-)

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Operation Smile

Do you want to know how loud 14 expat women can be when it's all for a good cause? Really, really quite loud! Members of my Monday quilt group and the Thursday knitting and stitching group gathered in Kehi's house today and made quilts for Operation Smile. Operation Smile provide free reconstructive surgery to children with cleft lip, palate and other facial deformaties. While recovering from these surgeries, nurses place a roll of soft fabric under the patient's necks. A roll of soft fabric is fine, but a quilt is so much better. Of course it is!

Many of the knitting group didn't know how to piece or rotary cut, but they found themselves called upon to choose fabrics for the quilt tops, press the quilts as we stitched, do any handwork required and make copious cups of tea. Trust me, they were vital! Thalia is home from school this week and she came too, tracing applique shapes, taking photos and making a quilt for the pile. She also found herself much in demand when it came to laying the quilt tops on the backings. We had to use the floor for this, and her back and knees are much younger than the average!


Suzanne stitching
Our first finished quilt, modelled by Kehi


Thalia's quilt


Today's effort

In all we completely finished 8 quilts, before we ran out of the fleece we were using for backing. Another two tops are ready waiting for more backing to be purchased, and many of us took home bundles of fabric to make some more. So a day spent doing something really useful, and having great fun with it!



Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Twinkle! Sparkle!

What do you do in a predominantly Muslim suburb in the days leading up to Diwali, the biggest Hindu festival of the year? You buy Christmas decorations, of course! At Monday's quilt meeting I was given the address for the Christmas Decoration man, and told not to wait too long before paying him a visit. Helen said you'd go to a suburban home, walk down into its basement and be blown away. She wasn't wrong! A basement not much smaller than our Hauz Khas home full of sparkly, dangly stuff! Three rooms of colour coded baubles, wreaths, tree skirts and tree toppers - everything you'd need for Christmas, with all the baubles priced at 50 rupees. Well, almost everything. There wasn't any wrapping paper...

A small selection of our purchases
We bought 17 baubles, two of the stand up stars and a tinsel tree for each of the kids' rooms. This one's Thalia's. As the Christmas tree we bought last year is only marginally bigger than this turquoise one, we're going to need to get a larger tree if we're going to have any hope of hanging all these trinkets on it!

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

A walk in the park

Well the weather seems to be finally on the turn, the maximum temperature has been 34 degrees (93F) for the last couple of days. Not enough of a drop to wear different clothes yet, we're wearing the same things we did when it was 40 (104F), and just sweating into them a little slower :-)

To celebrate our new found freedom on Sunday we went for a walk in the park. Nehru Park is in Chanakyapuri, near the Australian High Commission and one of Delhi's premier hotels, the Ashok. For the past week, The Ashok has been playing host to the Commonwealth Games Federation General Assembly, who came to check on Delhi's readiness to host the Games this time next year. Delhites think there's lots of work being done, so it will all be okay. But there's 19 venues and none of them are finished yet, nor is the athlete's village. A lot of work is being done, but there's a lot that needs to be done! Delhi will think it's ready on time if everything is complete on October 2nd, the day before the opening ceremony. For something as important and complicated as the Commonwealth Games, I know I'd want to see most things ready at least six months in advance! I don't suppose the Commonweath Games Federation sees it any differently. To ensure all this work is completed on time, the CGF has said it will put in place foreign experts (a.k.a. people who don't work to Indian Stretchable Time). The Games getting the go ahead is very big news for Delhi. If the CGF had come in and said there was too much to be done and the Games will be held in Melbourne instead (a.k.a. Plan B), work on all those venues, and the road works, bridge building and traffic control measures underway all over the city would just stop. Driving here has been really dreadful. If all work stopped we would have had gone through hell for nothing. That's just too awful to consider!

Anyway, back to Nehru Park. In the sun it was still too hot, but in the shade it was almost pleasant.

Aren't we cool?

Aren't they cute?
Aren't they handsome?

Saturday, October 10, 2009

If it's Tuesday, it must be Belgium

but it's Saturday, so it's Switzerland!


Today we went to the Swiss Embassy for their Festa of Lights Mela. Diwali, the Hindu Festival of Lights, is next weekend, so the Mela, or Fair season is well underway. Traditional gifts to give at Diwali include candles and diyas (oil lamps) and food. This mela had lots of those on offer, and much more. Clothes, shoes, handmade paper crafts - anything a girl could ask for!



Thankfully for Keir they also had a kids area, with a ball cage. He was much happier there than browsing through Indian clothing stalls. They didn't know it, but the stall keepers were happier too! There was a gourmet food court, so Rod and I decided as we were in Switzerland we should do as the Swiss do, so lunch was bubbling Raclette cheese served with boiled potatoes, pickled onions and gerkhins. Though I suppose in Switzerland it's not generally served on a plate made from recycled palm leaves... Yummy, nevertheless.




And after the bustle of Switzerland we moved back into India. To celebrate our return, we enjoyed an icecream on the much less crowded footpath. Not the way round things usually are!





Wednesday, October 7, 2009

School run, the harder way

We have a great driver Raju, who can get us anywhere we need to, even into Old Delhi (even though he doesn't like it). But sometimes Rod and I need to be in two different places at the same time, and not even Raju can manage that. That's when we use an auto rickshaw, or tuc tuc. Yesterday was one of those days. Keir had to be collected from school at 2.15, and Rod needed to be in Gurgaon at 3. As the school is much, much closer to our place than Gurgaon is, I pulled the auto straw.

At 1.40 I walked down to the market to find a rickshaw. It's never hard to find one there, but you never know how good the driver's English will be. You also don't know how good a driver the rickshaw guy will be, but the state of his vehicle can give you a few clues on that front. It's a good idea not to make eye contact with any driver with a really battered rickshaw! Luckily the first rickshaw who offered me a ride had all 3 of its wheels, an non cracked windshield and only a few holes in its upholstery. Fingers crossed he would understand where I needed to go. Toes crossed he would know how to get there! I show him my school ID badge, which says in big letters "The British School". I say, clearly, "The British School, Chanakyapuri". The badge also gives the street address, but that's not going to be much help. The driver isn't going to be able to read much English (because if he did, he wouldn't be a rickshaw driver), and even if he did, he wouldn't use a map to get there, because Indian drivers are unlike men anywhere else in the world. They actually like stopping to ask for directions! I know, freaky! The driver nods, to indicate he knows where I want to go. I've done this enough to know that the nod doesn't actually mean he does know where I want him to go, but he thinks he can get me close enough so that I'll pay him. I ask him how much to get to the school, wait 10 minutes and then bring me back to Hauz Khas. He repeats "British School" and thinks, because all auto rickshaws have meters, but none of them work. Fees for hiring an auto are not determined by distance covered, nor time of day. They're determined by how much the driver thinks he can get out of you, before you go and try your luck with the next auto in the queue. My guy decides 150 rupees (£2, $3.20 USD, $3.60 AUD) is the tipping point. This would be exhorbitant if I wasn't white, but the journey's cost me 200 rupees in the past, so I take it.



We set off in the right direction (so far, so good), and after a short while he asks me "which Embassy?" Now Chanakyapuri is home to many of the Embassies and High Commissions, so it's not a bad assumption I'm going to an Embassy. Except that less than 5 minutes ago I told him "The British School", and he repeated it back to me. I say clearly, again, "The British School", and add "near the American Embassy", in case it helps. The driver keeps driving, and soon we are heading up Africa Avenue, and into Chanakyapuri. We turn into Satya Marg and the wide streets of Diplomatic Delhi. We come to a roundabout. The driver enters the roundabout and stops in the middle. I yell and point, "straight ahead", because I'm not too keen on being stationary in an open sided, three wheeled vehicle in the middle of a roundabout. The driver goes straight ahead. We come to the next roundabout. Because I didn't want to play sitting duck again, I tell him straight ahead as he enters the roundabout. He makes a noise which I take to mean he doesn't believe me, but he does what I say anyway. When we get to the next roundabout, I say straight ahead. He hesitates, and the penny drops. "Ah, British School", he says, no differently to I have been saying it, and he has been repeating it back to me all along, and takes me to the school gate. I get out and ask him to wait while I go collect my son. I know he will wait for me, because I'm not going to give him any money yet.


I get Keir and he is so excited to be going home in an auto. The driver smiles as he climbs in and Keir wishes him Namaste (hello). The driver grins even wider and asks Keir if he speaks Hindi. He replies, Han ji (yes Sir). The driver turns to me and asks if I speak Hindi. I reply chota (little). We set off back to Hauz Khas. As we get back to the market I direct the driver to our house. I get him to stop outside D59, and Keir thanks him in Hindi (Dhanyavad) while I get out the fare. The driver asks me "do you live in Delhi?". I reply, "I live here", and point to the house. He looks confused, and repeats "do you live in Delhi?". I'm confused, because I would have thought the fact that I collected my son from school and directed him back to our house, telling him it was my house, were enough clues. Maybe they aren't, so I point to the house again, and repeat "I live here". Just in case we still aren't clear, I leave. Quickly.


Thursday, October 1, 2009

Not fair weather, not yet

It's October already! Rejoice! Why? Because all Indians say the weather is best in Delhi from October to February. That's when the endless days of temperatures over 35 degrees come to a close, and locals start mentioning that it's turning cool. I'm waiting...because it was 37 degrees today, and it's forecast to be 37 for the next four days too. Now where I come from, that's just not cool...

I am really, really bored with my wardrobe. I am tired of opening it up each morning, and trying to find something suitable to wear when the forecast says 36 degrees or more. And it's not that I want to go out and buy more clothes suitable for this weather. Really, I have enough. I just want to wear something different, something suitable for a day when the forecast says 24 degrees. I have those clothes already. I haven't worn them to death since March. I still like them...

I know I need to take a reality tablet. I'd settle for a 28 degree day, even though we're getting 28 degree nights. There might be a 28 degree day in November...

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Things you don't expect to see on the motorway

I've been in India over a year now, and I'm much more used to seeing things I wouldn't have expected to see than I was when I first arrived, a novice traveller who'd only lived on two continents. I've seen people living in buildings that didn't look like they would withstand a light puff of wind. I've seen people surprised that it rains in the monsoon season, and all the roads wash away. I've seen trees growing in the middle of roads. But I've never seen this:


Yesterday was Eid-ul-Fitr, the day that marks the end of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. Thousands of Muslims gathered at mosques across India to offer prayers. And thousands gathered on the NH8, the Delhi Gurgaon Expressway, and offered their prayers there too. Traffic is often at a standstill on this road, but not usually caused by human gridlock.

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Wine glass 1 - Keir nil

Sunday evening we were provided with the reason why we have carried a Boots First Aid kit around for years. For on Sunday evening Keir decided to use a wine glass as a football. In case you're wondering, wine glasses do not make good footballs. Especially if you have hard marble floors...

First Keir kicked the glass with his foot (actually first Rod said, mind out for my wine glass, but considering what followed, that bit is a little redundant). The glass slammed down into the marble floor, bounced back up and then glass shards scattered over a large part of the living room. Rod yelled "stop", to prevent Keir walking on any of the fragments. I saw blood on his feet, yelled "blood" (I'm good at stating the obvious in an emergency) and scooped Keir up and carried him to the dining table. At this time all we could see was blood. Quite a bit of it. After cleaning up his feet we discovered Keir had a cut about 4cm long (1.5 inches) on the top of his right foot. Rod applied pressure to the wound and we hoped it would stop bleeding. Because a trip to the local emergency room was not really how I'd planned to spend my Sunday evening.

Here's where the first aid kit came in. Surprisingly, considering Keir is part of our family, we've never really had to use anything from the first aid kit before. But it contained enough steri-strips, wound dressings, bandages and micropore tape for us to avoid a trip to Max hospital. Max is the best hospital near us, and one of the best in New Delhi, but we weren't convinced they'd be as well stocked with sterile dressings as we were. I'm even more convinced today, as we were unable to refill the first aid kit after visiting three chemist shops yesterday. None of the pharmacists had ever seen steri-strips before.

Keir spent yesterday on the sofa pestering Rod, sorry playing Farkle and Farmville. He went to school this morning, proudly showing off his well bandaged foot. He has bragging rights today...

Monday, September 7, 2009

a further bathroom break

A little more to add on the bathroom situation. Yes there’s more. I just didn’t want to say it yesterday because:
a) I already had cramp from writing all that, and know there are published novels out there that are shorter and,
b) I was afraid if I made the post any longer some of you would look at it and decide: too many words, I’ll wait until Readers Digest bring out the abridged version. Yes Julie, I mean you…

I now know why Indian houses have lots of bathrooms. It’s not because Indians all want an en suite, it’s because they won’t all be fully working at the same time, and having lots of bathrooms means there’s a chance whatever you need will be working somewhere. See, our master bathroom has the best bath. Actually, it has the only bath. This worked even when we had no hot water, because we could carry a couple of buckets of hot water through from the kitchen. But the shower was cold, so Rod would use the shower in Keir’s bathroom, which is the best shower in the house. But Rod couldn’t use our bathroom to shave, because we had no hot water, nor could he use Keir’s bathroom for shaving, because Keir’s mirror is so bad you can’t see anything in it. That left Thalia’s bathroom for shaving. Thalia’s shower can be dodgy at the best of times, but she has the best mirror.

That of course was last week, when the master bath hot water cylinder was on the blink. Rod has had to go to London for 10 days, so at the moment, no one needs to be able to see their face in a mirror to shave. My hot water is now working perfectly (touch wood). Keir’s hot water cylinder worked last week, but now only gets to lukewarm. Keir had cold showers for a couple of days before he said anything. I know that cylinder was working last week because Rod would never have done that! And we don’t seem to be able to get any hot water out of Thalia’s hot water cylinder. Actually, we don’t seem to be able to get any water out of Thalia’s hot water taps at all, not hot, not cold. Fingers crossed my hot water cylinder lasts until Rod gets back on the weekend!!

Sunday, September 6, 2009

In hot water...not!

How many Indians does it take to change a hot water cylinder? It's not a joke, I'm just asking. Because it's taken days already...

A little bit of backstory first: The hot water cylinder in our bathroom stopped working while we were in Australia, and Rod got it repaired in time for our return. For Rod is a good husband, and knows how important a bath is to me all of the time, and even more so when I've just got off a plane. Fast forward six weeks, and the hot water cylinder stops producing hot water again. Now as far as I'm concerned, this makes it not a very good hot water cylinder. So we went to the same repair shop in the local market and asked for a repairman to come and fix it again. It was late in the afternoon and the owner was not in, so the man behind the counter said he would come tomorrow morning.

The following afternoon, the shop owner and his repair guy came to our house. Unfortunately they had chosen to come while there was a colony wide power cut, so they could not test the electrics on our hot water cylinder. Why did they come when they knew the power was out? They want us to call them when the power is back on. When power was restored we called the number they had given us. The man said he would come in half an hour. At six o'clock, three and a half hours after the half hour, I get Raju to call to find out when the repair guy will arrive. I don't want anyone saying I don't understand... Raju calls, and tells me it is Tuesday and they are not working today. Now I knew it was Tuesday, and I know many shops shut here on a Tuesday, but it was Tuesday four hours earlier when they stood in my house in the dark because the power was out. But it's not Raju's fault, so I just have to accept that they will do as they say, which is come to my house to fix my hot water cylinder the following day at 10.30-11.

Wednesday morning comes, and while I have hopes that the hot water will work today, I have no expectation that someone will be in my house at 10.30 fixing it. But I need to go out around lunchtime, so I'm going to need the repair guy to have an un-Indian approach to time-keeping. At 10.45 I explain this to Raju, who goes around the corner to the shop to make sure they understand I need them working in my house in the morning. The shop isn’t open yet. So Raju calls the mobile number he has been given, and is told we are the repair guy’s first job of the day.

Repair guy and his toolbag carrying sidekick arrive at D59 at 11.45, and repair guy sets about checking the cylinder. He decides to disconnect the water supply to the cylinder. At least I think that’s what he does, for copious quantities of water pour out the side of the cylinder and all over my bathroom. Sidekick stands in the bathroom holding a screwdriver. Raju stands in my bathroom holding a bucket. Repair guy takes out the scorch marked heating element, and two rods, one of which has a melted hole in the side I’m sure the manufacturers hadn’t intended.


I may make this sound like a quick job, but in fact this takes 45 minutes. During the 45 minutes, water continues to drip out the side of the cylinder. Maybe repair guy hasn’t been as diligent in turning off the water to the cylinder as he should have been. But he leaves with the three broken pieces and a 1000 rupee advance, saying he will be back to fit new parts later that afternoon. With more forethought than the repair guy, I balance the bucket on the loo seat to attempt to catch some of the drips. Why bother at this stage you may think, considering how much water has already gone on the floor? But it feels like the right thing to do, and when I returned home after my errands I found the 22 litre bucket close to overflowing.

Repair guy returns at 4.30. He empties the now again half full bucket and attempts to fit new replacement parts. He’s finding this a little tricky, because there’s a stream of water coming from the hole he’s trying to plug with one of the rods. He can use a cloth to plug up the hole. That stops the water, but he can’t get the rod in with the cloth in the way. He can take the cloth away, but then the water stream comes back. Hmmm.

Eventually he manages to get the hole plugged with the rod and he can close up the side of the hot water cylinder. He tells me it works, and asks that I test it that evening, and he will be back tomorrow to check all is well. I tell him I will check it that evening, because I’ve been looking forward to having a bath where I haven’t had to carry the hot water in from the kitchen in my 22 litre bucket. Unfortunately, that evening I was not able to have a bath, as there was no water coming out of my bathroom taps at 8pm as the roof tanks had run dry. This is not uncommon, and it often does not last for long. It might not even have been connected to the water feature that was my bathroom earlier that day. But I checked again at 9pm, and then at 10 and 11 and midnight. When the water came back I do not know. But I’d lost the urge to bathe by then!

Saturday, September 5, 2009

Television 101

I don't think Keir has quite grasped how television works. This surprised Rod and I, considering how many years we have worked in the industry. And what led us to this conclusion...let's start at the very beginning, it's a very fine place to start...

Back in 2007, one of Keir's absolute favourite TV programmes was "Any Dream Will Do", the search for a new West End star to play the lead role in Joseph and the Amazing Technicolour Dreamcoat. It was must see television in the Fairweather household, so much so that I made him his own dreamcoat for his birthday. That dreamcoat came with us to India, and it's still one of his favourite things. (Will I continue with the musical references? Maybe this time...)

When we returned from Australia we discovered one of our satellite channels, BBC Entertainment, was showing re-runs of the show. Keir was very excited. But after a couple of weeks, he said something that didn't quite jell with us. He was surprised when Craig was voted off the show, and said he hoped Keith would win. Now, I had hoped Keith would win, back in 2007. But he didn't win then, so I wasn't expecting him to do so in the repeat. Not even maybe this time...

So we gently tested our theory that Keir thought it was a whole new programme, but with all the same people, singing all the same songs. When asked who he thought Andrew Lloyd Webber would send home each week, he would look thoughtful, and declare Lee. For those who didn't see the programme like we have, twice, on two different continents, Lee was the eventual winner. Any dream will do, but sadly Keir's dream of a different outcome was just not going to happen!

Saturday, August 29, 2009

The burning question...

After a long and detailed investigation (we opened the wall switch) Rod used his extensive knowledge and experience to identify what he believed may have been causing the sub-optimal performance of the fan in Thalia’s room …


Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Style Icon

My boy's a style icon! Imagine my surprise last Friday, at a 9 year old birthday party (that is, a party for a 9 year old, not a party which didn't know when to end) when the Mum of one of Keir's classmates came up and told me Suraj wants a ponytail because Keir's got a ponytail.

He's such a trendsetter! I'm sure Suraj would look good with a ponytail. We won't be in India by the time he has it, as Suraj currently has a number 3 cut!

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Vegetarian shop discovered in Hauz Khas

I know where the vegetarian shop is! The paneer selling vegetarian shop. What Bapi meant was one of the vegetable stalls down the high street. Now why didn't I think of this? Possibly because the vegetable stall consists of a plank of wood on a couple of trestle legs, and no refrigeration? Bapi took me down the street and I admit I wasn't expecting to stop at a veggie stall. But under the table, in an esky (coolbox) was paneer and a big block of ice. Considering how often the electricity goes off, and how shopkeepers don't like paying for electricity to keep refrigeration units cold (it must be true - I read it in the papers!), a big block of ice is probably just as reliable, maybe more so!

Monday, August 17, 2009

Cooking with gas

One of the delights of India is the relative cheapness of household help. This is a delight, because I love household help, but I'm cheap! The daily maid is no luxury - India is so dusty, and the doors and windows so ill-fitting, floors have to be swept and washed daily. And dishwashers do exist, that's the maid again! We've had a part-time maid since we arrived last year, and send our ironing out to the press-wallah down the street (for the princely sum of 3 rupees an item, less than 5 pence!) but have not succumbed to any more help. But now we've splashed out and hired a cook! Bapi comes to us each Tuesday, and spends 90 minutes or so making 20 rotis (chapatis), a paneer (cheese) dish and a vegetable dish. This gives us two family meals each week, for 800 rupees (£10) a month! All I have to do is provide the ingredients - Bapi turns them into dinner. Bloody marvellous as far as I'm concerned!

So Bapi gave me a shopping list, and last Monday I went off to make sure I had all the right ingredients. He said to buy 2kg of Atta (wheat flour) at Big Apple, one of the local shops. I went to Big Apple, and right inside the door they had 2kg boxes of Atta. I bought one of those. And I went to Mother Dairy, the milk stall, and bought the paneer. And I bought a large selection of whole spices I've probably never cooked with before. Maybe I have, but Masterfoods wrote in English on the outside of those bottles. These spices weren't in bottles, nor were the labels in English, so I called on another lady customer to help me identify them. Big cardamon, green cardamon, black cardamon...I'm not even sure if we like cardamon! But I was pleased with my purchases. Shopping for unfamiliar ingredients, when you only know their names in a language not used on the labelling, isn't the easiest job!

Unfortunately Bapi was less pleased with my purchases than I was. He couldn't understand why I had bought that box of Atta. As far as I could see, it was the product he'd asked for, the size he'd asked for, in the shop he sent me to. But it was the wrong kind of Atta. And I'd bought the wrong kind of paneer. It was starting to feel like I was back in Britain, on the platform at Motspur Park, listening to British Rail explaining that the late arrival of my train was because the autumn leaves on the line were the wrong kind of leaves, or the snow in winter was the wrong kind of snow... Bapi was confused as to why I had gone to Mother Dairy (the milk shop) to buy the paneer (a dairy product). The best paneer, he told me, is found in the Sweet shop or at the vegetarian shop. I've told him he's going to need to take me shopping this week. I'd never ever have thought to look in the sweet shop for cheese, and I don't even know which shop in the market is the vegetarian shop. No shop in the market has that written on their shopfront, not even spelled incorrectly!

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Straight, sort of...

Thought you'd enjoy seeing one of my Nehru Place purchases. I asked for half a metre of this checked fabric. The young man behind the counter snipped and tore the fabric to make a straight edge he could measure from. He then cut this piece for me.

It's 66cm at the short end, 85cm at the other. I'm so glad he tore to get a straight edge to start with! To think we used bitch about the fabric not being cut straight in quilt shops in the UK!

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Wet T-Shirt Competition

Yesterday I took part in an impromptu "Wet T-shirt" competition. And I won! I was at least 15 years younger, and 15 kilos lighter than the other three participants, so it wasn't that tough a job. But we were all white women, so we were going to be stared at, wet or dry!

Yesterday I went out shopping with some members of my quilt group. We were going to go to Lajpat Nagar, a market (new to me) where they had silk threads, beads and buttons, and then on to Nehru Place to check out some fabric shops. When there's fabric on offer, a little bit of rain was never going to deter us. It's the monsoon season after all. It's supposed to rain. As it turned out, it was the second wettest day this season, just under 44mm (1 and 3/4 inches), and all in the two hours we were outside!

After a while, you can't get much wetter. And as we found out, if you hold the plastic bags containing your purchases to your chest, that at least stays dry. This prevents your clothes clinging to your nipples quite as badly as they could. See, it's important to shop!!

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Bug Update

Those teeny tiny ants I told you about last month have, like Elvis, left the building. Hooray! They had to be tackled, so Rod found a packet of powdered cement. He mixed it up in the bottom of a coke bottle using all his cement mixing knowledge (zilch, but there were no instructions), and applied it to the join between the tiles and the window sill in the kitchen. That's where we'd seen the ants enter. And we had no more ants, until the next day. The next day the ants had moved to using gate no.2, otherwise known as the join between two pieces of wood in the window frame. This wood is brown, so the white powdered cement was going to look ugly. We went out to see if we could find a prettier fix. Trust me, if we couldn't we were happy to go with white cement! Luckily we found some clear silicone sealant. We even found one of those guns you place the silicone cylinder in. We didn't find the nozzle you put on the front of the cylinder to direct the sealant where you want it to go, but two out of three ain't bad! So using two high tech tools (his finger and a toothpick) Rod applied the silicone and we had no more ants, until the next day. The next day the ants had moved to using gate no.3, a hole in the window frame near the right hand window. Rod used the sealant and his high tech tools to plug this hole. And we had no more ants, until the next day. Now, try as we might, we couldn't see where gate no. 4 was, but it obviously existed, because we still had ants. So we decided to try a different tack, and went and bought a can of Mortein Gold All Insect Killer. This is pretty impressive stuff, because all we did was place the can on the counter. All the ants ran away! And they must have sealed gate no. 4, because they haven't come back!

Sunday, August 9, 2009

The Breezers are back in town

Back in April something dreadful happened. The slots on the liquor shop shelves where the Bacardi Breezers should be became bare. This was bad, because Breezers are 35 rupees each, about the same as a can of soft drink. A bottle of Indian wine costs fifteen times this, imported wine about twice the Indian wine price. So you can see why Rod and I enjoyed having unfettered access to Breezers. But like Old Mother Hubbard's, the wine shop cupboard was bare, and it wasn't until we opened the newspaper one morning we discovered why. Breezers are manufactured under licence in India, and the existing licences expired at the end of March. Someone forgot to file the papers requesting the renewal of the IMFL (Indian Made Foreign Liquor) , so production had to stop until the new licences were issued. In a country which so values paperwork, especially when carbon paper is involved, failing to have the right papers was a really big mistake. It seems the authorities wouldn't allow the licences to be fast-tracked, as it's taken four months for Breezers to get back to the shops. Maybe they didn't offer a bribe, or the bribe wasn't big enough, or the Commissioner for Excise is a whisky drinker. And it wasn't just the licence for Bacardi Breezers that had been overlooked, many of the foreign beer brands were also withdrawn. You couldn’t buy Fosters, not even in the Australian High Commission. Strewth! What’s the world coming to!

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Newspaper musings

I found a number of articles amusing in yesterday's newspaper, so I thought I'd share them with you. On page 17, one past an entire page of Vladimir Putin's summer holiday snaps (which I did not find amusing, does he think Carly Simon wrote "You're So Vain" for him?)


Bugger, I seem to have misplaced my shirt, again

there was an article entitled "Chinese trust prostitutes more than govt officials". Results of an online survey found sex workers were considered more trustworthy than government officials and scientists. 91% of respondents admitted they'd take government data with a pinch of salt, because they feel they have been fed so many lies in the past. After all, what's the worst lie a prostitute's going to tell you: "Oooh Sir, that's the biggest one I've seen!"
And on the back page, Ross Brawn, head of Formula One team, Brawn GP, could lose his licence after being acccused of driving 30 mph over the speed limit in May. At least the man has enough money to pay for a driver for the duration of the ban. I understand Nelson Piquet Jr's available...

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Legal at last!

Well who would have thunk it! Not I certainly, when Rod came home from the FRRO at 12.30. He'd seen the man at Counter 4, who had looked over all our papers. Counter 4 guy noticed our visas had expired and queried this with the Incharge. Rod doesn't know much Hindi, but he recognised the word "penalise". The Incharge waved him away. She knew it was their incompetance, not ours..

Rod been told to come back at 2pm with an "undertaking letter" from his employer, nothing to do with funerals, but a letter "undertaking" they would pay to have us repatriated to the UK if we were naughty. Thankfully one of the company directors lives in the next suburb, so Rod made it back to the FRRO on time. Unfortunately, power was out at the FRRO. Luckily they have a battery operated emergency light like we do. Ours doesn't give off much light, but at least it stops us bumping into chairs. Theirs is the same size as ours, and their office is about the same size as our whole house. It wasn't giving off enough light for the counter staff to check the badly photocopied forms they are so willing to accept, so Rod just waited. Power was restored at 2.45. The undertaking letter was okayed, and the stamp pad came out to finalise our registration. Then Counter 4 guy gave Rod 3 visa forms and told him to fill them out. Rod did. He asked for our passports. Rod handed them over. He stamped them. We didn't think we'd get this far without a trip up to the Home Affairs Office (the place where they take all day to give you the brown envelope covered in seals that you're not allowed to open). Then he told Rod to go to the Cash payments desk and pay for our visas. Rod calls me, because he doesn't have enough cash on him (16,000 rupees, or about £200) to pay for the visas, and there's no ATM at the FRRO. So I get cash at the market, throw the kids in the car and rush there.

First day of school. Morning, obviously, we're still clean and tidy!

The security guard at the FRRO won't let us in, because I cannot show him my passport. I try to explain my passport is already in the building. I call Rod, and he comes to the guard, who decides the kids and I can enter. We pay at the Cash desk and get sent to the Incharge. At 5pm the Incharge signs our visa stamps and we are legal! Until June next year! We don't have to visit the FRRO again, unless we move house. And trust me, we're not going to move house, because we're not going to the FRRO again!
Today is Rakhi, a lovely Hindu celebration. Brothers pledge to look after their sisters for ever. Sisters tie a decorated string or rakhi on their brother's wrist as a remembrance. They in turn are given a small gift, like chocolates.


Big Brothers - Keir and Raju

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Illegal aliens

I thought I'd give you all an update on the status of our visas. And no, just in case anyone was wondering, we're not legal yet. Rod, the kids and I spent four and a half hours yesterday at the FRRO. Our papers have arrived (finally!) from Gurgaon, and now we are in a position to move forward. Unfortunately the fact that this was Rod's fifth visit (and the kids and my second) since July 23, and the fact that we had been in the office for many, many hours already did not allow us to complete our visa extensions, because we hadn't filled in the necessary forms (possibly because we'd never been given them!). But we left the office with two different forms to fill out (in triplicate) and the Incharge told Rod to return with them in the morning. He kindly said we needn't bring the kids again. This is a good thing, because school starts today and Thalia doesn't want to miss it. Keir said he didn't mind if he missed school, probably because he played on his DS for the whole four and a half hours! So Rod is back at the FRRO. I don't expect we will get our visa extensions today. The forms we were given all relate to our re-registration in Delhi. We aren't overly concerned about not being registered in the right district, but the FRRO obviously thinks it's vitally important. I think this is a step we just have to go through. But I am hopeful we will complete the registration today. Hopefully.

Saturday, August 1, 2009

One year down...

Today is the first anniversary of our departure from Britain. You'd think in all that time we'd have learnt a few things about life in India. For example, it's a good idea to have lots of torches to deal with the frequent power failures. It's even better if you know where they are before the lights go out! We have a battery powered emergency light which comes on when the mains power fails. This gives us enough light to find the important things we need, like torches. But last night I gave the emergency light to Thalia, because the lights went out just as she'd put the conditioner on her hair. Her need was the greatest. But what I should have done was located another torch before I handed over the emergency light, because once it was in her bathroom, I was in the dark!

Thursday, July 30, 2009

A good girl...but not for much longer

This is the last post I get to write to you as a upstanding, law abiding citizen. For tomorrow I am a criminal. So is Thalia and Keir. Rod has managed to stay on the right side of the law - it is just his family who are villains. And our crime? Our visas run out today. From midnight the kids and I are illegally staying in the country. Now you'd think we would have made efforts to stay within the law, after all, we were brought up to do the right thing. Well, we have made efforts, but an old friend (?) is making things difficult for us...

Rod has an employment visa, and the kids and I have X visas. X visas used to be called Dependents visas, and they allow us to stay for the duration of Rod's employment visa. When he went to Britain over the summer he got his new employment visa. He could have got our new X visas sorted in the UK, but for that he would have needed our passports. But as we needed our passports to get into Australia, that wasn't going to work. So I tried to get the visas sorted in Perth. That wasn't going to work either, because the lovely Sikh man at the Indian Visa Service there told me that for the children's visas, in addition to the standard forms and Australian passports, I'd need:

1) a letter from both parents stating that we were happy for the visa to be issued. This letter had to be witnessed by a Doctor, Police Officer or Justice of the Peace.

2) Full Birth Certificates for both kids, and our Marriage Certificate (if applicable)

3) Both Rod and I had to sign the Visa Application forms, preferably in front of the lovely Sikh man at the Indian Visa Service.

This I explained to him was hard, because:

1) Rod was in Britain, not Australia, and was not really expecting to be in Australia before June 2010, quite some time after we needed our visas.

2) The kids didn't have Australian passports, they had British ones, because they were British citizens, born in Britain, like their father, and

3) Rather than trying to take the children away from their dad, I was trying to get them back to him!

The lovely Sikh man looked at our passports and declared our current visas were fine. I explained we were due to land on the 16th of July, and the visas expired on the 30th. Would we have difficulty in getting in? No he said, they will just point out you do not have much time left and will need to sort your visas promptly. Dhanyavad (thankyou) we said , and left.

The Immigration Officer at Passport Control at Indira Gandhi International Airport did not point out we had only a little time left on our visas. If he had not smiled at the changes in Keir's appearance in his passport (in the passport he's 4, with a number 3 cut. Now he's 8, with hair to his shoulderblades) I would almost have believed he didn't look at them at all.

But we heeded the lovely Sikh man's advice, and last Wednesday, as soon as the jetlag had cleared, headed to the Foreigners Registration Office in Delhi. We got there early, because we thought there might be a queue. Unfortunately for us, the Foreigners Registration Office in Delhi opens at 9.30, half an hour earlier than it's counterpart in the Mini Secretariat in Haryana, where we had been registered before. We joined the queue for the reception desk, two rooms away. I won't say it took a long time for the queue to move, but Rod left an important paper at home, went back for it and returned to us just as we moved into the room that housed the reception desk. God bless Nintendo DS and Ipod! When we eventually reached the receptionist we discovered we could not have our visas extended, because our RP (Residence Permit papers) were still at the Mini Secretariat in Haryana, even though we had attended the Foreigners Registration Office in Delhi requesting their transfer in May. We were told to wait. Three and a bit hours after we had arrived, the Incharge told us we would need to go to Haryana to ask for the papers. We pointed out our visas did not have much time left on them, but the Incharge said she was not able to process them until our Residence Permits arrived at her office.

So Thursday morning Rod drove to the Mini Secretariat, and gave our old friend Mini Secretariat guy the letter from the Incharge requesting our RP papers. Mini Secretariat guy says the papers will be sent tomorrow, and gives Rod his phone number so he can call to check. On Friday Rod calls. He's told the papers will be in Delhi on Monday. On Tuesday he goes to see the Incharge in Delhi - the papers are not there. On Wednesday he goes to see the Incharge in Delhi - the papers are not there. The Incharge looks a little embarrassed, she says come back on Monday, bring the whole family. Rod points out our visas only have one day left on them. She gives a look Rod hopes means, "don't worry, we'll sort it". So guess what we're doing on Monday?

Monday, July 27, 2009

As safe as a dangerous sport can be

It was a Formula One weekend, so I spent most of it glued to the telly. I found it was hard while I was away from India to keep up with all that was going on in my favourite sport. Australia only seems interested in sports that use balls - Aussie Rules, cricket, rugby. Balls do not feature in Formula One. Well, not that kind!

It was a unusual race weekend, what with Felipe Massa's freak accident during qualifying on Saturday. For those who may not share my enthusiasm for the sport, those who spent the past weekend in an alcoholic stupor, and those who just don't get out much, the car driven by Rubens Barrichello suffered a rear suspension failure. A spring came off and bounced along the track. Four seconds later, the spring struck Massa in the head. His Ferrari then ploughed into the tyre barrier. Pictures of Massa's helmet show the force of the impact. Four years ago the helmets were upgraded to carbon-fibre, twice as stong as the previous material. This carbon-fibre is being touted as the reason Felipe was able to survive the crash. The design of the car, and the tyre barrier, also played their part.

And I've just seen footage on the BBC news of another reminder that Motorsport, in spite of all the safety precautions, still has its dangers. Driver Tony Kanaan was taking part in the Edmonton IndyCar race on the weekend. Things were going swimmingly, until his first pit stop when the ethanol fuel hose filling his car appeared to not shut off properly, dousing him and his car in fuel. Seconds later, the car was on fire. He drove a short distance down the pit lane to prevent the fire spreading to his pit garage. Other teams' pit crews doused the flames and helped Tony out of the car. He suffered minor burns to his thumbs and face. In an interview after the event he was asked "what if it had been worse?". His reply: "How much worse could it be? I was on fire for 45 seconds. I'd like to thank the people who make Nomex (the fire-retardent fabric his driving suit is constructed from)". I'll second that!

Saturday, July 25, 2009

Come in...make yourself at home

Today there was a news story on BBC World News. Scientists have discovered a new species of lizard in the lush Western Ghats mountain range in the Indian state of Maharashtra. They're not alone. I've discovered a new lizard species living in my fusebox, just outside my front door. I just haven't got around to letting the BBC know yet. The lizards are geckoes really, a couple of inches long and almost translucent. I don't mind them living in my fusebox. I only have to go to the fusebox when we need to reset one of the fuses, which, because of the reliability of the power supply and the quality of the electrical work, only happens a couple of times a day! So we have a fusebox routine, which goes:

1..Open fusebox with one hand.

2..Keep other hand close to your body while geckoes run for cover.

3..Visually identify flipped fuse.

4..Quickly reset fuse and close fusebox.

The geckoes don't bother me there. They can have a party in my fusebox for all I care, as long as the Bhangra's not too loud, they put their empties in a neat pile, and scatter when I perform fusebox routine stage 4. However, some of the geckoes have started to get a bit familiar, and have begun coming into the house. I haven't invited them...they just waltz in under our ill-fitting (but by Indian standards, probably top quality) front door. While I wish they wouldn't I can't get rid of them. I tried. They move much faster than I do. However, they eat bugs, so at least they have their uses.

It's not just the geckoes that seem to have found my home much more inviting than I had intended it to be. We also have teeny tiny brown ants who like congregating on my kitchen worksurface. In the past it's been really hard to see them, because the worksurface is dark. But Rod washed the kettle the other day and they have been attracted to its now gleaming whiteness. They may be small, but I can see them very clearly now. I can even see them when they fall in to the water and boil to death. While I don't want them inside my house, I don't need them to suffer that much. I wonder if I can convince the geckoes to eat the ants...

And if you're wondering, why, when we have a maid, did Rod wash the kettle? It's like this, Santoss is not the best maid in the world, and sometimes she struggles to see the dirt we can so clearly see. Or maybe she does see the dirt, but doesn't think she needs to do anything about it?