Delhi 2

We had a little errand to run and wanted to take it a bit easy after the long Taj Mahal day. We walked to Khan market, which was like a strip mall but had some interesting shops.

After that we walked through Lodhi Garden, which is a free park in the middle Delhi that is full of 500+ year old ruins and tombs. It would be like if Golden Gate Park in SF was full of ruins, very cool. It was quiet and not busy at all, which was surprising given how nice a park it is. I also think it is a romance park, there were a lot of young couples sitting close together on benches talking quietly.

We’ve traveled so much that I think we’re getting jaded to sites. It is difficult to get interested about another museum or temple or palace. I found this park really interesting though, it’s something unique in my experience.

After that we went to Khanna market where we had a late lunch.

Then we headed back to the hotel.

David

Taj Mahal

We got up and had breakfast, then headed to the railway station for the train to Agra. We booked on the Gatimaan Express, which is targeted at people visiting the Taj, it is a nonstop high speed train to Agra. It leaves at 8:10am and the return train back to Delhi leaves at 5:50pm.

The first problem we had was figuring out where to wait. Finding the correct platform was no problem, but the platforms are immense. It was probably close to half a mile long. We were in coach C1, but had no idea where C1 would stop. There were digital signs that were supposed to show the position of the coaches but they were all broken or turned off. While we were trying to figure it out, the train arrived.

This is actually a picture of the train arriving in Agra, I didn’t get a pic in Delhi, but it was the same train. It didn’t look very high speed to us. The order of the cars was confusing, we saw a C5, then E2, eventually we just jumped on and made our way through the cars on board until we found it. It was the first car. We had reserved seats so we didn’t have to worry about not finding a seat.

We heard they served refreshments, but we didn’t expect a full meal.

The train was definitely fast compared to the Sri Lankan trains, it probably averaged 100kph (~60mph). We arrived at Agra on time at 9:50am. There was the usual crowd of taxis and touts, actually probably more than usual. One nice thing they have at some of the major transit points is prepaid taxis where the fair is set by the government. You wait in line and pay at a booth run by the police, then they give you a ticket which you give to the driver when he drops you off. No negotiation, or dealing with other problems. A “guide” tried to jump in the taxi with us, but we made him get out.

We finally got dropped at or near the Taj Mahal complex, they keep traffic at least 500m away to reduce noise and pollution. We walked through the park area to get to the foreigner ticket booth. It was 1000 rupees each, and it included at bottle of water and shoe covers. Some guy said it also included a free guide and tried to join us, but we’d never heard of that so we declined.

We got to go into the foreigner line, which by passed the huge locals line. They let Yanmei through right away, but when he scanned my ticket it “failed”. I thought I was going to have to go back to the ticket offices. A couple of other agents tried their scanners and it said “verified”, but my agent didn’t want to listen for some reason. Eventually they let me through.

Phew. I read just before we left for the train that the Taj Mahal was being cleaned and they recommended waiting until 2019 to visit. I was worried the whole thing would be covered in scaffolding, but luckily that wasn’t the case. The main dome is slightly browner than the minarets which have already been cleaned.

It was crowded with people, but the place is so huge it didn’t feel too bad. I was surprised how many locals there were, I was expecting mostly tourists, but it was 99% locals. It is interesting, you don’t see a lot of Egyptians visiting the pyramids for example. Maybe many of them were coming from other regions of India.

One of the outlying buildings was being cleaned, the other was done.

Line to go inside. We had to wear the shoe covers or go barefoot here.

After looking around for a while, we headed back to the surrounding garden and Yanmei found a bench in the shade for us to sit. It was pretty hot and we didn’t want to face the chaos outside yet. As we were sitting on the bench we became a mini attraction ourselves. People asked to take pictures with us, and others were trying to subtly take selfies with us in the background.

Later we stopped at the restrooms.

People taking silly perspective shots.

Finally we left from the South Gate. I was expecting a mass of souvenir and gift shops, etc.. There were a lot of shops but they were all closed. It was Sunday, but the Taj Mahal itself is closed on Fridays and I expected the shops would only be closed Fridays. I didn’t care about the shops, but we were hungry and most of the restaurants were closed too. A guy from a barber shop eventually pointed us to an open cafe where we had lunch. I kind of regretted not going back to the barber for a haircut. I kind of need one since it has been two months, and getting a haircut in Agra, India would be a once in a lifetime experience. We had time because we felt too tired to visit the Agra fort, so we just needed to wait until our train back.

We went to the train station early so we had plenty of time to look around. There were a lot of monkeys hanging around, most in the girders above the platform. One funny scene was Yanmei was sitting on a bench, I was standing about 3 feet away chatting, meanwhile a man was walking past us down the platform with his son, about 3-4 years old. The boy was holding his father’s hand and with his other hand he had a bag of chips. A monkey jumped down, ran between Yanmei and I, came up behind in the boy, snatched the bag of chips, and then scampered up into the girders, leaving the kid with a shocked look and us grinning.

Anyway the train came on time and we got back on for the ride back. We had the same seats and it was the same train. Yanmei found a piece of garbage she left on the way down still in the seat back pocket. It rained a bit on the way back, it we made it.

David

Delhi, India

For our first day in India we decided to book our trip to the Taj Mahal. The Taj Mahal is in Agra which is about 110 miles from New Delhi, which is a pretty reasonable train ride. Of course you can get all inclusive tours where they will drive you to the train station, give you tickets, pick you up, etc. but we wanted to book it ourselves. I think tours can be good in some situations, but booking it yourself gives you a better feel for local life.

Of course I wasn’t able to resister on the India rail website to buy tickets online, that would be too easy. So we had to go buy the tickets in person. The best (only?) place for foreigner to buy tickets is the International Tourist Bureau in Delhi station. We could get there by the Delhi Metro.

Not bad at all, pretty modern, similar to Beijing.

Once when we got out of the Metro we were right at the rail station. It was very crowded and tons of people were offering us taxis and tuk-tuks. It can be hard to keep your cool when you are trying to find your way in a confusing and you are constantly being badgered for taxis. The problem was we needed to get to the other side of the station across the tracks, but we couldn’t access any of the walking bridges over the tracks without tickets. Finally we figured out we could buy a platform ticket for 10 rupees to get across. That turned out to be a waste because no one ever checked it, despite having to pass through security and armed guards.

I’d read about a lot of scams targeting tourists. People will tell you the office is closed or moved and lead you to another place where they sell you overpriced or fake tickets. This was reinforced when we saw this sign:

This is my number one problem with India, you feel like you can’t trust anyone and everyone is trying to trick or scam you. I’m sure there are many honest, good people, but the problem is you don’t know so you can’t trust anyone. In most other countries if someone is friendly we are happy and grateful. Here we eye them with distrust and suspicion. It is a bad feeling.

Anyway we got to the International Tourist Bureau, got a ticket number and waited about two hours and finally booked our tickets to Agra for tomorrow. The reason you have to go to the ITB is they have some seats held for tourists even if the seats for locals are sold out. But it is like a bad DMV, long queues and slow service, but at least they had seats and some level of AC.

Then we headed back out and decided to walk to Old Delhi, which wasn’t too far from the station.

Eventually we headed to the Red Fort.

We paid 500 rupees each for a ticket to go inside.

Through the security check. Then we go to this:

We paid money to visit some shops? But no, once we got through the bazaar, we got to the interior.

By then we were tired and it was getting late so we decided to head home. Again we ran the gauntlet of taxi and tuk-tuk touts and walked towards the metro station. We to a further station because it was on a direct line to our hotel. Along the way we came across a restaurant that said 100% Vegetarian and was pretty full of locals so we decided to stop for dinner.

We’re not sure what that was but we saw most people around us ordering it so we got one too. It was pretty good. Afterward we continued to the metro.

Inside the metro they had an Air Quality Index display.

188 is “moderate” on this scale. Here is the US EPA scale:

The only other thing that happened on the way back is we got on the women’s car of the subway. We were rushing to get on a train already at the platform and quickly jumped on an uncrowded car. I immediately looked around and told Yanmei that I shouldn’t be here, although I couldn’t see any signs. Everyone was female and it was less crowded than a normal car. I moved to the next car while Yanmei enjoyed the female car 😀. When we got off I looked for a sign on the outside and couldn’t see one either. There must be an icon or color code or something else I’m missing.

David