Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Venezuela !

Caracas, the capital of venezuela, is in many ways, the gateway to Latin America.
Watch some pictures:































With fuel prices at some of the lowest in the world (lower even than Iran), Venezuela has a number of gas guzzlers which are many decades old. The cost of filling up a car tank is approx USD 2.5 (INR 100)

One such gas guzzler is pictured above.

It also means that variable costs being near zero, a large number of people use cars, as it turns out cheaper than public transport, at times.

There are, however, a number of scooters and motorcycles as well- and India rules the roost again: LML Vespa, Bajaj, Hero Honda; they are all here
































































Caracas has a beautiful, picturesque setting, with the mountains giving a perfect backdrop to an immensely interesting city. In addition, there are ugly skyscrappers, like in most of Latin America. However, the most interesting is the unusually high number of favelas (slums) that dot the landscape on the approach to Caracas. Many of them sport pictures of their God, President Hugo Chavez, who appears to have displaced the original one, Simon Bolivar ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sim%C3%B3n_Bol%C3%ADvar ), who is more on murals and historical buildings. (Bolivar, perhaps would be the only person in history to have been the president of three countries )

The slums have a life of their own, many of them tapping electricity from the poles, and buying servcies like water from water trucks which keep moving around.











Venezuela also has traditionally dominated beauty contests like Miss Universe and Miss world, winning everything that came in its way, till the tide was stopped by an articulate Sushmita Sen in 1994.

Venezuela has come back into the reckoning since, and the cosmetic industry has one of the highest per capita consumption here

















Unlike the rest of the continent, Baseball is the major sport here, followed by football. With the Prez being what he is, politics is also not too far behind !

There's magic to life

23rd March was Jaadoo's fourth birthday. He turned three.



This was a rather unusual birthday, it lasted 32.5 hours.

It started with the 23rd of March in India, and ended with the close of the day in Brazil.


Jaadoo, in his Ronaldinho jersey, was all Brazilian. Once ready, he took a ride in his favourite mode of transport: the Metro. from Consolacao station to Villa Madalena. He recognises that this route is on the green line in the Sao Paulo metro. And boy, does he love the metro maps ! he feasts on them.


That done, we went to Fabio's place, where he had invited us, alongwith his family,for Easter lunch. It was so good to be in a family atomosphere, and that too, on a day as significant as this.

The highlight of course, was the cake cutting, with the extraordinarly affectionate family singing in Portuguese and Jaadoo blushing.
View by clicking below:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z01bdhwrip0

Turning three is also a significant milestone for a child. And Dr Spock, the guru of pediatrics, might add it is the end of terrible two's, but life goes on: as interesting, as exciting, and as magical as Jaadoo always makes it to be !

Saturday, March 22, 2008

Snakes and ladders

Went to the Butanta park today. It is a snake park (serpentarium) in Sao Paulo, which does a lot of research on snakes and also produces medicines.
www.butantan.gov.br
Saw the Boa constrictor (of Harry Potter fame).
Most of the snakes were bored and only a few were moving.
There is an enclosure in the open, with a few Brazilian varities of snakes and then there is a museum which has a bigger collection, including some massive ones.
I was expecting to find an anaconda, but unfortunately, there was none :-)

The park is very well maintained and is also a fairly common picnic spot.

Today being Good friday, traffic in Sao Paulo was the lightest i have ever seen, and wouldn't mind seeing again.
Afterall, just a few days ago, i was a part of a world record wherein there was 221kms of congestion on sao paulo roads, and it took me about 2 hours for a 5km distance.

Thursday, March 20, 2008

19th March, 2008
Today has been eventful, for sure. Arriving from
Lima to Sao Paulo, rushing home to change and a
shower, and rushing back again to Guarhulous
airport: all in the space of three hours. And from there on to Londrina, via Curitiba.
Curitiba: I first heard of this in 2003, in the
context of an extremely efficient public
transportation system.the green views from the top, the perfect
parallels and perpendicular roads, the planned
houses, make Curitiba an urban planners delight. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curitiba#Urban_Planni
ng
A hugely interesting thing about Curitiba is the
24 hour street, which is always open, on which
there are about three dozen shops which remain
open, 24 X 7
From Curitiba, on to Londrina: named after London
(Londres in Portugese), as a mark of recognition
to an English cotton company that made the
original investment to settle there.
All along, i flew by TAM airlines, the airline i
first heard of when its plane crashed into
Congonhas airport about one year ago. But its a
really nice and efficient airline, and i was lucky
to see a plane which had signatures from thousands
of TAM employees; looked super.
Londrina is a small city, about half a million
people. I had a couple of hours, so i strolled
along the bazaar near the bus station. There is a
pretty interesting museumhttp://www.londrina.pr.gov.br/english/tourism/weis
s.php3 The most important thing for me, in addition to
the story of Londrina's evolution, was to see the
first (non-metro) train in brazil. As the museum
functions in the building of the old railway
station, there is a bit of railway to it. Two
coaches, in defunct condition was all i got to
see, but then, it was a train nevertheless !
Also had my first haircut in Brazil, in the
bazaar. I walked up to a unisex saloon and got my
haircut. It started with a shampoo (unlike in
India, where shampoo is a separate item on the
barber (or artist's) agenda and moved on to the
haircut. Pretty neat, in ten minutes and 7 reals.

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Impressions !

My labour of love:

http://deepak.sapra.googlepages.com/impressions

Impressions from diverse places and people

go ahead, click !

Orkut

Managed to upload some photos to my Orkut photo album.
Its a potpourri of places, and mainly about life on the road, across hemispheres, countries, cities and altitudes.

http://www.orkut.com/AlbumList.aspx?uid=8863989011039374395

Talking of Orkut, its amazing how important it is to life in Brazil, especially for the young.
In many cases, it has replaced the phone as the means of contact. Appointments, social networking, gossip, bitching, Orkut is the forum for it all. No wonder, the maximum number of Orkut users come from India and Brazil.

It brings about its own peculiar termiology as well. A friend, who converted to Facebook, deleted her orkut profile. She subsequently sent an email to all her friends that she was commiting orkuticide.

I have no such plans, and i love my orkut acount. As for facebook, although i have a profile, i do not see a compelling enough reason to shift.

Images from Sao paulo

Images from Liberdade, Sao Paulo
Liberdade is the Oriental part of the city, and has a hge congregation of Japanese, Koreans and some Chinese.
I love the graffitti, the sights and sounds






Songs which set the adrenaline racing

Tried to sample videos and songs which talk specifically of a country and a place. I could find out the following, and yes, i love them all.

Pakistan:
Dil Dil Pakistan
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KHeQUtRsMLU


Brazil:
Brasil...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z3JBHZ8fAik


New York:
New york, New york
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jM52Xsvw5NQ


Ipanema:
The girl from Ipanema (Rio's second best beach):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F2kHm2_V9HA


and last, but not the least,
India:
but can be true for any place you love
Aisa des hai mera (Shah Rukh Khan, Preity ZInta):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZijzozhUSGM

Peru

Landed in Peru 8.30 in the morning.
TACA airlines, pretty efficient, from Sao paulo.

Peru never ceases to amaze: an ecelectic mix of all kinds of people. The most dominant are the mestizos, the mixed kind.

Peruvian traffic is as funny as it gets in South America. Big nosed buses and carts. And yes, after weeks, saw a Maruti Suzuki car (made in India) and felt close to home.

Had a Peruvian corn drink, forget the name, but was extremely invigorating. Also had an Inca cola in the morning, the yellow coloured Peruvian cola that is everywhere.

Lunch was at a museum-turned restaurant: rice, mushrooms and potatoes. The museum has artefacts from as old as 1200 BC, and can easily be labelled the Peruvian version of Indian Kama sutra.