Tuesday, April 22, 2014

My boat 'The Spirit of Meenachil'

Many people may wonder why my blog is known as 'Spirit of Meenachil'. The Meenachil is the name of the river that flows through our ancestral areas in and around Teekoy, and discharges into the Vembanad Lake at Kottayam. The very name 'Meenachil' brings delight in the minds and hearts of all Meenachilkars (people of Meenachil).
In addition, my boat is also called Spirit of Meenachil . My boat has given me (and my family and friends) so much joy and pleasure over the last ten years or so, that I thought I should include at least a few photographs of it in my blog. So here they are:



The ladies have a toddy break during a boat ride

Quite high after all that toddy!

I wait patiently for the ladies outside Champakulam church

Simmy in the boat

The boat docked at the Sailing Club
Learning the tricks from Papa

Tonya the ace pilot in the Vembanad Lake 
Father and son relaxing 
At peace with the world
On his own
Enjoying the lake 












In keeping with its name, The Spirit of Meenachil has always uplifted my spirits. Whenever I am down and out, a quick ride in the boat never fails to refresh me. Thanks to the boat, I now know the backwaters of Kerala like the palm of my hand! Initially I needed a map for navigation; but now, I can do most stretches on my own. The ride to Champakulam, my maternal home, is particularly beautiful and I always look forward to that destination. R Block, Alleppey, Karumady, Thanneermukkom, Kainakary, and Kuppapuram are some of the other picturesque places on the way. Once in a way, Simmy and I also make it to Cochin, where we head straight for the Yacht Club, and then onto Taj Malabar in the boat, for a sumptuous lunch there, always the highlight of the little adventure. I then come back to the Club, feeling very tycoonish!

Irukanni -- Our very own private paradise on the Meeenachil

Our family is very lucky to have a very private place on the Meenachil river, very close to our ancestral properties. The best part is that my brother Babychan has a hut there right on the river, which all of us use often, especially when we have friends visiting. And all our friends love the place.

Here are a few photographs of Nevan, our grandson, frolicking in the water at Irukanni. Nevan truly loves the water and  really enjoyed himself. So did the rest of us.    























Monday, April 21, 2014

Nothing like old friends

Friends are like wine. The older they are, the better they become! There is nothing like old friends. Over the years, I have been fortunate enough to make some exceedingly good friends and even more lucky that we get together quite often.

Here are some pictures of two very good friends: Shamsher Singh Ahlawat and Vijay David and their wives Nandita and Rita when they visited us a couple of years ago. I should have put up these pictures much earlier, but better late than never.



A quiet evening at home with the Ahlawats in Kottayam  




A boat ride in Cochin with the Davids 

After the boat ride


 Simmy crossing the bridge at Irukanni 



Relaxing at the Sailing Club

Thursday, April 3, 2014

Adieu to Europe and onward to Bahrain

We were indeed sad to leave Europe, and particularly Rome. But all good things must come to an end and soon it was time to move on. 

We left our lodgings around 4 in the afternoon on the 13th October. It was just as we were leaving the place that we met our son's classmate and her husband (briefly mentioned in the previous episode). As we were booked on a train leaving for the airport soon, we bade farewell to them quickly and hurriedly walked over to Ottaviano station to catch a train to Termini, from where we were to go to Rome's Fiumicino airport by another train. Though we reached the airport very much ahead of of time, we were very carelesss and reported to the check-in counter rather late. For some reason there was an unusually large crowd of passengers that day, departing to various parts of the world, and the staff at the airport seemed unable to cope with the work load. Progress was painfully slow and even ten minutes before take-off, we were still in the queue! It seemed certain that we would miss the the Qatar Airways flight to Doha and the connecting flight to Manama.

Just then Providence intervened in the form of a young girl who suddenly appeared on the scene like an angel. Like us she too was waiting impatiently in line, chafing at the delay. Though I (and Simmy) had tried to persuade the authorities to let us in because our flight was about to take off, they would not budge. The girl however, suddenly decided that she had had enough. She aggressively broke the queue, went forward, argued with the person on duty, and was soon cleared. Somehow she persuaded them to clear us also, and soon we were charging through the labyrinthine corridors of Fiumicino, to catch the in-house train within the airport which would take us to the tarmac. While doing so, I noticed that she was calling someone intermittently on the mobile, asking them to hold on and telling them that she was on her way. She soon revealed the secret of her success with the airport authorities; apparently she was an off-duty Air Hostess with Qatar Airlines!  And luckily for us she decided to befriend us, thereby enabling us too to catch the flight.
She seemed to be a very nice person, even carrying Simmy's hand-baggage during our sprint to the plane. All that we could gather about her was that she was Tunisian, her name was Unns (or something like that), she had an Italian boy-friend, and that her mother was a French teacher back home in Tunisia.
  
We had a two-hour wait at Doha. As it was early morning, I thought of having some coffee at the restaurant. And that's when I discovered the pathetic purchasing  power of the Indian rupee. The girl at the counter told me disinterestedly that two cups of coffee would cost only one thousand rupees! On hearing this, we hastily decided to forego the coffee.  

Sonny (Simmy's brother) and his wife Leeli were at the airport to receive us and we were soon enjoying a fabulous Kerala lunch at their beautiful apartment in Manama. After almost two months of bland European food, it felt heavenly to dig into some spicy Indian dishes. 

We spent more than a week in Bahrain with them and enjoyed every moment of our stay. Sonny and Leeli were lavish hosts and entertained us regally. They took us all around Bahrain and we got to see (and travel) on the Causeway linking Bahrain  with Saudi Arabia, the Bahrain Race Track, the Grand Mosque, the National Museum and many other places. And above all, we got to eat some great food and drink some exotic beverages, including champagne. They also entertained us at the Royal Golf Club to an enormous buffet lunch, where, much to my surprise, alcohol and pork were openly served!

Bahrain marked the end of our long holiday, and we were back in Cochin on the 23rd October 2013, after a wonderful, enjoyable, exciting and occasionally adventurous sojourn in Europe. 
Entrance to the souk in Manama

Brother and sister pose with me on the Causeway

At the restaurant on the Causeway

Tucking in at the Royal Golf Club

At the Royal Golf Club

In Sonny-Leeli's beautiful house

At the Grand Mosque

With friends at Sonny's house

An exhibit at the National Museum


Waiting for the champagne

Champagne Time!