Monday, December 26, 2011

Pataudi Palace - a place resonant with a lost lifestyle


On my current visit to India, my family and I paid a visit to the Pataudi Palace yesterday. Just an hour from New Delhi, enter the sprawling luxury of the well-laid gardens at the Pataudi Palace, a verdant oasis in the countryside of Haryana.
The noble, white palace built by Nawab Ibrahim Ali Khan, was designed by the Austria architect Karl Molt Von Heinz in 1935, stretching the proportions and scale of the grand residences of Imperial Delhi, built by Lutyens. The palace in itself is not big but has been tastefully adorned with artifacts and family albums from yesteryear's. It is a treat for the cricket aficionado's as the hallways are adorned with pictures of Iftikhar Ali Khan and Tiger Pataudi at historic cricketing moments.
I must mention here that Tiger Pataudi's father Iftikhar Khan played cricket first for England under Douglas Jardine and consequently incurred his ire as he opposed Jardine's bodyline tactics whilst en route to Australia in 1932. He was never to play for England again but captained India later in 1943. His son Tiger Pataudi had unparalleled success as a cricketer and became India's youngest captain ever at the age of 21 years 77 days. He was also India's most successful captain in test matches before Sourav Ganguly broke his record.
The Nawab's palace has had a way to always stay afloat in fame - first cricket, then Bollywood - and now even Hollywood with Julia Roberts spending a lot of time at the palace while shooting for Eat, Pray and Love.
We did have a lovely lunch overlooking the palace pool and gardens bathed in the beautiful North Indian winter sunlight.
It was definitely a short road trip I thoroughly enjoyed with my mom, dad, sister and of course wifey.....

Saturday, January 01, 2011

When Darkness Falls and Other Short Stories

A compilation that once again invites curiosity about the Ruskin Bond way of life.’ Ruskin Bond displays all the qualities of a master storyteller: a deceptively effortless style, an eye for the extraordinary in seemingly humdrum lives, and a deep empathy with his characters. Humorous, sad… More and nostalgic, …a treat for all Ruskin Bond fans.’There is an overwhelming simplicity in all his stories.
A deceptively effortless style, an eye for the extraordinary in seemingly humdrum lives, and a deep empathy with his characters. We make the acquaintance of Markham, a war veteran condemned to a lifetime of loneliness by a tragic accident: Susanna, the merry widow who loved each of her seven husbands to death; the sad wife who returns after her death only to find that her husband has moved on, to another life and another love; a simpleton who outwits a crafty ghost; and Kundan Lal, the reckless rake whom women find irresistible. We also go down memory lane with the author; to Dehra Dun of the 1940s and 50s, when life was simpler and there was space for the small errors of young and eccentric lives. All in all a decent read which can be finished within 2 hours....

Monday, December 13, 2010

In Macau everything is a gamble!

Our latest holiday trip took us to the land of the Orient - Hong Kong China and Macau. Fishermen from Fujian and farmers from Guangdong were the first known settlers in Macau, when it was known as Ou Mun, or "Trading Gate", because of its location at the mouth of the Pearl River downstream from Guangzhou (Canton). In the early 1550's the Portugese reached Ou Mun, which the locals also called A Ma Gao "place of A Ma", in honor of the Goddess of Seafarers, whose temple stood at the entrance to the sheltered Inner Harbour. The Portugese adopted into the name Macau.
Macau is a SAR (Special Administrative Region) of the People's Republic of China since 20th December 1999, and, like Hong Kong benefits from the principle " One Country, two systems". Macau has a population of 542,000 and is spread across 29.5 sq. km and comprises of three islands - Macau, Taipai and Coloane. The official currency of Macau is the Pataca (MOP$) and is divided into 100 Avos.
The tiny SAR is growing in size - with more buildings on reclaimed land - and in the number and diversity of its attraction. The greatest of these continues to be Macau's unique society, with communities from the east and west complementing each other, and the many people who come to visit.
We went to Macau via ferry and it takes 60 minutes to reach the island from Kowloon. We had a full day to explore the fabled island which is famous for its architecture, gambling and textiles. As we cleared immigration we were greeted by our tour guide Cisco who as we realized later is a fascinating specimen of the homo sapien version of mankind. Born in Europe and raised in China, Cisco knows how to read, write and speak in 7 different languages apart from English and Chinese.
Anyways our first pit stop was at the statue of Kun Lam - which has been at the centre of controversy ever since its inception. The statue is made of pure bronze and is gold plated - the reason for the controversy are many i.e the statue looks more Greek/European than Oriental, it is inward facing which is bad Feng Shui and the lotus at the bottom of the statue is closed which is augured as bad omen. Most importantly it's an eyesore for the locals as it has cost $11.5M of the tax payers money.
From the statue we then took a ride to appreciate the majestic casino buildings built by Dr. Stanley Ho, MGM and James Packer. I must say some of the must visit casino buildings are - MGM, Grand Lisboa, Sands and Star world. I can't complete this blog without talking a bit about Dr. Stanley Ho, who is the 11th richest man in the world and is a great philanthropist. Dr. Ho is 89 years old and has 4 wives. He again became a father at the ripe age of 86 and has given the world a testament of his virility. He owns most of the casino buildings in Macau most notably Grand Lisboa and has the Stanley markets in Hong Kong named after him.
Macau is famous for it's historical buildings which are a melange of old Chinese and European architecture. We went to the A-Ma temple which existed before the city of Macau came into being. The temple is more than 600 years old and is an exemplary representation of Chinese culture inspired by Confucianism, Taoism, Buddhism and multiple folk beliefs. Outside the temple one can look straight into mainland China. In the temple neighbourhood is the famous MACANESE Coffee house which is world famous for its lemon tarts. A bit further down the street are the Moorish Barracks - built in 1874, this building was constructed to accomodate an Indian regiment from Goa appointed to reinforce Macau's police force. The building is distinctly neo-classical integrating elements of Moghul influence.
A trip to Macau is not complete without paying a visit to the following historical sites - Ruins of St. Paul's, St. Dominic's Church, Guia Fortress and Senado Square. Macau has lot to offer especially to the gambling kind, in terms of net profit Macau has taken over Las Vegas. Our last pit stop was the Grand Emperors hotel - owned by Jackie Chan and has 74 gold nuggets/bars encrusted on the floor at the entrance guarded by two guards - who are replica of the Venetian guards at the Buckingham Palace. No visit to Macau is complete without shopping and we did a lot shopping at one of the factory outlets at Senado Square.
Macau is now the gambling capital of the world and represents a heaven for those lucky few who have a great spin of the roulette. For the others who abstain from gambling Macau has more to offer in terms of architectural wonders, shopping and a relaxed life.....

Saturday, September 25, 2010

Hunter Valley - The Wine Country


The upcoming birthday of my friend Gautam along with a desire to spend a weekend away from Sydney in early August took us north towards Newcastle
The Hunter Valley, is one of the most visited wine regions in the world. Life began as a brutal colony here, it was only discovered because of one lieutenant Shortland from the early colony at Sydney was hunting for escaped convicts. As he sailed around the coastline, he saw an outflow of water and pursuing the same he discovered what is present Hunter Valley rich with cedar trees and coal. These were exactly the things the fledgling colony needed.

But the Hunter was much too fertile to remain as a penal settlement and settler's soon arrived to take advantage of the area.

Its been aptly said that " The man who could sit under the shade of his own wine, with his wife and children about him and ripe clusters hanging within their reach, in such a climate as this and not feel the highest enjoyment, in incapable of happiness and does not know what the world means."

The valley is divided into regions - Upper and Lower, the Lower region in Pokolbin hosting most of the famous wineries the regions has to boast about. Whilst in pursuit of the Godly spirits (pun intended), a good starting point to commence your journey is Brooke road - there are so many notable wineries on either side of this road. Some of the famous and must visit wineries in Hunter are - Tempus Two, Drayton Family Wines, Mount Pleasant, Broken Wood, McGuigan and Audrey Wilkinson.

As for the wine itself, many grape varieties do well here, from classics like Cabernet Sauvignon to lesser known varieties like the white grape Verdelho, which at its best can have a taste like a refreshing fruit salad. But two varieties of grapes do outstandingly well here :- Shiraz and Semillon.
Our accommodation at Crowne Plaza was fantastic, our cottage overlooked a small pond which was part of the resort golf club. Our cottage was fully furnished and had two rooms, the resort has all the modern facilities along with with two excellent restaurants. Our first day was spend on wine tasting and buying couple of bottles of Moscato and Semillon for giving us company through the evening. I must say the Moscato from Tempus Two cellars is world class. The following day we went to the Cheese and Chocolate factory to buy authentic home made chocolates. Post which, my wife and I paid a visit to the famous Hunter Valley gardens and simply loved it all - 60 acres containing 10 distinctive gardens - the Rose Garden, dedicated to grandmothers - in a corkscrew design, the centre of which showed a grandmother surrounded by happy children and many roses encircling it. Off course it was the wrong time of the year, but their were still a few flowers hanging on and a lot of the northern hemisphere trees had lost their leaves. The Formal Garden featured yet more rose and topiared bushes, the Indian Mosaic garden had topiared elephants and interesting ground covers, as well as an Indian tea house on the lake's edge. The Chinese Moongate featured magnolias and camellias and weeping mulberries, Sunken Garden had a 10m waterfall and lovely garden beds, the Border garden contained formal hedging and fountains, the Italian Grotto Italian urns, citrus trees, the Oriental garden - Japanese Pagoda on the waterfront with beautiful bushes and grasses and finally, for children, the Storybook garden. This featured figures from nursery rhymes, the Mad Hatters Tea Party and all sorts of wonders to delight. We finished our visit with lunch on the cafe' veranda in the sunshine, overlooking the oriental lake and pagoda. Post this it was a drive through the Upper Hunter Valley, lovely farmland, horse studs, green paddocks and high rugged mountains in the distance. Most of the drive through areas we haven't been to before - always good to try the road less travelled back to Sydney...


Friday, August 13, 2010

The Byron Diaspora

An aggregation of organic food stores, yoga clinics and people selling crystals gives a homely air to Byron Bay. The central market area is predominantly full of cafe's, chic boutique stores and some very arty looking people.
The place evocate's emotions of how Adam and Eve may have reminisced upon their time in the garden of Eden: sunshine, rolling hills, soft sands, breaking waves, Fern gully, fresh fruit, community engagement, homegrown, locally made, multicultural, chickpea salad and spiritualistic innocence. However, bear in mind that Byron Bay is a paradise not heaven. Disregarding the cold weather, I could easily paint a picture of myself playing on the beaches of white sand and have a sense of belonging to a place were people care for each other and live by the community spirit.
Byron Bay is like a beautiful golden orb cobweb which is made up of a variety of individuals that create an overall beautiful structure. Our morning was spent taking a long walk across the coastline and post a sumptuous breakfast we decided to explore the local markets. If you are a fan of "The Rocks" in Sydney then Byron Bay is a larger than life version of "The Rocks". It's a paradise for shopaholics with keen interest in antiques and organic produce.
Post some shopping and a lunch at HOG's Breath Cafe, we spend more time in the town post which we headed towards to the beach to watch the sunset. I was eager as a beaver to try out my new digital SLR and Byron Bay sunset provided the idyllic setting for it. To add to the mysticism of the evening were a couple of hippie musicians playing the drums as the sun disappeared into the night sky leaving all of us behind in a haze of orange and indigo.
It might seem strange today looking around, but long before tourism Byron Bay was the Australian working man's best choice for an inexpensive family holiday. It was never a place for the "monied and would be trendy' folks. They came like a dribble in the 80's and then like a flood in the 90's never to leave the place. The point is when you find a good spot...for heaven's sake tell no one....

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Greatest Sporting Anthems

Watched 20 to 1 Greatest Sporting Anthems by Bert Newton last week...allthough I do agree with some of them but not all the anthems included in the list are the greatest ever.....

Here is my list of top 21 (in reverse order) of the greatest sporting anthems ever or songs which are played at major sporting events
21.Global Deejays - "Flashdance...what a feeling"20. Genghis Khan - "Moscow" -
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BQAKRw6mToA
19. The Immortals - "Mortal Kombat" OST for the movie Mortal Kombat in 1994 -
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xWnJyKQACXA&feature=related
18. Jordin Sparks - "You will never walk alone" now official song for FC Liverpool
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8smO4VS9134&feature=related
17. Hunters & Collectors - "Holy Grail" traditional song at all AFL Grand Finals
15. 10CC - "Dreadlock Holiday"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N5xm3F-s6xE&feature=related
14. Mojo Singers - "Cmon Aussie Cmon" debut for Kerry Packer's World Series Cricket in 1978
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NzfzNiwyWJk&feature=related
13. John Cafferty - " Hearts on Fire " for Rocky IV
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xJaEVmbzXSA
11. Sarah Brightman & Jose Carreras - "Amigos Para Siempre"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yM2-L5MUEkU
10. Elton John - "Philadelphia Freedom"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IhyMvQ_N7Zc
9. John Farnham - " You are the Voice "
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lZSnGQq4BKc
8. Queen - "We Will Rock You"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iikKzQwgBJc
7. Men at Work - " Land Down Under" Australia's song when they won the America's Cup
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DNT7uZf7lew
6. Vangelis - "Chariots of Fire"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L-7Vu7cqB20
5. Tina Turner - "Simply the best"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GC5E8ie2pdM
4. Queen - "We are the champions"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xdCrZfTkG1c
3. Europe - "The Final Countdown" official song for Euro Cup 1988
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7_IKcMl_a9A
2. Bill Conti - "Gonna Fly Now" for Rocky I
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aJmr5CKY73M
1. Survivor - " Eye of the tiger" for Rocky III
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nS4giqtbRBM&feature=related

Please do post your comments in case of any sinful omission / inclusion......

Cheers

Friday, March 26, 2010

Invictus

I watched Invictus yesterday and feel good after watching the movie...its again a top of shelf classic from Clint Eastwood with remarkable performances from Morgan Freeman and Matt Damon.
The movie touched a deep chord with my conscience and proves the fact that forgiveness and not looking back into the past are highly mature form of thinking....something only very few blessed souls have on planet earth....

Invictus means Unconquerable in Latin and is actually a title of poem written by an English poet William Earnest Henley in 1875..this poem was Nelson Mandela's favorite poem ...and something which gave him strength when he was imprisoned....

INVICTUS
Out of the night that covers me,
Black as the pit from pole to pole,
I thank whatever gods may be For my unconquerable soul.
In the fell clutch of circumstance I have not winced nor cried aloud.


Under the bludgeonings of chance My head is bloody, but unbowed.
Beyond this place of wrath and tearsL ooms but the Horror of the shade,

And yet the menace of the years Finds and shall find me unafraid.
It matters not how strait the gate,How charged with punishments the scroll,

I am the master of my fate:I am the captain of my soul.

I was amazed by the fact on how Mandela can / could forgive all the people had indicted punishment , insult and pain to his body and soul. In one of the scenes from the movie Freeman playing Mandela truly says that Forgiveness truly liberates the soul and that he can't afford to delve into the past and instill the fear the white government had whilst passing on the power to Mandela.

The movie is based on a book Playing the Enemy : Nelson Mandela and the Game That Changed a Nation. Its a true story of human bonding beyond racial barriers in which Mandela asks the captain of the Springbooks (South African rugby team) to win the 1995 world cup for the country and people of South Africa.

Many people already know what is the plot of the movie ...however what is important is the underlying message for humanity....

I personally believe that the day we stop caring for each other is the day we stop being called as humans....it exemplifies the fact that people like Gandhi and Mandela are true gems of the human race...people who believed in the power of mind and sacrificed their whole lives in service for their country...

So on that note for a feel good evening with family do watch INVICTUS....