Tuesday, December 25, 2007

Trip to Washington DC

Returned today after a straight long drive from Newark today - via NJ turnpike, taking the I95 through Baltimore, Washington, Richmond, Raleigh and a host of freeways, counties and parishes on the way. Being christmas, it was a day when seeing a cop on the interstate was a rarity and most surprisingly, seeing scores of closed departmental stores and food shops. But the trip, a tight 4 day tour of Washington,DC and NYC was truly amazing...We started off around 2PM from Columbia on the 21st. Our car (a Hyundai Santa Fe) had Vishal and his family, me and Furqan in it. There were two more vehicles - both 7 seater SUVs - going on the trip.


While filling in fuel for the trip at Kangaroo. we had already sensed what was coming - the entire Two-Notch was jam-packed with traffic and we knew we would not make it to Washington before 11 or 12. Anyhow, we started off - Furqan was driving and I was navigating him. He was to drive 200 miles, till we were near the North Carolina-Virginia border. The road was very busy and we passed through many exits with very funny and unusual names of counties and rivers etc: a town is called Local Traffic. Then there were the Great Pee Dee River, followed after some time by the Little Pee Dee River - both in our own South Carolina. Each state has its own traffic laws and we could distinctly feel the traffic getting a lot tamer as we entered Virginia (with a posted speed limit of 65 mph and enforced by aircraft). We stopped at a gas filling station after about 250-260 miles - somewhere in Virginia. Virginia is loaded with historical places - Mt Vernon, Washington's birth place and home to his estates, came on the way. Other names that people across the world know as the CIA's base - Langley - was also mentioned somewhere as we entered Washington. We reached the outer areas of Washington (close to the Pentagon ) around 9.15PM - a great feat considering we had left Two-Notch at around 2.30PM. It was very cold outside -which we could sense at the gas filling station. We decided to take our dinner at an exit after getting out of Washington and Baltimore. At night, it becomes very difficult to delineate any city in that area - we left Washington and , through a tunnel entered Maryland - saw hoardings that flashed some hallowed names such as University of Maryland at Baltimore, Johns Hopkins University, etc., then through the Delaware Memorial Bridge to the name that was to become familiar throughout the journey, the spinal cord of the state of NJ - the New Jersey Turnpike - came along. We got out at an exit - Exit 74 - for our dinner. Furqan wanted to go to Pizza Hut but we had to settle for a place that had a chinese joint (called China Haste), a Sub Way, and a few other places. Vishal and I chose the chinese place to try out some chinese food - it turned out quite good - lobster fried rice and schzuan chicken. Nitu was on fast and Suchet and Furqan had tuna sub. The journey from our Washington hotel to the NJ Turnpike junction where we were to drop off Vishal was about 140 miles and it was about 11/11.30PM when we dropped them off. Then the most interesting thing was to happen for me and Furqan - getting lost in the capital of the United States. We drove off from the Turnpike point towards our destination - Comfort Inn, 6111, Arlington Blvd and were to take Exit 27- Silver Spring on I495S. We were told by Atul (Vishal's bro-in-law, who had come to pick him up at the Turnpike) to stick to the right as we neared the Silver Spring exit else we'd end up back in Richmond,Va. By the time we had reached that exit, it was about 1.30AM - we got a call from Puneet saying the rest of the gang had reached Comfort Inn and we told them we'd be joining them soon. That call was enough for us to miss the exit - Furqan, quite tired and sleepy due to driving 380 miles , got distracted by that call and as it happens on the free-ways, a small distraction could make you miss an exit. We thought to take the usual recourse - to take the next exit on the Richmond direction. However, we were to discover that its not the usual road system that we see in other American cities that we see in the DC area. The Interstate interchanges or feeder roads such as I395, I495, etc are like our Indian ring roads - they are circular roads on the periphery of the DC area, connecting DC to other Virginia, Maryland and Pennsylvania suburban towns. So we soon saw ourselves hurtling towards Langley and Richmond. We took the next exit and soon were moving towards the Dulles Internation Airport. The roads suddenly became one way and we were heading for a toll. We paid 75 cents and tried to move out - found ourselves moving towards some restricted administrative building and did a U turn on the one-way road to get out of it!!! Had it been an earthly hour, we would have been ticketed for sure. We suddenly saw an I-395N sign - by then we were already disoriented - and we thought we'd soon meet the exit we were looking for. At one point, we had landed next to Tysons Corner and later on we were to realize how close we were to our hotel from there! The place was really cool - there were huge corporate skyscrapers belonging to Pricewaterhouse Coopers, Deloitte and the like. We however got out and then following our instincts which were all screwed up by then, took another road that took us to the Arlington Cemetary, to a huge wooded park (I was thinking about Chandra Levy as we moved around in that park - it was like driving through any national park)...As we continued moving, we however started seeing a more lighted, structured area approaching us - very beautiful baroque buildings, lovely streets...I soon spotted the US Capitol to our right!! We had spiralled from the outer roads to the inner DC area and we soon found ourselves driving on Pennsylvania Ave and Constitution Ave. I spotted the National Mall strip with the Washington Monument looming...the watch was screaming 3-30AM already as we were driving very carefully in that area, and both of us had lost any trace of sleep by then. After some talking to a cop at a gas station in the downtown DC area, we took the I395S and as told, decided to stick to that road. The road was not straight - it had a few roundabouts and we saw ourselves somewhere in Massachusetts Ave. It was 4.30 by then and we almost gave up and were quite panicky. Furqan had decided to camp somewhere there for the night instead of continuing struggling to find our way. We parked at a shopping area on the Massachusetts Avenue, next to an Exxon Service Center and called up Vishal/Atul. After a few missed calls, Atul picked up and it took some time for him to realize the situation. He couldn't see how we could get out of that area since it was some place in North-west DC and we were supposed to take some turns and lanes to reach our hotel. So we dropped the call and decided to take the Massachusetts Avenue right till the end and see where it went.. We finally reached a road sign that said I495 N and I495 S and then I called up Atul again. This time, knowing we were back on I 495, guided us - we took I495S, took exit 46A and reached Tysons Corner, then Atul guided us minute by minute and we got onto 50E that went straight to Comfort Inn. It was 5.30AM by then and we were tired and crashed on the bed.

We were to get up in an hours time, since the shuttle from the hotel to the nearest metro station (Ballston-MU) left at 9AM and then 10AM. With a sleep of just about an hour, we were up again, and after taking a shower and then breakfast, took the shuttle to Ballston-MU station. By the way, it was very very chilly and windy too.The group took a lot of snaps there itself - it was a beautiful place - looked very upmarket and refined. After taking the day tickets, we went downstairs to catch the Orange Line to Federal Triangle. The Federal Triangle station was truly amazing. It opened right into the courtyard of the Ronald Reagan International Trade Center, the second largest federal building after the Pentagon and what a building, truly. It is right on the Pennsylvania Avenue. After another round of photographs, we came out of the place and headed out on the Pennsylvania Ave towards the White House, our next destination. While on the street, I could easily sense that I was in the prettiest American city - even as I think of NYC now, the Time Square, the Manhattan area, I simply cannot find any other American city prettier than Washington - only the major European capitals could be rated equal or higher than DC. While walking down, a lot of our guys were taking snaps - posing next to statues and buildings. We were moving towards the Constitution Avenue and the National Mall strip - first we made our way into the White House Visiting Center that is housed inside the Department of Commerce building. There the entire place has White House memorabilia and movies on the history of the building running continuously. One exhibit was on the First Ladies and their cats, etc..We then came out and got out into the morning chill. God, whenever I think of those cities now, I can't get the chill out of the picture - it was so damn cold! We soon could see the huge obelisk, the Washington Monument and we slowly reached the hallowed gates of the White House..the entire place was crawling with Europeans, Chinese, Indians all taking pictures, posing infront of the gates to get the best view of the White House. Opposite the White House was a big Christmas Tree. Then there was a big slopy lawn that had the Washington Monument. It was quite late for us for the tickets up the Monument. Close to this area, on the green lawns, was a covered place where some people were playing Lennon-Yoko's Give Peace a Chance....We then walked by the Washington Monument after scores of photographs on the way. Around this time, our group also split too into people who were interested in going to the Capitol first and others who were walking towards the Smithsonian Institutions. We were earlier thinking of going to the Arlington Cemetary area or the Lincoln Memorial first, but then got our way into the Smithsonian buildings. Of all buildings, we could choose the Natural History Museum. The other buildings on that walk included the "Castle" - the beautiful red-stone cathedral like headquarters of the Smithsonian Institutions, the Freer Gallery, Air and Space museum, etc. One day seemed so less for everything, really. However, we managed to have a good trip inside the Natural History Museum. We were all quite famished too by then and the moment we got out, we pounced on the nearest hotdog place. I grabbed a Polish sausage hotdog and a usual hotdog. It was so cold that I had to huddle and eat them. We then moved towards the Capitol. Most of our time was spent on photography and therefore by the time we got to the Capitol, it was already about 4.30PM. We spent another hour on the reflecting pool infront of the Capitol, and then took the stairs. We I think didn't spare any statue on the way where we didn't take pics. After leaving the place, we walked down to the Lincoln Memorial - which was many blocks away - then to the World War II memorial and then back to the station. The plan for the next day was the Smithsonian National Zoo till about 1PM and then leaving for New York later..

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Got my Sony Handycam!

I got my Sony DCR-SR62 Handycam yesterday. Its such a cool, tiny thing - truly amazing how cool a gadget it is - its slightly bigger than the Olympus digital camera we have...couldn't have asked for more for a first camcorder. It is not very high-end - just has a 30GB Hard Disk storage space, a Carl Zeiss Vario-Tessar lens, 25x zoom and has come with a docking station for directly linking it to a DVD burner...so, I am all set for my Washington and NYC trip! I took a few video clips at home which I plan to upload. I also hope to shoot some films at Orlando - of Anup Bhaisab, bhabhi and kids and of beeji...

Tuesday, December 18, 2007

Christmas concert at the Forest Drive Baptist Church

The last Sunday (December 16) we were all invited by Chris for a concert at the Baptist Church on Forest Drive, less than a mile from the Walmart and a mile away from our first acco in the US - Extended Stay Americas. It was our first chance to witness protestant Americans worship and was truly a delightful experience. The event was just for an hour - an auditorium with lots of worshippers in the pew area and on the stage there was the choir. Also there was an orchestra. There were many songs - gospels and hymns - including some rock type gospels in the agenda. Next to where the choir stood was a huge display with lyrics flashing for the audience to sing along with the choir. It was all about christmas - the birth of the Baby, the Magi, the gifts, the concept of giving gifts and of life and eternal life. The message sounded so similar to what we learn in Hinduism too - meaning that the essence of most of the world religions are more or less the same. When we left the place, it was very cold and around 8PM already...the next thing planned out was the Christmas drop-in at Chris' place. We (Shveta and me, Hemant and Sonia) had gone to the Forest Drive stores to hunt for the gift and finally after buying it and all the gift wrapping material - packed it then and there and put it in the car before leaving for the concert.
Chris and Sharon's house is quite close to the church - just a mile's drive from the place, on Percival Road. They had invited virtually every Indian staying at Windsors and some 30-40 people had turned up!..As a matter of fact, Sharon and Chris used their cars to guide all the cars to their home. And the entire place was jampacked with our people. There was some beautiful Christmas decorations in their living room and the table had some delectable dishes - samosas, pakoras, turkey wings in honey, and a very delicious dessert - pie kind of a dish. Chris gave a small introductory speech where he introduced his parents, his guests and after a prayer, we all started off on the snacks along with meeting and talking to Chris and Sharon. We talked on a range of topics, including the Bible, their family, his twin brother in Orlando (incidentally he is an identical twin and lives in Winter Park), about how frequently they visit Windsors and about sports, etc. Was a great, great experience for all of us - truly...

Thursday, December 13, 2007

Plans for the Christmas Holidays

I am planning to tag along with the bachelor folks here to go to Washington,D.C and NYC, if I get to travel with them, while Shveta would be off to Orlando this Christmas. I should be getting my Sony DCR-SR62 handycam sometime next week (got to read some glowing and not so glowing reviews about the camcorder before buying it. Its a budget Hard Disk Drive camcorder - with 25X optical zoom and 2000x digital zoom, and comes with 30GB of hard disk space. But I wanted a Sony and I wanted a state-of the art tech and this was the best bet for me. Mini-DVs and DVDs are passe now.). Vishal and Nitu are bound for NJ and Hemant, Sonia are planning another trip to Gatlinburg, TN and possibly to Biltmore House at Asheville,NC...Lets see how things turn up and we'd see some more posts on the Holidays in this blog. Watch this space!

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Got my South Carolina License...

Finally, Applied and got my SC License. The best part about the license is that it is used as a photo ID everywhere and you don't have to lug your passport everywhere. If you lose your license, its not as difficult as getting a duplicate passport. So, in so many places across America, for the period of my visa, I can now drive freely...what a relief!!!

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

World of Warcraft

Hey..forgot to add..talking of being good kids...finally bought the first game here..all for just $3 thanks to the Google Checkout discount of $10 at Buy.com..World of Warcraft. The world's largest Massively Multi-Player Online Role Playing Game, with some 9 million subscribers. I don't think I am going to pay the monthly subscription for this. I'd rather buy some interesting stuff for that money or save it than splurge on a virtual community. Truly, for the sake of experience and fun, one could pay and play..but no addiction. I also bought a teeny weeny Belkin FM tune transmitter for 6 dollars..connecting it to my laptop through the USB port, I can actually tune in to the FM radio in the Sony boombox lying at our home and play the music remotely. And it can be used with iPods and music players too in the car. Not bad, I should say..

Watching lots of movies these days...

Got some good movies from the library - Jeremy Brett's Sherlock Holmes, The Exorcist, Indiana Jones - The Temple of Doom, Gladiator, MI3, etc and a few from Hemant - The Transformers, Saving Private Ryan, etc. Read a Sidney Sheldon book - what a crappy book really - called Best Laid Plans...Shveta has picked up a few books on arts and crafts of the Americas and a few serious fiction literature - including Virginia Woolf..
So, all in all, we are now the good kids who don't play much but read and watch movies a lot..:-))

Sunday, December 02, 2007

Biggest crap..!!

Saw one of the most outrageously absurd video on Youtube, South Park - More Crap. Was in splits - if you, reading this, are familiar with South Park and not seen this - check this out!! its in 3 parts and it raises some stink...the featuring celeb is the lead man of the greatest rock act that ever happened - Bono of U2...Nilu, if you are reading this and I am sure you've seen it already, but if not - what are you doin' man? Here's the biggest crap you would have ever taken!!

Part 1: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lf2kAN2agys
Part 2: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AQJzKKVtK7E
Part 3: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uc5No8uelXs

Amma at Michigan

Shveta's been giving reports from Dearborn,MI - seems like its snowing and Shveta is reminded of real christmas time weather - with all decked up Christmas trees..thats something one could see in my office too - with so many christmas trees at the lobby downstairs all decked up in lights, bulbs, gift packets, etc..

Shveta is so lucky to be attending the program there..it was just not possible for me to attend because of issues with leaves and the costs involved with taking an unplanned flight. Putun is there over the weekend, at the retreat. Apparently, Putun met a french man on her plan bound for France who talked with her, deferred his plans to go back to Paris and went with her to the retreat. He couldn't get the darshan but could see it from a distance and couldn't help crying before he left. I really think they are all blessed...I will get more information about Amma's darshan and her visit once Shveta's back from Detroit tommorrow...

Friday, November 30, 2007

Night of The Long Knives

Saw a History Channel program the other day..The Night of the Long Knives...on June 30, 1934 occurred an event that in a way changed the course of German history and brought into absolute power that satanic force ..Hitler...the political intrigue, the plot to systematically eradicate all of Hitler's (and his cronies' - Goebbels, Goering, Himmler, Bormann, Heydrich) enemies to pave the way for absolute power...so strange that the world played mute witness to such dramatic changes in Europe then..and so much of water flowed through before things changed...anyhow, the event saw the killing of Ernst Rohm at Bad Wiessee and the top leaders of the SA and the transformation of the SS - from a small regiment serving as bodyguards of Hitler (Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler)to the most feared body within Europe - headed by that small time, scheming ex-school teacher, chicken farm runner ..Reichsfuhrer SS Heinrich Himmler and his man-at-arm, Reinhard Tristan Heydrich...coming to think of it, had Operation Anthropoid not been successful, had Heydrich continued to live on, unimaginable devastation would have occurred..perhaps it would have been endless Nights of Long Knives for all of us...

Finally, my house is wi-fi enabled...

Got myself a wireless router and configured it today...its a powerful Linksys router and now I can access my internet connection from any part of my house..Didn't know that Linksys is actually part of Cisco until I got the package today..

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Bhaisaab and Shveta at Bhaisaab's garage..spot the mango tree!!

Mom and her two sons - Beeji, Anup and Gopal bhaisaab


...With Beeji...


Anup bhaisaab and Rekha bhabhi busy in their kitchen..


Shveta in Michigan as I write this..

Shveta would be landing right now at the Detroit-Wayne County airport as I write this. The outside temperature is 3 deg. celsius, though it "feels like -1 degrees" per the weather forecast there. The night temperature last night was -4 deg.cel., so its going to be very cold. Anyways, since she is going to meet Amma, she is very excited. Putun would be there on Saturday and both would return by end of day Monday next week.I hope and pray they have a safe and good journey...

Monday, November 26, 2007

Sunday at Daytona, FL

Sunday ushered in the end of what was one of the most memorable days of my life - a complete pleasure stay at Anup Bhaisaab's place, getting completely pampered by bhaisaab and bhabhi and with the loving presence of Rahul and Chandni - to visiting the Disney World parks and especially witnessing some of the once in a lifetime moments - of watching the Thanksgiving electric parades and fireworks at the Cinderella castle. Sunday started off as a lazy morning - we got calls from Hemant at around 7.30AM and I woke up and got ready to go with bhaisaab to fetch the couple from their Knight's Inn, Maingate lodging in bhaisaab's merc. What a cool, imposing vehicle that is. Anyways, we all came home after the 20 mins each side ride, and had breakfast of idli and dosas. We stuffed ourselves really silly till about 11.30AM and then, after a short visit to the bada ghar to meet beeji, Gopal bhaisaab and Saroj bhabhi one last time (hope to meet all of bhaisaab's family again this christmas...), we set off towards Daytona. We expected to meet Manish and Richa there at the Neelam restaurant on South Atlantic Avenue. Must admit, gujjus have restaurants, shops and gas stations in some of the hottest areas in any american city. We reached Daytona around 1.30PM..its quite like Goa with a weather like Bhopal in Spring - very pleasant..there are 4-5 storey buildings lined up along the beachline which are primarily residential and tourist hotels. Life looks quite lazy except for the presence of bikers here and there - we also saw some real rich dudes on their Bugattis, and saw the NASCAR stadium from the outside. Unlike our seafront, there is a very thick hedge like divider separating the road from the seafront esplanade and that makes it not a very scenic drive. Anyways, we didn't have any mobile phone with us - ours was with Manish Sharma and we had to call Bhaisaab to inform them of our coordinates and plans. We finally got that near a beach walk-out. A walk-out is a wooden ramp that extends out into the sea till the edge of the land and looks quite like a peer or a gangway for boarding a ship or a vessel. There however is a toll-gate for that and we were charged 6 dollars for the four of us (all included) to go up the ramp. The entire ramp was full of anglers with their fishing poles and iceboxes. There was a small store nearby where one could buy fishing lines, baits, etc. The girls, being veggies, had a bad time with the all pervading smell of dried fish. Lots of people were surfing too - though it hardly looked like a surfable place - the water was very calm. The water looked quite dirty - it was all brown, perhaps due to the sand and the surfers. We just grabbed a few cans on coke and spent some time at the edge of the ramp, looking at the anglers patiently waiting for some fish to get hooked up. Reminded me so much of the idle Bhopalis who spend the whole days in and around the Bada Talaab. A japanese guy caught a small carp like fish and immediately rushed to his ice-box. I almost thought he'd eat sushi right there. But I guess he wanted to keep his prized catch a little longer...We left Daytona for Columbia at around 4PM...the road was long and the traffic was dense...we saw a car in flames on the right hand shoulder once - no one could have survived that kind of an accident on the interstate...We were back home at 10.30PM, driving at around 80mph (144 kmph)...

Saturday, November 24, 2007

'Twas Truly Dreams coming True on Friday!!



We came into the land of Mickey, Donald, Goofy and lots of those childhood characters that we saw and raved and dreamt about as kids at around 12PM. Thanks (so much! For what all can we thank you ??) to Anup Bhaisaab and Bhabhi, we started off with a sumptuous breakfast of aloo paratha- and a cool talking GPS device (a Garmin Nuvi) - and drove down to Disney World's Magic Kingdom. I was expecting the road to the amusement parks to be jampacked with cars, and police vehicles all around the place, but the journey was unusually smooth. Perhaps because it was noon and quite late in the day. We reached the Disney World area - its like a medium sized city - with its own vehicles, a huge open air parking lot that accommodates more than 65000 vehicles anytime, huge theme parks (besides the 4, there are places like Blizzard Beach and Typhoon Lagoon, etc)..the roads themselves are like freeways. We reached the place and then rushed to the tram that takes you from the parking lot to the ticketing area. Later, we were to realize what a mistake we made - by just parking our car and rushing to catch the tram.. We then caught the tram, a train rather of small coaches..and reached the ticketing area, where we got Shveta's ticket (I'd got mine the day before when I was at Epcot)...After getting Shveta's ticket from the counter, we boarded the monorail from the ticketing counter to the Disney Magic Kingdom - to describe even the monorail journey is an amazing experience by itself - its a smooth, bullet-train like vehicle that moves on a rail across lakes and forested areas into the Theme park. You suddenly start seeing the huge castle like landmark in the foreground, and many rides and entertainment areas from that place, and a huge lake with ferries coming and going ...the monorail stopped at the Disney World entrance, and boy, its a complete township by itself. The setting is quite like an old, European city - with narrow, cobble-stoned streets, beautiful buildings that are basically modern eateries, cafes, memorabilia stores, merchandise shops, etc...the entrance also has a station that has another train system - the Disney World railroad that leads you to another part of the huge village thats the Magic Kingdom theme park. The station reminded me of Euston or King's Cross St Pancras station in England - old victorian look blended with spanish thick walled architecture (a better example should be the kind of stations you see in old US civil war movies with the "Ye Olde.." prefix)...we walked down from that entranceway onto the Main Street towards the huge Cinderella's castle - the castle is the one you'd find in any Disney film logo..the crowd was overwhelming near that square - the weather couldn't have been better, warm, sunny weather as pleasant as a winter afternoon in India. We were armed with a map and a schedule of events at various places within the park, and ofcourse, our tickets..I had decided to first take the thrill rides..and we started towards one of the many "Lands"..they are - Adventure Land, Fantasy Land, Frontier Land, Tomorrow Land and Mickey Mouse's Toon Fair Land. The Frontier Land has some of the best thrill rides in Magic Kingdom - Splash Mountain, Big Thunder Mountain Railroad, etc..we were still around the castle when we saw all the streets crowded and sealed, and all the people seemed to be standing along the sideways, waiting for something to happen. We tried to make our way, a little anxious since we had come so late in the day (the park opens at 9AM) - then we came to know the reason - there was a Dream Will Come True parade coming - first, we saw a vintage car with some Disney characters, followed by a group of boys and girls dressed in Disney costumes coming, dancing to the tune of a lovely song..followed by lots of floats of Disney characters and movies - Cinderella and the Seven Dwarves, Beauty and the Beast, Aladdin, Lion King, etc, then a float of all the villians - Cruella DeVil from 101 Dalmatians, etc - and at the end, the king himself, Mickey Mouse, along with Minnie, Pluto, Donald, etc. A long parade with lots of dancers it was..as it went passed us, the crowd was slowly getting dispersed to various destinations. We headed towards the FrontierLand. The first place - Splash Mountain. We went to the Fast Pass distribution area, put our tickets and got our Splash Mountain fast passes. I actually couldn't get one through my ticket and there was a small problem - Shveta got her pass. The time to enter Splash Mountain was 1.35PM so we thought of going to Big Thunder Mountain railroad and tried our luck with the fast passes there - the normal lines for most of the Thrill rides in Disney are so long during Thanksgiving that it makes sense to try the Fast Passes. These are free, timed entries to certain events which are a lot in demand within Disney, esp. the rides. But the timings that the Fast Passes show are quite spread out, and once you avail of a Fast Pass, you can't use your ticket for another Fast Pass in another ride till atleast an hour. So, I tried my ticket at Big Thunder and got a Fast Pass. So, we had a fast pass for Splash Mtn and one for Big Thunder, and therefore we went to the ticket counter of Splash and asked the guy there to help. He suggested us to surrender the Big Thunder and get a switch pass to Splash for both, and so we traded the Big Thunder one and went to Splash. Splash Mountain is based on a Disney character, Brer Rabbit - its a roller coaster ride that ends with a huge, almost vertical, fall from the top to a water body - the vehicle being a raft like structure, and end up with a splash - wow, we thought we'd die when we fell from there and it was really thrilling!..then we thought of going to Tomorrow Land, and see a few things since we were quite daunted by the sight of the queue infront of other rides. We went to an Indy car race there and I and Shveta "drove" an Indy car. A very kiddish thing. Took quite a while. We then tried our luck with Fast passes and got the fast pass of Space Mountain - a fastpaced rollercoaster ride in a sci-fi setting. We got the timing for 8.30PM!..our next destination? Stich's Great Escape - based on the Lilo & Stich character. Very stupid, but cute trip. A character's name was Commander Gantu, by the way :-)..we were quite tired of walking - the distances are huge across the different Lands. So we walked by and had some Mickey shaped cookie'n icecream sandwiches and tried our luck at the Small World in Fantasy Land - a musical journey on a boat through a cave that has some very interesting puppets of various cultures - European, Chinese, Arabic (India and Arabic, as always, clubbed together as bindi-adorned veiled girls dancing or playing the sitar), Hawaiian, Mexican, Japanese, etc. Seems like its a lot in demand too and took us a long time to actually get to it...then, we went to the Adventure Land and tried out the Pirates of the Caribbean, a very very long queue - but absolutely worth the visit - a journey very similar to the one in the movies where Orlando Bloom travels on the ship to find Jack Sparrow. Cannot describe it - its just mindblowingly awesome. After that, we had a few more icecream sandwiches and went back to Frontier Land to try Big Thunder. A hugely thrilling ride on a roller-coaster train travelling in break-neck speed. Disney roller-coasters however are not very long. But they are good, no doubt. It was already getting dark when we finished with Big Thunder. We didn't want to visit the kiddish places in Fantasyland, more because there was so much and so little time - Peter Pan's flight, Mickey Philharmagic 3D movie, Snow White's scary adventures, etc. We wanted to cover the thrill rides first.We then went to the Country Bear Jamboree - a cute little show of some bear - puppets singing some honky-tonk music and it was straight out of one of the 1940s-50s cartoon movies, with some wall animal trophies, like moose and deer and bisons also singing happily!!..by the time we got through it, we tried catching up with our colleagues Hemant, Sonia, Manish and Richa who were somewhere in Tomorrow Land. We decided to meet for the fireworks at Cinderella's castle scheduled at 9PM. Just before that, we had gone to Tomorrow Land to try our luck at Space Mountain as we had fast passes for that, but to our utter dismay, we were told it was closed for sometime. We then went with the group to the central plaza that was the castle area, and then started the most spectacular event I have ever witnessed in my life -the fireworks show!..With the castle changing colors from a deep florescent blue, to aquamarine, to coffee brown, etc, and all kinds of fireworks lighting up the skies to the tune of a lovely Disney song, it lasted many memorable minutes...we again dispersed - Hemant et al enroute to Peter Pan while we to try our luck at Space Mountain again before calling it a day. And to our luck it worked! We went it -and it happened to be one scary ride!!..At breakneck speed, we were travelling, nay zooming, across dark space, through wormholes lighted up in all kinds of psychedelic colored lights with sudden twists and turns, vertical falls, steep rises, etc - Shveta was screaming at the top of her voice!!!..We finally dragged our tired feet across the cold night to the exit gates when we again saw the oh so familiar crowd on the streets waiting for something to happen...and there it was, the legendary electric parade of Thanksgiving. Rekha bhabhi had told us it was once in a lifetime kind of thing and she was not wrong. The parade had everything in lights, all Disney characters in psychedelic lights walking past, singing and dancing etc..and then we finally bid Disney World goodbye, dead tired that we were by then..we caught the monorail, which took us through the inside of a huge Disney Contemporary Resort - a huge multistoreyed building through which the monorail passes. Imagine getting out of the monorail and finding yourself in a beautifully carpetted lobby of a swanky hotel, on the second or the third floor!!!..we finally reached the ticketing center and took a tram to the parking lot. And then we realized we didn't know where the car was parked!!!!..We had forgotten the parking lot number and there were 65000 cars parked!..Shveta called up bhaisaab and informed him and we all got really scared. Then I pieced up all my memories and thankfully after some walking got to our car. And then we just had enough energy to get into the vehicle and drive back home to Winter Park. As I recollect things we did on Thursday and Friday - at EPCOT and Magic Kingdom, I regret not having been able to cover all the attractions at either of the theme parks. But then they are so huge, with so much to see and relish, besides the landscape, the buildings,and all of this while wading through a huge ocean of humanity, all that we could cover was incredible. Anup bhaisaab told me that people in the US save money for a long time before coming to Orlando and going to all the theme parks. We couldn't buy any memorabilia - the entire exercise of looking at those stuff takes a lot of time, and then things are just prohibitively expensive. A tee that costs not more than 5 dollars at JCP or GAP would cost nothing less than 30-35 bucks in a theme park. Even a small keychain would take you back by 7-8 dollars. Its just plain and simple loot. Disney, Universal, etc must be raking in billions. But then, they have to continue running the show even during the lean periods - periods when Florida is hit by hurricanes or when its pouring cats and dogs. I saw people spending a couple of thousand dollars buying junk there!! Anyways, all I carry with me is tons of memories and some snaps - I would collect some of the snaps from Hemant and Manish Sharma later, to create a montage of pics we took there. For sure, the moments in some of those attractions, including the fireworks and the electric parade, were some of the best moments of my life..

Thursday, November 22, 2007

Disney World EPCOT!!

Thanksgiving is BIG in the US. Its more than just a holiday - and so it was for me. I kicked off my second trip to Orlando with a visit to Disney's EPCOT. The Disney World in Orlando consists of four theme parks - Magic Kingdom, Animal Kingdom, EPCOT and MGM studios. EPCOT stands for Experimental Prototype Community of Tommorrow. True to its name, it has rides and themes based on futuristic stuff and was really really cool. The first place I went to in the park was the International Space Training Center. This was a very innovative place based on Gary Sinise's movie (and as in all movie based entertainment places, presented by the movie cast) on a trip to Mars. The idea was to subject "candidates" to advanced space training before taking off to Mars. The entire place looked so real - just like out of a movie. The entry lounge had a huge rotating space capsule..videos were running showing the insides of a space vehicle to be used for the take off. I unfortunately took the Green (less intensive) ticket (all tickets are obviously free, so that thing really pinched me a lot later as I really wanted the more intensive one) but anyways..we finally "boarded" the craft..teams were formed and my team (no. 1) had 3 people including me..we were supposed to be the crew manning the ship to Mars. I became the pilot and the navigator while the other two became the Commander and the Engineer...the rest was one heck of a ride to Mars!!...I will write more on my EPCOT trip later perhaps - about Finding Nemo, Soaring over California, about the World Showcase, about Ellen Degeneres' show on Energy, and the best thrill ride of 'em all - Test track (powered by GM)..I missed out Honey I shrunk the audience - guess the only one thing I missed and regret now..its quite late in the night as I write this and I am groggy - after all, I need to be in Disney's Magic Kingdom on time tommorrow and a lot more stuff to see...!..:-)

Sunday, November 18, 2007

Fall colors next to our apartment


America looks absolutely beautiful this time of the year - just outside our apartment, at the parking lot, one can't miss nature's resplendent beauty..

This is where we stayed when we set foot here in Columbia




Extended Stay America at Forest Drive - Shveta took me here on Saturday. This is next to Walmart, Hobby Lobby, Conway, Payless Shoes, Shoe Carnival and a good number of places. We stayed here for 2 weeks before moving down to our apartments at Windsors...How time flies!!

Auntyji ki dukaan on Two-notch road


How on earth could I not include a picture of the famed Indian grocery store on Two-notch, the nearest such place to our home. Auntyji, as the lady running the place is called, stocks all the parathas, spices, namkeens, masalas - not to mention - the vegetables, that the desi diaspora needs. The Walmarts, Targets and Publixes of the world do not cater to this demographic segment yet, and thanks to the gujju/Patel network across the US, this requirement is met quite well. Columbia has 2 or 3 such stores....

Shveta zipping on Interstate 77N from Exit 12 to Exit 17

Thursday, November 15, 2007

Got into a writer's block lately!

Seems like I have hit a roadblock on my blogging journey - keep watching this space for new blogs. Lets see where Pallav and Shveta head to this weekend! Hope its Atlanta or Myrtle Beach! Or Savannah!

Monday, November 12, 2007

Michel Gondry

I saw a couple of Michel Gondry videos on youtube.com and they are simply mindblowing. Is there anyone more creative than this guy out there? I mean Beck's "Cellphone's dead", Chemical Brothers' "Let Forever Be", the Levi's Commercials, the Paul McCartney video, not to speak of the HP ad...I would absolutely recommend the Beck number to anyone. Features quite close to another video (not Michel Gondry) - Free As a Bird (The Beatles) - that is mindblowingly cool (especially when you adore The Beatles)....

Sunday outings this week



We went out yesterday to the Saluda Shoals Park on Bush River Road for a picnic and man, what a picnic it was - cricket, rumaal jhapatta, dodge ball, what have you! The place was teeming with most of the desis - barring a few of us who went to Gatlinburg on Saturday and were dead tired. We played a lot of games, ate Krispy Kreme donuts, Doritos nachos, Cheetos puffs and just enjoyed the place from 11.30AM through 3PM before we decided we had to go out. There were a lot of parents with kids and it was kind of growing on us - and then we decided to go to Charlotte to watch "Om Shanti Om". While returning from Saluda Shoals, we stopped by at Subway and I grabbed a Chicken Teriyaki sub with lots of sauces and pickles in it(yummy - just added this note so that it reminds me what is good at Subway that I could try again! If you happen to be in the US and reading this - try it out if you haven't already!). Then we went to Windsors, picked up some jackets and then went off to Charlotte. Reached Ayrsley at about 5.15PM and then got the tickets to Om Shanti Om. The movie is good - an out and out SRK movie and very entertaining. The most charming part of the movie was Deepika Padukone - she rocks! She is so cool looking in the movie. Hope she continues to get some more screen time in her movies. Her eyes and smile were very expressive indeed....Anyways, we then left the theater after taking some pictures next to a "Hitman" cutout. Our plan was to stop by Udipi - which is supposed to be one of the best Indian joints around (frankly, I have been really put off by the quality of stuff they dish out at other places here including Bombay Bistro - they ought to be taught how to make good Indian food!!) - sadly we were already quite late by the time we figured out how to reach Udipi - it was 9.30PM already and time for the place to close - so we caught the next exit and drove back home...