rambling around the world

April 19, 2007

Spotting Tigers

Filed under: Uncategorized — petrajw @ 7:48 pm

India is a populous country. A country of people, buildings, movement, pollution, crowding and claustrophobia. It’s difficult to imagine a place of nature, sparse and natural. Which is why the Corbett Tiger Reserve near Ranmagar is the perfect breakaway for a couple of days while travelling through the country.

Corbett Tiger Reserve was initially opened in 1936 as Hailey National Park, becoming the first of its kind in India. In 1955 it was renamed the Jim Corbett National Park after the man who hunted man-eating tigers from 1907-1939. Legend says he opened a wildlife reserve to make up for the animals he had hunted during his time, provoding a sanctuary for the threatened species of India. It became one of the first parks associated with Project Tiger in the 70’s, set up to protect the endangered Bengal Tiger. This is one of the best parks to visit to see wild tigers, but spottings are not definite.

We arrived in Ranmagar in the middle of a true thunderstorm, attempting to find a hotel listed in Lonely Planet. Somehwere I wouldn’t recommend, by the way. Once the storm passed, we wandered up to the Registration Office for the Reserve, which had already shut for the evening. Opening hours are 8am until 5pm, with a lunch break.

Stopped on the street by an old man, he convinced us to drop by Hotel Govind, found on the main street, for a chat and some dinner. Food was delicious. They run private safari tours out of the hotel, and have several journals filled with happy customers. You can organise jeeps and drivers at the registration office, but you’re in India, so there are always hidden costs and worries. The hotel organised a driver, Suresh, a jeep for the night, a 4 hour safari, all driver’s costs and one night’s accommodation in the park.

We left late the next morning, indulging over breakfast and finally making our way into the park shortly before midday. Suresh was brilliant, constantly scanning the forest, looking for wild animals. While known as a tiger reserve, the park has numerous animals, such as deer, elephants, birds, crocodiles and monkeys. We saw a jackal, and 2 varieties of deer before reaching Dikhala, the park’s village. We also endured a downpour…in a jeep. We saved our cameras, but not the our seats.

Typically, the rain stopped moments after we arrived. The park normally opens at 6 in the morning and is open until 11am. In the afternoon the park timings usually are from 2:30 to 5:30. During the middle of the day, you can’t leave the campgrounds, which still surprises me as this was the time we drove in to the park. We’d arrived shortly before 2pm and Suresh took us down to the watchtower, a tall tower overlooking the grasslands.  It’s an amazing experience, overlooking the park and attempting to remind yourself you are actually in India, not Africa. It;s straight out of an African wildlife documentary.

Patience is a virtue, one we don’t have. But once we finally fell silent, we saw a herd of deer drinking from the waterhole, and spotted wild birds in the trees. My friend decided to explore on the ground level; highly against park rules due to the possibility of tiger mauling.  This became more apparent after we heard godawful screaming in the nearby bushes which cut off, and then ominous rustling. My friend came shootingback up that watchtower quicker than Delhi Belly.

We found out it was a tiger, with a fresh kill…right there in front of us, only we couldn’t actually see it. Tiger spottings are rare, in the sense they’re not sitting around like in a photo shoot, awaiting your arrival. However, there were 2 sightings that day, and of coruse, we could hear the tiger breaking bones of some poor animal. We headed back shortly before 5pm, heading straight into the cafe for dinner and then smuggling biscuits for the wild monkeys which live in the park. Wild monkeys with a food fetish so bad, they started attacking us. We ended up throwing the biscuits and running for our lives.

There are 2 elephant rides per day, one at sunrise and another at 3pm. We were determined to make the sunrise ride and turned in early, only to yell at the other occupants of our dorm room every half hour for talking so loudly. And playing music. And yelling and laughing louder than a jet plane. We rose before sunrise, grabbed our blankets and headed to the elephant staircase. The birds softly started singing as the sky turned pink. Before it became too light, 3 elephants trampled down through the village, munching on breakfast. We climbed the stairs and made our way on the back of an elephant, and headed out into the heavy fog of the grasslands.

Waddling across the river, straining to see in the heavy blue fog clinging to the grass was a once in a lifetime experience.  We had a tracker finding the trails of a tiger and he lead us straight to a fresh kill. Still no sign of the tiger, but plenty of deer stood around, quietly grazing and on their highest alert. After 2 hours following the river we returned to the village, slightly sore but beaming from ear to ear. We jumped straight back into our jeep with Suresh and headed out into the park.

We found wild elephants, more deer, wild pigs, owls, peacocks, hawks, eagles, vultures, crocodiles and  monkeys. 4 hours driving through grass, forest and scrubland was beautiful. Unfortunately, we still hadn’t seen a tiger and our time in Corbett was over.

We packed up, sad to be heading back to the rat race. Peaceful, calming and relaxing, those 2 days were the perfect antidote to the dirty, crowded and harsh Indian cities. We drove back out of the park, Suresh constantly on the lookout, pointing out crocodiles, monkeys and more deer.

Then suddenly, tigers! Out on the dry river bed,  a breeding pair were stalking a stag. They disappeared into the tall grass, and then the female pounced, racing after the stag up the hill. Yet again, we heard the cry and the silence. We waited, to see if the female would come back to her mate, but we were running out of time and had a lot of ground to cover before they closed the gates. Suresh drove that jeep like a rally car along the rough dirt roads, making it back in seconds. If only we’d remembered to actually check out of our dorm room and get our clearance form!

April 13, 2007

Veronica Mars

Filed under: reviews — petrajw @ 6:04 pm

Please don’t cancel this show.

Please, please please don’t take Weevil and Logan off my screen!!! What one arth will i do without my HoYay?

It sad such a critically acclaimed, unique and genuinely excellent show is in danger of cancellation. It doesn’t get any viewers, it never really has, and I am the Queen of On the verge of being cancelled shows. Practically everything I watch is awesome, except nobody watches it.

Admittedly, the sophomore seasonw as a letdown. After such a strong emphasis on the main story and the heavy focus on flashbacks  in the first season, the bus crash and badly-orchestrated episodes became hard to bear. Finding the inevitable perpetrator of crime was also a shock…which was brilliant on one hand, turning a much-loved character into an evil mastermind. It also  made me cry.

However, the show is back in fine form in the third season, dealing with smaller arcs which run into each other and handling the qhole equation much better. It woudl seem the writers got their groove back, and it would be devastating to lose it now. Even if it do go psychotic momentarily, with Veronica and Logan breaking up and getting back together in the next episode, only to repeat the following week.

I’ve enjoyed this season, seeing Veronica in a new environment, and now with Mr Mars back as Sherriff and Logan moving on, it’s going to be interesting to see how different our Veronica is this time around. And what new mystery we’ll be faced with.

I don’t want to lose this brilliant show, not yet. I’m not ready to let go. Hopefully, neither is the CW, the channel it shows on in the US. Keep the snark on TV and keep those hundred’s of thousands of viewers happy.

April 11, 2007

Singletons? Bring it on!

Filed under: musing — petrajw @ 7:54 pm

I am sick and tired of whiny, mopey women complaining about how aful life is when they’re single, and how everything is harsher, crueler and lonelier without a man.

For christ sake’s, girls, listen to yourselves. Firstly, you all sit aorund, triumphantly bellowing how terrific you all are and capable of doing EVERYTHING,  and don’t need a man…..then suddenly you’re all curled up on the couch crying over the pathetic sad excuse your life is and the fear of dying alone.

By all means, get boyfriends. Do the couply thing. Have sex. Just don’t think there’s something wrong with you when you’re single. It’s not a disease, it’s not a fate worse than death. Hell, I’m enthusiastically throwing myself into my long life as an eccentric cat lady who scares the local kiddies. Without a man in my life. If he’s there, great, someone to take out the garbage. If not, I’ll teach the cats to do it.

I have friends who are incapable of being alone. They break up, and have to find someone new within days. IS it a fear of being alone? Or is it a fear of social standards? Or simply a case of afraid of being you?

A few of my friends are incapable of doing anything on their own, they’ve never learnt how to. They can’t travel on their own, go to the movies or shopping on their own, or go out to dinner by themselves. I blink in shock at them, and recount how I’ve had to teach myself to to do all those things with people. I’ve become so used to doing things on my own, I don’t know how to share myself around. Frankly, I prefer it on my own. There’s nothing better than taking a solitary trip overseas, sitting down in a restaurant and enjoying dinner.

They say the hardest thing for a woman to do is have dinner on her own. Screw that, for the past 2 years I’ve had dinner on my own on Valentine’s Day. It ain’t difficult, it’s shit easy. You go in, order food, and then EAT IT.

There’s only one thing to say really, and this has been quite a round-about way of getting there:

Learn to yourselves, ladies. Love yourself, spend time with yourself, enjoy who you are to the point where you don’t need someone.

Then, and only then, can another person truly love. If you don’t love yourself, who else will?

April 10, 2007

Grey’s Anatomy

Filed under: reviews — petrajw @ 12:19 pm

Finally got caught up on Grey’s Anatomy, although it took me awhile.

I have to say…show has become ridiculous.

I traipsed around Television Without Pity for awhile and came to the realisation that a large number of fans agree….the show is losing it’s meaning.

It started off terrific, a bunch of interns, different interns, very different characters to what we normally see on TV and seeing them make their blunders on the show. There was a focus on medicine, on relationships, on the internal struggle within ourselves to find out who we are, where our palces in the world are, and how the hell we’re meant to balance it all out and be happy, constructive people of society.

2 seasons later, and it’s nothing more than a sordid who’s sleeping with whom plot. Seriously, do these characters ever get outside of the hospital and actually meet other people? Hell, I manage to meet people walking down the street! Why is that every single character on this show has to be sleeping or making goo goo eyes at another in-hospital character? I find it ridiculous and slightly overdramatic and annoying. There’s only so many characters before they start repeating themselves…or should that be repenting?

and the storyline itself……ridiculous. We have ferry crashes, we have people dying left right and centre and while individually the stories are interesting, when they follow each other one after another you start rolling your eyes in ridicule. How many more tragedies can this hospital face? First there’s a plague epidemic, then there’s a patient with toxic blood, then the ferry crash then god knows what it’s just…..it’s all a bit too much. There is no balance anymore in this show.

Get your act together Shonda, find the balance before viewers start realising Supernatural is a hell of a lot more interesting (and the guys are hotter too).

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