Travel


20
May 10

Varkala, Kerala

As a freelancer chasing after work it’s often difficult to find a convenient time to escape for a family holiday. Early in the year is normally ideal but somehow I’d landed  quite a bit of work for an exhibition and a book. With the wedding season fast approaching, my desperately neglected wife Annie finally put her foot down (to put it mildly) and insisted I take a break from bookings and organise a getaway as far as possible from the coldest London winter we’d apparently experienced in 30 years.

Climate change?

So, where to go in March that’s hot, interesting, inexpensive and has fantastic food? Inspiration came from our favourite local restaurant Ganapati in Peckham. We’d never visited India and Kerala looked like it would be the perfect destination. Being the end of the peak season it wouldn’t be overcrowded with tourists like us and not being monsoon season we were guaranteed lots of heat and not a drop of rain. But best of all there’d be daily feasting on fresh seafood, warm Paratha’s, hot Masala curries, exotic fruit and Keralan street snacks from dawn till dusk! Still, taking our two young boys (2 & 4) to India was a little bit daunting for a whole host of reasons so a little research was needed first.

Seafood on Papanasum Beach

I can’t recommend Tripadvisor enough. After trawling through the recommendations we settled on Varkala and a suite at the Hindustan Beach Retreat. Not a swanky boutique hotel, but it was clean, comfortable, with a pool, good facilities and perfectly situated at the South Cliff end, smack on Papanasum Beach.

As soon as you arrive you’re greeted by fantastic hospitality and warmth. The people here are amongst the friendliest I’ve ever met. By pure luck we arrived just before the beginning of the 1o day Arattu Temple festival. Our hotel was sandwiched between the 2000 year old Janardani Swami Temple and a stretch of seashore said to have medicinal properties by the pilgrims that visit it daily to perform obeisances to their departed souls and forefathers. Not sure about the medicinal bit since I contracted an ear infection towards the end of the holiday! Temple festivals are a serious business here to the mostly Hindu population. Everyday was an amazing spectacle involving much drumming, chanting, elephants and fireworks. Our boys loved it, especially when the Cobra snake charmers turned up with monkeys in tow. They weren’t so keen on riding an elephant and who can blame them. They’re enormous and elephant bare-back riding is a bit challenging on the bum!

Yee-haa!

In short we had a totally chillaxed and memorable time in Varkala, met some special people, swam loads, had some interesting experiences and of course the food was everything we’d hoped for (I still dream about the Brinjal Masala I had one night). Not many families holidaying there, mostly European travellers, back packers and the occasional hippy. Thankfully it’s not yet as developed as somewhere like Goa or even Kollam further up the coast, but it’ fast becoming renowned as an Ayurvedic or Yoga retreat. If you fancy assuming the lotus position whilst sipping on iced coconut milk and want a bit more than amusement parks, nightclubs and overpriced restaurants then head out here before it’s too late.

Mmm Sandalwood incense . . . .


28
Jan 10

My first DSLR

I found myself pondering the quality of DSLR’s today and wondering what the future holds when I suddenly remembered my very first DSLR purchase. A Nikon D1x. Up until then, the only digital camera I’d used was the wonderful Canon Ixus (still a classic) and a friends Nikon Coolpix 990 with a whopping 3.1 megapixels. The Nikon D1x had 5.3 mp sensor and an ISO range of 125 to 800. Okay for daylight but virtually unusable in low light situations without flash. Back in 2004 the $ rate was 2 to the £ so it made sense to use up some air miles and Marriott Hotel points for a long weekend in NY and a trip to Adorama. Another bonus came from our dear HMRC since no duty is payable on DSLR bodies imported into the UK (might’ve changed now).

Here are the first few snaps I took once I’d eagerly ripped open the copper box, charged up the battery and fixed on a 28-70 f/2.8 AF S lens. I hadn’t even sussed out RAW so the first batch were all jpg’s. Incidentally that lens is still my workhorse and despite the weight probably my best lens purchase to date.

New York, USA

First D1x snaps

7 Photos


21
Jan 10

Éire

I Ryanned over to Dublin just before Christmas to visit a very dear Irish friend that I’d met some years ago in Russia. What a wonderful city. Within hours I was shamefully regretting that I’d never visited earlier and wished I had more time to explore. That said, within minutes I was on the road to Kilbeggan and being driven through some of the worst rain I’d ever experienced, to savour some traditionally produced Whisky at the Lockes Distillery. (Note that there’s no ‘e’ in Whisky since the Irish invented it and the Scots rebranded it Whiskey). I can’t remember much of the journey home but I did have a very comfortable sleep back at the Portmarnock Golf Club, and no, I don’t play golf.

If you’ve never been to Dublin and imagine it to be quite cold, wet and windy during late November then you’re almost right. Hold that thought and then treble it. I’m no Greek hero of the odysseying type, but with a throbbing head and not much sleep I went of to discover why Dublin is a renowned centre of culture and the source of the Craic. But not before a couple of Espresso Dopio’s to help summon up some energy.

Well, to wring out a damp story and cut it short, it rained rather a lot. However, I did manage to cover an impressive amount of Dublin’s sights, museums, gallery’s, bars and coffee shops before meeting up later for another night of the beverage that’s “Really good for you” and a promise to return.

Here’s a moist selection that I’ve dried out for you . . .

Éire

9 Photos