Skip to main content

Blog Catchup Links....

Because I have written my blog in chronological order I have updated a few gaps whilst I am procrastinating from job hunting!

Hope you enjoy the stories as much I have enjoyed the experiences and if you have any questions or comments I welcome them.....


India - I had a few items to catch up on so here goes
Mumbai/Bombay - Hello Mumbai! Bye Bye Bombay!
Chandigarh, Punjab - A Modernist Experiment 60 years on
Taj Mahal, Agra - Taj Mahal Unvisited


Thailand - I have not writen anything for my time in Thailand because my dear Mum says "if you can't say something nice so nothing at all" but here is a great cooking school I attended in Koh Chang of the South East Coast

I am desperately trying to write about Myanmar for my friend Matthias. Promise its coming, I just need to put some final research into it my dear x

I am working on some overview items for you too....joys of having some spare time on my hands "between job"

Sensual Overload in India - Taste, Touch, Smell, Sights and Sounds of India
Confessions of The Big Adventure...some telling tales of life on the road. Including my loves and hates of travel in a year on my own.
Also I will do a note on the Paralympics 2012 after an awesome time at the events in my London neighbourhood.

So stay online for the continued tales

xBig Love

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

My My Myanmar

I have been touched, pinched, squeezed and had my back rubbed as I was sick. Myanmar is one phenomenal place which I have so much hope for. Hope for democracy, hope for development and hope for conservation, all in a gradual process without losing its authenticity. I have felt safe, with my large amounts of cash (remember no ATM’s so budgeting became a real past time of all travellers not just the “budget” ones) and in pilgrimaging crowds, in villages and on rickety hill top roads, travelling solo or in a crowd. Not once did I fear for my personal safety or that of my belongings. I had to stop myself on the first day from being so travel weary and closed. I had to trust. I had to open up and Myanmar may well have taught me one of my greatest lessons on my Big Adventure. captive in Myanmar There were moments of democratic desire, like an aged village monk carrying a bamboo log who stopped me to ask “Do you know Aung San?” to which I replied quietly knowing it was a very c...

Hills of His Holiness

The state of Himachal Pradesh is one of mountains and rivers, winding roads and toy trains. Here are a few of the famous tourist highlights I enjoyed between 10 hour bus journeys! Shimla Famed as one of the great Raj Era Hill Stations where ladies of the Raj spent monsoon summers sheltering from the heat, I had to see this. In my experience this is anything but a shelter from the heat! On arrival you are deposited in a new bus station 8 km from the town forcing you to use either the public bus (R10) or a  taxi (R250) neither takes you to the top of town or even close to a hotel. So I opted for the R10 bus. They deposited me at the bottom of the hill. Porters were waiting at the bottom but how hard could it be? Hard. I walked for 3 hours in the hot sun with my 20+kg trying to find a nice clean hotel room, eventually ending up on the ground floor of Spars Lodge. You can’t open the windows due to monkeys so the task of finding a room in Indian summer season is hard. Really th...