LOTHAL TO DIU
Early
morning, awakened by the cold I am greeted by the lowing of
hungry Buffaloes and Cows and of course the blissful snoring
of our bunch.
Decide to take a walk in the village and wander along. I guess
I was the first amongst the entire group to get breakfast
of Bhakri (which is a kind of roti) and of course lots and
lots of Chai.
Must add here, in Gujarat offering one's guest tea seems to
have been developed into some kind of a ritual. One is usually
given a saucer (made of steel ) and the host is ready with
a kettle of the steaming brew. Finish one saucer and you are
immediately offered another. Finish that and then again you
are offered another!
Talk of Chai Pilao Yaar!
After the usual round of goodbye's and a bit more of snapping,
we hit the road again. Bound for Velavadhar Black Buck National
Park. The going was mostly through the interior parts of the
state and we were rewarded by views composed of thorn palisades
along the roads, stunted Babool trees and of course both of
Gujarat's famed carriers - the colourfully caparisoned Chagdas
drawn by iron bulls and their plodding counterparts drawn
by flesh and bone Bulls.
Chagdas
are almost like the Autorickshaws one sees across India in
which the Bullet's engine (modified to run on diesel) and
gearbox have been retained. I was nonplussed to see them fully
laden with upto 10-12 people and their luggage, before realizing
that they rarely go beyond 40kmph and remembering that the
Diesel does pack an amazing torque. But for sheer majesty
I would choose the ordinary bullock carts anyday. The carts
themselves looked amazingly sturdy and the Bullocks were mostly
hefty, muscled beasts with amazing horns! By the by (considering
that the roads were either bad or downright un-rideable) we
approached Velavadhar.
The weather was a bit on the hotter side and the topography
was now really arid. I knew we were in Velavadhar when Amol
shouted across the cacophony of our Bullets "Watch out
for Nilgai crossing the road". And thereafter of course
it wasn't surprising to see a sign saying "Animals Have
Right Of Way". Once in the park proper, the vistas were
all golden grasses with perimeters of thorn trees. One is
allowed into the core area of the park on vehicles, so we
all got to ride into the core area.
A
jeep trail was our road, traversing through tall golden grasses
on both sides from where herds of Black Buck gazed at us in
different degrees of alertness. Riding parallel to the racing
herds, one is gifted by the spectacular sight of the Bucks
putting on speed and slowly cutting across to cross the road,
almost as if it was some kind of a flank attack! One moment
they are on the left grazing peacefully, the next minute they
are all bounding parallel to us and then they are suddenly
jumping across the road to vanish on the right! And I am talking
of herds which must have numbered in hundreds! We were lucky
enough to spot a rooting wild boar too, though the Nilgai
eluded us (we could just observe a couple of the majestic
antelopes at a distance).
Velvadhar
onwards we proceeded towards Una, stopping enroute for some
food at a roadside hotel. The food was amazingly bland and
typically Gujarati. Of special mention are the buildings housing
these hotels. Set a bit away from the road, they resemble
an inverted Pagoda and look massive from the distance, though
they are mostly just two-storied in height. I was astonished
to find that almost all across south-western Gujarat, all
these hotels looked astonishingly alike!
Next followed an amazing ride through the Sanctuary, 18 odd
kilometers before we were to emerge out of it. 18 odd kilometers
of a narrow single road through scrub and thorn forest with
the usual forest department boards every 250 metres or so.
The riding was single file and the going slow.
Finally we were out of the Sanctuary and on the way for the
Union Territory of Diu. We ultimately reached Diu at around
11:00 in the night after some really bad roads.
Gujarat is under prohibition so it was no wonder that Diu
was choc-a-bloc full with all kinds of bars, permit-rooms,
etc., etc. Having been to Goa, I could note the similarity
when it came to the names of the resorts and the "private
clubs".
Nightscapes wise, Diu is amazing. The main hotels and resorts
rival a Christmas Tree in their brilliance and what's more,
revel in reflected glory too, considering that they are all
located along the waterfront besides Diu's harbour.
Everybody got down to discussing the day's events while I
(with Kyle in tow) hunted out an open bar for some well-earned
Beer. Post dinner some of us decided to have another shot
at adventure, rode 15 odd kilometers through sleeping Diu
without lights and finally slept at a beach.
Next...
there's an island bang in the middle
of the harbour. What better setting for a prison than this?
...(read on)
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