Tag: spare time

Booking it to St. James

Josh Bickel, a fellow grad student at the Missouri School of Journalism edited a book with the images of last year’s Missouri Photo Workshop for his professional project. Last weekend, the big day finally arrived: Coinciding with the St. James’ 76th annual Grape and Fall Festival, the book was finally published.

So, together with Rita Reed, who is a native of St. James, Josh, Calin Ilea and David Kennedy, we headed down to St. James on Friday to build a float and participate in the Fall Festival parade. Thanks to the meticulous planning and preparation by Josh, Rita, Calin and David, the float was built within a couple of hours and it looked amazing. Obviously, the jury thought the same and awarded us the First Place in the Organization/Club entry category…

Calin and Josh prepare the frame for the huge book that goes on top of the float.

Calin proudly presents his Mickey Mouse sweater.

Josh tries out the M8 – good try, but bad subject…
Photograph by Josh Bickel

It just doesn’t get better…
Photograph by Josh Bickel

Josh is warming up for his role during the parade. With the motto of the parade being “Pedal to the Medal,” he’s going to “pull” the float on Rita’s old bike – wearing Spandex!

Unwinding in the motel room after a day’s work is done.

Josh attempts a self-portrait in the motel mirror.
Photograph by Josh Bickel

Our float looked really, really great – except for Josh in Spandex.

The float gets the finishing touches before the judges arrive.

I don’t know what Phoebe is doing here…

Receiving the first price for our float really made Rita’s day.

Josh tries to gather momentum – once the float was moving, his job became a lot easier.

The only thing I remember from shooting this picture (and the next) was that all of a sudden I was surrounded by photographers who photographed me – seriously, have you never lied down on the ground to take a picture?!?

Even you, Calin!

Notice the camera being held up in the air in the background. This must have been the most-photographed parade/float in human history. At least in St. James.

I don’t know whether it’s the physical exhaustion or the embarassment of knowing that the whole world will see him in Spandex that causes this look on Josh’s face.

Of course, the book in question rode along on the float.

We had local support for throwing candies and waving to the crowd.

Hundreds of thousands of people attended the parade to see our float. They came in from as far as Alaska and Hawaii.

David Kennedy has a patriotic fit.

After the parade, Josh sat until the early morning hours and signed copies of the book for the thousands of people who lined up for miles and miles to get hold of a copy.

September 13, 2009

Kolkata – Dhaka

I don’t know why I’m doing that to myself again and again. Once more it takes my breath away, when I step from the aircraft into the glowing sauna called Kolkata. Someone just seems to have made a lunatic infusion, because it’s not the blistering heat that is most back-breaking, but the humidity, that wraps me in its wet coat and soaks me to the bones within seconds. Why do I always have to choose the hottest countries of this globe for my journeys? At the moment, it’s summer in India, and the monsoon that reduces temperatures down to a bearable degree, still some two months away. The question is, however, which is better: submerge in the floods of the monsoon, or drown in your own sweat?

View from our favourite restaurant. Kolkata, India. 7th of March 2006

Kolkata is a seething metropolis, and although you don’t get to see much of it during four days, the impressions are enough to make you definitely want to come back. We stay in a small hotel in the New Market area, a vibrant quarter where life never stands still. Tea stalls, street kitchens, shoeshine boys, fruit sellers, cigarette stalls and all other kind of street hawkers alternate with the fixed built stalls of shoemakers, purse dealers, cloth sellers and kiosks, which almost wholly occupy the rare side walks and choke the streets in a never ending swarming which angrily honking cars and motorcycles push their way through. All kinds of odours wave through this chaos, and while you stop every now and then to absorb the charming scent of spices or flowers, you wish that your sense of smell were dead when you break through a wall of faeces stench or when you are pushed past a pile of refuses.

When we reach Kolkata, our plan is actually to head for Bangladesh as soon as possible to surprise our friends, who are absolutely clueless that we are here. Then, after spending some seven days in Dhaka, we want to journey on to Delhi to start our project. At first, however, we have to apply for my Bangladeshi visa and since we tiredly sleep away the Friday of our arrival, we face closed counters at the embassy the next day. It is closed for the weekend, and we have to wait until Monday, so we dive into the vibrant crush of the New Market, buying some clothes and an umbrella which is taken apart by the first slight breeze, and book our bus tickets to Dhaka for Tuesday. Nine o’clock sharp on Monday morning, we are at the embassy again.

Although we reach there early, the cue is already long, winding along the edge of the shadow that the rooftops above our heads cast in the bright morning sun. Half an hour later, I’m in front of the counter, and an impolite officer hands me over the form for the visa application. The same officer also receives it again after I filled it in duly, and informs me casually that I can come back for the interview after four days. Just a short time ago, the visa was issued within 24 hours, but for some obscure reasons, the embassy made this procedure more complicated so that you have to wait for up to ten days now to get your papers. Of course we didn’t know that and – in good faith – booked our bus tickets for the next day. I try to talk to the officer, but in vain. He explains us that he just receives the forms and that the visa is issued by another officer, and that we need to make an appointment and explain our needs to him if we wish to get special treatment.

Resigned, we proceed to the reception and apply for an audience at the visa officer. Finally, after two hours, he receives us and we are allowed to bring forward our concern. When I explain, that we already booked our bus tickets for the next day and therefore need my visa immediately, he virtually explodes. Who did we think we were to assume that they didn’t have anything else to do here! After all, there was a procedure that had to be followed! Frankly speaking, he wasn’t precisely wrong with that. It was indeed abundantly arrant what we asked for. But that didn’t change the fact, that we needed the visa immediately, and after my friend – being a Bangladeshi and therefore his sister – won over his heart, and after I sang a nice Bengal children’s song to him, he turns a blind eye and stamps my passport. We even have to promise to come to his place for dinner whenever we return to Kolkata. And by the way: No other foreigner received his visa that day…

We celebrate our last evening in Kolkata with grilled Tandoori chicken and three bottles of ice cold Kingfisher beer. Our Greenline bus starts early the next morning, at six, and after we paid the hotel bill, we hit the road for the coach stand, which is right around the corner (A fact that was not at all unwelcome to us with our two big rucksacks and five backpacks). The bus is waiting already, and we store our luggage in the trunk and get aboard. I quickly fall asleep, and when I wake up about one and a half hours later, I realise how huge Kolkata is. We are still in the city. From the last urban outskirts to the border however it’s just a stone’s throw, and at nine o’clock we get off the bus and into the Greenline waiting lounge to wait for the customs clearance.

It’s a strange feeling for a European of my generation, who grew up in a country without frontiers, to cross such a strictly guarded border as is the one between India and Bangladesh. I vaguely remember my mother showing our passports at the Brenner, when we went to Italy in my childhood. But for that, we didn’t even have to fully stop the car, let alone cross the border by foot with all our luggage and continue the journey in another car. Today, the Brenner station is a deserted, grey monument of this forgotten era, the dusted visiting card of an un-united Europe, and its new inhabitants are no customs officers any more, but truck drivers who take a short nap after a long journey.

Not so in Jessore. After fifteen minutes, we are fetched from the lounge, and two coolies – paid by the travel company – take care of our luggage. We follow the Greenline employee to the Indian immigration office, which registers all border traffic, and sit down in the waiting area. With us in the room, there are two men from Yemen who speak neither Bangla nor English, and an immigration officer tries to explain to them that one of them has lost his departure card which is stapled to the passport on arrival in India. Now they have to pay a fee to receive a new one. When it is our turn, we have to answer some questions such as where we stayed in India and then quickly get our stamp in the passport. We proceed, following our coolies through no-man’s-land now, where there is no law and no government, and enter the Bangladeshi immigration office on the other side. After some more questions and a quick look into my rucksack by one of the customs officers, they stamp our passports, staple their own departure card into it and finally wave us through. We take a rickshaw to our new bus which is waiting a few hundred meters from the border, and continue our journey to Dhaka.

Not much has changed since I’ve been here last time. The constant traffic jam that chokes every street 24/7, got worse again (we need three hours for a distance you would normally make within twenty minutes), power failure now happens six to seven times a day, and some more ancient buildings fell victim to the greedy hands of the real estate Mafia and were replaced by soulless concrete cubes. Javed, a painter and friend of mine, later tells me that the Shilpangol gallery is to be torn down, too, which is peculiarly tragic since this gallery – with its beautiful garden and tea terrace in the atrium an oasis in Dhanmondi’s concrete desert – was the venue for many great shows and a jewel of Dhaka’s cultural life.

The joy of the reunion with my friends is huge, and I spend a wonderful time there. Rosie, my Bangladeshi mother, cares for me as lovingly as always. During the last year, she arranged a breathtakingly beautiful garden on her balcony, but unfortunately it is soon to have no more light since an arm length away, the walls of a new apartment building are brought up. The room in which I usually stay is taken by a man named Selim, a consultant. We don’t see each other much during the first time, since both of us are out the whole time, but one day, both of us return home at the same time and we start talking. It becomes a two-hour conversation about our views of the world, and both of us feel so close to each other afterwards as if we had known each other for years. Selim, one of the most eloquent men I have ever met, promised to write a text for my Blog about his philosophy of life and I will be proud to post it.

The seven days in Dhaka rush by like nothing, although they feel like weeks. I spend most of the time with my five closest friends there – Insan, Chandan, Kashef, Patash und Javed. Insan is currently learning German, and his progress is impressive (I expect a German comment from you!). On the last evening, we all meet at Rosie’s place to say good bye, light-heartedly though, since I’m going to return end of July. We sit in the living room, smoke, make stupid jokes and laugh. At ten o’clock, Kashef and Chandan give us a lift to the bus stand, since we are late as usual. Both of them wait on the road side, waving us good bye, until they’re out of sight. We’ll be on the road now for 36 hours until we reach Delhi. I lean back into my seat and close my eyes, and within short I fall asleep.

June 2, 2006

birthday surprise

On my birthday, I was kicked out of my bed a little roughly; My friends told me to take off the bed sheets and the mosquito net so that everything could be washed. I took a quick shower and then I began to pull the covers from the blanket and the pillows. After a little while, Nokhutula’s maid came into the room and told me that I had to put the cover back on the blanket since there was no spare cover and the first one wouldn’t dry in time. I did as she told me and began to wonder what this whole thing was about.

When I was ready, the maid took the whole stack including the blanket and the mosquito net and disappeared. I started packing my stuff since we planned to spend the day at Nokhutula’s cousin Jackie’s to relax and hang around at her pool with some drinks. Saba told me to take my camera, but I asked her why, we would just lie around in Jackie’s garden. She shrugged her shoulders and said “Just take it.” I really didn’t see any reason to waste my films for such nonsense and left the camera behind.

When we sat in the car – the drinks were bought and everything was there for a nice barbecue at the pool – we drove in a completely wrong direction, away from Harare and deeper and deeper into nowhere on a small rural road. I asked them what this was about and I was told that we would just drive to some farm to get some maize for the barbecue. I was really wondering why we would go all the way to a farm for some lousy maize cobs when they just sold them on the roadside but I didn’t say anything. After almost two weeks in Nokhutula’s house with only short trips to downtown and Mbare, the trip into the countryside was a welcome break. I enjoyed the beauty of landscape rushing past the windows, dramatically enhanced by the clouds of an upcoming thunderstorm.

We were cheery, in party mood, fooled around and tried to make a hitchhiker whom we picked up believe that I’m a lunatic virgin priest who just came out of mental treatment and was now taken out into the green by three women for his 45th birthday – Of course the guy didn’t believe us a single word, but he joined in and bamboozled with us. Eventually we reached a gate and a young man approached the car and talked to Nokhutula in Shona. He opened the gate, we passed and he looked into the car, grinned and said in English that we should be cautious about the lions that strolled around the farm. What the hell was that supposed to mean now? I pointed towards Saba’s digital camera and asked if it was ok to take pictures. He grinned again and nodded simply. For some minutes we drove past a fence with a beautiful, natural scenery behind it. I gradually started to be suspicious now. We were on a farm and not a single field around?!? The girls in the back were grinning already and every now and then one of them would say in an exaggeratedly startled way that she saw something in the bushes. By now I was sure that we were not going to a farm.

We finally came to a halt at a parking lot, bordered by a wonderful, green garden. Somewhere in it was a house with a roof made of straw and a covered porch in front and some people were just on their way there. We got out of the car and went to the hut. On the pebbled way leading to it were several jeeps with zebra painting; in that moment I realised that it must be some kind of Safari park the girls were taking me to. I also realised, why Saba told me to take my camera and I was a little bit pissed that I didn’t listen to her. They asked me to wait outside, went to the reception, talked briefly to the guy behind the desk, received some piece of paper and came back out. “Happy birthday, Jakob” they said and handed me the paper. It was a map for a Safari Game park. I didn’t know what to say. This morning Saba said that she was so sorry that we were not in her country where she could have organised something beautiful for me. I was simply flabbergasted.

After some time a guy came and we went back to the car and got in. It was quite narrow – Nokhutula’s car has four seats only – and I wondered if that guy would stay in the car throughout the whole Safari. But soon we stopped again in front of a marvellous cottage. There was a plastered courtyard and on it a hut – open in the middle and with two rooms on each side – and a second hut right next to it with a kitchen and a bathroom. The man exited the car, started to unlock the doors and told us that this was our cottage. I didn’t quite understand. What, our cottage? What am I supposed to do in a cottage? I want to see the park! Only when Saba walked past me with our blanket and the mosquito net, I realised that this was an overnight trip. That also explained Saba’s show with the blanket this morning… I was so happy that I didn’t know what to say. I threw my arms around the three girls, thanked them vigorously and began running back and forth between the car and the cottage to unload our stuff.

Some time later we took towels and bathing suits, drove back to the parking lot and went through the garden to one of these colossal rock piles that are so typical for the Zimbabwean landscape. Stairs wound upwards and on the top, hewn into the stone, was a tremendous pool. A small wooden bridge lead over the pool to another rock screened from the sun by a wooden construction covered with straw and behind that was a third rock, surrounded by a fence, serving as sun terrace. From up here we had a wonderful view over the roof of leaves that covered the whole park. This complex was breathtakingly beautiful. We bathed for around an hour – me decadent sod of course with a bottle of beer in my hand – then dried up and went back to the reception. I was told that the best was yet to come.

We waited some minutes until one of the park’s staff came and loaded us upon a jeep. Safari… We drove off, through some gates that secluded the 1000 acres of Wildlife Park and into the savannah. After a few metres we saw the first Impala herd grazing, stopped and the guide told us something about the animals. Unfortunately they were very shy and so we couldn’t get closer than maybe a hundred metres. Not so with the Zebras. This time we left the jeep and approached the animals slowly until there were not more than five metres left between us. The Safari guide then asked me to come back because I got too close.

We saw a lot more animals other than these, but the Giraffes were the most impressing of all. A herd of them was hidden in a small forest so that I didn’t see them instantly. But then they started moving, startled by the car, and crossed the path we were standing on. Although I saw these animals on TV so frequently, it was an incredible experience to have them in front of me, just an arm length away. The Giraffes moved as smooth as elves, despite their towering size. It was one of the most fascinating experiences in my life and I wished I could once see these animals in their real environment, without some degrading fence around.

In the evening, after we came back from the Safari, we lit a fire in front of our cottage and made a barbecue. We roasted four huge T-Bone steaks, a whole chicken (we roasted it in one piece – rarely had such a delicious chicken…) and a pork steak, along with rice, Sadza, coleslaw and lots of beer and wine. After dinner we sat for hours under the African sky and partied.

Unfortunately we had to go back early the next day since the first meeting with the women’s group in Mbare was to take place. But the park is just a half-hour drive from Nokhutula’s house and we’ll surely spend the one or the other weekend there during the next three months – and then I’ll bring my camera…

3 Comments February 23, 2006

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