Dare County, North Carolina that is.

These are the adventures of the Sutherland family. We have moved from the northeast coast of North Carolina (Dare County) to the southwest coast of India...from Nags Head to Thiruvananthapuram. If you can't say that, then Trivandrum works, too.



Thursday, February 24, 2011

Clay Pots, Smoke, and 1.5 Million Women

     In Trivandrum, home to Hindus, Muslims, Christians, and others, there is always a festival celebrating something.  This past weekend, it was Pongala, a Hindu festival that draws 1.5 million women to worship a goddess called Devi.  I was invited to attend with a Hindu friend but opted out, so she described it for me afterwards.  The women fill the streets, sidewalks, and empty lots surrounding the temple for kilometers.  They bring with them clay pots, dried coconut leaves, and all the fixings for a sweet rice dish that the goddess is said to like.  They sit down and wait for the holy fire to be passed from the temple to light their fires, around 10am.  The whole city is filled with smoke.  They cook their rice dish (payasam), then wait for the priests to come and sprinkle holy water from the temple into it, around 2:30pm.  That's a long time to be sitting on the street in the hot sun, I thought.  The payasam is supposed to be an offering to the goddess, but I guess it is usually brought home and eaten because my friend gave us some.  Would you eat it?  This festival has made it into the Guinness Book of World Records for largest religious gathering of women.  Very interesting.

Saturday, February 19, 2011

Delhi and Agra

      Last week, we flew north to a homeschool conference outside of Delhi.  The conference was great.  We met a lot of friends, learned some good stuff, Cora took her exams, and they even had a big field (with grass!) that the kids could play football (soccer) in.  Delhi was very dry and dusty, the dust covering everything to the point that the whole world looked almost black and white.  The only refreshing site was the mustard fields, a sea of yellow and green against the drap backdrop.  We took a bus from the airport to the conference center in Rajasthan, which should have taken 2 hours.  After 4 hours and many wrong turns, we arrived.  One of the wrong turns led us down a dirt road that got bumpier and bumpier as we went until it was almost impassable.  We saw bullock carts, camel carts, donkey carts, horse carts, and herds of goats.  Finally, when we approached a 5 foot deep trench across the road that really was impassable, the driver decided he "probably" took a wrong turn!  You never know in India.  The nicest hotel really could be down a road like that.
      On Saturday after the conference, we took another bus to the Taj Mahal.  It took us a total of 11 hours on a bus only to be at the Taj for 3 hours, but it was worth it.  The place is amazing.  The marble has such a high percentage of crystal that the whole building seems to glow.  The colored designs are all precious stones from around the world that have been inlaid.  The pictures won't do it justice, but here they are anyway:

Delhi was a lot colder than we were prepared for, since we live in the tropics now and own very few cold weather clothes.  We had to go out and by Evie's first footy-pajamas.

Cora dressed as Naya Nuki for a Character dinner at the conference.  Umah hand-stiched this for her while she was here.

The Red Fort, across from the Taj Mahal.  We didn't get to tour it because it was under renovation.

Pretty fancy for a tomb, huh?  The inside is totally empty except for 2 marble caskets.

One of the three entrance gates.  Each gate was built for a different wife.  The more he liked the wife, the bigger and fancier the gate was.

The colored design is all precious stones, and the black is an arabic prayer.  Each side of the Taj Mahal is identical except for the prayers.

The hand-carved marble and inlaid stones.

A boat on the Yamuna river, just next to the Taj.



The wall around the Taj.  Evie finally slept after crying almost the entire time we were there.  She wasn't so impressed by the whole thing.  But we have pictures to say she was there!

This camel cart was for the tourists, but we saw others just like it hauling produce, rebar, bricks, just about anything.

Monday, February 14, 2011

Umah and Papa are here!!!

Alicia's parents came to visit for a month in January.  It was such a blessing to have them here and be able to share with them our life here in Kerala.  Although the month seemed to go way too fast, we were able to do quite a few short trips around the area.  The best part, though,  was just having them here throughout every day.  Enjoy the pictures:

We drove about 1.5 hours out of the city to the 2nd tallest mountain in the state, Ponmudi, in the Western Ghats. 
It was an exciting ride and an absolutely beautiful view.  This is our family plus our friend and driver, Hareesh.



My little mountain climber

My even littler mountain climber.  Sadly, the drive home was a little too excitiing for her. 
She was car sick the whole way, vomiting all over the car, Jay, and Mom!

We also went to Neyyar Dam and saw monkeys in the woods along the way.  It was sooo neat. 
They came to about 8 feet from us.

Mom and Dad, touring the Indian jungle on elephant-back.

Auto rides - not as relaxing as the smiles might suggest.