Road down from our house to the soccer field. The kids thrived in having complete freedom to run anywhere and they loved it. Our life in KL is very restricted to our high rise apartment with too many condo rules for kids. Here, no cars, no rules, just running and playing.
Boom sad because he couldn't climb up the steep mini-climbing hill, as Griffin can do in the next picture below.
Mountain flowers that feel like paper but seem alive when they quickly close after water is poured on them
Gardener around our house. She wanted me to pay her for taking this shot after I took this photo.
Harvey was sitting in the same spot we left him before our hike. Except now, his skin was completely burnt. So burnt it pussed yellow in parts the next day. He hadn't budged, even to put sunscreen on. Poor, sick Harvey.
April 7, 2011
We left Cochin in South India, and after almost 8 hours of driving, twisting and turning up mountain passes, and a couple vomit stops for Alice, we arrived at the famous Munnar hill top station. The Munnar area is in the Ghat mountains, surrounded by tea plantations. We stole the idea from the British colonists who would come up here to cool off. Unfortunately, there is not a well-preserved set of hotels from the colonial era, so we stayed at “Camp Noel” which is an hour drive past the main town of Munnar (Munnar is unpleasant, not even worth stopping in). It is an hour drive on a dirt road to Camp Noel.
Without old-world charm, modern Camp Noel has the charm of its outrageously beautiful mountainous surroundings. We all stayed in a cute house with a large terrace looking out over the valley. We would watch the sun rise over the facing mountain, turning our “great room” pink every morning. At night, we would look at the many stars and hear the croaking of frogs and birds’ pre-sleep singing at twilight. We also faced a mountain peak that we climbed.
The peak is the shape of a dog’s face, as seen from our terrace. A guide named Salaam took us up the peak, a short walk from Camp Noel. He and his friends climb all over these mountains. He says that if you hike 2.5 hours, over a couple mountains behind Camp Noel, then you see real wildlife. He’s seen 5 leopards. Wild elephants. Bison. Deer. He tells stories of the wild elephants deliberately, systematically sliding down the slippery, steep mountain to get to the bottom, during the wet monsoon season in June and July. He showed us how to distinguish elephant from bison from cow poop.
You wonder how much interaction there is between humans and the wild elephants. Salaam told a story of drunk Indian men throwing beer bottles at some elephants next to a dam. One bottle hit the elephant’s tusk, exploding on carbonated impact. The elephant was enraged, turned and rammed over 30 cars then pushed 13 cars into the dam. Lesson learned. Or, at least, Abraham will never throw a beer bottle at an elephant because that story made such a strong impression that he told it to each adult over and over. Abraham had a whole new respect for Salaam, with his wildlife tales, and held his hand on both the hike down the mountain peak and the next day, through the tea plantations. Abraham talked nonstop to Salaam the entire walk down the mountain peak. Truth is, Boom has become attached to each of our male hiking guides, always holding their hands through the return hike, probably seeing them as muscular, superhero-like role models capable of fighting off wild animals.
On our way up and down the mountain peak, a local Indian boy raced alongside us. Like most Indian children in this rural area, the only English he knows is “What your name? My name is …” In the tight confines of a large city, he’d be diagnosed with ADHD. But, in this rural freedom, he was lithe, graceful, and fearless in his climbing up the peak. He made a point of non-verbally teaching us how to turn nature into toys, like jumping onto a skinny tree and pulling it down with your weight, then using it to jump up and down as if you’re riding a pony. He taught Griffin the tire-spinning game used by all the boys living in the mountains here. They take a tire and spin it down the steep hills using a stick – their tire balancing skills are impeccable. Click HERE for a video of the boy doing it, and then HERE for a video of Griffin doing it.
I honestly think the boy aggressively insisted on posing for so many pictures for me because he wanted money for them. Same thing happened when I took a picture of a female gardener outside our home. I didn’t understand when she asked for money after the photo until she mimed eating food. My reaction usually is irritation at someone letting me take their picture then demanding money afterwards, but in such a relatively poor country, I guess you gotta do what you gotta do.
We made it to the top, feeling good, enjoying the cool mountain top breezes and outrageous views. We sat and ate our picnic lunch, watching the kids scramble all over the top.
Grammy and Harvey didn’t join us for this steep mountain hike. Click HERE to see us yelling from the top of the mountain peak to Harvey, pretending our voices could reach him, lazing on our terrace. Harvey was recovering from a nasty virus and Mary’s metal knees prohibit anything steep.
Good idea they skipped the hike since when we returned home, Kenny and I collapsed in bed, complaining of sore hamstrings all day. The kids, on the other hand, insisted we join them for a game of “family soccer” later. We couldn’t say no since we know that once we’re back in KL a few days later, we can’t play soccer in our concrete jungle. Despite a lot of chasing the soccer ball down steep hills and skin burning from the surprisingly strong sun, we had a great time, with the kids somehow beating us. No, really, Griffin is faster than me and Ken now, constantly eluding us with his patented footwork.
We ended the day on our terrace drinking beer, watching the sun go down on our mountain peak.