There's nothing more intellectually satisfying than travelling across the globe on road. Global Roadie is a collection of fascinating worldwide road travel photos, stories and support information with special emphasis on road travel in India, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Bhutan from my own travel experiences and also curated from various sources. Due credit for contents and photos in the form of mentions are awarded to deserving persons and/ or entities. Please check www.facebook.com/GlobalRoadie
Friday, 19 May 2017
Kummatti festival at Kunissery in Palakkad district, Kerala, India
Kummatti is a festival of colour, fun and light at Pookulangara Bhagawathy Temple in the small, quaint and simple village of #Kunissery, #Palakkad district, #Kerala, #India.
Elephants’ parade with percussion music, votif art forms.
Coordinates: 10°38′20″N, 76°35′35″E
Festivals in Kerala are held according to the Malayalam calendar. In 2017, the Kummatti festival was held on 25th March.
The closest town from Kunissery is Alathur on NH544 and is about 7 km away.
Kochi to Palakkad via NH544 (i.e. via Aluva, Angamaly, Chalakady, Pudukad, Alathur, Kuzhalmannam) = 145 kms and takes about 3 hrs 30 mins by car.
Alathur to Palakkad via NH544 (i.e. via Kuzhalmannam) = 27 kms (30 mins).
Wednesday, 17 May 2017
Hostels and low budget decent hotels for backpackers in Varanasi, India
Hostels and low budget decent hotels for backpackers in Varanasi, India:
1) Stops Hostel.
2) Zostel.
3) Blox Hostel.
4) Granny's Inn
5) Palace on River (Rashmi Guest House) (www.palaceonriver.com).
6) Bunkedup Hostel (www.facebook.com/bunkeduphostelvaranasi).
7) Tiwari Lodge, B-1/243-A Road, Assi Ghat, Varanasi. Mobile: +91 94158 21033.
8) Shiva Ganga Lodge.
1) Stops Hostel.
2) Zostel.
3) Blox Hostel.
4) Granny's Inn
5) Palace on River (Rashmi Guest House) (www.palaceonriver.com).
6) Bunkedup Hostel (www.facebook.com/bunkeduphostelvaranasi).
7) Tiwari Lodge, B-1/243-A Road, Assi Ghat, Varanasi. Mobile: +91 94158 21033.
8) Shiva Ganga Lodge.
US Navy aircraft wreckage of 1973 in Solheimasandur's Black Sandy Beach in Iceland
White US Navy aircraft crashed 40 years (1973) ago in Solheimasandur's Black Sandy Beach in Iceland.
Wreckage never looked so surreal.
It's a 4 km one way trek to the wreckage site. The black sand beach a little beyond the site is amazing.
The site has been made even more famous by Bollywood, Hollywood movie shoots.
Thankfully everyone on the plane survived. Otherwise it would not be so cool posing in front of the wrecked airplane.
Try to visit in summer as you'll get over 20 hrs of day light. The photos were clicked at 10:30 pm.
Photo & content credit: @mdoutofoffice on IG.
Thursday, 11 May 2017
Bubble-car "Isetta"
In the 1950s BMW teamed up with the Milan-based refrigerator company Iso SpA on this one, the bubble-car "Isetta".
This little car is soo cute!!
Wednesday, 3 May 2017
Road trip to Dhauligiri Shanti Stupa, near Bhubaneswar. Odisha, India
Dhauligiri Shanti Stupa (Buddhist Temple), off Bhubaneswar - Puri National Highway in the state of Odisha, India.
Dhauligiri is 7 Km from Bhubaneswar. The last 2 kms is a steep drive on a hillock.
The word 'shanti' in the name suggests peace. Since King Ashoka adopted the path of peace and tranquility and resorted to Buddhism, he laid the foundation of Dhauligiri Shanti Stupa at a place which is known for the end of Kalinga War. Here, one finds the edict of Lord Budddha which is visited by numerous Buddhist devotees.
Photos from Camille Toural's travel to Bali
Rice terrace at Tegalalang, Ubud, Bali, Indonesia.
Rice terrace at Tegalalang, Ubud, Bali, Indonesia.
Jatiluwih Rice Terrace.
Pula Tirta Empul, Tampaksiring, Indonesia.
Pura Ulun Danu Temple, Bedugul, Bali.
Kelinking Secret Point, Bali.
Nusa Penida, Bali.
Swimming with turtle at Gili Trawangan Island, Lombok.
Content credit: Camille Toural, Travel Blogger from Paris.
(@camille_trl on Instagram)
Tuesday, 2 May 2017
Fernhill Palace, Ooty, India
The first Fernhills bungalow was built in 1844 by Capt. F. Cotton. It changed hands over a period of time till mid-1860 when it was temporarily named Moonesami and served as one of Ooty's earliest country club. During the time of the British Raj, the English elite would flee the hot and muggy plains of the Madras Presidency and take sanctuary in the refreshing cool climes of Ooty, with its expanses of undulating hills and terraced tea gardens.
Fernhill Palace was the erstwhile summer residence of the Maharaja of Mysore. The palace resembles a Swiss Chalet. Its carved wooden bargeboards and ornamental cast iron give it that characteristic appearance. The palace grounds accentuate the alpine look of the place with its manicured gardens, firs and cedars. There is an interesting church like indoor badminton court on the grounds.
The Palace is spread out over 50 acres (200,000 m2) of green lawns, stylized gardens and dense woods with spectacular views of terraced tea gardens and lush verdant valleys.
Presently its a luxury hotel in Ooty named WelcomHeritage Ferrnhills Royale Palace.
John Lennon Peace Wall in Prague, Czech Republic
Featured in the photo: @li_dookie on Instagram.
John Lennon in Prague
John Lennon is in Prague – well, to be precise, his wall is in Prague although John Lennon himself never visited Prague in his short life.
In Mala Strana, near the French Embassy, you’ll see the John Lennon Wall. The wall that was formerly an ordinary wall in Prague has been called Lennon´s since the 1980s, when people have filled it with John Lennon-inspired graffiti and pieces of lyrics from Beatles songs.
John Lennon and the Communist regime
Lennon was a hero to the pacifist youth of Central and Eastern Europe during the totalitarian era. Prior to 1989 when communism ruled, western pop songs were banned by Communist authorities, and especially John Lennon´s songs, because it was praising freedom that didn’t exist here. Some musicians were actually jailed for playing it!
When John Lennon was murdered in 1980 he became a sort of hero to some of the young and his picture was painted on this wall, for whatever reason right here, along with graffiti defying the authorities. Don’t forget that back then the Czech people had few opportunities to express their feelings with their lack of freedom. By doing this, those young activists risked prison for what authorities called “subversive activities against the state”.
But the threat of prison couldn’t keep people from slipping there at night to scrawl graffiti first in the form of Beatles lyrics and odes to Lennon, then they came to paint their own feelings and dreams on the wall.
The Communist police tried repeatedly to whitewash over the portrait and messages of peace but they could never manage to keep the wall clean. On the second day it was again full of poems and flowers with paintings of Lennon. Even the installation of surveillance cameras and the posting of an overnight guard couldn’t stop the opinions from being expressed.
John Lennon Peace Wall
The Lennon Wall represented not only a memorial to John Lennon and his ideas for peace, but also a monument to free speech and the non-violent rebellion of Czech youth against the regime. It was a small war of Czech people against the communist police who cleaned the wall.
At first glance the Lennon Wall is like any graffiti-covered wall you see around the world. But this wall is special thanks to its history. I’ve heard people saying that it is Pague’s equivalent of the Berlin Wall. They are not far from the truth. Some people also believe that the „John Lennon Peace Wall“ helped inspire the non-violent Velvet Revolution that led to the fall of Communism in the former Czechoslovakia in 1989.
In 1998 the wall had to go through reconstruction of its crumbling facade but the spirit of the wall lives on. It used to be covered in anti-Communist graffiti, now it is covered in messages of love and peace. The original portrait of Lennon is long lost under the layers of new paints but if you look hard enough you can still find tributes to Lennon and a yellow submarine!
The wall, located at Velkoprevorske Namesti, Mala Strana, is owned by the Knights of the Maltese Cross, who allowed graffiti to continue. It will be a symbol forever.
How to get there
From metro station Malostranska (green line A) take trams no. 12, 20, 22, 23. The nearest tram stops to Velkoprevorske namesti are either Malostranske namesti or Hellichova.
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