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Thursday, October 15, 2009

Asleep at Agra Fort, Agra

Asleep at Agra Fort, Agra

I went to Agra in March 2009 and it had already become quite hot. I saw this foreign tourist catching up on sleep at the edge of the Diwan-e-Aam. And yet it was only 11 am or so.

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Thursday, April 09, 2009

Nagina Masjid, Agra Fort

Nagina Masjid, within Agra Fort Premises

Nagina Masjid, only the top is visible from durbar-e-aam, Agra Fort

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Wednesday, April 08, 2009

People at the Taj Mahal and Agra Fort




The Lady is all dressed up for the visit, I took this picture at Agra Fort

Another group of brightly attired ladies at the Taj Mahal, pausing to catch their breath

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Saturday, March 28, 2009

Anguri Bagh (Garden), Agra Fort

Anguri Bagh (Garden of Grapes) Agra Fort

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Thursday, March 19, 2009

Watching Out from Agra Fort

Watching Out from Agra Fort

You can see the Taj Mahal from the Agra Fort. I wonder if the couple was gazing at the Taj Mahal? There were so many people both at the Taj Mahal and the Agra Fort that it was almost impossible to click a shot without people walking through your composition. After a while, I started enjoying including them in my shots! This is something I rarely do oherwise. I still can't point my camera to the faces of the strangers most of the time. But if they are not looking in my direction, then it is another matter.

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Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Tourists at Agra Fort

Tourists at Agra Fort, I leave all the Story Telling for this one to You

PS. (Updated March 18, 2009, many hours after the main post) Oh Boy! I enjoyed the poem by Paradox so much in the comment section that I decided to post it along with the main post.

She found the weather hot,
So she went around in a short,
Now she sizzled
And the local lads were bedazzled.

She wore the color pink,
They stared and did not blink.
With each other they jostled
And how they ogled.

Faithfully they followed her
And were clicked by a photographer.
They thought they were sort of cool-la,
But not more than the blogger Mridula.

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Sunday, March 15, 2009

Lazy Sunday Photo- Taj Mahal as Seen from Agra Fort Window


Taj Mahal- As Seen from Agra Fort Window

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Sunday, March 08, 2009

Lazy Sunday Photo- Agra Fort, UNESCO World Heritage Site

Agra Fort, UNESCO World Heritage Site

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Sunday, November 09, 2008

Lazy Sunday Photo- Taj Mahal, The Good Old Taj Mahal


Taj Mahal as seen from Agra Fort

The Taj Mahal needs no introduction nor am I going to give one. I took this picture when I just had a Nikon point and shoot camera. I feel that with a better lens, the Taj Mahal views are magnificent from the Agra Fort and I should give it another try. I will of course need two things, a better lens and a will to drag myself to Agra again.

Taj Mahal Lawn Mowing, I consider this my Best Shot of the Taj Mahal!

I still remember the moment very clearly. We (Dilip, Sunil and I) were walking towards the Taj Mahal and suddenly I saw these bulls positioned in front of the Taj Mahal. Images of all those dignitaries posing (Princesses Diana in particular) flashed through my eyes and I liked what I saw more than anything I had seen before. In fact there was another tourist along with me who ran towards this side path and both of clicked away. I have of course posted the picture of the bulls and the Taj before but then I like it so much that I thought I can post it once again.

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Sunday, May 25, 2008

Lazy Sunday Photo- Taj Mahal from Agra Fort

Taj Mahal from Agra Fort

I wonder how my two nephews agreed to stand for this picture. Well, in those days I had no SLR and the my first digital camera, the Nikon Coolpix 3200 gave me this kind of a hazy zoom. Even with the SLR I have a wide angle lens. Hopefully, things will change this week. I plan to head to Chandni Chowk and buy a new lens for my SLR that will give me a better zoom.

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Tuesday, May 22, 2007

World Heritage Sites

I was looking at the World Heritage Sites list at the UNESCO site. I was curious to see how many India has, how many I have seen, etc.

Well, here is the India list (reproduced from UNESCO site, I have only changed the bullet points to bullet numbers)
  1. Agra Fort (1983)
  2. Ajanta Caves (1983)
  3. Buddhist Monuments at Sanchi (1989)
  4. Champaner-Pavagadh Archaeological Park (2004)
  5. Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus (formerly Victoria Terminus) (2004)
  6. Churches and Convents of Goa (1986)
  7. Elephanta Caves (1987)
  8. Ellora Caves (1983)
  9. Fatehpur Sikri (1986)
  10. Great Living Chola Temples (1987)
  11. Group of Monuments at Hampi (1986)
  12. Group of Monuments at Mahabalipuram (1984)
  13. Group of Monuments at Pattadakal (1987)
  14. Humayun's Tomb, Delhi (1993)
  15. Khajuraho Group of Monuments (1986)
  16. Mahabodhi Temple Complex at Bodh Gaya (2002)
  17. Mountain Railways of India (1999)
  18. Qutb Minar and its Monuments, Delhi (1993)
  19. Rock Shelters of Bhimbetka (2003)
  20. Sun Temple, Konârak (1984)
  21. Taj Mahal (1983)
  22. Kaziranga National Park (1985)
  23. Keoladeo National Park (1985)
  24. Manas Wildlife Sanctuary (1985)
  25. Nanda Devi and Valley of Flowers National Parks (1988)
  26. Sundarbans National Park (1987)
I have seen seven of these sites (nos 1, 5, 9, 14, 18, 21, 23) but the way we maintain some of the monuments on the list!

Graffiti at the Taj Mahal

I am amazed at the kind of Graffiti I have seen at Agra Fort! In small amounts you can even find it at the Taj Mahal. But at Agra Fort it is unbelievable.

Graffiti at the Agra Fort and it is a World Heritage Site too!

Finally, here is the file from where I calculated that we are at number seven (jointly with Mexico) in terms of the number of the World Heritage Monuments in the world. According to my calculation this is the standing-

  1. Italy 41
  2. Spain 39
  3. China 33
  4. Germany 32
  5. France 30
  6. UK 27
  7. India 26, Mexico 26

I can never ever see all the heritage sites around the world but I can surely try to see all in India. I wonder if some tour operator will offer a grand tour of all the sites in India some day (or are they already offering it?) but then I am going to see all of these on my own.


World%20Heritage%20blog.doc

PS. I hope I am not violating any copyrights by playing around with the UNESCO documents.

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Sunday, July 23, 2006

Taj Mahal, Agra: Shatabdi to Shatabdi One Day Trip

Taj Mahal! Surely my words are inadequate to describe the beauty of the monument. So, I won’t even try. I will restrict myself to the more mundane aspects of getting there on a day trip from Delhi and coming back in one single piece.

We, my two teenaged monkey nephews and I, decided to do a day trip to Agra to spend sometime at the Taj Mahal and Agra fort (Sesha, my husband, still refuses to visit any place that does not has the Himalayas in the background).

We did what is known as a ‘Shatabdi to Shatabdi’ trip. The trick is to take the morning (6.15 am) Bhopal Shatabdi Express to Agra Cant. (8.15 am ish arrival) and take the evening Bhopal Shatabdi (8.22 pm) from Agra Cant. to reach Delhi the same day at 10.30 at night. We also decided to drive to the New Delhi Railway station from Gurgaon and leave our car parked there till the night.

The train arrived right on time at Agra Cant. and deposited the three of us quite clueless on the platform. I had read at Indiamike about prepaid Taxi stand and that was our immediate destination. Our cluelessness must have been quite apparent to the taxi driver who was trying to direct us to the pre-paid booth but skepticism was written all over my face as to his directions. He pointed out the exit to us and we decide to trust him that far because the railway signboard concurred with his directions.

Once we exited, it was easy to spot the prepaid taxi booth. I stood in the line for the ticket. And while the people from other countries before me were asking for taxis to Maurya Sheraton and the like, I could read the signboard at leisure. That is where I came across the phrase ‘Shatabdi to Shatabdi’ tour first. It was packaged at Rs. 950 (taxi charges only) for a non AC vehicle and Rs. 1400 for AC vehicle. It included a trip to Taj Mahal, Agra Fort and Fatehpur Sikri. Tempting as it sounded, I decided to stick to our original plan to hire a taxi just to the Taj Mahal. The good folks at the prepaid booth charged me Rs. 125 for the service.

The hard sell started in the taxi itself. Our driver for this trip, extended the offer to retain the taxi for the entire day at the charges of an additional Rs. 325. We told him we were not interested. He persisted saying he could take us to the market too and we politely told him we would not do any shopping. He said I will not find any taxi vacant to take us back to the station in the evening and it would not be safe for us at all to roam on our own. I told him it would be really sad if I can’t feel safe in our own country in broad daylight. After trying for 15 minutes he gave up.

By that time we were almost at the Taj Mahal car parking. Most types of motorized vehicles are not permitted beyond this point. We decided to walk the remaining one kilometer though one can take a cycle rickshaw or a horse drawn tanga to the entrance. The dual pricing policy remains in place in spite of some news that I read quite sometime back that hinted at some changes. Indian nationals pay Rs. 20 and the foreign nationals Rs. 750.

Taj Mahal had braces as repair work going on the day we visited.


But bring in a bit of tree into focus and no one would know about the repair work!

My elder nephew was visiting the monument for the first time and as soon as it came in the full view, he went silent and his jaws dropped in sheer amazement. So did ours’ even though it was not the first time for my younger nephew or me. The guide explained various things to us but something else caught my attention.

I have seen so many famous faces peering in front of it but I liked what I saw on Saturday 21, 2006. I would have liked it even more if there were no long sticks in the picture.

After the guide took us through the history of the monument, we wandered along for quite sometime on our own. It is said that the Emperor Shahjahan cut the hands of the craftsmen who completed the monument but our guide had an interesting take on it. According to him it is not true. He said the emperor made the craftsmen sign an agreement that they will not practice their craft anymore and hence the saying: it is like cutting their hands, a mere figure of speech. I wish his version is true but I guess there is no definitive answer out there?

By 12 noon my nephews stopped speaking. I knew then it was time for lunch. The Taj Restaurant (run by the Ashoka Group, government owned) is just a two to three minute walk from the main entrance towards the car park and that is where we crashed. It is moderately expensive and we had a hefty meal. Midway through our meal, I had a nagging suspicion that they may not accept a credit or a debit card. On inquiry, the waiter confirmed my fears. I had enough cash on this occasion but I told him to put a sign on the entrance that cards are not accepted or someone may just realize it too late!

Stomach full, our eyes started drooping but we walked out and took a tanga to the Agra Fort (Rs. 25) that is roughly 2 kilometers away from the Taj Mahal. Only 15 to 20 percent of the fort is accessible to public and rest is out of bounds either because of renovation work or because of the presence of the army.

A View from the Agra Fort

When our guide showed (same story here too, charge Rs. 150, even though his card said Rs 275) us Divan-e-Aam (a place where the king would meet the common people) my younger nephew remarked as I was clicking a picture, “Why can’t they include such a picture in our history text books? When I read about it in class 7th I had no clue it would be such a place.” Good question indeed, why not?

The fort is full of history, so many great kings, battles, polts, treachery, the place has seen it all.

Diwan-e-Aam at Agra Fort

Once again we embarked on the photography session after the guide completed the tour and we sat for an hour and a half near the Hava Mahal for the simple reason that there indeed was a cool breeze blowing around it. I was reading ‘Mansfield Park’ by Jane Austen for a while and wondering what activities people would have been doing 300 years before at the same place. And yet some have the courage to write graffiti. Even though we saw it at the Taj itself, Agra Fort has it real bad.

Babitas of the world leave the Taj Mahal Alone!

Graffiti at the Agra Fort

View of the Taj Mahal from Agra Fort

Around 4.30 in the evening we decided to take a tanga back to the Taj and spend some more time there but the huge queue deterred us. Instead we went to the restaurant of ‘The Rooftop Hotel’ (seedy and overpriced place, but from their roof you can see the Taj in all its glory) and had our tea.

We decided to head back to the railway station soon after. The search for auto was complete after a little bit of bargaining. The auto guy charged us Rs. 40 after bargaining (So much for prepaid taxi that charged us Rs. 125 for the same).

My kids once again enjoyed the train journey though we all were very tired by now. The air conditioned chair cars of Bhopal Shatabdi has decent leg space that contributed to the happiness of my nephews, as at six foot plus both will have significant difficulties if the leg room is not ample.

Once we reached Delhi at 10.30 at night it was a struggle to reach home because of some moronic ‘kanwaria’ festival going on. They organized some kind of running/walking event at night and of course they had to block traffic with their mini trucks to make way for the runners. But for this, I don’t think I would change much from our day out. On second thoughts, I would also choose a cooler month than July for our next visit. Maybe we will go again in October or November.

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