Monday, November 4, 2013

Happy Diwali

Happy Diwali

Shanti Nehi (No peace) here in Kasar Devi, it's full war with fireworks of all sizes, each of the poorest quality and quickest burning fuses found anywhere.

Photos to come soon, winter is coming and the last wave of tourists is due soon, the Himalayen mountains have been clear every morning until atleast noon, only this past week have they opened up completely again since march, now it gets colder and clearer views each day. nights are getting long and days short, and while many people shifted one hour due to winter time, india does not have DST and never shifts it's time during the year.

The housing project has shifted focus to a more general bio-composite housing project, adapting to the most availible fiber in a given area. The previously chosen fiber is now seen as unresonable when large quanitities need to be obtained, and creating an fiber industry for a materiel which is banned is outside the scope of any housing project.


Friday, August 16, 2013

Nepali Traditional Beehives

These were quite common on some parts of the ACAP trek south of Muktinath, and seemed quite effective. The Honey was excellent, as expected.

This is the first uploaded video shot with the Canon 5D mk2 btw. Despite it's short length raw filesize was about 100mb, so longer videos must be edited down, which reduces quality if re-encoded (not to mention it takes a long time) I am working on a solution to cut up videos with minor processing, stay tuned.


Thursday, August 8, 2013

3 videos

Kasar Devi is a great place to hang indefinitely....

Copied all 1.1tb of photos to my backupdrive successfully, so now clear for more shooting. This required making a 12v powersupply with the right barrel connector for my 3tb backup drive.

Working on the Open Laboratory Umbrella Project as much as possible, as I have gotten many positive response.

here are 3 videos i stuck online, sorry for the low quality of the one on the bike
http://www.flickr.com/photos/alexcount/9465953182/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/alexcount/9463878833/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/alexcount/9463210811/


Monday, August 5, 2013

Two Poems

Checkpost

Driving down the highway
Night has fallen, but headlights shine
A routine checkpost
Slow down, weave through
I've no time to stop
I have to sleep

 

Seized

Wind, weather
Beautiful curves in the road
All is fine as I make pace down these roads
Thud, bang
Silence
As I drift slowly to a stop
My smile is still great,
But the intellect knows fear
I wander into town
All 600 pounds of attachments
Between my legs

Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Photo Post - Now including my 5D mk2 + panos

Alternate Trail before Tatopani, Annapurna Circuit Trek, Nepal

I carried this Goat Skull until a villager warned me to put it down before entering her village, Annapurna Circuit Trek, Nepal

Looking south towards the Rain, Annapurna Circuit Trek, Nepal

Burnt Rock, heading back from Annapurna Base Camp Trek, Nepal

South of Kedernath, Uttarakhand, India

Sign leaving Ngawal to Naar/Phoo Valley, Annapurna Circuit Trek, Nepal

Local Kids, Annapurna Circuit Trek, Nepal

Annapurna Circuit Trek, Nepal

Nice Plants, Annapurna Circuit Trek, Nepal

Villager, Outside Tatopani, Annapurna Circuit Trek, Nepal

Dirty Hands need cleaning, Annapurna Circuit Trek, Nepal

Looking up at Annapurna, Annapurna Base Camp, Nepal

Night Mountains, Below Kedernath, Uttarakhnad, India

Early on in the Trek, Annapurna Circuit Trek, Nepal

Kasar Devi, Almora, Uttarakhand, India

Phewa Tal Lake, Pokhara, Nepal
Vishwanath Baba, Outside of Tatopani, Annapurna Circuit Trek, Nepal

Vishwanath Baba, Outside of Tatopani, Annapurna Circuit Trek, Nepal

Manang Region, Annapurna Circuit Trek, Nepal

Oldschool 'Pickup Truck', Annapurna Circuit Trek, Nepal

View from Top of Hill above Ngawal (and right above Padmasambhavas Cave), Annapurna Circuit Trek, Nepal

Vishwanath Baba, Outside of Tatopani, Annapurna Circuit Trek, Nepal

Annapurna Circuit Trek, Nepal

Flesh Eating Plant (Like a stinkpot), Annapurna Circuit Trek, Nepal

White Raspberries, Picked on Annapurna Circuit Trek, Nepal

Bridge on Annapurna Circuit Trek, Nepal

Ngawal, Annapurna Circuit Trek, Nepal

Kasar Devi, Almora, Uttarakhand, India

Kasar Devi, Almora, Uttarakhand, India

Kasar Devi, Almora, Uttarakhand, India

Kasar Devi, Almora, Uttarakhand, India

Hampi, Karnataka, India
Sorry NYC, but Varanasi is the worlds most amazing city, Jain Ghat, Varanasi, India

Sorry NYC, but Varanasi is the worlds most amazing city, Varanasi, India

Monday, July 29, 2013

Arrived in Almora - Painting Bike

I arrived in Almora at night on July 3rd, around 9:30pm, and made it to Pushkar Guesthouse by 10. I have been relaxing and recovering, i feel quite productive up here and there is a lack of tourist which is quite a relief in it's self, as the locals are in a different mode in off-peak season. The rains have continued almost everyday, but only for a few hours generally in the evening, but some days the morning. flooding has continued to devastate Utterakhand, with many road closures in the mountains. The flooding 1month ago was so devastating that many towns were destroyed, and the Char dam yatra was canceled, after the complete destruction of Kedarnath, where only the main temple above the town was sparred by the avalanche/landslide when a boulder rolled down before it happened and stopped above the temple, protecting it from the massive torrent of rock and ice.

I have changed my oil, as it was more than 500km after my Piston/Cylinder/Head Kit was changed after blowing my piston up in Nepal. My bike is running like new, with way better compression and power then it ever had in my hands. I have fixed my rear brake light, in addition to installing the upgrade free-flow k&M air-filter that rohit gave me, and re-jetting to adapt for it. My mileage is excellent, getting 80+mpg, or 35+km/l unlike before at 50-60mpg, or under 24km/l. In Pokhara after seeing my massive ring gap it is amazing i had compression  at all, but changing my rings without dealing with my real problem at the time (needing a bigend overhaul, and having a 'soft-seized' piston/cylinder, showing scraping spots, which was already 0.040" oversize, max oversize for both piston and cylinder.having the compression boost from the rings in pokhara pushed it over the edge, as not 65 km out of pokhara i blow my piston in half, and have to get rucked 100+km to Butwal, where the very nice and competent mechanics at the Royal Workshop did my bigend and new headkit, in addition to a few other tweaks. Right before i left Pokhara i look down at my rear shock after packing, and see it is rubbing on my rack, after closer inspection i could see it was broken at the rod internally, forcing me to delay another few hours before leaving butwal, and costing me another 2500npr for a single used shock.

Have read a number of books over the past few weeks, starting with most of hunter s thompsons work (hell's angels, rum diary, f&l), then tropic of cancer by Henry miller, then the new translation of siddhartha we were given before we left. I have also been writing as much as possible, both in my journal and about open-hardware/education.

In the past few days i have transferred half of my 1tb hd to my 3tb backup, which is now possible because i found a 12v powersupply  and a fat barrel connector to power up my 3tb backup. I now can continue shooting photos at full speed. After the first day of transferring i came home to find my battery charger (for both cameras) was belly up and dead, but after opening and fixing a cold solder joint, it now works with 12v input at least, and the cap that is swelled up is probably the only thing keeping it from working on mains, which will be an easy fix once i find a replacement. I am really glad i bought a soldering iron in nepal, because i have needed it at least 6 times, and will let me rewire/cleanup the wiring on my bike reliably.

Next stop will be Manali, where i will then plan the Leh/Ladock trip. Myles just left for this tour, and it will take a month or so. This is supposed to be the most amazing bike tour in India, with much of it virtually offroading. If you look at a map the one road goes from Manali stright up to Leh, where there is an amazing lack of roads for hundreds of kilometers. This requires a bike in top running condition, and people on the tour who can assist in repairing. Like always I will have my tool kit, but will also invest in a tire pump, a set of tire irons, and an innertube and patchkit. This plus a set of all cables for the bike (brake, throttle, decompresion, clutch) will make the chance of surviving much higher.... Also mandatory is sleeping bag, tarp/shelter (ideally tent), warm clothes, smaller jets for carburetor for 18000ft pass (or you will run way rich).

BTW, please comment more if you read this, i dont get  much internet access so comment are a good way to talk.

Sunday, June 30, 2013

Blew up my piston, back on road soon

Started my trip from Pokhara back to India 5 days ago, and made it maybe 60km before I heard a nasty sound and lost power/compression immeditely. I feared the worst, and was right. My engine catastrophically seized and my piston subsequently broke in half at the pin. Somehow I was able to get a truck to drive me and my bike 100+km to Butwal, which is the first (and last) major city I pass through to go to india. I was first planning to get my bike via truck all the way to india, but this is unrealistic considering the issue of walking my bike accross the border would be beyond a spectacle. Luckily I found an enfield repair shop in butwal, called the royal workshop, which agreed to fix my bike for between 32,000 npr, which is arround 330usd, a fair price in nepal for a full engine rebuild and new piston cylinder head kit, the cost in india would be 10000-12000 for an engine rebuild and 5000 for a new piston cylinder head kit, installed, which is around the same price. In pokhara I was quoted 45000 just for the engine rebuild, without a new piston or cylinder. My piston and cylinder were already bored out to the largest oversize 0.040", so now I won't need to change the cylinder for another 2-3 rebores... my cylinder was also destroyed upon impact from my piston breaking, so a new kit was needed. There is aguy doing 350cc to 450 cc conversions for the enfield in america, so there are other options.

Sunday I watched as they did my main bearings and most work, today in the mornig I went over and they completed the job and closed her up. I am into doing work, but after spending 8 hours with competent Mechanics and my bike, I realized I am glad I wasn't doing the work, as it is not as simple as it seems, and many tools and psrts are needed, which need to be collected.

Monsoon is here in full force in july, and it has been raining atleast once a day, generally in the evening. For this reason, It is a good idea to get as many hours on the road before rain starts, and start as early as possible.

I am now in the process or 'running-in' my engine as if it were new, which it effectively is. This requires me to run at 50km/hr for the first 500km, then an oil change to remove metal debris, then a careful ramping up of max speed over the next 500km as per nandens website. This will be tough as i have no speedometer, but i will use my gps for speed verification, the next 500km are on the mahindra highway, mostly a strait line to banbasa, the highest north crossing into india, utterkhand.

Utterkhand is in the midst of a natural disaster caused by the unprecedented rain, withthousands dead and tens of thousands trapped. The char dam yatra has been suspended, which is the pilgramage every year by millions of pilgrams to yamnotri, gangotri, badrinath, and kedernath. This was were myles was planning to be at just this time, luckily he was delyayed. Kedernath, which we got clowe to a few months ago, was destroyed by a large avalanche/landslide. This is a massive disaster that is getting very little news in the west.

My first stop in india will be almora, which was sparred from diaster, and is a good place to relax for a few weeks, then to rishikesh via the highway, avoiding the mountain roads. Then up towards manali in himachal pradesh, the next north state in india from utterkhand.

Monday, June 10, 2013

Beer in Nepal

Expensive, but clean and pure, beer, and other harder alcohols are available in Nepal. Even American alcohols like Johnny walker are avaivlible, unlike in India where the quality of alcohol is abysmal.

Attached is a photo of Everest beer, as found in Pokhera.

My new favorite beer is by far Chyang, which is a simple unclarified unfiltered beer, made commonly from rice, but also wheat and barley variants can be found. It is quite thick, and most often freshly squeezed from the mash by hand after ordering. It is made by simply steaming and letting the grain ferment. It is a clean beer with almost no hangover noticeable, and quite nourishing with a lot of carbohydrates left. It can be described as so thick it is chunky. Certainly an acquired taste, but I definitely have a taste for rice Chyang now.

Barley Chyang is more sour and somewhat yellow clear, while wheat Chyang is more like fermented flour with bits of whole grain mixed in. Of the three I prefer rice, but wheat is second, an I only tried barley once, so probably have to try again. Rice Chyang was available quite cheap (20-40 rupees a cup, or 100-200 per liter, sometimes less for a pitcher.) at most spots on the trail.

Completed the Annapurna Circuit Trek

I have completed the Annapurna circuit and base camp trek over 20-21 days.
Our route was counterclockwise over the Thorung-La pass. From Tatopani Myles and devin went to Pokhera, and I went to Annapurna basecamp

We started in Besisahar, where we got into the back of a Tata army truck filled with bags of rice, and got driven to Chame in about 6 hours. From Chame (2710m) to Upper pisang (3310m) was a day, then upper pisang to Ngawal (3680m), where we stayed for a rest and acclimatization day and visited Padma-Sambhavas' Cave, which we were told is the most extensive cave in Nepal. From there we went to Manang (3540m) where most people acclimatize, then Letdar (4200m), then high camp at 4850m, then did the Thorung-la pass (5416m) to Muktinath (3800m) where we stayed a rest day before getting a jeep to Jomson.

Jomson has an airport and an army base, and food is almost normal prices again. We had the thickest local wheat beer, thick and white like flour, hand squeezed from the grains right as we ordered at our hotel.

From Jomson to Tatopani (Tatopani means hot water in Nepali) took 3 days, stopping in 2 small towns filled with cannabis. We slept the second night in a tent surrounded by plants just starting to flower. On the way down to Tatopani we tried our hands at rubbing, quite successfully.

In Tatopani we spent 2 days before devin, and Myles

Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Zen and the art of motorcycle maintance

I need to read the Pirsig classic, as the parallels of two characters, one with a new bike and no plan to learn about repair, and another with an older bike and a desire to learn how it works and how to service it, are surprisingly similar.

Downloaded the service manual for my enfield bullet motorcycle. It is a well written and detailed manual, and the bike is easy to work on and well designed. Both on my phone and tablet, but a printed copy would still be handy. Though nanden advises to take the info in the manual with a grain of salt, and use it forguidance more then reference.

Having fun adjusting the idle speed, brakes and clutch, which need a little tuning I feel. (This was written before i saw i had almost no compression due to my piston having 'soft-seized' in addition tomy piston rings had a huge gap from wear. This probably happened on the highway getting to pokhara, as it was the first time i opened her upto almost full speed, which in retrospect was a mistake, especially not knowing the topspeed we hit. According to nanden, even an engine broken in, but only city or mountain ridden less then 70km, will seize up if you just take it to topspeed and leave it, he claims you must slwoing wear the clearances for that working temputure, which is a perfectly logical approach. The enfield, when new has many parts not set at working fit, but interfereance fit, and only through careful wearing the parts in can you achieve perfect tollerences.

Currently I need to fix my rear brake light, which apparently was disabled after a mechanical fault (a screw attaching the brake switch to the bike is missing, causing the switch to rotate) by removing the spring and splitting the electrical connector to the switch, both are easy to fix. My turn signals also need to be fixed, one of the rear ones is falling off, and the front ones are removed entirely. They have also been electrically disconnected.i also want to fit larger jetsin thecarb and the k&m airfilter rohit gave me, plus change the tires formodern knobbies, and change the rear suspension or the spring/recharge or tunr the pressure, or find an oldschool oil dampened shock and tunr that instead.

Work done on my bike so far (as i remember)
-rear shock bushings
-front shock seals and oil
-rear brake pads changed from knockoff
-engine rebuild and new piston cylinder head kit after catastrophic seizure
-wheels bearings
-centrrstand needed weld tokeep bike upright, making it easiertoget offthe stand[needs tobe done again]
-oil pump rebiolt
-used pistons fitted, needto put new ones in india
-got a rack
-fixed/disabled rear brake light myself a few times [missing a bolt i cant find, gonna use wire as there is no stress]
-Got spokes fixed in rear wheel and wheel trued.

Preparing for the Annapurna circuit trek.

It is pouring right now in Pokhera, weather has been on and off every day since we arrived. Sights of Annapurna opened for the first time a few days ago, and the sight of the shortly unveiled peak were awesome.

We got a stove, gas, cookware, cups, a set of use poles for me, a used "4" man tent in new condition. Also picked up food (1kg oats and dahl, trail mix, coffee, peanut candy, etc.,) matches, spare lighter, water bottles, spare batteries for our headlamps, a tripod, and pack covers for rain. Our kits are ready, and packs are being preped tonight.

We have bought both Entry tickets and Registration cards for the ACA (Annapurna Conservation Area) for the cost of 2000 Nepali rupees for the ticket, and 1600 rupees for the Registration card, plus a few hundred in passport sized photos, which if you are bringing from home you never have enough for traveling in Asia.

Our route is counterclockwise, starting from Besisahar, the common start point, and the route most take, as clockwise the Thorung pass is more dangerous to cross.

From Besisahar to the Thorung Pass is 111km and 4400m climb, bringing us to the highest pass on this trek at 5416m or 17,769ft. This is also claimed to be one of the tallest sustained passes on the planet.

We will hike down the north side of the pass down to Muktinath, a sacred Shiva place, and holiest site for shiva worship pets outside of India. At Muktinath (3800m) we will rent mountain bikes and descend to Jomson at 2720m, then Tatopani at 1200m, after which we have to climb 3000m over 20km to Poonhill at 3200m, and it's all downhill back to Pokhera.

Friday, May 10, 2013

Arrived in Pokhera

We made it to Pokhera today, after a good 250km ride from Butwal. Most of the ride was easy, but just as we got near Pokhera a local told us it is raining season, and to expect 2 hours or so of rain everyday, or every other day. By the time we got to Pokhera it was pouring, and we got fully soaked trying to find the Tropicana hotel where Devin is staying since yesterday. All is good now, after a shower and drying our shit, and the cameras are fine.

Pokhera has quite a scene, definitely way more westerners that where we came from. We are now done with riding for a week or so while we see Pokhera. The bikes are running ok, but I need a mechanic to check on my newly discovered oil leak.

Attached is a photo of the lake, as seen from our hotels front balcony.

Thursday, May 9, 2013

Bought an enfield motorcycle, riding to Nepal

Bought a 1998 350cc classic motorcycle for 38500 rupees or ~700usd on 4/22, same day Myles bought a clean 2009 350cc classic enfield with a left side 5 speed gearbox (like every other bike without British origins)

We ( Ira and Sophia by car, devin, myles, rohit and 3 others on bikes) on the 23rd to Chota, close to gangotri, about 220km from Rishikesh, where we began. We started at 6am, and on the road by 7, it took about 12 hours of riding with frequent stops. I was by far the slowest rider, but luckily traveling with a bike tour guide many people had advice and help during my frequent stall outs. I had only driven an enfield the week before, (one of which Myles bought) but the experience of an older bike with a 4 speed gearbox took a little getting used to (new models are 5 speed) the bike Myles got is nice to ride, but I am happy with what I found last minute,

The bike is a beast, with a good sounding and running engine, but almost everything else on it needed care. I had never ridden before in the Himalayan mountains, which begins at rishikesh roughly. My previous long ride 170km each direction was from Gokarna to Mudeswhar in february where the second largest shiva statue is. We (Brooke, Fabio, and I) rode in one day on 2 scooters, I drove part of the way there, and the whole way back, solo, which was way more intense as far as traffic goes (we were on busy highways the whole time). The scooter feels and is way less stable and is not comfortable for long distances due to the high frequency vibration and shitty suspension, similar to a lightweight cycle like the honda hero 100cc we had in goa.

On our ride we went from Rishikesh ( laxmenjhula) through devprag, rudraprayag, then Chota for a total of 220km on day one. Road Conditions are mostly great, with a couple dozen rough destroyed sections, we were blocked for 10 minutes as a bulldozer cleared a landslide. The roads are beautiful to drive on, and compared to filling rattling rides in a bus or cab we can set our own pace.

The bike has great power to pass, and is actually very comfortable, which when riding 6-12 hours a day for weeks is important. Acceleration is generous, allowing safe passing on strait sections. I purchased a small basic toolkit which has already been handy for removing the warped rack that came with my bike, fixing devins horn, putting on my mirrors, and adjusting our brakes. I downloaded a repair manual so I can begin to start learning about working on it more seriously. the bike are well known for being easy to work on, and the manual is excellent and detailed.

Riding is both fun and addictive. Here in India, and much of the world, bikes are used by many people as a primary vehicle. Every day you will see 3-4 people on a motorcycle or scooter, often whole families (mom dad and 2 young children is a common sight. ) Driving in India is horn dependent, before a blind turn everyone honks to let them know your coming, if you hear a horn make space and honk back before they see you. I have seen buses and trucks just honk and drive strait through 4 way intersections without slowing down, one after the other. There don't appear to be any actual traffic regulations, and the few seen are often ignored, such as no passing zones in blind areas. Somehow though traffic smoothly flows, it almost never stops they way traffic can hold up for hours in America, unless the road is physically obstructed. The hierarchy of driving in India is cows come first (hit one and get killed by a mob or if your lucky life in prison.), then Tata trucks and buses, then jeeps and taxi, followed by enfields, then smaller bikes and scooters, lastly is pedestrians.

The road conditions are up here are mostly great, wide enough for 2 easily, and a good surface, with frequent washed out parts where landslides destroyed the road. The road was pretty good with little traffic. Once we got really high in the mountains the last 20km to Chota; the temperature dropped, traffic ended entirely, and road conditions became excellent.

Views of the Himalayan peaks and valleys are awe inspiring and beautiful, and the forest we entered has a certain diversity and beauty not seen before, owing to the strong legal protections in this region. It is cold here, I am glad I brought every bit of warm clothes I did, including the waterproof hard shell, which is indispensable riding in these high mountain roads. Tungnath is the highest of the panch (5) Kedars at 3700m, after climbing to tungnath we continued another 1km and 300m climb to the peak of Chandrashila at 4000m, or 13000~ft., which was unclimbable on the path due to ice and snow, requiring hugging the knife edge cliff to summit. Views were overcast but still amazing, and the feeling of being up in the clouds was

Stayed the first night in a camp in Chota, then a small house down the road, than further down the road in a nicer hotel in ukhimath, where the badrinath diety is kept during the winter months. As badrinath has not opened yet, the diety is here in ukhimath. We went to the temple to receive darshan and see the diety, which is quite small, around 8 inches tall. Like all temple diety's, photography is forbidden. We went to deoria tal lake, which was the most picturesque lake any of us had ever seen. 2 pics are included in this post of the lake, HDR panos were shot with the 5D mk2 but need patching.

Gas is 70- rupees a liter, and milage is approximately 35 kilometers / liter. Our total trip to Pokhara, Nepal is 1800 km round trip, making our fuel cost 4600 rupees or under $85USD. road taxes are

We have until may 11th to leave India and renew our visas (we have 10 year visa's, but you can only stay 6 months at a time) Devin is planning to return to Rishikesh and return his bike, and we are going to meet him in Nepal over the next few weeks. Devin will take trains and buses, while Myles and I will be on our Enfield's. Rohit rode with us until we reached the Nepal border on the 7th.

On myles birthday (5/6) we went from Munsiari to Pithoragarh in 6 hours, where we found an authorized enfield dealer and mechanic, and spent all day from 1 to 6 working on our bikes, but mostly mine as it was never checked or serviced after I bought it.

I got a complete rebuild of front and rear shocks including seals and oil, new bearings for the rear shock pivot arm, timing adjustments, new rear brake shoes, new front and rear wheel bearings, new clutch plates, cleaning and oil for the gearbox, adjustments and tightening all over on spots I had no tool for or couldn't reach, did a weld on my center stand to keep it from leaning too far (making the bike difficult to get off the stand), tightened my rotating ignition keyswitch, and probably some other things, all for 2030 rupees, or less than $40usd. Myles got a bearing in his front wheel for 250 rupees (5$) and his rear brake pad inspected than roughened. Rohit got his front left shock seal changed, the kickstand replaced, and a wheel bearing changed. We also picked up a spare spark plug, a spare brake, throttle and clutch cable for each bike, a spare headlight, and a liter of engine oil. Neither my bike nor Myles' has a working speedometer or odometer, and my bike has no functioning blinkers. We bought Rohit's air pump, now all we need is a spare inner tube, a patch kit, and 2 tire irons. Rohit gave me an upgrade air filter which is cleanable and reusable, and should give me better mileage and pickup, but I need to find a few parts to attach it (a rubber hose and pipe clamps.)

Pithoragarh is a military town, with many Enfield's, many set up by the military with custom racks and cases that look very retro. Not much to do here other then fix our bikes, but we did score some nice stuff as a gift from a chaiwalla.

The enfield mechanic (Sai automotives) was thorough and professional, and seemed much better equipped with a great stock of parts on site unlike mechanics we met in Almora or Rishikesh. Our fears that there would be no mechanic at all in Pithoragarh were unwarranted. We are now free to explore Nepal without fear of breaking down. Western Nepal is a remote region, much of which only opened in 1992 to foreigners.

We crossed the border into Nepal on the 7th, and stayed the night in a town called Mahendranagar 7km from the border. Entry fees and taxes for a 15 day visa were pretty expensive, costing about 2000 rupees each. We need to get a new visa in Kathmandu if we want to stay longer, for a maximum of 90 days.

Last night we stayed in a town called Banke on the highway after driving around 200km from Mahindranagar.

I broke my chain today about 60km from Butwal, and it took myles about 2 hours to find someone to fix it and get the parts, while I waited with the bike. No damage to the bike except the chain guard got wrecked, and a few spokes broke. Hopefully the wheel can be trued in Pokhera, as I now have 6 broken spokes in the rear wheel. Cost for the repair was 500 Nepal rupees, the part cost 250 for a link, and we decided to give him 250 for riding with Myles for an hour to find the part and doing the work.

We are now in a town called Butwal, Where we split off to the Siddhartha highway towards Pokhera in the morning. Estimated arrival in Pokhera is tommorow evening, if all goes Well. We have 240km of winding mountain roads, with a serious climb, unlike the strait flat highways we have been riding in Nepal. In the mountains the average speed is more like 35km/hour max.

Friday, April 19, 2013

In Rishikesh - Planning a Enfield trip to the Himylayen mountains and Nepal.

We have been here in Rishikesh for the past 2 weeks, and right now am plannning the next leg of our trip. Our Visa's need to be extended by may 11. Current plan is to go to Tungnath, one of the panch (five) kedar's on rented Enfield motorcycles on tuesday (the 23rd or april) We have hooked up with Rohit, a friend of sophia's that organaizes bike tours and shoots photpgraphs, who has agreed to bike with us to the nepal border across the india himalayen range, after he joins us for a 300km trip from here to Tungnath.


Ideally we plan to each purchase a bike with the idea to sell after the summer, which is cheaper than renting for 600 rupes (11 dollars) a day. Prices for an enfield is around 50000 rupees (1000$usd) for an slightly older (1998-2006) bike without disc brakes in trip ready condition, a almost new bike (2009-2011) is around 85000 rupees (1600$usd) with front disc brakes. The bikes can be sold back to the same person we bought the from in rishikesh at 70% of what we bought them for, or sold to someone else for anywhere from 35,000-45000, making the cost for having a bike around 10,000-15000. Most enfields are 350cc bikes, but there are 500cc models, and there are rare old models called the interceptor, which is 2x 350cc engines bolted together in a v-configuration. I have never seen one, but enfields are a common sight. They are similer in style to a Norton or Triumph, from similer british origins.


List of Enfield Motorcycles


Looked at a few bikes today, and got my first 50-60km trip in on an enfield today. these bikes are powerful, sturdy, and heavy, and a dream to drive. The advantages of the enfield are increased stability compared to the lightweight japanese and indian bikes, ease of repair and finding parts, reliability, and a huge userbase in india. The bikes are also incredibly well balanced. 

Sunday, March 31, 2013

In the Kumaon Himalayen Mountains

We arrived in Almora more than 2 weeks ago, and have been staying on Kaser Devi ridge, or Crank's ridge, since then, enjoying an incredible view of the snow capped Himalayan glaciers, which appears amazingly close to us.
The people are incredibly nice and have shown us many traditional dances and traditions. There is a strong musical culture here, and during Holi, the festival of colors, everyone was in high spirits and sings and dancing for around 6 days in a row. 

Geohack for Almora, Utterkhand, India

We went to Jageshwar and acquired some on the sacred Deodo (Ceder) wood and bark. We also visited an a\incredible cave temple deep underground, which was consecrated by shankaracharya in the 10th century. 
Internet access in only through an internet cafe a half kilometer down the road, so I am not online often.


Monday, March 4, 2013

Arrived at the Maha Khumbh in Allahabad

We have arrived in Allahabad after a short flight this morning. We woke at 6 am and caught a flight at 10.

We went to the meeting point of the Ganges and Yamana Rivers and splashed the sacred water on our heads, and gave offerings of flowers, incense, and fine camphor. Sadly the Naga babas and the Juna Akara have left already for Varanasi, where we will be going in a few days if not tomorrow for Shivaratri, which is on the 10th.

The energy is still amazing, though admirably much less intense than during the main bathing dates. It struck us that virtually no westerners are here at all, the majority of people being Indian pilgrims. Many rudrushka mala beads are for sale, along with conches, toys, and anything else you can imagine.

Allahabad is amazing, filled with peddle tricycle rickshaws and packed with traffic.

Current toolkit for instrument building

Got a cheap Chinese Swiss army knife, a box cutter, a cheap serrated stainless steak knife for precision cuts, and m-seal, which is a epoxy putty found fairly cheap (30 rupees for 100 grams) and quite handy for quick builds. Almost bought a wood carving toolkit for 170 rupees ($3.40) in Gokarna, but passed because of the weight, I also ended up ditching the large crude hand forged blade that cost 60 rupees (around a buck) and my boxcutter on the way to the airport today. Got a good blade in the Mysore market for 20 rupees, but it ended up dying the pomegranate we ate jet black in some strange reaction with the surface, though it is lightweight and good steel, so I ended up checking it with my tools today's while flying.

Also included in this post is my first string instrument made in India. I built it two weeks ago, but only last week finished it with tuning pegs and strings. Tuning pegs are an excellent simple tech for string instruments, and are quite easy to fashion with a knife and hard stick. Tuning pegs and tuning machines seem almost impossible to find for sale, so everything was made by hand. The hole can be awed with a half scissor blade to made a round a tapered hole. The pegs were first goan driftwood bamboo, then palm tree wood, and now some random hardwood from Hampi. Working on one more string instrument which will be longer with the bowl more centrally located, and with heavier strings. I want to make a bow to experiment with playing it like a violin or fiddle.

Current trend with my guitars is a metallic resonator for analog amplification. I used the bottom of a coke can in my first guitar which is quite effective especially with higher frequencies.

Hampi is incredible beautiful, both geologically and historically rich with temples everywhere. We visited the hanuman temple where hanuman was born, on top of a mountain covered in monkeys, with a long steep staircase climbing up to an incredible peak and temple. There is a drum circle every sunset like arambol, albeit smaller but on top of a mountain with an incredible view. We found the Italian baba living amongst the ruins in the center of Hampi, he has been here 40 years and ha become a well respected baba with an incredible home. He has Internet and was on Facebook, and I helped him fix his keyboard.