Saturday, December 6, 2014

Of mountains and beaches...

Another year. Another skiing and camping trip with the family - check and check.

Skiing:

We went to Whistler Blackcomb ski resort this year in February for couple of days to ski. It is lauded as the largest ski resort in North America. We stayed in Pemberton, a little north of Whistler Village and drove in both days to ski.

This was our first time in Whistler. So the first thing we did when we reached there in the evening was to pay a visit to the visitor center in the 'village'.

Whistler Visitor Center
We picked up the ski trail map. It was a hodgepodge of color coded trails and lift information. There are two mountains - Whistler and Blackcomb and they have many different levels of slopes (green, blue and the blacks) with many chair lifts and gondolas to take you up to different elevation points in the mountains.


We decided to stick to just one mountain, the Whistler mountain.

Whistler Mountain Ski Trail Map
The simplest trail I was told, was the 'Lower Olympic Trail'. I have skied few times and feeling quite confident that I can manage the 'green' slopes, I got on the lift 'Fitzsimmons', to tackle the 'lower olympic trail' which is marked as the easiest one.  As the lift started up, I found that this mountain is nothing like any other places I have skied. As the lift kept ascending (which felt like forever to me), with me gaping at the intimidating valleys down below, my heart started pounding.

After a few apprehensive runs in this trail, I pep talked myself to take on a higher 'green' slope. So I took the 'Garbanzo Express' lift to go to the next high point.

There are few ways to come down from there to join the green 'pony trail', cruise down the green 'expressway' and eventually down to the 'lower olympic' trail.

Up there the real trouble was that I couldn't locate the 'papoose' trail which was the 'green' path. There are 2 other 'blue' trails (banana peel and orange peel) which will join the green path as well. In the state of panic, I couldn't locate the right one and I still am hazy about how eventually I ended up in the green 'expressway'. The 'expressway' was so fun to cruise and from there I made my way down the lower olympic trail again.

I did not have enough nerves left that day to take the 'Garbanzo Express' one more time. That's for another time, another winter.



The Whistler Village is a smorgasbord of restaurants, book stores, coffee shops, boutiques and grocery stores where we spent much time hanging out.

Whistler Village

Whistler Village
Camping:

We camped at Nehalem Bay State Park again this year in august. This time we stayed for two nights. The days were warm, evenings windy and the nights wet and cold. The kids biked around the camp site, played in the sand at the beach.

Nehalem Bay State Park
Nehalem Bay State Park
We went to Manzanita, a quintessential beach town, right next to the state park, for coffee, ice cream, grocery and food.

Manzanita, OR
Manzanita Beach, OR

Manzanita, OR
We lounged, read books and huddled together when it got cold.


Whenever we cross the Columbia River to get to OR, I get mesmerized by the grandeur of the river and the breathtaking views you get, when you cross the bridges across the river. On our way to Nehalem Bay we went through Astoria and crossed the Astoria-Megler Bridge. On our way back to WA we used the Lewis and Clark Bridge. Both of these bridges are majestic, preserve the character of this region and offer stunning vistas.



Sunday, October 19, 2014

Friends, trips and more of those...

This year has been momentous, in that, I was able to make a couple of girls trip.

The first trip was in January with my best buddies from college. We flew (me from WA, one from CA and the other from MN) and we met in Las Vegas. This was the first time we made it as just us and it was a much needed one for each of us. It was a trip to reconnect, be carefree and unwind. That's exactly what we did. What better place to do that other than LV.

The second one was to LA in October with my cousin from CA. We had been planning this trip since 2012 and finally made it this year.

The plan has been to go to the 'Real Time With Bill Maher' show that airs live on HBO on friday nights. We had to request tickets through their online ticket request form (we did this 3 weeks ahead just as soon as we finalized the dates for the trip) and follow up with a voicemail (I called couple of days before as we had not got a confirmation and we were getting anxious), to finally get a call from them for confirmation (which we did, the day before).

We arrived in LA on a Friday afternoon for the show goes live on friday evening. It was such an amazing experience. We were actually in the audience on the show that aired on Oct 3, 2014! The first interview was with Senator Elizabeth Warren from Massachusetts!! The panel members were Nicholas Kristof, Michael Steele and Actor Ben Affleck! Sam Harris joined in for a mid-show interview. More details about the guests here. The show caused quite a stir and led to a series of debates following that.


The rest of the weekend was spent loitering on Hollywood Boulevard and Manhattan Beach.

Manhattan Beach, LA

Monday, September 1, 2014

Road Trip - The red hot sand dunes

An engagement got us on the road for a one day road trip from Madurai through தூத்துக்குடி (Thoothukudi) and திருச்செந்தூர் (Thiruchendur), to the red sand dunes (I found out it is called 'Theri' soil) of Thoothukudi district.

I gaped at the salt fields of Thoothukudi and I reminisced, on seeing the தாமிரபரணி (Thamirabarani) river. I have lived in திருநெல்வேலி (Thirunelveli) for couple of years and the river brings back fond memories.

We passed through many banana and coconut plantations and finally arrived at the hot sandy red dunes. There are villages and village deity temples around these dunes. There are palm and cashew trees that grow wildly on these lands.

The salty winds, the river, the greenery, the feet burning red sand - that was quite a palette of characters for one day!

Some pictures - 

(தாமிரபரணி) Thamirabarani River
(தாமிரபரணி) Thamirabarani River


Palm Trees
Red Sands ('Theri' Soil)
Hot red dunes



Sunday, August 31, 2014

Vegetables Galore

I love vegetables. I am rare one of those, who after school raided the kitchen for leftover vegetables and ate it by the bowl as a snack.

I am not a fan of salads or raw vegetable platters but I love the veggies my mom cooks.

வாழைக்காய் (Plantain), அவரைக்காய் (couldn't find the English word), வெண்டைக்காய் (Ladies Finger/Okra), முருங்கை (drumstick), சேனைக்கிழங்கு (Elephant Foot Yam), சேப்பங்கிழங்கு (Colocasia), பாகற்காய் (Bitter Guard), Butter beans, any and all kinds of கீரை (greens) are few that I devour when I am in Madurai. These vegetables (I think, vegetables in general) taste way better there.

Vegetable markets in Madurai were like eye candy for me.

Some pictures from the Friday Market in bypass road, Madurai. The freshness and the colors - Oh my!

Friday Market - bypass road

Piles of cabbage, radish, cilantro, ginger and green chilis

Greens, Cluster beans, drumstick, brinjal, green beans and அவரைக்காய் (lower right corner)

வெண்டைகாய் (Ladies Finger/Okra)

Butter Beans (peeled as well!)

வாழைப்பூ (Banana Blossoms)

கீரை (Greens)
சேப்பங்கிழங்கு (Colocasia)சேனைக்கிழங்கு (Elephant Foot Yam)
வெங்காயம் (Onions and shallots)
பாகற்காய் (Bitter guard)
நெல்லிக்காய் (Gooseberry) - Not a vegetable, a sour fruit - also a favorite


The trees of Madurai

We visited the 'Eco Park' when we were in Madurai this July.

I have been there once before, about 7 years ago. The place was crowded and I think it was relatively new that time. There were fancy lights fixtures on trees. There was a fountain show and there were boat rides.

This time there was no water in the park, the big water structures were empty and the boats were grounded. The lights on the trees looked damaged and few electrical wires were precariously exposed.

Keeping up the maintenance seems to be a challenge for the city. Rather than go with fancy, decorative unrealistic approach I wish they had stuck with simplistic design, preserving the natural space. 

I loved the huge beautiful trees and the walkways paved through the park.

The park also has a play area for the kids to climb, swing and slide.




Banyan Tree
Flame of the Forest
Peepal Tree