Showing posts with label Places. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Places. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 18, 2025

What to do in Hyderabad?

"What to do in my city?"

This question is in the mind of thousands of any city dweller who wants to go out of office and out of home to relax, enjoy, get out of the daily scene every weekend to enjoy life.

Fortunately, Hyderabad has grown into a cosmopolitan city with multiple cultures imbibed to give you a refreshing taste of multiple ways to perceive, understand and learn things.

Here is a list of things to do:

There is something for everyone to enjoy and learn outside work in Hyderabad.
I have purposely left out food & drinks as there are more than 1 new restaurant/pub opening up in the city every week.

Art workshops
Art workshops include Pottery, Resin art, Fridge magnet, Drawing, Moon Lamp, Crotchet, Mandala, Tote bag painting, Djembe, Perfume making, Terrarium, Candle making, Pizza making, Canvas Painting, Gold Foil painting, Theater acting, Neon painting, Fluid art, Texture art, Pottery painting, Mixology, Pichwai painting, Body painting, etc.

Open Mics - Usually unpaid tickets for practice stand up comedy shows
Every Tuesday at Ivy mic
Every Wednesday at Street Mic
Every Friday at Moto Garage, Jubilee Hills at 8.30 pm or 9 pm till 10.30 pm (Only pay for the dinner/ drinks)
Other places at other days of the week.

Stand up comedy shows

Events (Music shows and concerts)


Axe throwing
2 places in Madhapur. Call 9985739573, get location and go.
Rs.300 for 10 throws

Pickle ball
Multiple courts and rates in the city to explore
Rs.1000 per court per hr in Madhapur

La Makaan, Banjara Hills
A cultural center.
Go through https://digital.lamakaan.com, find out what interests you and go there. Mostly free shows.

Board game cafes
AM Musuem, Himayatnagar - Check hourly rate per person
Get on board cafe, Jubilee Hills - Check hourly rate per person

Rock climbing 
Crag Studio, Gachibowli - Rs.750 per session per person

Gamepoint 100 Ft, Madhapur
Badminton, Table Tennis
Download app and book your slots.
For badminton, rates for court, racquets and shoes separately.
Table tennis all included.

Dance studios
Google and find many in the city

Music academies
Muzigal, Madhapur (15k for 3 month course of 2 classes per week of 1 hr each)
And others

Puzzle Rooms
Mystery rooms, Escape rooms - Multiple locations in the city with multiple games at each location. 
About Rs.1000 per person per game. 2-4 people per game mostly

Trove Experiences

Cold Plunge

Steam Sauna

Go Karting
Few places - Call, check and go

Indoor Sky diving
Gravity zip - About Rs.3500 per person

AR / VR games
Multiple locations in the city

Computer games
Multiple locations in the city

Bowling
Multiple bowling alleys in the city

Snooker/ Billiards
Multiple spots in the city

Concerts (from time to time)
Previously Bryan Adams, Badshah, etc.

The Selfie musuem
Google "Hyd Selfie Musuem", next to Alankrita resort for a 3 hr trip of interesting selfies.

The Nehru Zoological Park
A good zoo with a huge variety of animals. Need full day to explore.

Cooking classes
Google "cooking classes in Hyderabad" and discover many

Meetup groups in Hyderabad

Annual Events and Exhibitions
Kite Fest at parade grounds - January during Sankranti
Annual Numaish exhibition - February at Nampally grounds
Hyderbad Literary Fest - https://www.hydlitfest.org
Sunday Soul Sante - Feb at Hitex
Holi events during Holi - March
Hyderabad marathon, half-marathon, 10k - Aug
Navratri events during Navratri - October
National Book fair - December
Lock the box (Book fair) twice a year

Other irregular places to visit (Foreign cultures)

Films

Wednesday, July 9, 2014

Budget Trip to Bhutan

We (My wife and I) travelled to Bhutan during Apr 21 to Apr 28, 2014 from Hyderabad, India. The place had fascinated me ever since I heard about it from my two classmates in Philippines. The place has many unique things to its credit.
1. A place still ruled by the king and the queen and has democracy
2. A landlocked country
3. Beautiful clean places with its own unique culture of clothes, food, games, traditions and beliefs
4. A unique ecosystem of plants and animals
among other things.

I will give a brief of the plan followed by details to help you plan your trip.
Hyderabad --> Bagdogra --> Phuentsholing --> Thimphu --> Paro --> Phuentsholing --> Bagdogra --> Hyderabad

Day 1: Early morning flight from Hyd to Kolkata, Stopover for 2 hrs at Kolkata, Connecting Flight from Kolkatta to Bagdogra. Reach Bagdogra by afternoon, take a prepaid taxi to Phuentsholing and stay at Hotel Sinchula (http://www.tripadvisor.in/Hotel_Review-g469428-d456013-Reviews-Hotel_Sinchula-Phuntsholing_Chukha_District.html).
Day 2: Get immigration formalities done, get a prepaid sim card, take a bus to Thimphu. Saw Buddha statue at night and night view of Thimphu from near Buddha statue. Stayed in Peaceful Resort (http://www.tripadvisor.in/Hotel_Review-g293845-d1943683-Reviews-Peaceful_Resort-Thimphu_Thimphu_District.html) for the night.
Day 3: Saw the Takin preserve, roamed around Thimphu market (meant for tourists), Bought souvenirs, went to Choki Traditional Art School, Saw Thimphu Dzong (from outside), Visited the local football stadium and stayed at Peaceful resort.
Day 4: Travelled by taxi to Paro, enroute visited Tachogang temple (on a hill after crossing Paro river), Checked into Rema resort in Paro (http://www.tripadvisor.in/Hotel_Review-g321541-d2166460-Reviews-Rema_Resort-Paro_Paro_District.html), Visited the Paro musuem, the Paro Dzong, did archery for an hour and rested at Rema resort for the night.
Day 5: Trekking Tiger's nest (Paro Taktsang), booked bus tickets for travel next day to Phuentsholing .
Day 6: Travelled to Phuentsholing, took Bhutanese bus from Phuentsholing to Siliguri and stayed at Sevoke Valley Residency (http://www.tripadvisor.in/Hotel_Review-g659786-d4606812-Reviews-Sevoke_Valley_Recidency-Siliguri_West_Bengal.html) in Siliguri, West Bengal.
Day 7: Auto from hotel to Bagdogra airport and afternoon flight Bagdogra-Kolkata-Hyderabad with a layover at Kolkata. Reached home in Hyderabad at night.

The detailed plan of the above with associated costs, distances, mode of travel, review of places is hereunder:
Day 1: Reached Bagdogra at around 1 pm and took a prepaid taxi at a prepaid taxi stand to Phuentsholing. Enroute the driver stopped for lunch at a restaurant. The cost of the prepaid taxi was Rs.2,263 for an Indica. You can get Indicas and Innovas from the prepaid taxi stand with payment and receipt.

We reached Phuentsholing around 7 pm.
You know you are entering Bhutan when you see the welcome board:


We put our stuff at Hotel Sinchula and though we could have ordered food in the hotel, we walked back to India for dinner as we wanted to explore the border area. The hotel is 5-10 min walk from the border. We had dinner at a vegetarian hotel (tried their unique delicious Bhutanese dish called Kewa Datshi - A dish made of Potatoes, Cheese and chillies, Photo below)
There are restaurants around in the Indian side and food should not be a problem. They serve both Indian and Bhutanese dishes on both sides of the border.
Dzong next to Hotel Sinchula:
Night stay at Hotel Sinchula.

Day 2: We started at around 9 am for and went to the immigration centre after having breakfast. We filled up the application forms for visitor visa along with the 2 photographs and passport and submitted it. We had to wait for about 45 min to get our application processed along with our photo taken and get the permit. (You are only allowed to travel to some distance in Phuentsholing without the permit)
With the permit to enter Bhutan, we photocopied a couple of copies of the permit. We bought ourselves a local sim card (http://www.tashicell.com/prepaid-mobile for latest call rates) from the Tashi complex which is the office of Tashi (a popular mobile service provider) and is 5 min walk from the immigration office.
There is a park with a Dzong nearby which can be checked out if time permits.

We comfortably checked out of Hotel Sinchula (check out time is 12 pm or so) and took a cab to Phuentsholing bus stop (around a km away. We paid Rs.50 for taxi). We bought bus tickets to Thimphu (Rs.230 per head) and it took close to 6 hrs to reach thimphu. We reached Thimphu bus station around 6.15 pm. We took a taxi to take us to Peaceful resort (Taxi fare Rs.100 after bargaining. 5 km distance. Rs.20/km seems to be fair although they demand more). My friend came to the hotel and picked us up for dinner. Post dinner, we went to see a big Buddha statue in Thimphu and the night view of Thimphu from the same hilltop. It is advisable to see the Buddha statue during the day although the night view of the city from the hilltop is mesmerizing.


Day 3: My friend picked us up at the hotel and we visited the Takin preserve which is very close to the peaceful resort. The takins were unfortunately a little far away that day from the enclosure boundary and we didnt get a very good look at them. They are very lazy. After that we went to the tourist area with lots of souvenirs/handcrafts for tourists to buy. We then went to the Thimphu main post office where we bought a souvenir of the Taktsang monastry magnet which is the cheapest here (Rs.500). One can also get their photo taken in the post office and get custom stamps made with your photo at this place. Unlike in India where your customised stamp has a photo alongside the regular stamp, here your photo is the main part of the stamp. A set of 4 stamps can be done for around Rs.350. Later, we took leave of our friend and we had hired the same taxi of the previous night for the rest of the day (Rs.800 post negotiation). We went to Choki Traditional Art School (it is north of Thimphu and the route can be a little back breaking as there is no proper road in the last few kilometers). The entrance of the school is mesmerizing with the large art work:
Embroidery of Goddess White Tara being made. It takes close to 4 months to get this embroidery from start to finish.
 Wood carving being done at one of the classrooms.

En route you will crossing the Thimphu chu (Thimphu river) and you can get a few good photographs along the river front.
We saw the Thimphu Dzong in the evening and were late for the ceremony which starts at 4.30 pm or so. We later went to the nearby football stadium and went back to our hotel.

Day 4: We checked out of the hotel (Peaceful Resort) and travelled to Paro with the same taxi driver (Rs.2000 for the entire day). On the way, we visited Tamchogang temple. It is temple on top of a hill which can be reached after crossing the Paro river. There are 2 parallel river crossings - one metallic thrilling one and another less thrilling one.


The drive from Thimphu to Paro is around 1.5 hr excluding the small trek and river crossing to Tamchogang temple. We arrived at Rema resort which is 1.5-2km from central Paro and is situated alongside Paro river at around 1 pm. The view from the resort is good, but the service is the worst ever. We had lunch (with bugs in it - one of the many reasons for poor service of this hotel) and visited the Paro museum and Paro Dzong. The Paro museum has an entrance fees of Rs.50 for an Indian couple or so. The museum has a wide variety of things - masks used for festivities, stuffed animals (especially lots of birds) specific to Bhutan area, mineral samples with a small area on geology, Pottery, how to make buttered tea, etc. It is an interesting museum to see. Cameras and mobiles need to be submitted at the entrance.
Paro Dzong is situated along the Paro river and has a breathtaking panaromic view of the entire Paro valley.



Dzongs were once military areas but are now administrative areas of Buddhist temples and have paintings/sculptures and Buddha Statue/other gods inside.
Inside Paro Dzong:




We later went to an archery range in Paro and did archery. One side of this range has professionals and the other side is free for amateurs to try archery (Rs.100 per head/hr). 

We booked a driver with the help of the reception at the hotel for a hotel pick up and drop to the base of Taktsang monastry for the next day.

Day 5: It takes about 45 min to reach the base of the monastery from Paro (Taxi charge of Rs.700 for pick up and drop). There are two options: trekking or hiring a horse and trekking only the last part. We trekked the whole way. We were slow and it took us about 3 hrs to reach to the top. Almost 1 hr looking around and resting and about 2 hrs on the way down.
Photo of monastery from base. The little while thing in the mountain in the below photo is the monastery.

The real size is revealed as you get close to it.
There is a restaurant in the middle of the way to eat, but it is quite expensive at Rs.450 per head for a vegetarian buffet.
On the way back to the hotel, we bought bus tickets for the next day from Paro to Phuentsholing (Rs.220 per head) as there are only 2 morning buses daily. One is at 8.00 am which we took. Another costlier alternative is to hire a sharing taxi which can charge around Rs.600-Rs.800 per head (dont remember the exact figure) or hire a full cab for Rs.3200 or so.
We reached Phuentsholing bus station at 1 pm and booked the Bhutan bus to Siliguri from Phuentsholing for Rs.132 per head (yes, it is that cheap). The Bhutan bus is faster and reaches Siliguri in 3.5 hrs or so compared to Indian buses which start from Jaigoan (Indian side of Phuentsholing) and take over 5-6 hrs to reach Siliguri. Another costlier alternative is to hire prepaid taxis to Siliguri or Bagdogra. We had enquired on day 2 we while leaving Phuentsholing to Thimphu and they said the bus to Siliguri would start at 2pm. It was supposed to be a tight schedule from Paro but the departure bus timing (not sure if the time was revised) was 3 pm from Phuentsholing. We reached Siliguri at around 7 pm (post a tyre change enroute) and took a share auto to reach Sevoke Valley Residency hotel.

Day 7: Checked out of the hotel at around 12 pm, caught an auto (Rs.300) to Bagdogra airport and caught flight back to Hyderabad with layover at Kolkatta.

Some interesting things discovered about Bhutan:
There is only one traffic junction in Bhutan which is there in Thimphu. This is yet to have an automated traffic signal and there is a traffic police directing traffic at this one junction.
Television was introduced in Bhutan only in 1999.
Although notes above Rs.100 are forbidden to be taken or used in Bhutan, people arent against it as it helps them trade more easily with Indians across the border.
Indian currency works easily in Bhutan as the people want more of Indian currency and it costs the people to get Indian currency for buying things.
Archery is their national sport.
Terracotta Buddhist Vortive miniature stupas can be found a plenty in mountain crevices.

The culture of Buddhism does not allow killing of animals. But, the modernisation of the country is expanding non-vegetarianism.

The various key costs of our trip are as follows:
Flight                  - 26248
Road transport   -   8933
Food and drinks -   3200 (We did pack in quite a lot of ready to eat items for the journey)
Hotel           - 15065 (Hotel Sinchula: Rs.1240 (1 Night); Peaceful resort: Rs.8385 (2 N); Rema Resort: Rs.3780 (Paid for 1 Night although stayed here for 2 nights as the service was so bad I demanded refund of 1 night and I got it); Sevoke Valley Residency: Rs.1610 (1 N); Remaining tips)
Misc                           -  1247
Gift/items/Souveneirs-  3478
Total                          - 58171 (door to door from Hyd)

Hope this information helps all of you to make your own travel plans to visit and enjoy beautiful Bhutan.

Cheers.

P.S: Updated on 1 Apr 2016:
A good post on travel to Bhutan is mentioned in the below link which I have not covered.
http://blog.byond.travel/index.php/cocks-kings-an-honest-travel-companys-guide-to-bhutan/byond/

Thursday, September 27, 2012

5 ways to negotiate with a Hyderabadi autowala

1. Ask for sympathy (student, old age, lady, please, etc.)
2. Justify (small distance, no traffic, travelling to popular destination and hence sure another passenger, it is only day now, I travel daily at x costs)
3. Provoke/Insult them
4. Threaten (with policemen, act like a senior govt. bureaucrat, CBI officer, etc. - Anything to intimidate them to submission)
5. Default (after ride, pay what you think is right, not what they ask. Keep arguing with nothing to loose, they  understand the value of lost time in not transporting another passenger. Know that if things are going to get physical, there is that auto that can always be damaged with a stone throw.)

P.S: Do not use the methods in other places blindly. Each place has its own cultural norms, sensitivities and tolerances to things (like insults, default, etc.) Apply suitable method judiciously.

Sunday, July 1, 2012

Ideas that work

From storage space, household plant rental, at home dog grooming, drycleaning and doorstep car cleaning, sheesha delivery at home, at-home spa service (Delhi/NCR); dporstep post pickup & doorstep autorickshaw service (Pune); virtual personal assistant, packaged ready-to-cook food, midnight delivery and Laundry (Mumbai); Shoe laundry, at home haircuts/salon services and midnight delivery (Bangalore).
http://articles.economictimes.indiatimes.com/2012-06-03/news/31985596_1_iit-kharagpur-grocery-shopping-idea-entrepreneurs

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Mumbai is Happening!

Ever wondered what to do in Mumbai and not knowing what to do?
Ever wanted to try something new?
Want to just get out of boredom?
Wanted to meet new people sharing your interests and passions?
Mumbai provides you so many opportunities and at nominal prices.
All that is required from you is some effort to get off the couch and do something about it...

http://www.mumbaireadyreckoner.com/
http://www.thecityguide.in/Mumbai
http://www.mumbaihikers.org/
http://www.ignitemumbai.com/
http://mumbai.metblogs.com/2008/12/16/100-things-to-do-in-bombay/
http://www.couchsurfing.org/
http://www.mumbaikar.com/en
http://www.thecomedystore.in/
http://www.meetup.com/cities/in/mumbai/
http://www.bluebulb.in
http://www.mumbaifoodie.com/
http://www.mumbairestaurantmenus.info/
http://www.fullcontactchampionship.com/home.html
http://www.snmcpn.in/index.php
http://www.wtcmumbai.org/Venues_Exibitions.aspx
http://www.mumbaitheatreguide.com
Races at Mahalaxmi race course
http://mumbaiboss.com/2012/04/27/an-activity-centre-for-the-time-strapped/
http://mumbaiboss.com/
Plays: http://qtpthescript.blogspot.in/p/up-coming.html
Many a people say Mumbai is a happening place, now you know why!
If any of you know of more things, please do comment on this post.

Sunday, November 21, 2010

Apple school

Ad seen on a Breach Candy bus stop:
A great differentiator indeed! But is it secretly selecting only rich kids? Can an Apple enabled learner be better at studies?

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

The bikini and Godzilla



What does the beautiful bikini and the beasty Godzilla have in common?

Ans: A place called Bikini.

Bikini Atoll (also known as Pikinni Atoll) is an atoll in one of the Micronesian Islands in the Pacific Ocean, part of Republic of the Marshall Islands. 
Bikini Island is well-known for being the subject of nuclear bomb tests, and because the bikini swimsuit was named after the island in 1946. The two-piece swimsuit was introduced within days of the first nuclear test on the atoll, and the name of the island was in the news. Introduced just weeks after the one-piece "Atome" was widely advertised as the "smallest bathing suit in the world", it was said that the bikini "split the atome".

Between 1946 and 1958, twenty-three nuclear devices were detonated at Bikini Atoll, beginning with the Operation Crossroads series in the summer of 1946. The March 1st, 1954 detonation codenamed Castle Bravo, was the first test of a practical hydrogen bomb. The largest nuclear explosion ever set off by the United States, it was much more powerful than predicted, and created widespread radioactive contamination."Bravo had an explosive force equal to nearly 1,000 Hiroshima-type bombs. It vaporized the test island, parts of two other islands, and left a mile-wide crater in the lagoon floor. In total, nearly 70 acres of the Bikini Atoll were vaporized by the nuclear testing."
Among those contaminated were the 23 crewmembers of the Japanese fishing boat Lucky Dragon 5. The ensuing scandal in Japan was enormous, and ended up inspiring the 1954 film Godzilla, in which the 1954 U.S. nuclear test awakens and mutates the monster, who then attacks Japan before finally being vanquished by Japanese ingenuity.

A large majority of the Bikinians were moved to a single island named Kili as part of their temporary homestead, but remain there today and receive compensation from the United States for their survival.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bikini_Atoll

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

A strange sight


Guess what these people are doing....
Clue: "It happens only in India"  :P

Back with a bang

It has been ten days since I arrived in Mumbai and have taken time to set myself up. Finally decided to get the internet connection and got it. 

So far, in ten days, I have seen the best that Mumbai has to offer. Be it film stars, scenic skylines, business tycoons or sea link.
Will upload the best and strangest parts of Mumbai soon. :)

Sunday, January 24, 2010

The sinful path

Wall Street runs from Broadway to South Street. There's a church at one end and a graveyard at the other.
Don't you think the location is perfect.
lol
The bankers should either go and pray or get themselves killed for putting the world in a mess.

Thursday, May 7, 2009

Good to great to superb

It felt good to be back in Bangalore, it felt great to be back in Mumbai, but I think I would feel superb to be back in Manila.

Sunday, August 3, 2008

The road more travelled

BHAVNAGAR <--> AHMEDABAD Here are a few things you will see (if ever you do) when you travel on this highway..... Flamingos Some white birdie When was the last time you saw a horizon? Salt mountain Islands? Light through clouds Salt refinery People moving from one place to another

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Bhavnagar - Part 2

The houses here are Huge(yes, with a capital 'H'). There are so many of them(the whole city is of them) and are bigger than the bigger bungalows in Bangalore. The footpaths are not paved but are huge and once the city develops this will be the next Chandigarh(If you know what I mean). You will find a lot of brokerages here(Number of brokerages/sq.km in Bhavnagar > that in Bangalore). As there are no big industries (apart from diamond cutting) in the city, the development of this place is quite slow and almost everything eatable is imported from another major city. Bhavnagar is a 3hr drive from Ahmedabad and if you are lucky the roadtrip can be an experience to a wildlife sanctuary. I have seen a herd of camels and a Neelgai(deer)on the highway. My mom has once seen a tortoise cross the road(the sea is 20 km away and must have got washed away to this highway). There are a lot of upturned cows like the ones in the (Me, myself and Irene) after being hit by lorries in the night. I saw two upturned lorries on the highway(I dont know what they hit or what they tried to avoid hitting). So far, these have been my experiences in Gujarat and will post more on any new adventures/events I encounter when I travel to Amvabad(This is what Ahmedabad is called locally) again.

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Bhavnagar Part 1

Almost everything here in Bhavnagar is very different from that in Bangalore or even south India. Only stale news (not yesterday's but the day before's) comes in the Times of India newspaper. And there are no supplements(except for Times Life on sundays). Even the cartoon strips are repeated repeatedly. Nothing ever opens here before 11am. Right from the hair saloon to a restaurant/cart wheel food place. Slim milk(the cheapest) costs Rs.19/litre here and other varieties with fat cost even more considering the fact that Gujarat is a major milk producer in India. Everywhere around, everything is written in gujrati. The city roads here are made in a different way here. They dont lay 3.5 inch thick roads each time like in Bangalore and so there are no 4 inch deep potholes that will break the axle of your car or your vertebra of the back on your bike. Being a tier2/3 city, a few things are cheaper here. A visit to a good hi-fi barber costs Rs.25, whereas this would have cost me Rs.40 in Bangalore. The cost of pressing clothes is also cheaper here at 2 bucks an ordinary male dress piece.

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Exotic fruits cheaper than regular vegetables

Strange are the times in India. Stranger are the costs of the fruits and vegetables in Bhavnagar/Ahmedabad. The costs of a kg of the not so ordinary fruits like peach, litchi, apricot, plum, jamoon are cheaper or equal to cost to that of the cost of a kg of the usual vegetables. My mom is taking some real advantage of this situation. She went to the bazaar the other day and bought more of these exotic fruits (I have never before seen a real peach, apricot, litchi and green badam) than the vegetables. During my childhood days these fruits used to come up only in memory games and scrabble. So I have heard of them and never actually seen them. I started seeing their pictures of these only during the last 3 years in the tetra packs of the fruit juices being sold in the provision stores. And now when I open the fridge for a quick bite, I see peaches and litchis waiting for me. I used to fancy the strawberries and the litchies. But now after eating them, I feel that the ordinary fruits (Mango, grapes, musk melon, chikku) are better than these extra-ordinary fruits. There is a certain sourness about these fruits that I dont seem to like. But these fruits taste great in their flavours in the 1 litre fruit juice packs with a hell of a quantity of sugar added in them.

Sunday, June 22, 2008

Bangalore, buck up!

There is something in Ahmedabad which I have not found in Bangalore. Marts. Not food mart or mega-mart brands but hyper marts and mega marts. I had gone to the Star Bazar(Tata's) the other day and spent two hours shopping and looking around the store. It had two floors and contained everything from stationaries to groceries to electronic hair curls, from provisions to bakery to pram to clothes to wine glasses and what not. All under one roof. I was amazed to see the variety of items they possessed. I asked the store manager how many items they had. He replied about 50,000 to 60,000 items. I guess he meant 50,000 to 60,000 different types of items. And coming from a city like Bangalore where I used to shop regularly at Food World, I feel I have come from a small town to a real city.

Patiala's Pizza

While my parents were in Patiala, Punjab(a year and a half ago), there opened one of the first pizza outlets in the city. I dont remember whether it was a pizza hut or a pizza corner. Never mind. But within a few months of opening the shop, it closed down as there was no brisk business. In Punjab, a kulcha is a thick base of baked maida with a cooked potato topping and 6 pieces cost Rs.10/-. And when a fat (punjabi) lady sang "Kaun iss tandoor ko itna paisa dekhe kareedhega", the business of pizza got over.

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

End of days

There are only a few more days for me to stay in Banglore. The three things I am going to miss the most are 1. My friends and former colleagues, 2. FM Radio, 3. My bike. Alas, just when I had a steady life going out there with a steady job and same house with no shifting, here comes the biggest change in my life so far.