Father Graham surfs the 4-stroke in search of Truth (generally in India, but other places are permitted too)

Sunday, March 05, 2006

Come into my shop Sir, I give you very good price...

Apologies for being AOL for the last month, but I do have a good excuse - I have been beavering away like a beavering beaver – doing my Microsoft qualifications. I am now a Certified Microsoft Systems Engineer, and also certified well and truly insane. (They’re coming to take me away, haha!). Its been a long journey from Textile Desiner to Network Engineer. Who would have thought it? Not me. Fuk, it was hard work I can tell you. Anyway, it means that I am now fully qualified to break customer’s networks, whereas before I was doing it all by myself.

The Bullet has been sold to one Mr. Greg New (who also did the MCSE with me). What a lucky bastard he is - his journey through India is just beginning as mine comes to an end. And of course he has the lovely Carmen. A “very good price” was agreed upon, and of course, business was conducted over a few cups of chai (“come into my shop Sir, I give you very good price…”). I have her for one more ride from Panjim, down to the beach that will be my residence for the next week.

And then back to England’s fair shores – and, best of all, my English Rose.

C u all soon
G x x x

Saturday, January 14, 2006

New Indian photos are there...!

check out the latest photos over on msn
http://spaces.msn.com/members/grahamdoyle/PersonalSpace.aspx?_c01_photoalbum=showdefault&_c=photoalbum

Saturday, December 24, 2005

A Christmas Paradise and the Indian Free Market

Everyone knows that a thing is worth what someone is prepared to pay for it. But knowing and experiencing are two things. If you want a to see the economics of supply and demand at full tilt, come to Goa at Christmas time.

Bamboo beach huts double in price at this time of year and double again if you want to enjoy a cool beer from your own veranda while you watch the sunset over the ocean. The tourist season here lasts 6 months at best, and these two weeks are the prime opportunity for local business owners to recoup their profits and repay their debts to the loan sharks.

At Palolem beach, we are staying in the same cozy little courtyard of beach huts that we stayed in 4 years ago. Kiran recognized us the moment we strolled in (me with standard-issue-shaven-nonce and motorcycle gear), and we are once more the best of friends. We are the privileged benefactors of his ‘special price’ only reserved for life long friends. There is no doubt that he is one of the most genuine people we have met in India, but we are under no illusions that the reason we pay a good price is because we are tucked away in a little courtyard away from the beach – and because we got in just before the festive crowds descended.

Kiran and his brothers, together with a lot of hired help have to dismantle all the huts every April just before the monsoon spills out, only to rebuild them all again after the skies let go their torrent. As his huts lay 50 meters back from the sea, the monsoon washes away all the sand, and every year he employs 50 people (women) to carry bags of sand from the beach until the 20 x 40 meter enclosure is replenished to a depth of 50 or 60 centimeters.

As we have become more familiar wit the price of things in India over the last few years, it’s all the more baffling to rediscover an encapsulated sub-economy in Goa’s beaches, with a whole new set of rules. Of course, one must not forget that pale pot bellied Englishman can still easily afford a quadruple-priced room. And so, confusion reigns - a thing is affordable, nay a bargain by home standards; but it brings with it a slight residue of that feeling you get when you return to the empty spot where you parked your car, before you ate out in Peckham.

On Boxing Day we have planned our escape from the Goa party scene. We will retreat further, to Agonda, which must be the quietest beach in Goa. There is very little development - just a couple of small guesthouses and a few small bamboo beach shacks. In 5 years it too will be overrun with the bamboo party brigade, but for now it remains a little piece of paradise.

And what price paradise? Well there are some cheap sand-floored shacks on the beach, but as middle age approaches we are more attracted to a new strata of lodgings. So we will pay 1500 Indian Rupees for a room with a view. I have never in my life paid Rs 1500 for a room. But hey, to you and me its twenty quid.

I try to convince myself that it’s a bargain, (the price includes 3 meals a day you know). I congratulate myself that my savvy business acumen has triumphed. But there is precious little to negotiate with - this is Goa at Christmas time. This, my friend, is the economics of supply and demand – expertly administered with a grin on its face.

And now for the bowels. As a youngster I could never understand older people’s obsession with their bodily functions, particularly the bowels. I have vivid memories of long hours spent squatting over an empty bowl at Nana Doyle’s, while the importance of regularity was hammered into me from the other side of the bathroom door.

“But Nana, I went last night, honestly”
“Ah, but my dear child, if you don’t go every morning, it means that you’re constipated! You can’t move until you go!”

When one was a whippersnapper, everything worked of its own accord, with out interference. But as the years progress and the girth increases, the need for intervention augments. It’s amazing how the generations repeat themselves, and with 35 years under my belt, the time has come for me to take my place in bowel forum. And so, for your exclusive pleasure, the details now flow.

Day 1 – operations continue as normal
Day 2 – dosa for breakfast, dal for dinner, but the sphincter is unyielding
Day 3 – a diet of Indian pure veg, no movements, and the stomach gains some girth
Day 4 – same diet, no movements, and the stomach gains mass and firmness
Day 5 – managed to squeeze out a few rock-solid pellets
Day 6 – mild relief
Day 7 – the sphincter tightens again…
Day 8 – still no movements. Meanwhile those near me squit the night away
Day 9 – squeezed out a few small pellets and nearly ripped something inside
Day 9 – discovered ‘SAT-ISABGOL’ (an industrial strength Indian high-fibre concoction) and administered the maximum recommended dosage. Still no movements
Day 10 - administered double the recommended dosage, Still no movements
Day 11 - administered quadruple the recommended dosage, Still no movements
Day 12 - administered 8 times the recommended dosage. Such sweet relief
Day 13 (Christmas Eve) –normal operations are resumed

And amid all of the above, somewhere around day 3, one Enfield Bullet 350 was purchased in Bombay. the same Bullet has been riden to Goa, and will continue to act as our carriage henceforth. Further reports will follow for those interested parties, but for for the time being, you are spared the bike porno.

Al that remains is to wish you all a most economical Christmas and firm (but not too firm) New Year. And most important of all - never stop giving each other plenty of that special loving :)

Your very own Mister Graham (with Mistress Caroline)

Tuesday, November 08, 2005

Spiritual quote of the day

"Happiness is a choice that requires effort at times"
Anonymous

Monday, November 07, 2005

here's what happened last time... (fotos from April)

G-Boy and Mistress C


Its game on - Caro's flights are booked too :) Here we go...

Saturday, November 05, 2005

Father Graham rides again

Hoorah!!! My flights are booked for a 3rd trip back to the beautiful land of dosa :D

Leaving 6th December, coming back 15th March.

Oh yes my fellow seekers of Truth, there is more to be found, so much more. But wait, what's that I hear from the back? “Why don’t you stop being a boring middle-aged git and go somewhere new for a change?”

Well, what can I say? A seeker of truth must go to the source. And so it shall be. Watch this space, and ye shall see the reasons unfurl before your very eyes!

Saturday, April 16, 2005

Blow it all...

Darn it and blow it all: it takes too much time just chillin' and pottering about on a Bullet to be spending any unneccessary time on these blasted computers!

What a silly idea this journal was. You can all all hear about it and see the pics when we get home. We'll try not to gloat too much, promise :-D

Until then, I have only this to say: masala dosa, rava dosa, special dosa, yum yum yum, thali, thali, yummy yum, put-put-Bullet, put-put-Bullet, put-put-Bullet --- breathe, and reee-lax. You do this one thing: what is your good name Sir? Mileage? Mileage? Lighty lighty! You are from? Your country? Dust, dust, cough-cough-spittle. Chia-chai, masala chai, veg, veg, dibble and grub. Squirty-squirt, poo-ey-poo poo. Meeels, meeeeels! Rice-a, rice-a, idly, idly, oo-oo-oo-oooothapam-a-go-go. And the waves come rolling in as they have always done and always will do; and the red red sun sets over the distant mountains as it always has done and always will do - at least, that is since Shiva or Krishna or someone puked-up the sea and the mountains and the sun, or however it all happened in the first place, I can't quite remember that bit of the Maharabatta very well: only those arrows flying endlessly through the sky at the enemy's camp, in the cartoon from my childhood. And the lonely moon keeps quiet vigil over the little little world while the red red sun goes to bed-beddy byes. And if anyone gets that little monologue entirely, I suggest you seek medical help immediately, for you are sick, my friend, oh yes... Meanwhile, I prefer to pay no mind to what it says about me, for I am immersed in it. But what does it all mean? Well, for goodness sake, don't ask me - I'm on holiday!

C U soon. x x

Tuesday, March 29, 2005

Hotmail is Shitemail

Pete was right it seems - I can't get hotmail to work anywhere in the land of cow chappaties - please use grahamdoyle at gmail dot com while I am away...

Sunday, March 27, 2005

Je suis arrive...

Helo seekers! Je suis arrive...

All is well, but totally wiped out by the 4 day journey and 2 years of mentalistic work. Now chilling in the Palace Estate in the Coorg region in southern Karnataka. Visiting Old haunts makes for a civilised and easy-going lifestyle alright, and the hills afford a comfortable climate. Looking forward to a good night's sleep sometime soon... Picked up Pete's Enfield and starting to familiarise myself with it. Ah, the joy of 2 wheels is mine again.

Haven't come across much Truth yet, but I'm sure its round 'ere somewhere! More soon dudes!

Graham. x

Saturday, March 12, 2005

Back on the road... soon come India again

HA!
Don't go expecting any enlightened morsels in this episode, oh my spiritual seekers: your Father's brain is fried! Fried I tell you! He has been busy drowning in the mill of human bondage, and now back to India to figure out what the f**k went wrong since the last time... Now, where's that birch cane?