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Selina Binfield: Gap Year Images

Tom Medley White



Hi,

I'm Tom, and when I had to plan a constructive gap year at very short notice, Gap Guru amazingly managed to find me the perfect job in the perfect city, working in Bangalore.

Tom

 
 

Mysore

Tom Medley White: Gap Year Images A jam packed weekend! We left early on Saturday morning; Mysore is about a 4 hour drive from Bangalore. We stopped on the way for traditional South Indian breakfast, before stopping at Srirangapatna. This place, a few km from Mysore is a tourist hotspot, for Indians and foreigners alike. It is crammed with temples, mosques and ruins. It was once a huge fortress town, ruled by Tipu Sultan, but it fell to the British in 1799. First stop was at The Gumbaz, some way outside the town. It is the burial site of Tipu Sultan’s parents, and there are many other tombs there. After this was the bathing ghat on the river nearby. This was surrounded by a large (mostly tourist) market and a temple. We went for a spin in a boat out into the river (we were followed by some cows!) and swiftly moved to our next port of call, Daria Daulat Bagh, an ancient palace inhabited by Tipu Sultan. It is entirely painted with ornate murals from top to bottom, all of which are exquisite. There were also sketches of the area and of some of the notable figures at the time made by British soldiers inside. Sadly I couldn’t take any photos, and the entire building was under a kind of tent to protect it.

Next was Shweta Varahaswamy Temple, an ancient Hindu temple again surrounded by a bustling market. We spent a few hours in the zoo, which was a pretty depressing place. The animals were all looking rather shabby and unhappy, most of the enclosures were tiny. Similarly, the aquarium we visited later featured a large fish in a tank about four inches longer than its body. While the others didn’t seem to mind, I couldn’t really enjoy seeing the animals in this state, especially the tigers, who were kept in a row of cells smaller than the average bedroom, and the elephants, who had their legs chained up so they were on show to visitors during the day.After this we went to visit a friend of Hrishu, one of my friends, who has set up a school for slum girls in Mysore. She entertained us to tea, and we chatted away for a few hours, with the children chanting in the background. The school has only just been set up, and all the girls are very young, but for most of them it will be their home until they can get a job and get their own place. The girls stayed here for the night, and Hrishu and I headed off to find a hotel in the city, which was a pretty crummy place, but fine for just one night.

The next morning was spent in campus. The Mysore campus is for training only, and most employees will have spent their first few months here before joining a process. The campus is more like Butlins than a place to work. It has a multiplex cinema, three swimming pools, a bowling alley, a golf course, a cricket pitch, a climbing wall, courts for everything (including squash), and acres and acres of space. It makes the Bangalore campus look rather drab in comparison.After a session at the bowling alley, we headed off again, this time to the Brindavan Gardens at the base of the Krishnaraja Sagar Dam. These beautiful parks are almost symmetrical, and full to the brim with fountains and waterways, as well as beautiful foliage. It is also very clean (there are bins!), which is a nice change from the filthy parks in Bangalore. It did draw my attention to how spectacularly badly we do ‘water features’ in the UK, especially with regards to paddling. All the waterways (which are full of electric cables for the submerged glass lights) are full of children playing and sliding down the waterfalls. There are even changing rooms provided!

Next stop was the Biligiri Rangana Betta, a huge hill that dominates the horizon around Mysore. On the top is a large temple, and some spectacular views out over the city and the plains. Our final stop was at Mysore Palace, which is lit by thousands of lightbulbs every Sunday night. The palace grounds are very crowded with tourists, with a notably high number of Americans (all of whom seem to dress in the same way: sarongs, long messy hair, beards (men only)). After the show was over we headed back to Bangalore, stopping on the way back at a seedy looking restaurant which served some surprisingly good food. We finally got back at about 2am, thoroughly worn out! I’ll be going back to Mysore in two weeks, with the gappers, hopefully we won’t be doing too many of the same things!