


We all had to take off our shoes before entering the main part of the house boat. The shoes are all kept on a rack in the front - verandah - of the boat. 'Bari te porar choti rakha chilo' for those who wanted to use some footwear inside the boat. Not required really since the entire boat had wall-to-wall carpetting.
'Josh dekh, babi chobi tul che - tara tari kheye nao!' Of course Josh could not be bothered and had to literally force fed here as well. This is a view of the verandah - a fantastic place to hang out and watch the Dal Lake and the rest of the house boats. As one sits, shikaras with chaps hawking literally everything from eggs, bread, jewellery, soft drinks, hard drinks (yes, and they shout 'hard drinks'!), kashmiri souvenirs, clothes - literally everything!
This guy had a studio on the shikara complete with the Kashmiri dress and plastic flowers. Photos would be delivered in a few hours at your house boat.
This is the front view of Teheran taken from a shikara. Teheran, Mr Ghulam claims, is often requisitioned by the J&K Government for state visits.
For those of my good friends who are wondering what the loo is like, here it is. Now please do not ask me about the plumbing since I did not ask the owner. I assume that it would be similar to a normal house since the house boats do not sail. They just stay tethered to the shore and thus all facilities including electricity are shore-based. I was scared to ask about the plumbing since if they told me they dump it into the lake, I might not want to stay there any longer!
They had 24hrs running hot water and mixer and handshower et al. Pretty clean stuff.
A word about the Dal Lake. The Dal Lake is one crowded place with over 950 house boats. There must be at least 5000 shikaras on it. The place is buzzing with activity since thankfully, tourism is looking up now. The Shankaracharya Ghat and all the other ghats around the Lake were also busy with day trippers taking joy rides etc. A typical tourist destination.
Post-militancy, Kashmiris seem to be indulging in tourism with a vengeance. I tried to engage the locals in conversation and asked them about the security situation and all were unanimous - some too obviously so - in that there was no trouble and tourism was doing well. The stone pelters it seems avoid the tourist areas since any impact on tourism will have a negative impact on them.
So much for now...more follows.
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