Anyone who has used that comforting phrase "a nice cup of tea" invariably means Indian tea. ~George Orwell


Archive for the ‘Charms of Darjeeling’ Category

Snow Leopard Tea Dreaming of a peach.

Wednesday, July 9th, 2008

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Vintage photo of the Darjeeling tea train

Monday, July 7th, 2008

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Trains of India!

Monday, July 7th, 2008

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This is going to be a collection of my favorite trains…. Limited or Unlimited! This bejeweled buxom lady is known as the “Palace on wheels”

George Orwell’s classic essay on Indian tea

Thursday, February 14th, 2008

A Nice Cup of Tea
by George Orwell
Evening Standard, 12 January 1946

Read the original that has the B.B.C. honoring him as the King of Indian tea.

Victorian India, daughters of Ganesh

Thursday, February 14th, 2008
Victorian India All honor goes out to the Victorian Era woman who sculpted the tea world of Darjeeling today. Those strange times between The scepter of the Queen and the thunder and lightening of Shiva.

Pictorial Art and the Indian Ethos

Thursday, February 14th, 2008

by Usha Bande

excerpt:

Spectrum, India Tribune

In colonial India, calendar art was not an indigenous popular art form but a hybrid style produced for British patrons and the Anglicised Indian elite. It denoted the westernisation of taste of the bourgeois Indians and the modification of a foreign medium to suit the Indian style. The credit for popularising calendar art and taking his paintings to the masses goes to Ravi Varma (1848-1906), the painter-artist from the royal household of the Travancore state of Kerala. An artist par excellence, Ravi Varma was the first Indian painter to master the technique of western oil painting. He also set up one of the earliest lithographic presses in India. These presses reproduced Varma’s mythological paintings by the thousands. These reproductions reached Indian homes across the vast span of the land but at a massive cost to his art.

Some of the early calendars demonstrate his graceful portraits of goddess Lakshmi, the lithe Shakuntala, the beautiful Damayanti and the harassed Sahirhandri hiding her eyes from the gaze of Keechak. But unfortunately, the paintings became the objects of the erotic gaze and his art became synonymous with kitsch. During the freedom struggle, the common motifs were of mother India and the traditionally accepted mother-son duo of Yashoda-Krishna.

Calendar representation has undergone rapid change over the years. It is now a popular art form as well as an advertising medium of sorts. Apart from religious icons and mythological figures, new and more patriotic and secular themes are displayed on calendars. Large establishments like banks, insurance corporations, big corporate houses and airways, and even central and state governments have entered the field. Though religious themes are still in popular demand, depictions of Indian textiles, folk arts and crafts, and places of tourist interest are also gaining ground.

During the 60s, popular calendar displays pertained to the slogan Jai Jawan, Jai Kisan. Pictures of farmers and lush green fields formed the foreground or there was the Army in action with Patton tanks in the backdrop. Portrayals of dams and some industrial establishments and other sites of progress were also trendy. The secular topics present themes of unity and the equality of all religions. To emphasise this theme, some calendars portray men and women wearing different state costumes or people with different religious affiliations standing within a map of India with a lamp burning in the middle. The lamp is symbolic and may well refer to Cardinal Newman’s famous poem, so liked by Gandhiji, “Lead Kindly Light, amid the encircling gloom.”

Rolling boulders not stones. The true tales of carousing salubrious wild Indian Pachyderms. Ganesh must blush!

Thursday, February 14th, 2008

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Tea Paparazzi have spotted however the itinerant native wild elephant neighbors bootlegging for grog and beer.

 

More than a few of the powerful “Pachyderms” roaming wild have been known to go carousing for spiritual journey of their own where they nose about in hot pursuit of purely what I call “Darjeeling Moonshine” They litterally throw their wieght around like wild pirates, barging in here and there right through walls and drink up the tea garden workers home made basmati sake or beer. Giving new meaning to being a “nose” in the tea business! I hope they are over 21!

Apparently they are just crazy for Tea Garden basmati sake and they wantonly wander in search of the pure spirits! I wonder if salubrious elephants chant about Ganesh slurping sake! The carousing of these wild elephants can cost Tea Estate owners millions of rupees in tea garden insurance to protect and insure the peace of mind for tea garden work forces. It is hard not to giggle. The Darjeeling Tea Lady will be providing surprising and delicous local recipes such as “mo mo’s” Nepalese spicy dumplings and perhaps some basmatic spirits surely they delight and sing tea songs after a long week of tea plucking!

Wild rolling boulders not stones… Sloshed elephants actually are quite a serious disorderly bunch. In other parts of India they can cause quite a traffic jam. How do you give an elephant a DUI when he takes a nap right in the middle of traffic?

Oh what tales the modern day “Mowgli” of Rudyard Kipling would see. To give a gander to the rolling emerald tea fields of green leaves. Dont get me started on the tale of the girl raised by wild elephants…. Apparently she might just have thrown Jane and Tarzan quite a Bombay gin! A film showing here in a local deli featuring Banglore T.V. Simply a true story above shared with me of real life tale of my beloved caravan carriers of the Raj and Rajini elephants.

The bigger the elephant the bigger the insurance Tea Garden owners much pay to protect the tea ladies from drunk as a skunk and elephant trunk!

Better they should seek peace and enligtenment drinking fresh tea.


 

Cha Su Ma, Yak Butter Tea Blog

Sunday, January 6th, 2008
There is a great blog called “ChaSuMa” all about Tibetan culture. I like to take a moment to sip the metaphorical Cha Su Ma, this blog is great. It talks about “Talking up a storm, on the roof top of the world”

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Here is a description of their blog

Cha su ma

Cha su ma is one of the names for Butter Tea, the traditional Tibetan drink usually made from Yak butter.

Danba

Danba lies in the eastern border of Ganzi Tibet Autonomous Region, within western Sichuan.

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The county varies tremendously in altitude, from 5,820 meters of the highest peak, to  1,700 meters of the lowest river valley. The Big Jinchuan and Small Jinchuan Rivers meet here, marking the start of the Dadu River.

Danba’s landscape is vertically changing, from snow mountains, glaciers, to grasslands and valleys.

Cha Su Ma says…

“There are already many blogs about Tibetan culture, Tibetan freedom, Tibetan religion. The sole purpose of this blog is to raise an awareness of Tibet, with each article containing some interesting fact for visitors to take away, story to share, or picture to save. Ranging from folktales to Buddhist philosophy, tsampa to chupas, oppression to freedom. I wish to remain impartial in all areas, giving the facts as I understand them, not as I want them to be. Please feel free to comment, contend and discuss. It’s why I’m here.”

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Esoteric time travelling through Tea….

Saturday, November 24th, 2007

Darjeeling - The Victorian Charm

Himalaya Tour Packages

Tea Plants grown in DarjeelingDarjeeling is the Queen of India’s hill stations. Its setting is one of incomparable beauty. A Victorian town of old world charm ‘discovered’ by the British, it is almost completely surrounded by fragrant tea gardens which seem to flow over the layered slopes like emerald swells on a rough sea. These are in turn interspersed by untamed jungle of Fern and Bamboo, groves of sweet smelling Coniferous trees and hamlets lost and which may be the finest this earth has to offer, It hits one like Darjeeling’s true name, “Dorje Ling”, or ‘Place of the Thunderbolt’.

Part Victorian holiday resort, part major tea-growing centre, Darjeeling straddles a ridge 2,200m up in the Himalayas and almost 600-km north of Kolkata. Its been more than 50 years since the British departed, still the town remains as popular as ever with holiday-makers from the plains, and promenades such as the Mall and the Chowrasta still burst with life.

Darjeeling is a fascinating tourism place rich in natural beauty and surrounded by the Buddhist monasteries. Its beauty surpasses any other hill station of India.

Maps of Tea terrain, People of Darjeeling…

Saturday, November 24th, 2007

visit Sikkimover view of India



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