We were two long days on the road (including some stops to
visit field trials) to get from Bhagalpur in Bihar, India to Jaynagar (Janakpur)
in Dhanusha, Nepal. It would have been
shorter if we’d not needed to detour to find a land crossing which would
process our (non-Indian, non-Nepalese) passports.
On the way we slept at Siliguri, in north eastern West
Bengal: the “chicken neck” of India, in a very fancy hotel – it was a welcome
respite after the cockroaches – and the hot shower was wonderful when we
arrived at almost midnight. We’d been
delayed on the way by bad traffic (we covered 30km in 2 hours) for which there
was no obvious reason. It was a major
news story the next day that a train which had been lost in Bihar for 17 days (!!!)
had been found – perhaps finding it disrupted traffic? It was either that or the storm breaking
spectacularly overhead.
It was much easier to leave India than to enter it, though,
unlike the last border crossing, the Indian border guards were officious and
stopped us taking photos (the Nepalese border and gate were much more
impressive than the Indian one, and there we were able to take all the photos
we wanted!).
Indian border in the distance
After presenting our passports at emigration and getting our
Indian visas cancelled we drove across the border to Nepalese immigration and
compulsory Ebola screening. I thought it
particularly unlikely that anyone would be able to get to this remote border
post before being incapacitated by Ebola, but if the guards are going to be
officious about something I’d rather it was Ebola checking than
photo-repression J
Crossing into Nepal
Gate from Nepal back into India
We then discovered that one of our two cars wasn’t
registered to be driven in Nepal. After
a bit of a delay we were able to hire a second one to drive us to Jaynagar –
there were a surprising number (10+) of cars at the border, waiting to pick up
jobs.
Waiting for action at the Nepal border post
Initially we drove through a short area of tea plantations
and silviculture – mainly eucalypts again.
Mature trees are grown in the tea plantations for shade, and the mature
tea trees are grown to about hip height, with dark leaves below and bright
green fresh young tips waiting to be picked on top. It’s odd to see such small mature trees.
Tea plantations from the car
We then came out onto the terai country and drove west
across the broad sweeping plains, often with mountains off to the distance in
the north. River beds were very wide,
but few had flowing water – most fill rapidly after rainfall in the mountains
and subside again just as quickly.
Terai plains
We passed a funeral procession – presumably of a very
respected man; there were several hundred people in the procession.
The hearse
It’s interesting to be in Nepal – it’s very similar to India
and at the same time distinctly Not India.
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