Road Trip II . . . with Chocolate for Breakfast!

Imagine, if you can, the taut thrill of navigating a slalom course behind the wheel of a finely-crafted sports car. Revel in the snug caress and rich aroma of the sleek leather driver’s seat and the surge of power as you shift up and down through six high-strung gears, the slightest flick of your wrist weaving the car around the barriers. Arumai, as we say in Tamil! (Awesome!) Okay, now imagine that slalom course in a more plebeian Maruti Suzuki Ertiga, its stubby minivan prow bucking the wind, canting side to side as if plunging down a series of class IV whitewater rapids, and straining to hit the maximum highway speed limit in India, a hefty 100kmph (or about 60mph). A bit deflating, right?

But wait, lets add in a few complications: on our two-lane slalom course from Chennai to Pondicherry, we have dawdling three-wheeled autorickshaws courteously hugging the margin but still on the pavement; two-wheeled scooters and motor bikes efficiently carrying a family of five or a load of live goats (yes, several in cages both in front and in back . . . okay they were small goats but still); and the occasional bicycle or a picturesque oxcart loaded with 8 foot fluorescent tubes and even solo walkers on foot graciously bearing a stack of bricks on their head, all exerting their right to the asphalt pavement. More of a challenge, right?

Goats on the road . . . okay this shot is in the middle of Chennai but you get the idea!

But don’t forget the napping or trotting dogs and the herds of mindless goats and, even better, the strategically placed cow that pops up in the middle of the road like a penny arcade duck. (You better never hit one!!) And if that’s not a high enough difficulty level, let’s toss in a few metal police barricades placed as if by the spiteful child of a giant and narrowing the road to a single lane . . . in total. . . with no seeming rhyme or reason. And did you think there would be warning signs and painted lane guides or maybe some flashing lights? Silly you. The difficulty level just climbed some more, didn’t it?

Okay, now our racing game is getting tense, but the best is yet to come: Not only are you navigating that slalom course, but so are all the other cars and buses and lorries following you, all of whom seem to think you’re going way too slow, so it’s a nail-biter to decide if you should overtake that oxcart in front of you or if you should let the bus that looks like it saw WWII and whose banshee horn has been spiking your adrenaline for several minutes go ahead and squeeze around you. Enough? Hardly. This slalom course is even more special: all the cars and lorries and buses headed toward you are also competing on their very own special slalom course—and your car is getting in their way!

Get the picture? Now you can grasp the joy of our three hour trip from Besant Nagar to Pondicherry–it’s now called Puducherry–a journey of 148 km or about 90 miles so, that’s right, an average speed of about 30 mph! Nearly constant overtaking and heart-numbing close calls every other minute . . . now you know why we will NEVER EVER enter our car without our driver, Mani, who handled the slalom course with aplomb while explaining Indian history and culture and the millions of Hindu gods and teaching us Tamil and getting a kick out of our flat midwestern accent–“Oh, sir, do you mean ‘when?’ You say it so long and slow like you are singing the words like ‘waaaaaayyyynnnnn’ so I don’t understand your English . . . .” Point made!

Scrumptious room at Palais de Mahe
Old style brass key about 12cm long!

But what better way to unwind those nerves than to fall in love with the Palais de Mahe, a heritage hotel in the heart of Pondy. Only about a dozen rooms that combined French colonial flair with contemporary details, a cafe on the ground floor that flanked the compact pool, and a full restaurant wide open to the elements on all sides but covered (so we could watch the Diwali fireworks) on the second/top floor along with a bar—yes, a bar! Can you say first gin and tonics in a long while?

The cafe by the pool at Palais de Mahe, perfect for another cappuccino or a smoothie while reading and listening to the rain
Cappuccino at Cafe des Arts where a lovely couple from Oxfordshire began stalking us

The two days in Pondy were awash in gray and mist and drizzle, so not many photo opportunities, but plenty of shopping and cappuccino and dinner delights. For our first evening, our friend and travel blogger, Swapnil Midha, had made a reservation for us at The Promenade Hotel’s Bay of Buddha rooftop restaurant where she knew the chef. Sadly, the weather caused them to close that venue so we went to the hotel bar to wait for a table at the hotel’s BlueLine restaurant inside. As soon as we ordered our first gin & tonic, another couple (from Oxfordshire, England) sat down next to us at the bar and we struck up a conversation that led us to enjoy dinner together where they admitted to noticing us at the Cafe des Arts earlier in the day–“stalking” was their word. All in all, it was a delightful dinner where the chef paid us a visit to apologize for the closure and where we tried our first Indian wine, a Sauvignon Blanc that was quite lovely, especially at Rs500 a bottle (7.50 USD!!).

Next morning, we met up with Roshan, our Storytrails guide, for the French Connections Trail, a two hour guided walk (including a starter of filter coffee, yum!) explaining the French colonial history of Pondicherry. Even in the drizzle and starting at 7:30am, the tour was a wonderful way to learn so much about the city and India. Did you know that, although India gained its independence from Britain in 1947, Pondy, being a French colony, only joined India officially in 1963 and is still a separate “Union Territory,” which is rather like the District of Columbia? (We also learned about a Raja who was so embarrassed when he praised, unwittingly, the stunning architecture of a bordello, that he ordered it razed . . . )

Sarah discovers another shop with lovely artifacts in Pondy . . . and I explained what a lakh and a crore were (many zeros and many many many zeros!)

But the highlight of our stay in Pondy was receiving a blessing from Lakshmi, the elephant, at the Vinayagar (Ganesha) Temple. Simply place a coin in her outstretched trunk and she lightly touches your head to give her thanks and a blessing. Truly a unique experience and her gaze was so penetrating–next time I’ll get a better photo of that intense communication. We then walked through the temple and Mani explained the different representations and styles of Ganesha and we received a few more blessings from the priests as well as sitting and listening to the Indian flute and tabla players’ music echo through the gleaming space. An inspiring visit.

Lakshmi the elephant at the Ganesha Temple in Pondy doing her swaying dance

We then headed to Auroville–only about 12 km–where the community’s “. . . purpose . . . is to realize human unity,” and where we confirmed what the website notes: it is definitely not a breeze-through spot for tourists and intentionally so. While we knew it was a wide open area, we didn’t realize the distances between, say, the Visitors’ Center, and the Matrimandir, the heart of the community. (Sorry, but I must admit–to my embarrassment–I envisioned something like Colonial Williamsburg where vehicular access was restricted but where everything was, well, within sight and easy walking distance.) We learned some good lessons about the genuine pace and spirit of Auroville, where life is slow and natural, and simplicity is honored above “creeds, politics, and nationalities.” More importantly we learned or confirmed some truths about ourselves.

Yep, we are too old to stay in a guesthouse (not one of the official Auroville Guesthouses) that needs two exterior flights of rough-carved stone stairs at a pitch that suggests the need for pitons and belaying ropes; that has about 15 watts of light in each of the rooms (we had the family suite); that has no hot water; that requires kneeling down to shower; that, when one asks what time dinner will be served, gives a response of “Not sure. May not be dinner tonight.” Okay, what about breakfast? You guessed it.

A quaint Auroville guesthouse welcome . . . but . . .
Spirit-harboring trees line the paths at Auroville
Lovely handmade crafts and artworks at the Auroville Visitors Center

At any rate, we did discover a pair of delightful restaurants just down the Auroville Main Road: Tanto, an Italian bistro, and Bread & Chocolate, recently opened by the well known Mason & Co chocolatiers in Auroville, and quite possibly one of the best breakfast/lunch spots we’ve ever enjoyed. Consider the morning pleasure of perfect coffee and a crusty European sourdough drizzled with olive oil and shaved, dark chocolate with a side ramekin of honey . . . yep, a nirvana called Il Buli!

We were also delighted at how quickly folks connected with us: one lady, a child psychologist with a practice on the ECR in Chennai, left her party to sit with us over our pizza at Tanto and another, a woman close to our age who had dropped out and was now making jewelry as a member of the community, who chatted with us over breakfast at Bread & Chocolate. (It turns out we missed Marc’s Cafe, just a few hundred meters down the road . . . his coffee is magnificent and we took his “Coffee 101” class at Nicobar last weekend . . . and boy is that another story!)

Gazing out from Bread & Chocolate, European metro for the palate, but set in the Auroville simplicity.
Sarah votes yes for Bread and Chocolate–can you guess she loves that mug?
And I concur . . . heck yeah!

So, all in all, a flavorful and relaxing road trip, with only minor skirmishes as we–Mani–leveled up with another heady run through the return slalom course to our home. But as we drove down our street, we automatically looked for Walter, our teru nai–street dog–who consistently sleeps right in the middle of the road, and we realized there was no sign of him. For the next four days, sadly, still no sign–and the fraternity of watchmen and even the ironing man across the street had no idea what had happened to him. Our attachment surprised us by how much we missed the bedraggled old fellow, and I wondered if he had been insulted by my too formal a name for him and simply moved on.

But the story has a happy ending as I happened one afternoon to glance out our front window—I was actually hoping (wishing) to see him even after so long—and there he was, skinny as a whippet and limping painfully, but trotting with decided focus down the street. It turns out that, with the thousands of crackers that are constantly exploding over the few days around Diwali, the Hindu Festival of Lights, many of the street dogs take refuge at the nearby Arupadai Murugan Temple down by a quieter section of the beach (where the horses hang out), and where the crackers are fewer and less intrusive. Anyway, we ran out and fed him and gave him water and the folks across the street have now provided a blanket for him in their carport as Northeast Monsoon season has now hit Chennai–but that, as you can guess, will be another story.

Welcome home, Walter.

Our teru nai, Walter, before he disappeared

Next up, we head to Dubai for a few days. But in the meantime, I explored the Thiruvanmiyur wholesale veg market and, as noted, Sarah and I both gained coffee enlightenment with Marc Tormo’s Coffee 101 class at the new Nicobar boutique up in the tony Nungambakkam neighborhood. Stay tuned . . .

Author: David Hassler

David M. Hassler was fortunate enough to have become a relatively rare male Trailing Spouse when his talented wife Sarah accepted a job teaching music in the elementary division of the American International School in Chennai, India, in 2017. His role included, for more than three years there, serving as her everything wallah, but also allowed him time for exploring, discovering, and sharing new places, new faces, and new tastes around Chennai, throughout south India, and beyond. When the pandemic arrived, Sarah retired and they moved to Lisbon, Portugal, where they continue to live and love life. David M. Hassler is a long-time member of the Indiana Writers Center Faculty and holds an MFA from Spalding University. His work has been published in Maize and the Santa Fe Writers' Project. He served as a Student Editor for The Louisville Review and as Technical Editor for Writing Fiction for Dummies. He is currently the Fiction Editor for Flying Island, an online literary journal. He is co-author of Muse: An Ekphrastic Trio, and Warp, a Speculative Trio, and future projects include A Distant Polyphony, a collection of linked stories about music and love, memories and loss; and To Strike a Single Hour, a Civil War novel that seeks the truth in one of P T Barnum's creations. He is a founding partner in Boulevard Press.

21 thoughts on “Road Trip II . . . with Chocolate for Breakfast!

  1. David, you are a wonderful writer! Jim and I are truly enjoying your blogs and learning about life in your part of India. The people you meet and the flexibility on your part to adjust to this environment makes for a great story. What an experience. Not exactly the same when you lived across the street from us!
    Hugs to you both!
    Carlyn Moyer

  2. Once again a mesmerizing account as the adventure continues. You are whetting my appetite for a trip to India.

    Jodi

  3. I really can’t add anything to what has already been said. I so enjoy your stories. Always look forward to them. Thanks for taking the time to write these wonderful stories and take the very interesting pictures.
    Patti W.

  4. Oh David and Sarah!! The places you go and how you share them: wonderful, awesome, inspiring, connecting! Thanks for inviting us to your experience through masterful storytelling and captivating pictures. Gerry and I love your posts…feel like we’re with you through all of it. Thank you so much!!!

  5. Loving living vicariously through your adventures! Life is quite normal here. No goats in the street. I see a book in your future … a film adaptation … possibilities galore. I do have one question: is that a Photography Prohibited sign on the wall in the background of the photo of Sarah in the shop???

    1. No goats? What’s become of the neighborhood? Actually, I thought the sign said “Photography Exhibited” . . . okay, the owner was standing next to me when I snapped the shot with my iPhone . . . yeah, that’s the ticket!

  6. Can’t think of a better way to spend a rainy Sunday afternoon in Indy than to escape through you and Sarah into a world we can’t wait to visit for ourselves. Sitting here with a Graycliff, a Stella and a Stout-casked brandy warming my heart almost as much as your stories. Going to endeavor to persevere and attempt Il Buli next weekend! Thinking of you two often and looking forward to the next installment. Safe travels and joy.
    Namaste,
    Geo

  7. Nandri! I miss those stogie and Stella afternoons. But we look forward to sharing Idli and sambar and masala dosa and kurma and kuttu and so many spicy delights with you and Karen when you make it to the subcontinent. Wish I could send you some Mason & Co chocolate for your Il Buli! Namaste.

  8. David, it was great to meet you and Sarah at the Promenade and share dinner and Indian Sauvignon with you. And a great read your adventures make. Our trip back from Pondicherry was a very similar slalom experience. In addition, it was dark and our driver had the distraction of a friend in the passenger seat who he constantly talked to in a very even tone. We got there in one piece and were further amazed at his control of the accelerator when he got out of the car barefoot !!! We really enjoyed getting to know Pondicherry and will follow your further adventures with interest.

    1. Great to hear from you, David! I’m glad you and Alison survived your slalom course back from Pondy. At least our driver wears shoes! As I said, Sarah and I thoroughly enjoyed chatting with you folks over dinner and we appreciate you introducing us to our first Indian wine. All best to you both!

  9. David perhaps the Indian common law of negligence is a tad underdeveloped for road travel? I enjoyed reading your adventures and the pictures are marvelous.

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