Showing posts with label Bombay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bombay. Show all posts

April 4, 2009

Bombay

First off, yes, I call it Bombay and not Mumbai. I've found that several of my colleagues refer to it as this, and most switch between the two.

A couple of weekends ago we returned to Bombay for the first time in over two years. During what was my first visit, we stayed at the Marriott in Juhu Beach, which I now know to be quite far from the center of the city. As a result, we spent most of our time hanging out at the hotel - enjoying the pool, the incredible breakfast buffet and the (once) popular nightclub there.

This time I vowed to get out and see more of the sights. Fortunately, there aren't that many sights in Bombay so we were also able to spend a lot of time relaxing at the hotel pool and enjoy our view of the sea from our hotel room. Here's the view...

View from our room at the Trident

On the first night, we walked around the Colaba area, including the Taj Palace Hotel and Cafe Leopold, both targets in the Mumbai attacks. We stopped by the Gateway of India, which I found utterly unimpressive and very small. It left me asking, "This is it?" After that brief stop, we had really yummy food at Bademiya, a Bombay institution. It rivals Delhi's Khan Cha Cha, but it's even bigger and takes over the entire alleyway with tables and chairs.


The Taj Palace Hotel

On our second day, we did the required visits to Victoria Terminus, Bombay University and the High Court, wandered through the Oval Maidan to watch a few cricket matches and eventually made our way back to the hotel for some pool time. As weekends in Calcutta (at the Park Hotel) and Bombay (at the Trident), I've decided to give up staying in smaller (and less expensive) hotels in major cities. The comfort, amenities and service are too much to give up! We ended the day with a very nice, relaxing dinner at the restaurant Indigo in Colaba. If we lived in Bombay, we would make regular visits to this place!

Victoria Terminus

Bombay High Court and Bombay University

On our final day in Bombay, we gorged ourselves on the great breakfast buffet and squeezed in a little more time at the pool. Finally, we headed off towards the airport, but stopped at Dhobi Ghat and the Racecourse on our way. Dhobi means washer in Hindi and Dhobi Ghat is the main place where the washers do they thing - cleaning laundry in the rows and rows of bins and then hanging them out to dry. And as luck would have it, in the 2 minutes that we stopped at the Racecourse, a race was just about to begin and we managed to catch the horses running by.

Dhobi Ghat - where most of the city's clothes are washed and ironed

December 25, 2006

Mumbai

I spent this past weekend in Mumbai, the financial and cultural capital of India, but I must confess that I didn't see much of the city. This was thanks to Marriott, who once again honored me with a wonderful (and free) room with a view of the water. And just like in Goa, it was easy to forget I was in India when I was in the hotel. One of the highlights was definitely the daily breakfast buffet that was included with the room. I suffered from my usual dilemma of deciding between eggs or pancakes/waffles. Because because it was a free buffet, I could have both!

On Friday night, we checked out the club in the hotel called Enigma, which is allegedly one of the best in Mumbai. It was nice, but not that great and I can't imagine paying the ridiculous cover charge they usually charge. But since we were hotel guests, it was free. Later on in the met up with Irene Hong (from Georgetown), who just arrived in India that night. She's spending most of her time in Delhi, but it turned out that her 8 hour layover in Mumbai would overlap with my visit. So, being a trooper, she left her bags at the bell desk and stayed in Enigma until she left at 5am for her flight to Delhi.

On Saturday, we lounged by the pool and finally ventured outside of the hotel complex for dinner. Upon returning to the hotel, we opted to hang out in the lobby instead of heading to Enigma again. But the lobby of the JW Marriott is the place to see and be seen in Mumbai. In addition to a model/actor and a singer I didn't recognize, we saw throngs of people there to look for stars. This included a 14-year old boy who was very excited to show us his photos with the abovementioned model/actor and singer, as well as some photos of the Bachchan Bungalow, as he called it. He was visiting Mumbai with his family from Ahmedabad and was in the hotel armed with his camera, just to try to capture some celebrities on film.

Next stop: Pune. On Sunday afternoon, we headed to the train station for the much shorter (only 3 hours) journey to Pune.