Wednesday, 27 June 2012

Lions, Tigers, and Bears Oh My!


June 25, 2012

Today. Was epic.

We went to the lab in the morning, but there wasn’t anything to do there, so we said… “Screw this! We’re going to the zoo!” So we did…and it was awesome!

We started off at the Arignar Anna Zoological Park in Vandapur.  It’s pretty cool here in India to go to zoos, because all veterinarians get in free, so of course we got in free, and had luxury treatment.  Wayyyy better than American zoos!  There were some really cool animals there, but the coolest part was that we got to ride around in style in a golf cart thing, like we were going on a safari…I will only be going to a zoo from now on if I can ride around in a golf cart safari.  We made it through the entire zoo in an hour and a half, and then went for lunch.

Then. The most epic part of the day was when we went to Fodder Bank Lion and Tiger Sanctuary.  We got to come face to face with lions and tigers.  It was the most awesome, and terrifying experience of my life!  Enough words…now enjoy the picssss :D





























Sunday, 24 June 2012

Visit to Mamalapuram Shore Temples


Yesterday we made the trip to Mamalapuram Shore Temples to check out some temples and landmarks that were over 1,400 years old! These temples had been buried until the Tsunami in 2004.  Then, the tide receded and the temples came into view.  These temples are no longer active temples, and are more or less just tourist attractions, but they are very very cool!  We had a really good tour guide as well.

We saw a large rock that looks as though it’s about to roll off of the hill that it’s set on.  It is called Krishna’s Butter Ball.  Apparently the Hindu God Krishna had over 1,600 girlfriends, and they all brought him butter or something like that.  Hindu mythology is too much for me to remember, but they have some reasoning for why this butter ball will not move from where it is planted.  I will call it center of gravity.

After that, we went to a crocodile park where they had many, many different kinds of crocs.  My favorite animal there was the Adalabra Giant Tortoises.  I have always been a turtle person as it is, and they are magnificent!







This is me holding the Butter Ball like no big deal. Wasn't thaaat heavy :D

Oh dear...the Butter Ball might fall on me...

Indian Ocean!
Today, we visited St. Thomas Basillica and went to mass there.  We also viewed the tomb where St. Thomas is buried.  It was very cool, and the mass was fantastic!

Friday, 22 June 2012

Musta Been the Lime Juice...


Yesterday, 6/20/2012 was D-day.  All 6 of us got gastroenteritis.  It all started with Julia.  After lunch, we decided to go for some shopping.  When we were at the store, Julia vomited, poor thing.  Then, she continued to throw up all the way back to the hostel.  When we got home, Dr. MohanKumar had gone to get her some medicine, and then Pam started to not feel well.  She went down fast, and then Lindsay and Daryl went down simultaneously.  Carrie and I were feeling quite proud of ourselves, even bragging that we had stomachs of steel.  Then, my stomach started to turn.  Immediately I was in the bathroom projectiling everything that was in my gut.  Carrie held out until the morning, but then she went down the hardest of us all.  Today, we just laid around all day wallowing in our sickness, but we are feeling a little better now.  Dr. MohanKumar said that he hadn't felt well either, and that he thought it was the sweet lime juice we had drank at a restaurant the day before as that was the only common food between us all.  Hopefully that is the only sickness that we get!

Tuesday, 19 June 2012

Village Trip to Kancheepuram District


Today marks the official 2 weeks of me being in India! As of today, there are 30 days left, and I will be returning to the USA!!  I’ve decided to write a short portion of my blog today as a sort of “ode to America”, just displaying all of the things that I so take for granted in the US, that I desperately miss.  They are very simple, everyday, mundane things, but you never realize how much they mean to your life until you do not have the leisure of having them anymore.  Things such as going into a public restroom.  In the United States, when you stop at a rest area, you go in, do your business in a normal toilet that is relatively clean, wash your hands in a sink with soap, and then you’re finished…well, that is just not the case here in India, oh no, not only do you get the luxury of a hole in the ground that is almost full to the top with excrement, there is no sink, and it costs 3 rupees to use (what that money goes to, God only knows…certainly not cleaning supplies).  Next, things such as getting water from the tap…that’s a no no.  Drinking COLD water…we only get that once in a while, otherwise it’s room temperature.  Next, wearing gloves in the clinic…that just isn’t done here much, unless of course the cow is suspected of having brucella or something.  Finally, being able to cross the street without seriously wondering if you are going to die.  The drivers here obey no traffic laws, honk horns constantly, and seem to not believe in car seats, or child endangerment.  The biggest difference I think is that all of these things are purely cultural…I’m not trying to say which culture is better or anything, and I certainly do not mean to offend anyone.  I’m just saying that I happen to prefer my own luxuries, but it is just so interesting the impact that our native culture has upon us all, no matter how much we think we can avoid being imprinted by it.

Now that I’ve blown off some steam…let’s get down to what I did today.  This morning we were scheduled to leave early in the morning to go to the Kancheepuram District to collect blood samples from chickens, and to give the chickens an oral pellet vaccine to protect against Newcastle’s disease.  After a 2 hour bus ride in our Tempo Traveller, we arrived.  We first came to a place called Krishi Vigyan Kendra, which is basically a government-sponsored farm to teach people how to farm, and be successful in reaping things from the land.  They have crops such as rice and maize, medicinal plants, piggery, poultry, rabbits, ornamental fish, precision farming, cattle, goats, and various vegetable and fodder crops.  The mission of KVK is to promote the agricultural industry in Kancheepuram by providing services such as training in their soil and water testing lab, autonomic weather station, and instructional farm.  We met with Dr. Kumaravel, who is the head of Kancheepuram’s KVK.  He told us a little bit about what he does, showed us some of the poultry they have which include chickens, turkeys, ducks, Japanese quail, and guinea hens.  Then, he showed us a little bit about how they compost their cattle dung in order to grow earthworms to feed the poultry…it is amazing to me, that in a country that is literally littered with garbage, that when you go to the villages, and away from the city, they are very concerned with being environmentally friendly.  All of the districts in Tamil Nadu are sponsored, in part by TANUVAS, to create these KVK’s.  I really find this interesting, and in a country that is giving away 300,000 free cows to people in order to boost the economy, the people receiving the cows need some training in how to farm.  Very smart thinking indeed…

From there, we left the KVK to head to the villages.  We stopped at the first village, and right away I was handed a chicken to hold.  I thought it would be a good photo-op, so this big girl got to be famous for a minute before I fed her a pellet vaccine, and stuck her with a needle to collect some of her blood for gene comparison (I thought it was a fair trade, and she was very compliant).  We continued with the rest of the chickens in that village collecting samples, and will return in 21 days to re-sample, and examine if the vaccine is working. 


Then, we moved on to a place called “Little Flock”.  Little Flock is an Indian orphanage that teaches the 42 children they house, to farm.  They have cattle, goats, chickens, turkeys, geese, and sheep.  They also grow crops.  Little Flock is sponsored by Christian missionaries, and is really cool.  I checked out this brand new little girl!  She is only 4 days old, and wasn’t having such a fun time in the bright sun.  Hopefully they will get her into the shade next to her mama, and hopefully she will feel better, but MAN, was she cute!!  I keep begging Dr. MohanKumar to let us take a calf or puppy or goat back to our hostel to keep as a pet, and he keeps saying no…boo ;)

From there we moved on to our final village to collect samples.  The people from this village are real live snake charmers!! They catch snakes and extract their venom for medicinal purposes.  They promised that in 3 weeks when we come back to collect samples again, they will show us a demonstration…can’t wait!!  We must have given over 150 vaccines to all of their chickens…it was like they just kept coming, and coming, and coming!  When we were done with all that, we got to see some baby chicks, and then headed back to the hostel. 

I can tell that I am never going to be a good researcher, and that I am going to have to be in the field or at least in a processing plant because I LOVE our field days collecting samples and interacting with the animals and people.  The days in the lab are not so fun for me, but that’s okay, all part of the process!  Anyway, our internet is out…once again…so I will have to post this tomorrow! Goodnight to all!

Saturday, 16 June 2012

Totally Rode an Elephant Today!


Today we woke up, ate breakfast, and then headed out to see a temple that was built by King Chola over 1,000 years ago!! It was absolutely breathtaking!  The entire thing is built solely of granite with no concrete or mortar.  The carvings on the temple are super intricate, and each one is different.  The temple itself is over 13 stories high, and was assembled over just 4.5 years! Such an incredible feat for so long ago. 

The temple was designed by over 300 artisans, and was intended to portray the miniscule size of humans in comparison to the deities, and I do have to say that one feels very, very small in comparison when face-to-face!  We walked around the entire thing barefoot, and also participated in a prayer for all of the veterinarians and animals in the world.  Pretty fitting I thought!
When we had wrapped up our temple sightseeing and were headed out we got the chance to ride an elephant!! I couldn’t pass it up, and hopped right up! It was an amazing view, and I can’t wait to do it again on our trip in Mudumulai!!!  All in all, it was nice to have a day to act like a tourist, and see what all India has to offer!  Now we are back at the hostel after quite a bumpy bus ride home, and I’m doing laundry, cleaning, and learning to play cricket today!! Should be fun! 








Here is me riding the elephant!!! So cool!!!
Oh! And although you are sleeping right now, Dad, I know it’s Father’s Day , so HAPPY FATHER’S DAY DADDIO!! I LOVE YOU!!!

Wedding Crashers!!!!


The bride and groom!

Wow it has been a crazy couple days!!! A lot of interesting things have happened all starting with yesterday morning.  We got up early to go to one of Dr. MohanKumar’s friends’ weddings.  In India, the weddings are all day affairs, but the most important rituals happen from 7-8:30 in the morning!! All of us girls got up at around 5 to get ready, and get wrapped up in our saree’s, then we headed to the wedding.  As soon as we got into the wedding hall, I knew that it was going to be like nothing I had ever seen.  When we walked in, 2 younger girls gave us all roses, handed us sandal paste to put into our palms, and made us eat a couple of grains of sugar.  Then we walked into the room, and immediately a traditional Indian band began playing really loud beautiful music.  Then we looked up to a very crowded stage full of the bride, groom, their families, and the priests and other special people.  There were many, many rituals going on, and Dr. MohanKumar was attempting to tell us about each one.  It was sort of a bizarre experience for all of us, because compared to American weddings, the two are not only not on the same page, they are not even in the same library!  The guests mingled with eachother as the wedding was proceeding, and there was breakfast being served in a different room at the same time.  Then, at an important ritual, such as tying the knot (literally the groom ties a necklace into a knot around the bride’s neck) people really pay attention, and the music blares.  Definitely an interesting experience!!!  After the wedding we came back to the hostel to prepare for our trip to Tanjoor.  Pam and I laid out in the sun, went on a 2 mile run in the 100 degree heat, and packed our things to go on the bus. 

The Bride!
The bus ride was an experience in itself.  We arrived at the bus station at 9:00 p.m. for a 9:45 bus.  We rode on a sleeper bus, where literally the whole bus is full of little beds.  Pam and I shared a bed, but neither of us slept a wink because it was bumpy, cell phones were ringing, there was stops and go’s, and most of all it was FREEZING!!!  All of us were really happy when we arrived in Tanjoor this morning, and checked into our hotel.  If there is one thing that I will take away from this trip it will be a pure appreciation for America, and a true feeling that I am one of the luckiest people in the world to be able to live in a land as great as the USA!

Us girls in our beautiful sarees!


We got a couple of hours of sleep, and then met for breakfast.  After a good breakfast we headed out to the villages to hit up some farms to get brucellosis/tuberculosis milk and blood samples, along with getting information for our mastitis project.  Our goal was to get 25 samples from all of the farms, and I just finished entering the data in the computer and I am proud to say that we collected 40 samples today.  We worked really hard!!  We used up all of our blood tubes, and even had to use some of our smaller milk tubes, and fill up 4 instead of 1 per cow.  We also saw some really really cute calves, met some really nice people, had tea in a village, listened to a villager sing us a folk song, and ate coconut water right out of the coconut!!!  It is unbelievable how hospitable the people in the villages of India are, when they seem to have so little, but in fact, they do not see it that way at all because I think they are really a happy people, and fully enjoy the lifestyle they live.  There is definitely something to say for enjoying your life versus having every material thing you could have.  Now I am relaxing in the hotel room, but dinner is soon so I gotta scoot! I’ll write more tomorrow!