We parked at Mumbai’s answer to Marina Bay Sands and Circular Quay …
We took a ship organised tour. We lunged into the colour, noise and chaos …
… visited Crawford Market …
… where our guide had to explain a custard apple to some of our fellow travellers!
We walked past these …
… to visit a strange temple, once one of the highest landmarks in Mumbai.
We drove along Marine Drive … where, from a distance, the beach looked surprisingly clean.
We saw many of the legendary trains …
… the MCG (complete with trains going past)!!!
… a man delivering ice …
… and thousands of miles of chaotic cables.
We saw the Dhabi Whallahs in action.
We went to the Gateway of India with a huge swarm of people (the detail is interesting!)
… and looked at the many boats, and the Taj Hotel …
We had a nice lunch at a restaurant near here: a relatively nicer part of Mumbai from what we could see … but across the street was a completely derelict hotel. Apparently there is a decades old bureaucratic dispute about it’s demolition(?)
After lunch we drove past slums …
… to this interesting Museum …
… displaying, amongst other things, the faces and headgear for many different Indian sects.
Then to some old Mumbai houses …
We had afternoon tea in this one.
Then back to the busy street … where there were all kinds of users …
On the way back to the ship, past the main Railway Station …
… at peak hour (on a public holiday so only 30% of people about!)
What can I say, based on just one day in Mumbai? Some travellers love India. Some are fascinated by it’s chaos, colour, culture, history, scenery and so on. They may be perfectly justified.
I will not be joining their ranks.
I could write chapters on this, but here I’ll just say this: India could be a much better place if it had way less people, and, just for starters, they just picked up their trash.

































You have done well! I think you may feel better about it as time goes by! Xx.
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Beautifully put Geoff. DITTO!
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I”ve been to India three times and I’m sure I’ll go again – although on leaving last time, I was equally sure I never would! That’s India – the juxtaposition of the beautiful and the ugly, the opulent and the destitute, the beggar at the palace gate etc etc. When you get back, see if you can get a copy of Sarah Macdonald’s fantastic book, Holy Cow! I’ve just finished reading it for the second time and I rarely read a book twice. Having visited Mumbai, you’ll appreciate her experience of India, and it’s hard not to enjoy the read.
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