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Where’s Rick Gunn?

Maui Tour: Hana to Kihei

For our last night we had a special treat. Vanessa was our Maui hostess–she lives in Kihei and teaches junior high science, god bless her. In celebration of her birthday, we all got to hang out and party at the Tedeschi Winery and camped at the owner’s house up the hill above the winery. In addition to great food, wine, celebration and accommodation, that night was also the super-full moon which lit the sky as if it was daytime.

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Maui Tour: Wailuku to Hana

Everyone knows of the Road to Hana, but doing it on a bike beats the heck out of being in one of those tour buses or a rental car. There are some hills, baby! Kevin gets credit for doing most of the organizing for this trip, including arrangements of camping at the Y camp and outside Hana at Waianapanapa. It’s only 200 miles around Maui, so you could probably do the whole thing in four days, but why would you want to?

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Maui Tour: Kihei to Wailuku

I had the good fortune recently to ride around Maui with a great group of friends. Even though we had barely just returned from India, Rick and I joined Kevin, Vanessa, Taylor, Ken, Kathy & Rob for a week-long lap around the island. What a spectacular place!

Biking Maui was pretty much the polar opposite of India; about the only commonalities were that I was on my bike, there were roads, and the weather was nice and warm. That’s about where the similarities end. India is big on culture, but solitude and spectacular scenery are not nearly as common. Maui proved to be the perfect antidote for India’s congestion and pollution.

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India: Parting Shot

On my last night in India I found myself standing on a traffic island outside of Victoria Terminus in central Mumbai. “VT”–as it is popularly known–is a UNESCO World Heritage site, but it is also the busiest train station in Asia.

The activity is crazy both inside the station and out. After three months of biking across India, I am quite intimate with Indian traffic, but things are even more nuts than normal around the VT.

This shot was remarkably challenging for a number of reasons. First, there is a short window to shoot dusk shots when the sun is down but there is still a nice glow in the sky. The lights of the buildings didn’t come on until well into this period, narrowing the window dramatically. But the key to this shot is to get the lights of the traffic streaking across the streets outside the station, only the traffic was at an absolute standstill for most of the time I was out there.

I think I have only seen true gridlock on a couple of occasions in my life and this was one of them. I stood there, dancing from foot to foot, yelling at bus drivers who entered an intersection that they could not possibly clear, watching my light disappear. But finally, as the last minutes of my last night in India passed, so too did the worst of the traffic jam and I was able to get the panorama I hoped for.

victoriastation
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Mumbai Street Living

After a few days of beach life in Varkala, we flew back up to Mumbai in anticipation of our flight out. We stayed a single night in Colaba, the tourist area in the southern part of the city.

The irony of Colaba is that it is probably the richest part of Mumbai, yet the streets are home to some of the city’s poorest residents. As tourists bed down in expensive hotel rooms above, the untouchables of India make their beds anywhere they can find a place where they won’t be disturbed.

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