

Our weekend started on Friday night when we went out for Italian food at a highly recommended, trendy (and pricey) Italian restaurant called Fiorano. While the food was mediocre, the fresh mozzarella in the Caprese salad (fresh tomatoes and basil layered with the cheese and drizzled with olive oil) was really good. Amazingly, they make it from milk they get from a local supplier and manufacture it right there. They sell it, along with their signature breads, for a reasonable price, much less than a comparable imported Italian cheese would be.
On Saturday, John had to connect with a colleague for a lunch



This second quote from their website made me want to make the long trip

Still with a couple of hours to kill, I found a promising beauty salon called Lakme. Later, using an on-line “Salon Locator,” I found that they are part of a chain (115 locations in 36 Indian cities) and that the salons can be found all over India. There are 20 in Bangalore alone.

I got a manicure and pedicure at the same time ($10.00 for both plus tip; ironically the same price as the wine!) by two competent young women. One of them was from Pondicherry, formerly a French colony on India’s east coast. The other was from Manipur, a state that is part of the Northeast, where I traveled a few months ago. Several of her colleagues at the salon were also from there. Many people have migrated from this region to do all kinds of work in Bangalore. Since my visit to the Northeast, I have learned to recognize them by their lovely looks and quiet charming manner. Here are some other faces of Northeast India.





So we had no choice but to try a third option, to find an auto rickshaw. I crouched under an overpass where some young Indian men made a place for me, as John (trying to protect himself with the one umbrella we had brought with us) tried to find an empty auto rickshaw and get it to stop. He did that, agreeing to pay much more than double the usual price ($4.00; I would have paid a lot more at that point. The ride back to the Halcyon John described as something Disney should try to replicate as an amusement ride. Up to a foot of water had accumulated on the streets by that time and adjacent cars splashed huge amounts of the wet stuff on our feet.
That was in addition to what was coming down on us, since the sides of this particular vehicle did not close off as some do. (The driver suggested the low-tech solution of placing the umbrella vertically to block the rain driving in on the worst side.) Some rickshaws with their low clearance were unable to negotiate the depth of the water and they fell by the wayside. Ours made it, however, and our being extremely wet was the only inconvenience. (I have no photos of this little adventure for obvious reasons.)

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