Wednesday, July 27, 2005

It's Raining, It's Pouring...

For all those of you, who've been following the news (closely or not) the deluge in Maharashtra that has caught most people unaware and has created a pandemonium like never before in Bombay, and parts of the Konkan region, this post comes a little late. I thought I'd refrain from posting about it lest someone complain loudly about my ridiculous obsession with the Mumbai monsoons and the romantic nuances of this season (yes, even when there are landslides, floods, and people are stranded in offices/schools/colleges/friend's homes/roads I find a certain romantic strain to this weather)...

But I couldn't resist. More so, since I have been told to sit at home like a good girl and not think of venturing out in such weather - pleading that Pune rains are non-existent in comparison to Bombay rains didn't help my cause, for I was kindly reminded that Bombay has an excellent public transport system that fails only when the Rain Gods unleash their complete and undiminished wrath on the city - that doesn't hold true for Pune. And then ofcourse the gentle reminder that I maybe up and about and prancing around like a gay deer once again, but the congestion is still there and I can't risk getting wet and/or falling sick again - so here I am marooned at home and with nothing to do but contemplate this season's best (or worst, depending on your perspective) display...and here's a random toss-up of scenes I saw on the news or heard about from friends and folks in Bombay or similarly rain-affected regions in our own friendly neighbourhood next IT destination:-
  • "The bridges in Pune are submerged under water. Those who haven't crossed the Sangam bridge as yet will have to stay in their offices" - ahem. First bit of rather exaggerated news about the state of affairs in Pune. It rained, but we weren't exactly submerged under water and commuting by waterways!
  • Bombay has recorded 940 mm of rain this season - having broken records of even Cherapunji, which recorded the highest of 830 mm in 1910! Now if that ain't BREAKING NEWS I don't know what is! It takes a downpour of this magnitude to bring that awesome city to a standstill - and even then, doesn't break the spirit of the city! A reporter who hails from Delhi remarked on how well the people are coping with the calamity - hear hear!!
  • The roads in Andheri West have been transformed into meandering rivers, as have the roads in several other quartiers in Bombay - verified on phone from friends and family in Tinsel Town and by our gleeful news reporters who are merrily blaming the 'prashasan' for the chaos that rules Bombay at the moment.
  • Thousands of people spent the night on the road yesterday - stranded in cars or other modes of transport, kilometers away from their own home or from those of friends/family. Thousands others waded (that isn't a typo- they waded, didn't walk) their way home - taking hours at end to cross an area just 1-15 minutes away from home.
  • My cousins had varying experiences - one cousin spent most of the evening and night in a bus and reached home at 4 am. His wife, was stranded in Goregaon and got a message that her father-in-law was stuck nearby - before cellphones networks got jammed - she was lucky enough to find him and they spent half the night in the car, inching their way towards home.
  • Yet another cousin waited too long to leave work and spent the night in his office, since the railway tracks were flooded with more than 6" of water and the local train services were shut down till water levels receded.
  • Areas that never got flooded several years ago, have been experiencing ankle-length water-logging for the past few years (I'm sorry if I offend someone when I place the blame for this directly on the public who support road-side vendors and turn a blind-eye to the use of storm-water drains as garbage-canals - if the BMC has a job to do, so do you as citizens of this planet). This year the areas experienced flooding - I'm talking waist-high water in most areas and water that went as high as 5' in others and reached the 1st floor in yet others...
  • Many areas experienced power-cuts and telephone lines are down, while cellphone networks are hopelessly jammed. So are roads - people are stranded at airports and railway stations; hotels are overflowing.
  • Children who attend the afternoon shift were stranded in Podar school, without electricity and adequate food. Apparently harassed school authorities finally put phones off the hook so that they could focus on calming the kids down, instead of answering to frantic queries from parents and guardians...
  • My friend spent the night at a colleague's place after his own building got flooded, making it impossible for him to go home - keeping in mind his paranoia about rains and water (he hails from Rajasthan and must be excused since such a phenomenon is very alien to him), it must have been quite bad for him to agree to spend a night without access to internet! ;-)
  • A distant relation was stuck in Chiplun for a couple of days after the route to Goa got blocked by a landslide - her husband and brother rushed to rescue her, and now all three are trying to make their way back from Ratnagiri, even while the NH is submerged under water in certain sections! Adventure galore!
  • Pune seems to be limping back to normal today - am still grouchy about having to spend the day at home with nothing to do but study! Even the fact that I've got my computer back after a week isn't making me feel too delighted about this house-arrest...think I'll go make myself a cup of steaming Cappucino flavoured with Cinnamon and try and cheer myself up :-)

And latest news :- A fire broke out on an ONGC oil rig 150 km from Bombay, in the middle of the Arabian Sea, surrounded by water, even while it continues to pour!

15 comments:

Anonymous said...

yaaay....first to comment *relishing the momentary happiness*
comin bak to normal...hey gurl..look at the bright side of the rains...u din hafta go to alliance n hear "baldy gone hairy yeti" rattle for 2 n half hrs...or the grammar session which makes u feel like a loser even if u kno all the answers...
abt Bbay n its (in)famous floods...i think its quite an adventure...wish i cud b stuck someplace like this... sounds crazy but hey u kno me :P (dis mite gimme the time to do some soul searchin...yea rite)
finally...kinda strange aint it tht v hav rain n fire at the same time? makes me wonder which is more destructive n powerful....?
PS. jus chillout babe..do not lose ur kool..n hey u wanna get outta the house u kno who to call...class aint the only reason to step out...think fun...if not i shall drop by to c mr. schnapps. :)

Paddy said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Pincushion said...

Heres my bit of news adding! U wished me happy holidays..guess where I am at??!! Mumbai! Yep wot a deluge of a welcome it has been! Just missed getting caught on the roads..me put at my mum's place in Goregaon now..the road was like a river! My son stuck at my sis/law's place..i couldn't get in touch with him for the last 2 days..this is the first communication I am having now! Phones still dead and cell phone network erratic! Been thinking about how lovely it wd have been to meet up with you! But are in Pune..sigh! WEll..Mumbai monsoons and here i am..and WHAT a monsoon!

Anonymous said...

hey geets,the intense down pour semmed like a nightmare.me walked frm andheri to goregaon then hitchhiked my way to kandivli

Anonymous said...

i mean seemed

livinghigh said...

aaawww.. poor apy! :(

geet - enjoy de dry weather, gal. am at office today, and its a skeletal staff even today! lol.

Anonymous said...

Our office was submerged under nearly 8 feet of water. :(

and life limps back to bombay normal...

Vasu the terrible said...

I remember walking once in 1999 from bandra to andheri west... It was a deluge then too. But this time I guess its much worse than imagined...

wierd isnt it ? I have been wondering every year the weather is changing in wierder ways.. is it global warming or what ?

vasu

A. Diddy said...

I thought we had it bad when Southern California got some 35 odd inches of rain over a span of 3 months this yr....but 37 inches in ONE DAY in Santa Cruz....that's just plain effing insane!!

G Shrivastava said...

Kitana - Muhaha...aint you the most wicked of us all!

Paddy - I wonder what you said that made you del your comment?

Pincushion - Oh cool - that you're in Bbay, not abt the deluge and disaster - I am planning to hit the city next weekend...mayhaps we could meet up?

Aparna - Ouch...yeah me been hearing the horror stories non-stop. Worst was abt ONGC colony Panvel where they had upto 20ft water and then some of them lost their men in the fire... :-(

Rahul - Well not EXACTLY dry, but defi drier than Bbay ;-)

Mads - Ouch...shit the more I hear abt the losses, the more unsettled I am. It's really quite horrifying that something like this could happen to our beloved Bbay. Sigh...

Vasu - Luckily I never had to walk home in any of those deluges - I always managed to leave early - before the flooding and water-logging started. Which is what is surprising abt this week's incident - why so many ppl were out there working till so late when it was raining so heavily...usually offices shut early in such a scenario...

A.Diddy - Was wondering today abt the condition of ur school which got flooded in 'normal' rains...so what must have happnd this year?

A. Diddy said...

Gee - shall find out from the girls as soon as we can...the phones in parle are dead at the moment...but my grandmom said that they got home at 11PM that day *shudder*

. : A : . said...

Thanks for the detailed account. I know several people who faced similar situations as you have outlined. It is crazy what rain can do.

And you still find it romantic?

So do I!

:-)

Sreekesh Menon said...

and here i pray for atleast a drop on rain to kiss my face.

gulnaz said...

its terrible what has happened in mumbai especially the tragedy of rumours, it was totally not-needed!

it took rainfall unprecedented in 100 years for mumbai to go powerless, come to up, a coy fluttering of leaves, a low moan of thunders and power gone. its gone most of the time in any case!

i love the rains, inspite of all the terror they have unleashed, they really a cast a romantic spell on this dry sunny land of ours.

Anonymous said...

one of my old neighbour's son works at ongc. he still missing.