The Delhi Metro ROCKS!!
I came back from college on the Metro yesterday. Delhi University to Central Secretariat in eighteen minutes - I thought I'd stepped into another dimension.
And it's not just the speed - it's everything; the cleanliness, the simple decor, the lack of crowds, the punctuality, not to mention the airconditioning that makes the station seem like heaven after the heat outside. It's almost like a plane ride, only even better, if that's possible.
The Delhi University station is the first on the line and you can get a seat if you're quick enough. Otherwise, there are some stations where the people get off in huge waves, like Kashmere Gate and Connaught Place (though the computerised Metro lady calls it Rajiv Chowk, for some reason) and you can get a seat.
You pay your money, you get a token that you use to get to the platform, you wait for the Metro - there's one every five minutes and there are signboards telling you how long till the next one - you get on board, you sit there watching your fellow passengers' faces - not much of a view outside, since it's underground - you reach your station, you use your token to get back outside. That's it, done.
In spite of the fact that I'd never ridden the Metro before, I was amazed at how familiar everything seemed, thanks to the countless movies I've seen that feature at least one scene in a Metro; the most recent of them being one of the earlier scenes in The Lost World, which I watched again on TV recently.
One of the most fascinating things about the stations are the rails themselves. In India, we're used to dirty, stinky, litter-strewn rails at the platforms. These Metro rails are so clean, I'd willingly bet that they're swept every hour. In fact, they're so clean that they look rather inviting. I've always wondered what it would be like to be directly in front of a speeding train, though I've never felt the slightest desire to actually find out, thanks to the stink and the dirt of the Indian Railways. But these rails look.. tempting. Even if I did jump, I doubt I'd be in any serious danger, though, because the Metro comes in so slowly at the stations.
Since it was my first time, my friends gave me a guided tour. I kept jumping about like a little kid, exclaiming in an awe-struck voice about every little thing. We speculated on what would happen if we took a ticket for a nearer station and rode the Metro till the last station. Do the authorities fine the offenders or make them ride back to the station they took the ticket for? Do they have some kind of computerized system keeping track of each of the tokens? Maybe they have different coloured tokens for each of the stations.
In fact, I wondered about it so much that I dreamt about it last night. In the dream, I took a ticket for Rajiv Chowk and the clerk gave me a blood red marble instead of the blue token for Central Secretariat. Unfortunately, I already had a bag of red marbles on me and this marble got lost among them. I kept trying each of the marbles to find out which of them would let me get out of the station. Finally, I tried the last marble and that didn't work either. So, well, it was a nightmare rather than a dream.
If you're a Delhiite who hasn't already tried the Metro, please do, because it's a wonderful experience.
I came back from college on the Metro yesterday. Delhi University to Central Secretariat in eighteen minutes - I thought I'd stepped into another dimension.
And it's not just the speed - it's everything; the cleanliness, the simple decor, the lack of crowds, the punctuality, not to mention the airconditioning that makes the station seem like heaven after the heat outside. It's almost like a plane ride, only even better, if that's possible.
The Delhi University station is the first on the line and you can get a seat if you're quick enough. Otherwise, there are some stations where the people get off in huge waves, like Kashmere Gate and Connaught Place (though the computerised Metro lady calls it Rajiv Chowk, for some reason) and you can get a seat.
You pay your money, you get a token that you use to get to the platform, you wait for the Metro - there's one every five minutes and there are signboards telling you how long till the next one - you get on board, you sit there watching your fellow passengers' faces - not much of a view outside, since it's underground - you reach your station, you use your token to get back outside. That's it, done.
In spite of the fact that I'd never ridden the Metro before, I was amazed at how familiar everything seemed, thanks to the countless movies I've seen that feature at least one scene in a Metro; the most recent of them being one of the earlier scenes in The Lost World, which I watched again on TV recently.
One of the most fascinating things about the stations are the rails themselves. In India, we're used to dirty, stinky, litter-strewn rails at the platforms. These Metro rails are so clean, I'd willingly bet that they're swept every hour. In fact, they're so clean that they look rather inviting. I've always wondered what it would be like to be directly in front of a speeding train, though I've never felt the slightest desire to actually find out, thanks to the stink and the dirt of the Indian Railways. But these rails look.. tempting. Even if I did jump, I doubt I'd be in any serious danger, though, because the Metro comes in so slowly at the stations.
Since it was my first time, my friends gave me a guided tour. I kept jumping about like a little kid, exclaiming in an awe-struck voice about every little thing. We speculated on what would happen if we took a ticket for a nearer station and rode the Metro till the last station. Do the authorities fine the offenders or make them ride back to the station they took the ticket for? Do they have some kind of computerized system keeping track of each of the tokens? Maybe they have different coloured tokens for each of the stations.
In fact, I wondered about it so much that I dreamt about it last night. In the dream, I took a ticket for Rajiv Chowk and the clerk gave me a blood red marble instead of the blue token for Central Secretariat. Unfortunately, I already had a bag of red marbles on me and this marble got lost among them. I kept trying each of the marbles to find out which of them would let me get out of the station. Finally, I tried the last marble and that didn't work either. So, well, it was a nightmare rather than a dream.
If you're a Delhiite who hasn't already tried the Metro, please do, because it's a wonderful experience.
15 comments:
It seems like you haven't been on the Mumbai local.
Hellhole.
well, hello.
on topic: i heard so much about metro.. seems we mumbaikars were shown down afterall. oh, i am not a mumbaikar anymore.. and the city i live in now, hyderabad has a wonderful railway service too.. so i hear. it is called mmts.
off topic: really neat blog you have here.
the kolkatta metro is also neat but is 15 years old , but yes it is facinating and fun keeping in mind the trafic outside.
rohit: I have, actually. Only it was late at night and Ganesh Chathurthi. Didn't see much crowd. Though I've heard it's really bad during peak hours.
thetis: :? what does mmts stand for? Oh, and thank you for the return compliment. :)
toton: I've heard the Delhi metro is the best of the lot, though. :)
hmmm.. You make it sound better than the London UG. :)
First time here. Nice place you got :)
that was a nice piece about the Metro. its already on my list of things to do when i get to Delhi.
And wrt Rohit - The Mumbai Locals - been on it and hate it an love it too. The first time was when a friend forced me on it saying no visit to bombay is complete without a ride on the central line. and damnit i got off at the station after mine thanks to the crowd.
I guess that from now on you are going to be a metro taveller to DU? Do they have seasons passes?
cool !! I hope it remains that way :)
I miss Delhi... kinda,
Nostalgia... sigh.
Lets hope the situation lasts, i.e., the cleanliness etc. Your excitement is almost palpable and very infectious. One must always stay on alert though.
Regards.
rajesh: I wouldn't know, I've never been on the London UG. :) They've got a bit of security, though..
joker: Yeah, it's the best way to get there and back from my place. I haven't got a season's ticket as yet, coz I'm hoping they'll give students' discounts. :)
pallavi: Yeah, so do I..
conman: Well, I think you're prob thinking of the winter, coz it's impossible to miss the Delhi summers.
nishant: Yeah, that's true, especially since this metro goes through some of the major commercial and administrative blocks of Delhi.
Nice article...
Saw the Delhi metro when i had gone for Diwali a couple of years back but it was in construction
Definitely sounds impressive!
And yes, keep writing - you are good at that
tcr_79: Hail, fellow mallu! Yeah, the metro is AMAZING! So much so, I haven't travelled home by bus since then, never mind the cost.
three cheers for the delhi metro...finally something that delhi can boast of!!!
couldn't help but noticing that IQ score...sutis you if maths is your liking...
interesting dream you had...got me thinking...u already have a bag full of marbles...red marbles...just didnt know which one to use....story of my life....:)
2 and a half months in delhi, and haven't used the locals. Perhaps my bike has to be taking the brunt of all those times I get lost on delhi roads!
Loved that frantic dream of yours!
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