Amritsar After Dark (and a Seriously Weird Tuesday)
okay, so amritsar. it wasn't on the 'plan', you know? i was supposed to be chasing sunsets in goa, but a cancelled flight and a ridiculously cheap train ticket later⦠here i am. and honestly? itās kinda amazing.
let me preface this by saying iām a *vintage clothes picker. i live for the hunt, the stories woven into the fabric, the sheer weirdness you find in forgotten corners. and amritsar? itās a goldmine. not necessarily for designer finds, but forā¦character. i spent a whole afternoon getting lost in the narrow streets near the hall bazaar, and i swear i aged ten years just absorbing the energy.
i just checked and itāsā¦a humid hug right now, honestly. twenty-three point something degrees, feels like twenty-two. the air is thick enough to chew, but in a way that smells like chai and something floral i canāt quite place. the pressureās a bit wonky, apparently, but iām not a scientist, so who am i to judge? humidityās low, though, which is a win.
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āapparently, the lassi place on the main road is legendary. but only go if youāre prepared to share your table with a family of five and a very judgmental goat.ā
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thatās what old man rajesh told me, anyway. he runs a tiny stall selling embroidered shawls, and heās a font of local wisdom (and surprisingly strong opinions about goat etiquette). i havenāt braved the lassi yet, but iām considering it. for the story, obviously.
iāve been mostly sticking to the old city, wandering around the golden temple (which, yeah, is as breathtaking as everyone says - check out some photos on TripAdvisor). itās a sensory overload in the best way. the sounds of the chanting, the smell of incense, the sheer scale of it all⦠itās humbling. i overheard someone saying itās best visited at sunrise, but honestly, iām a night owl. give me darkness and twinkling lights any day.
finding decent coffee isā¦a challenge. iām a bit of a coffee snob, i admit it. i need my fix. i found a place called ācafe hangoutā (you can find reviews on Yelp) that does a passable cappuccino, but itās not exactly third-wave stuff. itāll do.
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ādonāt trust the rickshaw drivers who offer you āspecial pricesā. theyāll take you on a scenic route that adds an hour to your journey and then try to charge you double.ā
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that was a tip from a fellow traveler i met at the hostel. sheād been here before and looked thoroughly traumatized by her rickshaw experience. iām sticking to walking, thanks very much.
if you get bored, lahore is just a short drive away (though, you know, border stuff). iāve been looking at some local forums (IndiaMike) to get a feel for the area. apparently, the food scene is incredible.
someone told me that the best place to find vintage textiles is in a tiny shop hidden down an alleyway off the katra jaimal singh* market. iām determined to find it. itās a mission.
and honestly? iām kinda falling for this chaotic, beautiful mess of a city. itās not what i expected, but sometimes the best adventures are the ones you donāt plan. i'm thinking of checking out Punjab Tourism to see if there are any hidden gems i've missed.
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