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I was talking of mangoes and flies in Vizagh.
Flies made my life miserable for my seven years' stay there. They were breeding sinfully and flourishing in all the seasons. They tickled my nose. Also arms and face. And hopped all over the floor.
There was no fly-repellant then. Nor a fly-catcher. The only way was to try and catch and hope to smite them with the hand. But they would always escape and fly away (that's why they are called 'flies').
Saha & Srivastava's bulky tome was too heavy to wield. Finally 'The Hindu' Newspaper folded into a Quarto turned out to be the best weapon...it is just a matter of Scattering Cross-section.
Red ants were also rampant. They were great scavengers. I watched them clean up a heaven-bound lizard in no time. Despite their voracious appetite they never grew in their size. Remained red and tiny. Maybe all that food they took in was going into making their prodigious progeny. That could be a great way to shed weight for British dames. Britishers like Churchill used to deride Indians as 'breeding like pigs'. Totally unfair. India's projected population fell drastically due to artificial famines created by the Brits intent on plundering the wealth of their richest colony.
On the other hand, Wiki says that the great limericist Edward Lear was the 'penultimate of 21 children' :)
My cousin (sister) was convinced (in 1957) that there was only one way of coping with red ants: Write "Sri Rama" (శ్రీరామ) 1116 times in a loose note book, roll it into a pipe, and store it in the attic. All the red ants in the house, according to her, would rush into that tiny note book, suffocate, and die, singing:
"శ్రీరామ! నీ నామమెంతో రుచిరా!"
(Sree Ramaa! Your name is so sweet!)
Also spidermen.
I find happily that, wherever I dwelt in Hyderabad, it was free from red ants and hanging gardens of spider webs. And houseflies are limited to a month before the monsoon...and then they vanish I know not where.
Flies are diurnal; mosquitoes nocturnal.
The odd fly found hopping in the night is called: "Blind Fly" (గుడ్డీగ)...he can't tell day from night (like me now).
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It was in Vizagh again that I first saw handcarts loaded with sugarcane. Whenever I see sugarcane I recall the Train Scene of Pather Panchali:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Y2qIPSf7Ig
Urchins used to flock to the cart, pool their money, and ask for one of those 6' canes. And the vendor would cut the chosen one into six pieces and hand them over. It was fun to watch the kids attack their canes summarily with their teeth from peeling to chewing to spewing. I never ventured...I didn't have that strong teeth and didn't like to spit out the remains on the road.
At KGP, I saw the first 'sugarcane juicer'...a couple of huge rollers with gears and a hand-driven crank. In Hyderabad there is its 'electrical' cousin. Still...the iced juice in the tumbler never fascinated me...I felt better gulping Coke instead.
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It was in Viazagh again that I first saw the pineapple fruit. During our trips to Simhachalam we used to watch entire slopes of hills by which pineapple were cultivated in rain-irrigated ridges. The sight was unforgettable...the whole hillside dotted with golden brown pineapples.
Pineapple were sold whole in the Poorna Market. But I didn't have the courage to buy them...didn't have the knowhow of cutting them...as bad as jackfruit 'with thorns'.
Their slices also were sold by the roadside. Flies again...
It was in 1964 that 'Pineapple Juice' appeared in Vizagh food stores in cans. I bought one and brought it home. There was a mini-party I was throwing to our two lady-classmates.
My two sisters and I looked at that tin wondering how to go about opening it. The tin was hermetically sealed. And the lid was a thick shiny brassy thing fused into the rim. We didn't have a can-opener. All we had was a tiny screw diver sans a hammer. I fetched a stone from the street and my younger sister held the screw driver. After hectic efforts we could tease out the lid (with bleeding fingers).
And we greedily tasted a slice dripping sugary syrup. It was great. But left a fearsome itch in the throat that persists till today in my memory.
There never can be a better-narrated story of the 'pineapple tin-opening adventure' than written by Jerome K Jerome.
Here it is in all its glory:
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