Mascara on your eyelids (or anywhere) will come off eventually with water, and tea bags are v soothing if your eyes are sore... from 'odmother Nic x PS Just seen this nice reason to go to Darjeeling from Lonely Planet: It’ll start on the train there (or indeed, any train in India) – the nasal call of the chai wallahs pacing the platforms, hawking their masala-spiced nectar. But that’s nothing compared to Darjeeling itself. Once you switch to the narrow-gauge steam train that hauls you up to this 2000m hill station you’re surrounded by the stuff : tea in the cafes, tea in the bazaars and a deep-green leafy profusion of tea cascading down the hillsides, with the might of the Himalaya behind. Between March and November (picking and processing season) take a plantation tour and marvel at what goes into a humble tea bag. Of course, high tea is in order – take it at the Elgin or Windermere hotels. Shop for tea at Nathmull’s Tea Room.
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ReplyDeleteMascara on your eyelids (or anywhere) will come off eventually with water, and tea bags are v soothing if your eyes are sore... from 'odmother Nic x PS Just seen this nice reason to go to Darjeeling from Lonely Planet:
ReplyDeleteIt’ll start on the train there (or indeed, any train in India) – the nasal call of the chai wallahs pacing the platforms, hawking their masala-spiced nectar. But that’s nothing compared to Darjeeling itself. Once you switch to the narrow-gauge steam train that hauls you up to this 2000m hill station you’re surrounded by the stuff : tea in the cafes, tea in the bazaars and a deep-green leafy profusion of tea cascading down the hillsides, with the might of the Himalaya behind.
Between March and November (picking and processing season) take a plantation tour and marvel at what goes into a humble tea bag. Of course, high tea is in order – take it at the Elgin or Windermere hotels. Shop for tea at Nathmull’s Tea Room.
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