The Beautiful Temples of Kanchipuram, South India

Temples are located throughout India, and Asia for that matter, but the ones in South India are gigantic and architecturally brilliant. I was born and brought up in India and our favorite family activity during the holidays was to visit one temple after the other, right from a young age. Religious tourism is the popular with most families in India, including mine. When I was young, visiting temples was like a picnic, a family outing. With age, the temple visits have lessened but I have always had a special place for temples in my heart.

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One of the beautiful Hindu temples in Kanchipuram, India

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This specific temple, Ekambareswarar Temple, is particularly beautiful; it is located in a temple town called Kanchipuram, near Chennai, in South India. Ekambareswarar temple was initially constructed in the 7th Century AD and since then it has undergone many modifications and additions and the temple now stands at an impressive 59 meters high.

Kanchipuram, one of the more popular temple towns in India, is called the “Land of 1000 Temples,” and for good reason—the town has been in existence for a very, very long time. In fact, written history of this temple town goes back to at least the 5th Century BC. South Indian temples, unlike their North Indian counterparts, have been relatively lucky because their location down in the south shielded them from the destruction caused by wars and foreign conquests. Hence, there are many ancient temples in this region that have survived—almost completely intact—until today.

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One of the things I love best about the temples in the south are the intricately carved stone sculptures. These beautiful carvings and sculptures can be found on the temple’s towers, the walls, on the pillars, practically everywhere. Even smaller temples in the region have beautiful stone-art inscribed right into the temple structures. One neat thing, if you look closely at the temple towers, many resemble pyramids because pyramids concentrate energy at their base-point (that’s why corpses are kept there in many cultures). Similarly, here in India, the pyramid temple towers concentrate energy at the base and that’s one reason people walking through and around the temple often feel refreshed.

Personally, though I don’t often visit the temples for praying, I do visit them to capture the beautiful sculptures and stone-carvings in my camera. It is unfortunate that many temples in India (including this one) do not allow photography inside, but even with that rule in place, I always end up with some beautiful photos of the outside—if these are the type of sculptures you can see on the outside of these temples you can imagine how many more beautiful ones decorate the inside!

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It takes many years to build a tower like these, and the sculptures inside the Temple were carved over centuries and by many hands. The Ekambareswarar Temple (also called as Ekambaranathar Temple) is one of the most popular temples in Kanchipuram, and I think for good reason. Inside the temple you’ll discover a thousand-pillared hall, a huge temple pond surrounded by long steps, a 2000 year old mango tree bearing four types of mango fruits, and many other beautiful offerings and additions to make the temple a holy and welcoming place.  Also, located right next to the temple (in a 300-year old heritage house) is the Shakuntala Jagannathan Museum of Fine Arts, which is worth visiting while you’re on the temple grounds. And since photography is prohibited inside, you’ll just have to go yourself to see the inside of the gorgeous Ekambareswarar Temple.

As for visiting, foreigners and visitors are very much allowed inside the temple (except a small hall where the main deity is kept). If you visit you should buy and eat the prasadam, food offerings, called Puliodharai, Vadai and Chakkarai pongal. These foods are made from rice and are very tasty— my favorite, so don’t miss!  🙂

Photos by Destination8Infinity.

A Travel Blogging Industry Perspective by an Outsider

I’ve been blogging a long time, since August of 2006 to be exact. I’ve run a successful real estate technology blog for five years and I co-founded a microfinance blog around the same time. Throughout all of that, I’ve written over 2,500 blog posts (there are 1,500+ on my personal blog alone) spanning five main blogs (not to mention countless guest posts) over the past seven years.

Awhile ago I read Matt’s thoughts on the real business of travel blogging. I actually started this post a few days after reading it, but am just now circling back to the ideas his post sparked and share a few of my own thoughts. As you know, with blogging, you’ve got to start somewhere. Like Matt, I had no clue what I was doing early on in 2005 when I was hired at Zillow, and still no clue in 2006 when I started blogging. Truth be told, I didn’t even know what a blog was when I got hired there. Our whole team figured it out together over the following few years. Because of that, I saw the earliest days of blogging in the real estate vertical.

You see, in 2005, very few real estate agents were blogging. And by 2006, just a few agents had started blogging. Large numbers joined between 2007 and 2010. Active Rain was created, gained widespread momentum, then ultimately crumbled due to the huge circle-jerk community consisting of “nice post” comments that added zero value to anyone reading. The Carnival of Real Estate saw its time in the spotlight, and has faded away into the sunset.

As a veteran blogger in the real estate vertical, yet fairly new blogger in the travel industry, here’s what I can tell you:

Travel blogging isn’t the only industry that suffers from the issues Matt mentions. In fact, I’d say blogging in every industry has the same problems.

Travel blogging has the big time stars everyone aspires toward; bloggers such as Jodi Ettenberg, David Lee, Dave Dean, Cailin O’Neil, EarlMatt Kepnes, Caz and Craig, and Gary Arndt. I don’t follow every single travel blog to know who the up-and-comers doing all the right things are, but I know they are out there (and I’m sure Matt could pinpoint a few of them). There are countless others treading water by publishing a bunch of average photos, telling boring stories, and writing “top 5 things to do” posts. Real estate has the same top tier — people like Jay Thompson, Ines, Sue Adler, Jim Duncan, and Kris Berg. Real estate has new blood in the industry too, people (such as Greg Fischer) who are doing everything right and starting to see the fruits of their labor as a result.

And below them? It’s the masses. Multiple agents have tried to seo their way to the top and failed. Thousands have started blogs only to quit after seeing zero results in the first month or two. Most people don’t have business plans, and most who write online think they are great writers and deserve special perks as a result.

Ultimately, the vast vast majority of people in the world aren’t willing to put in the work in to get to the top. Unfortunate, but true. The issue isn’t specific to travel blogging.

Want to succeed with blogging in any vertical? Give a damn about your readers. Focus on providing real tangible value. Take the hard road. Be real and authentic and put yourself out there each and every day. Have a plan, long term goals, a clear strategy, and work (write) your ass off. If you don’t have all of those, then just quit now (if you want to build a business) and, as Matt says, get a desk job. If you want to just blog for fun and to share your personal travel experiences? Fantastic. But know that’s not enough to make it a business or a career.

I get it. Everyone wants the easy button.

It doesn’t exist.

The real key to succeeding in anything?

Doing something.

Don’t be this guy…

Now, back to your regular scheduled programming…

What Mark are you Leaving on the World?

MoMF-LogoAs you know, we partnered with Month of Microfinance with the goal of organizing the world’s microfinance community into local communities. I wrote an “autobiographies of microfinance” for Month of Microfinance that was published today titled “What mark are you leaving on the world?” You can read it here.

So, what mark are you leaving on the world?

Remember, to help us achieve our goal of bringing microfinance advocates together in person:

  1. Sign up for the beta using THIS link
  2. Fill out your profile
  3. Check in to your current city
  4. Take a look at other microfinance advocates here (the nearest ones at the top of the list)

Seriously, the Easiest Way to Connect with Other Travel Bloggers Nearby

Oh Hey World enables you to instantly see other travel bloggers nearby, and receive notifications when others show up nearby in the future. If you’re interested in meeting up with other travel bloggers in person, here’s the short version of how to get setup:

  1. Sign up using THIS LINK (it auto tags your profile correctly with “travel bloggers”).
  2. Check in to your current city.
  3. Fill in a few details in your profile, including a link to your blog.
  4. Click the “travel bloggers” link on the interests section of your profile. You’ll see a list of other travel bloggers here (the nearest ones at the top of the list).
  5. Navigate to “settings”, and then click the “manage notifications” button to turn on either SMS or email alerts.

Pretty simple, right?

PS #1: If you need the raw registration code, it is as follows: cbf7ea57-7607-44b2-9fe1-156d8b22dafc

PS #2: Remember, Oh Hey World instantly updates your WordPress.org blog when you check in.

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“Go to War” Values

socialWhen Jeff Turner writes, I listen; he’s one of the few individuals I follow close enough to the point where I read virtually every post he shares. Jeff recently wrote “What are your ‘go to war’ values?“. I believe in the power of understanding why you are doing what you are doing, and hence, firmly believe outlining Oh Hey World’s “Go to War” values is a useful exercise…

We believe a connected travel experience is a better experience. If you want to bury your head in the sand to the world around you and remain in a silo, we’re not the travel partner for you. Sure, visiting a 4 star resort for several days every now and then is fine and dandy. But if your entire travel experience, every single time, is focused around getting pampered – we are not the right partner for you.

We believe in the power of social good. If you are reading this blog, chances are extremely high (98% or above), you have had tremendous opportunities to succeed in this world. You’ve probably never faced hunger. Never slept on the street. Never not been able to see a doctor when needed. Never needed to walk five miles for water. Nor have we. But we’ve seen and spoken to many people throughout the world who have faced all of those issue – and we couldn’t live with ourselves if we didn’t do something about it.

There they are. Our go to wars values, right out in the open.

If you don’t like them?

Leave.

[Photo via http://www.socialbene.com/]

Apologies on the Blog Hiccups

website-maintenanceYou may have noticed this blog has been down for a few days — that occured when we switched our BETA site from beta.ohheyworld to www.ohheyworld.com last week. Since the blog is hosted in a different environment (Dream Host) than our primary site (EngineYard), the switch meant that we needed to put this blog into a subdomain rather than a subfolder.

We’re still ironing out a few redirects, but we should be back at 100% shortly. Thanks for your patience.

Note: the site is still in beta, we just wanted to get it on the permanent URL sooner rather than later.

[Graphic via http://nextlevelvision.com/]

The Art of Globe Dancing

There is something to be said on the way people view the world versus the way they experience it. While the world’s media tends to cast a shadow over all of the beauty and wonder around us, all you need to do is enjoy it the way YOU see it. This is the foundation of a unique travel experience.

I’ve always tried to travel with a sense of disconnection. Forget about the overbearing stress of work, relationships, and money, and enjoy the story you’re writing. Of course, this can be a challenge, and it is easy to drift off into the world of…well, HOME. But fear not my fellow globers, just take a tip from my friend and travel nurse, Felicia.

DANCE. IT. OFF.

I found this video on Felicia’s wall the other day. Just back from an adventure filled trip to “The South” (South America, not to confused with Birmingham, Alabama), Felicia and her travel buddy Sadie were sore with laughter and smiles when they uploaded their unique travel style that I very simply titled: Globe Dancing.  With so many adventures to be had, and only a realistic amount of time to take them all in, these two found a way to capture the essence of their trip, and put a very warm smile on my face.

It all starts with a beautiful hike in Ushuaia, Argentina.

“Honestly, the first and last clip of the video was the start of it all. We were hiking and it was just so freaking beautiful that we just started doing a crazy mother nature dance and decided to film it. And then we thought it would be cool to try and get more clips of dancing elsewhere and with some of the awesome ass people we met.”

That’s right! A “crazy mother nature dance”. These two didn’t hog the free spirit, they passed it around to everyone they met. As a result, they now have this amazing footage and synopsis of their travel story together, along with a handful of new friends. I won’t spoil your plans with the rest of their itinerary, but I must say, this was the best trip I’ve never been on.

 “When I was putting it together, I kept thinking “my mom is really going to love this”,  I hope it makes people want to get out and travel and to just have fun in life.”

Oh you definitely inspired me. Time to dust off the dancing shoes, it’s gonna be an eventful summer everyone.

Exploring the Wild Blue Yonder