WE were supposed to visit Narail months ago. But then many moons 
moaned by and all our plans collapsed one after another for one reason 
or another. Finally when we found time, it began with a disaster.
On
 a perfectly nice winter morning, we parked our car at the Mawa police 
station for two nights and went over to the speedboat terminal. On the 
other side of the Padma would wait a microbus. This arrangement would 
have been the quickest to Narail. With a heavy backpack and the jacket 
wrapped round my hand, I first stepped
 on the front deck of the 
speedboat. As I was about to step inside the canopy, two more halfwit 
fellow travellers with no knowledge of a speedboat's behaviour jumped 
in.
It took a second for the boat to rock vigorously, like a 
bucking horse; and the next second I found myself floating on the Padma.
 My backpack felt like a tonne of brick and impossible to dislodge. My 
jackets were fitted tightly. Somehow I swam against a current that was 
trying to carry me out to the middle. Then I found the white hull of the
 speedboat above my head. I grabbed its edge and calmed myself.
Then
 I was laughing manically. All those birdbrains responsible for the 
mayhem and my watery state were also in water. All with their backpacks 
and one of them swimming like a rat thrown into the pond.
There 
were people stretching out their hands to me and I caught a few of them,
 or they rather caught me and pulled. Try to climb onto a speedboat from
 the river and find out how difficult it is. Almost when I was thinking 
the rest of my life would be spent on the Padma bobbing like the float 
of a fishing rod, they landed me on the deck. The rest were rescued as 
well.
Drenched, we sat like some catfish and chattered teeth as 
the speedboat roared through the Padma for half an hour. I tried to see 
the best of the river view -- the seagulls dancing on the waves, the 
long sandy beaches and wonderful squirt of silts thrown up by dredgers 
looking like whales spraying water. 
Thankfully, the chilly ride 
was over, but not our indignation. All the fools on the other side of 
the bank -- from village morons to newly-wed girls going to in-law's 
house -- asked if we fell over the speedboat. Our answers varied -- No, 
we were scuba-diving, only we forgot to change clothes; No, we were up 
in the sky too high and got drenched by the clouds; No, we are 
Argentinean pearl fishers.
..............................................
Once
 on the other side, the journey transformed into one of bliss and 
wonderment. The road was wide and empty  eerily empty for Bangladesh . 
For minutes we traveled before meeting another vehicle. The roadside 
view also changed dramatically. The fields spread away to the horizon 
and uncountable palm trees gave that special feature to the landscape. 
Then I realized all those tals we have in Dhaka must have come from 
here. Jute sticks were piled up along the road in the most interesting 
fashion. The stacks looked like witches' hats.
In exactly four and
 a half hours from our journey in Dhaka we found a narrow side road and 
followed it to a beautiful river. The narrow river meandered very 
gracefully through bright yellow mustard fields. Not a ripple in it. Its
 marbled water looked almost blue. Only occasionally a jute-laden boat 
would appear lazily and sail away.
A few blackened figures stood 
knee-deep in the river and used buckets to throw water onto their 
saplings on the slanted paddy fields. We looked at the cotton-balling 
clouds above and inhaled the utterly village smell -- of water, mud, 
mustard and paddy -- and knew heaven is here.
There was a strange 
ferry here -- a private one inscribed “Arunima Modhumoti Ferry” on it. 
Its triangle shape made us to research out that it was in fact the 
sawed-off front of a steel boat, probably a cargo ship. A Chinese diesel
 engine has been fitted to its side in a watchtower like room.
It 
took us a few minutes to cross the ferry. Here we had to board a 
rickshaw-van. A ten-minute trip through a village took us to the resort 
 Arunima Countriside. The tree-frilled wide road welcomed us inside the 
sprawling resort to a cosy bungalow.
It's a beautiful place full 
of tall trees and big ponds. There was a beel as well -- a water body so
 huge that the end part of it had been turned into a bird sanctuary. 
Amid thousands of red lotus were nesting the winter birds, mostly 
whistling teals, cormorants, egrets and herons.
On the bank of the
 beel is the dining place. We watched the birds cackling and whistling 
and rising above the water and dropping again as we had our lunch.  
I
 took a stroll around the resort. It has many promises. The whole place 
has been turned into a golf course as well. We were told that a team 
from Dhaka Club had recently come here to play. The landscaping has been
 outstanding at places. So close to the Dhaka city, it could be 
anybody's dream retreat. With conference rooms and all, a corporate 
attraction.
The bamboo rooms with ACs and all by the beel are interesting.  Only their balconies are too narrow for any meaningful lazing.
……................................….......……..
There
 was this big field behind our bungalow and a high ground for the golf 
tee. We sat there in the after noon and watched two horses grazing 
nearby. There was this lonely farmland beyond the field -- the paddy 
stalks looked dry and golden in the dying sun. A long stretch of tall 
trees lined round the field like a looming forest.
Suddenly the 
sun died down and a fine layer of mist settled in. A little girl in a 
red frock limped along the field. The sun was now hanging very low, 
looking like a pink fireball. The horses neighed. The cackling of the 
birds peaked as their nesting time neared.     
We watched the whole Dalisque transformation of nature and felt content.
………................................................
Before
 evening we took a walk through the village. It was the most beautiful 
village I had ever come across. Bamboo huts with clean yards fenced off 
with hedges. The traditional bamboo pigeon pens hanging under the 
ceiling ledges. The calf with their mothers chewing the cud. The jute 
straws burning in the mud oven. That old acrid smell. 
You could 
hear the children's laughter and the silhouettes of the women cooking in
 the outhouse. The kerosene lamps and the burning firewood throwing a 
kind of wavering glow on the faces. The men were sitting in the yards, 
puffing on their hukkas. Their faces content with the smell of the hays 
stacked in the corner. The harvesting was just completed and it was a 
good year. The rain had lifted the crops in time and the pests were few.
Then
 I heard the unmistakable hoots. Our searching eyes found two owlets 
sitting in the gathering dusk on the electric line passing over the 
barren field. They were waiting for the field mice to come out.
We
 left them to their own affairs and walked to the Modhumati river. A 
half moon had cast a magic spell and flooded the river silver. We could 
see as far as the farthest bend. The river lay there prattling some 
mysterious songs to the universe.
We listened as a perfect night closed in.
……..............................................
It
 was time to come back. This time at Mawa we were extra cautious while 
getting on the speedboat. One after another we filed ourselves. No rush.
 Ah. All safe.
After about fifteen minutes we were in the middle 
of the Padma and something queer caught our eyes. Lots of speedboats 
were moored in the mid-river. What are they doing, we wondered. First I 
thought they were tourists enjoying the Padma cruise. But what interests
 should tourists find here? Then they must be some kind of geological 
surveyors looking for minerals. But then why so many women and children?
Just
 then our speedboat passed by one stationary boat. To our surprise we 
found that the outboard engine had been taken apart and the boatman was 
fiddling with it. Then we passed another boat and its engine was also 
dismounted. We passed another and another. And then we realized what had
 happened. The river was so shallow here that the boats were all stuck.
Hardly
 a second went by before our boat suddenly stopped with a sudden jerk 
and three of us just simply tumbled over into the river. The same three.
 I stood up sheepishly, all wet once again. But then I again started 
laughing maniacally.
Whoever has ever heard of the Padma flowing just ankle deep in midstream? 
Photo: Md Nuruddin
Contact:
Tel : 02-9896945
Fax : 02-8829681
e-mail : info@shabaztourism.com
Time distances of Arunima
Countryside & Gold Resort
from nearby cities:
Dhaka : 4 hours
Jessore Airport : 1 hour 45 minutes
Khulna : 1 hour
Gopalganj: 20 minutes
Thursday, October 13, 2011
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