Guns and Mangoes in the Punjab

I was on my way back to the far west of Pakistan and in order to get there, I had to fly from Singapore via Dubai to Karachi.  Knowing that it’s Ramadan and that people are fasting, I carb and alcohol loaded before I got off the plane.  It’s actually illegal for non Muslims to eat or drink in public in Pakistan during Ramadan, so I ate my pitiful airline lunch and washing it down with a little plastic bottle of Shiraz, I made the most of it.

I had a number of meetings in Karachi and I was helping to select a new office there for our local sales team and then I also had to select a new service provider for security, because this is a place where my employer requires that you don’t go anywhere in Pakistan without men with guns.  Lots of men, with lots of guns.  

There are only a couple of hotels that are generally acceptable for foreigners to stay in in Karachi and sadly, a number of the hotels or major buildings close to them have been blown up at one time or another.  The Karachi Marriott has only been blown up once, in 2002 (when the US consulate was also targeted) and because of the up armouring carried out by the owners, they now claim that its the ‘safest hotel in Karachi’  Lets hope so, because that’s where I am staying this time.   

The Pakistani people are charming but formally polite until you get to know them well.  The thing is, getting to know them beyond the pleasantries that dominate the first few minutes of any meeting.  The state of your health, the health of your family, the number of children you have and the weather are all prerequisite topics.  Even if it’s abundantly clear that what they have to sell, you don’t want, you still have to go through the motions and then politely tell them that the office that they want you to pay a fortune for, is actually somewhere that you wouldn’t run your chooks in it for fear that they would catch something.  Obviously you don’t tell them that exactly, but you get the picture.

The longest internal leg of my trip is from Karachi to a town called Rajanpur, in the Punjab. It’s not technically in the region named Baluchistan, but its right on the invisible border that runs through the mountains, so it might as well be.  I booked a flight there and back hoping to avoid the hellish drive but I found out that because of very high daytime temperatures (50 deg C plus), sand storms and high winds that around half of the light passenger aircraft who service the smaller airports have been unable to land in that area over the past few days.  I didn’t fancy getting turned back and having to try and divert from whatever other airport was open and make the journey in an unknown vehicle, so I resolved to drive in a small convoy.  Well, for accuracy, I’m not driving, I am a passenger and a fairly nervous one at that.  

At ten hours, it’s a dreadful journey for anyone, but as a jumpy passenger, with all the jingly trucks wandering across the road, motorcyclists weaving in and out, pedestrians darting though the traffic and beggars and pedlars trying to flag down vehicles at every choke point, it’s enough to make you close your eyes and pray.  In fact, I think that’s what my driver is doing most of the time.    

I think I mentioned that it’s Ramadan? and so I got up early and shovelled in as much spicy chick pea dahl and roti as I could before the journey, thinking that I’d manage the drive better if I ate my fill at the hotel as an early breakfast – at 6am, which for the faithful is still 3 hours into the fast, but as an nonbeliever, I get a break on that, even if I do have to eat in my room.  Part way through the ten hour drive I am reminded why lots of chick peas are not good travelling food. I feel like I am in the scene in the Peter Sellers film where someone passes wind in the lift, but I figure that my travelling companions won’t get the reference and besides, they are heavily armed.  Giving in to the dahl probably wouldn’t have been the best idea anyway as I always have a small but powerful attack squad of Giardia or some other exotic parasite tucked somewhere about my intestines.  As a result, I am beginning to feel a sense of impending doom with my stomach fermenting and gurgling malevolently away.   

While we are on the subject of pop (or is it poop?) culture references, this morning the security guards were checking over their weapons in the car park and exchanging admiring glances at each others ‘modifications’ – it’s probably a boy thing…  Most of the guards have the 30 round magazines on their folding stock AK47’s with another reversed and taped onto it giving the ability to change mags quickly when needed.  One actually had a small welded brace made to hold two magazines together without the need for tape and that was universally admired.  A couple of them had local versions of the MP5K, which is a very useful short weapon for bringing to bear in cramped circumstances, such as from inside a car. Not that you’d want them fire it without it being absolutely necessary, I hasten to add, as you’d be as deaf as a post afterwards.  Being former military men and all really good guys, they wouldn’t do anything so crass as to add some bling to their weapons or wear a Rambo like headband and I wouldn’t get into a vehicle with them if they did, but some of them do like ‘mission impossible’ ring tones on their mobiles. The accompanying Police Commandos also have “No Fear” emblazoned on their t shirts and vehicles.

My own personal paranoia goes into overdrive when I am up in the mountains and I refuse to move without something that goes bang close to hand.  On previous trips I have managed to persuade them to place an MP5K under my seat, where it is never mentioned, but it’s accepted that if there’s an orange jump suit being handed out, I’m not putting it on.  We aren’t going high up or out of the way this time and I don’t need a weapon because of the all the others in friendly hands around me, but it’s a matter of principle and possibly, just possibly because it makes make me feel more like one of the gang. Not that I could really be one of the gang as I’m the only white boy and just about the the only one without a beard. This time, they waited until we were just about to leave and then, with straight faces, handed me a dinky little .38 calibre pistol, in a holster that seriously looked like it had been made for Bodyguard Barbie.  Hmmm, “Shukria” I said politely and with as much dignity as I could muster, I then slipped it in the seat pocket, where it sat, looking very small.

Yes, apparently ‘desert pink’ is a legitimate colour.

Part way through the journey and late at night, I arrived at the little town of Rahim Yar Khan, where I had reserved rooms in a small hotel.  The chain, which is actually owned by the same people as own the Marriott franchise in Pakistan was allegedly the best in town, but I wasn’t expecting much, just a place with a lock on the door, air con and a bed.  When we arrived, I discovered that they wouldn’t let me, a foreigner, stay due to the local security situation.  I know, because it is my business to know, that there had been significant inter tribal conflict lately and in some parts, there was more than a general resentment of the west, but I wasn’t aware of the government directive that hotels ‘without security’ had to turn away foreign guests.  I gestured through the window at the four vehicles, two with flashing blue lights and with my private army rapidly fanning out to cover the street and without a trace of irony, said “I think I have enough security for us all, don’t you?”

That didn’t work of course and we were politely turned away and instructed to call the chief commissioner of Police for permission, but by that time of night  he wasn’t taking calls.  Some serious string pulling by the guy running my security detail got us into an approved government ‘rest house’ for the night, which actually was quite comfortable, even if my security head was woken up every thirty minutes or so by members of the intelligence agencies demanding copies of my passport and trying to force us to leave and drive on and into the next regions responsibility.  That would have meant that we continue driving through the night, which you just don’t do in that neck of the woods so he refused and told the spies to wake me up and kick me out themselves.  As he’d anticipated, they didn’t want to do that and instead let me stay asleep, even though he had to go downstairs minutes later and have a two o’clock in the morning meal before the fasting started.    

The next day, looking out of the window I was mortified to see that my security detail had actually slept in the back of the trucks and I resolved that the next night, I’d find them beds or at least they would be under cover.  I expected to hear lots of grumbling and rubbing of bad backs but they were as cheerful as ever and they climbed back aboard for the next leg of the journey

After several hours in convoy, I arrived at the same 1922 British built fort that I been to for a tribal council or ‘Jirga’ some time before. I doubt that the Brits actually laid the bricks here, more like directed the work, but the same tough looking individuals that I remembered from the last time I was there were still on the site and their crinkled faces and twinkling eyes told me that they were happy to see me and by extension, what that could mean in terms of progress for their remote desert community.

The Border Military Police post 

NOT a ‘Game of Thrones’ set…

It’s a very hard life that they lead, what with having to live with contaminated ground water and struggling to make a living from subsistence goat farming.  Although the land in the Indus river valley area is incredibly fertile and almost anything grows, including mangoes, cotton, sweetcorn, rice and wheat, nothing will grow well out there in the desert, except for immediately after the rains and then the land is inundated and would wash any crops there away.  In most desert areas hunting is banned (not that a ban stops people) in order to preserve the wildlife, or so they say.  I have a feeling that the real reason is to preserve the wildlife for the wealthy Arabs who fly in with their hawks and four wheel drives and live in luxurious tents, with flushing toilets and air-conditioning.

 The last time I came to the fort, the locals had laid on a feast of roasted goats that were hacked into pieces and laid on several platters for us to eat with our fingers. The goat was a similar temperature to molten lava at that moment and I was busy trying to cool my rapidly blistering fingers when the grinning tribesman opposite pulled apart a large piece with his asbestos hands and dumped it onto my place with the admonishment to “EAT”  so, I ate.  Everyone was fasting this time of course, so there was no roast goat, but recognising that I wasn’t Muslim and following their traditions of Pashtunwali,the unwritten code of looking after travellers and defending them with their lives, if necessary, they insisted that I had a drink of water and a few slices of delicious local mangoes. I had no idea where the water was coming from, but it would have been rude to refuse, so I drank it, all the time thinking about the consequences. I felt, rather than heard the shriek from my stomach.

One of the fierce looking, but very friendly Border Military Police guards

I knew that we had a small number of Border Military Police who were out in the desert guarding the technical equipment on our behalf and I wanted to visit them to make sure that they were being looked after, so my private army took  me on a 30 minute ‘Mad Max’ type road race to the sites.  I was reminded of Legionnaires standing post in forsaken corners of North Africa when I saw the remoteness of the location and I ambled over to introduce myself to the old grizzled guards who spent a month at a time living in a brushwood shelter on site. 


This, believe it or not, is the security guards ‘barracks’ in the desert.  The shapes on the horizon are ancient undersea reefs.

I shook all their hands and thanked them for their duty and as we had some fruit in an cool box in the back of the car, I got that out and left it with them. As we drove off in our air-conditioned vehicle.  I noticed my guards looking quizzically at me and I hoped that I hadn’t embarrassed anyone by offering food during the fast.  Generally speaking, when a non Muslim makes a minor mistake of etiquette, but does so inadvertently, you are forgiven with a smile and it’s usually forgotten, but in this case I wasn’t too sure.

I had been swallowing Imodium like it was candy all morning and had been able to manage my rapidly rioting innards, but right there and then, I needed to stop the convoy and consumed with embarrassment, I scampered off behind a small bush.  Within seconds, I was surrounded by armed men, all concerned for my wellbeing, but luckily facing outwards in ‘all round defence’, in case someone wanted to attack me when my pants were down.

That evening, when it came around to the Iftar or ‘breaking of the fast’ meal, the guards left the commander and I alone in the guest house.  As is traditional, we started with dates and again, slices of mangoes.  I remarked how much I loved their mangoes and I was told that it was mango season at that time and we could stop on the way back to Karachi and buy some.  The commander drank the allegedly refreshing and sugar laden pink rosewater.  I tried it but being the plebeian I am, I preferred the sugar laden coca cola that I was offered.  We had a delicious chicken curry, again eaten with fingers (I’m not even going to describe my innards by this time) and mercifully, lots of naan bread and I asked if we could arrange some bedding for the guards and somewhere inside for them to sleep. “No room Sir” I was told, but I insisted and suggested that they sleep in the dining room, which had fans.  Begrudgingly the guest house managers agreed to allow that “those who wanted it” could sleep inside where it was cooler, inferring that anyone who took up the offer was not at all welcome really.

My bathroom had several resident crickets and as soon as I had got into bed, they started up.  I knew that there was no chance of sleep with them around, so I took a running shoe and after chasing them down, battered them into silence. No sooner had I done that, but the door flew open and two guards ran in to see if I was being attacked.  I assured them that I was not and that my room was now cricket free.  Through the door, I saw that all twelve (!) of the guards had decided to sleep on the floor outside of my room.  After their food, they were revved up and ready for a fight, but luckily for me, they had no where to go.

I managed to reassure them that I was not in danger of imminent kidnap by showing them the carcasses of the crickets, which were already being dismembered by ants, but they must have thought that I was complaining about the mess, so they brought the manager out of his bed by his ear and instructed him to clean the room.  When he had done so with very bad grace,  my guards (note the possessive pronoun) as good as tucked me back into bed.  When the door was closed, I had to jump out of bed again and rush to the loo.  I tried to be as quiet as I could so they didn’t knock on the door and ask me if I was ok.

Very early the next morning, the guard commander who spoke the best English woke me with hot water and a towel.  I realised that I was expected to use that to shave but that he also wanted to chat and so I invited him to sit down in my room as I packed my small bag.  It transpired that the guards had quite taken to me and genuinely wanted me to know about the history and the peaceful nature of Islam, so that if I wished, I could use the occasion of morning prayers to convert.  I saw no irony in hearing about the peaceful nature of Islam coming from a heavily armed man in a fortified guesthouse in a province where many would have quite happily staked me out in the town square and very, very politely declined the offer but agreed that as soon as I was feeling better I’d look more closely into the history.  He took that as a partially successful conversion and I was allowed to continue my ablutions.    

On the journey back to Karachi we stopped at a Chinese run highway building project to see what they were doing about security in challenging circumstances.  The Chinese, not wanting to lessen their profits are often a little slipshod about the security of their workers and as a result are the only ones currently having people kidnapped for ransom.  The government, who are embarrassed by this, insist that they live in fortified bases and provide large numbers of troops to guard the men working there.  Of course, they also require the project people to pay for it all and no doubt make a tidy profit of their own.

When we left, I noticed the almost indecent haste with which the convoy was barrelling down the highway.  I knew that the guards were trying to get home to Karachi before Iftar and the leapfrogging Police vehicles that changed at each invisible province line were hard pressed to stay ahead of our own drivers.  I didn’t complain and just made like my driver and closed my eyes.  It was dark by the time we got to the outskirts of the city and I remembered that we hadn’t stopped and bought any mangoes.  “Don’t worry Sir” I was assured and I nodded off again.  When I awoke, we were inside the Marriott compound and all of the guards had de bussed and were formed up to say goodbye.  I had intended to pay for their Iftar meal as a thank you, but we’d run out of time.  I pressed an envelope with my remaining cash onto the guard commander and asked him to pay for the food on my behalf.  They were certainly not expecting anything, but nor was I expecting the gift of a tray of mangoes that they had obviously purchased en route as I slept.

A great gift from really nice heavily armed people.

It was my best trip to Pakistan yet and I told them all so.  I have several weeks and five countries to visit before I get home again, but I will really remember this trip and the people I met.  Some old friends and now, some new ones.

Pizza and a hand made chair

Recently, we were having pizza (and a glass of wine) at the local winery when an email pinged into my inbox.  I resisted the temptation to look at it there and then, but instead resolved to look at it later as I was, at that moment outside  admiring at the owners 1974 blue Rolls Royce, which was parked out in the rambling grounds of the winery.  He very kindly allowed me to take it out for a spin, so I did. Carefully…

I do feel quite like an east end villain enjoying the spoils of my last ‘blag’

Not only does the winery do a very nice glass of sauvignon blanc but they make lovely pizzas in a enormous Italian oven that quite literally fell off the back of a lorry.  Apparently the leg of the oven had broken ‘beyond economical repair’ according to the insurers and the new owner acquired it for a fraction of its new price. The new supports for the oven didn’t look great and so it was bricked into the corner, where it does sterling service.

The pizza oven – boxy, but good… 

After lunch, I managed to check the email whilst sitting near the house greyhounds, who roam free through the dining area.  They are rescue dogs, who otherwise would have been put down and with the exception of “Psycho” who is wearing the blanket like a shawl, they are very good natured animals.

This sofa is not for sharing – dogs only…

The email was from Rundell & Rundell, the Kyneton company who had arranged the ‘lost trades fair’ I attended some time before.  I’d signed up
for a chair making course in the hope that a place would eventually become available. Lisa, the lady jointly in charge of the business and of taking bookings told me that there was quite a waiting list, but that she’d add me to it.

The email said that there was a cancellation, the first in around five years and could I get there the next week.  Yes!  I said, clearly not working out the logistics properly as I was in Singapore at the time.  My domestic suggestion that I would be coming home for the week to see them all and that I’d be making a chair whilst there was quickly seen through and it was pointed out that I was coming back to make a chair and that I might see them all whilst there.  Point made and taken.

Kyneton is a bit of a drive from home and so Mrs Jerry researched some B&B’s and motels in the area.  Sadly, the prices were around $200 plus for a night, so that was a non starter, I therefore persuaded Scarlett, my 1970 MG roadster to take me there on an almost daily basis.  She didn’t mind the cold mornings and with only one tyre blowout, she faithfully carried both me and ‘Q’, a local farmer, who was also attending the course, along the country roads and through the tiny villages that must have been social centres during the gold and wool rushes.

On the way – an autumn morning in the lovely hamlet of Glenlyon

The countryside here is remarkably English in appearance, but it’s obviously not England as the mobs of Kangaroos standing around in the fields demonstrate.  I love the cold misty mornings with the top down on the car (Scarlett’s roof is full of holes and so drafty that it feels just the same with the roof on or off!)  It’s funny how a car can make you happy though.  Driving her on days like that just makes me smile.

Delinquent sheep mugging a farmer 

I have to confess to have been a complete woodworking dunce at school.  Well, perhaps not a dunce, but I was certainly too busy acting out to have paid enough attention to the rules and niceties of working with wood.  Over the years I have turned my hand to making shelves, boxes, kennels and parrot stands, with varying degrees of success.  To be honest, my earnest efforts could have best described as ‘rustic’ and driven more by necessity than a genuine desire to create something unique and long-lasting.

The course I was about to embark upon was seven days long and was advertised as teaching a person how to make an heirloom wooden chair in the traditional way.   The kind of chair I was intending to make is known as a Windsor chair or ‘double bow’ named for the two bow shaped pieces of wood used in its construction – it’s a British chair, but one that is also known as a ‘sackback’ chair in the United States.  

The yanks named the chair for the burlap (or hessian) sack that they slung over the back of the chair to keep the draught away from the sitters body in the old houses.  When I first looked at the chair, I wasn’t sure how comfortable it could be, but I was pleasantly surprised when I sat in one.

The essence of traditional chair building is that you make everything by hand, use no electrical tools and certainly no sandpaper, because they didn’t exist back in the eighteenth century, but I have to admit that the legs were turned on a lathe and I used a power drill, for the angled holes.  Curved pieces of wood, such as the bows, have to be steamed and bent by hand, much in the same way that they would have been well over two hundred years ago.

Bending the top bow – fresh out of the steamer

Due to that lack of sandpaper, traditional tools such as draw knives, scrapers and travisher’s are used to shape and smooth the green and unseasoned wood.  

My Fijian mahogany seat, part way through being ‘dished’ and trimmed.

There are several parts to the sack back chair; the legs, the seat, the bows and the spindles.  In order to work the green wood for the spindles, it’s best to use it when it has been soaked for a couple of days and then cut into staves, around half a metre long.  There is a device known as a shave chair, which looks a bit like a cross between a ‘steam punk’ rocking horse and a medieval torture device.  The shave chair helps you grip pieces of wood while you are working them between a leather padded jaw and using a traditional draw knife, shape the wood to your needs.

Sitting at the shave chair, my position for several hours a day.  My ‘under construction’ chair is next to me. 

The thought of creating something literally from green wood was something that I relished, but at the same time, worried me because the thought of using such fine motor skills or truthfully, finding such skills in the first place was a little daunting, because my hands are to woodworking what boxing gloves are to flower arranging.   The traditional draw knives and spoke shaves felt very strange to me but even for a woodworking duffer like me, under the careful tutelage of the instructors Glenn and Peter, I soon got the hang of them. I did discover that I seem to suffer from a condition called ‘grain blindness’ (not recognised by the British Medical Association) – thats not something to do with home made alcohol, it’s just that I seem to have an issue with recognising which way the wood grain runs, not something that aids a woodworker, so things tend to take a bit longer than they might for other more able chair makers.

Drilling the back bow.  Note the mirror for checking the angle of the drill.  

Glancing around the workshop at my fellow trainee chair makers and seeing that they were all moving along much more quickly than I was, I couldn’t help but feeling  that I really could have done with an electric sander, but that just wouldn’t have been in the spirit of things.  I think that perhaps I could have made a small fortune selling small squares of #220 grit sandpaper though…

Everyday at around ten o’clock, Mrs Rundell came around to the workshop with freshly made cakes but one day, some fantastic home made doughnuts and jam appeared.  Her son Tom had knocked them up for us that morning and they were still warm when we fell upon them like hyena’s on an unattended fresh kill.

Warm doughnuts and strawberry jam – it doesn’t get much better than that.

Fuelled up by the excellent snacks, I got back to the pleasurable work of assembling the various parts of my chair.  Some fine tuning was needed to make sure that everything fitted as it should and muttered curses could be heard from more than one of us as we struggled to fit the spindles into the top bow.  Once we were all happy, we warmed up the traditional brown glue (allegedly made from cow lips and a**eholes) and sparingly dabbed the parts before fitting them together.

It was at this stage when I learned the meaning of bodging. Apparently skilled itinerant tradesmen in the Chilterns (a beautiful area of England) who used to turn chair legs using a bent sapling to power a lathe were known as ‘chair bodgers’ so, ‘bodging something together’ wasn’t originally a pejorative term, but when used to describe my earlier attempts at woodworking, it certainly could have been.

The very cool sapling lathe.  Note the beard required to operate one.

As I had seen at the lost trades fair, there was a whole subculture of traditional artisans who built stone walls, tanned and tooled leather, smithed metal and worked wood and as they called into the workshop to say hello, they looked the part too.  Beards seemed standard, as were sturdy boots and checked shirts.  The beard was sadly beyond me, but for a week, I got to be a small part of the community.  

The finished article – back at home

At the end of my seven days, I really felt that I had achieved something.  Because I wanted to get home, I missed the end of course cheese and wine party, but sitting at home on my handmade chair more than made up for that.