I am going to ramble a bit in this chapter. Recollections are swirling around in my mind since I began to write my stories.
The phone would ring and Mum would pick up the phone and the operator would tell her for instance ‘Sylee T.E. calling’. Jake Murray, a Scottish planter would be on the line, someone Mum knew as a friend but did she understand what he was saying - noooooo!
She would say to Jake, ‘Just a minute, Jake’. She would then call out, ‘Bunty, come here. Please listen to what Jake is saying.’ And I would understand quite clearly the broad Scots accent conversation and relay it to Mum!!
Then there was another Nepali ayah who was our bearer Singbir’s wife and she was my ayah as a new bride. Mum was very very fond of her and whilst Kanchi took care of me, Mum took care of Kanchi! Kanchi was almost a child herself and I can still recall her pretty face. Then she got pregnant and started her own family of one terribly cute child after another so she stopped working for us.
The tray would be brought up by Singbir who carried it up a flight of stairs to the dining room. Singbir would solemnly stand beside the guests first as they served themselves from the delicious array of food that Mum would have ordered and organised in the morning. As Singbir came around the table and stopped beside Mum, his face still poker straight, his stomach rumbled loudly. Mum had a great sense of humour and she was dying to laugh, as were we, but it was a formal set up and she couldn’t!! Singbir continued his rounds of serving without missing a beat. Shades of a butler you would say!! Later on after the guests left Mum regaled us with a funny recall of the incident and had us in splits! And how many of us remember scrambled eggs as ‘rumble tumble’ and sausage as ‘saasit’. Ham was ‘hum’.
A scene comes to mind of Dad, Mum and me in the lovely Baintgoorie drawing room. We had this comfortable deep sofa set that Mum had covered in thick white cambric slip covers which would come off when we had guests. There was a beautiful, thick carpet across almost the entire large drawing room which was cream with pastel flowers around the borders. There was Rintintin, almost invisible in the thick pile of the carpet as he was so small. His tiny dark brown face with black around the nose and mouth looking up at me as I lay on the carpet beside him. Dad on the carpet too and tapping his hands on the carpet and calling to Rintintin. With little barks the puppy would crawl on his stomach and inch forward to Dad. Two steps forward and one step back in play and yipping all the while. Sadly I did not have Rintintin for long. A jackal grabbed him on one of the occasions he went out on the lawn and that was the end of my little pup.
This beautiful photograph of the Chel river is taken by Sayan and is from the website 'TrekEarth' |
There was this beautiful lady, so artistic I wonder if she gained recognition after she left tea. Her name was Sheila Rana and her husband was Frankie Rana. She would decorate the ‘stage’ area we had in the club in the most creative, magnificent tableaus. I can’t even begin to describe how wonderful these decorations were. Every year was different. And the Christmas parties with one of the uncles dressed as Santa Claus. We totally believed it was Santa. One year Santa arrived on elephant back with his big old sack of presents. Another year he arrived in a helicopter!( courtesy our army friends!) What excitement for everyone. The spread of food over Christmas and New Year could rival the best of the best! Hogmanay (New Year’s Eve) was as big an event because of the British planters. The decorations remained till a week after New Year.
Meenglas was not far from Baintgoorie TE. It was good to have relatives near. My father and Sejokaku were very close to each other. Sunny Bose was more of a flamboyant, colourful character than my Dad. I can remember his love of music. The jazz LP-s and the rock and roll. I would never have taken to jazz had I not listened to Sejokaku’s music.
And his love of cars too. One time Sejokaku went to Saugaon T.E. to meet a Jamair flight and pick up another uncle who was the youngest of the brothers. My dearest Chotokaku. They were driving to Meenglas and Chotokaku was commenting to Sejokaku that one hears such tall stories of wild life in the tea gardens and pooh poohing: were they true at all?! Well, as they drove into the garden, very propitiously a beautiful leopard leapt over the bonnet of the car and disappeared into the tea bushes.
Ha ha, Chotokaku says ‘I’d better wind up my window.’ Yes, you’d better!!
Editor's Note:
T.E. - Tea Estate
Paaniwalla - the cook's helper (or as one of our visitors labelled him, the sous chef)
Baburchikhana or Bawarchikhana - the kitchen
Baburchi/Bawarchi - the cook
Western Dooars Club - Shipra mentions the old club, which was known as the Chel Club. If anyone has photographs of the club, old or new, would you care to share them here? Please write to indianchaistories@gmail.com. Thank you.
'My name is Shipra Castledine nee Shipra Bose (Bunty). My parents were Sudhin and Gouri Bose. I am a tea 'baba' of the 1950-s era. I spent a part of my life growing up in the Dooars and another large part of my life married to a tea planter's son the Late KK Roy son of PK and Geeta Roy of Rungamuttee TE in the Dooars. I continued to be in the tea industry for many years as KK was a tea broker till he passed away in 1998.' Read mo0re stories by Shipra here: https://teastorytellers.blogspot.com/search/label/Shipra%20Castledine
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A lovely roller coaster of a tale, Bunty.
ReplyDeleteYour nostalgia seeps through all the scenes and cameos of your childhood.
Your descriptions and details are so accurate that each of us lives through those days once more. Great times!
ReplyDeleteI have lovely memories of going to the club and swimming, I may even have some pictures.
ReplyDeleteI remember Santa arriving by elephant and also by helicopter one year. I really need to do something with all the cine film dad took.