Shri Husband,
Bai Goanna and I rarely eat out. This week we decided to treat ourselves at a
fancy restaurant in the by-lanes of Fontainhas. Great food.
The kind of places we usually go to, both
lower end and starred, offer un-bottled water on arrival, free and unlimited. Young
men in loose uniforms hang around with jug, and cloth to wipe spills on tables.
We are given a choice of buying bottled water if we’re unsure of the quality of
the ‘plain’ liquid.
Here, we had to ask for the aqua when
thirst beckoned. The bottle he put on the table was made of thick glass, not
crackly plastic. Environment-friendly designer bottle, with parallel circles
protruding along its length. The label indicated that the water was sourced
from a lake between Mumbai and Pune. Nice.
Then I saw the price and yelled “a
hundred bucks”.
SFW (Sad-Faced Waiter), in perfectly
fitting attire, behaved like he was announcing bad news. His body language and
facial expression gave his thoughts away. He echoed: “yes, ma’am, one hundred
rupees”. Before I could ask him whether the bottle, once emptied, was then our
property, Bai Goanna reacted: “Get us another brand, something common, don’t
want far-off lake-water. Get something cheaper.”
SFW owned up:
“Don’t have any other brand.”
I kindly
instructed him to get plain water, preferably filtered. SFW now developed a smirk
and some confidence: “Don’t have filter.”
Shri Husband
asked him what he (SFW, not Shri Husband) drank on duty. “Tap water,” he
confessed.
“Get us tap
water,” the three of us chorused.
“Not allowed.”
So our arm-twisted choice was to either buy water at the price quoted or stay
thirsty.
My year-end resolution is: I won’t
sit in any restaurant, unless I’m comfortable with the water I’ll be provided/ buying.
(Like, I always check whether there’s
Service Charge in the bill. If there is, no tip is the rule.)
I still don’t know whether, once paid
for and seal broken, the fancy bottle belongs to the customer.
I’m surprised that tourist-friendly,
tourism-dependent, waste-management aware Goans who are so vocal when it comes
to taxi-fares, look the other way at the accumulation of plastic water-bottles
clogging drains and ruining the look of neighbourhoods/ beaches/ temples. I’m
equally surprised that voices raised against lack of parking-spaces don’t
whimper about non-availability of treated, potable water.
Most times I carry water from home to
live by the mantra of reduce-reuse-recycle. It’s also a habit carried over from
the eras when bottled water on sale wasn’t even a figment in someone’s
imagination. In those days, soft-drinks (for some reason called ‘cold’-drinks)
were drunk by the elite, not the aam junta. Another reason I carry along
‘home-water’ is because I don’t trust what is sold in the plastic containers.
Just because the liquid in them is transparent, doesn’t mean it’s free of
pathogens. (Pathogens = disease-causing micro-organisms = bad bacteria/
viruses.)
This was my first experience of a
commercial eating-place refusing to provide ordinary, un-bottled tap-water,
filtered or otherwise. If SFW is to be believed, no one else has complained.
“He’s lying,” I presumed.
“Or perhaps you are mistaken,” Shri
Husband said. “There are people who really don’t mind getting fleeced, whose
logic is convoluted. Remember our old friend, YZ Prabhu?”
“What about him?” Bai Goanna asked.
“When Delhi’s air got unbearably
polluted and the government decided to take steps, he was irked by the odd-even
formula.”
“What’s an odd-even formula?” Bai
Goanna is out of sync with what’s happening in the world/ country.
“Delhi-government said odd
number-plates and even ones could ply the roads on alternate days to reduce the
number of cars and therefore keep pollution levels at 50% of what they are.”
“What was YZ Prabhu’s take?”
“His solution was to own two air-conditioned
cars, one with an odd and the other with an even number.”
“You mean he preferred to own two
cars rather than breathe fresh, safe air?”
“Exactly. He values his cars more
than his lungs.”
“Takes all kinds to make a world,”
sighed Bai Goanna. “I guess the manufacturers of air-purifying gadgets are
making a lot of money.”
“The bottled-water guys have been
doing just that for some decades now,” said Shri Husband. “Who knows, in the near
future we might carry along personal portable water-filters and
germ-eliminators.”
“Or,” I added, “instant
water-manufacturing machines.”
“That’s a bit far-fetched,” said Bai
Goanna. “But possible. There is a chap who’s invented a water-making unit for
Indian farmers. And air-water manufacturing factories have been around in
Andhra since early this century. You know…”
Before she could complete her
sentence, Shri Husband interrupted: “Perhaps we could spark a change by
checking before entering restaurants what water they serve and avoid those that
force you to buy something you don’t want.”
Thus he spoke before walking out of
the room.
Feedback: sheelajaywant@yahoo.co.in
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