MrMatt wrote:India does look amazing! What makes it tough?
There is so many place ahhhh!
India is just chaos. If you have travelled in larger cities in Africa (not counting Sth Africa but like Nairobi or Cairo) or, especially, SE Asia (Vietnam, China, parts of Thailand) its like that but about 10X more chaotic. Maybe 20X. A typical 2 lane road will have 8 lanes of traffic, comprising pedestrians, camel or donkey cars, motorbikes, tuk tuks (3 wheel taxis), cars, trucks, buses and cyclists. All honking their horn (you miss the honking after you leave) and trying to overtake at the same time. Trying to make your way around a major train station is not something to do if you are a worrier.
If you get stressed dealing with touts and beggars (or negotiating for taxi fairs etc), then it can be really hard. I, however, being totally heartless, was able to say 'no' to all beggars and being 6ft3 and male, they tended to leave me alone after that. Read up on how to deal with them - not rudely, just firmly. A lot of westerners I saw were either too rude (usually because they were scared/ not confident) or too vague and soft, and were constantly harassed (it is easier being male for sure in this respect - females tourists do get harassed more).
You will probably get sick a few times, hopefully not terribly but that's just the way it is. Even the locals get sick...
Basically its a country where you either roll with it or get stomped. Much like falling off on a big wave really, you roll with the wave or you get bit#$ slapped (as someone wrote recently) and, even then, you will be taken out of your comfort zone. Its noisy, crowded, chaotic (did I say that before), constant, bizarre - just comes at you and comes at you. Ive travelled a bit and its the only place where I have seen tourists have 'culture shock', to the extent that some almost refused to leave their hotel rooms or could only stay out for an hour or two before needing to rest and recover
But its the most fascinating country I've ever been to. I often say that when you go to Europe, you go for the sites and wandering around the streets is nothing special. In India, the sites are so so for most of them, but wandering around the streets is just mind blowing. You will see things every minute you have never seen before in your life (that said, the Taj Mahal is extraordinary). I wandered around the old streets of Varanasi, which isn't a large area really, for about 3 days straight just looking, wide wide eyes. Dehli much the same. You will never forget it; it may change your life (I like to think I became much less consumerist after visiting, and I'm not a 'spiritual person' by any means)
I have only been to Northern India; I gather its a bit calmer in the south but I cant imagine that the cities are much different.
Oh, I can't imagine dragging a surfboard around Dehli or Varanasi or really anywhere in India except around Goa and the coast. You might want to try and find some kind of storage facility if you can and leave your board there for as much as possible.