Getting to Calcutta means coming across a metropolis (17 million inhabitants, including the suburbs!) which has remained as India dated back 30/40 years ago.Thousands of yellow old ambassador cars (like Italian old Fiat 1100) used as taxi, the shops on the sidewalks that sell everything and cook food filling the air with spices and fumes, the chaotic traffic, the perennial noise of the horns, but also markets, richness of colours, the many British-style cricket clubs.
It is a city that deserves one or two days of visit and can be considered as a stopover to continue towards other destinations such as the north-east of India, the Andamans, or Bhutan.Definitely not to be missed: the flower market which takes place in the morning in an area adjacent to the Hooghly river; the ablutions in the river performed daily by the locals; the terra cotta district where craftsmen create objects with the clay, especially figures of gods, which are cooked in the sun.