The water tankers seeking to fill their bellies bounced past the dry lakes of India’s booming technology capital.
Their bleary-eyed drivers waited in line to suck what they could from wells dug a mile deep into dusty lots between app offices and apartment towers named for bougainvillea — all built before sewage and water lines could reach them.
At one well, where neighbors lamented the loss of a mango grove, a handwritten logbook listed the water runs of a crisis: 3:15 and 4:10 one morning; 12:58, 2:27 and 3:29 the next.
“I get 50 calls a day,” said Prakash Chudegowda, a tanker driver in south Bengaluru, also known as Bangalore, as he connected a hose to the well.
“I can only get to 15.”
Persons:
bougainvillea, “, ”, Prakash Chudegowda
Locations:
Bengaluru, Bangalore