Monday, February 23, 2009

Thailand (Ayuthaya and Kanchanaburi)

Hello from the flagging Bloggers! I got a free hour internet with the second hand book I just bought so thought I'd make hay... have yet to write about amazing Angkor or buzzing Bangkok but will move on to more recent adventures...

We headed to Ayuthaya, north of Bangkok and Thailand's capital between the 14th and 18th centuries, on the 20th. Fantastic, crumbled Wats and Chedis and Praangs (read... ruins), all sombre and eerie amid falling leaves and sitting on an island where three rivers converge. The natural moat kept Ayuthaya safe for 400 years but eventually the Burmese sacked the place and sent the Thai monarchy south first to Thonbury and then Bangkok. Anyway, we had a fabulous 'Indiana Jones' experience when trapped in the central praang (read very tall tower) by a spectacular afternoon thunderstorm. I happened to be downstairs in the poorly lit, tiny treasure chamber when the lights started flickering on and off with the storm and the wooden boards started slamming open and shut in the wind. There wasn't a 'Mummy' waiting to seal us in its tomb but it felt like there could have been... Magic!

We are now in Kanchanaburi of 'Bridge over the River Kwai' fame, living it up in a wonderful little house on the river (thanks Elaine - good one). The semitary was moving... lots of little quotes from hurting mums and ages generally well below mine. Peaceful-sad-dignified.

Yesterday (another Elaine tip) we got to stroke Thai tigers at the 'Tiger Temple.' I've always wanted to see one of these magnificent animals up close, and have felt some urgency to do so with the fear that they might soon disappear altogether, but was a little hesitant about this one. I just wasn't certain about the ethics of getting photographed with a captive tiger... I gather that the tigers there are the orphans and rescued hurt of the wild who would otherwise be lost to poachers and lost habitat. 80% of the tigers there now were bred in captivity from these rescued animals and hopes are to start reintroducing cubs into the wild. Justification for my photo-moment? I'm not sure. But they did seem very well fed and cared for. It must cost an arm and a leg (not literally, or at least I am intact) to keep them all fed.

The hilarity of the temple (it's run by Buddhist monks) is the variation of animails they have taken in... the tigers are the main attraction but wondering around at random together and munching on potatoes dropped from trucks are cattle, water buffalo, a camel, chickens, boars, dear and (on leashes admittedly and only when being moved around) the tigers themselves! Very much the 'lions lying down with the lambs.'

Must close... the dubious oily coating on this keyboard is making this hard on the fingers! Tomorrow we leave Kanchanaburi for Bangkok... on the 26th we depart for Canada and the BIG (at least in miles) portion of our journey.

Love to all,
Nick (tired and unapolagetic about grammar and flow at this point)

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Cambodia (Killing Fields and S21, Phnom Phen)

Hello again! We’ve been out of blog action for a wee bit as internet in Cambodia turned out to be pretty slow going… That said, there wouldn’t have been a great deal of time to write anyway, given the things we’ve had to cram into a very small time. Lonely Planet talks about Cambodia being a place of contrasts and that is probably a good place to start – the Khmer people have been through a peculiar brand of horror which I really couldn’t conceive despite the rather disturbing cinematic education that is “The Killing Fields.” Spending even the few days that we did there, however, and it’s just not possible to be unaffected by the magnitude of the loss suffered under Polpot… I don’t know a great deal about mass psychology but evidently noone has been left untouched.

What makes it at once heart-warming AND heart-wrenching is extraordinary resilience, optimism and humour of the Khmer people. Whether it be tour guides with ‘missing’ uncles and brothers or the crippled victims of land-mines with little or no state support selling guidebooks, it feels like you are somewhere almost everyone has the RIGHT for a chip on their shoulder and, strangely-beautifully-soulshakingly, noone seems to carry one. So yes, we have seen the Killing Fields and S21 and the photographs of the victims and it is an exceptionally nightmarish story but I'd rather talk about the Khmer people who are, in a word, humbling.

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Sleepy in Saigon

We've just had our day at the Reunification Palace and wondering round sweltering, lusty, frenetic Saigon. The evening rain has just made things more humid and the place feels oddly appropriate for the end of our Vietnamese soujourn.

So this is just a little not from a tired traveller that we're off bright and early to the Cu Chi tunnels tomorrow for a little Viet Cong action before heading across the border and into Cambodia - it's a fair bus trip to the crossover and then another 5 hours to Phnom Phen so lots of bus-time.

Not sure what web connectedness is like over there... I'm guessing pretty good like in this end of the world but if not, we'll write you from Bangkok!

Love to all.

Mekong Delta


Yesterday we took a fairly epic day tour of the Mekong Delta - the point where the mighty Mekong, having wound its way down from Tibetan China through Burma, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam, meets the sea. The delta system consists of 9 little rivers (each with a dragon) and between sit islands built up with delightfully ramshackle fishing villages and little fruit farms. Here we are in 'traditional' Vietnamese garb paddling down one of the irrigation canals on one of the islands (where we were introduced to a staggering variety of fruit - Lindsey will remember these better then I but they included the infamous 'Durian', which is apparantly less stinky in Vietnam then in Thailand due to fewer chemical additives. I'm personally not convinced).

Motorbikes (Xe-om) around Nha Trang

Here are some quick snaps of our whirl around country Nha Trang on a motorbike... the most fun you can have with your helmet on...

Learning how to weave Vietnamese style... These ladies can finish a 4 metre weave with consistent detail in 2 hours (that's without an overlocker, Gran/Mum)

Handing out treats (read 'junk food') to the 'Little Monks' at the Buddhist orphanage. As you can see his head is shaved except for a forlock - when he turns 16 he has the option of either remaining in the community as a monk or returning to the world. Some of the kids of 7ish on had started wearing robes and were astonishingly calm and serene for such young things, but before that age they seem to be completely free to be children as the pic suggests. Notice Miss Bates in classic 'positive reinforcement' teacher pose.
Rice paddies! I love them. I want to decorate a room with pictures SOLELY of rice paddies... Lindsey has suggested the bathroom.


'Tropic Thunder' - Lindsey on a motorbike. Note the white knuckles grasping the handlebar on the back.

Love to all

Saturday, February 7, 2009

My Son




So here we are at My Son, about 35 km and a hired car (and driver too! - we shared the cost with a bunch of travel mates so it ended up being much cheaper then the advertised 'optional tour' our company offered) away from Hoi An in central Vietnam. It is the religious centre for the Champa people, the original inhabitants of central and southern Vietnam (or at least they were here before the Vietnamese people, arriving - from Indonesia? Malaysia? noone really knows) by the 2nd century AD. Heavily influenced by Indian culture (like the Khmer people of Cambodia) they worshipped the 3 major Hindu deities Brahma, Vishnu and (especially) Siva. As such their religious architecture and sculpture is in marked contrast to that of the Vietnamese who gradually occupied Cham territory from Northern Vietnam from the 14th century onwards and whose culture is more heavily indebted to their Chinese neighbours. The Champa people are still around today as a Vietnamese ethnic minority though the majority have now converted to Islam.
Anyway, the ruins of the religious centre were mysterious-haunting - set amid the huge fan-like leaves of great tropical plants and overgrown with vegetation in misty-humid hills and (because we had hired a car rather then a tour bus) were an eerie quiet for the enigmatic statues. There are a few tablets of texts scattered amid the ruins in a language noone speaks and which may never be deciphered, and the whole overgrown temple feeling has one feeling a little 'Indiana Jones.' Sadly, like so much cultural history around the world, the ruins have been wrecked by the often random destructiveness of 20th century warfare: for the majority of the ruins (not pictured) centuries of slow, romantic decay were given a rather major push when they were obliterated by US bombs during the Vietnam war.
It was interesting that we should visit a place of lost cultural memory on the day we lost some of our own photographs... the mystical nature of the place was a fitting one in which to think about time, the present, life, memory and everything. But enough philosophising - we're about to head off on xe-om (motorbikes) to visit a huge Buddha statue!
Love to all.


Hue: Sleeper Cabins and Country Walks

Much has happened since our last post. Firstly, we've survived the overnight train from Hanoi to Hue. Our tickets were NOT what you would call first class. There were six of us to a cabin - two sets of narrow bunk beds stacked three high with just enough space inbetween to stand without your shoulders quite grazing the beds. You can smoke on the train here and they do not like it when you open the window. Other than the space and air quality issues it was fantastic. The rocking train lulled us to sleep and we woke to a sunrise over the rice paddie- beautiful!

The first day in Hue we went for a "cruise" on a dragon boat and visited the Citadel. The Citadel was not what we expected- much more lavish and intrecate then any fort I've seen. I can't do the beauty or history justice so will suggest you google it.

Day two consisted of a rather high budget motorcycle tour of the tombs around Hue. Nick and I decided that Tu Duc's tomb only looked like it was about 2km from the hotel- easily walkable. We set off on foot along the river and in though the outskirts of town where tourists are far more rare. By the time we'd walked about 3km people had stopped offering us motorbike rides and the streets had fallen off our map. Eventually we found ourselves along a dirt road in the countryside of Hue. Totally lost we kept walking in the general direction of the tomb. We encounted two young (maybe 6 years old) monks out for a walk with their friend. We bowed to them (as you do). They very solomly bowed back... and burst into giggles as soon as they had passed us. Evenutally we had lost all hope and stopped to ask a lady how we could get back to town. She said "Tu Duc", grabbed me firmly by the arm, led us down the road and pointed along a narrow path throught the trees. She then gave me a firm push in that direction. It seemed we weren't going back to town. It was nothing less than devine intervention that guided us to the tomb situated 8km from our hotel, but eventually we did arrive.
Tu Duc's tomb was more like an estate than a tomb. The Vietnamise are very wise, so they build their tomb to be enjoyed as a place of residence durnig life, not just death. After our 8km walk we didn't have much time before we had to find some motorcycles to take us back to the hotel for our departure to Hoi An...

Monday, February 2, 2009

Tour- the official beginning

Today (Feb 2nd- happy groundhog day, by-the-by) was the first official day of our tour.
First we visited teh Hoa Lo Prision - also known as the ‘Hanoi Hilton’ thanks to the many American jet fighters who enjoyed a "holiday" there during the war. It is a beautiful french style building form the outside but obviously quite stark from the inside.
Next we were back off to the mausoleum of Ho Chi Minh to see the One Pillar Pagoda, Presidental Palace and the homes in which Ho Chi Minh lived. - he was a very modest man as we learned; choosing to live in a small house-on-stilts rather than the palace.
Last stop was the Temple of Literature. This ancient confucian sanctuary was the first educational institute for Mandarins. It's a lovely sequence of five courtyards areas filled with ponds, statues, stone stele, grand pivilions, a drum to signal the beginning of exams and a bell to signal the end (Nick may choose to write some more insightful facts about these "statues and such"... but that's about the best I can do...It was VERY pretty.)

The rest of the day was ours to fill with a final wandering of the city. Stay tuned for Nick's Pagoda post if you'd like to learn more!

Overnight Train

More to follow on our rap up of Hanoi... but to keep you updated we are about to leave on the 'Reunification Express' overnight train... should arrive at Hue at 11 in the morning.

Love to all.

'Cyclo Rides'

Taking a trip on a cyclo (a pushbike with a seat for an unspecified number of passengers and luggage - two people with minimal bags seems the sensible maximum but apparantly numbers are no obstacle) is a surreal experience amid the hectic traffic, blaring horns and frenetic ze-om (motorbikes), hawkers and taxis of Hanoi - doubly so in the dark. These composed (often elderly) gentlemen must have iron endurance to heave us silly westerners about - very impressive. Anyway, the whole experience is a bit like virtual reality... a flight simulator if you will. You see, feel and hear the traffic coming at you from multiple directions but are powerless to make any changes to your direction yourself (perhaps a roller coaster or scary ride is a more apt description); fortunately you wouldn't REALLY want any control anyway. The cyclo drivers (and surrounding traffic) seem to know exactly what to do to avoid collisions, and it seems to me (from my experience as a pedestrian here) that it is when WE start second guessing the system (is it a SYSTEM?) that things go wrong.

The only person who has almost killed us so far was an American tourist.

After Halong Bay (Hanoi)

We've wandered around crazy-lit Hanoi at night in search of a feed - after many successful street crossings (we-came, we saw, we conquered) we 'discovered' a local hangout of the local young hip things (as it turned out just outside our hotel, but I apparantly still can't find my way around - Nick).

Here we guzzled delicious cooked 'Hanoi fondu' (it's not actually called that) and marvelled at the unbelievable number of flammable materials and fuels which made the packed two storey structure an inferno waiting to happen... but lured by the deliciousness and comforted by the climable tree outside the nearest window as an escape route we dug in... (are you STILL typing about food? - Lindsey)

Next off to see the water-puppets - a playful, cheeky display of Vietnamese folk culture which uncannily echoed our own experiences of the place in caricature (a boy on a water buffalo, the legend of a turtle and a magical sword, the way the fields are indeed irrigated and temded by countless farmers in straw hats, the cheeky, independant but much loved and cherished children and most of all the people's huge smiles and boundless optimism.)

Saturday, January 31, 2009

Halong Bay

We're just back in busy-crazy-wonderful post-Chinese New Year Hanoi to find our Hotel Room has been upgraded for our loyalty and that the upgraded toilet doesn't work. But frankly we could call our trip a day right now and we'd feel we'd had sufficient adventures after Halong Bay...

The embarressing thing is that we really didn't know that much about it, but our overnight boat trip on an 'authentic' Chinese junk was all the cliches and postcards and more. Epic mountains rearing out of dead calm waters, magic sunsets and sunrises, huge amounts of ridiculously delicious food included and wonderful visits with the happy fishing folk on floating villages... Just truly spectacular nature with a splash of culture and rough fun.

Right, we're off to check on the state of ablution repairs... later tonight - Shadow Puppet theatre!!

Ciao ciao (I know I know... I've forgotten the Vietnamese and don't have the phrasebook right now... but Italians would like it here too, promise)
Lindsey and Nick

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Hanoi!

We've arrived! And already we have learned our way around the Old Quarter (the big lake in the middle helps ;-), how to navigate traffic (Lindsey got 'nudged' by a whole family on a xe-om (motorcycle) in our first ten minutes in the city - only pride was injured), how to bargain with denominations in the millions and found loads and loads and loads of beautiful food.

Food: We've had two 'mysterious' meals on the street so far (no food poisoning yet, Tom) and LOVING sitting/squatting (there is a lot of squatting) on little plastic stools in the middle of streets while food is cooked in front of us/by us by the locals. First call was 'pho' - noodle soup with a range of meats (porkish I think), mushrooms and spicy bits - complete with the locals having a midday lunch. Last night we hung out on the pavement with the young hip Vietnamese where a young hip maitron-dee in a young hip plastic leather jacket quite literally 'worked the street' - bringing our ingredients (we were offered chicken, beef or pork which meant you got beef and called it pork or chicken unless you had chosen beef in which case you got beef too). But twas DELICIOUS! (Nick has relaxed his mammal-free diet for the duration in the interests of cultural exploration and difficulty in accurate food-identification).

We also saw lots of stuff and might even write about it some time. But right now we're off to Halong Bay to sleep overnight on a 'junk'.

Love to all!

Lindsey and Nick