Wednesday, January 12, 2005

Young Vietnamese Women are Trying to Cripple Me

Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon), Vietnam

First I have trouble getting out of the country, now I'm worried about getting out in one piece. With only a few hours left I have my closest call yet to being crippled by a motor scooter. You would think that with over 4 weeks of experience crossing moto-infested streets in south-east Asia, this would be the least likeliest time for an accident. You quickly learn the survival essentials (see the first blog entrees) and the characteristics of the different drivers coming at you, which are:
1) Older riders can be depended on to just flow around you if you don't change your pace
2) Young males drive fast but have good reflexes
3) Watch out for young women, they will be the ones to kill or maim you

Young ladies are the ones that are all covered up so they are the hardest to read: masks over the mouth, hats, gloves, armcovers, and dark glasses so you can't make eye contact or know that they see you. I don't know if it is attitude, ignorance, or a real mean streak that makes them do it, but it always seems like they will hit you if you don't take action. Today I had to do an emergency jump out of the path of one of these ladies and believe me, if I had been wearing runners instead of flip-flops I would have caught her, kicked her butt off of that machine and dumped it into the Saigon River (it's not a far walk back to my hotel either). Hmm, maybe that's why I haven't been asked to be an Ambassador yet.

Laying low until the taxi show up.

Paul

MISSED THE PLANE!!!!!

Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon), Vietnam

Woke up this morning with a leasurely day ahead: Vietnamese cooking class from 9:30-12:30, nap time, go to the market for Vietnamese coffee beans, dinner, shower, flight home at 11:55 pm. For extra piece of mind, I thought I would call to re-confirm the flights back to Toronto. Got out the ticket and ...

My return flight is 11:55 PM on October 11 - WAIT A MINUTE, THAT WAS LAST NIGHT!!!

DAMN!!!
[edited to keep a PG rating]

OK Paul, don't panic (too late), airlines are reasonable (ya right) and will do their best to accomodate you (as if) without charging you a lot of money (are we in never-never land?). I blast out of the hotel and hop onto the back of a motorbike directly to the Vietnamese Airlines main office. Two angels in the office helped me out, re-booking the same flights a day later (today). I didn't even have to resort to lying and crying (which I was ready to do). "How much?", I whimpered, clutching my Visa card so hard it was about to snap. "No charge", sang the angels, and handed over the new tickets. They said that I must be a very good man to be so lucky.

Done, just in time for cooking class.

Paul (the bonehead)



Tuesday, January 11, 2005

Sleeping with Old Vietnamese Women

Chau Doc -> Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon)

Another 6 hour bus ride from Chau Doc to HCMC throught the Mekong Delta. This time it's on a "mini-bus", which is actually a big van with seats for 14. It's all Vietnamese people except for myself. The scenery for most of the ride was great but it was a bit hot thanks to the old mamasan next to me that slept on my should for about 5 out of the 6 hours. I have a few very funny pictures of her sleeping against me that I took with the camera at arms length.

Paul

Monday, January 10, 2005

Finger Update - Jerry's gone

I'm happy to report that the finger is back to normal. There's only 1 bump left that was part of Jerry's ear. I'll miss him, he was a good companion after Lucy went home.

Paul

Cruising the Delta

Chau Doc, Vietnam (in the Mekong Delta)

The Mekong Delta is an amazing place, everything revolves around the water. The Mekong is a massive river, over 1 km wide in places that splits into a lot of smaller rivers and canals in the delta before hitting the ocean. Chau Doc is at the top of the delta region. I'm getting tired of hearing "motorbike" all day so I rent a motorbike for myself for the day. It was the same price with or without a driver but I wanted to ride for change instead of hanging on for dear life over the bumps and when going through intersections. The guy was nervous about me taking his bike for the day so I had to drive him around for awhile so he knew I could ride a scooter. Then he asked if he could be a passenger all day - NO WAY! I could have used him a few times, there are virtually no road signs and I didn't have a map. Had to stop at most intersections and ask which way to go. Nobody speaks english there but they can recognize the name of a place and point so it wasn't really a problem.

One of the places I visited was the "Bone Pagoda" in Ba Chuc. They call it that because they have thousands of human skulls and bones on display from people that the Khmer Rouge massacred in the 70's. The pictures of the Ba Chuc massacre in a nearby temple are probably the most horrific images I have seen in my life.

The people out in the country are so different than those you meet in the towns and cities where tourists usually go. I guess they don't see gringoes on motos very often out there because they were laughing and waving as I went by. Whenever I stopped for directions they were very kind, it was a great experience. The moto owner was very pleased when I dropped off the bike without a scratch.



Sitting at the hotel bar on the river in the afternoon/evening was also very interesting. There is a constant stream of activity going by and boats of all shapes and sizes. They did have one thing in common, they were all old, decrepit, and very dirty. The current is very strong, small islands of shrubs are always shooting by at the speed of an olympic swimmer. A lot of people get around on rowboats so they have to really work to get across. They row while standing. It looks like most women row and most men use motors (I'm not sure if that is an indication of strength or intelligence on either sex.).

Back to Saigon tomorrow on the bus.

Paul

Sunday, January 09, 2005

Now in 'Nam

The boat left the dock today for Vietnam, but not before a last-minute shakedown attempt by the cab driver that took me from the hotel to the ferry dock. He insisted that MY ears were bad and that we had really agreed on 5 dollars, not 1 dollar. I realize that these 2 numbers sound alike but considering that you can get a cab driver to chaufeur you around for 8 hours for $16, 5 dollars for a 5 minute cab ride seemed like a pretty shaky case. I gave him a buck and got out of the cab but was a bit worried that he would take off with my bag in his trunk so I left the door open. He didn't get out to unlock the trunk but the car was such a piece of junk I just opened the trunk without the key.

The ferry ride was amazing along the Mekong river from Phnom Penh to Chau Doc, Vietnam. Chau Doc is in the delta region there the Mekong splits into small channels and people literally live in houses on the river. They raise fish under their houses in suspended nets and feed them through trap doors. It makes them really easy to catch, you don't even have to leave home. Someone should tell the people in Newfoundland about this technique.

Paul

Saturday, January 08, 2005

Stuck in the Penh

Phnom Penh, Cambodia

Bad news this morning, there won't be a boat to the border today. Or at least that's what I've been told by Mr. Tung at the hotel that was supposed to get a ticket for me. He seemed eager to sell me a plane ticket to Saigon so I called around to see what the story was with the boat. I called another travel agent and got a different story: the boat was completely sold out. I tried one more time as a tie-breaker and they said no problem, they will send a tuk-tuk by at 1:30 to pick me up to take me to the boat. That sounded pretty good but while I was packing I got a bad feeling about it and called them again to double-check that there was space on the boat. Sure enough, they called back and said that there wasn't. I've got a ticket in hand for tomorrow though, hopefully it works out. So another day of wandering the streets of PP getting harrassed by the moto boys.

Paul

Thursday, January 06, 2005

PP Stinks

Phnom Phen, Cambodia

If it wasn't for the rotting garbage, festering sewers and dusty roads, this might be a very attractive city. It looks like they spend as little money as possible to build and maintain PP. Other than the main streets, the rest are bumpy dirt roads, right in the middle of town. There are virtually no traffic lights or street lights so it gets very dark and at night and crossing the road at any time is a nightmare. Literally every street corner has a couple of guys sitting on their scooters and tuk-tuks waiting to give you a ride: "hey man, moto?, tuk-tuk?". I used to respond out of politeness but now I just pretend their not their. Even looking ahead of you and seeing the next gang on the corner has them off their bikes looking at you with their hands up. I'm actually starting to say yes to the Moto guys, it's too hot to walk far in the day and at night it's just too scary to walk in the dark.

The nights are beautiful. Last night I met Lara, Chris and 2 other Canadians at the FCC (Foreign Correspondants Club) where journalists used to hang out when Cambodia was in the news. They've got a great open bar on the 2nd floor overlooking the point where the Mekong and Tonle Sap rivers come together.

Found a few stalls in the market selling Alias software. Maya goes for $2 and AutoStudio for $4 (that's before bargaining). To get a better perspective on the price, Maya costs the equivalent of 4 bowls of the noodle soup I had for lunch at a market stand nearby. It's nice to see Alias making inroads in SE Asia.

Disturbing visit to the Tuol Sleng museum this morning. This is the place that the Khmer Rouge processed over 17,000 of the 1-2 million people they exterminated in the killing fields. It's hard to believe that this was going on in 1978.



I think that this is enough of Pnohm Penh for me, back to Vietnam on the boat tomorrow.

Paul

Crispy Crawly Snacks + Dirt Farmers

Siem Reap -> Phnom Pehn, Cambodia

Siem Reap to Phnom Pehn is a bumpy 6 hour bus ride with some interesting observations along the way. Best of all are the snacks that are available for sale when the bus pulls into a roadside stop every 1 1/2 hours or so. The deep-fried spiders and bugs looked especially tasty and if I weren't on the Atkins diet I would have put back a few kilos of those in a minute. Bugs look appetizing enough as it is, but when they are fried to perfection they're almost irresistable. Deb - Do vegetarians eat bugs?

Farming is still done with water buffalo to pull the plows and manually picking or cutting with scythes. This is at about the time when the first settlers were making their way across Canada with ox-carts. After seeing how dominant the Khmers were when they build the incredible temples at Ankor Wat and how backward they are now compared to the rest of the world, it's hard to believe a society fell so hard.

Getting off the bus in PP you are swamped with people trying to get you to stay at hotels and guest houses. I didn't have a reservation but knew a few places that I wanted to try so I just get a cab. The cab driver starts pushing the King Hotel even as we're walking to the cab so he's just like the rest of them. I convince him to take me to where I wanted to go and he tries to talk me out of it the whole way. He even told me that there was a crematorium across the street and the smoke of burning dead people blows into your window at the place I wanted to go. We went anyway and there wasn't a crematorium in sight.

Paul


Tuesday, January 04, 2005

Finger update

Siem Reap, Cambodia

Just noticed that if I point my diseased index finger to the sky, the pattern of the spots looks like Jerry Lewis. How can I put this on eBay?

Paul

It finally happened ... SNAKE!!

Ankor Wat, Cambodia

I was walking along a jungle path near one of the out-of-the-way temples enjoying the absence of other tourists when something went shooting up a tree right in front of me. IT WAS A BIG GREEN SNAKE!!! (probably scared off my my battle-yell). It's time to get out of here, there are probably more.



Today was "animal kingdom" day. In addition to the killer snake, there were bats in the temple, monkeys in the jungle, squirrels, and a massive roach in my shower.

Off to Phnom Penh tomorrow.

Paul

Monday, January 03, 2005

What a coincidence

Ankor Wat, Cambodia

Another reminder that the world is a small place (so you should always be on your best behaviour). Walking through Ankor Wat today I ran into an ex-colleague from Alias, Lara Koretzky. Even more amazing is that this is the place where they filmed part of Lara Croft, Tomb Raider - the movie. As the esteemed Keanu Reaves would say - whoa.

Paul


Vendor madness

Ankor Wat, Cambodia

Another incredible day at the temples. Today I borrowed a bike and rode to the main temple of Ankor Wat. By now the vendors start to get on your nerves. I'm starting to hear their voices in my sleep ...hello, hello .... motorbike? ... cold drink? ... postcards? ...hello, hello .... motorbike? ... cold drink? ... postcards? ...hello, hello .... motorbike? ... cold drink? ... postcards? ...hello, hello .... motorbike? ... cold drink? ... postcards? ...hello, hello .... motorbike? ... cold drink? ... postcards? ...hello, hello .... motorbike? ... cold drink? ... postcards? ...hello, hello .... motorbike? ... cold drink? ... postcards? ...hello, hello .... motorbike? ... cold drink? ... postcards? ...hello, hello .... motorbike? ... cold drink? ... postcards? ...hello, hello .... motorbike? ... cold drink? ... postcards? ...hello, hello .... motorbike? ... cold drink? ... postcards? ...hello, hello .... motorbike? ... cold drink? ... postcards? ...hello, hello .... motorbike? ... cold drink? ... postcards? ...hello, hello .... motorbike? ... cold drink? ... postcards? ...hello, hello .... motorbike? ... cold drink? ... postcards? ...hello, hello .... motorbike? ... cold drink? ... postcards?

Warning - adult content below.

Have got to learn not to answer every question so truthfully here, it can get you into trouble. Snce Lucy left and I'm alone I often get asked questions such as: "you like pleasure from woman" I'm thinking to myself, what is this, a rhetorical question? Of course I like pleasure from woman. (sound of palm slapping forehead) Oh, I see, he's not talking in the general sense, we're talking about "advanced keraoke" in one of those shady looking places on the side streets. No thanks, not today.

Paul

No longer itching

I'm happy to report that my index finger has stopped itching ... it would be nice if the bumps would go away too.

Paul

Incredible Temples in the Jungle

Ankor Wat, Cambodia

Mind-blowing temples scattered in the jungle. It is impossible to describe the scale of these buildings and the ornate carving on them. If you're interested look up Ankor Wat to see for yourself. I was chauffered around on the back of a motor scooter from temple to temple. Tomorrow I'll do some of the closer ones on a bike and get some more exercise. Hoping to get a better look at the monkeys and toucans you see around the temple sites.

Looking for a hotel with hot water.

Paul

Sunday, January 02, 2005

Cambodia - Hot Weather + Cold Showers

Siem Reap, Cambodia

Flew in from Saigon yesterday and moved into the Big Lyna Villa. It's high season here so if you don't book in advance or are reluctant to shell out $500 US per night the pickings are slim. It's a great room for $15 a night in a traditional Cambodian wooden house. The biggest drawback I discovered was the absence of hot water (where's the second tap?). Cold water isn't so bad because the temp is hot - what is troubling are the red wriggly things that shoot out of the shower head every once in a while and start writhing like crazy on the bathroom floor (which doubles as the shower stall). They look kind of like the bug that they put into Keanu Reeve's belly in the Matrix.

Many grim reminders to watch out for land mines here - lots of people missing limbs in town.



Paul

Saturday, January 01, 2005

Alone

Lucy is on her way home ... I'm lonely.

Happy New Year

Saigon -

Lucy and I take our first break from Vietnamese food and enjoy a fine feed of french food. We had a magical cyclo ride through Saigon after dinner. A cyclo is a 3 wheel bike with a seat in the front. Just before midnight we got a ride back from the restaurant along the Saigon River and through downtown Saigon back to our hotel through a sea of thousands of people on scooters. It was amazing!!! It ended on a bit of a sour note as the cyclo drivers tried to shake us down at the end of the ride but the ride was incredible. They wouldn't accept anything less than their "extortion price" so to end the discussion I just put what the fair price was on the bike and we walked. Note to anyone thinking of travelling here, if someone says "don't worry"... worry.

Paul