Tuk Tuk Tour

The official tour ended yesterday, and we are flying out today, but not until 11 at night. I wasn’t going to let a day in Cambodia so close to such an amazing location. Everyone else was exhausted, so I got a tuk tuk for myself and headed back into Angkor. Forgoing the slow pace we have kept up during this trip, I visited Preh Kan, Neak Pean, Ta Som, Pre Rup, and East Mebon, and was back by 2.

I don’t do selfies very well.

Teddy and his tuk tuk.

 Preh Kan was one of my favorites. It had the beautiful overgrown look of Ta Prohm, but far fewer people. The next was Neak Pean, the island temple. There was nothing to walk through here, but you could walk part way around the pool the temple was in. The following two were–I can’t believe I’m saying this–standard, and I went through them rather quickly. The last was a very tall temple with lots of stairs. From the top there was an amazing view across the jungle canopy.

Natural framing.

This is more my type of selfie.

I loved the long halls in this temple.

One of my favorite Buddha engravings.

This could be Seattle if we would just abandon it. Of course, I doubt it would stand the test of time quite as well.

I love this tree; it was amazing.

I had to cross a large pond and marsh to get to the Island Temple.

More natural framing. Yeah, I tried to get artsy again.

I got back to the hotel much sooner than I had expected, so I took a walk around town. I didn’t find any place that was very interesting to explore–not because there are none, but because I just didn’t know where to walk to. After arriving back at the hotel,  we decided to take a tuk tuk to lunch. We had a pretty good meal as our last in Cambodia, and then took a tuk tuk tour of the city. On the tour I found the market, and Sarah and I may go back there later tonight.

Now I am sitting on the veranda of David and Anita’s room, right next to where people are arriving for the big New Year’s Gala. I’m sure the ticket prices were around $75 per person, but we are not staying here tonight so we do not have to attend. However, I can reach out and touch the nearest table, and from the veranda I have a better view than some who did pay. I just don’t get the food and drinks. My next post will be a travel post, and then it is back to the real world. I do have a couple of days to recover and readjust to the time change before heading back to work. Honestly, I would be happy to live here, but my commute might increase a few more minutes.

Tomb Raider

Anita and I started the day off with viewing the Sunrise from Angkor Wat. David and Sarah decided to save their energy for the main tour. We left the hotel at 5:15, and arrived to a huge line of people and a beautiful blanket of stars. The best viewing spots around the reflection pool were all taken, so we sat on the edge of the library to watch as the sun rose over the temple, and the dark outline was slowly revealed the spires and carvings of the massive edifice. After burning the temple into my retinas, we finished our tour of Angkor Wat, passing the four pools and ascending to the second level–the level of kings. We did not go to the third level–the level of gods–because it was closed until 7:45, and we wanted breakfast more than gods. 

The smooth parts are where people touch the carving.

After breaking our fast, we all joined up and continued the tour. We visited three different temples–Banteay Srei, Banteay Samre and Ta Prohm. We were also supposed to visit Prasat Kravan, but everyone (except me) was getting tired. My favorite by far was Ta Prohm, which was featured in Tomb Raider. I didn’t like it because it was famous. As a matter of fact, I wish that it wasn’t so less people would have been there. I enjoyed this temple because it was being reclaimed by the jungle. Huge banyan trees grew out of the stone, their roots creeping down the walls. It has also only been partially restored, so there were still piles of rubble. I love the restored temples, but the power of nature is also amazing.

A poem carved into the entryway of one of the temples.

These native boys were watching a herd of cattle at one of the temples. They were extremely joyful, and it was infectious.

Na-na-na-na-na-na-na-na–Batman!
The rest of these are from Ta Prohm.

We are finishing the day off with a buffet and a native Khmer dance show. Today was the last day of the tour and our last full day here. Tomorrow we leave for the airport, and ultimately, home. However, this doesn’t happen until around 9:00 pm, so really I do have a full day. I am going to take full advantage of it by getting a tuk tuk to take me to a few of the more remote temples. Our guide has made some suggestions of ones I might like.

UPDATE:

Well, we went to the show. That’s all I can say about it. Okay, you twisted my arm; this was one of the worst dining experiences of my life. There were about 400 plus people all arriving at a buffet with no line organization. I tried to get to a station that had people ringed two deep and not moving. I finally gave up on this, and got in the only line that had a distinguishable end. After a 45 minute wait (not exaggerating here; Sarah actually sent out a search party), I finally got a plate of noodles that I couldn’t eat they were so bad. Sarah informed me when I sat down that while I was getting my meal, someone came by and took my glass… and another person came by and took my chair. I did manage to get a small amount to eat, but am still hungry. As for the show, I was already a bit too annoyed to give it a fair assessment. (I almost walked out without eating.) I suppose it was okay, but there was about 5 minutes of waiting between each dance. Plus, we had been put behind a pole holding the roof up, so half our party couldn’t see anything. People liked to stand next to that pole to take pictures which created an impenetrable wall. I’m pretty sure one of the performances was a love story about a woman in a fishing village and a 6 year old boy standing on a chair. It took two Mai Tais to get the taste of that out of my mouth.

Angkor Wat

Yesterday I said that Siam Reap was like an amusement park, and today I will confirm it. We started the day waiting in line to enter the park, this one’s name is Angkor Wat. After purchasing a three day pass with our picture on it (no arm bands, though), we got in the queue of cars entering the park. Each attraction we went to was crowded with people, and there were often lines just to walk down the halls. Everywhere I looked, there were hundreds of people. We were told that tourism is the number one job in Siam Reap.

Just another theme park?

That being said, lets get on to the attractions. Remember the first time you watched Jurassic Park, and they showed the brachiosaurus, and shivers ran down your back as you though to yourself, “This is going to be a good movie”? Seeing the bridge crossing the moat to Angkor Wat, and the archway through the wall did that for me. The carvings were amazing, and the scale was gigantic. It was nothing like what I had expected.

Our first temple was Angkor Thom, and this actually did remind me of something from Disney Land. I have a feeling the Disney theme parks borrowed from Angkor Wat when creating their world. Huge stone towers with faces and reliefs carved into them erupted from the ground, and towered above the trees. Walking through the halls and up the steep steps is something I cannot describe. It was absolutely amazing… I guess one more thing I need to put on my list of four most amazing things I have ever seen.

We visited The Angkor Wat temple, the largest temple in the world, as well. However, description just doesn’t work. All I can do is show pictures.

A line for cars and a line for people.

It is obvious, but actually tell yourself that this was all carved from stone.

I thought this was massive at first, but then we went on.

A little monkey business.

The carvings were extremely detailed and on all of the walls.

This temple was enormous; truly a city onto it’s own.

Prince Sedartha being shielded from the rain as he meditates under a tree.

Photo op… not sure who the subject is.

Sarah desecrating a national treasure.

The temples are being restored. You will see a row of ancient statues, and one new one placed where the original had crumbled.

Again, the walls were so intricate.

Angkor Wat.

The ceiling towered above us.

No need to be reminded that this is not just a temple but an ancient city of thousands of people.

M*A*S*H

(Okay, yes, I know this show is in the wrong setting, and that it is probably rude to bring up war, but I like the show, and the title worked for me.)

Sarah was still not feeling well this morning. I convinced her to go down to breakfast, and at least have some soup. While there, the staff of the hotel came over to make sure everything was okay, and Sarah said she was feeling sick. They asked if we wanted to have them call a doctor to the room or a taxi to take her to the hospital, and she decided that it was time to do so. We decided to take a taxi there, and one of the five hotel staff who was there disappeared. Before we even finished planning, our tour guide showed up. There was hardly time to stand up before she had a taxi there, and we were off to the hospital. It wasn’t until we were almost done at the hospital that I realized that I hadn’t paid the taxi driver. It turns out our tour guide got that as well.

 Unfortunately, we are in a country that has Socialized medicine, so everything was a lot worse than in the US. We walked into the emergency room, and they immediately put us in an examination room. There was one other family in the room with us. A nurse came right over, and before she finished getting all of our information down, a doctor was there for the examination. They took blood and about 40 minutes later pronounced that it was nothing serious. There were no viruses in her blood, but she was low in some nutrients, probably from not eating in the last couple of days. They prescribed some vitamin C and some pills, and we were left to pay our bill as uninsured foreigners. The total came to 150,000 dong for the examination, and another 27,000 dong for the medicine. Having no more money, we left the hospital and had to hitchhike back to the–wait. 150,000 dong is only $15! The entire visit with medicine and blood draw cost only about $18.50. Damn socialized medicine. I’m sure glad that we don’t have to put up with low prices and no waiting for emergency room service in the US.

We got back to our room and shortly after David and Anita came back from today’s tour. There was more talk about returning early, so our ultimate route today is up in the air. We may be continuing on to Siam Reap, or we may be flying home.

UPDATE

The decision was made to move on to Siam Reap. We took the long drive to the airport, and then had a 5 hour wait before our plane took off. This seemed like a waste of time, and I think it would have been better if we had used it doing something for our last day in Vietnam. I wonder if our guide was ready to get rid of us because of all the trouble we were. I suppose I wouldn’t blame her.

Waterfront property in Vietnam.
The rest stop where we stopped for our eight-course lunch.
Police randomly point at cars to pull them over. It has nothing to do with speeding, but with how much money you look like you have. To get under way again, you need to pay a bribe. They were everywhere today.
Good evening, Vietnam! Flying out of Ho Chi Minh City.

We arrived in Siam Reap, and because David was in a wheelchair, we flew through customs. Unfortunately, when we got to the hotel, we found that we were on the third floor, and there is no elevator. For tonight, we are staying here, but I believe that we are looking for a different hotel since David is not able to make it up and down the stairs easily.

My first impression of Siam Reap is much more modern and touristy than anywhere we visited in Vietnam. It seems we are back to a tipping culture as well. The person who showed us to our room–as if we couldn’t find it ourselves–all but held his hand out for a tip. We didn’t have any money outside of dongs left from Vietnam, so had to stand there embarrassed, and wait him out. I did manage to find a dollar for the person who brought the luggage up.

Sick Day

We all felt a little under the weather today, some more than others. For a while it was uncertain whether we would complete the tour, but we decided to go on. Sarah has caught some bug, and is planning on sleeping the next 18 hours. If she is feeling better, she will join us for the tour tomorrow, but if not, she will continue to rest.

Our tour today was on the Mekong Delta. We took a boat tour, making four stops. The first was a honey bee demonstration. We didn’t learn much about making honey, but I did hold a hive, and we had some very sweet tea. The second stop we experienced cultural singing and music, while drinking more tea and eating fruit. On the third stop, we saw how the islanders made coconut candy. The last stop was lunch; another multi-course touristy meal, which none of us were hungry enough to enjoy. On the way back, I got a coconut milk fresh in the coconut.

The tour we are on feels a little strange. There were all of these boats loaded with people going to each of these different places, and then there were us four on the same sized boat, with a tour guide. I felt like everyone must have been looking at us and thinking either that we were rich or that we chose the tour boat that nobody else wanted. Our rooms are pretty spectacular as well. We are staying on the 9th of 10 floors of one of the taller buildings in town in a pretty nice room with floor to ceiling windows. Despite my sniffles, I am having a great time.

Our own private boat, with recliners.
Oh, bee-hive.
Mixing coconut candy.
Each piece gets two wrappers… a rice-paper wrapper that you can eat, and a regular wrapper.
Fish of the day…
Gratuitous selfie with a coconut milk.
Pretty amazing hotel room.
Night view from our room.

The American War

Today was the first time I felt unwelcome in Vietnam. We went to the Cu Chi tunnels, which the Viet Cong used during the war to hide from the Americans. We then went to the War Remnants museum and the former Presidential Palace. The tunnels were pretty nifty. Six hundred people lived in these cramped tunnels. They had made them bigger to accommodate tourists, but they were still cramped. We also saw several traps that the Viet Cong had used. It was uncomfortable being there.

The war museum was worse. Although there was certainly propaganda–they talked about the South Vietnamese American puppets–it also showed the death and destruction done to the people by the war. I know some feel the war was justified and some do not, and I am not going to get into that. It really did make me feel embarrassed to be here. I asked our guide what percentage of Vietnamese people still hate the US, and she said that the culture has become much more westernized, and people accept us. To understand it, I think of how we view Japan or Germany. They are a valued part of our culture now, and very few people hold a grudge.

Nevertheless, the day left me exhausted emotionally, and the heat left me exhausted physically. I am ready to collapse and sleep for a week, and it is only 5:00. Rather than changing my views on war, I think today helped strengthen and define them. I feel that there is almost always a better solution than war. I am talking more generally than just the Vietnam war. I think that our not-a-war with the Muslim country of the day. Every time we go in and fight, we just make things worse. If we say we want to help the people, we should help them by giving them options other than the repression they are living in. Perhaps my statement will make people angry, and they will want to argue the point. I’m sure they can, because this is an idea, not a comprehensive plan, and I’m not nearly bright enough to make it into one. However, if we want to say that we are creating a safe place for people to live, then we should not be killing these people.

I debated removing the last paragraph, and I may still do so. However, for now I will leave it in, and leave you with a few pictures that I took before becoming embarrassed and depressed.

View from our hotel room. Look at the edge of the roof in the full sized image.

Woman making rice paper.

The Viet Cong made sandals out of old tires. They started wearing them backwards so they would leave tracks in the opposite direction from where they were going.

Sarah in the exit of one of the tunnels. Remember, they made these larger to accommodate tourists.

We saw these strange chickens on the drive back to Saigon. I think they look like Velociraptors.

A man taking his flat screen TV out for some fresh air on the scooter.

The former presidential palace reception room.

Merry Christmas, I guess

Merry Christmas! I have gone through most of the day without really remembering that it is Christmas. It is not the weather, because in Hawaii we most certainly celebrate Christmas. Here, it was just like any other day on tour except we had a day of rest rather than a day of running around. Well, rest and a flight, but I’m getting ahead of myself.

We started the day off with breakfast as usual, but the dishes looked suspiciously like leftovers from yesterday’s dinner. After breakfast, we had until 1:30 to do what we wanted, but this time was used for packing all of the things we had purchased in Hoi An or reading and relaxing. I sat out by the pool and read, despite the rain. There was an umbrella over my chair, so only my feet were getting wet.

At 1:30, we took off for the airport, and an hour flight later arrived in Ho Chi Mhin City, otherwise known as Saigon. Exiting the plane we were hit with a wall of liquid air. The heat and humidity reminded me of Malaysia, although I’m sure that it wasn’t quite as bad. So far the temperatures have been almost perfect; it is amazing how much the climate can change in an hour long flight.

I had thought that the traffic elsewhere was bad, but here it was amazing. We went through one intersection where bumper to bumper cars were going one way were almost brushing against the hundreds of scooters and cars crossing the other way. Our hotel here is one of the fancy ones where there is an amazing lobby and a small room. However, we have a good view of some very nicely lit up buildings.

Sarah and I went to the night marked, but I was feeling a little claustrophobic there were so many people. I don’t do good in crowds. Sarah said that the people population was denser than in New York. We were also warned to keep close track of our money as pick-pocketing is common here.

The view from the top of our hotel.

Asian buildings are always so pretty.

Christmas Eve Fishing and Gala Dinner

This morning we started out with a fishing trip where we got to try our hand at net casting. I did pathetically, but I’ve never been much of a fisherman anyway. We also took a ride through a jungle of fronds in what can only be described as a half-a-coconut-boat. I did much better at operating this. By the end, I was able to do it like the guides, although I wasn’t as fast and my arm got very sore. After this, we took a tour of a farming village.

Net fishing with the locals.
For even more excitement, here is the video.

Sarah and I got dropped off in town where we picked up our tailor made clothing, and bought a bunch more. I did pretty good with bargaining until the last impulse purchase, where I was taken pretty bad because of an error in my conversion. Oh, well; you win some, you lose some.

That evening, we went to a Christmas Eve Gala at the hotel, where Sarah wore her new dress and I wore my new slacks. The music was a bit loud inside, and it was hot, so Sarah and I went outside and danced. We even got a group of people who gathered to watch us and take our picture. There were some pretty good dancing troupes and a magician from Vietnam’s Got Talent that was fun to watch. Now we just need to await the arrival of Santa.

Traditional Vietnamese dance.

I caught the second part of the dance on video. The first 30 seconds are the best, though.

Lets Get Cooking

After breakfast I took a short walk down the beach while Sarah took care of some things in the room. I found it humorous that the locals were all bundled up in coats and hats, and some even had gloves, while I walked in shorts without a coat through the crashing waves. I lost track of time, and delayed our tour departure a bit. However, since the first part was a tour of the market, everyone else delayed it even more as souvenirs were purchased. Sarah and I got a set of chopsticks in a nice case, some tea cups for Sarah’s tea parties, and cinnamon containers–containers made of cinnamon–for holding tea.

We then went to a cooking class where we learned to cook some Vietnamese dishes, and then ate them. This was a lot of fun, and I have some great recipes I’ll have to try when we get back. After lunch, we went back to town where Sarah ordered a dress, and we tried on clothes that we had ordered yesterday. I also requested two more shirts. Hopefully everything will be done tomorrow, and we will have time to go down for a final fitting.

I assisted the chef with this in front of the entire class.

This evening, I believe we will just relax at the resort. Having an evening to take it easy will be nice.

The Emperor’s New Clothes

Today was another one of those stressful ones. We traveled from Hue to Hoi An, and the stress started with new clothes. Hoi An is the place to go in Vietnam to purchase new clothes. However, all of the travel guides warn not to take recommendations from the locals, as they are all getting kick-backs for sending business their way, which drives up the price and makes the recommendation useless. Our driver not only recommended a shop that belonged to his brother, but set it as one of the stops on the tour. We had managed to get this information out of him early on in the trip, and I refused to go until I could check the shop’s ratings on Trip Advisor. Our guide was rather forceful that we should purchase our clothing from there because everyone else was going to take advantage of us.

We moved off the subject because it wouldn’t do any good arguing about it until we made our stop. This did not reduce the stress of our drive, however. Someone asked the question of how gays were viewed in Vietnam, and we had to spend the next half an hour listening to him tell us that being gay was a disease, and you could catch it if you hung around gays. He was extremely homophobic, and I found his diatribe annoying. We tried several times to change the topic before finally getting him off on a music tangent where he sang to us for the next several miles. It was better than his rant.

We did go to his brother’s shop, and found the prices to be awfully high. However, when we got to the hotel and looked it up on Trip Advisor, it had a 100% rating with over 50 reviews. If I could have had this information to begin with, we may have purchased from him. Instead, we took a bus into town and spent about three hours wandering through first tailor’s that I had researched, and then ones that looked like they had a good selection of fabrics. We finally settled on one that had decent stitching, an okay selection of fabrics, and good prices. After ordering some new shirts and slacks, we went out for a good local meal.

I am physically and emotionally exhausted from this day, and am looking forward to going to bed right after posting. We have a busy day tomorrow.

There is, however, one last thing that we did. We were scheduled to stop at Marble Mountain to view a marble shop–another one of those things with kickbacks to the guide. The shop had beautiful pieces, and if I were rich, I would have loved to purchase a few. Better than that, though, was a pagoda up on the mountain that we were not scheduled to go to, but we took the time anyway. We had to take an elevator up to it, and it was amazing, nestled against towering vertical cliffs. Behind the pagoda was a cave with a couple shrines, and a 20 foot tall carved Buddha. Also, exiting one of the buildings we were surprised by another enormous Buddha. This was the best pagoda yet.

I wanted this, but I couldn’t come up with the $11,000 (usd) asking price.

Thinking of modifying the roof of our house to resemble this.

This temple is inside a cave with natural lighting coming from holes in the ceiling 25 to 30 feet up.
This was a pretty amazing Buddha, nestled in a back chamber of the cave.