Friday 29 March 2013

March 29 - Saigon

The passed few days have been a bit of a blur! First, we took a 2.5 hr ferry ride from Phu Quoc Island to back to the mainland. The boat had a pretty great name...



Next, we had a 6 hr bus ride to Ho Chi Min City. We got on the bus, and were pleasantly surprised to see it was a sleeping bus of sorts. Much better than the Cambodian ones. A little weird, but pretty comfortable once you get used to it! Unfortunately, in Vietnam they like to play terrible music videos the whole time, and the volume was too high to sleep. Can't win 'em all.



We finally arrived in Ho Chi Min in the late afternoon, and headed to the backpacking district downtown in District 1. It has tiny, narrow alleyways jam packed with tiny hotels and guesthouses. We found a hotel room for 16$, dropped off our bags and went to have a beer. The alleyways open up to a normal sized street, which in the evenings is converted to a street bar of sorts... The road stays open, with scooters and cars driving through constantly, but little hole-in-the-wall places put out plastic chairs on the sidewalk and into the street. Beer is bout 50 cents... Very little overhead cost, I guess.


We hung out and met some cool people from Germany, South Africa, Denmark, and even Montreal! Ended up staying late into the night.

The next morning (ok...afternoon) we went to the War Remnants Museum. It was pretty heavy. The museum mostly consists of 4 stories, each wih of rooms full of photographs. Some are well known, were featured in Time magazine and such. Others were terribly graphic and I'd never seen them before. For example, this one really got to me. It's a picture of 4 US soldiers posing with 2 decapitated vietnamese men.



The caption reads, "The above picture shows exactly what the brass want you to do in the Nam. The reason for printing this picture is not to put down G.I.'s but rather to illustrate the fact that the Army can really fuck over your mind if you let it. It's up to you, you can put in your time just trying to make it back in one piece or you can become a psycho like the Lifer (E-6) in the picture who really digs this kind of shit. It's your choice."

There was also some crazy propaganda posters. This one features Nixon riding a B-52 bomber, waving a nazi flag...?


There were rooms dedicated to the effects of agent orange and dioxin, which were incredibly difficult. I had to leave after awhile actually, it was just too much.

Outside of the building were American planes, tanks, boats, etc. I wasn't sure how I felt about them after seeing all the destruction inside.



We left the museum feeling pretty solemn. But in the streets of Saigon, the action never stops. Dodging scooters quickly took our minds off things. Definitely the kind of place that only has room for here and now - gotta stay focused.



We went to a market near the river and had some noodle soup, and decide to go up the Bitexo Financial Tower, by far the tallest building, and watch the sunset. It was beauuutiful.

I ordered a Saigon fizz. It was delicious.



We met a couple from Alaska who are bicycling through Cambodia and Vietnam for 3 months or something. They were totally great and we got along quite well. We all went out for dinner afterwards, and then back to the street bar for another crazy, fun night. We are paying for it today - my activities today were limited to eating a cheeseburger in my hotel bed. This evening we did go out and have some great pho, but now we are back "home" again, packing up our stuff and enjoying the air conditioning. Tomorrow morning, we leave on a 6 hr bus ride to Miu Nee. Back to the seaside!

Until next time,
Jessica

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Tuesday 26 March 2013

March 26 - Vietnam

Today we rented scooters again, and toured the island!....ok so actually we meant to go to a beautiful beach, like the one we found yesterday:



(Don't let this woman's outfit fool you - It was about +35, and she was selling ice cream out of that cooler.)

Alas, today we got incredibly lost. We ended up just riding around for a few hours, which was fun in it's own right! Most of the island is red dirt road.



A lot of this island is under construction - it's in the midst of massive development. Made for some scary motoring...



Then certain areas were long stretches of paved highway, where we could really let loose! And try not to drop my iPhone from a moving scooter!...


After a long day of riding around, we came back to town for a final dinner at the delicious food market. The market consists of about a dozen virtually identical outdoor restaurants with plastic chairs lining the street, and each one has a crazy selection of seafood. Check out those crazy lobsters!



We had oysters yesterday that were probably the best I've ever had.


We've tried the scallops, clams, oysters, sea snails, fish, and other tasties I couldn't identify that were shared from nearby tables, heaping with too many crustaceans. Generally, there has been at least one table each night of vietnamese men getting pretty drunk off local liquor that they bring in old water bottles. They do shots every five minutes, toasting to everything under the sun (between cracking open a giant prawn or a crab leg). Things get pretty rowdy, but at least they like to share!

Anyway, despite the passed two days of scootering around and adventurous eating, I remain safe and sound, healthy and happy. I better sign off now - tomorrow we are embarking on an early morning taxi/boat/bus saga to Ho Chi Min City! (I have to make an effort not to call it "Saigon", mostly because otherwise I start singing Ms Saigon lyrics.) We haven't planned a thing there, and I really don't know what to expect or what we will do. So stay tuned.

Cheers,
Jessica




Location:Phu Quoc

Monday 25 March 2013

March 25 - back in the game.


So far in Vietnam, Internet has been great. Fingers crossed, I'll be able to reinstate my travel blog!

My last post was early February, and since then I've been a bit all over the place. Quick rundown:

Since enjoying the southern islands of Thailand, I've been back to Bangkok, then to Lophuri to see a gaggle on monkeys (not sure of the technical term, but i'm deeming this either a "troop" or a "gaggle", they were just hilarious).



Then we took an overnight train to Chiang Mai.



Then a slow boat along the Mekong to Luang Prabang in Laos.



Laos was absolutely beautiful! We spent about two weeks travelling Laos.


then moved into Cambodia.

In Cambodia, we started with Siem Reap, and saw the temples of Angkor Wat (and surrounding, less touristy temples).



Then we went to the southern coast of Cambodia and spent a week relaxing on the beaches.





Next, we visted Phnom Phen and toured the Killing Fields and the S-21 prison, which was a moving and harrowing experience. An Israeli guy we were with said it was much more intense that even the comparatively sanitized holocaust memorials in Europe. It was just incredibly raw.



There were human skulls piled high.


Chains and blood stains left on the floor of tiny prison cell.



There were instruments of torture just right out on the floor rather than in a glass case or something as it would be in a western museum. When we were walking through the killing fields, there were large pieces of human bone littering the grass, as many of the mass graves have not been dug up and when it rains bones and such float up to the surface. It was very intense. I shudder just thinking about it.

Whoa. Ok, so, after that, we went to a sleepy, relaxed oceanside town in Cambodia called Kep. There were still reminders of the Khmer Rouge - the town had once been a sea side resort for affluent Cambodians and French nationals, and there were skeletal remains of burned out French villas shattered along the seashore. But there were also lively Cambodian families picnicking along the ocean, and the seafood we ate at a restaurant on bamboo stills over the ocean rivals any I've ever had! Here's my buddy Tomas enjoying the tasty fare.



Yesterday, we left Cambodia and moved into vietnam. Today, we rented scooters and rode for over an hour down a red gravel road along the coast to a beautiful secluded beach where we spent the afternoon. I love scootering!



It is actually pretty dangerous, I know, but with locals breezing past me on scooters loaded with mom, dad, baby 1 and baby 2.... I can't help but try! I love that the south East Asian "family vehicle" is a scooter, and we in the west feel we need SUVs or minivans... I am trying to hard to get a good family scooter photo, but honestly, they move so fast!!

Anyway, hopefully I can keep this up again. I will be spending the next three weeks or so making my way up the coast of Vietnam. Hopefully Internet works around here!

Cheers,
Jessica


- Posted using BlogPress from my iPad

Location:Cambodia, and Vietnam.