Tuesday, February 27, 2018

ANCIENT KINGDOMS





Our big trip this year was a 32-day excursion to Southeast Asia January 12 through February 11, 2018; we visited Hong Kong, Myanmar, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam.  There was a hiatus from extensive foreign travel as we moved from one state to another, bought land, and built and moved into a new home.  That was our full-time activity for the better part of two years.  We are now back into travel mode and hope to regale you with more tales of our adventures in the future.

This series of essays and photographs is organized by country in the order in which we visited them and is designed to capture what we saw and our reaction.  It will be our unvarnished, non-politically correct opinion of SE Asia as seen through our eyes.  This is not an arm-chair tourist guide designed to feature only the most beautiful aspects of any given place or people.  There is great beauty to be seen and wonderful people to meet in all of the places we visited, but this covers the good, the bad, and the ugly as viewed by us.  We hope you enjoy our retelling of our journey as much as we did experiencing it.

Hong Kong

Our first day was long and exhausting; 19+ hours flying time from Denver to Hong Kong with a couple of hours layover in LA.  Jet lag had us in its grip for a couple of days.  Of course, that was the point of stopping off there first.  The day after our arrival, we went into discovery mode and caught a Big Bus, which took us every where on the island we might want to go and then some.  It was one of the best bargains we found on this trip.
The population in Hong Kong is hugely dense—about 6,500 people per square kilometer and most of them are stacked on top of one another in high-rise buildings.  In comparison, using that ratio, the entire population of Montrose county could fit into less than 1 ¼ sq. miles or 800 acres there.  That, my friends, is dense!  The concrete canyons are amazing—even on a clear day (and we lucked into 2 of them) most of the streets are shady most of the day.  While the temperatures were warm in the open, a jacket was necessary in the canyons.










In addition to a tour of the financial district, Stanley, Repulse Bay, and Aberdeen on our first day, we took the iconic Star Ferry across to Kowloon and enjoyed morning tea at a ritzy hotel.  The history of HK is fascinating, too.  The British acquired the island in the 1840s as the spoils of the first opium war with the Chinese.  From that acquisition began the journey that resulted in HK becoming one of the greatest commercial successes on the planet and which grew from a few hundred people to more than 7.5 million today.  The Brits had negotiated a 99-year lease in 1898, thinking it was a good deal—we are not too sure that they were feeling the same way when they turned over the governing of HK to the Chinese in 1997.  That said, to outward appearances the place seems to be running smoothly, but we suspect that there is plenty of strain when it comes to actual governance.


Star Ferry

Star Ferry

Repulse Bay






Day 2 found us taking the Big Bus once again, this time to Victoria Peak via the tram.  The weather was beautiful and almost clear—somewhat of a rarity this time of year.  The views from Victoria Peak are spectacular.  Like everywhere else on this island, it was teeming with humanity.  We got there early, so the line was small, but an hour or so later it was awful.  We finished the bus loop around the Causeway area and returned to our hotel to rest up for dinner and to get organized for our flight the next day.








It's hard to try to capture the sights, sounds, and smells of this teeming pile of humanity.  HK is a true international city.  One can't begin to count the number of different races and religions encountered in a single day.  Our photos can show you the concrete towers and the swarm of people, but the smells of HK (perhaps all of Asia), are indescribable.  We never fully adjusted to the variety of aromas which assaulted our senses every minute we were there.  Food vendors of every stripe are on every street and they create a mind-boggling array of aromas.





The sounds, of course, are a cacophony of languages, traffic noises (blaring horns, sqwealing tires, roaring engines, and screaming sirens), and perpetual construction racket.  Truthfully, over half the city seems to be under construction all the time—more buildings of every kind and highways.  The largest employment group seems to be construction workers followed very closely by bus drivers.  Public transport, by necessity, seems to be quite good here.  The highways on HK look like a huge pile of linguini; they are over and under one another, stacked high, and buried deep, and the whole thing is in perpetual motion all the time—that may be a little hyperbolic because we imagine it slows up sometime between 3:00 & 4:00 A.M., but we slept through it.
  
Street Scenes
Street Scenes


View from our Hotel Room


View from our Hotel Room
















Housing is another interesting problem—actually, the cost of housing is the problem.  For example, a 271 sq. ft flat near our hotel sells for around HK$6M.  Using the equivalent ratio of US$ per sq. ft, our home in Montrose would set one back US$6.9M—egad!!  There are other, more expensive, areas of HK if you are inclined to home ownership.  It's easy to see why home ownership is becoming exceedingly difficult here.

Day 3 we woke up to smog so thick you could slice it with a knife.  The visibility was less than ¼ mile.  Half the population was wearing surgical masks—they were the smart ones.  We asked, “Where the heck did we put the masks we packed just in case?”  Fortunately, Day 3 was our departure day, so we didn't have to put up with it for too long.  It was truly unhealthy!  Sadly, this would be a theme of our SE Asian trip.  We encountered dirtier air in Beijing in 2009, but our experience on this trip was similar.

This was in the Hong Kong Newspaper the day we left


Smoggy Morning Outside Our Hotel


MYANMAR

Yangon

The second leg of our SE Asia trip took us to Yangon, Myanmar (Rangoon, Burma, in British colonial days).  What one is struck with immediately in this 8-million + person city is the bone crushing poverty.  As you can imagine, there are lots and lots of people everywhere you go.  Without sounding like an encyclopedia, we'll add historical and statistical tidbits as they occur to us in the writing of this blog.  But right off the bat, one is baffled by the fact that they drive on the right even though 90% of the vehicles are configured for left hand driving.  Why is that you may ask?  Well, it turns out that one of the many governments or dictators this country has had since winning its independence from Great Britain in 1948 decided to rid themselves of all vestiges of colonialism and that included driving on the left in the British manner.  Anyway, it is all very confusing.

The vast majority of the people here are Buddhist (85%) even though there are 156 different ethnic groups. That means lots of visits to temples, pagodas, and monasteries; all of that translates into lots of monks and nuns.
     
Novice Monks Line up for Lunch




   
Novice Nuns' Flip Flops
Every collection of people has their oddities.  Sometimes it is gastronomical, other times it is sartorial.  People in Myanmar, both men and women, young and old, wear a sarong-like garment called a Longyi.  While not universal, it is certainly ubiquitous.  Its use is reminiscent of Pacific Islanders—flip flops always accompany it.

Our Guide, Joe in his Longyi


Joe Wearing His Longyi
People Bathing in Irrawaddy
River in Their Longyis





Listening to stories of the country's political history is like reading a bad novel.  Good novels coalesce around one or two themes, less good novels need many twists and turns, allowing none of them to resolve the conflict; so it is with Myanmar's political history.  Without offering an interpretation, let’s just say that Myanmar's people have yet to find their way and are residing in what can easily be called a state of perpetual chaos.  Economically, Myanmar ranks about 74th in GNP out of 191 countries.  The USA is first.  Tuvalu is 191st.  Tuvalu?  Don’t ask.

One of the most amazing pagodas we saw on our entire trip to SE Asia was in Yangon.  The Shwedagon Pagoda, most frequently referred to as the Golden Pagoda, is the most sacred pagoda in Myanmar.  It houses the relics of the past four Buddhas, a particularly astonishing feat we’re told.  At Shwedagon and all the rest of the pagodas we visited, we (and the thousands of other visitors) took off our shoes to show our respect. While there, we were able to make offerings to planetary posts of the days of our birth.  For example, we are Thursday/mouse and Wednesday/elephant respectively.  We dutifully went to our respective stations to anoint its Buddha with water.  Can't tell if it has made a difference, but we are both still kicking, so it apparently did no harm.  Karma being what it is should not be tested too much.

Shwedagon Pagoda


Making an offering to Buddha
Shwedagon Pagoda sits on 14 acres (there are about 114 acres of land around the pagoda) and is about 326 ft high—it is festooned with gold leaf.  It was started around 588 BC and has been maintained since that time by a variety of Burmese Kings; therefore, it is quite venerable.  At the very top of the pagoda’s spire is a diamond orb which contains 4,351 diamonds totaling 1800 carats.  The apex diamond is 76 carats.

Shwedagon Pagoda


Shwedagon Pagoda








A visit to a monastery/nunnery is necessary in Myanmar—there is no shortage of them as much of the education in the country is through the monks and nuns.  The country’s educational system is poor, and the people are poorer, so it is difficult for them to go to government schools (private schools are exceedingly rare), therefore, most kids go to monasteries and nunneries for their educations.  We visited one such place, the Kalaywa Tawya Monastery where more than 1,000 novices and nuns examine the purity of Buddhist scripture and conduct modern academic studies.  We arrived at lunch time and were amazed by the order of the activity.  Hundreds of novices (youngsters from ages 7 or 8 to upper teens) were gathering for the noon meal that they had acquired that morning by walking the streets seeking alms.  As former educators, it surprised us that that many young people could conduct themselves with no riotous behavior—indeed, with almost no noise what-so-ever.  Locals regularly help feed the monks/nuns as they do not own anything or conduct any business unlike folks in other religious orders.  All they have they acquire via alms.

Monks & Novices at Lunch


Monks & Novices at Lunch


Monks & Novices at Lunch


Novice Nuns Lining up for Lunch


You Want Some More Rice?
Yangon is also home to Myanmar’s most revered reclining Buddha.  Begun in 1899, this massive image of the elegant Buddha is resting on its side in a six-story pagoda is more than 200 ft long.


Myanmar's people are the most polite and gentle folks that we have ever encountered.  We felt completely safe there, yet from outward appearances we should be petrified to show up on the street. That grim reality is no more evident than in the village of Dala, a housing area/village on the west side of the Yangon River, where some 100,000 people call home.  These people come from out-lying regions to find work in Yangon but cannot afford to live in the city.  They literally live in shacks that have no running water—daily, someone from the family goes to the local reservoir to haul buckets of water for that day’s use.  Because there is a water shortage, each family is restricted to how much water they can draw each day.  Our photos show it better than words can describe.

Street Scene in Dala


Housing in Dala
More Housing in Dala

Collecting the Daily Water Ration


Collecting the Daily Water Ration

















Marketing for every kind of goods—veggies, clothing, meat, fish, all manner of groceries, and motorbikes--you name it, it can be found in huge outdoor markets as well as along the streets.  Markets are everywhere, and we visited many of them.











Pollution is awful here, too.  There are a vast number of cars and buses belching out whatever it is they belch out.  Outdoor cooking with charcoal and wood prevails.  The air smells as bad as it looks—we were all suffering from pulmonary allergies.  There is no obvious effort by anyone to bring the situation under control.

Yangon, as well as our next two stops, will be too quick—just 7 nights total in Myanmar.  A fast visit really provides just an impression rather than any understanding.


Bagan

We had a relatively short flight from Yangon to Bagan, roughly 2 hours in a 72-passenger domestic airline turbo-prop that wasn't full.  Bagan is the home of “4 million pagodas.”  That is hyperbole, there are only about 2,370 pagodas and temples in and around Bagan.  However, these ancient structures are literally everywhere.

Loading Plane Bound for Bagan
Seemingly impossible, the air quality in Bagan is even worse.  It makes for some glorious sunsets and sunrises, but it is very hard on the respiratory system—wood burning smoke mostly.  On our fist morning, there was a large hot air balloon lift right at sunrise and we managed to get photos from our hotel balcony.  We also caught a great sunset on a boat ride on the Irrawaddy River the previous evening—there is no rest for the intrepid traveler.

Sunset on the Irrawaddy Near Bagan


Balloon Rise at Sunrise in Bagan










Speaking of no rest, we took a two-hour horse cart ride amongst the pagodas.  It was bumpy and dusty, but a genuine hoot.  We were able to get up close to 100s of pagodas and temples that would have been otherwise difficult to get to.

Pagodas in Bagan


Your Friends Aboard A Horse Cart















At this point, one would think that some Buddhist philosophy would have rubbed off on us because of the amount of time we spent in pagodas and temples, but that was not the case.  However, we still had plenty of time as we would be visiting many other Buddhist countries before this trip would be over.  Our tour company, Overseas Adventure Travel, markets itself as OAT.  We have decided that really stands for one of two things: it is either “Old American Travelers” or (and our favorite and no less accurate) “Oh, Another Temple.”


Mandalay

We wrapped up our visit to Myanmar with a two-night stop in Mandalay.  Rudyard Kipling made Mandalay famous (or infamous) with his poem “Mandalay.”  Some see the poem as a glorification of colonialism; however, we suspect those people are academics who are always looking for something provocative. However, to be fair, there are some significant geographic inaccuracies in the work.  Since Mandalay is in the center of Burma, it is improbable that one could see the sunrise across any kind of bay, or, for that matter, see any part of China.  The poem's narrator is a retired British soldier who misses Burma, its women, and its loose morality. He laments that the only easy women in London are scruffy house maids; not so in Burma.  Comparing Burma to old Blighty, Burma wins out in his mind: better climate, more attractive women, and no 10 Commandments getting in the way of a good time.  Ah, nostalgia!

Our guide in Myanmar was Joe.  He was a 35-year old Burmese who lives in Mandalay.  The eight of us who did the pre-trip to Myanmar fell in love with this guy.  He was very personable, and his English was very understandable.  On one of our back-alley excursions, he took us to his parents’ house (where he still lives) to meet them.  (Interestingly, the photo of the old woman that opens this blog was taken in this back-alley.) He said he rarely did that but found us to be so harmonious that he wanted us to meet one another.  He is getting married in April and the two of them will move into that house with his parents (he recently added a bedroom just for them).  It was very common in SE Asia to find many generations living together in really small spaces; even people who seemed to be moderately well off lived with extended families and poor people were stacked like cord wood.

Joe and his Parents
We continued our quest to visit all the temples and pagodas in Myanmar.  The largest book in the world is at the Kuthodaw Pagoda, where all of Buddha's teachings are etched on 729 Tripitaka Tablets, each in its own building; quite a staggering site to see.  While fascinating, we didn’t take the time to drop in on each tablet for a read.
















Mandalay is a city that relies on scooters for transportation.  All three cities that we visited in Myanmar have had lots of scooters, but Mandalay is awash with them.  Indeed, our bus was swimming in a sea of scooters everywhere we went.  In addition, traffic control devices and signage are simply suggestions, not mandates.  Everyone drives with one foot one the accelerator and one hand on the horn.  Traffic is a cacophony of competing irritations.


Scooter Traffic

Nuns Dodging Traffic to Collect Alms


Scooter Parking Lot
Mandalay is also strewn with pagodas and temples.  One of the more interesting ones sits atop Mandalay Hill.  It requires a gawd-awful ride in a truck-like “bus” that the locals use for public transport, but barely accommodate a large Caucasian (particularly a tall one) to reach the base of the pagoda/temple because the road is so narrow and twisty.  Anyway, after a long and bumpy ride, the stalwart traveler is rewarded with a beautiful pagoda/temple and a 360° view of Mandalay with the Irrawaddy River meandering through the city.  We arrived near sunset, so were doubly rewarded.  There was some annual celebration going on where monks from all over SE Asia come to Mandalay to receive handouts to help support them for the coming year.  Apparently, there were 20,000 extra monks in town.  Not surprisingly, they wanted to visit the same pagodas/temples at which we were stopping.  (As an aside: monks from different countries wear different color robes: tangerine, maroon, orange, etc.: it was quite colorful.)

Myanmar Transportation

A Plethora of Monks
A boat trip on the Irrawaddy River to visit Mingun was a feature of our Mandalay visit.  As we will reiterate frequently in these essays, a component of an OAT trip is interacting with locals on a different level than is typical of most tours.  Our boat ride upriver to Mingun was another such experience.  We saw one of the world’s largest ringing bells, and, yes, we got to ring it—apparently, one rings the bell after performing a good deed, so he/she can share with others the merit he/she has earned.  Local lore holds that it can be heard for miles around.

Pre-Lunch Snack of River Fish


Street Vendor in Mingun


Ring That Bell, Big Boy!


Old Buddhists have to go Somewhere




























The world’s longest wooden Buddhist bridge once again captured our imaginations and challenged us to creative photography—not that we always succeeded, but we always tried.  A popular activity for Burmese planning on getting married is engagement and pre-wedding photos at popular places.  The U Bein footbridge that stretches almost three-quarters of a mile over the shallow Thaung Thaman Lake is one of the most popular spots in Mandalay, especially at sunset.  As was true throughout our trip, there were throngs of people.  It’s not until you are forced to do everything en masse that you realize what a quiet, uncluttered life you live in the confines of your own community and home.

U Bein Bridge


Sunset from U Bein Bridge



THAILAND

Bangkok

Living in a small rural community and having not spent much time in cities these past few years, we found ourselves pretty overwhelmed with their intensity and sheer density.  Bangkok offered us no respite.  Weighing in at about 12 million, it is the biggest city we have visited in quite some time—it is also the largest on this SE Asia trip (although Saigon is giving it a run for its money). The traffic is mind- boggling.  Here, too, scooters are wide-spread, but there are also many, many cars, buses, taxis, taxi scooters, sky trains, and subways.  And the hordes that are not in vehicles are walking the streets. Whew!


Bangkok Traffic

High Rise Buildings in Bangkok

Electricity Grid

Chinese Owned 7-11s are Popular in Thailand


Thailand has some 65 million residents, 90% of whom are Thai—the remainder are a mix of Chinese, Cambodians, and Burmese.  There is not the same level of ethnic diversity as was true in Myanmar.  One's first impression of Bangkok is of a vibrant modern city.  On closer inspection, it has large slums with very dense conglomerations of patched together housing.

The eight Myanmar travelers were joined by six folks who were just doing the Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam part of the trip.  In a study of group dynamics, it was interesting to see how the group would react to becoming larger after seven days of togetherness.  As it turned out, we had nothing to worry about.  We all fit together pretty well and there was little in the way of competition or conflict among the members.

The newly comprised group under the guidance of our new trip guide, Wichien, visited two sets of temple ruins the first day.  In the city of Ayutthaya some 50 miles north of Bangkok, UNESCO World Heritage Sites beckoned.  Home to 33 kings from many dynasties, it was the capitol of Siam from 1353 to 1767.  So wealthy was it, that it was often described as “2,000 spires clad in gold.”  Sadly, for the Thais, Burma attacked and destroyed the temples, stole the gold, and lobbed off the heads of all the Buddhas.

Decapitated Buddhas

This one got his Head Back

More Decapitated Buddhas

Temple Ruins



















On our second day in Thailand, we visited the Grand Palace.  Masses of humanity were everywhere.  There were so many people that had the site not been extraordinarily beautiful, it would have been truly unpleasant.  As it turned out, we were there for the changing of the guard—an unexpected treat.  This grand palace, a sprawling compound of ceremonial halls, gilded spires, and ornate buildings was the home of Rama IV, the monarch who was romanticized in the musical The King and I.  The grounds sport a 26-inch Emerald Buddha—actually, it’s carved out of Jade, but who’s being picky?  The temple Wat Phra Kaew houses this beloved figurine, which is so valued that the king himself changes its robes for each hot, rainy, and cool season.


Grand Palace Crowds

Your Friends With Their New Friend

Palace Pagoda

Palace Temple

Changing of the Guard

Here Come Some More
We explored the Chao Phraya River and an off-shoot canal by boat to, once again, get a better flavor of how local people live and make a living along these waterways.  We had a great lunch at a small family-run restaurant following a cooking demonstration.  Fred got roped into helping make our lunch of Thai Pad.  It turned out to be excellent.  It probably won’t win any Michelin ratings, but it was good enough for an OAT group.


Typical House on the Canal

Fred Preparing Lunch a la Thai
Continuing our traveling ways, we took an hour and half bus ride south of Bangkok to experience the Thaling Chan floating market.  It was captivating.  We rode a small motor boat (5-6) passengers to the market.  Once there it was wall-to-wall boats and people.  What undoubtedly started out as a market for locals to buy veggies and other daily necessities has turned into a gigantic tourist attraction.  Locals still come to buy necessities, but they have been joined by a gazillion souvenir sellers. The result is mayhem.  Of course, we joined right in with the throng and even left some of our money with local vendors in exchange for souvenirs.


Souvenir Peddlers

Mamma-San Selling Veggies

Local Goods Venders

Do You Want Some Potatoes?

How About Papayas?




Following the floating market, we hopped a fisherman's boat for a visit to a mangrove forest restoration area right on the Gulf of Thailand.  At the mangroves, which we could aid by planting new shoots, we were joined by a troop of monkeys seeking a handout.  They were not disappointed as there were plenty of bananas available for that purpose on board the boat.  We passed, but others in our group did not.  We imagine the monkeys appreciated the largesse.


Fishing Village

Hey, Mack, Toss Me A Banana!

Some of our Group Planting Mangrove Shoots

Some Not

Fishing Village







We took a dinner cruise on the Chao Phraya River our last night in Bangkok.  The lights adorning the Royal Palace and many temples and pagodas were a delightful adjunct to the excellent Thai food we ate as we floated this broad waterway.  The food we encountered on this trip was great.  Fortunately, we are fond of Thai and Asian food.  We have eaten more rice on this trip than we have in a year at home, but, of course, that’s why we travel—new and unique experiences.

Royal Palace From Our Boat


Royal Palace From Our Boat



















LAOS


LUANG PRABANG

Our flight to Luang Prabang was mercifully short.  The old prop plane was like the ones we used in Burma; no head clearance and even less leg room.  Laos is much smaller than either Thailand or Myanmar—only 7 million people with 49 ethnic groups.  Hence, there is a lot less congestion here.  As is true elsewhere in SE Asia, everyone cooks with open wood fires leading to lots of smoke pollution.

We visited the biggest and best temple in Luang Prabang—Xiengtong Temple.  While nice, it was not as elaborate or large as the ones we saw in Myanmar.  This city was once the old royal capital of Laos and it reflects its history with quaint architecture.  One of the many Laotian kings who died lay in state at this temple for three years.  He was wrapped in tobacco leaves to preserve his body, which led the author to reflect on Willie Nelson’s recent bi-op, Roll Me Up and Smoke Me When I Die.  But we digress.


Moasic with beads 

Where King Wrapped in Tobacco
Laid in State 
Xiengtong Temple




















A common feature of most temples that are also part of royal palaces is a building for the king to lie in state after he has died.  All of the subsequent kings who die lie in state there also.  It’s ironic that a group of folks who spend their entire lives trying to establish themselves as gods plan ahead for mortality that shouldn’t be necessary if they were to actually become gods.  Xiengtong is also a popular spot for pre-wedding photos.  We were fortunate enough to be present when one such couple was having their photographs taken.  The traditional costumes (a necessity it seems) were enchanting.


Aren't They a Handsome Couple?



Betrothed



















We'd Bet They Are Going to be Really Happy















The town has become quite the center for various kinds of adventure tourism and, hence, attracts lots of Caucasians (mostly Europeans and Aussies) who are in an unending quest to defy death.  As a UNESCO World Heritage Site, it is also very popular with tourists of many ilks.

We made an early morning visit to a village that specializes in paper-making and silk-making and weaving.  The paper-making was fascinating.  They use the bark of the Mulberry tree, peeling off strips of bark.  The bark is soaked until it becomes very soft. The bark is then pounded until it is mushy; fred was cajoled into helping with this task, too.   Finally, the mushy bark is soaked until it becomes a fibrous mass of glop (notice the precise scientific names used to describe the end product), which is then spread out on screens, decorated, and set to dry. The final product is very strong and attractive.  These people also use a low-tech method of making silk.  They use a small number of hatched silk worms who then create the silk.  Later, after making thread, they weave it into colorful scarves, table runners and such.  We are the proud owners of one such piece.

Fred Pounding Mulberry Bark
For Pulp

Designing a Paper Wall Hanging



















We cruised the Mekong River up to a village that specializes in making rice whiskey.  It is really terrible stuff.  Not only did it taste a lot like what kerosene must taste like, it had snakes and other critters in it.  Apparently, the varmints in the hooch make it some kind of herbal treatment for what ails one.  It was not among our souvenir purchases.  The local people have also constructed a Buddha shrine in a cave right next to the river.  The Pak Ou Cave is filled with thousands of Buddha icons.  Locals and visitors are continually adding to the menagerie.  It is high enough above the river that it doesn’t fill with water during the monsoon season.


Rice Whiskey With Snake
Pak Ou Cave

Hundreds of Buddhas in Pak Ou Cave


Lots of Tourists & Local Visit the Cave



























Laotian massages do not have the same reputation as Thai massages, but for $8 USD per hour for a very deep massage you can't go wrong.  After a long day on the river, it was a delightful experience.

The favored mode of transportation in Luang Prabang is the Jumbo.  These are small truck/scooters they carry about 6 passengers comfortably; the Lao manage to get twice that many into them.  The streets in the old section of town are too narrow for larger vehicles, so the Jumbo is the way to go.  It costs about $5 USD for most trips.

Our Guide, Wichien, Dodging a Jumbo

Those Suckers Weren't Easy
to Disembark

















Various members of our troop had been passing around a chest cold caused by pollution and sleeping in air conditioning.  For two days, it was fred’s turn to have the crud.  It turned out that 14 of the 16 of us wound up with this bronchial infection.  At least one person probably had a low dose of pneumonia.  While fred stayed in the hotel with an assortment of drugs, including antibiotics, in an effort to get better, the remainder of the group visited a school and had a community lunch in a Hmong village.

Susan loved visiting the village and said it was one of the highlights of her trip.  The group was welcomed by the Communist village chief, who poured each of the group a small glass of village-made rice whiskey.  She noted that he sipped a bit with each pouring, surreptitiously sipped a bit between pourings, and by the end of the ritual was a bit loopy.  When asked why he was chief, she was told the Communists selected him because of his high morals and sobriety.  At lunch she asked how many of the other villagers were Communist.  The headman’s wife shook her head.  “None,” she said.  We saw the village blacksmith hammering the knife he was forming on a shell casing anvil made from American bombs.  The group met with the village shaman who performed a ritual dance and who also demonstrated his agility with his crossbow, used to kill rats.  The local Hmong primary school is supported by OAT/Grand Circle Foundation; we saw the toilets OAT had built for the children when we visited the school.  The group gave gifts to the Hmong teacher, and we were enthusiastically greeted by the children. 

Susan Gifting the School Teacher




Grateful Kiddos
Headman

Kiddos Learning

VIENTIANE

OAT always includes a home hosted dinner where a small group of us (4-6) have a traditional meal with a local family.  On this trip, our home meal was in Vientiane.  Along with another couple, Susan and I had dinner with a four-generation family who prepared for us a traditional Lao dinner (with our help).  A traditional dish that Laotians have is green papaya salad.  They mercifully made a batch that was edible for us as they normally serve it with a huge amount of red pepper that will literally take the hide off your tongue.  It was a delightful evening.  Two of the men spoke English, so we managed to have a great time as well as a great meal.  One of the men was a university student. His brother-in-law, a university graduate, worked for the Laotian Lottery.  We learned a lot about life in Laos from regular people that evening.


Our Laotian Home-Hosted Dinner
Since Vientiane is the capitol of Laos, we saw the Presidential residence as well as several very impressive embassies.  Vientiane also has an arch that resembles the Arc d’ Triomphe in Paris (the French, after all, were the European colonizers of Laos) called the Patuxay Victory Gate Monument.



This city, as is true of most in SE Asia, is home to an impressive stupa, PhraThat Luang (pagodas are called stupas here). The Great Sacred Stupa, a national symbol of Laos built in the 16th century, also has a reclining Buddha made of gold.  A couple was having their pre-wedding photos taken at this site, too.  As almost always, they were festooned with the traditional Lao wedding costumes.

Great Sacred Stupa

Great Sacred Temple

Posing With The Buddha

Pretty Fancy Footwear on
that Prospective Groom

Reclining Buddha
A real treat for us was the opportunity to meet with a monk for a discussion of his daily life and practice and have the opportunity to pick up tips on meditation.  This was mesmerizing.  Those of us who meditated with him felt that it was the best meditation we have ever had (our Catholic members from Georgia passed, thank you very much).  Perhaps it was because we were all totally exhausted and really relished the opportunity to sit mindlessly still for a little bit.  On the other hand, perhaps some of his devoutness rubbed off on us.  After all, he gets up a 4:00 a.m. and meditates for an hour every day and has been doing this for 10 or more years.  In any event, we are all still talking about our experience.  After the meditation, the monk showed us how he dresses in his robe.  It’s a complicated process that involves a sheet of fabric bigger than a king-sized bed sheet that he systematically wraps around his body with no buttons or zippers at all.




Meditating Monks (one in Orange is a Novice)


















Hard to get through a country without some discussion of politics, Laos is no different.  Because of the extensive American bombing of the Ho Chi Minh Trail, which was on Laos’s eastern border, there are tons of unexploded ordinance in the country.  There is and has been a significant effort to find and disarm these devices.  Immediately after 1973 and the end of the war, 400-500 people per year were maimed or killed by stumbling on to these bombs.  Today, that is down to fewer than 20 per year.  Better, but still way too many.  The USA has been an active player in the removal, primarily through funding.  We visited COPE, an organization run by the Laotian government that is leading the effort to help people who have been injured.


Examples of some of the Artificial Limbs
Distributed by COPE

CAMBODIA


Phnom Penh

The Killing Fields of Cambodia impacted us in ways we had not anticipated.  We were, like most of you, aware of Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge.  However, since it was far, far away, we had not internalized what had taken place.  After all, it was the mid-1970s and we had just escaped our own national nightmare.  To have it slammed home in our comfortable old age was startling, to say the least.  It is clearly one thing to know about something intellectually and something else again to visit the actual spot of these atrocities. Bones don't lie, and they do make an impact.

Memorial at Choeung Ek
Killing Fields

Close-up of the Memorial at Right
Overview of the Killing Fields'
Mass Graves

More Grizzly Samples



S-21 was a notorious re-education center.  Actually, it was a pipeline to the killing fields.  A former high school converted into a center for torture, it has been preserved as a remembrance of the genocide that took place there and other places in Cambodia.  During our stop at this place, we had an opportunity to meet with one of the few survivors and to hear his story.  He managed to get through S-21 without winding up in the killing fields, one of the very few to do so.  Because they accidently discovered he could repair typewriters, he was given that job and, hence, avoided being sent to the killing fields—talk about serendipity.  He was one of the handful who were able to testify at the trials of some of the perpetrators.  Bizarrely, fewer than 10 people were ever charged and punished for these crimes.  Indeed, some members of Pol Pot’s regime are still in high places in the Cambodian government today.

There are rooms full of photos of victims

Leggings used for confinement

On the grounds

Torture Tools

Chum Mey S-21 Survivor & Your Friends

Prison Cells


Because it was such a traumatic day for us, our guides decided we needed a little activity to let off steam and get outside our mournful funk.  Before dinner, they took us to an amusement park for a ride on bumper cars.  We kid you not.  Almost all of us piled into carnival style bumper cars and smashed the hell out of anyone who got into our way.  Essentially, we collectively thought it was ridiculous, but it did turn out to be cathartic.

Foreground - Young Sam, our Phnom Penh
Guide & Fred


Susan Readying for the Fray

On a lighter note, the next day we visited the Royal Palace with its Silver Pagoda.  The King of Cambodia is a figurehead (and a Buddhist monk as well), who was put in place to placate the people as they love the idea of a monarchy.  However, he has little or no influence on running the country—similar to the Queen in the UK.


Royal Palace

Silver Pagoda


Spirit House on Palace
Grounds



















Siem Reap

Our only day-long bus trip took us 200+ miles north from Phnom Penh to Siem Reap, home of Angkor Wat.  Getting a closer view of the countryside did not alter our view of Cambodia much, except for the fact that rural Cambodia is more destitute than urban Cambodia.  Along the way to Siem Reap, we stopped to help a Cambodian woman catch and cook tarantulas (with which she supplements her income by selling them on the street) and learned about how rice is grown and harvested.  Some of our intrepid travelers tried the tarantulas as a pre-lunch snack, but your friends were not among them.

Fangs have to be removed to render
them non-toxic

Lunch is served


As we have mentioned many times in this blog, part of OAT's goal is to provide travelers with opportunities for learning and discovery.  In that vein, the next day we took a boat ride to a floating fishermen’s village.  Along the way, we stopped off at a small village to take a ride in a traditional ox cart—an interesting but exceedingly bumpy ride.  Our guess is that most rural Cambodians ride scooters rather than ox carts but do use them to haul freight and grain.

Rice spread out to dry after harvest

Your Friends on an Ox Cart
















In the fishing village, we met with a woman who was a mid-wife.  She had personally given birth to 10 children in the small floating house they lived in.  As the only person available to pregnant women, she delivered something like 100 babies during her career—she is still practicing.  One of our group members, a retired pediatrician, was fascinated by this woman and her practice.  She also asked a lot of interesting technical questions, none of which stymied the mid-wife.


Mid-wife with her medical kit

Floating Fishermen's House

Prepping fish to make
fish sauce










Almost everyone comes to Siem Reap for one reason, to visit Angkor Wat.  We were not much different.  We did do other things, but most of our group was here for the temples.  We arrived just after daybreak and as the park opened—good thing, too, as the place was already crawling with people.  We had to cue up for half an hour to climb the stairs to heaven on the third level of the temple; a pain, but well worth the wait.  What makes Angkor Wat so impressive is its sheer size.  It is not more beautiful than many we have seen, but it is much larger than most—96 square miles.  It is also very old—constructed between AD 800-1200.  It had been abandoned and then reclaimed fairly recently.  The temple is a monument to both Buddhist and Hindu beliefs.  Parts of the temple complex had been completely overgrown with vegetation until found by the French in the 1800s.  Many edifices still have tree trunks running through the walls—left to help hold up the now crumbling structure.

Angkor Wat Here & Below




Ruins in Angkor Thom Here & Below




We concluded our visit to Angkor Wat and our day with a sunset stop on the shores of the moat surrounding the compound.  We drank Cambodian whiskey and ate local hors d’oeuvres: snake jerky, water buffalo jerky, sticky rice cooked in bamboo tubes, and frog legs.  Yummy!   It sounds icky, but it was all actually pretty tasty.  In any event, we all had smiles on our faces, but that might have been the whiskey.


Our Siem Reap Guide, Sam,
Displaying our Whiskey

Smoggy Sunset at Angkor Wat








VIETNAM


Saigon / Ho Chi Minh City

1975


2018





This city surprised us.  Unlike the other large cities we have visited on this trip (Saigon has 11 million people), the city center is incredibly modern and new.  The place has changed dramatically since the Communists decided to loosen up.  Following the end of the “American War,” they were incredibly tight-assed, banning religion, land ownership, and enforced any number of other restrictive measures.  Ten years later, it became apparent to them that their economic system was not working; shoot, even the Russians were abandoning strict communism at that time.  The government decided to recognize some forms of capitalism and three religions (Buddhism, Catholicism, and a conglomeration that is a lot like b'hai).  Since 1986, Vietnam has become a hot economic engine, welcoming investments from all comers and doing very well as a result.  Communist government workers still have the best jobs.

OAT trips, as we’ve mentioned continuously in this blog, feature learning and discovery as a primary focus.  Sure, there are shopping opportunities and we see most of the same tourist attractions, but in between, we see life as the locals live it.  In Vietnam, that included a trip to a back-alley residential neighborhood where 24 people were living in about 400 square ft (one exceedingly small bathroom & hardly any kitchen to speak of)—egad!

Back-alley Housing Area

Cooking Area for 24 People



Even with the cramped quarters people were generous.  A street vendor graciously took Susan to her own home to use a restroom when told she needed facilities—Susan was relieved to discover that they were regular western facilities and not one of the more common squat toilets, although, at the time, it wouldn’t have mattered.  On a more touristy front, we spent a goodly amount of time at the presidential palace.  Much of the history of the American War with the communists was enshrined there.

Presidential Palace

Conference Room

President's Office
The Mekong River has been a theme for us since Laos.  (Have we told you that the 2,700-mile long “mother of all rivers” starts in the Himalayas and passes through Tibet, China, serves as the border for Myanmar/Laos, Laos, Cambodia, & Vietnam?)  Our trip to the delta region was a great highlight.  We walked the back “streets” of a village in the delta and then caught sampans for a ride up a canal to a coconut candy maker’s place.  Although not experts, we can now discuss with some authenticity the manufacturing of coconut candy.  We sampled it at various stages and were given the opportunity to purchase some.  Following our “factory” visit, we cruised up and down several channels within the delta and had a great lunch at a river-side restaurant.

San-pan Ride

Shaping the Coconut Candy

Cooking the Coconut Candy

Peeling a Coconut

Wrapping the Candy for Boxing

Coconut Milk on the Mekong River

Elephant Ear Fish for Lunch

We must have liked it!



















No trip to this region is complete without a visit to the Cu Chi Tunnels.  Actually, one’s trip can be complete without that visit, but it makes for interesting cocktail party small talk to have been there.  The tunnels were first developed to aid villagers in this region north of Saigon fight (avoid, actually) the French, whom they were trying to oust from their country in the 1950s.  We should have been paying attention!  Anyway, the tunnels were thought-provoking.  While they were extensive in this particular region, they played only a minor role in the entire conduct of the war.  We met and talked with a former Viet-Cong who lived in these tunnels and was injured early on.


Visitors to the tunnels are invited to climb down into them and see what it might have felt like.  However, none of us will ever know what that was really like.  Too many quandaries.  First, it takes a particular mind-set to be willing to live underground with little or no headroom voluntarily for extended periods of time.  Secondly, they were much smaller (5 ft or less tall & 80 lbs. or so) people than westerners and the tunnels were built by them for them.  Try shoving a 6’ 2” 200 lb. person into one of those and it’s a whole lot like being a sausage.  Well, we tried it—for a short distance anyway—and are no worse for wear, but probably couldn’t do it for any length of time or distance.

Cute little guide, Tam, always clowning around




On a lighter note, we spent an evening traveling the streets of an excessively busy Saigon in a cyclo-rickshaw, attended a water puppet show, finished up the evening at a Vietnamese beer garden—it wasn’t Octoberfest in Munich, but it wasn’t bad.  Tet was February 16 this year and Saigon was awash with lights and flowers (thousands of marigolds and mums) everywhere in preparation for the big day.  The lunar new year is a time for families to hold reunions and make offerings to those who has passed on to another world.  Traffic was horrendous everywhere we went as the city filled up with people returning from wherever; you could feel the bustle in the air.  While kibitzing with a street food vendor one day, we noticed a young woman hanging around, listening to our conversation.  Lo and behold, she was from Texas and just home for a visit with family for Tet and wanted to hear some American English; we had a nice chat.  It’s a small world and you never know who you are going to run into.

Water Puppet Show

Water Puppets

Rickshaw Ride in Saigon

Serious Traffic in Saigon

Streets Decorated for Tet




MOT HAI BA-DO
(1-2-3 Cheers in Vietamese)
This is generally the part of the blog where we try to arrive at some sort of summary and draw meaningful conclusions from our observations and travels.  This, being an especially long trip (32 days) with many stops in six different countries, is more complicated than usual.  However, since we brought it up, we might as well try it.

Southeast Asia is a teeming mass of humanity.  Every city and country is awash with people.  Most of them are impoverished.  Without witnessing it, one cannot imagine the living conditions of the vast majority of people in the places we visited.  Most still cook on open fires outdoors.  Pollution is a significant health issue caused by the open fires, vehicles of all kinds, and industrial emissions.  SE Asia is scooter land.   Most people can’t afford cars, so they travel by scooter (public transportation was great in Hong Kong, but dubious everywhere else).  It was common to see entire families (mom, dad, a kid or two) piled on a scooter buzzing down the road.  Even more amazing was the fact that we never saw a scooter accident.  Scooters are notorious polluters because of the 2-cycle engines they usually use, so the use of millions of them certainly aggravate a serious problem.

The people of SE Asia are wonderful.  They are polite and helpful.  They are also incredibly patient.  They tolerate political mayhem & corruption with an “oh, well” attitude and the notion that this too shall pass and get better if they wait long enough-- acceptance that drives this American nuts.  It must be the Buddhist influence in their lives as no other explanation makes much sense to us.  History has shown that circumstances do ebb and flow here, but it’s hard to know if things are better or just different.

Mighty kings and kingdoms have come and gone over the centuries, invaders have put their mark on the place and have then been thrown out.  Nationalism is alive and well.  People can’t criticize their political handlers publicly—dissenters still “disappear” with great regularity in every country in this region.

Our guides always answered every question we had, but almost always it was on the bus, not out in public.  We soon learned to not ask awkward questions until we were on the bus.  We should point out that every guide (and we had six altogether—five locals and a trip leader) said they were afraid to answer some of our questions about their government even though they did so honestly—frequently, you could see the pain on their faces as they grappled with answers.  For example, our Cambodian guide grew up in a refugee camp on the Cambodian/Thailand border during the Pol Pot era (he was forced to spend a year as a guerilla fighting in the jungle as a 14-year old—had he been caught he would have wound up in the killing fields).  His calm demeaner and straight forwardness was incredibly refreshing considering what he had lived through.

You are beginning to get the feel for why it is so difficult to give you a nice summary with a bow on it for this trip.  It is complicated and our reactions to it are no less complicated.  Fred was somewhat startled by his reaction to Vietnam.  While he only served on a ship in the Gulf of Tonkin in 1964, he was surprised that his emotions about that time which had long laid dormant popped up soon after arriving in country.  It cannot be explained or ignored.  Part of it might have been quizzing from fellow travelers which brought up much that had long been suppressed.  Either way, it is not easy approaching this trip with sanguinity.  However, doom and gloom does not fit at all.

Myanmar probably was our favorite stop even though it was clearly the most impoverished and suppressed politically.   This is the land of pagodas and temples.  The vast number of them was nearly overwhelming; they ranged from golden edifices to vast areas of ruins.  The Burma people (a name they call themselves) are gentle souls who were generous and polite to a fault.  They consistently showed respect for others with actions and simple gestures.  We found no one who supported the military’s inhumane treatment of the Muslims on the border with Bangladesh.  There are 156 ethnic groups in Myanmar, so conflict is a way of life.  Indeed, many of those groups are still fighting for their own freedom.

While intellectually stimulating, travel such as this trip is exhausting.  One’s daily routine is upset, you eat strange, but interesting, food, and your sleep patterns are all messed up.  We visited 11 cities and numerous villages in our 32 days, plus we rode on airplanes for approximately 58 hours from home to home—we don’t even have any way to count the hours we spent on buses, boats, and walking, but it was a bunch.  All of that said, we had a wonderful time.  Sure, we are still jet-lagged after being home almost two weeks, but our memories of our trip are all happy memories that we will carry with us the rest of our lives.  We don’t know where we will be going next, but you can count on us sharing it with you.