Saturday, December 20, 2008

On Doxycyline...

Anecdote number one... actually I have been meaning to write a note on my friend Doxy for a while... I don't think I have already have I? Have I? It's hard to keep track. This is not a blog advising you not to take preventative medicines... I know people who have had malaria, I have seen people with malaria, I don't like malaria, it is not nice. I would rather not get malaria. 

Doxycycline is an anti-malarial which we were given back in the day, when we were in a seriously high risk malaria region. On my latest trip I passed through various high risk places, and while a lot of travelers don't bother with anti-malarials due to the possible side effects outweighing the benefits, because I had a known history with Doxy and was getting off the beaten track a bit my doctor and I decided I may as well go back on it, better safe than sorry. 

Doxy is not the worst of the anti-malarial drugs, but they all have possible side-effects. Some, like the one some Dutch guys I met were put on, can be pretty nasty. I forget the name but it is actually banned in many countries, and they found within two days of starting to take it they were actually hallucinating and one of them didn't sleep a wink for three days... they quickly decided to discontinue that one. Doxy also has a wide range of possible effects depending on the taker. Some people are fine and have no issues, others have lots. The one thing that has always perplexed me (and I have checked everywhere) is the one major side effect that I and many, many people taking it with me experienced is not actually listed or explained anywhere... I wonder if they think it is best not to tell people... It simply says in big letters that Doxy should be taken with food and water early in the morning, and the only reason I can think of for this is because of the phenomenon widely known as Doxy dreams. 

Back in the day before we went away we were told by quite a few people to expect them. They said we would dream like never before, and they were indeed right about that. I am not usually much of a dreamer, I don't sleep that long but I sleep very deep so any dreaming I do is forgotten. Except on Doxy. Doxy dreams are like nothing else. They are vivid, they are long, and they seem to take whatever you usually dream about and multiply it by a factor of ten. Or twenty. It is ok if you know it is coming. Getting back onto Doxy for this trip I lay back on the first or second night and waited for the ride to begin. And did it what... The first night I had what you can only call a night terror, like the ones on the documentaries on TV, the full on big-black-presence-at-the-end-of-the bed, thinking you are awake, crushing pressure, unable to move... I knew what was going on but it's still not the greatest feeling. The weird thing is I was sure I was thrashing around violently, I was really fighting it, but when I finally woke I was on my back, sweating, and the bedclothes were not even disturbed. 

From there the dreams just kind of rolled on every night and I rolled with them, nothing too nasty (although I do have to apologise to a couple of people at home about the incident with the chainsaw), but everything so vivid and so real you have to spend some minutes after waking thinking about whether the things you remember actually happened the day before or just in your head overnight. Other people I know aren't so lucky, the ones I felt the most sorry for back in the day were several who had children at home and repeatedly dreamed of them dying in vivid detail. 

Someone once said that on Doxy you have two lives, the one where you are awake and the one in your sleep. It certainly makes life interesting. 

And hello from...

New Zealand... yes kids, that's right, I am home, safe, finally, it's all over... well not quite all over, I still have a fair bit to cover blog-wise which I will get to before too long, there are plenty of anecdotes and fill-in bits still in my brain which I will share with anyone keen to keep reading my waffle. 

For now I am glad to be back and catching up with everything and everyone slowly... at least it is slightly warmer than a Shanghai winter, although the good old NZ rain is still hanging around, reliable as ever. It is always a bit surreal coming back to the world after time away but at least the culture shock was not quite like it was six years ago. After a couple of days of eating and drinking all the things I missed and lazing around I am pretty much back in the groove again, although the pollution-stuffed chest I have had since Bangkok has finally jumped into a full blown flu or something. It could be the SARs, we shall see. 

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

A quick update...

Hey everybody

Well I am not motivated enough to write much just yet, but so you know, China has been and gone and was good... well, some of it... There is much to be written on the last few days which I will get to in due course, however the most important thing to say right now is I am finally on my way HOME. Well, more or less. For the first time at least I can say that I am traveling in a homeward-type direction and it won't be too long before I am back in town, all going to plan.

Watch this space for updates and the conclusion to our gripping epic saga...

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Wednesday already...

Time is ticking on alright... has been a week in HK now, and I am very lucky as I could never have afforded it without the generosity of my host... you don't see backpackers and the like in HK... they just don't have them... let alone staying in a prime location near the centre of HK city itself.

The soiree the other night was an interesting affair, the restaurant was very nice indeed with a magnificent view over HK island, and the wine and food did indeed flow... kind of. The queues for the assorted gourmet nibbles were so long there was not much point in even trying, and the bar ran out of glasses as the place was so overpacked... not well run at all, but then I think they were a bit overwhelmed by the crowd. And what a crowd. The beautiful folk. I am quite sure that most of the guys in the place were wearing socks that cost more than my whole outfit, I felt somewhat underdressed in my button-up Illicit shirt, jeans and black jacket, but what can you do. HK is a high fashion town, so I just tried to make out like I was being unique and a rebel, rather than poor. Fortunately for us we found a spot outside on the deck and, my mate being who he is, the manager not of the restaurant but of the entire hotel came out before too long to say hello and ordered one of the frazzled looking waiters to find us four bottles of wine while the rest of the crowd continued to mob the bar trying to get a single glass.

So that was Tuesday night. Was it? I think so. No, it was Monday. Today is Wednesday. Except now for you it is Thursday... Anyway the next day I got up and wandered a bit and took a tram to Central then got on the subway and headed out to Lantau, which is the larger but vastly less populated island to the west, much of which is parkland and great hiking country. The rail ride was fairly long but as always efficient and easy enough, once you find your way around some of the massive stations. From the main town of Tung Chung I caught the cable car that weaves its way over the huge hills of the island for about 15-20 minutes of amazing views before ending up at Ngong Ping, near a large buddhist monastery set amongst the hills, and featuring the world's (or possibly just Asia's) largest seated buddha. Now I have seen a lot of buddha in the last five weeks, and this one certainly was large. And seated. There is even a museum inside him. I am not sure if this is a direct copy of the real buddha and whether he also had a museum inside him, or if this is just something they thought was a good idea at the time. Anyway after snapping lots of photos of him I caught a bus to Tai O, a little village on the very west side which is very much the opposite of Hong Kong and does not looked to have changed a great deal in the last 50 years. It was very nice and peaceful, with lots of old people pottering about and houses on stilts over the water and little fishing boats chugging in and out of the bay. I even managed to spot the old (English) Police Station hidden up on a hillside amongst some trees, and felt obliged to break into the grounds to get some photos. Well, it seemed a shame not to, it is just sitting there all neglected. In hindsight I am probably lucky I didn't end up providing the subject matter for some gory horror movie... lonely tourist ventures where he shouldn't... but then again that could have happened countless times in the last month and a bit. I wonder what really was in that "noodles with assorted meats" in Cambodia...

Lantau also features large shopping outlet malls, the huge Hong Kong Airport, and Hong Kong Disney resort. I didn't make it to any of these, although I will hopefully be making it to one of them fairly soon... Today was just a wander around various parts of HK and Kowloon (the "dark side" as HK people call it, though much of HK is on the mainland but still part of HK) including Jordan and Causeway Bay, the latter of which had many many shops I thought I would probably get declined entry to if I even tried. Tomorrow will be another day of just trying to get around things and see what I can see and then I think we are out tomorrow night and off to the north Friday, so blogs and emails may kind of run dry around then for a bit... We will see how we go.

Everything is exceptionally Christmas over here, shopping is like a national sport for the well off and everywhere you look there are trees and decorations and carols playing and the usual madness. Still not quite sinking in for me though, as far as I am concerned it is still early November... Funny thing is it is still 20 degrees and clear and sunny, and it is their winter. Think I definitely lucked out there, in the summer it gets into the 30's and is incredibly muggy and smoggy, but for now there is a nice breeze and it is just pleasant.

Oh well I may retire to the roof for a while with a beverage, my host is currently at some other event but will be returning soon to join me. Cheers for the emails as always, catch you soon.

Monday, December 8, 2008

Another night in HK...

And another do to go to...

Just killing some time, off to another do tonight with my host, but first he is off playing Santa at his work's kids Christmas party, haha. Later we are going to some flash restaurant's first birthday do across the harbour, free booze and gourmet food apparently... HK is always on the go all year round and if you are in the right social circles (and/or job) then there is just party after event after function after show, every night of the week...

A few more days here and then north again to see some more of the big place over the border. The days are ticking down now and it is hard to believe soon it will all be over. But I am definitely looking forward to a lot of just doing nothing. And seeing everyone back there of course. And a nice NZ summer. And the food. Still no joy on the Christmas shopping I am afraid, HK is more the Gucci and Armani and LV and Rolex shopping kind of place than the "nicknacks for the folks at home" kind of place... And I mean the real stuff not the fake stuff. And no, none of you are getting the real stuff for Christmas. Unless you send cash now. I am lucky I have friends in the right places or there is no way I could even afford to stay on this little island...

Anyway kids I have a ferry to catch, preceded by a subway train... Not long to go til I can bore you with days and days of average photos and endless stories... trust me what you get to read on here is only the general overview.

Take care all

Some more while I have some free time...

I have thousands of photos and haven't even begun to go through them so these are just some randoms I have come across..

Singa zoo

Sunset Singa/Malay Causeway
Taken from the train through dirty window, shame I couldn't get out for a better one

No idea why, just liked the building
Photo is rubbish though

View from the bathroom, Malacca

I have a lot of photos of monkeys. I love the expression on this little guy, it's priceless

Caves near KL

Moto taxi, Chumphon

Hellfire Pass

Not a very good shot but kind of random backlit by the flash of another camera. Muay Thai, Bangkok

View from the Camry taxi, road to Siem Reap

Not a job I envy... Saigon

Saigon again

HK this evening

Friday, December 5, 2008

A snap or two

Hong Kong. It's large.

Hairy crabs. Enough said.

Hue, Vietnam

Me hitching a ride, Hue

The huuuge Hue flagpole

What can I say. Saigon.

I am ze monkey. Zis is my temple.
Angkor Wat, Cambodia

Cambodian trees: ruthless.
Angkor complex

My word...

Another proud day for the New Zealand Defence Force... I opened the NZ Herald website tonight for the first time since I left, and read the RNZAF is standing by to evacuate Kiwi backpackers from Bangkok, presumably because they have run out of beer money... Good grief. Tell them to start walking. They are so ignorant they didn't know a six month long political protest was happening until they got to the airport. Trust me, I asked lots of them.

And an OMR, another one I really mean... Listen to 'Iron and Wine'. They will heal in you what is broken and bring you to tears for what you didn't know was.

Thursday, December 4, 2008

And hello again...

This time from Hong Kong... I made it... not without the odd bit of fun on the way mind you. This will be a long one...

When I last left you I was in Hue and getting ready for a bus ride... That was certainly fun, kind of. From the hotel it was a very short taxi ride to the bus agents office where I waited for a while with various locals, then we were all packed into more cabs to go to the bus... the bus staff were nasty rude little folk, especially the driver who was some little poison dwarf of a Vietnamese. The bus was about half and half, locals and foreigners, and we all climbed into our bunk chairs and settled in.

The drive was typical SE Asian, the driver on the airhorn about every twenty seconds (not an exaggeration) and driving like he was running from the devil, but you get used to that very quickly. If it kept him awake for the twelve hours I was ok with it, mind you they say most of the drivers are on meth and other stay-awake drugs which wouldn't surprise me at all. It was reasonably comfy, the seats are not quite lie-flat but you can lie down ok and try to sleep amid the swerving and bumping and tooting.

There was one slightly disconcerting episode sometime in the middle of the night, I was dozing but woke up when the driver braked hard and came almost to a stop. The rest of the bus was dead asleep but I stuck my head over the side of the bunk to see what was ahead. In the pitch dark I could see the blazing lights of two trucks coming the other way, but in our lane. As the bus waited they both slowly swerved around something on the road and back into their lane and carried on. Curious I turned and peered out my window as the bus moved off, trying to see what was on the road. I couldn't see ahead and it was dark by the time the obstruction was along side, but an old Vietnamese guy stood on the side of the road shining a torch around various shapeless objects scattered across the other lane. I made out or thought I made out a scooter or possibly two, and at first though 'Oh looks like a couple of scooters have had a coming-together in the dark'... not very nice but unlikely to have done too much damage, and in any case the bus and trucks didn't bother to stop. I figured the old man was one of the riders and wondered where the other one was. I watched as we passed and the old guy just stood there looking confused and shone his torch around at the bits and pieces, and I tried to make out what it all was. There was definitely one scooter, or at least bits of one, and some other items (the locals use their scooters like we use utes or vans, they will carry anything and everything). As we drove off I got a few snapshot-like images of the scene, patches of colour in the dark, lit by the torch one by one, and while we carried on our way I was trying to piece together what had happened. There was the yellow frame of a scooter, and some bags, and some other bits, and a bundle of clothes or something. It was only further down the road analysing these mental snapshots I actually clicked as to what the other object in the middle was. It was, of course, a body. I have seen a large dog hit by a truck at home, at first unrecognisable, rolled over and over and crushed by half a dozen sets of wheels, the form gone, limbs where they should not be. The old man on the side of the road was not the rider of one of the scooters, he was just a confused old man who had come out of his hut, with his torch, and was standing forlornly looking at the scene, watching as the vehicles passed, none stopping.

We got to Hanoi at dawn and were dumped unceremoniously in the middle of somewhere, the bus literally surrounded by a band of taxis and guys yelling about hotels and promising minibuses into town for anyone who would agree to stay at their hotel... the usual vultures. I hate them all with a passion as I hate taxi drivers, but I figured there was little choice, I wanted to get to another bus ASAP and nothing was open and there were no other cabs. And it's a taxi on the meter right, how bad can it be..? As it turned out, bad. The a-hole taxis were obviously all in cahoots with the bus folk (everyone has a network of scams over here) and within minutes the meter on the taxi had flown up to 270,000 Dong, and kept going. I thought roughly I knew where I should be and by the time we got there and the driver dumped me, fuming, on a (wrong) corner, I had to fork over about NZ$35, absolute daylight robbery. But there was little I could do, there was no other way to get there. So I quickly determined after a short walk that this **** had dropped me at the Long Bien train station rather than the buses, and so started wandering in directions I hoped would be the right ones, with all my gear strapped to me. After maybe an hour and several incorrect sets of directions from locals I finally found a moto driver who said he knew where he was going and hopped on his scooter... I had thusfar been avoiding motos with all my gear, worried about my ability to stay on and the rider to stay upright with 25kg of ballast on my back and another 10 or so kilos of front-pack in one hand. But we survived, somehow, in rush hour Hanoi traffic, til we got to a dodgy looking little shed nestled among dirty office buildings, which the occupants sitting out front smoking and drinking tea in their fake leather jackets assured me was a bus company. Sure enough after about half an hour of smoking and talking in broken English to these wannabe mafia types, a silver, reasonably new but utterly battered Mercedes van about the size of a Ford Transit pulled up, and we were off.

These silver vans are obviously a common way to get around in Hanoi as they were everywhere, and as you go north I discovered the way to catch one is to sit on the guard rail of the motorway, and as they approach they will slow down and yell where they are going and you can flag them down... so soon there were about five more people in the van than it was designed for, me with my feet on my pack and my knees around my ears, as we rocketed north to the border, four hours away, with possibly the most insane driver I have had in my entire month away (and that is REALLY saying something). The rules in Vietnam as with all the other places I have been are that the biggest vehicle has right of way, even if you happen to be overtaking and there is a vehicle coming, if it is smaller you just keep overtaking and it is the other guys problem to get out of the way. I saw at least two light trucks in the trip out of Hanoi alone that had just crashed, having been run off the road in this way.

We stopped about half way at the usual road-side shed/restaurant and I was contemplating food as it was nearly 24 hours since I had eaten. They had the usual wok full of small whole birds deep frying out the front but I was sure they would have something slightly more normal on the menu (my philosophy for eating weird food revolves around whether I can afford to be horribly ill for a couple of days or not... when on buses and trains, the answer is no...). So I decided to take a bathroom break first and headed out to the toilet stalls out back. And on the way back inside I glanced at one of the tables near the kitchen area, and saw, lying there in the sun, a dead puppy. And was suddenly fairly confident I could go a bit longer without food.

We made it to the border in the rocky, dry, hilly area of Dong Dang and I was luckily dropped right at the gates by the van, which was a small blessing. The border crossing is a narrow mountain pass with huge hills either side, the sky was bright and the whole place looked faded and washed out, like an overexposed photograph... admiring the scenery I threw on back and front pack and trudged past the first guard post up to the Vietnamese exit building, where inside a decent sized crowd pressed together in a clump were all trying to get their passports through the slot in the window. I reached over some black-haired heads and flicked mine onto the pile. The thoroughly unimpressed looking Vietnamese officials made their way through the huge stacks, occasionally shuffling them or tipping them over or changing piles half way through, I think just to mess with people. The only other Westerners were an overwhelmed looking young couple I think on a bus tour who kept on getting elbowed to the back of the pack. I was lucky with the shuffling of the passports and got out of there within about 20 minutes, leaving the rest to it.

I wandered up past the guard posts to the rather impressive shiny modern Chinese border office. Inside was very airport-like and I was waved through and up the escalator by some rather uninterested looking Chinese in uniforms. I got up to the arrival card filling in bench and was half way through scribbling my details when a chubby old Chinese border chappy wandered up and eyed me and asked for my passport. I could see what was coming and sure enough after a quick glance at my docs he led me to a row of seats on one side of the big corridor and had me empty all my belongings out on the seats and floor (I guess the search benches downstairs were too good for me)... He obviously didn't find what he was looking for, although he paid intimate attention to various bits and pieces while completely ignoring larger stuff that could have concealed anything, and also completely missing several of the smaller pockets on my packs... satisfied I was just a smelly tourist, he sent me on my way.

I wandered outside and up through the huge stone archway-gate that fills the narrowest point in the pass and was suddenly in China. Bizarre. I invaded China on foot this time, but if I do it again for real I may avoid the Dong Dang/Pingxiang area... it's a rough piece of real estate. Nothing but rocks and cliffs. I made my way past the old French colonial styled tourist office, remarkably called "The French-styled building" on the tourist information sign, and a Chinese military outpost, and was accosted by the usual taxi drivers waiting to pounce on whoever emerged from the gates. I had changed US$20 to RMB (Chinese money) 120 from a girl with a money belt at the border but didn't want to change more as those types are always a ripoff, so I decided to wait til I got somewhere with a booth or bank. The taxi dropped me at the train station in decidedly rural and 1950's communist style Pingxiang and with an hour and a half til the train out I sat outside in the warm-ish sun and was soon surrounded by a gaggle of local peasant folk talking at me loudly and asking me questions in Mandarin. After much shrugging and head-shaking from me I pulled out the little Mandarin phrasebook loaned to me by the S's (thanks M&C!) and the locals took great delight in finding Chinese words in the dictionary and pointing at the English translation as a means to ask me questions. We established who I was and where I was from, had been and was going, and I found out they were factory workers, and we all decided the Beijing Olympics had been amazing, etc etc. I noticed I got a fair amount of disapproving looks from some other passers-by, which I ignored.

Once on the train, also straight out of 1950's communism, we chugged north through some amazing scenery, huge rocky hills everywhere jutting out of green farmland, lining both horizons like rows of broken teeth. A young Chinese girl sat opposite me, the train was pretty packed, we established she was learning English and swapped some chit chat. About another four hours on, having dozed a bit on the train along with everyone else, I was a bit groggy arriving in Nanning. It was about 6pm and I asked my little Chinese friend if she knew where I could exchange money. She led me out of the large and frantic train terminal and into the dimming daylight of a large Chinese city (they are all large of course). We tried a nearby bank, closed, then several local hotels, with no luck... this was not looking good as I didn't have enough Chinese money for the next leg of the trip and really didn't want to have to overnight in Nanning. To say the looks we got walking around together were frosty would be a fairly large understatement (this, as a mate said later, was true "old China"), and I am fairly sure my little friend copped some fairly direct abuse from the hotel staff and other people she spoke to for hanging around with the likes of me. Eventually she flagged a cab and told me to get in and took me way across town to a large fancy western style hotel, where the staff refused to give me any money as I was not a guest. They suggested I stay the night but I said no, I was really keen to keep moving on.

My little friend (I think her name was Won Won, maybe UanUan or or Wan Wan or YuanYuan, I don't know, I am terrible with accents and couldn't make out much of what she was saying) kept getting angry calls from her mother, she was supposed to be home for dinner (she was making the four hour trip back from work to home), but she insisted on continuing to help me. She got us another cab, again which she paid for, and we stopped at an ATM next to the train station and she withdrew 300 Yuan, about NZ$80(?) and handed it to me, and apologized but said she was poor and that was all she could give me... I was a bit overwhelmed, knowing this must be a massive amount of money for the poor girl, and she was just handing it to me, a stranger, a foreigner of the "worst" kind, who she had met only hours before. I gave her what I hoped was the equivalent in US$, which she didn't want to take but I insisted, telling her to exchange it at the bank the next day. She was reluctant, I am sure partially because she would have to explain at the bank how she came to have a (for them) large amount of American cash, but she took it. She said I must be hungry, and terrified she was going to start giving me more charity I am sure she couldn't afford, I said I was fine. We walked back to the train station and queued up and she inquired for me about the train to Guangzhou... the older railway lady openly sneered at the two of us and looked her up and down and hissed a response. After some to-ing and fro-ing Won Won stepped out of the queue and gave me the English version. The lady had said the train had gone, the next one was at half past midnight (which I expected)... and there was standing room only. This I was not quite expecting... According to the train lady they have such a thing as standing-only tickets. On a twelve hour train journey. We stood for a while and pondered this and Won Won tried to convince me to stay somewhere the night but I didn't want to impose on her any more or stay in this rather unpleasant little city, so I figured a twelve hour standing ticket would make for a hell of a story (and a lot of suffering, but hey...), so we went back to the evil ticket lady and said I would take it. There was again some to-ing and fro-ing in Mandarin and then Won Won turned and said that the lady had somehow, magically found one more bed in a sleeper car which was the last one and I could have it. It was RMB298, the 300 Won Won gave me would cover it. With much elation I handed over the money and the ticket lady literally threw the ticket and my change at me through the slot in the window. And with that little Wan Wan walked me up the waiting area and I told her to get home to her angry mum, and she was off.

The five hour wait at the train needs little description, the terminal was reasonably modern, the huge waiting room was filthy and dim, we sat on rows of stainless steel seats, it was boring, I got stared at a lot, I ate a RMB4 pot noodle which was my first food in 24 hours and bought some little strawberry creme cake things for the trip, trying to spare what Chinese money I had for unforeseen emergencies. The train arrived late and everyone ran to get on. I found my carriage and climbed aboard, and blimey... it was a nice train. Chinese rail is a wider gauge than the other countries I passed through, so the car was big, and carpeted, and the rooms, with four bunks apiece (east-west across the carriage like the Vietnamese) were comfortable and a good size. Very nice. And as you may have guessed, the evil train lady was lying through her yellow teeth. I had the whole compartment to myself the entire trip. Unless it was Won Won lying and trying to get me to stay in Nanning until we could be married, I am not sure. Anyway, I slept like a baby.

Guangzhou appeared about 12 hours later, around noon, a big city indeed. The train station was again pandemonium, and I shuffled my way through the crowds, occasionally almost bowling little Chinese folk over with my packs when I turned around. I made it out and took a long, long time to find somewhere to change money (more hopeless Asian direction giving), and then there was a long process as they evaluated me suspiciously with my US$. Once this was done there was another long drama as I tried to find out where the train to Hong Kong left from (a whole other station somewhere else, which various people indicated was a short walk in several directions... it wasn't, and I finally got there a couple of subway rides later). And so, in the same clothes I had left Hanoi in, and smelly and sweaty, I decided to treat myself and got the business class fast express train, leaving at 1530, and sat in a plush chair offending well-off business people of every creed and colour with my smell and appearance all the way to HK island, a couple of hours south. And so, after goodness knows how many miles and two days, I arrived at my friend's apartment in one of the older parts of Hong Kong. Of course he wasn't home and I quickly established after lots more wandering with my packs that internet cafes are virtually unheard of here... so unable to retrieve his mobile number from my email account, and with nothing else to do, I got some food and sat and waited, and he finally turned up surprised to see me on his doorstep so soon. So now Hong Kong awaits and I begin my wandering, with a few things planned for the coming days. And that, my friends and loved ones, is the story so far.

Monday, December 1, 2008

Just another quick hi...

Since I am doing some online stuff before checking out... I just had my traditional breakfast, an amazing Vietnamese iced black coffee... basically a shot of espresso with ice, or more accurately about ten shots of espresso condensed into one... the stuff is so strong that while the bubbles on a strong black coffee at home are kind of creamy brown, the ones on this stuff at dark brown and the coffee is thick and black... you get all twitchy after a few sips. The hotel staff know how to make it the way I like it... I seem to have developed something of a cult following here, on my first night they all took a liking too me, with my scruffy clothes, stubble, ruffled hair and giant backpack. I wandered out into the alley out front to smoke and before I knew it I had an audience of five hotel workers and I was chatting with them in broken English about my travels etc... while all the other guests wandered in and out of the empty lobby looking kind of lost. I think I am kind of the opposite to what they usually get for guests, it is quite a nice place and all the others are pasty well dressed European couples. Whenever I emerge from my room or arrive back from somewhere all the young porters and doormen congregate out the front with me to have a cigarette and hang out and ask me all sorts of questions.

Today is overcast again, as it is every day, but it is not too bad, it is still a nice change from the last month of heat and stickiness. It is hard to believe that in two days I would have been on the road for a month solid, after a while travelling all the days sort of blur together and it becomes a way of life. I can't imagine how it must be for people like Rob who I met, just travelling for two years...

The next few days are something of an unknown quantity, in all my travels and in all the millions of travellers and backpackers I have run across I have yet to talk to anyone who is going the route I have planned. Should be fun and games, especially since I will likely be on the road/rail for maybe 48 hours straight, maybe more. As always I wish I could stop off a bunch more places but I have plans for when I get to Hong Kong so I am going to just keep on trucking til I get there. Wish me luck and say a little prayer... Anyway, off to pack up and wander Hue a bit more til the bus is going. Take care all and will hopefully let you know how I went in a day or three.

There were no D-Day heroes in 1973...

So sang Jimmy, and while I don't condone Australian music, Khe Sanh is one song that holds special significance for Aussie and Kiwi soldiers to this day. It's about an Aussie Vietnam veteran coming home, having been through hell trying to do what he thought was right, trying to put his life back together, to be greeted by people who couldn't understand, didn't care, and in many cases, hated him for what he was.

Today I rode a (painfully, horribly slow... I mean painfully... every other bus driver in Asia is a suicidal/homicidal maniac, this guy was just hoping to kill us from old age and horn overuse) bus north, from sea level up through the valleys and into the hills, passing rice paddies and farm land and jungle growth, into the rocks and clouds where the hill tribes live. A steady drizzle fell all morning, occassionally breaking into decent rain, the wet season running long in this part of the world. I was in two tshirts and long pants, comfy enough, the locals rugged up and shivering in the wind... the shoe is on the other foot now... We made it to the Khe Sanh plateu in a thick mist, the hills on every side obscured from view. It was another one of those moments of disbelief and incomprehension really, to be standing on Khe Sanh. As with every war site in this country there was not much to see, coffee plantations now takeing up the majority of the 1x3km that used to be a huge US Marine base that has since passed into legend. A small museum told the communist version of events, a few old relics, a tank, two helicopters sat outside, all trucked in from other places once the government realised tourists wanted to see more than coffee plants (the original remnants quickly sold for scrap by locals once the bullets stopped flying). But none of that mattered. I stood on Khe Sanh. The thick red mud stuck to my boots, the same red mud that caked the clothes and boots of soldiers fighting for their lives thirty-some years ago. Khe Sanh was, of course, a glorious victory for the communists, so said the museum. In reality when the communists finally made it into the base, the US forces were long gone, having decided that after thousands of lives were spent, the place was not important any more.

We saw a few other interesting spots today I won't bore you all with, apart from mentioning I crossed the DMZ and made my way through a North Vietnamese tunnel network, which was fun (note to self, North Vietnamese folk do not make tunnels for 6ft2, 100-something kilo New Zealand farm boys).

Yesterday I was all around Hue (pronounced kind of rhyming with "way"), including the Forbidden City (not so much forbidden any more, unless you forget to pay the US$4 or so to get in), and the citadel. I nearly died about 80 times, Asians everywhere insist on paving everything with the slipperiest tiles they can find, and then letting the moss grow... Hue was also the site of a major Vietnam war battle, not that it was mentioned anywhere at all, apart from a small sign that said much of the palace and citadel was "damaged by war" (in other words, wiped out). I have no doubt the lack of any further mention was because Hue was pretty much an ass-whupping for North Vietnam. But all the evidence is there if you look, bullet holes in the walls, craters, etc. For a reference the less war-savvy may understand, Hue is where they went for the big battle at the end of 'Full Metal Jacket'... There is (slow) rebuilding of much of the site ongoing, so, as with Angkor Wat and various others, half the interesting things were closed and covered in bamboo scaffolding... which leads me to an interesting question that has crossed my mind several times - if you have a magnificent ancient site or ruins, complete with all the mystery and wonder and atmosphere that goes with it, and then you decide to recreate the whole thing in its full glory on the same spot... doesn't that mean you have just ruined the amazing archaeological treasure you had, and now all you have is a replica? I wouldn't cross the road to see a replica... but that's just me...

Apart from war type stuff, I stand by my initial assessment that Hue is my kind of town. It is not too big, not too westernised, but has plenty to cater to people want the best of everything. There is a nice big river, which is fed from nearby mountains and so is not choked with garbage and weed like most in SE Asia, and plenty of stuff to do... ok the nightlife is not much to talk about, but as soon as you have a nightlife, that means you have a tourist town. I found a better place with local food last night and gorged myself on similar gooey steamed unwrapped dumplings, cooked folded in banana leaves (I think), but got a dozen for the same money instead of four and much better tasting at that... the goat's tendon pho (noodle soup) that followed was not bad at all, and the last course of beef(?) cooked in some kind of leaf packet was good, although extremely strong tasting for beef(?). Tonight was "fried noodle with various foods"... which was also good. Tomorrow I shall be at a bit of a loose end for the day as my bus north is not til late in the afternoon, and through the night. A warning in advance, depending on the train and bus timetables there may not be any email or blog for the next few days, I am going for the long haul and probably not stopping at Hanoi. Shall be in touch... thanks for the news from home, still much appreciated