Tuesday 29 December 2009

Hanoi and Ha Long bay


So there's been a bit of a break since the last post. After Saigon I flew to Danang then shared a taxi with two other solo travellers to Hoi An. Everyone on the flight was going to Hoi An I think. Its a very pretty town, ridiculously so in fact, it looks like a set from a Disney musical. There are lots of tailor shops there but the only thing I bought was a fake North Face bag to use as a day sack. I stayed at the Hop Yen hostel, which was $7 per person for a twin room, cheapest in town I think. I shared with a German fellow, who left the next day but paid for the room while I was out - thanks for that, you didn't leave any contact though! It rained constantly in Hoi An so I didn't make it to the beach.

I took a day trip from Hoi An to the My Son ruins, which are the remains of some Cham temples in the jungle. They weren't a patch on Angkor but it was good just to walk around in the jungle for a day. The most interesting thing was the several large pools which were actually in bomb craters. There is one temple which is in pretty good shape, the rest were in bits and under heavy restoration. I booked the trip through the hostel, I think pretty much every time I've booked a tour or bus here it has picked me up from the hostel and then drove around in circles for about an hour picking people up, I saw my hostel about three times in Hoi An. Surely it could be better organised. The souvenir shop at My Son was a treat - fridge magnets depicting Paris and Marseilles, nothing to do with Vietnam or the temples. There's a lot of that in Vietnam - rows of shops selling the same things, men trying to sell you books, always the same ones (photocopied versions of Mr Nice, Irvine Welsh, the same South East Asia Lonely Planet...). Speaking of fridge magnets, I've lost my Angkor magnets somewhere along the line, the folks at home will be disappointed.

It was a 3hr trip from Hoi An to Hue, some nice scenery as we went through the mountains. The bus takes you through a fairly long tunnel; The train actually goes over the top of the mountains which would have been spectacular but it would have meant a journey to Danang first and then getting a train, the bus won out as it was easier. One of the people I met at Danang airport was traveling north so I teamed up with her (I'm mentioning no names here), and together with two others we met on the bus, we decided to walk from the bus stop to the hostel we had looked up, and so avoid the taxi touts. Felt good to find the place in an unfamiliar city. It's turning out to be quite easy to meet people, and it feels a bit less stressful walking around trying to find a place to stay or eat. Not much going on in Hue I thought, we stayed in Hue Backpackers, which was very good for the price, good food too (I had a chicken burger for the first time ever, don't know why apart from I saw someone else's and it looked good). I was there three nights, and spent two evenings in the DMZ bar across the road as the beer was cheaper than the hostel. There is a great vegetarian restaurant by the river, can't remember the name. Vietnam is actually turning out to be quite easy to be a vegetarian, there is a tradition here among hte buddhists of having a few days each month when they don't eat meat (only the monks are truly vegetarian though.) The main part of Hue is a huge walled citadel with a smaller walled area inside it (the Forbidden City), I spent the best part of a day there but it wasn't that impressive to be honest. Its more interesting to read about the history, the place was bombed to bits by both the French and the Americans.

I spent a day with my travel buddy walking out to visit the Tomb of Du Doc, Hue is surrounded by tombs of all the past emperors. It was worth the three hour hike as the tomb area was well preserved, a nice lake, some temples, some statues of the emperors mandarins. The walk back to Hue was insane, rush hour, roads chocked with bikes but no pavements. Made it back alive somehow. Took an overnight bus from Hue to Hanoi, 14 hours, cost $10. Arrived about 7am and again walked to a hostel rather than take a taxi. I got ripped off in Saigon I think (paid three times what I should have done according to my friend who lives there, even though the meter was on), wherever possible I walk anyway, I never take a cab at home unless I'm with other people. The first hostel in Hanoi I stayed at was Central Backpackers, not far from the Hoan Kiem lake and by the St Joseph church. I arrived on Christmas day so it was nice to see a procession there, all Vietnamese bishops and nuns and so on. The Central Backpackers is a new place run by young Vietnamese so I thought I 'd give it a try. It was ok, room clean enough, and there was always people hanging out downstairs, a couple of guys had guitars so it was good to have a strum. On the downside, the free beer tasted off, there was no sink in the bathroom so people were spitting on the shower floor while brushing their teeth, and I got messed around on which bed I was sleeping in. Also, once in the evening I asked for a cup of tea, which they advertise as being free, the young man just sort of brushed me away, and sat down behind the reception desk and stared at me. So I started to feel a bit weird about the place. My friend had booked into the Little Hanoi on Hang Ga street, I went to check it out and it seemed a lot better. I booked my Ha Long bay tour there (that's the picture above). It was $45 for two days, one night on a boat. That was enough for me, to float around the amazing limestone karst islands, explore a cave, do a bit of kayaking. The cabins on the boat were ok, not as cramped as I expected, they even had their own bathroom with shower. 14 people stayed on the boat; some people got off at Cat Ba island for the night, they were going back to Hanoi the next day, I couldn't understand that as it meant no kayaking and very limited cruising time through the bay. The meals were included, but not drinks. It was 30,000 dong per bottle of Tiger, no other beer. Some cocktails or fruit juice would have been good, hardly anyone was drinking. I met some interesting people, Brazillians, Germans, Americans, and a Maori woman. (Just for the record it is 18,000 Dong to the dollar, so the beer cost a pound - still twice as much as in the street side bars). Ha Long bay was definitely worth it, it was my main reason for coming to Vietnam.

Yesterday I went to see the preserved corpse of Ho Chi Minh, the highly revered former President, it was a bit strange really, everyone sort of shuffles past staring at this waxy looking figure in a glass case. Cameras are not allowed (they get confiscated before entry and handed back afterwards), clothing must be respectable, and people were getting told off for having their hands in their pockets or talking. I also visited the Ho Chi Minh museum, lots of pictures and letters giving the life story of the man, I think it would be better to read a book first though. After that I went to the "Hanoi Hilton", or Hoa Loa prison, which was first used by the French to imprison the Vietnamese during colonial times, the conditions being horrific. There is a room with statues of Vietnamese prisoners in stocks, that was a bit spooky. Overall it was similar to the Tiger prison in the War Remnants Museum in HCMC, which had far more interesting stuff in it. The Hoa Loa was later used by the Viet Cong to imprison American POWs (mostly pilots, including Republican John McCain), the pictures show a deliberate contrast with the conditions endured by the Vietnamese prisoners - the Americans are shown eating Christmas dinner, receiving gifts from home and playing volleyball.

One day left in Hanoi before I go to Luang Prabang in Laos for New Years Eve. I'm flying again, which is not really in the spirit of backpacking, but I'd heard too many stories about 36 hour bus rides, people waiting hours for a driver to appear, drivers being drunk and so on. A 1 hour flight is just too tempting, although they are expensive - cost me 126 Euros.

Saturday 19 December 2009

Saigon


Picture shows my room mate in Saigon... Only kidding. I was really tired yesterday after getting the nightbus from Ha Tien to Ho Chi Minh city. It took 7 hours, and I didn't really sleep on it. When I arrived I had no idea where I was, took a taxi to the Phu Ngam Lau area which is basically the tourist area. Staing at the Ngoc Minh guesthouse, which is off a narrow street from the main road. Today I took a walk round the city. Although it is heavily built up and there are thousands of bikes, there are also some quite nice parks. The traffic is not totally chaotic, there are a lot of one-way streets and traffic lights that even the motorbikes obey. When crossing hte road you just have to wait for a small break in the traffic and go for it, helps if there's a local crossing too. I got asked a lot whether I wanted a motorbike or my shoes shined but after Bangkok and Siem Reap I'm used to it, don't make eye contact and keep walking. It felt rude intially to ignore people but it gets very tiring saying no thanks to everyone you pass.

I went to see the War Remnants Museum. Outside are some models of tanks and planes used by the US army. The picture is from a reconstruction of prison cells used to detain suspected VC sympathisers. There are some barbed wire "Tiger" cages that looked particularly gruesome, and images of tortured victims with teeth pulled out, nails driven into their heads and so on. Most of the displays inside detail what the US forces and their allies got up to during the war. The worst bit was the pictures of children which are thought to have been born malformed due to agent orange. There was a photo of a woman selling fruit, even when the villages where being bombed people were still trying to go about there normal lives.

After that I went round the Independence Palace, which did not have much in it but it wasn't much to get in (less than a dollar). Mainly some stately rooms and some phoney set ups of war rooms and communications rooms and so on. After that I just walked around, seeing the Notre Dam cathedral, Post Office and a quick look in Saigon Square, a very busy mall packed with clothes shops (mostly women's clothing so hundred of teenage girls - scary stuff). I found a vegetarian restaurant which was ok, portions very small though so I had two meals. They charged me for using the towel which was placed on my table, so I'll have to watch out for that in future. Tomorrow I go north, hopefully find my way to Hoi An.

over.

Wednesday 16 December 2009

Sihanoukville to Ha Tien


I've made my way along the coast of Cambodia to Ha Tien, which is in Vietnam just after the border. Along the way I went to Kampot, which had a nice sunset over the river but not much else of note. Quite a dirty town, and loads of dogs - howling and barking all night. Next I went ot Kep, which is an old French resort, lots of crumbling villas overlooking the sea. I hooked up with someone I'd met in Kampot and we had a day on the Rabbit Island. To be honest there's not much to do in Kep apart from swim in the (murky) sea or swing in a hammock, but it was a cool way to pass three days. And a bit of a relief after some of the other places in Cambodia which were quite intense. We did eat some great crab in Kep, seafooded-out at the moment. Also I saw a vivid green preying mantis, just outside my hotel room (Kep Seaside Villa), which rocked.

I took a moto from Kep over the border to Ha Tien in Vietnam this morning. It took about an hour and cost $12. I was the only one crossing at that time (about 9.30AM) so I breezed through. Ha Tien is a quiet place, I'm taking the night bus to Ho Chi Minh city from here at 10PM, should get in about 5AM. Saves on paying for a room!

Til next time, I'm batman

Sunday 6 December 2009

Siem Reap, Cambodia

Sok Sabai,

After two sleepless nights in Bangkok I got on a plane to Cambodia. Siem Reap is a town that has built up around the temples of Angkor, from the old Khmer empire. I'm staying at a very nice guesthouse (the European), and have my own driver to take me around to places in his tuk-tuk. So far I've been on a boat on the floating market and seen some of the temple sites. So far, so chilled. There is a lot of poverty here, at every stop there are children trying to sell you water, postcards and various tat. I bought a hat of one of them, within five minutes the band around the top came off. Well, you get what you pay for. I'm here for another two nights then I'm planning on heading East to the capital, Phnom Penh. Weirdest thing I've seen is the crocodile farm at the back of the guesthouse. Whoever owns the building behind here has two swimming pools and about 30 big crocodiles lounging about, apparently bred for food. No, I haven't tried any croc burgers yet...

Unfortunately the net is too slow here to upload any images so you'll have to wait until next time.

Rob