Thursday, 11 January 2018

Vietnam. South this time

Vietnam is too big to do in a single hit (when you’re doing in on annual leave rather than a proper walkabout) so having visited the north in January, we flew to the south in December. 
As excited to see our friend Steph as we were to see a new bit of the world, we arrived in Ho Chi Minh City (or Saigon as everyone still calls it) the night before our friend Steph arrived from the UK.  And before my backpack as it turned out - but thankfully both arrived the next morning. 

  
Laughing in the face of jet lag (Steph, not us. Can’t claim jet leg on a 1hr time difference) we spent the first day exploring the city’s landmarks.  Everyday is a school trip with us so first stop was the War Museum to see the horrific impacts on the American War (as it’s called in Vietnam) both at the time and ongoing.  The museum is partisan of course but in a war that no-one seems able to justify it presented some interesting facts about life under attack.   Due to recent infrastructure investment from China, all reference to the part China and Russia played have been removed which is a shame as that would add some balance but also help fill in some knowledge gaps for me about the difference between the North and South experiences.   Instead the 3 floors concentrate on the impacts on agriculture, civilians and the ongoing effects of using Agent Orange.  You can’t sugar the pill when it comes to chemical warfare but I’m not sure any of us were ready for the photo’s showing the immediate effects, and those still present in new-borns 3 generations on.   
  
From there we stopped off for the most expensive drinks of the trip - 3 waters, and 2 7Ups for $28.  Outraged by such a bill we refrained from trashing the place in anger just long enough to do the sums again. Turns out it cost $2.80.  The conversion rate of 33,000 Dong to the £ caused us maths problems throughout this trip.  The thrill of being a cashpoint millionaire doesn’t last long when you realise it’s £33 taking up your entire bag. 
   
Next stop Imperial Palace - no longer in use but the historically important site of Ho Chi Minh handing over the city to the Communist Party in 1975.  It’s an incredible place - somewhere between a war room (helicopter pad, comms centre and bunker in the basement), an Corporate HQ and a Bond villains lair. Super-stylish in 60’s decor.  Sadly lacking a swimming pool though so we didn’t buy it. 
  
Our plan for Christmas Day involved a speed-boat up the Mekong to see the Cu Chi war tunnels however an unusual-for-this-time-of-year typhoon was heading our way and all river activity had been banned.  Typhoon Tembin had struck the Philippines a few days earlier, killing 220 and leaving devastation in it’s wake. It hadn’t hit land since then and was showing no signs of slowing down so the government was taking the threat seriously; evacuating people from the coastal provinces and locking down all public transport in preparation.  HCMC was the next big-population region it was due to hit. 
  
We were in no danger so changed out plans to an ever-so slightly less glamorous mini-bus, visiting the bizarre Thanh That Cao Dai temple in the morning in the hope that we might be able to speedboat back to the city after the tunnels in the afternoon. 
  
The religion of Cao Dai began in 1926 and follows a mix of Eastern and Western beliefs: Hindu, Christian, Buddhist, Confucius , Brahma and Islam, Taoism. It also looks like Willy Wonka built it.  It’s beautiful in a weird cult way but despite all the brights colours and mythical beasts (they hold sacred the unicorn, dragon and turtle*) the ceremonies we witnessed felt as drab as most other temples.  The single ‘all-seeing eye’ that features throughout the temple and in the ceremonious clothing of the male leaders (of course only men!  It may only have been invented in the 20th Century but it’s still got to support the patriarchy) is a creepy affair and in a year where The Housemaids Tale has made a comeback we couldn’t help but mutter ‘under his eye’ as we explored.   
  

Same old ‘riches for the gods while the worshippers starve’ and ‘women at the back’ nonsense.   Told without so much as a smirk, this religion was quite literally ‘dreamt up’ by a civil servant who then convinced others to make his dream a reality.  I can only imagine the dream was opium induced and went along the lines of ‘I’ve dreamt of a way to get a lot of money off people irrelevant of their god-preference’.   
  
*We did point out that a Turtle is not a mythical creature but that was shushed and we moved on. 
  
Next stop world-famous Cu Chi tunnels and they didn’t disappoint - 250kms of tiny deep tunnels just wide enough for a small Vietnamese frame.    
Whole villages had to live in these tunnels - tiny, filthy spaces that they slept, cooked, and fought in to survive.    The network is very impressive - from the trick routes with man-traps, smoke chimneys built away from real locations, the river escapes (to prevent flooding if the Americans found an entrance and tried to drown them and to give them a last resort exit if needed), and the multiple levels for different purposes - it’s a real feat of design.   And all done with no light.    Years of persecution made them ingenious in ways I hope we never have to be. Rubber soles fixed on backwards to leave mis-leading footprints,  different man-traps for different levels of injury and surprise (the rationale being that it will take 2 more soldiers to rescue an injured soldier so you don’t want them too lightly injured or killed outright, and the longer they take to untangle him without further maiming the better), bird sounds to communicate etc. 

I describe my claustrophobia as ‘can just about cope on an aeroplane’ so didn’t go through any but Steph and Chris did.  I waited at the other end with the camera,  and their description of having to bear-crawl through hot, humid and not very-well oxygenated mud-holes made me glad I’m a coward.  We all got into a tunnel entrance and that was quite enough for me. 
  
Typhoon Tembin had failed to make a U-turn while we were there so the river option was definitely off and we drove home to open the 2 bottles of Tattinger Stephie had bought from the UK.   It being Christmas Day we made some video-calls back to the families in the UK to raise a glass and see what we were missing. Unbeknown to us, our cunning plan not to alarm anyone with talk of the storm lock-down was thwarted by the BBC having banged on about it all day using the headline “Killer Storm heads for Vietnam’.  Not worrying your family while travelling was so much easier pre-internet… 

  
Thankfully (for us) Tembin hit Can Dao island and slowed down significantly. Pretty much by-passing Nam in favour of the Thai islands, it created some rain but given the expected ferocity no-one was complaining. 
  
Relieved to be on track with our plans, we caught the sleeper bus to Can Tho.  Simultaneously failing to be comfortable or practical these adult-cot buses are used for all long distance journeys day or night. In additional to jamming your legs into a Asian-sized cot, you must lie down throughout, keeping your bags and shoes on top of you (or shoved down by your feet if your feet aren’t already bent double and occupying all space) while you enjoy the ride.    Steph it turns out is Expert level in being able to fall asleep on any form of transport, plastic cots included. 

Our huts for the next 2 night were basic but brilliant. Wooden slats with a view through to the river below and the boats passing by made it feel very remote despite being 30 minutes away from the nearest town. Just some backpackers, a few hammocks and a fridge full of beer.  Seems we can also add ‘hammock’ to the list of places Steph can sleep like a baby.   


  
The only ‘ents’ were a trip to the floating market which turned out to less scenic and more practical for the Mekong dwellers. With a ratio of 5:1 tourists to market traders it didn’t take long to tire of circling the pineapple boat, followed by the jack fruit boat, followed by another pineapple boat.

 Luckily our guide (the fella who works at the hostel and knows upwards of 100 English words) made the day memorable.  His insistence on wearing a voice-distorting headset microphone to talk to us ensured we understood around 15% of the wisdom imparted.  I would argue that 7 people in a small boat are able to communicate without microphones but he felt differently.   After an hour of us shouting ‘can’t understand you’ and shrugging at each other he got the sulks, removed the microphone and stopped talking to us.   From that point on we had to eek information out of him; at the market garden he answered our ‘what’s that’ questions with ‘salad’ or ‘just something to look at’. At the noodle making house he withdrew further to mono-syllabic responses: ‘Is this the same as they use in spring rolls?’ – No.  ‘Can we try some?’ – No.    Having mostly sarcastic bastards in the group made this hilarious and to his increasing confusion the more useless he was the more we laughed.  Returning to our hammocks we all agreed it was the most fun we’d had on the worst tour we’d ever had. 
  
Next morning we took a prop plane to Phu Quoc – a small but fast developing island just off the Cambodian coast – for a few days of doing nothing in the sun. 
  
Dossing around in the sun isn’t too tricksy on Phu Quoc.  For variety we tried 3 different beaches, took a boat trip around the Southern Islands (not as good as the Mekong tour obviously but gave Steph a chance to confirm her boat-sleeping skills), and saw in 2018 with pizza and wine. And cocktails. And more wine….

  
Thoroughly relaxed after 3 days of nothingness, we were about to enjoy our final breakfast of Ice-coffee and eggs when a random web-check showed our flight out had been bought forward an hour.  With 50 minutes to go we grabbed our belongings and despite the best efforts of the pootling taxi made it to check in just in time. On the plus side it gave us an extra hour in HCMC airport waiting for our connecting flight. Because 3 hours wouldn’t have been enough to explore the shop and café on offer. 
  
2nd flight took us to Da Nang, the furthest North we were heading this trip and we were met with rain from the off.  In November this region got badly flooded with 1.4m of standing water for over a week so we were OK to cope with a bit of rain. Plus it was still in the mid-20’s so wasn’t going to stop play.   Da Nang is an unremarkable place but it is the closest airport to Hoi An, famed for its untouched beauty forged by the influences of Japan, China and France occupations over the years. 

  
Untouched is pushing it a bit as it relies wholly on tourist dollars to survive but it is a very scenic place to hang out for 2 days.  This time we stayed in a woman’s house who’d converted her spare rooms into a B&B. She also seemed to have employed her slightly batty mother as cleaner and night-watch(wo)man.  Admirable to keep it a family business but as a cleaner she forgot to clean our rooms and lost our keys, and as a night-watch she was incredibly hard to wake up. After the first night of trying to raise her for an age, we just forced the doors open on night 2 and stepped over her sleeping body to get to our rooms.   
  
In the name of culture we took a day trip to My Son - the oldest ChamTemple Ruins in Vietnam.  Despite the remaining structures dating back to the 13th century (the site itself 4th Century), and being a Unesco site it is overshadowed by the proximity of Angkor Wat in neighbouring Cambodia so not as well touristed but still interesting in it’s own right. Set at the foot of Hon Quap (Cats tooth) mountain it’s surrounded by lush jungle so gave us a different view of Vietnam again. 
  

Although it felt like we’d seen a fair amount of diversity in a short time, it still flew by and before we knew it we were back in HCMC for a final day.  Our visit to the famed Binh Tay market (less local goods, more knock-off handbags/sportswear) was made more interesting when a fire broke out - that’s a lot of man-made fibres in a small badly built building - but not wanting to inspire another BBC headline we took it as a sign to call it a day and head to the rooftop bar for final drinks. 
  
Loved South Vietnam and made all the better for having Steph with us. Around 6 months (ish) til we meet again so we waved goodbye, and flew to our respective home countries. Ours being the PRC we’re not allowed to gamble but if I were to, I’d bet Steph slept her way back to the UK. 

Sunday, 22 October 2017

Myanmar: bare feet and temples

We’d been told by many that Myanmar is a jewel in SE Asia so booked our flights out of Golden Week chaos a couple of months in advance.   Myanmar/Burma has had a turbulent past getting caught in the middle of the British Empires land grab, then occupied by the Japanese, then ruled by a brutal military regime before finally getting a democratically elected leader in 2015.  Aung San Suu Kyi (The Lady as she is known throughout Myanmar) is not the ruler as she is barred due to her foreign links however she is all but in name the leader.
Despite that, her government is still dominated by military seats so the fight for democracy is far from over and the internal battles between the 135 ethnic groups, military and civilians continue.  Most notably at the moment the persecution of the Rohinga people who have been living in refugee camps for over 20 years but a recent bout of ethnic cleansing has put the spotlight on them once more.

We debated long and hard as to whether to cancel the trip. Clearly the presence of 2 westerners in the other end of the country will not make a jot of difference to the welfare of thousands of displaced people on the Myanmar/Bangladeshi border but making a holiday destination of somewhere with such blatant human rights issues didn’t sit well.   On the flip-side we live in a country where people are still disappeared for their views, pay taxes in the UK that fund illegal wars, and have been to many countries under oppressive regimes before now. The fact that the BBC are covering this one now doesn’t really alter facts – just our emotions.

We’re still not decided whether it was the right thing to do, but we went. Myanmar is a big country and at no point did we see or hear anything that would give any indication of the conflict. There is also an ongoing war with China along the Northern State borders that is invisible to all but the fighters in that immediate area.  We did ask some Burmese people about the Rohinga situation and they were united in their view - it’s unfair that Myanmar and The Lady are being judged by the world because they’ve suffered terrorism at the hands of the Rohinga for years. They told us stories of children being raped and murdered, of towns being no-go areas for any non-Rohinga, and of the Rohinga people burning their own houses down to point blame at Myanmar.  They are convinced that it’s Bangladesh’s problem (believing them to have come from Bangladesh as economic migrants rather than being introduced by the British as immigrant labour and then abandoned).  Their government-led press has told them consistent stories for years and there is no sympathy for the plight of this tribe.  Even some UN workers we met (who were very reluctant to discuss it) told us that it was estimated 95%+ of The Lady’s supporters were anti-Rohinga so for her to denounce the military actions would get her kicked out of power, and the brutal military regime would take control again. 

So, with lots of heavy sighing we decided that we’d spend money on Mom&Pop guesthouses and restaurants only, and try and limit the amount of tourist money that feeds its way back to the government. Not sure how much more responsible travel can get in those situations.

Flying into Myanmar (we came in from Kunming so flew over the length of the country North to South) we were struck by how green it is.  The landscape of jungle was only interrupted by the glisten of a temple roof or the curve of a river.  It is the least built up country in SE Asia (as well as one of the poorest) and astounding to see so much land that untouched when it’s neighbours have well established super-cities.

We arrived in Yangon (Rangoon for those of us with Colonial history books) and immediately melted.  The humidity averages 80% and as we were landing in the tail-end of the rainy season the difference from dry Beijing couldn’t have been greater.

A fleeting visit as we were heading north the next morning so saw nothing beyond a local noodle bar where I brandished my ‘I am vegetarian’ sign at them and actually fared better than Chris as a result.  Myanmar takes its cuisine from neighbouring China, Thailand and India but seems to have taken the least interesting aspects of each and as such is pretty bland.   Super-cheap but more functional than enjoyable.

Bagan
Day 1 we got a local bus 10 hours north to Bagan – the highlight of Myanmar. Surrounding Bagan a little hippy enclave has sprung up catering for back-packers which makes it very easy to get good cheap accommodation.  We hired bikes and cycled round lots (didn’t count but after 2 days if felt like we’d seen most) of the 3000+ temples and stupas.  We got up early to see sunrise, we climbed to the top tier to watch sunset and while our camera’s will never do it justice it is indeed a very beautiful place.   





 Bagan isn’t a UNESCO site because it’s suspected that only about 5% of the donated funds to restoring the temples get anywhere near the temples. And that 5% isn’t done with much sympathy.  It is however just becoming popular with Chinese tourists. We didn’t see any Chinese in any other city so it must be a stop-off on a wider tour but the enjoyment of one temple visit was greatly diminished by 2 coach loads of camera wielding selfie taking hawking shouting kinsmen.  For 30 minutes the solitude was replaced with elbowing, shouting, shrieking, bunny-ears etc. then someone gave a command and 80 people vanished as quickly as they’d arrived.

We took a boat up the Irrawaddy River to see sunset and moonrise which was wonderful.  Our boatman had promised us treats and sure enough, local beer and tempura was provided.  I will never understand tempura but we partook politely (threw most to the fishes) and Chris saw the beer off before it got warm enough to taste.



Mandalay
From Bagan we took a boat to Mandalay. We broke down a few times, got hit with a downpour and due to the lack of shade got way too much sun but after 11 hours of looking at the same view we were there.  We were lucky as the river was high. In low-tide it can take 20 hours.



I had romantic ideas about Mandalay that I can’t reason. Something to do with Daphne du Maurier I think.   Anyway, in reality it’s a typical functioning city – polluted, crazy traffic, hot and humid. After the calm of Bagan it felt busy but in reality it’s only got <2m population. 



We were there for October Moon festival so lots of people flocked down to the stone temples to celebrate and of course we joined them.  The temples each hold a page of a book, only the book is made of stone so each page is a massive tablet of stone.  Lots of singing and dancing, sharing food and providing strangers with water going on. An incredibly friendly and welcoming atmosphere and while most people are too shy to engage in conversation everyone will say ‘mingalaba’ and smile.




More temples, monasteries, the country’s biggest un-cracked bell (that gives you an idea of how many non-temple things there are to visit), more boat rides and we got a bus to the cooler climes of Kalaw – a hill station town favoured by the Empire as an escape from the ferocious heat.

A note on Monks.  Unlike our recent trip to Tibet where being a monk is a lifetime’s devotion, it’s not quite as binding in Myanmar.  You can be a monk for a year then go back to civvie life, get married, get a job etc.  Then if you have a row at home you can bugger off to a monastery for a few months under the guise of self-reflection.  You can eat meat and drink alcohol in your ‘non-monk’ days before abstaining again when you re-enter the monastery.

Children with no parents or poor parents tend to get educated by monks/nuns so it’s very usual to see boys (orange robes) and girls (pink robes) collecting food and money donations door to door before going back to the monastery/convent for hours of lessons and meditation.



Kalaw
A drop of 10 degrees makes Kalaw more manageable but not very interesting!  Trekking is the done thing here so we set off with a local guide to take us through the hill tribes.  We were hoping to find out more about the local customs, languages etc of the different tribes but our guide turned out to be Myanmar’s version of Alan Titchmarsh and stopped to point out every plant we walked past.  


Interesting to begin with but we began to suspect he was taking the piss when he showed us the medicinal wonders of doc leaves.   After 4 hours of this horticultural expertise we got to stop at our first village for lunch and a respite from plant enthusiasm.



I don’t like mid-day eating when trekking as it makes me feel sick if there’s afternoon climbing but accept it’s necessary to keep going.  Imagine my delight then at being served curried eggs and green tea.  Lots and lots of curried eggs under the watchful eye of our host keen to make sure she’d done a good job.

The afternoon was all uphill as expected but thankfully Titchmarsh laid off the lectures and led us through tea plantations, poppy and rice fields before announcing our final climb.   To be fair he did tell us about the tribes but admitted he couldn’t speak with them as their languages don’t overlap sufficiently. In his defense he spoke Burmese, his own tribe’s language, and English so we couldn’t expect much more. Each tribe is closed to outsiders.  If someone marries an outsider they have to live in a hut by themselves as neither village wants them.  We walked through 3 villages in 1 day which shows how physically close together they are yet still see each other as strangers. In-breeding is rife but things are changing and outsider marriages are increasing, polygamy almost non-existent and the amount of people living outside of their villages will soon fill in the gaps between the boundaries.


The final climb was great – low cloud in jungle looks incredible. The insects are noisy (apart from the ones eating my legs), the heat is immense and underfoot becomes like a luge. Chris remained upright while my famed mountain-goat skills meant I reached the top covered in mud and scratches.  But happy.

At night Kalaw is pack-dog territory.  In the daytime they laze in the heat (although we were warned not to walk through them solo as they have been known to take on lone humans) but at night it’s turf war.  Canine Jets and Sharks make a lot of noise ALL NIGHT so despitetrek fatigue the bus ride to Inle Lake the following day provided better sleep.

Inle Lake
It’s big.  45 square miles big.  We spent a day being rowed around various villages famous for weaving (lotus root, silk and cotton), silver smiths, boat making and breeding Burmese cats.






Tourism aside, the lake provides livelihood for fishermen (famed for their one-legged rowing technique) and farmers who’ve created huge floating fields of vegetables by stacking soil on bamboo rafts bound together.



                               

So – back to the cats.  Purebreds died out in Burma in 1920’s and most people had bigger things to worry so while a few muggle-cats carried the genes on they weren’t recognizable as the regal looking creatures that used to the country’s national animal.  In recent years cat donations from Europe and Japan have led to them being re-introduced and to ensure the bloodline stays pure they are housed on a cat-only island until there are sufficient numbers to survive on their own.   If you like cats this is probably a nice island.  If you see nothing but evil in their eyes and find their smell overwhelmingly unpleasant this is not a nice island.


That night it rained monsoon levels for hours and hours. When eventually it stopped we grabbed some bikes and cycled up to a vineyard – Myanmar’s only vineyeard where we’d heard the wine was questionable but Blessed Be The Winemakers and all that so we felt we should lend our support.

We reached the bottom of the driveway when the rain started again. Drenched in minutes, we took cover in a security guards sentry box and there followed a very awkward hour of non-verbal communication with said security guard.  Eventually the eye-rolls, shoulder shrugs and ‘will this never end’ gestures got too much for all of us so we chanced a gap where it downgraded from monsoon to torrential and finished the journey.



Being rained into a vineyard should be fun but it’s a sad measure of Myanmars wine that it was a struggle.  We tasted all 4 of their wines – leaving 2 glasses undrunk.  1 white that had such a long finish that I could taste it days later, and 1 red that Chris thought was corked but actually was just so cherry-heavy it tasted poisonous.   As the rain was still doing its thing we ordered a glass each of the least offensive white and willed the clouds to move.   In the end we chose rain and cycled back accepting the lesser of two evils.  A sad day in the Scarth-Cogswell vineyard log book.


Next morning off to Heho Airport to get a teeny tiny plane back to Yangon.  More bus station than airport, we were given a sticker instead of a boarding card and when an official held up the coloured lollipop matching our sticker off we went.



Flying in China I’m used to having my vegetarian meal request either ignored or met with something fit for an ‘I’m a Celebrity Get Me Out of Here’ challenge so was very surprised that while still taking off with YangonAir we were all served a breakfast I could eat.  The flight was only 1 hour yet we were given not 1 but 3 cakes for breakfast.  I’ve never had an éclair for breakfast. Or a mango Danish. Or a nut chocolate thing.  But I did.   Then very much regretted it as we hit big old rain clouds…

Yangon
Last few days then to look at more temples, monasteries, markets and temples.  Safe to say we were templed out by this stage and going to the biggest one, with the most real gold on it’s roof, failed to excite us.



And that sort of sums up our feelings for Myanmar – it failed to excite us.  Maybe if we’d never been to SE Asia we’d feel differently but as it is we didn’t get the specialness that other people spoke of.  We enjoyed it very much; the people were very friendly, the air clean, Bagan is certainly very photogenic and the jungles the greenest we’ve seen on that continent. We had a lot of fun in our two weeks there but were quite pleased to put our shoes back on and wave goodbye to temples and stupa’s for a few months. 


Vietnam. South this time

Vietnam is too big to do in a single hit (when you’re doing in on annual leave rather than a proper walkabout) so having visited the north ...