Monday, June 29, 2009

Vietnam



First, one for Steve, who will be arriving in a couple of days! Orange on orange!

(note the intense bambgoo scaffolding on the construction site in the background).













I have to leave and reenter Indonesia every 60 days or so for my visa, so I chose to go to Vietnam last month to visit my friend Elisa (from Evergreen). She was working on a research project involving Agent Orange, dioxins, and the state of things these days. I slept in the Kuala Lumpur airport on a layover.

This is where I slept, on the grass. My yardmates were Israeli and Polish.










If anyone ever needs an overnight layover in Malaysia, I highly recommend the KL airport. It's the best hostel in town! There must have been 300 of us overnighters milling about all night, from every corner of the world, sharing benches, yards, and alcoves.








I arrived in Saigon and went to the train station to buy a 12-hour trainride north to Hue, where Elisa was. I had to take a number for the line to buy tickets. I was number 390. "Now serving #290..."


















I've always wanted to travel by overnight train! I've had my fill. Not a souls on the train that I met spoke English and Vietnamese is not a language you learn in a few days (tonal).
This was one of my bunkmates, an obnoxious boy who had no qualms about crawling all over, yelling, slamming the door, and periodically staring at me for 20-minute spells. He looks cute in a still photo doesn't he?




Upon arrival in Hue I went to the Hotel where Elisa was. I got a 4th floor room. My balcony overlooked the public pool. The pool played dance hall remixes from about 6am to 10pm every day. I awoke some mornings to "Who let the dogs out?!" Thumpety thumpety thumpety thump...







Hue is the old imperial city, in the middle of Vietnam. It is near the demilitarized zone, the dividing line between the conflicting regions during the War. It was hit hard, but much of the amazing architecture and relics still stand, plus a few War artifacts.









Elisa introduced me to Nyoc Mia. Sugarcane juice! These women have stands all over Hue and for about $0.50 switch on their machine and press sugarcane through it with a little lime or orange. By the end of my week in Hue I was up to 3 or 4 glasses a day. Oh, so refeshing.















Elisa and I at a Pagoda.


















In the old imperial city, a semi-preserved section of Hue where the old dynasties sat, these big frog things are scattered about. I don't know their purpose, but they seem to have successfully bred themselves all over the grounds.







This is Tia, one of the workers at the hotel where Elisa and I stayed. She took a liking to both of us and one day she and her friend put us on their motorbikes and gave us a great little tour of the nearby pagodas and such. We all went to dinner and they showed us "how" to eat Vietnamese food (which is incredible...but confusing).









Elisa on the roof next to our hotel balcony; sunset over Hue. Hard to believe if I'd been born a few decades earlier I might have been dropping bombs here.










Chnese remnants in the imperial city.

















It looks like a chicken, but it's a giant foam-and-metal phoenix. It's getting overgrown, but two years ago Australian and Vietnamese artists created this 20-foot tall bird and a matching dragon for a parade.









Tia and I, saying goodbye and the ubiquitous victory "V".











Her friend (whose name escapes me right now). She's so short that we could get a good framing for the photo.

















Elisa and I bussed to Hoi An, east and south of Hue, near Da Nang. We rented a motorbike at left at 5am the next morning to fing the Myson ruins. We buzzed through a trickle of rain that became real rain and got drenched, but the moistness enriched the moss on these ruins.









The ruins were well preserved until the 60's, when Viet Cong used them to hide out in. So they were bombed. Craters are all around, overgrown, and unexploded mines are in the area still.









Some artifacts have been collected by anthropologists and housed in one of the better structures there. It was quiet and misty as we strolled around.










Sanskrit? Some of these obelisks are incredibly legible (if only I could read the language).
















Still at Myson ruins, a rich path through the woods.















Then back to Saigon for a day befor I flew back to Bali! I bought an instrument called a Dan Nguyet, which means "moon instrument." It sounds beautiful and looks a bit like a 2 stringed banjo. This is the girl that sold it to me after I spent 3 hours playing every instrument I could.
Kacy leaves in a week, Steve gets here in 2 days and Mike and Tam are here in a week! We've been getting our hands in the dirt and learning acro yoga and permaculture. Potlucks and portraits are sure to come soon!
--Trav--






















Wednesday, June 24, 2009

San Juans Bike Trip

Amanda and I have just returned from a week and a half bike trip on the islands. It was a wonderful trip! My buns are quite toned.

My favorite spot: Spencer Spit on Lopez.



This was our base on a sweet organic farm on the San Juans that Amanda had previously worked on.













A marimba band at a wonderful potluck at another organic farm "Sweet Earth"





















Cruisin'

















I don't know where this is.














Our base for four days at Spencer Spit
















Amanda on the road!








I harvested the clams from the beach that morning, the berries were from the side of the road, the peas from a work trade on a local farm.













One of the views at Spencer Spit on Lopez Island.
















Relaxing after a day of biking some serious hills.









It was a glorious trip and a wonderful way to wrap up my time in the US before I jet off to Bali!

Thursday, June 18, 2009

I would stand with you on a mountain...I would swim with you in the sea...

Hello everyone! Here's some photos and faces of my time in Bali. This is the last two weeks; I'm working backwards through my photos and will try to get some of my trip to Vietnam and before that up soon.


Highlights of the last two weeks: we climbed Gunung Agung...we rafted the Ayung river...Kacy and I got certified to dive...I saw my first trance dance in a village in the north...lots of good food and people.




Kacy's here! It's wonderful to have her to share all of this with. I returned from Vietnam on the 1st and she arrived the next day.










Sunrise on Gunung Agung, Bali's highest peak and spiritual epicenter. Most things on Bali are oriented towards this peak, where the Gods like to hang out.


See the pyramid-shape? That's the shadow of Agung, taken from the top, stretching into the clouds in the west.


We slept in the temple at the base and performed a ceremony to ask permission to climb and well-being for all of the climbers.










At the top, finally...Agung is reported at 3400 meters and we started the climb at 900. Nobody told us how hard it actually would be and that we'd be scaling rocks on the top third. We started at 1:30am and got back down around noon, though we expected a 6-7 hour round-trip.







A set of offerings at the top of Agung.
















Hayley, one of the four of us that made it to the top of Agung.














Tsiping; he was staying with our friends, Made and Jepun and wanted to join us on our climb of Agung. His family is from Taiwan, but he grew up in Paris. An all around good guy and a good photographer too. I hope to keep in touch with him.














Nyoman, a guide on Gunung Agung. He scaled the rock faces in flip-flops, carrying his water in a plastic grocery bag.








John and Alice, two Australians who I met halfway up Gunung Agung. Our party of seven split in half when some decided to go back down the mountain part-way. I stayed with them for a bit, then ran to catch up with everyone else. I met these two and a guide and continued up to the top with them.







Nina, from Australia. She's part of our weekly trivia team at the Fly Cafe in Ubud; her and her husband, Phil were introduced to me by Felice and Bruce.
















This is Putu, our friend Legut's son, at the villa to play in the pool.











Felice likes to have wax sucked out of her head.


















Felice, post-ear-candling, at the villa.


















Kacy Spooner, also with clean ears, listening to the sounds of the birds singing and the rice growing.




















Romance: Mango juice and papaya juice, a near-daily interaction with Kacy and I.














This is Wishnu, the son of the owner of the place we stayed in Pemuteran. He saw Kacy and I playing Dutch Blitz and asked to jump in. I know a few colors and numbers in Indonesian, so was able to explain it to him, and we went several rounds. But the end, not only was he able to play, but I caught him trying to cheat!













Kacy getting certified to dive in Pemuteran!





















Luc and Keri, from Switzerland, in Pemuteran on a project top document frowth rates of coral within the BioRock project. They went snorkeling with us and gave us a fun little tour of the coral.






Nick and Suzy, from England, in Pemuteran doing a research project on sustainable tourism. Kacy and I were the first to complete their survey on the BioRock project.










Jessica and Greg, whom we met while getting dive certified in Pemuteran; from Vancouver, Canada.










Hayley, from England, here in Bali doing acro-yoga and enjoying life.











The beginning of a good day: a morning game of chess with a pineapple juice and a fresh coconut, which led into more chess over lunch and over martinis in the evening.
















A young monkey in the Monkey Forest. I wish I had feet like them; a bigger one took Kacy's bottle of water from her, easily unscrewed the cap and held it up to drink out of it. He left it crumpled and ripped the label off, then cast it away and wandered off. Monkeys aren't eco-concious.














Monkey wrestling in Ubud's Sacred Monkey Forest. There are a lot of young ones tight now and they're super playful.










That's it for now! I'll try to get other updates and photos from Vietnam up soon. Love you all--

--Trav--