Saturday, October 31, 2009

It's 91.3 degrees and I can't find my adventure sandals

Hey folks,

Maggie and have been walking all around Luang Prabang today, we saw Buddhist temples, wedding processions and a sunset over the Mekong river from our own private river boat (sort of).

We really like this city as it has a laid back atmosphere much different from Hanoi, we had a tasty breakfast at our guesthouse and then headed out walking to see the downtown of the city.

the Laos language has an awesome way of saying hello, the Lao say sabadi ( pronounced Sa Baa Dee) and everyone seems to say this with a smile and warm wishes. Maggie And I can't get enough of everyone saying hello when they pass each other on the street, it is very welcoming and respectful.

As we were adventuring around downtown Luang Prabang processions of cars would stream by filled with people singing and making all kinds of racket in a wedding celebration, really a cool sight.

As we headed back to our guest house, Maggie saw a sign for sunset river boat cruises, 5.50 per person for the public boat, or 55.00 per person for a private boat. We decided on the public boat and headed down the ramp and across the gangplank over the Mekong river to find we were the only two people on this 100 person boat! It was great, we cruised up the river with drinks served to us by a very attentive waiter and spun the boat around just in time to see the sun drop behind the mountains outside of Luang Prabang.

were off to dinner, have a good night, also. The Celtics look phenomenal with pierce draining 3's the way he did against Chicago.

-Sam

Friday, October 30, 2009

Flying to Laos













Sam and I are sitting on the plane flying from Hanoi to Luang Prabang (really... That's the name of the city) we partially chose it because Sam heard the name and looked at me and said "we have to go there!"

We chose Luang Prabang because we kept reading and hearing from fellow backpacker's that Vientiane (the Laos capitol city) wasn't that awesome. Luang Prabang is supposed to be laid back, small, and scattered with various Wat's (the word for Temple)... Pretty much exactly what we are looking for.

Our last day in Hanoi was really nice. We spent the morning uploading photos and the afternoon walking around. We had coconut milk by the lake and ChaCa as a last meal. Sam got a great deal on a "Diesel" watch. And I opted not to buy anything. Sometimes it just feels so overwhelming when your bombarded by souvenirs. That, and the last time I thought I purchased something "authentic" a local laughed at me and said "oh, that made in China". A fool and her money are soon separated, my parents used to preach.

The air port was SO expensive! We paid $6 for coffee and almost had heart attacks. That and we saw a HUGE rat inside the terminal. Airports are not friendly places for the budget conscious travelers.

Hoping for Internet and wifi in Laos, but if you don't hear from us you'll know why.

In the interim, if anyone has blog suggestions for us you can email Maggie at curriermaggie@gmail.com and Sam at sjkachmar@gmail.com. We have had a request for more photos so we'll work on that. We are also going to work on the format once we have a real computer again.

Happy Halloween!

Credits: the photo is of a box of food the flight attendant gave us on the plane with a Laos Wat on it.

- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

PHOTOS

HANOI
http://picasaweb.google.com/curriermaggie/Hanoi?authkey=Gv1sRgCKzL2ODp5ba2cQ&feat=directlink

BAC HAI MARKET & SAPA
http://picasaweb.google.com/curriermaggie/Sapa?authkey=Gv1sRgCPvt-bXG79uIGg&feat=directlink

http://picasaweb.google.com/curriermaggie/SapaContinued?authkey=Gv1sRgCITR3sjBmYq-MQ&feat=directlink

HALONG BAY
http://picasaweb.google.com/curriermaggie/HalongBay?authkey=Gv1sRgCKnY45H7lYOScg&feat=directlink

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Getting ripped off sucks...

and in Vietnam it appears to be a daily ritual. No matter what the item is, if the prices are not posted Westerner's are charged double or triple what the locals pay. Water for locals is 6.000 VND and for Westerners it's 10.000-15.000. Pedicures for locals are 30.000 and 90.000 for Westerners. Taxi's are 5 usd for locals and $10-15 for Westerners... I know, it's only a matter of a few bucks. Why am I complaining? It's not the money, it's the principle.



- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

GOOOOOOD Morning Vietnam!!!!



Hey, Sam Here


So, Its Maggie and I's last day in Vietnam, we fly out to Laos, a city called Luang Prabang later tonight.
Vietnam has been a great learning experience for us in how to travel and what physical items ( spoons/ lightweight pants/ sunscreen) to bring, and what tech items/software ( blogger lite/ iphone/ skype) before heading out on a trip.
Before heading out on a trip you have to buy skype credit for your skype account, then you can call family and friends on their cell phones for super cheap, I'm talking like .001 cents per minute, its pretty amazing. also bring sunscreen, its sunny here and sunscreen is just kinda hard to find.
The Picture above is from a town called Ba Cai near Sapa, the peoples garb and overall look reminded me of Otavalo in South America. The People in the towns surrounding Hanoi were all very nice but also would try to sell you things like water and cigarettes at double and triple the "local" price.
We are gonna head out to explore Hanoi for our last day, hope everyone is watching the Celtics dominate!! I am psyched to See Rasheed hitting threes for us in the playoffs, also, keep your eyes on Brandon Tate on the Patriots, I hear is is crazy fast and could be our third receiver that we need to back up Moss and Welker. Cheers
-Samuel

Halong Bay

As our time in Vietnam moves forward Sam and I are amazed that a whole week has passed.

Thus far we have moved from Hanoi, to Sapa (northern Vietnam), and now over to Halong Bay (which is north east of Hanoi). Sam and I will fly to Laos, Luang Prabang, when we return from Halong Bay. We decided that traveling to Ho Chi Minh was going to take too much time and we want to move on. We remind ourselves that time spent in the beginning of our trip will eventually affect time at the end.

Our tip to Halong Bay has been wonderful. It seems that Vietnam/Hanoi tourism operates on a tour based system, which has it's pros and cons. The pros are that it's convenient and more or less well priced (even if one were to do the excursions solo it only saves you a few bucks, so you might as well do the tour and meet some nice people along the way). The cons are that you don't know what you're paying for until it's too late... From the brochures they all look good. The best advice Sam and I could give, book the tour through the tour agency NOT through a hotel. The hotel takes a cut of the funds--leaving you in accommodations that are not as nice as they would have been had you gone directly through the agency. We booked through our hotel and the tours have been okay. But, being bargain shoppers I know we could have saved $10 had we booked directly. In the end we are just happy to be here and the $10/20 is insignificant.

Our tour is the equivalent of the "deluxe" package. Which is probably one of the lowest (but, we didn't want to spend the money for the superior accommodations so we got what we expected). The accommodations have been clean and bug free (which is a big criteria!). A bus picked us up from our hotel in Hanoi at 8AM. We drove for about 3 hrs with 10/12 other people. Of course stopping at the tourist "hot spots" for shopping along the way (these shops have western prices, and Sam and I are too bargain savvy to fall for them).

We arrived in Halong City at about 12:00 and boarded our boat. The boats are totally cool, and look like old Vietnamese war ships... really old, wooden, ships, with multiple decks (I'll post photos). The crew had lunch waiting for us as we motored out of the harbor. These ships never sail, and it looked like only the nice ones bothered to put up the sails.

Halong Bay is famous for the scenery which is very unusual. The story goes that an old emperor of Vietnam called down a dragon from the heavens to fight off an invading army. After the dragon expelled the army, the emperor told the dragon to go back to heaven. But the dragon was angry, he wanted to stay because Vietnam was so beautiful he thought this was heaven. Eventually the dragon was forced back to heaven but as he left he smashed his tail into the land causing water to flow between the islands... Granted we obtained this story from locals that barely spoke English... So it may not be really accurate.

We spent the afternoon hiking in a limestone cave and kayaking around the bay. We also met this really sweet couple on our boat from the Czech Republic (Suzanne and George) who have been fun to hang and chat with. Sam and I slept for 11 hours on the boat! It was SO nice to not have the honk honk beep beep noise of Hanoi.

Day two of our excursion provided us with some much needed exercise. We motored to Cat Ba island, which is one of the biggest of the 1,968 islands. It is also one of the only islands that has residents (halong bay is now a national park). We spent the morning mountain biking and hiking--which was really fun. Whenever we biked into small villages the children would run into the street and say "hello!" with their little accents.

At around noon our group checked into our ghetto-fab hotel. It was this 13 story, Florida knockoff, gaudy building that was probably only about 5 years old. However, due to it's "quality" construction it looked more like it was built 20 years ago. The wood in our room had suffered serious water damage--the tong and groove had separated and worn and the slabs of granite in the grand staircase were worn down to about 1/4 of an inch thick. Poor design and cheap construction aside the hotel staff were very nice and it was the first hotel we stayed in that had wifi in the bedrooms!!!

Post lunch we all hopped back into our van and drove a short while to another port, where we took a smaller boat to Monkey Island. Monkey island was definitely the highlight of the day. When we exited the boat a guide gave us bananas and as we walked down the beach 4 little monkeys greeted us. Now, I though we would be able to feed these suckers, but hey had a different agenda. They are very quick--and they DO NOT want to be fed. Once you see them barreling toward you the desire to feed them quickly leaves you and you throw the banana, for fear of monkey attack! The scenery was quite beautiful, a white sandy beach, little monkey's running around (we even saw little baby monkeys), turquoise blue water, limestone islands all around, and wooden Vietnamese ships anchored off the land.

It was hot on Monkey island. Maybe not for the locals, but for us! Sam suggested, let's go swimming. I only had my bra and underwear on but being a Currier I have an unnatural desire to jump into water when I see it. I hesitated, feeling self conscious about my garb. But in the back of my head I heard and saw my sister saying, "who cares!?" within minutes I stripped down and plunged into the bay. And oh, it was beautiful! It really was the perfect moment.

As the sun set on the bay and we cruised back into Cat Ba Island, we looked at each other in amazement--wow, we're in Vietnam!

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

iphones & travel

Sam and I are sitting in our hotel room in HB--typing away on our iPhones! Thank you wifi!!

Sam and I debated as to whether or not to bring our phones (we initially thought we would sell them). In the end we decided to hibernate our plans and use them as itouch's. Our phones have been really useful this trip (they weigh significantly less than a computer!) and as we go on we find better apps to use that make traveling easier.

A few of our favorites;
Skpye: the connection is amazingly clear--we just wish more of our friends would make skype accounts so we could call them!!
Cur-con: a currency converter. Because when traveling through so many countries it's hard to keep track of rates and values.
Tetris: (really, I paid the $8, worth every penny! I suck up all of my battery juice for it)
Trip Advisor: we have not really used it much, but it knows where we are and gives us legit ideas.

A few we wish were better;
Sit or squat: could be SO useful! But it has a hard time accepting addresses and it keeps telling me we're in NYC
Yelp: again, not recognizing our location (trip advisor seems better)

A few we wish were better/existed:
Full lonely planet books as apps... Because carrying these suckers totally blows!
A translator that didn't connect to the Internet.
An app that could tell us when we were getting ripped off!

Off to dinner. Will tell all about HB after.

Monday, October 26, 2009

Sapa Trip


Maggie and I just arrived back to Hanoi from Sapa Via the overnight train. on the way up we shared our sleeper car with two really nice and fun British Girls on the way up, Annika and Lucy, they had been travelling for a few months together and had some really good tips and ideas for us, and they gave us a travel pillow to boot! it was very fun to go to the Ba Cai Market, and Spend the Night in a Beautiful hotel room in Sapa, the Wood Bugs in the Headboard kept us awake for a little while but eventually we just slept upside down until we heard a pig being slaughtered at 500am, a very interesting sound if you are not expecting it.

We took a beautiful tour of some of the surrounding towns of Sapa during the day with a very knowledgeble and kind guide and then had some coffee with the British Girls (Annika and Lucy) when we ran into them in Sapa later in the afternoon. After Making down to Lao Chi, we made it onto the train and Lucy and Annika got held up with the Ticket Guy we are hoping that they made the train.

We are off to Halong Bay this Morning and hope to head to Laos soon after. have a great day

-Samuel

Saturday, October 24, 2009

Hanoi

I wish I had more time, but Sam and I are about to head off to the train station to take a sleeper train to Sapa.

Yesterday and today were totally surreal!

Hanoi is a very busy city, which appears to get busier and busier as the day wears on. Before noon the streets are busy, but calm in comparison to what it's like at 6:00/7:00 pm. Crossing the street is a major event, but we were fore-warned of this challenge before we arrived. No one abides by street signs, they just plow right through red/green/yellow lights. Their mode of communicating that they are going and to get out of their way is to honk.

Last night, when I couldn't sleep. I determined that there were 4 different types of honks. There is the quick; beep. There is the double quick; beep beep. There is the extended; Hooonk. And, there is the "super deluxe, get the fuck out my way" HOOOOOOOOOOONNNNNNNNKKKK. Every time a scooter passes another scooter, they honk. Think, NYC in the 70's?

Today we had an AMAZING lunch of Cha Ca (traditional Vietnamese "grilled" fish... it's really more like oiled and fried...). Sam and I walked into a restaurant and a woman came over and explained that they only served one item in the restaurant. Sam and I said, "great!" A guy came over and lit a stove on our table, and then he prepared this small bowl of food (since we obviously didn't know what we were doing). It was great! We took pics, but they are all super big and I don't have time to upload.

We spent the day walking around Hanoi. We went to the equivalent of Best Buy, and Sam was delighted to discover that he could get better deals on electronics than they were selling for here. The temperature is hot and humid and we find ourselves having to stop regularly for iced coffee.

By the end of they say we were pooped, so we decided to get Vietnamese massages. This was an experience! For the amazing price of 180.000 DNG ($10) we got 1.5 hour massages. It was total culture shock. For those of you who have never been to an Asian Spa, it is a strange experience. They are not bashful about anything! I had to strip down in front of a room full of ppl, shower, sit in multiple hot tubs (one that smelt like green tea and one that smelt like Good Earth). When it got down to the actual massage this little Vietnamese lady was crawling all over the table--she was gettin down! Toward the end they rub this burning towel on you... When I walked out I guess I was supposed to sit down and drink this green stuff, but I looked at Sam and said, get me outta here! It wasn't the Four Seasons, that's for sure (and this was one of the fancy ones!) I shudder to think what the non-fancy ones are like.

Sam's ready to get massages daily. And I'm all set. I'll see him at the pedi place.

Off to Sapa! Sorry this is written SO badly! Not a great writer to begin with, let alone under the time constraint!

Thursday, October 22, 2009

LONG Flight

Everyone always says how far away Asia is from Boston, but I don't think anything can prepair you or really relay HOW far Asia is from Boston!

Sam and I departed Manus's apartment (courtesy of Taxi de Margot Lubin ;) at the ripe hour of 4:00 a.m. We hadn't gotten to bed until 1:30 because we figured we would sleep on the plane (big mistake to make that assumption). Our flight departed for San Fran at 6:00 a.m.. The flight to San Fran was fine, although neither of us slept that much because we were excited. So far so good. We had a nice lay-over in SF, checking out Gucci and Burburry (so I could better spot which knock off's are this season and which were last when we encounter them!)

We boarded for our flight to Seoul, which was an 11 hour flight (not to mention with crappy TV's and shitty movies... like "A night at the Museum" and "The Proposal"). They played these on re-peat the entire flight. Having paid the premium to have Tetris on my iphone I figured this would keep me busy for a few hours... then, my battery died. All that was left to do was annoy Sam! He had brought his Audio Tenchinca, fancy head phones, which are exponentially more comfortable than my beat up apple ear buds. Occasionally he would let me listen to a song, when he slipped away to the bathroom or stood up to stretch.

As we departed the plane is Seoul we yawned with jealous eyes at the Business and First Class seats.... how comfortable and relaxed those passengers must be! They were long gone by the time we departed the plane.

We slept on and off throughout our flights, but it was a challenge because we were laterally chasing the sun around the world. Not to mention how difficult it is to sleep sitting up with all of the blood swelling in your feet. (Those of you who have done this trip understand what I'm talking about).

When we arrived in Seoul it was like arriving in OCD heaven. Sam and I marveled at how clean, modern, and not ugly the airport was. In the ladies rest room they even had this plastic covering over the toilet seat and when you pressed a button it rotated to fresh plastic. I can't even imagine how wasteful this is!

We had about an hour in Seoul which went by quickly. We even got Dunkin Dounuts coffee! At one point Sam looked at me and said "Maggie, everybody here is Asian" and I looked right back at him and said, "I know!" I don't know what either of us expected but everything is SO different. We are completely out of our comfort zones (and really excited about it).

Our flight to Hanoi from Seoul was AWESOME! We flew Asiana Air. They had hot towels, better TV's, and Transformers 2.... who can complain watching Shaia LaB's sarcasm and Megan Fox's hotness for 2 hours?... again, no sleep though. A total of 28 travel hours later, and about 3 hours sleep over the course of 48 hours... we made it! Relatively argument free for that matter.

This morning we begin our first day in Hanoi, and talk about noise pollution!! Honk Honk, Beep Beep, 24/7! Glad I brought ear plugs. Looking forward to going to bed again, but first we must explore for a few hours.

Monday, October 19, 2009

Welcome!

Hello everyone, and welcome to our blog! This blog has begun because Sam and I are headed out on a South East Asian excursion... and well... we don't want to have to send 1,000 e-mails out to friends and family every day!


This will be a great way for us to share our experience with people who care... or maybe don't care but feel obligated to care (you know who you are).