Monday, December 05, 2005

Saturday, November 26, 2005

Pacific Northwest Holidays






Oh how I love Mount Rainier, friend, family, coffee shops galore, plenty of local brews, "mist" aka icky rain, flying fish, underground tours, people in hiking boots everywhere, the influx of Outbacks ( I swear you are not someone unless you drive one), bars with bulls in them, and more. The trip to Oregon and Washington was a hit. I got to see Gene, my cousin, her wonderful friends, Sarah B from HS and Bobby. Went to the Underground Tour in Seattle, the Seattle Museum of Art, Pike's Market, mosied in Downtown Portland, got back into swimming, and managed to eat 2 great Tday dinners.

Here are some highlight photos:

Monday, November 14, 2005

Joshua Tree!!!!





Iran and I had a great time in Joshua Tree this weekend :)
Highlights:
getting hissed and shaked at by a rattle snake that was less than a foot away
listening to coyotes howl all night
meeting weird people that live in the desert
seeing an actual road runner
hiking lots and lots

Friday, September 09, 2005

Dead dogs and all that jazz

So, while playing an icebreaker where students tried to find one thing they have done that no one else has done in the class, the following became the highlights:

"Have any of you ever picked up a dog thinking it was a stuffed animal, and then realized it was a dead dog. And then, when you realized it was a dead dog, you threw it at your sister."

This came in second to this:

"Well, have any of you ever banged on the bathroom door while your papi is in there going number 2, and he yells at you to stop, but you keep hitting the door and he keeps yelling. But, the yelling stops and you realize he is coming out to find you, and he is really mad. Well, then, have you put pillows in your bed to make it look like you are there while hiding from your mad papi under your bed and watched him hit the pillows on your bed?"

Seriously, these kids are hilarious. They may not be able to read and write well, but they certainly have some crazy life experiences.

Sidenote: Jenni, I should ask them if anyone has propositioned them with poo crayons. :P I suppose we all have our stories...as random as they may be....

Monday, September 05, 2005

hehe...


Check out www.postsecret.blogspot.com for more secrets...
Happy Labor Day! Thank you to all family and friends who have helped Andrea and her community out in Louisiana. You are phenomenal people.

Sunday, September 04, 2005

British response

If you are interested, I suggest you read this article...it provides the responses of the British people who were in the Superdome and finally got back home recently. Warning: it is also upsetting to read about their experience as it casts Americans as pretty awful. Worth reading, though, to get an international point of view.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/4212684.stm

Friday, August 26, 2005

Weird trees and bootlegging

My car has been enveloped in this weird, sticky, mini-drop mess. Apparently Berkeley and Oakland are plagued with "Yellow Leaking Sap Trees" or something awful like that, and they are attacking the poor, slow, defensless and now dirty Saturn. It is really quite exciting.
Sidenote: I just had some breadsticks and they were fabulous...and now I am going to watch "50 First Dates" - the non bootleg version**- and then sleep lots and lots.
**For those of you who have not watched proper bootleg DVD's (like from Chinatown in NYC), you can totally tell that someone videotaped what you are watching from the back of the theater - people actually get up and their shadows walk across the movie, sometimes they cough, and if you are lucky, they make ridiculous comments!

Thursday, August 25, 2005

Durian, its nastiness, and the fam


During our exciting work training, Jessica announced today that she had the grossest candy ever last night: Durian Sucky Candy. Haha. Then we engaged in a conversation about just how disgusting durian is and debating if people can ever really like it, or if they are just confused.
Other news: My mom just sent me that picture and since I am becoming tech savvy, it is online here now. Say hello to the fam!
More other news: School starts in a few days and I really have no clue what I am doing yet....moreover I am not worried about it. What is up with that?

Thursday, August 18, 2005

tech savvy and loving it

So I finally have gotten my pictures online from my travels, have begun online banking, got all the music Leslie and Vicky gave me into Itunes and have learned how to use a mac.
In other news, Joyce (my next door neighbor growing up) was out here for an interview and we went out for a wonderful sushi dinner. I've also been working the past 3 days at a program for our 7th graders and the kids are pretty tough....the year should be interesting! Lastlu, Ben came up and Leslie and Bryan met us for drinks which was great - I love where I live now! We walked all over and found a great little bar and cheap Mexican place for dinner. Today I am going into my classroom to set up. Exciting - I know you are all jealous :)

Saturday, August 13, 2005

Saturns, Kayaks, and Hiking Boots

Jay, Vicky and I have been busy touring California and the unfortunate city of Reno. Conclusions:
Yosemite is goregous, but hiking up mountains poses challenges unmet in the Midwest.
The lack of humidity is loved by all (me escaping Asia, them escaping the Midwest)
Cold water or pop is the best thing after hiking.
More Europeans travel in our parks than US citizens.
It is really hard to Kayak on Tahoe. It is necessary to befriend rich people with boats (anyone....anyone???)
Good times were had by all. We toured around SF today and said hello to the Golden Gate, sea lions, Ghirardelli chocolate and vats of ice cream, the lovely Pacific Ocean and Redwoods, and the random crazies around the city. Tomorrow we are going to the great city of Sebastopol with Johanna and Ry to experience the greatness that is the apple festival.

Sunday, August 07, 2005

Yosemite!

Today Jay, Vicky and I embark on our cross-California journey to the lovely Yosemite National Park. Things to look forward to:
good car snacks
ipods galore
weird company (my family isn't normal...me included...)
goregous views
The adventure begins soon - I have to shower and then we are off!

Tuesday, August 02, 2005

Faux Pas

Some of the funny things I didn't mention yet were as follows:
In Cambodia, it was necessary to educate people about condoms since the average family has 5 kids and 60% of the population is under 15. Volunteers educated village people about condoms by using bananas and, well, condoms. All of the people practiced, and it was certain that they were ready to use them accordingly. Well, what happened was that they thought they needed to put a condom on a banana to prevent pregnancy...they didn't realize the true use :) Needless to say, more than one lesson was given.
Secondly, a friend of mine was trying to buy tampons in Vietnam and couldn't really act it out (acting is a crucial skill for travelling to Asia...) so she showed one that was in a bright pink wrapper to a pharmacist. The pharmacist thought it was lipstick and acted out putting it on her lips. We all looked at her in a sort of weird manner cluing her in that she was wrong. Then she figured it out, screamed "oh...." looked at us in a horrified manner, and said "Oh....you won't be able to find them anywhere here....on no..." She was clearly horrified and it became quite clear that it was seen as a taboo to use such objects.
Now that I am home, culture shock has set in a bit. Johanna has been my princess in shining armour and is helping me get used to cars, sidewalks, no bikes, drinking water from taps, non-Aussie/European language, and all TV channels in English! Woo hooooooo! It is nice to be back :)

Friday, July 29, 2005

Bikes and Fortunes

Yesterday we all rented taxi motos and got a lovely tour of Hue - the Perfume River, rice fields, a monestary and nunnery for buddhists, a rice hat making home, and we got to have lunch - monk style - at a temple. The food was spectacular - all vegetarian and tons of it - tofu, won tons, veggies, fruit, juices, and they make you take a nap after! There were 2 novice monks (probably 6 years old) who were adorable with their mandated haircut that actually looks like a haircutting mistake - were making fun of one of the guys in our group who was snoring during the nap time. They kept pointing and laughing while trying to make snorting noises. The temple takes in orphans and takes care of them - it is nice that even though they have so many problems already, they still goof around and act like kids.

Then, we all went to the fortune teller who is dons a huge smile that shows her missing teeth, is no more than 4 feet tall, weighs about 60 pounds, and is older than time itself.
This woman predicted that I would be married by the time I am 28, will have 5 children, and will make a lot of money in the next 2 years. Watch out world, all of that sounds a little scary (aside from the money bit). Anyway, it was good fun and she really got some people's past right on the spot.

In other news: the women here are obsessed with my skin - they love that it is "white" and really wish their skin was so great. They also love that my eyes are not brown - I have been told I am beautiful for these reasons more times than I can count. I swear I have more wrinkles than 80 year olds, but it is the color they want! To protect their skin from the sun, women wear face masks, rice hats, bandannas all over their face, and long elegant gloves just to go to the market. If they only knew how much money there was in tanning products in our country...it reminds me of Dr. Seuss' Sneeches.

Today we are off to visit the citadel and then onto the night train to Halong Bay and then onto Hanoi. Only 4 days left - Viet Nam is a goregous country. You should all visit.

Wednesday, July 27, 2005

Pacific Love!

The Pacific Ocean is warm enough here for you to swim in and there are not millions of people on the beaches (unless you count the women in tons of clothing from head to food, donning rice hats, trying to sell you crap). To say the least, the beach in Hoi An is goregous. We (my Aussie friend) and I had lunch and swam for a while yesterday and it was really relaxing. The two of us piled onto a female run moped (making 3 people on a one person bike), paid about 1.00, and got a round trip, door to ocean drive.
We took a cooking course last night which was fun I learned how to make pork in banana leaf (aluminum foil will suffice), vegetable spring rolls - fresh and fried, papaya salad (they use unripe papaya so it tastes like cucumber), and won ton salad. It was good fun :) I also managed to get some artwork that will hopefully be in my home one day and ordered more clothes. Johanna, watch out, I may come off the plane in something a little crazy!
We are leaving today for Hue, another beach town, and I have heard it is really nice. There is a woman who tells fortunes there and I am really looking forward to hearing what she has to say! While I am loving Asia, I think that I am preparing for going home as I am getting sick of people in these countries thinking I want to buy everything....they say "Madame" and follow you around, ignoring your pleas of "No, thank you" and bothering you for far too long. I am also sick of the mopeds here. They honk all the time and I have been hit by 2 so far (they drive everywhere - market, sidewalk, buildings, etc.)....none of my hittings were great and I didn't even get bruises, but it is annoying. Oh well, I will probably wish to be back soon enough!

Tuesday, July 26, 2005

Penis', Rats, Cockroaches, and more!

I almost forgot to tell you:
The restaurant we went to last night had the following items on the menu:
goat penis
she-goat breast
rat
cockroaches
scorpion
cow penis
intestines
eel

People in my group ate: scorpion, eel, rat.
I ate: rat.
It actually wasn't that bad and tasted remarkably like beef jerkey. Sorry Lizzy..I know you keep them as pets...I promise it wasn't related to Taz, Taz II, or Taz III.

Hoi An - the Beach Town!

After avioding getting run over by 30000000 mopeds this morning, we boarded a flight from Saigon to Hoi An - a lovely town on the enormous ocean. This town is really quaint, more quiet, and full of tailors and great restaurants! Nearly everyone in the group was fitted for clothing today and I am having more things made. I figure it will keep me out of US malls and truly I think I won't be able to handle them for at least 2 months for fear of culture shock. It is really cheap - for 120.00US I am having the following made (and the fabric ranges from linen to silk...)
2 pairs of pants
1 dress
1 asian-style jacket
1 asian-style shirt
1 skirt
3 button down shirts
Got a massage, ate some good tofu, read some Harry Potter (100 pages to go....), and walked a bit around. Tomorrow we'll go to the beach and visit some of the old homes on a tour. Leyla - Vietnam is definitely the Durian Country - it is everywhere :) Glad you are enjoying Ireland!

Monday, July 25, 2005

Cute Kids and Crazy Driving!

Chau warned me against adopting a cute Cambodian child...and I laughed telling her not to worry...but after visiting an orphanage full of the most adorable, loving, sweet kids in Phnom Penh, I seriously considered adopting a cute kid some day from here. I can't wait to share pictures of these kids with you - one of the boys just latched on to me and wouldn't let me go! We danced to Cambodian music and they gave us a traditional dance show which was captivating.
We also went out to a club in Phnom Penh which was an absolute riot. First of all, before midnight, there are shows to Western songs that incorporate hideous costumes and crazy dancing with some awful singing. Secondly, the men dance like they are on crack and shake your hand to ask you to dance. A good time was had by all :)
On a sad note, we visited the Killing Fields - where Pol POt and his army killed massive amounts of people for fun and raped many women and went to the torture chambers which were a school at one point. It was awful and very upsetting that so many people were hurt for no reason.

Vietnam is a crazy place. Two men were seriously fighting over me to ride in a little cyclo thing with them and that was scary. There are over 4000 motorbikes in Saigon and you just have to cross the street with 100's coming at you and hope they weave around you. There are 40 fatalities each day on motor bikes alone! The city is really pretty and the French influence is intersting - there is actually a Catholic church here and it has some nice Virgin Marys that are surroded my neon lights (they really like those here....). The coffee is fantastic and the rice paper rolls are phenomenal - finally the food is healthy and not fried! I have yet to see any obsese people that are not white in Vietnam and to date have only seen one fat Asian and I think she may have been a tourist :)

Today we visited the War Remnants museum which made me very unhappy about the US involvement in this country and felt physically ill because of all of the photos and information about the hideous tortures. In addition, we went to Chu Chi - the tunneled city that the Vietnamese lived in for 10 years and was crucial to them winning the war. It was amazing and extremely scary in the tunnels - they were TINY and smelly but included a school, hospital, kitchen, etc.
Sorry for the long post - internet has been spotty here. Tomorrow we leave for Danang and I am getting excited to resume a non-travelling life and see Johanna and other people I miss :) Mabel and Em - good luck with the marathon - Woo hoo!

Tuesday, July 19, 2005

Crocs, Ruins, Sunsets and rises, and Land Mines

Today I was up at 4:30 getting prepped to watch the sun rise over Angkor Wat. The sky was full of purples and pinks as it engulfed the beautiful outline of one of the seven wonders of the Ancient world. We spent the day toodling around many different ruins- the most beautiful, in my opinion, the ones that are the most ruined by trees and random earth shiftings.

We also visited the most unique restaurant - The Stinking Fish - which unfortunately did not serve rat, worm, or cat (it explained this on the menu) and had a lake full of crocodiles ready to attack any drunkard that accidentely fell into their swarming, seething, evil territory. Food here is pretty good....similar to Thai food, spicy if you so choose, and always full of meat or fish. I was completely misconcepted thinking that I would find tofu wherever I went as I try to aviod meat when travelling.

We also visited the Land Mine Mueseum which is actually more of a center for victims of land mines. It was harrowing arriving there as you pass a basketball court full of goregous Cambodian children missing limbs - arms, legs, faces cut up, etc. because of land mines the US and Vietnam left here during our conflicts. There are still over 6 MILLION land mines and 3 casulaties a day here because of them - generally the most poor people are hit by them and there is not much they can do about them because they pose such a threat to all involved in finding them. The Museum has volunteers who educate the children by teaching them how to read, write in numerous languages since most of the victims are beggars. Unfortunately the US, China and Russia are still producing massive amounts of these mines and no one seems to do much about it. There are 3,000 surrounding many villages in Iraq apparently....democracy what? Anyway it is upsetting and innocent people are being maimed by devices that are made to do just that.

To end on positive notes:
I was in the same place as Angelina Jolie in Tomb Raider today since she filmed here in Cambodia and we are on our way to have dinner at a woman's home....apparently she is a great cook and I am starving so it is really exciting! I feel very safe here and find it to be more beautiful than Thailand.

Monday, July 18, 2005

Oh Dear Me!

Greetings from Cambodia...a country that is full of interesting juxtapositions and that I am still quasi-getting accustomed to.
Our day yesterday was spent in a long line of Thai people and ourselves at Poi Pet - the border of Thailand and Cambodia. Parentless Cambodian children were fanning us and holding umbrellas over our heads in hopes of getting food or water. Thai people (who had been nothing but nice) were shoving, pushing, and ready to step on you since the line takes 2 hours to get through and the line is in the sun (temps here are not low...).
It was crazy and scary and just got a little more daunting. You see, Cambodia doesn't really have paved roads and the recent rains mean there are red-dirted pot holes the size of a modest home you have to forage through. To go 100 miles, it took us 10 hours. Along the way, there were homes with cute naked children running around, little stores, rice farms, and people on mopeds.
When we stopped for water, kids came running up to us, speaking perfect English and I danced the macarena with one little boy. They are selling anything - books, jewelry, water, etc. and are charming and very street smart (they operate scams of getting foreign currency and exchanging it with foreigners for more in their currencty).
Okay...so that is depressing...but it was a depressing experience. I can't even imagine what it was like under Pol Pot here and how anyone managed to get by.
Today we went to ruins that were absolutely goregous and watched the sunset on the top of one set of ruins. On one side, there was the setting sun...on the other, a newly festering thunderstorm. Words can't describe the ruins - they are tremendous - and I can't wait to share pictures with you!!!

Saturday, July 16, 2005

An American in Bangkok

Status: Lost in Bangkok
Update of things done:
--Subway and Sky Train rides (nice, surprisingly easy to navigate, airconditioned system!)
-- Changtuk Weekend Market (you can buy fishies, underwear, lights, furniture, smelly food, shoes, paintings, jewelry, purses, bride dresses aka anything you could ever want!)
-- Ate dinner with Noi (a friend's Thai host sister) and her friend - food was great and they are very nice. Sarah - she says hello and is very curious why I didn't bring you :)
-- Met a Michigan fan - wooo hoooo - and talked football (real football...not soccer)

I have tried to get my pictures online but it isn't working....Check out Leslie's blog - we have the same pictures basically - and enjoy! www.puddledog.blogspot.com

okay...time to find Jim Thompson's house. Wish me luck :)

Friday, July 15, 2005

King and Queen Bling Bling

Another interesting thing about Thailand are the King and Queen - interesting in the sense that their pictures are seriously everywhere and the people loooooovvvveeeee them. At first glance, it seems that people are brainwashed or something (especially since 50% of our country loathes our leader), but it is a genuine like and the king and queen have done a lot of good for this country. They have helped the hill tribes out, aided refugees, acted quickly in times of tsunamis and floods, and tried to remedy the financial situation that is pretty sad at the moment.
Today, I did go get fitted for a cute silk jacket and 3 pairs of cashmere pants...thanks for the address mom :) It is amazing how much cheaper they are here. Currently, I am getting a little weirded out about Cambodia - just because they have no ATMS and it is always dangerous to be a place with no access to money. I am sure it will be fine, just a little unnerving.
Yesterday I went to the Royal Palace - talk about bling. There is so much gold there it is crazy. Overall, it is goregous and I especially enjoyed the guards who I thought for sure would murder me with their machine guns. Thankfully, I took off my shoes at all the right times (you have to take off your shoes to go nearly anywhere here...keeps the floor clean) and was wearing respectable clothing (shoulders and knees = unseen).
I also went to the Golden Teak Mansion which was really quite astounding - very Victorian - and it won my heart because the whole thing was air conditioned! At the mansion, I saw a dancing show that was funny and they took kids from the audience as hostages (well...you would have thought as much at the little one's resistance). THere were seriously 10 schools of kids and all of them had to wear flourescent pink shirts - I gathered the pink color on boys isn't a problem here as it is at home!
I still have yet to meet another American person (aside from the cocky East Palo Alto boy Leslie mentioned). I don't think there are any more. Just me. The Thai people ask me often where I am from...it is funny because if I say USA or United States, most look blankly. It is essential to say "America" followed by "California" and then they smile and say how pretty it is there. Sorry about the rambling....I am waiting for my pictures to get on a CD! Check Leslie's site www.puddledog.blogspot.com for a link to her pictures - she's home!

Wednesday, July 13, 2005

Dogs with Running Sores

Dogs are prevalent in Thailand and I don't think any are neutered. This means there are tons of weird looking dogs that mate with other odd looking dogs and come up with the most hideous of beasts that just roam around cities. Of course I avoid the dogs at all costs, especially the ones with open sores, but it amazes me at just how many dogs are on the prowl. Absence of nasty dogs: a benefit of living in the US.
Leslie left us this morning after a crazy night out that involved drinking out of buckets that were filled with some crazy mixture that still has my head spinning. To celebrate our last night, we effectively got our tour guide drunk and all 5 of us climbed into a tuk tuk since it was pouring when we left the bar. Leslie introduced us to the Stephen Hawking dance (you don't even want to know...) and our guide danced in a teradactyl like fashion if he wasn't doing MC Hammer moves.

I have a few days alone in Bangkok and I am going to run around - go to the zoo, the Royal Palace, read my new book (that is actually used and falling apart) - Gone With the Wind, enjoy cheap Thai food, go to the Teak Mansion, and of course get another massage (all of this while avoiding the mangy dogs of Bangkok). Hopefully I will be able to get my pictures up onto a CD and online - email me if you want to be added to the album!

Monday, July 11, 2005

24 is the lucky number

So our visit to the Golden Triangle, where Burma, Thailand and Myanmar meet wasn't so exciting...BUT we did get to ride in a pick up truck with 22 people - 19 of which were locals - smashed in the back. That is the limit of students I will have in my classroom next year! Ideally I will not have to smash my students into a pick up truck, but thankfully I know it is possible to do.
We are now just chilling in Chaing Rai - a city in the North - with not much to do. We are enjoying AC and I am having my first mocah since leaving the USA. It is great :) On our way to get some massages and mom - we will finally eat the pad thai you say is so great at the Dusit Island. Hopefully it is better than the disgusting Durian I forced all to try!!! haha!
Tomorrow we stop by Chaing Mai for lunch and then board a night train for an overnighter to Bangkok where I will be staying for a few days before leaving on a crazy trip to Cambodia and Vietnam.

Sunday, July 10, 2005

Berkeley!

I didn't get a chance to tell most people before I left - I am living in Berkeley next year! College and Derby are the cross streets and it is a large, nice home built by Julia Morgan. My room is yellow with a balcony! Exciting. I will have to get some plants to grow off of it.

Showers!

Something is really odd about most of the showers here...there aren't bathtubs or little enclosures for showers. No, that would make too much sense. Rather, here in Thailand, most places just have a spout on the wall facing the toilet that shoots out water all over everything. You could take a shower while sitting on the toilet if you so chose. Some places even forget drains which means that they bust a hole in some corner and the water finds it way out eventually. So, after a shower, the toliet is covered in water, the toliet paper is decimated and full of water, the floor is a complete hazard, and you are clean. We feel really, really special if we go places that have a bathtub shower...one of the many comforts of home.
Also, another odd thing: whitening creams. I ran out of deodarant which is something you desperately need here since you are in a constant state of hottness (and by that I do not mean a high level of attractiveness...). It took me a while to find any that didn't whiten your underarms...all of the skin creams are whitening too. Johanna - quite the opposite of what you have been scouting, no :)
Everything is good here - we are in the Northern part of Thailand near the Burmese border. My travel guide thinks I am weird (I was acting like the coneheads - you know "We come from France" and he just couldn't handle me anymore :) and I was worried about accidentally crossing into Myanmar or as it is still called here, Burma and getting killed. We are going to the Golden Traingle tomorrow - where Burma, Laos and Thailand form a peaceful (or not...) union and will be taking some sort of boat along the Mekong River there. Should be fun! We miss you all and hope you are well!

Friday, July 08, 2005

Durian and Drag Queens

Leyla, Leyla, Leyla....how you find Durian at all appetizing remains one of the seven mysteries of my world right now. I talked this fruit up to everyone in my group - and they were a little sketched out from the start because every hotel has "NO DURIAN ALLOWED INSIDE ROOMS OR HOTEL" signs all over. I told them the smell was a decoy and that it tasted like pudding. When we got the "king of fruits" we disregarded the smell (which was repulsive). No one even swallowed it and their hands couldn't scrape the fruit out of their mouths fast enough. EEEWWWW! Haha! I got pictures of everyone eating it - you will enjoy them :)

On another note, we went to see the "lady boys" (the Thai term for Drag Queens) last night. The Thai men dressed as women are prettier than most women. Of course not everyone emerged from the show unscathed (remember Mike....the queen danced with you) Tim in our group was mauled by 2 of the queens and emerged from the show with huge red kisses all over his face. The lip syncing of English songs was amusing, especially for the people who did not speak English at all and at there were an alarming number of foreign kids in the audience. Good times were had by all.

Finished cooking school yesterday - Leslie and I are now culinary artists. The class itself was a lot of fun and we even got to play with fire. Pad Thai, green curry, sticky rice with mangoes, stir fry veggies, tom kum soup and more were our dishes and we ate them all :) It was a nice way to spend the day! Today we leave for Chaing Rai on a great city bus equipped with dirty people, buckets of sweat, fans that do nothing, and ... no air conditioning. Lovely. Bet you are jealous :)

Thursday, July 07, 2005

Thai Response to London

I am sure you are curious to know how people have reacted to the attacks on London. Not too many things seem different here since the attacks on London, but I also can't understand a lick of the language aside from Hi and Thank You. Our guide seemed less shaken than us - our other companions are from England and are clearly upset. Of course all news stations are broadcasting it - we get the BBC, some Asian news station which is in English and CNN. It is scary travelling when things are so uncertain and hopefully they are successful in figuring out who bombed their country and in helping the injured parties.

Asian Dialect

It should be noted that our tour guide asks us if we want "Sticky Lice" because he can't say the "R"sound. We also go to bed and get some "Lest" and "Lent" vehicles. Leslie and I can't help but find the "Lice" slip up amusing :)

Busy Bees!

CHAING MAI (excuse the massive amounts of info...we've been busy. Since it is so much info, it is divided up with subheadings)
- We like this city much more than Bangkok - it is cleaner and it is enveloped in beautiful tree-covered mountains. We visited a wat in the mountains that overlooks the city which gave an interesting vantage point for the city and of course we paid homage to the large buddah there and rang the bells for good luck. While in Chaing Mai, we also visited the following factories:
jewelry: saw beautiful jewlery being made...mainly jade, ruby, emerald, and sapphire things. I bought a really cute ruby ring.
umbrella: a lot of steps go into making these umbrellas - paper making, painting, sanding wood, gluing pieces together, cutting perfectly shaped pieces.
teak: When I am rich, I am importing the beautifully carved pieces of furniture that these woodsmiths make. Goregous scenes complete with elephants, monkeys and villages emerge from trunks of trees.
silk: what a lot of work for some fabric...it all starts with the boiling of cocoons and the tedious job of pulling out strings and moves to dying and looming.

HILL TRIBE TREK
Plowing through rice fields, through the humid, hot jungle, and a bamboo rafting we went! Why would we expose ourselves to such torture? Well, to visit the hill tribes! The hilltribes are minority groups in Thailand that live in the northern mountains. Most of the groups live very secluded lives and don't have TV, radio, electricity, cars, etc. After hiking in the jungle (I have sooooo much more of an idea of what Vietnam would have been like) and sweating more than humanly possible, we arrived at our first temporary home of the Lisu tribe. Basically envision chickens, pigs, dogs, people, red dirt floors, simple housing, squat toilets, beautiful Crouching Tiger-like mountains, and farms and that is where we found ourselves. The stars were absolutely goregous at night and the chickens, pigs, and roosters made some interesting noises for all of us to enjoy!
To get to our next tribe, we rode elepants (woo hoooo!) who were super cute and exciting and made our own bamboo raft to float down the river. The next tribe, Karen tribe, lives in teak homes that are on stilts about 10 feet above the ground on the river. The kids all were swimming and water buffalo (picture horse and hippo mix) were roaming freely. The houses of this tribe were much more substantial and we fancied them more. At night, we drank Chang Beer (6 % here in Thailand - catches up to you !) and our guides sang Bob Marley, Cat Stevens, and Simon and Garfunkel songs in addition to teaching us the Elephant Song. I hope you enjoy it as much as we did:

Elephant, elephant, elephant
Have you ever seen elephant?
Elephant have big body
Elephant have long trunk which we call moung
Elephant have two teeth we call neah
Elephant have two eyes and two ears
Elephant, Elephant, Elephant, Elephant, Elephant

TRADITIONAL THAI DINNER
We went to a Kabuki dinner which entails sitting on the ground and sharing a variety of dishes with your comrades. We dined n fried pork, chicken, spicy pork, sweet rice, sticky rice, fried bananas, and chili paste-ish mush. In addition to feasting on such healthy food, we watched traditional Northern dancing which was surprisingly slllooowwww paced and included some great outfits (chicken costumes, for example) and some neat props (fire, swords, long Halloween like fingernails). In addition to this dancing, we saw Hill Tribe dancing with the cutest kids you could ever imagine! Just the happiest things ever. One of their dances included a dragon suit with 2 people in it and they crept up behind some viewers and scared them to death! It was a riot. It should be noted that some 13 year old British girl was behind us and was balling her eyes out the whole time and her dad kept telling her to be quiet and that she was a drama queen. I thought she was going to die of suffocation.

Sunday, July 03, 2005

Markets and Caves

My mom told me there would be food cooking everywhere...and there is! Every city, street, corner, space has people cooking everything from entire fishies to chicken to veggies to unknown things on portable grill stands. I haven't eaten any meat from the vendors because typically there are flies all over the raw meats sold in markets not to mention nothing is refrigerated and it is really, really hot all day. There's also massive amounts of fruits (yes, Leyla, durian! I have yet to try it, but will!) and veggies all over. It is traditional for Thai people to shop daily and cook everything fresh (minus the flies). We have gotten to eat a lot of good food - Leslie really enjoyed Pad See Ew and I had some great coconut soup last night - and no one has gotten sick thankfully.

On a different note, we went to caves yesterday and encountered bats galore, stalagtites, and of course, buddahs! Unlike US caves which are to be untouched, Thai caves have massive golden buddahs hauled into them and monks go in to worship there. It was very interesting and was a stark difference from my Oregon Caves experience.

Feeling Hot Hot Hot!

Sawasdee - Hello in Thai.
We have been so busy! Yesterday we visited a National Park which had really goregous waterfalls with great swimming areas. We all went in for a dip with the plethora of gross fishies that would definitely nibble at you if you weren't incessantly moving. We stayed on the River Kwai for the past two nights in a floating room actually on the river. We shared the room with scary pigeons and some spider voyeur in the shower. The river is really pretty and has a lot of history attached to it. The Japanese had POWS from all over build a railroad across Thailand into Burma during WWII. Many, many people died from harsh treatments and illnesses. We went to the actual rail road to a place called Hell Fire Pass, named because when they cut and dynamited through mountains at night it looked like hell to local people. Also, we visited the graveyard of the people who died during the war under the Japanese - one of few graveyards you will find in a Buddhist nation (the British maintain it).
Today, we took public transit (i.e. unairconditioned busses) to Ayuuthaya - a city of many ruins. We just returned from travels to a few and checked out the buddahs there. Unfortunately not a lot is known about them because they are so old (at least 400 years) and the records were not kept. Tonight we take the great night train to Chiang Mai and I can't wait - it is supposed to be awesome! Now we are preparing to take a swim in the hotel's pool and it should be great.

Thursday, June 30, 2005

Buddah Day!

Leslie and I arrived last night in Bangkok without a hitch! The things that stand out:
-- people are really, really proud of their country and want to help you in any way
-- things are very inexpensive
-- the driving here is absolutely insane...blind faith gets you through
-- tuk-tuks are the way to go - little moped-like rickshaws
-- buddahs are all over...there are 3000 in Bangkok alone
-- extreme fruits and veggies abound
-- monks are all over - talking on cell phones, eating, cruising
-- pollution is abundant
-- air conditioning is really appreciated
-- the weather isn't unbearble ... it's definitely warm, but not boiling
-- motorcyclists are everywhere
-- thai massages are great!
we are really enjoying ourselves and thankfully the 12 hour time change hasn't affected us yet. check out leslie's blog - www.puddledog.blogspot.com - to hear what she has to say about this whole bangok thing! we leave for river kwai tomorrow and i'll most likely have internet again in 4 days. until then, adios!

Tuesday, June 28, 2005

The Great Adventure

While I feel that my post-first-trip life has been quite an adventure, the real one begins tomorrow when Leslie and I depart from the US, layover in Tokyo and arrive in Bangkok, Thailand. Here's what we will be doing each day:
Day 1 Bangkok Dive into dynamic Bangkok and explore all the fantastic sights, smells and sounds this amazing city offers.
Days 2-3 River Kwai Gain an insight into the perilous lives of the POWs on a ride on the notorious Death Railway or a visit to the JEATH War Museum. Why not check out the stunning Erawan Falls?
Days 4-5 Ayuthaya/Chiang Mai Discover the ancient ruins and temples of Ayuthaya, one-time capital of ancient Siam and now treasured World Heritage site. An overnight train then takes us to Chiang Mai with its happening night bazaar and great restaurants.
Days 6-8 Hilltribe Trek Colourful ethnic minorities reside in the hills of northern Thailand. Meet many of these friendly tribespeople on the hilltribe trek and enjoy an elephant ride or an exhilarating bamboo raft trip.
Day 9 Chiang Mai Continue the Chiang Mai experience with a traditional Thai massage, experiment with Thai cooking or find bargains at the night bazaar.
Days 10-11 Chiang Rai Chill out on the banks of the Kok River in the picturesque rural town of Tha Ton before boarding a local boat for a trip down to Chiang Rai.
Day 12 Golden Triangle Head into the infamous Golden Triangle where the borders of Thailand, Laos and Burma collide and maybe take a boat ride down the mighty Mekong River.
Days 13-15 Bangkok Return to Chiang Mai after some heavy duty travelling and then it's onward bound for Bangkok. Hit the streets of this vibrant city and discover why Khao San Road is such a well known travellers' hangout.

Monday, June 27, 2005

Redwoods!!!!!



Awesome place....Shady Grove around Crescent City in Redwood National Park. Go. Enjoy it. Play with the trees (careful, they could stomp you OR eat you...see the picture of me getting attacked). My mom is REALLY strong.

Friday, June 24, 2005

Crater Lake










One great secret of the United States - Crater Lake. My mom and I were flabbergasted at the immense beauty this not-so-well known place has. Formed 6000 years ago from an erupted volcano, the crater is about 6 miles across and a tecnicolor blue molded with turquoise that is just unbelievable. The lake's beauty combined with the fact that the park has a TON of snow left made it very special. I HIGHLY recommend you go, and when you do, hike down to the water (1 mile down) - there is only one trail down. Also, go in July or August because then you can take the only boat allowed on the lake around the perimiter and to the mini-volcano island in the middle.

Wednesday, June 22, 2005

More Crater Lake!

You have to go! If you are coming here from Portland, here's the route to take:
Highway 84 East to Exit 13 (Hwy 126). Follow city roads and take Hwy 126 to SR 97 at Madias. It takes you alongside the mountains and into the Oregon desert.

Monday, June 20, 2005

Butchart Gardens

The Butchart Gardens in Victoria are absolutely goregous! They made me want a house just so I could grow some roses and pretend to have a somewhat green thumb! The greens all melded together beautifully and all of the colors jumbled together to create a very picturesque place. In addition to flowers, trees, and bushes of all sorts, there is a hog-type thing you have to rub for good luck....hopefully it works.

Friday, June 17, 2005

Heellloooooo Caaavvveeessss.

What better to do on a rainy Oregon day than go to the Oregon Caves? Pictured here is...well... either stalactites, cave bacon, stalagmites, shelfs, calcite - all things we saw.
Cool cave info: It takes 1,000 years for a stalactite to grow one inch and if you take a piece of cave with you, the next 15 years of your life will probably be spent in jail. These caves are not as cool as the Mammoth or Luray caves, but they are definitely interesting.
It is always humbling to be in complete darkness for a few minutes and really scary too.

Thursday, June 16, 2005

Mooooove Over

Well hello there elk friends! It was in Redwood National Park that we encountered these large beasts. Were they in a fence you ask...NO! Which is great except that they could kill you in 2 seconds flat. Much like gender segregation in an elementary school, the male elk ate in one field adjacent to the female field. I had only seen an elk head (thanks dad!), which is neat in and of itself - elk are beautiful and quite strong.
After our run in with the elks, we went to see some Redwoods. As always, they were not a disappointment. We managed to find a grove of trees that was recomended to us by a park ranger we ran into at a restaurant...should you ever go to this park, go to "Stout Grove." For lack of better words, it was awesome. It was raining and because of the mammoths, we managed to keep quite dry.

Wednesday, June 15, 2005

Mendocino

After going up, around, down, and in loop-de-loops on Highway 1 for a good many hours, my mom and I arrived in the great town of Mendocino. We were greeted with warnings of tsunamis and were told that there was a large earthquake just North of our destination. Thankfully within 5 minutes, the warning was called off and the ipod kept us from hearing about it on the radio (Those of you not familiar with Highway 1 - you really can't get off of it and it is nearly all coastal).
Mendocino is just beautiful and you can easily climb down to the water and putz around on the beach. Tide pools are easily accessible and there are coves that would be fun to kayak in.
It was in Mendocino that my mom and I became "The Stupids." Much like one of my favorite book families, we made our fair share of stupid remarks. For example, my mom, when asked if she would like coffee or tea replied "yes." I couldn't remember the word for goose for the life of me and identfied the poor creature as a duck. I also fell down while running and made quite a lovely sight for all watching :) And that was just day one...

Sunday, June 05, 2005

Summer 05

Woo hoo. This summer is going to be fun filled with traveling on anything from an elephant to a rickshaw. My nomadic lifestyle begins in the good old US with my mom up and down the West Cost. Next I will be in Thailand with lovely Leslie and then Cambodia and Vietnam by myself. This summer will be the perfect culmination to a long teaching year and hopefully a peaceful experience to ready me for another interesting year. I hope you enjoy it :)

Saturday, February 26, 2005

Tahoe!

Gotta love Tahoe! Most of my friends are really good skiiers...that left Ben and me to ski together while all others went and basically paved their own scary paths down unchartered mountains. Ben and I had a great time trying not to fall the whole day and met up with the experts for the shady "free" lunch.

Saturday, January 01, 2005

Rose Bowl!

Oooohhhhh if only Michigan had won the day would have been soooooo much better. Thank you Ben for driving down and Steve for coming with and letting us stay at your place.