Sunday, December 30, 2007

the road to mordor

First off, Happy New Year everyone (if anyone is still reading - not sure cause you lazy bastards aren't commenting!). I've fallen a bit behind on this thing because decent internet access has been surprising hard to come by in New Zealand - it was faster in Laos! Anyway...

On Friday Maya and I left Rotorua, feeling a little underwhelmed and a lot poorer financially (shit is so expensive in New Zealand that it's almost inevitable that we'll end up feeling ripped off); we drove about 3 hours south to Tongariro National Park where we planned to take on the Tongariro Crossing, a 17-kilometer (about 11-mile) hike that usually takes at least 7 hours to complete, and which, I just found out a second ago, actually had two people die on it last year. Basically, it's no relaxing stroll along the beach, and while Maya and I have some serious hiking under our belts - we made a 7-hour climb halfway down and back up the Grand Canyon last year - we're not exactly what you'd consider to be the outdoorsy, trekking types, so we (particularly Maya) were a little nervous going in. Our trepidation wasn't helped by the fact that we had booked only one full day (the next day, Saturday) in the area so we were praying for the weather to be on our side, and yet, as we drove through the National Park to our guesthouse, we found ourselves in an absolutely torrential downpour. Then as we arrived at our accomodations, an attractively rustic-looking ski lodge, we saw the hikers who had been stuck on the trail during the rain returning from their trek, and they looked miserable, all drenched from head to foot, covered in mud, and limping.

That night we packed our backpacks - with multiple layers of cloths, snacks, lots of water - and went to bed around 10:30 - the shuttle driving us to the head of the trail left at 7:30am the next morning and we had breakfast before that at 7, so we set our alarm for 6. Now, you should know that Maya has had an issue for most of our trip - the night preceding any activity that you would really want solid rest before (like, when we hiked the unrestored Great Wall), she hasn't been able to sleep. And such was the case that night. Even with the help of two pills and earplugs, when the alarm started beeping at 6am, Maya had only gotten a few winks of rest, and she was fucking pissed. "I'm not going to do it!" she said quite for a few times of the Crossing, "I can't do it." But while Maya can whine, pout, and scream with the best of them, when push comes to shove, she's pretty fucking badass, and when she finally calmed down, stepped into the hallway, which was freezing cold, and was shocked into awakedness by a cold blast of outside air, she decide to go for it.

Good thing we did, because the weather ended up being perfect, and Tongiriro Crossing ended up being possibly the most amazing hike we've gone on anywhere. We climbed through Martian-looking plains...

...up crumbly lava flows, past snow-capped peaks...

...above the rather vaginal "Red Crater"...

...right to the banks of surreally colored mountain-top mineral lakes...


...and to the side of the active volcano Mount Ngauruhoe. I think I said of the Great Wall of China that it seemed like something out of The Lord of the Rings; well, Mount Ngauruhoe literally is something of The Lord of the Rings - it was the stand-in for Mount Doom in Peter Jackson's movies.


And the long, steep, exhausting climb up the side of Ngauruhoe was the road to Mordor in the films. Like true nerds, Maya and I joked about Gollum hiding behind the corner of various crags and recited lines of Frodo and Sam's dialogue as we made our somewhat less epic and arduous journey (we finished the Crossing in just about 8 hours, including breaks for lunch and to snap hundreds of photos), feeling not unlike two little hobbits awed in the face of nature's majesty.

Tuesday, December 25, 2007

kiwi xmas

It's the day after Christmas here in New Zealand, or as they call it, Boxing Day. Don't ask me what the fuck Boxing Day is, but whereas nothing was open yesterday here in the rotten-eggs-smelling town of Rotorua, almost nothing is almost here today. (It took Maya and I 3 internet cafes before we found one that was open.)

Christmas away from home is always weird, I guess. Holidays (or birthdays, anniversaries, any of the things that normal people celebrate, really) aren't a big deal in my family, but Christmas has been the one day a year when I've always come home from wherever I was, and then, with my parents and at least one of my two brothers, went for dinner at my Aunt's place, where I saw her, her husband, my two cousins, and my grandfather. I don't see my immediate family that often, let alone my extended family, but I can't remember a year when I wasn't there for Christmas (there might have been one - I just can't remember it), so it is weird to be away, and so far away.

New Zealand has been beautiful - and fucking annoying. Part of this has to be our current state of mind as our trip draws to a close - it's like being stuck right in the middle between two worlds (home and halfway around the globe from home) and not being sure where we'd rather be, so we're not quite happy, no matter how we look at things. But it's also been annoying because, well, New Zealand is annoying. The weather has been annoying as fuck so far - it will be the most gorgeous blue-skied and sunny day one second; the next, you're caught under a thunderhead that's pissing down rain even as you can see those sunny blue skies right ahead taunting you. The driving has been annoying as fuck, too - whereas the roads are long, straight, and largely traffic-less in Australia (at least where we were), the roads in New Zealand are winding, narrow, occasionally unpaved, tipping over vertiginous cliffsides, and the native drivers are fucking maniacs - they drive retardedly fast even on the most serpentine strips, and because the roads are generally one-lane and full of blind bends, they end up tailgating you when they think you driving too slowly (i.e. not suicidally). The owner of our guesthouse in Rotorua explained that everyone in New Zealand starts driving at 15, and so there are a lot of inexperienced, hormonal drivers out there, and as a result a lot of bad driving, and a lot of accidents. Then there are the prices - like Australia, shit seems mad expensive. Of course, we're spoiled, having just come from Southeast Asia, but shit really is expensive. It's almost impossible to get dinner at a half-decent restuarant for less than $50 each; a music CD averages about $30; and most of the attractions charge, at least, $25 per person admission fees. We're fucking unemployed, so this shit is gonna break the bank quick.

Still, despite such obstacles, we managed to see some amazing shit. While staying in a beachfront hostel in Whitianga on the Coromandel Peninsula for a few days, we hiked through the bush, past rolling pastures...


...through tangled jungle, and by majestic coastline...

...to the world-famous Cathedral Cove.


Another day we went on a boat ride through the choppy surf (shit was like a rollercoaster) along the rugged, volcanic coastline, visiting small islands and strange crags rising from the ocean.

And in Rotorua (which is plagued by that aforementioned rotten-egg smell due to the town's biggest tourist draw: it's sulfurous geothermal activity ((geysers, bubbling mud pools, hot springs, volcanos, that sort of shit)), we walked through Wai-O-Tapu geothermal park, where we watched the Lady Knox Geyser erupt some 30 feet into the air...

...and walked among amazing formations like the Champagne Pool...

...and the Devil's Bath, all bubbling up from the earth's hot, acidic, mineral-pigmented core.

We also went to Mitai, a Maori village site where we ate traditional Maori food called hangi (meat and potatoes cooked on hot stones under the earth for 3 hours), watched a cultural show (not as cheesy as it sounds) complete with singing, dancing, a weapons demonstration, and the infamous Maori pre-battle pump-up ritual, Haka, which goes something like this:



After the show, our guide - this huge, intimidating, tattooed Maori woman - led us through the dark jungle to her tribe's sacred spring, which had massive eels swimming in it (she claimed that they had swum there over a period of 3 years from California and would likely swim back at some point to die), and had the clearest water Maya and I had ever seen. The spring also had glow worms gathered around its bank, creating eerie flourescent constellations over the water; our guide explained that the glow worms were actually not "worms" but the larvae of a particular type of fly - maggots, in other words - and that the glow was actually due to an enzyme in the larvae's feces. Basically, we were oohing and ahing over a bunch of maggots' glowing shit. Still, by the time we left Mitai around 10:30pm (we'd been there for nearly 4 hours), we felt like we'd learned a lot about the Maori traditions (including their insane facial tattoos), which was cool since the Maori are a much bigger minority in New Zealand than we had realized (everyone working at the Auckland airport, for instance, seemed to be Maori).

As for our New Zealand Christmas, it was a strange one indeed. We spent most of it hiking through the bush right around our rather remote moutainside/lakeside guesthouse just outside of Rotorua, a location we selected mostly to be away from that rotten-egg smell. True to the New Zealand weather pattern so far, it was raining for much of our hike, but it was still a pretty awesome time, something like walking through a prehistoric landscape of massive ferns and towering redwoods, everything covered with moss and strange fungi. We didn't see any dinosaurs, but the lake we were walking along - Tikitapu (Blue Lake) - is reputed to have its own lake monster, named Taniwha. While we didn't spot the beast, we did see lots of New Zealanders laying out "sunning" themselves and/or picnicing on the lake's sandy beach, and swimming, waterskiiing, and jetskiing on its waters, even though it was freezing cold and raining out. Those Kiwis are fucking crazy.

Drenched after our hike, and after some lunch, we drove into Rotorua, which was basically a ghost town and walked through the hot springs and bubbling mud pools in the free-access Kuirau Park. They were kind of underwhelming - but the playground in the park was awesome, all futuristic-looking and interactive, much cooler than any playground we'd ever seen in the States. We played on that for a while - two Maori kids stared at us the whole time like we were crazy - until the rain got too hard and we had to retreat to our car.

When we returned to the guesthouse, a huge French family has arrived for the night (which they would be spending in the room right next to ours), including mom, dad, two little girls (one 5; the other, 6), and a tiny baby, not even 6-months old yet. As we stepped into the main door, the baby was wailing its head off and burping - we were not happy. This whole trip, we'd been talking about how annoying all the Frnech tourists are, and how they all seem to bring their half-naked children along with them to the most ungodly regions of the world. "French babies" had become a common, half-joking pet peeve of ours - Conan O'Brien does a hilarious impression of a French baby sometimes, and I would do my (not-so-good) impression of his impression in dismay whenever we were confronted with some new Gallic brat. It seemed somehow fitting that the Christian God would have given us, the atheist and the Jew, our own French-baby roommate as gift on his son's birthday.

But as we cooked our rather bizarre Christmas dinner in the guesthouse's shared kitchen - a tomato, scallion, and feta cheese salad (Christmas colors, it turns out!); BBQ lamb chops; garlic and butter potatoes; and a horrible store-made apple pie that made me wish dearly for my Aunt Ellen's delicious homemade pie - the clearly very harried mom of this French family told us sympathetically that her baby was "not a screamer" and that we shouldn't have any problems sleeping. And as it turned out, the French baby made hardly a peep all night, and though I haven't gotten a solid night's rest since we arrived in New Zealand, Maya and I both slept better than we have in days. Our own Christmas miracle.

Saturday, December 22, 2007

the end is nigh

Though we'd only spent a week in Australia, by the time we left a few days ago, we felt pretty fucking satisfied. We'd snorkeled and scuba-dived at the Great Barrier Reef, we'd hung in a town full of kangaroos, we'd driven through "the bush," seen massive crocs chomping chicken wings and massive endangered turtles laying their eggs. We'd even enjoyed a stomach-bursting Aussie BBQ, care of our awesome Bed & Breakfast owners. Stuffed with grilled meats, and a couple liters of Bundaberg's famous ginger beer and rum-and-cola-in-a-can, we flew off for 2 weeks in New Zealand, the final country and the final 14 days of our epic trip.

And the first day we arrived in Auckland, New Zealand, an earthquake hit the country. But it was on the other side of North Island (which is the half of the nation we're spending our time in), and we didn't even feel a quiver. Which isn't to say that we're feeling fine...

There are definitely things we look forward to about coming home. We miss our friends and family a lot. And it will be great not living out of a backpack, and finally sleeping in our own bed. But I'd be lying if I didn't say that the imminent end of our journey has our hearts heavy and has a dark cloud hanging over the New Zealand landscape, as beautiful as it is (more on that to come). But while this is almost certainly the most awesome thing that we've done in our lives so far, we don't plan on it being the most awesome thing we've ever done, so maybe we shouldn't feel so bummed out after all.

Tuesday, December 18, 2007

down under

With Malaysia sitting atop our list of countries to revisit (we'd made the most new friends there, spent the second shortest time - just a week - there, and of course, there's the fucking Thaipusam festival still to see), Maya and I headed off for a week in Australia. Arriving in Sydney felt at once comforting after the last 3 months of Asian insanity (we can actually drink the tap water?! No squat toilets?!), but also strangely anticlimactic. A safe western city - yawn. (An opera house shaped like a bunch of big clam shells - double yawn.) And after Southeast Asia, shit seemed really expensive (and even compared to the U.S., it is). The next day we were flying down to Hervey Bay, and from there we were renting a car to drive to Bundaberg and Bargara Beach, where we'd be spending 4 days, visiting the Great Barrier Reef, among other activities; so we spent much of our afternoon in Sydney looking for CDs to listen to during our forthcoming drive - the new Serj Tankian solo album and the new Dillinger Escape Plan album. There were tons of record stores near our guesthouse (which was in a trendy, Village-like area called Newtown), but we couldn't find the Serj album for less than 20 Aussie dollars (which is just about 20 U.S. dollars!) and the Dillinger for less than 30 dollars(!) (so we bought the former, passed on the latter - both are really fucking good, by the way; a warning from Maya about the Serj CD: "The songs might get stuck in your head and drive you insane!").

But if Sydney seemed anticlimactic after everything that has come before it on our trip, once we got down to the coast and started driving around "the bush," as the Aussies call it, the great Down Under did not disappoint. First, there was just the view from the plane of the coast, the ocean, the islands, and the Reef - simply stunning. We couldn't help but be filled with anticipation.


Then there was the driving - my first time driving on the "other" side of the road, which has been a bit of an adventure but not nearly as difficult as I had feared (my biggest problem is that I keep turning on the windshield wipers whenever I try to turn-signal). And the landscape has been amazing - wild, wide-open countryside; vast, dramatic skies; perfect clouds...

...and, we were particularly excited to come across, the occasional kangaroo-crossing street sign.

Most of all, it has been all those crazy Aussie animals that have made our time here so outstanding - in the last 5 days, we've had run-ins with technicolor fish, 4 of the 5 most venomous snakes in the world, hungry crocs, suburban kangaroos, a ginormous nesting turtle - and a little dog named Buddy (who belongs to the owners of the B&B, Golden Cane, we're staying at) that even Maya (who's generally terrified of dogs) can't help but like...

Technicolor Fish: On our first full day along the coast, Maya and I woke at 5am, had our "brekkie" (as the Aussies call breakfast), drove an hour and a half through the bush, and went on a 9-hour trip out on the Great Barrier Reef. First, there was a 90-minute boat ride bouncing over the high waves - we saw at least two other passengers puking from motion sickness - and then, once above the Reef, Maya and I snorkeled and even scuba-dived (our first time doing the latter) in the midst of the most ridiculous menagerie of tropical fish - I don't know any of their names (parrot fish? Long, thin tube-shaped fish?), but it seemed like basically every species in Finding Nemo, other than the sharks.

4 of the 5 Most Venomous Snakes in the World: Another day we went to this place called Snakes Down Under, where this crazy Steve Irwin-esque Aussie dude, Ian Jenkins, runs a little reptile zoo, where he handles 4 of the 5 most venomous snakes in the world (all 5 hail from Australia). Visitors aren't allowed to handle any of those, but they are allowed to handle a big python - and since I had just gotten a snake tattoo before Maya and I left the States, and since this trip is, in some ways, supposed to be about gaining new strength and facing old fears (a fear of snakes being one of mine), I felt like I had to partake. And you know what, I really wasn't freaked out at all - it's been so long since I've actually tested my supposed fear of snakes that, it seems, the fear has faded away without me even realizing it.

Hungry Crocs: At Snakes Down Under, this Jenkins dude also feeds what turns out to be an absolutely humongous crocodile. We had no idea of the beast's proportions as it was laying at the bottom of a small muddy pool in its holding pen; then Jenkins - holding a fresh, fully feathered chicken wing in his hand, and wearing a Santa Claus cap on top of his Paul Hogan hat - slapped the water with a long bamboo pole and the croc, which must have been 10 feet long, exploded out of the surface, sending water everywhere as if a bomb had gone off. The creature then crawled after him and snapped the wing from his fingers with an awful crunch. That's one powerful motherfucking beast - and one crazy motherfucking Aussie.



Suburban Kangaroos: Another day Maya and I drove to this small beach town called Woodgate, where, according to our B&B owners, kangaroos are known to roam the streets and backyards. As soon as we got there (around 12:30pm), we spotted three kangaroos bounding across the road ahead of us, but when we asked a grizzled old local when/where was best for 'roo-watching, he told us that the "nasty pests" are "like Mexicans" during the midday, spenting it just "sleeping in the shade," and really only come out in the afternoon. So, with some time to kill, we decided to go swimming - the beach was virtually deserted; the surf, high; the ocean, bathwater-warm. We didn't have any towels or our swimming suits on us, so we just stripped down to our undies and jumped in.

After a few hours and a quick lunch, we drove slowly through the town, looking for kangaroos - and they were fucking everywhere! Whole crowds of them - huge adult males, cute little ones, and even mothers with babies in their pouches - hanging out in people's yards along Woodgate's perfect suburban lanes, just lounging, sitting, standing, grazing, and staring back at us! It was bizarre and amazing, everything we could have hoped for - and yet as we repeatedly stopped our car, gawked, and snapped endless pictures, the locals just continued with whatever they were doing, almost oblivious to what was to them an everyday presence. Maya and I could only conclude that if monitor lizards are Bangkok's squirrels, then apparently, kangaroos are Woodgate's.



A Ginormous Nesting Turtle: Perhaps our most remarkable animal encounter was later that same day, when we went to the Mon Repos Conservation Park, a turtle rookery where visitors can see endangered loggerheads laying their eggs during their late fall/early winter nesting season. Maya and I got there around 6:30pm, and along with a group of maybe 40 other visitors, we were led by down to the quickly darkening beach, where, we were told, a turtle had been spotted crawling onto the beach. As we approached, however, we saw that the creature - which was huge, 3 or 4 feet long, and maybe half as wide - was making a U-turn back toward the water. The female scientist leading us explained that the turtle must have seen us and been scared off, but she said that another turtle was up on the beach not too far away and had already begun digging out her nest. Unfortunately, when another scientist went to check on this turtle, she discovered that it was a very young female who didn't seem to know how to properly dig her nest, and she had already abandoned her first attempt and was on to a second; the researchers didn't want us to disturb her in the middle of her struggles, so they told us to all sit on the sand and wait. As we were waiting, we spotted a dark shape emerging from the water directly below us; it was, most likely, the original turtle re-emerging from the ocean. The first scientist told us that we would have to all shuffle over while keeping low to the ground to get out of the way of the turtle without her seeing us and getting scared away again, so, in a truly absurd scene, all 40-plus of us crab-walked and crawled through the sand as the loggerhead lumbered out of the water and up onto the sand, seeming to follow us the whole way, forcing everyone to crab-walk and crawl even further. (Our undies were still wet from our earlier swim, so Maya got to do all this in a skirt without any panties on! Don't worry - the skirt was long and rather tight, so there was no free show for anyone.) Then we sat frozen for a long time as the turtle set up almost right next to the group and started making her nest. We ended up watching her for over 2-hours (till 10:30pm or so), as she meticulously dug out her egg chamber with her two back flippers, as she lay 129 eggs, as she filled up and buried over the nest with sand, and then, as she crawled back into the ocean. It was a ridiculously arduous process; big loggerheads are clumsy on land, and this one was clearly exhausted by the end. Plus, the turtles expel the salt that accumulates in them during all their time in the ocean through their eyes in what are known as "turtle tears," which meant that as this loggerhead labored through the night, she appeared to be crying. What made the experience all the more powerful and poignant was that this turtle, like many others, had misjudged her nesting spot, placing it below the high-tide mark, which meant that, if left there, her eggs would all drown. In such cases, however, after the turtles return to sea, the scientists move the eggs to higher nests that they have made themselves; and in this case, Maya and I got to help carry the freshly-laid turtle eggs into the new nest. Unlike snakes, I've always loved turtles - I had many of them as pets as a kid, and there's something about their solitary nature, the way they carry their homes on their back, their slow-and-steady approach to life, their old, craggy, wizen faces that really resonates with me. As Maya and I watched the massive loggerhead crawl back through the darkness into the ocean, knowing that her species is facing possible extinction, and that for all her hard work, the nest she had just made would have been doomed if it had not been for the scientists here, I realized that I had discovered another thing I like about turtles: their persistence in the face of futility, fighting the good fight even when defeat seems assured. Which is really what it feels like sometimes, trying to live a good life in this world of ours.

Thursday, December 13, 2007

batu caves

The day after the "canopy walk," we went to see the Batu Caves, one of the most important sites of Hindu worship in the world. Every year, during the end of January/beginning of February, thousands of devotees make a pilgrimage to the caves for the Thaipusam festival, where they engage in various acts of devotion, notably, carrying/enduring various types of kavadi or burdens. As good ol' wikipedia explains, "at its simplest this may entail carrying a pot of milk, but mortification of the flesh by piercing the skin, tongue or cheeks with vel skewers is also common. The most spectacular practice is the vel kavadi, essentially a portable altar up to two meters tall, decorated with peacock feathers and attached to the devotee through 108 vels pierced into the skin on the chest and back. Fire walking and flagellation may also be practiced. It is claimed that devotees are able to enter a trance, feel no pain, do not bleed from their wounds and have no scars left behind."

Unfortunately, we were a month too early for the fest, but the caves site was pretty fucking spectacular nonetheless. Here's Maya outside the main gate - you can see the stairway of 272 steps leading up into the darkness of the main cave, the Temple Cave... as well, of course, as the 120-foot-plus gold-painted statue of the Hindu diety Lord Murugan.


As you walk up the 272 steps, there are wild monkeys everywhere, playing in the nearby trees; leaping, sitting, and sliding down the stairway railing; and some, even crawling around the steps themselves.

We saw this one enjoying a flower garland left as an offering inside the cave.

And we saw another monkey taking a completely unprovoked and unexpected swipe at an Indian dude walking down the steps not far from us. So yeah, they may be cute but are not to be trusted.

The temple cave, as you can see, is fucking huge, and - as you can't see - is full of colorful tableaus depicting a variety of bizarre dieties in a variety of equally bizarre interactions (blue multi-armed women standing on little baby-sized men with handlebar moustaches; cows with the heads, and boobs, of beautiful women, etc.).

Me, below some of temple cave's many drippy stalactites.

After the temple cave, Maya and I took a personal tour of another Batu cave, the accurately-but-not-so-creatively-named "Dark Cave." Here we are before the tour in our spiffy spelunker's helmets. The highlight of the tour was probably when, about 10 minutes into the cavern, the walkway came to life with all sorts of creepy-crawlies - it was like something out of an Indiana Jones movie - most of which turned out to be cockroaches that live off of all the guano (bat excrement) dropped on the cave floor.


Finally, here I am standing in front of a big statue of an insane-looking green monkey-faced dude at the bottom of the temple cave. Can't pretend to know much more than that (Maya says that she read that he is the most rarely worshipped diety from the Hindu pantheon - can't imagine why).


Our visit has only made us want to come back during Thaipusam and see all the insanity for ourselves - if not actually "mortify our flesh."

welcome to the jungle

Malaysia boasts some of the most spectacular rainforests in the world, and remarkably, some of it lies not far outside of KL. In fact, even right from inside the city, you can see deep green forest-covered moutains brushing up against the sky. In between visiting metal stores and rocking out at hardcore shows, Maya and I went to FRIM (Forest Research Institute Malaysia), a scientific jungle-study center that was only recently opened to tourists and which is still off the beaten track (though I can't imagine that this will remain the case for long). There we tackled the "canopy walk," a precarious 600-foot-long rope-and-wooden-plank trail hanging from the trees some 90 feet above the ground, right in the midst of the jungle canopy, where it's used by researchers. The walk was ridiculously bouncy and the structure seemed ready to snap apart at any second, and the views were amazing - we saw families of monkeys leaping from tree top to tree top, and, through occasional breaks in the tangled foliage, we saw the KL skyline, with its famous Petronas Towers, in the distance. Indeed, civilization as we know it seemed fantastically far away.






Wednesday, December 12, 2007

kl rock city (part 2)

Unlike Beijing, where there are tons of metal bands playing live on a regular basis but almost none of them bother to put out albums, in Malaysia, there are tons of local bands writing, recording, and releasing albums, but there are very few live metal shows. Blame this on the government's last banning of "black metal" a little over a year ago and the subsequent raid of a metal fest in Kuala Lumpur and the detainment of over 300 of the fans and musicians there. Oddly, however, while Malaysian metal bands may be keeping to the studio and to the practice space for the time being, local and international hardcore bands seem to play out in KL almost every month.

In fact, during Maya's and my one week in the city, there was a big annual hardcore fest called Bridging Oceans 3, featuring Southeast Asian hardcore bands from Malaysia, Singapore (or "Spore," as the kids call it), the Philipines, and Indonesia, going down. I found out about it through this cool site, Malaysian Gigs, that I stumbled on while looking to see if there were any shows in KL while we were in town, and Maya and I showed up at the venue, the MCPA Theatre upstairs in the Chinese Assembly Hall - a rather official-looking convention center right by KL's Chinatown - bright and early at 1:30 in the afternoon this past Sunday, when the gig was set to go down. There was some kind of Chinese book fair taking place on the ground floor, which made for many awkward interactions between the black-clad and tattooed hardcore kids coming through to the fest and the very straightlaced book fair attendees. And on the second floor, right outside the MCPA theatre, there was a little exhibition in honor of Sun Yat-Sen, the first president of the Republic of China; all the hardcore kids seemed to find this hilarious, and many took photos of themselves giggling in front of a large photo of the communist leader.

In true DIY fashion, the gig didn't start until after 2:30, over an hour late, but other than that, there wasn't much that Maya and I could complain about - the show was pretty fucking awesome. The crowd was an amazing assortment of Malaysian, Indian, and Arab hardcore kids, including at least two girls in Muslim headscarves(!), many wearing shirts with "MYHC" (an acronym for "Malaysian hardcore" and a play off of "NYHC,"New York hardcore") emblazoned on them. As soon as the first band, a cool Malaysian quartet called Back on Track with an adorably nerdy-looking singer, hit the stage, the crowd went apeshit, moshing, circle-pitting, and skanking, sometimes with a weird synchronicity that suggested the violent choreographed dance routine of some bizarro hardcore boyband. Even more remarkable, however, was just how fucking friendly everyone was - kids smiled at us, said hello or welcome, some shook our hands, one complimented my Pantera T-shirt. And almost as soon as we showed up, a skinheaded Singaporean dude (named Yus) in a Madball basketball jersey came up to us, asked us where we were from (he was very impressed that we were from NYC since most of his favorite bands were NYHC groups like Sick of It All, Cro-Mags, and, well, Madball), and started introducing us to other people (turned out, Yus knew just about everyone there), telling us about the MYHC scene, and just generally shooting the shit. Later, in between sets, a random kid noticed that while everyone else in our general area, including Maya, had a chair to sit on, I was just squatting down on the floor, and in a truly unprecedented act of thoughtfulness, he lifted a chair from the stack behind him and placed it by me, gesturing for me to sit. He then chatted with Maya for about half an hour before excusing himself - "I have to go mosh," he said simply - and disppearing into the crowd.

As for the bands, they were totally solid, ranging from old school to new school, the more punk-inflected and the more metal-influenced. And some even cranked out a number of highly entertaining covers of songs that we actually knew, by bands including Hatebreed, Sick of It All, and Black Flag. The most popular act of the night had to be the Malaysian group xELEVENx, who had almost the entire audience piling on top of each other, trying to get to the mic to sing/shout along to every song which they clearly all knew by heart.



I ended up buying a CD of theirs (and a T-shirt of this "Spore" moshcore band, Overthrown), and Maya and I ended up hanging out at the show for nearly 7 hours, leaving only right before the final band, and only because we were absolutely starving. It turned out that My Chemical Romance were playing that night at the stadium almost exactly across the highway from the Chinese Assembly Hall, and when we walked to the nearby skytrain station after getting dinner in Chinatown, the My Chem show was just getting out. As we pushed disdainfully through the throngs of Malaysian emo kids (who were sopping wet because it had started raining midway through their outdoor concert - and probably because they'd been weeping along to every song), one of the kids, a young dude, looked at Maya and said as we passed, "So beautiful," followed by what sounded to both of us like, "Jew-bol," which Maya and I joked must be Malay for "Jewess" or something. I decided that while, yes, Maya is "so beautiful," she must seem extra-hot - like the forbidden fruit or something - as a Jewess in a Muslim land. Not to mention as a newly minted member of the MYHC scene among a sea of emo kids.

Monday, December 10, 2007

kl rock city (part 1)

When Maya and I first started telling people at home about the trip we were about to embark on, some of our friends, family, and random acquaintances thought it sounded fucking cool; others thought we were fucking crazy; most probably thought the trip sounded fucking cool and we're fucking crazy. One of those who thought we were just crazy was Maya's cousin Felix. Felix is a few years older than we are, and he's a security guard for one of the building complexes down in our 'hood in Coney Island. He thought we were nuts, and in particular, he thought we were nuts to go to Malaysia, mostly because it's an officially Muslim country. "Be very careful," he warned us, adding to Maya: "And don't let anyone know that you're Jewish," advice seconded by Maya's mother.

So, right now we're in Kuala Lumpur, where we've been for the last 5 days or so, and as shit turns out, KL (as the locals refer to their hometown) definitely is Muslim - there are gorgeous mosques all over the city; women in headscarves and even full-on burkas walking everywhere, sitting in cafes, strolling through the malls; there are restuarants advertising things that no restuarant in the States would wisely advertise, like "Iraqi food" and "Iranian cuisine" - but it's also, well, not. For instance, Christmas is fucking huge here - there are decorations everywhere, carols playing in the shopping centers; it's fucking bizarre. And most of the men that we see walking with the women in burkas are dressed like total wiggers (or "miggers," or whatever the term would be). And the city is actually insanely multicultural, full of Southeast Asians, Chinese, Indians, Arabs, and even the occasional whitey.

If anyone thought we had reason to watch our backs in Malaysia (and they did), it has turned out to be quite the contrary: Kuala Lumpur has proven to be the friendliest city we've visited yet (and the safest and cleanest after Tokyo and Kyoto). Everyone smiles at us, random people say hello (almost everyone speaks really good English, which is the country's second offical language), and we've had almost absurdly congenial conversations with Malay taxi drivers, Bangladeshi waiters, the Iraqi dude at the internet cafe...

And we've eaten the best food - hummus and kabobs, grilled lamb chops, dim sum, "chicken rice" (which, as the name suggests is just chicken and rice but so perfectly prepared that we've eaten it almost everyday for lunch at a restuarant where we've become quick regulars) - and even more impressively, have yet to get sick (a first for any Southeast Asian country).

But maybe best of all, Kuala Lumpur is rock 'n' roll as all fuck. This is actually a very big surprise, not only because Malaysia is Muslim but because the country's Muslim government's National Fatwa Council has gone out of its way in recent years to ban "black metal" - by which they actually meant any heavy music listened to or played by people in black T-shirts, not just the church-burning, corpse-painted brand of metal commonly called by that name - in the country (for more on the bannings, click here). And yet, on our second day in KL, Maya and I went off to find this metal record store, Nebiula HM Shop, which is listed on the metaltravelguide website; we ended up at this shopping center, Campbell Complex, off the beaten tourist track, and on the 1st floor, which had not just the one, but four metal-oriented stores. Nebiula is the best of these, and it's run by this awesome dude Jaei, who's the vocalist of one of Malaysia's leading bands, Sil Khannaz. Maya and I talked to him for an hour or so, as he played us music by his band and a variety of other Malaysian bands (he had a good two shelves full of albums by local bands, way more than we've seen anywhere else on this trip, except Japan) and told us about the scene. He said that the Malaysian government has been "very difficult," and that after the ban on "black metal" (strangely, most of the local bands, even now, seem to play in that actual style), much of the scene had to be rebuilt from the ground up. I ended up buying almost 10 CDs, and he ended up giving me another 4 or so as "free gifts."

After Nebiula, we stopped by the other stores, and in one, we had the most hilarious interaction with the totally adorable middle-aged proprietress, who walked us through her shop's metal section, describing various products with the sweetest little voice: "Ooh, this band, they play death/grind. Very nice." "Slayer, 'Live Undead' T-shirt. Very old-school vibe." We were giggling almost uncontrollably the whole time, and Maya eventually asked the woman if she actually listens to metal, and she explained that metal is very popular and her customers always ask for that kind of music so she has to stock it, and she started listening so she would know about it and that she did like a lot of it. "Some people think it is just noise, but I think some is actually very nice," she said. Maya told her that she was a great saleswoman, but that the whole experience was very crazy, Maya said, like "having my mother trying to sell me metal," which is pretty much how I felt about it, too. (To be continued)

Saturday, December 8, 2007

boy oh ladyboy

Returning from Ko Chang and swinging through Bangkok for one final night before our flight out to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, the next day, we went to the world-famous kathoey cabaret, Calypso, at the luxury Asia Hotel - where we definitely were not staying, by the way; our home for the night was a way more budget joint, coincidentally called the Malaysia Hotel. The Malaysia had been recommended to us by our old friend Max from Vietnam - he told us that it's a place with a dark past, the onetime hangout of serial killer Charles Sobhraj, who preyed on Western tourists in the Seventies, luring them to their deaths with promises of cheap drugs. Now, Max told us, the Malaysia was a gay hotel and the best budget place to stay in Bangkok - as long as you didn't mind all the "poofs mincing about," as he put it. We didn't.

In fact, staying at this notorious hotel with its blood-spattered history and going to see the Calypso cabaret seemed like the perfect way to bid farewell to Thailand - and to celebrate the eve of the 3-month mark (Dec. 5) of our trip.

The cabaret, in particular, was fittingly insane. The theater was exactly what you'd expect of a cabaret - all plush red-satin seats, little round tables with small, dim lamps on them, and overpriced drinks. And the show was a kitschy, flamboyant, sometimes hilarious mix of dancing and lipsyncing to classic showtunes, frenetic flamenco, cheesy Asian ballads, really cheesy techno, etc., performed by a cast of, I'm guessing, 50, at least 30 of whom were ladyboys. And not just any ladyboys, but the most convincing, glamorous, and, in some cases, dropdead gorgeous transvestites and/or transsexuals probably anywhere in the world (definitely click the link above for a look). As a straight man, I can say that it was truly a night of mixed emotions - attraction, dismay, disbelief, confusion, more attraction... Maya and I had read in BK magazine (which is kind of like Bangkok's Village Voice), that while, in the States, the average age that people have sex-change operations is in their 50s, the average age in Thailand is the mid-to-late 20s; this made me think that probably most of the ladyboys in the show were post-op and, for all intents and purposes, women, and so I didn't feel quite so conflicted admiring their voluptuous forms and sultry moves. As for Maya, this was one of the few times when she had no absolutely problem with me ogling scantily-clad "ladies." And she found my "issues" to be hilarious.

It was with similarly mixed emotions that we left Thailand the next morning. It definitely hadn't been our favorite country so far, and it wouldn't be our first to visit again, or our first to ever call home, but it had provided us with some of our greatest challenges and strangest - and gayest - memories.

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

the beach

Leaving Bangkok once again, we spent 4-and-a-half days on the island of Ko Chang for a little "vacation from our vacation," as I called it. We took a 5-hour-plus bus ride from Bangkok to the town of Trat, then a 15-minute-plus sawgtheow ride out of town through the jungle to the dock, a 20-plus-minute ferry from the mainland shore to the island, and a brief rumble along Ko Chang's one and only road before we finally arrived at the Paradise Palms bungalows, where we somehow lucked out and landed their "penthouse," a cozy little beachfront cabin...

...with a postcard-perfect palmtree-framed view of the ocean. The sun literally set over the lapping waves, right in front of our porch, bathing us and our room in orange warmth every dusk.

We came as close to doing nothing as possible for us. We swam in the warm, crystal water...

... (suffering through the occasional little jellyfish sting along the way), ate (lots of fruit, meat, and French fries), drank (Singha beer, and pineapple juice with a splash of rum), watched the sunset each day, and read. I had just finished reading an amazing book, Welcome to Hell, this Irish dude's absolutely gripping, harrowing memoir about his 8 years of wrongful incarceration in a Bangkok prison (while in Bangkok ourselves, Maya and I literally traded off reading chapters, we were so hooked); now on the island, I read another thought-provokingly relevant book, The Beach, the novel-cum-Leonardo DiCaprio flick (which I haven't seen, by the way - I can't stand DiCaprio) about backpackers seeking untouched utopia on a Thai island and finding much more than they bargained for. It's a derivative work - there's a little Heart of Darkness, a little Lord of the Flies - but a good read, nonetheless, and the author really nails backpackers in Southeast Asia: how they talk, brag, and dream, and how ultimately silly and deluded they often are - myself included, perhaps. That said, Maya and I weren't seeking any sort of utopia on Ko Chang, just a place to relax, to catch our breath, to get away from all the craziness of our trip so far. And in that, (despite Maya having to overcome her fear of canines by facing a few of the island's energetic beach dogs, and me getting some nasty coral cuts on my right foot and maybe even nastier sunburn on my back) I think we succeeded.

Friday, November 30, 2007

and then there was redlight (warning: sexual content - not for the faint of heart)

After our adventures setting/dodging shit on fire in Chiang Mai, Maya and I headed back to Bangkok for a few days on our way to the island of Ko Chang. Instead of staying in the northwestern tourist center of town, we decided to find a guesthouse in the center of the actual city where we'd have access to more public transportation options, like the skytrain and the subway, instead of having to rely on assholic taxi and tuk-tuk drivers, as we'd had to during our first time in Bangkok. We also decided that maybe one of the reasons we hadn't enjoyed that first visit so much was because we hadn't embraced the city...in all its depravity. Seeking to remedy that this time, we jumped onto the skytrain and headed off to Bangkok's world-famous/infamous Patpong redlight district.

Exiting the Sala Daeng skytrain station, we first had to navigate through a narrow, sweaty, crowded gauntlet of street-vendor stands hawking bootleg clothing, bootleg music, and very real-looking military, police, and martial-arts weaponry. Then we hit the first of the two Patpong streets. Almost immediately, a Thai dude shouted out to us from the front of a dark club, "Sir, come in! bondage show!" Only then did I notice the mannequin in a ball-gag and leather S&M gear hanging above the entrance. Maya and I shook our heads politely, passed another club, where three scantily-clad Thai women were gyrating on the stoop while techno pounded from the venue behind them. And then the first of a seemingly endless line of solicitors approached us with the following totally insane pitch: "Want to see [insert 'Pingpong' or 'Patpong'] show?" He then shoved in our faces what looked like a laminated index card, on it printed a long list of mindblowing acts to be included in this show: "Pussy writing, pussy smoking, pussy horn, pussy bottle-opening, razorblades in pussy, fish in pussy," and so on and on... "You can see first - no pay," he continued. "If you like, then pay. Come, follow me."

These solicitors would then lead us, sometimes physically, with a loose grip on the arm, to the sketchiest-looking of the numerous clubs stacked on top of each other along the streets - dark, dirty doorways up narrow metal staircases on the second floor of whatever building (the one venue name that sticks in my head is "Super Pussy" in big neon lights). First-floor spaces mostly seemed to be your basic go-go and strip clubs, their open doors revealing stages jampacked with fairly attractive young Thai girls in bikinis or topless, rocking back and forth listlessly (it couldn't really be called "dancing" due both to the girls' lack of enthusiasm and the lack of space) to the thumping 4/4 beat. The more outre performances are religated to the upper floors, apparently.

The streets outside, meanwhile, bustled with a strange motley crew, due, in no small part to the fact that Patpong Street Number 1 not only hosts redlight fare but also a market full of stands selling T-shirts, watches, CDs, and souvenirs; so, while there are plenty of the expected types - aged sexpats, drunken fratboys, sleazy Europeans, glamorous kathoeys (on Soi Jaruwan, the gay strip), Japanese salarymen (on Soi Thaniya, the Japanese strip), and fast-talking solicitors - milling about, there are also plenty of everyday tourists and even families brushing uncomfortable shoulders with the rest. As we pushed through the throngs, Maya and I saw a cute little white kid, maybe 3 years old, cradled in her mother's arm; a Thai woman was pinching the child's cheeks: "Pingpong show, pingpong show," the woman was babytalking to the kid till the mom, understandably disturbed, pulled away into the crowd. We also noted a teenage boy, maybe 15, staring at the index card of a solicitor eager to whip him into a nearby den of iniquity; the boy's gray-haired mother tapped him on his shoulder: "I'll be across the street in the internet place," she said, as if sending him off to see the pussies at work and setting up their post-show rendevous.

As for us, after a few false starts (we followed a solicitor into one place, only to run into a white couple on their way out who told us not to go in (("It sucks - the girls just stand around and try to get your money," they said)), then we walked into another club to find that exact scenario being played out), we ended up seeing something of a Pingpong or Patpong show (still not sure which is the correct terminology). Attracted by the fact that no one was trying drag us into the place, by the fact that there were only matronly-looking women working the door, and by the cardboard sign promising that we wouldn't have to pay more than the price of a beer, we ended up sitting on a padded bench in the corner of a dark, dingy stripclub. The white dude next to us had two strippers - one topless; the other, completely naked - draped over him, giggling. In the section to our right, a whole crew of wrinkled, older white men was laughing and drinking with - and fondling - a number of strippers in various levels of undress. And on the stage in the middle of the room, 5 or 6 strippers were gyrating lethargically, with bored and/or pissed-off expressions on their faces. Except for the two girls with both their bras and panties on, the women were not hot at all.

Maya and I sat, sipping our beers, trying to touch as little of the walls, seat, and table around us as possible, and watched, barely keeping our jaws from hitting the floor. During our maybe half-hour there, we saw a woman blow a horn with her pussy, another woman pull a good 8 feet of rainbow streamers out of her pussy, yet another woman pour some clear liquid from a bottle into her pussy and pour it back out whereupon it had mysteriously turned purple, and then a final woman pull maybe 6 feet of thread out of her pussy - the thread had sewing needles hung from it every couple inches, and as she tugged the string out, she pinned paper flowers through alternating needles till she had a garland hanging from between her legs!

Now, I'm not really a stripclub kind of guy - as far as I'm concerned, a stripclub, at its best, is just an exercise in sexual frustration, and one that I'm paying for. That said, there was nothing sexually frustrating about this place because the whole thing was so profoundly un-erotic. And, perhaps, a little bit unsanitary. At some point, a middle-aged Thai woman (strangely, in her clothes) stopped in front of our table, and put out a hand for shaking. Not knowing what else to do, Maya and I reluctantly shook her hand. We all stared at each other for a few moments, then the woman pointed to her own teeth and smiled, then walked away. "Do I have something stuck between my teeth?" Maya asked me, completely confused by the interaction, as was I. (We later observed this woman giving apparently platonic massages to some of the other clientele.) Soon after, two chubby strippers, who had been "dancing" on the stage, came up to us, and put our their hands for shaking; again, not sure what else to do and not wanting to insult them, we shook their hands. They then awkwardly - though sweetly - tried to chat us up with what limited English they had, clearly campaigning for us to buy them drinks. It was definitely time for us to go.

As we dashed back out into the relatively fresh air, the matronly women outside thanked us for attending. And as we walked away up the street, the solicitors swarmed on us again, as they did every foreigner, tried to angle us into their clubs. "Want to see show?" Maya shook her head, proudly telling them, no thanks, that she already had.

When we finally turned the corner off of Patpong and onto the main strip, Maya suggested that we try to find a pharmacy where we could buy some hand sanitizer. Not a bad idea, considering the disturbing number of hands we had ended up shaking. We stopped in a few places, but no luck. Riding the skytrain back to our hotel, resisting the urge to scratch our noses or bite our nails until we'd had a chance to wash, we felt oddly content knowing that while Bangkok may have kicked our collective ass during our first stay, now we'd seen her naked.

Monday, November 26, 2007

a blaze in the northern sky

As I alluded to in my last post, when we were in Vang Vieng in Laos, we lost an email regarding a hotel reservation in Thailand. The reservation was in a Northern city called Sukhothai, and it was from November 23 to 25, which is when the city was holding its annual celebration of the Loi Krathong festival, also known as the Yi Peng festival or "the festival of lights." Since we couldn't find our reservation info and since hotels are booked up well in advance over the festival dates, we had given up on seeing the fest and instead extended our stay in Laos, scheduling our flight back to Chiang Mai for the 23rd. Then we relocated the email, but now it was too late - we tried desperately to figure out a way to get from Vang Vieng to Sukhothai in time for Loi Krathong but without any success. Resigning ourselves to returning and staying in Chiang Mai then, we contacted the guesthouse, the Trigong Residence, where we'd stayed our first time there; the proprietor emailed Maya back explaining that he was all booked up and that finding a place to stay over the dates of fest, which, it turns out, is also celebrated in a big way in Chiang Mai, would be very hard. He added, however, that if we really needed it, he would try to help - but we didn't expect much. We began to formulate contingency plans for returning to fucking Bangkok, the city that had so royally kicked our collective ass the first time we stayed there. As it turns out, the owner of the Trigong, going way beyond the call of duty, actually did email us back in a few days, saying that we were all good, he'd booked a place for us to stay!

So, on Friday, we flew back from Luang Prabang to Chiang Mai just in time for the start of the festival, which, let me tell you, was pretty fucking insane. Basically, the whole 3 days - actually, mostly the nights - are a pyromaniac's wet dream. First, there are the krathongs, little floats about a handspan in diameter made from a section of banana tree trunk and decorated with elaborately-folded banana leaves, flowers, candles, incense sticks, etc. During the festival, everyone buys one from vendors lining the streets, lights the candles and incense on them, and lets them go in the Ping river, which runs through Chiang Mai, until the water is full of flickering trails of light. Couples often float two krathongs together, which is apparently considered quite romantic by locals, so that's just what Maya and I did.

Second, there are the Saa lanterns, rice-paper lanterns-cum-hot air balloons that Maya and I first saw in the skies of Beijing. Vendors are selling these everywhere, too, and everyone is buying them (some of them are massive, even bigger than the folks purchasing them), lighting them up in the streets, and sending them airborn, creating a truly surreal sight: a night sky filled with constellations of slowly drifting orange flame (some of the lanterns also have fireworks attached to their bottoms, so they drop a trail of sparks beneath them as they fly). But not all of the lanterns make it that high - some are blown into nearby trees, where they burn themselves out; others aren't filled with enough hot air by the time they are let go and fall lazily back to the earth like lethargic comets. Maya and I, fortunately, had both the skill and the patience to successfully launch the two balloons we bought into the sky. Some say that the Yi Peng festival evolved from the Brahmin belief of floating away evil - if so, we floated whatever bad vibes surrounded us so far, far away that they turned into stars in the heavens.

Finally, there are all the fireworks and firecrackers. These, in every imaginable form, are also being sold by a gazillion roadside vendors, and everyone - but most kids and teenagers - are setting them off in the streets and over the river deep into the night. Sometimes it literally feels like you're in the middle of a warzone as you walk through the city, as explosions flash and loud cracks resound all around you, dangerously close, sometimes right under your feet or over your head. Nowhere did we feel like this more than when on the last, climactic night of the festival, we went on a dinner cruise on the Ping river, a boat ride that, though the food was ridiculously good - I had honey-roasted spareribs with som tam (Thai green papaya salad); Maya had crispy fried mushrooms with kaffir lime leaves and tom kah gai (Thai coconut-milk soup) - was the least romantic cruise we've ever been on. It felt more like riding on the boat in Apocalypse Now, down a river into the heart of darkness. Everyone on the banks seemed to be setting off fireworks or tossing firecrackers, all into the center of the river, as if the opposite shores were at battle and we, on the boat, were stuck in the middle. More than a few fireworks actually hit our vessel, a few exploding right against the side where Maya and I sat! By the time, we and the maybe 14 other passengers disembarked, we were all literally feeling a little shellshocked and more than a little relieved.

Add to the krathongs, the flying lanterns, and the fireworks, endless food stands, bands playing, Thai dancing and drumming competitions, parades on land and on the river, probably the biggest bazaar we've been to so far on this trip, and a square filled with lanterns (of the non-flying variety) and even trees made of lanterns (one of which, Maya and I are standing in front of below). Like I said, fucking insane.

As if the fest weren't action-packed enough, on Sunday Maya and I spent our afternoon, riding ATVs - through the jungle, past water buffalos and ginormous white, humped cows, by mysterious, massive clay jars sitting in banana-tree groves - and shooting guns at the Chiang Mai shooting range. Here I am blasting my Glock.

Maya, with her little .22.

And Maya again, with her very big sniper rifle!

Somehow it just seemed like a fitting way for us to celebrate Loi Krathong.

Friday, November 23, 2007

down the tube

It's funny how quickly shit changes on you when you're travelling like this. One second you're on top of the world; next, nothing seems to be going right. So it was in Laos.

We were enjoying Luang Prabang so much that we decided to extend our stay in the country and bumped our return flight to Thailand back by a few days. And since our experience in the cave temple on the opposite shore of the Mekong had been so fucking cool, we decided to go to the Lao town of Vang Vieng, which was supposed to have a number of Buddhist caves that you can explore, as well as a river - the Nam Song - that you can kayak and tube down, and amazing karst peaks akin to those in Halong Bay. We booked what claimed to be a 5-hour "V.I.P. bus" ride from Luang Prabang to Vang Vieng.

What we couldn't have guessed about the bus was that 1) it would have big speakers and a TV inside and there would be absolutely atrocious Lao karaoke playing for the first 3 hours of the ride. Think 3 hours of the shit below but worse...



2) that the toilet in the bus would be a particularly awkward hybrid of an Asian-style squatter and a western-style sitter, situated in the back of the vehicle, which bounced so extremely over the rugged, pothole-ridden roads that trying to keep your stream on target - there was also nothing to hold onto in the bathroom cabin - was just about impossible; 3) the vast majority of the trip would be on roads that were not only rugged and pothole-ridden but also winding through jungle-covered mountains along a nauseatingly serpentine course that had me fighting to hold in the vomit for much of the ride; 4) our lunch break would be in a shanty-town-like village in the middle of one of these jungle mountains and would include almost nothing that didn't look like it would make the latter fight against spewing, a losing battle (we ended up having some rice and bought some packaged chips and cookies); and finally, 5) 5 hours actually meant 7 hours.

Excruciating as this ride was, our first impressions of Vang Vieng suggested that perhaps it had all been worthwhile. As we neared the city, the landscape became even more dramatic than it had been, as otherwordly limestone peaks crawling with tangled foliage and vines reared up from the jungle floor around us. The bus finally dropped us off at the "bus station" - really just a big, dusty abandoned airfield along the road - and we caught a sawngthaew to our guesthouse, passing as we went the river and the jagged peaks rising above its shore.

That evening we stumbled on a fantastically chill bar along those same shores that had four or five little shacks on stilts with two hammocks inside each; we claimed a shack, sprawled out in our hamocks and watched the sunset, feeling perfectly relaxed and content as we sipped our bottles of Beer Lao to the tunes of Pink Floyd.

Unfortunately, this was just a brief respite. The next day we went on this caving trek that we had booked the night before. We were under the impression that it would be just us, another couple, and a guide, and that we would be taking one of the "customized tours" that the trekking place we'd booked the thing at advertised in big bold letters over beside its front door. Yeah, bullshit. We ended up being jammed into the back of sawngthaew with, it seemed, 20 other travelers so tightly packed that one dude had to sit on the floor and 3 of the guides had to hang on outside on the back of the truck. We had been told to show up at 9:30am, but the sawngthaew wasn't even ready for us until 10, and then it did a couple circles through town to pick up other passengers and a variety of kayaks and tubes before finally heading off out of town.

When we arrived at the starting point of everyone's various treks, we were all separated into groups; Maya and I into one with maybe 8 other people. Our guide - a fat, amiable Lao - told us that we'd be visiting four caves, tubing and swimming inside one, and visiting four villages. We couldn't hold our tongues, and Maya told him that we weren't going to any villages - we've been to enough already along our trip so far, and we've found that most are just poor and depressing and/or just an opportunity for the villagers to try to get you to buy their trinkets and shit. Our guide seemed a little taken aback and confused, but he agreed to arrange for a vehicle to take us back to town before the rest of his group went on to the villages.

Then it was off to caving. The first cave set a poor precedent - it was just a little nook in a cliff face with a big golden-colored Buddha in the back and an even bigger man-made "Buddha's footprint" in front. There was also a small altar in the opening of the cave where, our guide explained, you could shake this little shaker-thing, then take a slip of paper with Lao script on it off these little pads - the writing supposedly would tell your fortune. Maya, if you don't know already, is very superstitious and pretty into this kind of shit, so she shook the shaker and tore off a slip; she handed it to our guide for translation. He looked at it and hesitated before finally explaining what it said. "It says to keep an eye on your husband," he explained with a somewhat uncomfortable grin on his face. "He might have a girlfriend. Not now, necessarily, but sometime, in a few years." As if the cave itself hadn't been disheartening enough, now Maya was really distressed. And of course, I didn't help things by teasing her that this sounded like a really good fortune for me.

Then we went to the next cave, which ended up being adventurous as fuck but also absurdly dangerous. Let's just say that Lao safety precautions are basically nil. First, our guide asked the group if any of us had brought our own flashlights ("torches" he called them, as the Brits do); fortunately, Maya and I had, because, it turned out, he inexplicably only had 4 "torches" with him. These were divied up between our tourmates; Maya and I had been talking to this Irish guy and girl who had been traveling together through Asia about along as we have, and the dude ended up getting this headlamp that basically looked like a lightbulb attached to an elastic band and wired to a slightly sized-down car battery that you hung around your neck on a string. With him wearing this absurd contraption, we all climbed up and down these slippery, muddy rocks and into the dark mouth of the cavern.

Our guide, having given out his 4 flashlights, was holding just a tiny little candle and walking around in his flip-flops. We were all wearing hiking shoes or hiking sandles, and having a hard time with our footing, since the interior of the cave was essentially all mud and puddles. As walked deeper into the blackness, which was pierced only by our torches and half-assed headlamps, we passed a precariously narrow and deep crevass on our left, which the guide only pointed out after most of the group had already - fortunately, I guess - walked by it. The one safety precaution around this crevass? There was some barbed wire strung over it!

Around this point, the luckless Irish dude totally wiped out in the mud and fell into a filthy puddle; he righted himself, completely coated in dirt. His fortune wouldn't improve when we descended even deeper into the cave and he whispered to his friend that battery acid had leaked on his hand from his headlamp contraption and he said, "It really burns." Maya poured some of her water on his hand, and when our guide was alerted to the situation, he didn't seem too nonplussed and simply encouraged us to pour more water on the burn.

When we got into the third and final room of the cavern, our guide explained why caves were so important to the Lao and why so many were full of Buddha idols. Laos, it turns out, is the unlikely holder of the unenviable title of most bombed country in history - according to our guidebook, the U.S. dropped a ton of ordinance, an actual ton, on the tiny country every eight minutes for nine years during the Vietnam War! - and the caves acted as natural bomb shelters for the people.

Somehow extracting ourselves from this second cave, which, hardships aside, was really fucking cool, we went to a third cave, where, our guide explained, a Spanish dude had gone exploring by himself a few years ago and had ended up getting lost and dying a 3-days-distance inside its long winding channels. He said there was a lagoon inside, and we heard that there was a waterfall as well. Then we walked about 50 feet inside and he said we were going to turn around because it was time for lunch. Maya and I were like, That's it? What the fuck kind of "trek" is this?! All that build up for shit?!

So, lunch. Lao BBQ - meat and veggie skewers cooked over a little campfire - with fried rice and baguette, which we ate sitting on some tatami-like mats on the ground in a clearing among some banana trees. The food didn't taste bad, but I ended up getting the runs almost as soon - and very luckily, no sooner - as we got back to our hotel after the trek. After eating, we went to the fourth and final cave, a water cave in which we would tube and swim. Good thing, then, that the water was so absolutely frigid that Maya's toes went blue from just stepping in up to her ankles for a few minutes.

As he set us up with our tubes, our guide offered all of us those ridiculous headlamp contraptions with the hanging battery and the open wiring, which seemed like an insane thing for anyone to wear while in the water. I turned mine down, but the guide was insistent and Maya ended up wearing one, which kept on going out, then flickering back on, the entire trip through the cavern. As for the trip itself, Maya found it to be a journey through hell itself; I'm much less sensitive to the cold, and I found it to be pretty fucking cool, to be honest. We tubed deep into the cave, pulling ourselves on a rope strung along the rocky walls, and then we (well, mostly just me) swam in the small lagoon shrouded in darkness, where it looked to me almost as if we'd been swallowed by a whale and were swimming around in its shadowy ribcage.

When we finally got back to our hotel from the day's caving (mis)adventure, I got the aforementioned shits, then the next morning I locked up my backpack with what few valuables we have with us - which I've been doing this whole trip whenever we leave our hotel room - and then almost immediately afterwards, realized that I had no idea where the key was. While our new Irish friends, with whom we hung out for the next few days, were telling us about all the shit that they'd had stolen from them while in Southeast Asia, we were in the improbable position of having to break into our own luggage. I ended up trying to buy a bolt cutter from a local hardware store to cut through the lock, but had to settle for a wire cutter; using that, I wrestled with the little padlock for 45 minutes until it finally just popped open and I got into the bag, in which - surprise, surprise - it turned out, I had locked the key.

A variety of other things proceeded to go wrong - I won't go into the devilish details now (suffice it to say, we lost an email regarding a hotel reservation in Thailand, then found it only once it was too late to get back to Thailand to use the reservation; we were getting more mosquito bites here, in the most remote place we'd traveled to, than anywhere else in Southeast Asia so far; and some other shit) - but mostly the town of Vang Vieng began to get on our nerves. As beautiful as the surrounding landscape is, the place is a proper shithole. There are only three real streets to the place, and they're basically just all guesthouses, bars, restaurants, internet cafes, and trekking places, and 4, not 1 or 2 but 4, of the restaurants/bars play nonstop Friends episodes all day and night to steady crowds of young backpackers, most of whom seem to be basically just frat-boys and sorority-girl types but the Eurotrash version, which, take it from me, is even more despicable than the American version. And to what end are these young backpacking Eoropeans using the beautiful landscape? Put it this way, Vang Vieng's biggest tourist activity is tubing down the Nam Song and stopping at the numerous bars that dot the banks, some of which sell ready-to-puff joints. It doesn't sound like a bad way to spend an afternoon, but when you find yourself in a town that's been built up in the middle of nowhere in one of the poorest countries of the world, just around that singular pasttime, shit starts to seem awful lame awful quick.

So, after just 2 days and 3 nights there, we bought tickets for a minivan - we had heard that the minivan was much more comfortable and quicker than the "V.I.P. bus" - back to Luang Prabang, from where we were scheduled to fly back to Chiang Mai, Thailand. The morning of our ride, we showed up at the place where we'd bought the tix and where we were to be picked up at 9am sharp (originally advertised as 8:30), only to be told that the van wouldn't be there till 9:20. Then when the van showed up, it was far from "luxury", jampacked with locals, most of them with their luggage in their lap and their heads sticking out of the open windows, clearly panting for air; there was only the backseat left open for us, with shin-crushingly little legspace, and when we asked the driver if there was A/C, which we had been told there would be, he shook his head incredulously. Maya just about lost it - and justifiably so. She stomped back to the woman who had sold us the tickets and told her straightup that we were not getting what she'd promised and we wanted our money back. The woman hemmed and hawed, but eventually relented; and then we dashed to the nearest other office for bus/van tix and begged for spots on the 10am V.I.P bus, which was our last hope out of this hellhole and to our flight out of Laos the next day. Miraculously, there were 2 seats available (here's Maya in the sawngthaew to the bus station - her expression says it all),...

and after 7 nauseating - but, thank god, karaoke-free - hours back through the jungle mountains, we found ourselves back in what-felt-like the sanctuary of Luang Prabang, where, hopefully, our luck would change again but for the better.

Sunday, November 18, 2007

ain't no phousi

As soon as Maya and I got back from our trekking tragicomedy we decided that we were done with the hyper-touristed bullshit of Thailand, and that very night we bought plane tickets to Laos. Yes, I said Laos. And yes, we didn't really know anything more about Laos than you probably do right now (the country hadn't been on our original intinerary). All we really knew was that just about everyone we'd encountered along our travels thus far who had been to Laos said that we had to go. They said that it was like Thailand when it was still cool, still relatively untouched. We went to see some Muay Thai fights in Chiang Mai that night (saw a dude get his arm broken, another guy get knocked out via an uppercut elbow to the chin), then went back to our room, packed up, and the next morning we called a few hotels, booked a room, and flew to Luang Prabang, Laos. (We had thought about getting there via a 2-day slow boat on the Mekong River, but then we heard that one of the boats had sank recently; everyone onboard had been able to swim to shore but had lost all their luggage. We opted to fly.)

As soon as we landed, it became apparent that we were in a different kind of Southeast Asian country. At immigration in the airport, the officers checked everyone's papers then handed each of us an illustrated pamphlet with "10 suggestions will help you enjoy your visit while helping us preserve our culture and traditions." These suggestions included: "5) We believe that kissing, holding hands, and other displays of affection with the opposite sex are private acts that should be done in private," and "7) Lao people are modest, and it's uncomfortable to see people who are not. Nude bathing at the waterfall, in the river, or while rafting, is never appropriate. Lao women wear a t-shirt and shorts covering from mid-thigh to shoulders; for men, shorts are fine. When in Laos, we hope you'll do the same." Woah.

When we exited the airport, more differences became apparent. Whereas in just about every other city we've visited, there's been an onslaught of cab-, tuk-tuk-, and whatever-other-kind-of-vehicle-drivers eagerly trying to get us into their whatever-kind-of-vehicle and take us to our hotel, here there was all of 2 sawngthaews (those crazy pickup truck taxis) for at least 20 some newly arrived tourists. We ended up bargaining for a spot and a poor whitey got kicked out of the sawngthaew he'd been sitting in to make room for us. Sorry, whitey.

Rumbling through town, we found Luang Prabang to be something like Siem Reap in Cambodia - but minus all the fancy hotels. Dusty roads, kids and livestock running alongside the street, a muddy river - the Nam Khan - with naked children playing in it, shacks woven from dried palm leaves... When we finally checked into our hotel, we found ourselves in a room with walls woven from dried palm leaves...

...and a dirty, dimly-lit, and altogether sketchy shared bathroom. There's a sheet of paper posted to the inside of the door listing "accomodation regulations," including "6) Do not allow domestic and international tourist bring prostitute and others into your accomodation to make sex movies in our room, it is restriction." What the fuck had happened in this place? (That night we could barely sleep due to the rooster crowing at all hours - that shit about roosters cock-a-doodle-dooing to mark the sunrise is a total myth, by the way - and then at 4am, the mysterious sound of drumming and gongs chiming, which we learned was the monks making morning music in the nearby temple. Needless to say, we checked out the next morning - though the place was worth all $6 that we paid! - and moved to a much nicer, quieter place - for the exorbitant sum of $15 a night - along the one trendy, touristy strip in town. This new place had a sign posted behind its bar: "Say no to child-sex tourists. Don't turn away, turn them in.")

Other things that tipped us off that Luang Prabang was a little different? When walking from our first hotel to explore town, we passed a flock of flamboyantly feathered chickens, including two roosters who were clearly facing off and engaged in some crazy fighting dance. When the electricity went out - twice - at the restaurant we were having dinner at. When a little boy monk in orange Buddhist robes walked into the internet cafe where Maya was checking her email and sat down to go online. When we learned that at 10:30pm quiet time starts in the city, and by 11pm all the bars and restaurants close because the locals need their sleep so they can wake up early to give alms to the monks (who are all over town, as are their wats, or temples).

Basically, we've been in Laos for 5 days now, and it's pretty much fucking ruled. Here are just some of the other highlights:

Climbing the mountain in the center of town, Mount Phousi, in the dark on our first night to reach the golden wat at top, which is lit up at night and can been seen for miles. We found a number of young monks and Lao locals amassed up there, a few of whom seemed to be practicing their English by either conversing with the few other foreigners there or by reading lessons out of their notebooks. This dude Ian we'd befriended at the Chiang Mai airport - a 24-year-old New Yorker who'd just been laid off from his soul-sucking investment banking job and decided to use his severance by travelling - told us that he'd heard about a wat in Luang Prabang where monks go to practice their English by talking to tourists. This, it turned out, was it. While Ian started conversing with an 18-year-old kid who told him that he'd had to drop out of school in order to work a construction job that pays $2 a day to support his family, Maya and I, feeling much less social, sat on a bench, watching the Mekong River in the moonlight, and made fun of a young white woman who we could overhear talking to one of the monks: She was ostensibly helping him practice his English, but it sounded to us like she was pretty obviously hitting on him.

Laughing at the names of various estalishments around town. You see, in the Thai and Lao languages, P-H is pronounced with a P sound, not an F sound, as it is in English. So, for instance, the Thai city Phuket is actually pronounced Poo-ket, though it's temting to pronounce it Fuck it. This being the case, think about how the word Phousi, as in Mount Phousi, would be pronounced. And think about how Phousi Massage, Phousi Gallery, Phousi Hotel, et al, would be pronounced. Needlessly to say, Maya and I were in hysterics.

Taking a sunset boat ride on the mighty Mekong river and riding on the tin roof of the long, narrow, otherwise-wooden boat for most of the ride. The view of amazing, the wind fresh and cool in our faces - all the stress instantly drained from my body...



About an hour into what had been an awesome ride, the boat pulled up to a floating fuel station, which turned out to be closed. Apparently the boat was almost completely out of gas because our driver then began shouting in Lao at any passing vessel, eventually hailing down two, which pulled up next to us to listen to our driver's plea. The second vessel agreed to drive us back to the dock and so we switched boats in the middle of Mekong and sped back to shore, laughing at the unrelenting adventure/incompetence that we've encountered in Thailand and now Laos.

Watching Sin City upstairs in the teahouse/bookshop L'Entranger Books and Tea, a cozy oasis of semi-familiarity.

Taking the local boat to the other side of the Mekong where we found ourselves on a trail where we came across no more than 4 other whities in the course of a whole day; we explored abandoned temples, crumbling in the jungle, overgrown with palm trees and vines, and we came across, at the top of a long stone stairwell, a cave temple locked with a huge padlock. Retreating to the nearest abandoned temple, we found a man, who looked rather like a bald young monk but in street clothes, and asked him if there was any way we could get into the cave. He said that we should buy a ticket - he directed us to a little ticket table sitting under a tree (tickets were 5,000 kip each (about 50 cents) - and that he had the key. Next thing we knew we were being led back down the jungle path to the cave temple by a maybe 10-year-old girl and a 5-year-old boy, both carrying flashlights (fortunately, we had brought our own along). They unlocked the door to the cave and led us inside. The cave was huge, winding and opening up deep inside the mountain, and pitch-black. "Buddha, no head," the little boy would say periodically, before flashing his light on the statue of a Buddha sitting among the stalactites in some subterranean corner - it's head, the kid correctly pointed out, broken off. The girl was mostly silent the whole tour; the boy, hilarious - making monster noises in an attempt to frighten Maya (she, of course, responded by making her own animal growls and sinister faces in the glow of her flashlight), singing bits of English-language (I think) songs, and telling us at one point to all turn off our lights - so that he could make even more monster noises in the absolute dark. Maya and I wanted to explore the cave even more, but the kids told us, "Sleeping," whenever we asked if we could go into a particularly shadowy offshoot of the cave; we think that they were trying to say "Slippery," but "Sleeping" made me imagine that we were the naively intrepid tourists in some horror movie and the kids were trying to warn us of the evil "sleeping" in the dark. When we finally emerged back into the light, the little boy pretended to shut the door on Maya, the little bastard, then when we tipped the kids a dollar each, the little capitalistic bastard asked for a second greenback since, as he explained, he had talked to us more than the girl. We just laughed - "You're like 5-years old," said Maya. "You get a dollar."

Exploring Khuang Si waterfall, about an hour's drive outside Luang Prabang - though our completely mad sawngthaew driver only took half an hour getting us there, whipping around the winding mountain roads as he did at terrifying speeds. The waterfall was gorgeous, multi-tiered and an otherworldly blue color due, we think, to its heavy calcium content, which had also built up strange stalactite-like structures along its banks (the photo below just shows the main section of the falls)...

We hiked to the top of the mountain alongside the falls (passing along the way a small animal sanctuary complete with bears who had been rescued from "bear bile farms" - bear bile is apparently a staple of Chinese medicine - and a tiger, who had been rescued as a cub from poachers), where we wandered through the jungle and, to alert any large cats that might be prowling in the area to our presence, we sang Pantera's "Mouth for War," Life of Agony's "Through and Through, and Metallica's "Fade to Black" complete with guitar solo to which we air-guitared along - if only some upsuspecting hippies had stumbled upon us up there. The truckride ride back was even more insane then the ride there had been - our lunatic driver was stopped on a number of occasions by herds of water buffalo loping about in the middle of the road, then he stopped to pick up three locals who piled in with a basket of vegetables; one unrecognizable veggie fell to the floor of the truck, and I picked it up to return it, but the Laos villagers shook it off, pointed that it belonged on the floor. Maya and I were confused. Then they placed a little baggie of cherry tomatos and a komquat-looking thing on the floor as well. Soon our sawngthaew stopped again, it seemed in the middle of nowhere, and the three passengers disembarked with a smile and a wave to us and our driver - it was then that we realize that they had left the veggies as payment for the ride! Our driver continued careening along the jungle road, then he suddenly screeched to a halt, calling back to a group of people hanging out in front of their palm-leaves-woven-shack-on-stilts; an older man runs over to the truck with a water bottle filled with a mystery clear liquid (it turns out to be Lao Lao, a 50-proof liquor distilled from sticky rice) and a shot glass, pours our driver a shot - "Oh, my God," says Maya outloud - which he downs in a smooth, unhesitating gulp. Then the older man pours a smaller shot and offers it to Maya who declines, then to me, who laughing at the absurd wrongness of this situation, accepts - if we're going to die, I might as well have a little buzz going. The man pours another a shot for Maya who relents this time. The shit is strong and warms us immediately. As Maya comments hopefully of our driver, "He'll probably actually drive a little more carefully now," and I think maybe he does. Either way, we ended up getting back to our hotel intact, and as we walked away from the pickup truck, having paid our fare (150,000 kip or about $15 for driving us there and back and waiting around 3 hours while we explored), our driver pantomimed puffing on a joint, asking us whether we'd like to buy some marijuana. We shook our heads and continued walking - as much as we've enjoyed exploring Luang Prabang so far, the inside of a Lao jail is one place we have no desire to see.