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bennedich


41 Blog Entries
4 Trips
213 Photos

Trips:

Ukraine, Iraq, Iran, etc
Baja Off-Road
Canadian Rockies
Philippines & Taiwan

Shorthand link:

http://blogabond.com/bennedich


My name is Max. I like to travel.


First dirt road!

Ensenada, Mexico


The bus arrives in downtown San Diego at 6am. I'm a bit tired and stiff and head to the gym for a morning workout, hoping to regain some energy. It doesn't work, so I head over to Andy's house for breakfast and a short rest. He reminds me of motorcycle insurance for Mexico and helps me get it online. I notice that I forgot the registration at home. This is pretty bad and will definitely be a problem if I get pulled over in Mexico.

The drive down to Tijuana is less than 30 minutes. No traffic at all at the border. Immigration guard tells me it will cost 262 pesos to enter Mexico (1 USD = 13 pesos). I reply "huh, it's supposed to be free?". So he gives me another form to fill out and I get to enter for free. Welcome to Mexico!

I drive straight down to Ensenada (1.5 hours), have lunch, then head to La Bufadora, a geyser 45 minutes south of Ensenada. Then I decide it's time to leave the paved roads and I select a 40 mile dirt route that will take me from highway 1, to the coast, pass a camp site, then back to highway 1. This should be a good warmup before I cross the desert. I'm a bit concerned since I've never driven on dirt before, but it turns out to not be complicated at all! It's a little bit like mountainbiking on dirt, except that the motorcycle weighs 250 pounds. At dusk I meet a farmer on the road and ask him if it's far to the beach. "No no, just 30 minutes." I drive for approximately 1.5 hours before I find an old abandoned camp site next to the water where I spend the night. Freezing! I have to wear all the clothes I brought, including the motorcycle gear.

What I learned today:

Don't park your motorcycle in a downhill. It will roll away.










permalink written by  bennedich on May 23, 2009 from Ensenada, Mexico
from the travel blog: Baja Off-Road
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Preparations

San Diego, United States


The weekend has been meticulously planned. Nothing has been left to chance. Two weeks ago, I drove my motorcycle from San Francisco to San Diego. It took two full days along highway 1 and the highlight was Big Sur. Awesome views, great motorcycling, and north and south of it there are plenty of beaches where you can camp at night and relax at day! I parked my motorcycle at Andy's house in San Diego and flew back to San Francisco. Today, Friday May 22, I take a 12 hour night bus from San Jose to San Diego. My gear all fits in a regular size backpack and consists of the following:

- 1" 3/4 length sleeping pad (15 oz)
- Emergency bivvy sack (3.5 oz)
- Hydration unit (3 l)
- AAA Baja California guidebook
- AAA Baja California map
- Some clothes, passport, 140 USD

The bike is a 2005 Suzuki DR200SE dual sport and has 6000 Miles on it.

What I learned today:

Don't take a bus to San Diego. Fly instead.







permalink written by  bennedich on May 22, 2009 from San Diego, United States
from the travel blog: Baja Off-Road
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The conclusion

San Francisco, United States


I'm up at 5.20am, take a guagua to the city center, then a motorcycle taxi to the bus station followed by a bus to Higuëy, where I have around 2h of sightseeing and breakfast. The main attraction is a really unique cathedral, apart from that the city is quite standard... but I like it. Whenever beautiful girls come up to me on the street and give me their phone numbers, things are good. Next, I take another bus to Punta Cana airport then fly to my new home of San Francisco, via Philadelphia and Las Vegas. Looong day.

This concludes my vacation. I'll try to summarize briefly. I've been to 11 countries (Norway, Czech Republic, Ukraine, Turkey, Iraq, Iran, Qatar, Sweden, USA, Dominican Republic and Haiti). I met one person whose philosophy appealed to me: "I trust people. If you can't trust people, the world is shit. And I don't want to live in a shit world." I've been careful, but chosen to trust many persons, and it's worked out wonderfully. I've met countless of new people, many of which I'm still in contact with. I've paid for accommodation twice now in 65 days (in Diyarbakir and Santo Domingo), and practically never had to eat a meal alone, which I think goes to show that humankind is pretty good after all :)



permalink written by  bennedich on January 4, 2009 from San Francisco, United States
from the travel blog: Ukraine, Iraq, Iran, etc
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Turning back home

Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic


We get home from Jet Set at around 3.30am. At 6.15am I'm up to catch the bus back to the Dominican Republic. Natasha tells me there are two buses: the comfortable express bus and the crazy bus, which is the one I took to get here. The choice is easy, but unfortunately the bus is not as crazy this time. People are a bit more mellow, presumably because last time they were on their way home to celebrate the new year and now they're on their way back to the reality of their hard lives.

I sit next to Alexis, a 25 year old Haitian whose job is to move steering wheels of imported cars from the right side to the left. During the 11 hour trip we become friends and he invites me to stay at his place for the night. He lives with a friend, another Haitian, on around 12 square meters in a suburb 30 minutes outside Santo Domingo. The living conditions are VERY basic. He prays to God every day to show him an exit, a path to a better life. It's a very moving experience.



permalink written by  bennedich on January 3, 2009 from Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic
from the travel blog: Ukraine, Iraq, Iran, etc
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The village

Grand Goave, Haiti


Today we visit a small village around 2h west of Port-au-Prince where Natasha knows some people (she grew up herself in an SOS village for children without parents). The village is set amidst a Field of coconut palms, so for a snack, all we do is pick some coconuts and chop them open. There's a beach just a few 100m away where we swim and get some sun.

The kids in the village are very curious about us blancos (Jason and me). They stand at a short distance just staring at us. One little girl is terrified and starts crying every time she looks at us. The people here are mostly dark dark black. For example, on our way home after dark we see at a stop sign on the street, only it's not, it's just a very black man with a stop sign on his t-shirt. For dinner we once again have an amazing home cooked meal at the orphanage. Then we head out to party at Jet Set in Petionville.

I really like this country... people are so warm, friendly, curious, inviting. Similar to Iran in a way, yet with many differences. One being that girls here are much more free, so it's easier to talk to them. In the Middle East I mostly just spoke to guys. Another being that Haiti is not particularly safe. There's plenty of crime and kidnappings here, and Jason and I attract a lot of attention. Except for the UN staff in their heavily armed trucks, we haven't seen a single white person. Moreover, police officers are virtually nonexistent, and the ones out there seem to be up to no good anyway. (The one we saw today was making out with a girl on the street.) For these reasons, we always go accompanied by at least one local, and usually in a car with the doors locked.



permalink written by  bennedich on January 2, 2009 from Grand Goave, Haiti
from the travel blog: Ukraine, Iraq, Iran, etc
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National Day of Haiti

Port-au-Prince, Haiti


First of January is the national day of Haiti, exactly 204 years ago they pushed out the French and became a free country. Haitians celebrate this by eating a traditional pumpkin soup. We eat it at the orphanage. The rest of the day we don't do much, hanging with Natasha and her friends and playing with the children.

Haiti is a true third world country, where running water is a luxury and electricity goes on and off, even worse than in northern Iraq. Here it seems the entire city can black out for a period of hours. There is garbage everywhere. Really! In addition to the omnipresent wild dogs, chicken and roosters, we spot a wild pig digging through a pile of garbage close to the city center.

In the evening, Jason and I go on a quest for pork. After having had so much chicken lately we're craving something else. We find it on the street not far from Natasha's home. The food here is really tasty, with a lot of spices.



permalink written by  bennedich on January 1, 2009 from Port-au-Prince, Haiti
from the travel blog: Ukraine, Iraq, Iran, etc
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New Year's in Haiti

Port-au-Prince, Haiti


After breakfast, Natasha takes me to a slum area of Port-au-Prince (PAP) to visit an orphanage and a school where she works. It's very very interesting to see since the life here is so completely different from say Sweden or USA. Even at Natasha's place, things are not exactly the way I'm used to at home. For example, there's no running water so we have to go get water from a well.

Tonight we're having a new year's party at Natasha's place. Jason and I spend most of the evening cooking and grilling. There's also beer and dancing. Suddenly it's 2009 and everyone is hugging and kissing. After midnight I leave with two Haitian girls to a club called Jet Set in Petionville, a rich suburb. There are plenty of westerners here, something you don't see in other places in PAP, they turn out to be from the UN peace keeping Mission in Haiti. It's a good day. A great end to 2008 and start for 2009!



permalink written by  bennedich on December 31, 2008 from Port-au-Prince, Haiti
from the travel blog: Ukraine, Iraq, Iran, etc
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At the Haitian border, she asks if I want to marry her...

Port-au-Prince, Haiti


At 6.45am I go to the Haitian Embassy, outside which there are buses leaving for Haiti. Haiti: the poorest country in the western hemisphere. The bus is already full when I get there, but I'm still sold a ticket. It's handwritten, on the back of a cornflakes box. To accommodate for more passengers, they simply put plastic chairs in the aisle of the bus. Right before the bus leaves, a car pulls up with 5 large black rectangular packages, which are loaded at the back of the bus.

The journey can be described as insane at best. It's me, a Peruvian man with his Haitian wife, and around 40 other Haitians, all black. There's loud merengue streaming out the speakers throughout the trip. Everyone is talking and shouting to one another, even though I assume they didn't know each other before the trip started, and things are passed back and forth; food, alcohol, a baby. I'm invited for both food and alcohol during the trip by the friendly Haitians. Everyone refers to me as "blanco" (means white). A girl sitting at my side is touching my skin and speaking to me in creole (language in Haiti, resembles French). A guy at my other side (I'm in the aisle) speaks Spanish and translates: "She wants you." We arrive at the border around noon, it's really busy, like a big market place. When we sit there waiting for our passports, the girl asks if I want to marry her. I contemplate it for a moment, she's 19 perhaps, very beautiful. I tell her it probably wouldn't work.

The border is set next to a lake. Somewhere before the border, the black packages disappear without me noticing. As we've passed, we see a huge black guy without much clothes rowing like a mad man over the lake. He rows towards us, and I see that the black packages are stuffed in the boat. They're quickly loaded on the bus, and we continue towards Port-au-Prince, the capital of Haiti. When I arrive, I call my Haitian friends and they come and pick me up. I'm staying with a Haitian girl called Natasha. There are always a lot of people in her house; friends, family and also another blanco: Jason who happens to be a computer engineer from San Francisco.



permalink written by  bennedich on December 30, 2008 from Port-au-Prince, Haiti
from the travel blog: Ukraine, Iraq, Iran, etc
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La Republica Dominicana

Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic


I arrive in Philadelphia at 6am and have almost 4 hours to kill before I continue to the Dominican Republic. Plenty of time to head downtown for sightseeing and breakfast! When leaving Philadelphia, an immigration officer asks me where I live. I tell her I don't really live anywhere at the moment, which is the truth. She studies my passport. "You've been to some interesting places." She comes to the page where I've managed to get the Iranian and Iraqi visa next to each other. "Why don't you step over here for a while, Sir."

I arrive in the Dominican Republic at around 2pm. Unfortunately, I land in Punta Cana, about as far away from Haiti as possible on this island. I am supposed to be in Haiti tomorrow, but have no idea how to get there. (I deliberately didn't prepare in order to make things more interesting.) I exit the airport and find a guagua (local bus) which takes me to a bus station where I find a bus for Santo Domingo, the capital. The bus takes 3-4 hours during which I make friends with the bus driver. In the capital, he takes me to the hotel where he's staying, then we meet with his friend the taxi driver and the three of us go out to eat, they give me a short tour of the city and tell me how to go to Haiti. Great! They're very hospitable, although one difference between them and all the Iranian people I've met recently is that they're happy to see me pay for things :)



permalink written by  bennedich on December 29, 2008 from Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic
from the travel blog: Ukraine, Iraq, Iran, etc
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Quick visit to San Francisco...

San Francisco, United States


I stay up all night packing and working, then fly to San Francisco at 9am, via Frankfurt. The flight from Frankfurt is overbooked and I'm told I'm bumped: I'll get 600 euro, hotel and a business class seat for the next flight. Awesome! Except that it means I'll miss my connecting flight to the Dominican Republic. They try to arrange things for me but in the end it doesn't work out so they let me board and bump someone else :( In San Francisco, my Silicon Valley based colleague Juan Pablo helps me out by meeting me at the airport and picking up my 40 kilos of luggage. At 10pm I take a domestic flight to Philadelphia.


permalink written by  bennedich on December 28, 2008 from San Francisco, United States
from the travel blog: Ukraine, Iraq, Iran, etc
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