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Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon

a travel blog by The Happy Couple


Michael's view on the trip. This blog is really mostly for me, so that I'll have a clearer memory of the trip when it's done, like a journal, so please forgive me my obsessions like sampling and photographing all the local food and the booze. It's just my thing!

Also please forgive all typos, spelling mistakes and grammar mistakes. I'm usually doing this in a rush, and most of the time it's on such a slow PC that it would take even longer to check for mistakes and correct them.

The blog is usually 2 to 3 weeks behind, but I try to keep next few locations on the map up-to-date. You can see the schedule dates associated with the map if you go to http://blogabond.com/TripView.aspx?TripID=4517 and click "Show Newest First" or, if the maps are causing problems try http://blogabond.com/TripView.aspx?tripID=4517&slow=1
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Wedding Gift Fund Closing

Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam


First, we'd like to say thank you to everyone who's given us something as a wedding present. We really appreciate it and we will get around to thanking you all individually...

Anyway, we need to start thinking about what we are going to use our STA fund for, so we'll be closing the account in about two weeks. So, if you were going to put something in it, but haven't got around to it yet... you are running out of time! Details in one of the first blog entries.

permalink written by  The Happy Couple on February 19, 2009 from Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
tagged Gift, Wedding and STA

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Last day in Saigon

Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam


We finished the previous day off with a lovely Korean meal, which was by far the most expensive meal we've had, but thought we deserved it after getting the blog up-to-date. Ah, those were the days! We decided it was OK to eat Korean since we're not going there; we've been avoiding the temptation of cuisine from any country we are going.

We also discovered that the reason all the travel agents appeared to have moved address is that Joanne was looking at the Hanoi page in the information booklet, which would not have worked at all in most countries, but in Vietnam all the same street names are used in every city, which can be quite confusing when travelling from place to place.

Anyway, apologies for not blogging for so long, but we're now in Cambodia and the internet speed is not generally good at all, it's too hot to sit around on a PC, and it's also a lot more expensive to get online. Anyway, I'll do some now. Also, I've made a wee change: I've deleted all of the places from the map that we've not yet been, so you can easily see where we actually are. I'll update the map before doing anything else. I'll post our intended schedule soon, so anyone who wants to meet up with us in, say, Rio, will know when we plan to be there.

I've built up a few wee observations about Vietnam that I keep forgetting to write about in the blog, so I'm going to try and round them all up now.

The first thing, which I don't think I've mentioned, is that the coffee is really really good. And cheap. It's extremely strong, but very compex and tasty. Even the iced coffee is really strong (we ignore that advice about avoiding ice). Apparently Vietnam is the second exporter of coffee after Brazil and they are very proud of their coffee.

Another little thing is that the Vietnamese sit on their haunches a lot. It seems to be the most comfortable, relaxed way for them to stay in the same place, but it looks like knee-breaking, thigh-straining agony to me. Joanne's theory is that their smaller frames makes it easier. People did it in China a bit too, but you see it all the time in Vietnam. Another couple of things, both captured in this photo is that you often see men playing a board game at the side of the road, and you often see people with circular marks all over their skin; we have since discovered that this is the result of a therapy where glasses are placed all over the skin, after holding a flame in them, and when the air inside cools and contracts it causes them to stick and draw some blood out.

Another weird one is that they seem to lose their cool quite often. We've seen plently of shouting altercations, rising to screaming on occasion. The only reason this is strange or remarkable is I had believed Asians generally do not like conflict and losing your cool means losing face, which is the ultimate fear. Anyway, they don't seem to mind losing face here.

I've been surprised to see lots of Americans here. There were quite a lot in China too, which was also surprising. I would expect them to avoid the great evil of communist countries, but when I asked on American guy about it he just said "No, we love it!" but he didn't seem to want to elucidate. There are also loads of French and Quebecois, which I suppose must have something to do with the collonial links, or maybe indirectly because of Tintin; but definitely more francophones that you usually find on holiday.

The last thing worth remarking on is the wearing of masks. We also saw this in China and Hong Kong. I put it down to disease after we saw an public information advert in Hong Kong advising that you should wear a mask if you are ill. Pietro seemed to confirm this when he told us that they've become very illness aware since avian flu and SARS. However, we have also seen women wearing long gloves that cover the arms and women often hold a book or folder up to shade their faces when riding on mopeds, both of which suggest that most women wear all this stuff to stay white; we were told that "here light skin is more beautiful". One final theory that someone told us is that people who are doing work they deem below their status tend to cover themselves up as much as possible, so that they are effectively in disguise. True enough people selling wares on the streets are often very well covered, but I had put this down to the fact they are in the sun for longer. Anyway, we've been finding it very hot since arriving in Saigon, so the idea of wearing loads of extra clothing is horrible!

For the whole time we were in Saigon there was a wake on the corner of the street our hotel was on. Three days of music pumping out and people sitting around drinking. I thought that it was a young person (and assumed a moped accident) as there was a huge picture up of a young man, but we were told that they have a ceremonial photo taken when they are in their prime, so that they will always be remembered that way.

Anyway we started our last day in Saigon with a cup of tea thanks to the kettle we'd bought the day before. We had tea all the time in China, but none of our rooms have had a kettle since, so we decided it was time to add to my huge pack, although the kettle's not really that big. The great Saigon food continued with a grapefruit salad for breakfast and a custard apple shake. Then we headed off to the supermarket in search of (non-whitening) moisturiser for Joanne and pro-biotic yogurts which are meant to combat the digestive damage caused by the doxycycline we were about to start as a malaria prophylactic for the Mekong Delta onwards. On the way to the supermarket I bought what I've since discovered is a water apple; a strange tasting fruit like an apple crossed with a carrot. At the supermarket I got a chance to look for the Vietnamese for fruits I wanted to identify and for some of the herbs that come with all the noodle soup dishes i.e. most breakfasts. On of the herbs tastes like coriander, but isn't, one like tarragon, but isn't, and another one tastes like cinnamon. The cinnamon one was the only one I've been able to identify: Vietnamese Perilla (Tia To in Vietnamese).

When I saw durian crisps at the supermarket, I just had to buy them, even though they were quite dear, after all I hadn't found any real durian. On the way back from the supermarket I saw someone selling strange cups of stuff from a stall, so I had to buy some of that too. It turned out to be hot soya with ginger syrup over it; really nice. Just as we were walking away from that stall I saw someone selling durian, so I bought a small bag of pieces. It was surprisingly cheap for such a delicacy and I didn't notice it smelling quite as much as I expected. Then when I got home I found out why: I had bought jackfruit! Jackfruit is delicious, but I had wanted to try durian.



The afternoon was spent following the Lonely Planet walking tour. After all the walking we'd done the day before, we realised that we had already been along most of the streets the tour follows, but we persevered nonetheless, taking in the rooftop bar at the Rex Hotel, where the beer was a ridiculous 60,000 dong. It took us past a couple of nice buildings, past Fanny Ice Cream (snigger) for lunch, where I had one scoop of anise, one of chilli chocolate, and one of green tea; very nice, but again way over our usual budget. The walk also took us to the War Remnants Museum, where there is lots of captured American military hardware on display, as well as plenty of photo displays. Who would have thought that the Americans would be capable of such war crimes, atrocities, and human rights abuses? Unfortunately we only got about halfway round the museum when a guard told us it was closing and kicked everyone out. A pity, I was looking forward to the gallery of torture by the Americans. They quoted a statistic in the museum, which I cannot reliably remember now, but I think they said that on Vietnam they dropped twenty times the quantity of explosives used by all parties in the Second World War. Anyway, the walking tour finished off at the Sheraton Hotel for rooftop sundowners. The price was ridiculous: we spent significantly more on two (cheap) beers than we had on the expensive meal the night before, but the view was excellent from the 25th floor.

On the way home we stopped off at a food market, which looks like it is in transition from a place for locals to one for tourists only, but it's still fairly cheap and the food was excellent. We had some more of the fantastic Saigon style ("fresh") spring rolls, which are just prawns and fresh herbs and bean sprouts wrapped up in rice paper, steamed, not fried. I think the key is the fresh ingredients, but they always taste exactly the same: delicious. I followed that with a green papaya salad, also very nice, and a sapodilla shake, which is a bit strange: caramel flavoured fruit. As soon as we stood up our chairs were gone as a bus load of Japanese tourists arrived. We passed another market on the way back to our hotel, where I bought some t-shirts. They really think the tourists are stupid. I tried on a t-shirt sized L, which they told me fitted. I said I thought it was a bit small and I'd prefer an XL, which prompted on of the ladies on the stall to disappear into the back with the t-shirt I'd just tried and reappear with a very similar t-shirt with a sticker saying XL fixed over the label. Amazingly it seemed to be the same size as the L.

We rounded the day off by changing some dong to dollars (yuk), as we thought they'd be handy in Cambodia until we could get some local currency. On the final stretch back to our part of town (which is very back-packery, a bit like Khao San Road in Bangkok) we passed a restaurant with Jochem and Marty, and now Marty's cousin, who had joined them. We managed to towns without bumping into them, but clearly they were still following us...


permalink written by  The Happy Couple on February 19, 2009 from Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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My Tho, Vietnam




permalink written by  The Happy Couple on February 20, 2009 from My Tho, Vietnam
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Ben Tre, Vietnam




permalink written by  The Happy Couple on February 20, 2009 from Ben Tre, Vietnam
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Can Tho, Vietnam




permalink written by  The Happy Couple on February 20, 2009 from Can Tho, Vietnam
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Bed bugs in the Mekong Delta

Can Tho, Vietnam



Well we had been prepared for mosquitoes in the Mekong Delta, but not what we found. Never having seen a bedbug before in real life, we weren't sure what the little beetle crawling across the bed in Can Tho was, but I had my suspicions. I took the photo thinking that I could later check to see whether it matches. Of course what we should have done is go to the reception and demand to be moved, but we weren't sure enough. The next morning an online ID check proved redundant: a good few splashes of blood on the bed and a really itchy bite on my ankle confirmed what we had suspected. The next night in Chau Doc, Joanne was covered in lines of bites, although we never saw the culprits there. A chat to several of the other people on the tour confirmed that both hotels were hoaching with the beasties, probably because the tours that TNK runs mean that they have guaranteed visitors, so they don't need to make the effort. Of course when one hotel has them and everyone who stays there is moving to the other hotel the following night, it is no surprise that both hotels are infested. We intended to complain, but haven't got around to it.

Anyway, the tour itself was quite pleasant, and the tour guide was pretty good. In the bus on the way he pointed out all the new building around Saigon. Apparently they are building to Singapore standards and the government have a plan for the city to be "better" than Bangkok by 2020. Certainly the rentals he quoted are aimed at international city levels. He also told us that, not only is Vietnam the second exporter of coffee after Brazil, but it is also second rice exporter after Thailand, and the biggest exporter of both black pepper and cashew nuts.

When we first arrived at the boat there was a slightly scary moment as it seemed like it was going to capsize when all the first few people filed in and sat on the same side of the boat, when the captain intervened and indicated that some people should sit on the other side, returning a less worrying camber. I had memories of boat accidents on the Mekong Delta news stories flashing through my mind, and it's quite easy to see how it could happen. All it took was for one person to decide to sit on the other side to take a better photo and the boat would lean massively in that direction.

We had been advised to buy a traditional hat each as sitting in the sun all day on the boat would be very hot without it, but we were herded onto the boat so quickly we didn't have a chance to fall prey to the hawkers. It turned out that the boats were all covered and there was no need to look silly after all, but that didn't stop some people, least of all the Vietnamese.

In the first day they took us to a coconut "candy" (I think they mean sweet) factory in Ben Tre province, which was just a little cottage industry business really. It was all done in the one room from juicing the coconuts to packing the finished product, and all using simple hand-operated machinery. Everything of the coconut is used: the milk and the flesh go into the sweets; the shell is used to fuel the fire that boils up the liquor; the ash is used to augment the soil the tress grow in; building is made from the leaves and branches; and so on. We bought some sweets at the end of it since they seemed to be quite tasty. Of course I couldn't resist buying a packet of the coconut and durian sweets, since my quest for actual durian was still unfulfilled. Joanne was not please about this, as the crisps had made her ultra-sensitive to the heady aroma of durian.

The factory itself wasn't really all that interesting, and I'd have been happy enough with all the chugging around the rivers in various motorised boats, and schlurking around the narrow tributaries in the little oar-powered boats.

Anyway, after that we were taken to a honey tea and banana wine farm, which was even less interesting, although I did buy some banana wine based on a tiny wee taste they gave us. I thought they were just being stingy, but later I realised that the wine is disgusting if you have more than half a thimble of it; then it was on to a crocodile park (if you've seen one you've seen them all; "this is what you do on a rainy day in Natal" said Joanne); then on to see a show of traditional music and sampling some tropical fruits. Great! I thought... durian, surely? But no, it was just dragon fruit and other relatively mundane fruit everyone must have already tried if they'd been in Vietnam more than a day. So we actually had a really nice day, relaxing of various boats as we were chauffeured around the Mekong Delta, but I could have done without all the activities really.


On the way back we got chatting to a couple when the girl asked if I was Scottish. Hollie is from near Loch Tay and travelling with her English boyfriend, Allan. After we'd visited all the proscribed sites we docked and (disappointingly) got on a bus to travel to the ferry crossing to Can Tho, where I ate snake curry, and then I was eaten by the first batch of bed bugs.


permalink written by  The Happy Couple on February 20, 2009 from Can Tho, Vietnam
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Latest Itinerary

Chau Doc, Vietnam


After the flight changes we made in Saigon, here is the latest itinerary.

16th March: Into Laos
30th March: Into Thailand
4th May: Fly to Mumbai
10th June: Fly to Tokyo
29th June: Fly to Beijing
21st July: Into Macau
24th July: Fly to Auckland
11th Aug: Fly to Santiago de Chile
13th Aug: Fly to Easter Island
16th Aug: Return to Santiago
2nd Sep: Fly to Rio
28th Nov: Fly to London



permalink written by  The Happy Couple on February 21, 2009 from Chau Doc, Vietnam
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Carry on up the Mekong Delta

Chau Doc, Vietnam


As the Mekong Delta tour continued into the second and third days, I became more convinced that what we should have done is just organise three days of boat trips up the river system because I was really enjoying all of the travel up (and inevitably back down to get the bus) the river, but I couldn't really be bothered with most of the activities the operators seem to think are the whole point of the tour. Anyway, we didn't realise it would be easy to do (apparently it is), and the main reason to go this way was to take a pleasant and hassle-free route into Cambodia.


The second day was all about floating market, for which we had to get up really early. The first market was quite interesting, but quite small; the next one is the really big one, we were told. Strangely we stopped for lunch before heading off back up the river to the second market. It was strange because we were told the reason we had to be up so early was to make sure the market was still on, but they knew what they were doing I supposed. It was about an hour up river to the second floating market where there was one boat selling some sort of fried bread snacks, then we turned around and it was another hour back to the bus. Hollie, Allan, Joanne, and I installed ourselves at the back of the bus where the bad kids sit, and drank beer, talking tipsily the whole way while the other passengers tried to sleep off the early morning rise.

It was quite a way to Chau Doc, and when we arrived everyone was booked into the hotel except us, who had to be shunted up to the next hotel because the first was full. Both hotels were infested, we discovered the next morning. Worried we would miss out on everyone else socialising we rushed back to the original hotel, where most people seemed to have opted for an early night, but Hollie and Allan were there and still ready to go out for dinner. Eel.

The next morning we were taken to a fish farm, which I expected to be the same as the one we'd seen in Halong Bay, but it was actually a lot more intensive. I don't know how many fish they ad packed into a tiny wee space, but they went totally berserk when some food was thrown in. Next it was off to visit an ethnic minority village. I can't even remember which ethnic group they were now, but it may have been Khmers (or maybe Cham Muslims, I can't remember...), but weaving and living in houses on stilts seemed to be the definitive features of their culture. Actually the stilts is really just about not having you house washed away when the Mekong Delta floods, but I suppose it is a cultural choice whether you do this or build floating houses, which seems to be the most common Vietnamese solution. Again all OK, but not terribly exciting. Next it was onto the slow boat to Cambodia. Actually the speed wasn't so much the problem as the really uncomfortable seats, but the scenery was lovely, so I didn't really notice that my bum was numb until I tried to stand up for the border crossing. This has to be the easiest, most laid-back customs I've ever been through: dock your boat, spend a minute queuing to pick up your already stamped and visa'd passport, cunningly couriered ahead by the guide on motorcycle, so that they were ready for our arrival. Then it was on into Cambodia for a few more hours before docking and getting a bus to Phnom Penh.


permalink written by  The Happy Couple on February 22, 2009 from Chau Doc, Vietnam
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Phnom Penh, Cambodia




permalink written by  The Happy Couple on February 22, 2009 from Phnom Penh, Cambodia
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Intro to Cambodia

Phnom Penh, Cambodia


I think you can forget any blogging for the next 3 weeks. Connection speed in the big towns of Cambodia has been nearly impossibly slow and I've just take 50 minutes to get to the stage where I can start writing this. We are in a smallish town now (actually it's the regional capitol), and it's only going to get worse until Thailand. At $1 an hour we can't afford it with these speeds either, not to mention wasting whole days just to upload a few photos.

It's too late to write anything substantive now as we have to catch the bus. Cambodia is a big rip-off! Tourists are just cash-cows and the money only goes to line the already well-lined pockets of the bratty elite VIP crowd. The wealth gap here is shocking after Vietnam and China, where we never saw any sign of poverty. Here there are loads of huge Hummers and other massive black 4x4s with no number plates and "VIP" in the windscreen; there are lots of expensive clubs, restaurants, and bars full of swaggering spoiled youths (with guns apparently); yet here there are lots of people begging; people in dirty raggy clothes; children up to the age of about 10 walking around the capitol city naked. The government is ostensibly socialist, but nothing we've seen suggests that it is anything other than extreme right wing (maybe it's following the nu-lab socialism), and nothing any of the Cambodians have told us about how politics works suggests otherwise: without money you have no education, no health, no pension, no unemployment benefit etc. By all accounts the government exists only to keep the elite in the money.

And the food is terrible (and expensive of course) after Vietnam.

I've just come back to this and I am being a little unfair on Cambodia, my anger at being exploited forthe last two weeks being focussed by the terrible internet speed I was enduring before I changed place to a slightly faster one.

We just expected Cambodia, being a poorer country than Vietnam or China, to be cheaper; in fact we've blown our budget time and time again here, using up all 4 "free days" that we didn't use in Vietnam. I mentioned the expense here on the couchsurfing website and go some angry responses. Yes it is a lot cheaper than Euorope, but it's still much moire expensive than the neighbouring countries.

permalink written by  The Happy Couple on February 23, 2009 from Phnom Penh, Cambodia
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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