Thursday, July 24, 2008

Leaving Luang Prabang



Novice Van and Novice Bee accompanied me to the Luang Prabang airport, where we posed for a final picture



Novice Van and Novice Bee in front of their temple at Wat Nong

Nothing seems to happen the way I think it will in Luang Prabang. Yesterday and this morning, my last, were no exception. Yesterday, I straggled out of bed late, but managed to get to the Pak Ou caves and the rice whiskey distillery. (Not bad stuff!) I even succeeded somehow in getting some decent pictures. Back in LP after my Mekong cruise, and despite almost constant light rain throughout the day, the sun came out quite suddenly while I was having a late lunch in town and I immediately zipped up Mount Phousi to catch stunning panoramic views of Luang Prabang, the swiftly flowing Mekong, and the Laotian mountains. It was hard to leave the summit and I straggled, so that as dusk fell, I found myself on a back path--an unlit one, alone--stumbling blindly, but excitedly, into a wat complex of Budhas--golden Buddhas, reclining Bhuddas, sitting Buddhas, and Monday and Tuesday and Wednesday Buddhas, Thursday and Friday, and Saturday and Sunday Buddhas.


The main street of Luang Prabang


View from the summit of Mount Phousi



A typical Luang Prabang Tuk-tuk


Sampling 100-proof(!) Rice Moonshine along the Mekong


Just a few of the thousands of Buddhas in the Pak Ou caves


On the summit of Mount Phousi


Alone on the step-path down from Mount Phousi


Reclining Buddha at a Mount Phousi Wat

I thought I'd ended my day with 2 1/2 hours of manicure, pedicure and massage (total, $20). Walking back to my hotel (with Nescafe, Equal and boxed milk for the morning!) I passed an Internet cafe whose customers included...Novice Van! He beamed a beaming smile and a long chat ensued before he suggested we return to the temple to talk more. I showed him pictures of the Thousand Pak Ou Cave Buddhas on my laptop. (As close as it is, it's still a $35-boat-ride away, and so almost none of these very poor novices have ever been there, so I funded an excursion, a pilgrimage, of sorts, for as many of them as I could.) Eventually, Novice Bee joined us and then another and then another. They would be up at 4am (and I was feeling really sick), but we talked and talked and talked until after midnight. I promised to return today at 12 for an hour to say goodbye. Novice Bee walked me to the gate and, as I walked away, I turned several times to wave until his orange robes faded into the misty dark.

As I write, it's 9am in Luang Prabang and I'll be leaving in a few short hours. It's raining lightly (again) and I'm sad to be leaving this peaceful and elusive and delightful place and Novice Van's warm smiles, sad to end my trip and to begin a two-day journey home, returning from the road in yet another travel-induced existentialist struggle with myself and my life and my values. I don't want to wear shoes again or walk down streets of impoverished wealth, devoid of ubiquitous clusters of bright orange cotton and golden temples and stupas and Buddhas and lush jungle and "sabai dees". But I have to go, as surely as the rain falls in Luang Prabang in the wet season.

"Kop jai", Luang Prabang--thank you.

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

A Day in Luang Prabang (or, "Just go to Wiki!")

I'm not a good photographer, but neither do I suck at the medium, so it's inexplicable that I have nothing much to show for today in the way of photos. Of course, the day had other (and fabulous!) redeeming qualities. I guess that if you want photos of Luang Prabang's 40-odd wats, you can prolly find them on Wiki. In a way, however, the fact that I can't seem to digitally "capture" this town is a good metaphor for this ethereal and elusive place. To be sure, it rained all day, so there never was good light, but I thought I'd at least get something that did minimal justice to the beauty of Luang Prabang, it's glimmering, gracefully sloping wat roofs, it's ubiquitous fluttering orange robes, and placid, narrow, streets. Luang Prabang is largely unspoiled by commercialism and rampant tourism, but don't wait too long to visit; even with UNESCO World Heritage site protection, tourists outnumber local residents--and this is the low season.

I began my day not sure what to do other than to secure batteries for my camera (a never-ending quest on this trip, for reasons far too dull for repetition) and try to unload some Vietnamese currency somewhere in exchange for some dollars or Loas kip. Having arrived at night, I had no idea what lay outside my window, much less down the
street, up the hill, or towards the river. After breakfast and reptile extermination, I set off with an umbrella and three street maps, each less helpful than the others. All the "major" sights were to the left, so I turned right, always having to do things my own way, figuring I'd start small, at the easternmost tip of the town and work west. Along the way, though, I stumbled into some pretty major "minor" wats. But with so many wats in this ancient capital of Laos, and one or two seemingly punctuating every block, it would have been hard not to.

At the fourth wat I visited, Wat Nong Sikhounmuang, a novice stood outside the (closed) temple door. "Sabai dee!" I called out ("hello"), one of the three phrases I know in Loa, the others being "please" and "thank you", which pretty much covers both the necessities and my available foreign-language RAM. I've already forgotten the one Vietnamese word or phrase I was able to say--what was it again? "How are you?," he asked, in Enlish. "Where you come from?" We had a brief exchange limited by my hearing and his poor English. Then it got really confusing, and remained so for the rest of the day. Don't ask me why, but I thought he said there was another deaf woman and he was going to get her. In fact, what he said was that he would open the locked door if I wanted to see the interior of the temple. I went in, he offered me a seat on the floor, and we continued to make and hear sounds of no communicative consequence. It became an English lesson and he asked me if I would come back later for more practice. He also said something about the market. That's the part that perplexes me still.

I continued to explore Luang Prabang, making my way down the main drag of shops and guest houses and restaurants. I bought some batteries (yay!) and got rid of my Vietnamese scrap paper, visited the Palace (and Museum), saw a photo exhibit and another wat, and had lunch at Tum-Tum Bamboo. Here's how you know you've been in Asia for awhile. I saw a small bug crawling through my sticky rice and just pushed that bit aside! (I saw it only briefly, vut I think it was just a tiny ant.) After that, with each forkful, I held it up briefly and, if none of the black specks moved...I ate it! :O Like your altered sense of trust without reliable cultural cues, I didn't know whether to do such a thing is, no matter where I am, unthinkable, or whether relativism applies and I should take the "eh, whatever" approach. No matter, I seem not to have been affected by it. Well, so far, anyway.

After lunch, I returned to the wat and found my student waiting again at the temple door, notebook and phrasebook in hand. In mine, an English/Loa study text I found at the Palace Museum store. To see the Palace, I had to rent a shirt to cover my shoulders--again, for me, inexplicably and shamefully unprepared! :O My student (Novice Bee) asked if I wanted to go to the "room" to study. I didn't know what "the room" was, but I said yes and followed. With monks everywhere, I had no lingering apprehension from my Yuksom (Sikkim, India) Tibetan monk episode.

We left the temple and walked to what turned out to be the monks' living quarters. My presence drew curiosity, but not as much attention as you might think. Boys (that's what they are) were coming and going and engaging in what my Dad would quaintly call "tom-foolery." We sat on the floor--I now had four students--and began a pronunciation lesson. Our "sh", "z", and "th" sounds, among others, don't exist in Lao or Thai (which they all speak, as it's closely related to Loa). So I instructed them to listen for the difference and repeat ship/sip, shock/sock, thank/tank, and zero and visit and buzz and other "v" sounds. It was fun to call upon the skills I used to earn my TESOL certification--curl your tongue this way, listen for that sound, put your teeth on your lower lip, relax your jaw. However, all the while, I was also thinking, am I where I am, doing what I'm doing? Am I sitting in a country we carpet-bombed in a circle of orange-draped kids meditate in the mornings and try to make "sh" and "v" and "z" sounds in the afternoon?

Mid-lesson, my "primary" student (Novice Bee), again said something about the market. And--damn it--I still don't know what this whole market thing was about! I still don't know what transpired, linguistically, that led to my next finding myself in a tuk-tuk with Novice Bee and Novice Van heading out of town to a market several kilometers away and returning with new sandals for both (I also bought them two more English study texts.) As we climbed into the cramped space, Novice Van made sure I was aware that I mustn't touch them. I said I knew that and was being very careful.

After our whirlwind tour of the market, I again found myself back in the dorm room with a newly reconstituted class, all of whom worked hard on that "v" sound. Novice Van interrupted to say that he wanted to give me something. He reached into his bag and produced two braided orange strings. He told me to put out my hands--one like this, one like that, one palm towards him, one turned the sky. He wrapped one string around my right wrist and chanted a prayer. He rearranged my hands (touching me in the process, which I guess is okay if your doing a blessing?) Novice Bee then repeated the process (but without the precisely arranged hands and with no prayer and with a slightly different hue of orange wristlet). As it was approaching 6pm--time to pray--our lesson ended, but not before I asked if I could attend prayers with them. Of course I could--Buddhism's a big-tent faith! I sat in the back of the temple for a half-hour or so, listening to and "feeling" the chanting, watching the prostrations, and generally marveling at these lives, so very different from my own.

I asked a monk outside to tell Novice Bee I would return if I could. I'm not entirely sure, but I think I may have a class scheduled for some time in the afternoon! Now, however, despite sore throat, headache, and what may be a fever coming on, I'm headed up the mighty Mekong River in a longboat to the Pak Ou caves of a Thousand Buddhas and to...a rice moonshine distillery.





Wait, was this on the itinerary?



Well *this* was a rather unexpected sort of day!

If someone had told me that, on July 23, 2008, I'd be going by rainbow-colored tuk-tuk to the Luang Prabang market with two novice Buddhist monks to buy them new sandals after conducting an impromptu English pronunciation class in the wat dormitory...well...let's just say it wasn't the sort of day one plans in advance!

(NB: Reptile vanquished from my quarters without incident.)

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Just for Chelsea

Creature alert.

I woke up comfy, snuggly and rested and was honestly thrilled to find it raining, to be in a place that doesn't have a long sight-seeing check-list, and have nothing more pressing to do than make my way to breakfast to leisurely plan my day's round of wat visits. Working clockwise in my room, I opened the windows, then the wooden shutters, re-closed the windows. One, two, three. Fourth window (the one in the picture, closest to my bed): I opened the glass and saw movement--FAST movement. I must be pretty fast myself (a lifetime of creature-phobia training), because I managed to re-close the window before the creature (a gecko of some other sort of reptile) leapt from window frame into my room. In my panic-stricken mind's eye, it was at LEAST 6 inches long--a MONSTER, Chelsea! My fear now is that the housekeeper will open that last window while I'm at breakfast and the creature will now be somewhere in my room without my knowing it (under my pillow? in my clothes? scuttling across the wall or ceiling just as I'm ready to fall off to sleep?). Of course, it'll turn up when I am least prepared and maybe amped up on coffee. Not that I need caffeine for a full-blown creature-triggered, blood-curdling scream, as my family well knows. :O

Oh, and Chels, the mystery rash on my calf faded on it's own, as did the suspicious-looking bump on my stomach that I was sure was a parasite portal. My intestinal distress did not, after all, require me to be medivacced to Bangkok, and DEET seems to be repelling the dengue and malaria-carrying mosquitos.

Note: Have just secured a protective escort back to my room to cope with the leaping lizard. Wish me luck.

Off to explore Luang Prabang! :)

18th Day, 3rd Country

If it's possible to say you love a place you've seen only briefly, in the dark, from the windows of a plane and a taxi, then I love Luang Prabang. And I definitely love the Apsara hotel. (Room pics dutifully attached for Nan.)

I left from the Hanoi "International" Airport, which felt rather domestic. Despite gates with television screens announcing outbound flights for Hong Kong, Taipei, and Bangkok, it was a ghost-town. I spent my last few hours in downtown Hanoi visiting art galleries and doing my level best in dark sunglasses to ignore the endless "hallo, hallo" of hawkers, moto-taxis, and cyclos. In saw some lovely art--oil on canvas and lacquer at "Apricot" and "Green Palm", both not far from my hotel. I then ascended to "Highlands Coffee" (the Starbuck's of Vietnam) for a coffee-slush drink, as much for the cool-down as for the caffeine. It offers nice views of the lake, but without AC, it wasn't the cool slurpy experience of my fantasy. I shuffled exhausted, hot and dripping with sweat back to the hotel, collected my bags, and actually did the head-dropping nod-off on the way here. (I dreamed of beautiful Sapa and have already decided I want to go back to climb Mt. Fansipan, Vietnam's highest!)

The first thing I noticed about Luang Prabang was from the plane as we descended. It looked eerily dark. No highways, few streetlights, an pale orange-yellow glow on small streets with almost no traffic, just a moving light here and there. After the chaotic traffic of Vietnam, I felt like I was landing on another planet.

I followed the NYTimes article on Luang Prabang and made sure to get a seat in the front for the dash to the Visa desk, where a long line was promised to form. Great, row three...but...er...we boarded and deboarded...from the BACK of the plane. Grrrrr..... But I did mange somehow to beat the crowd anyway, where I quickly became the cause of a bottleneck. No passport-sized photo (so unlike me to be unprepared in this most egregious way!). It didn't really matter. I paid $1 to have one taken. But then they never took the photo. :-/ I needed $35 and had no US money--again, egregiously and inexplicably unprepared, but I did try to get US currency in Hanoi and couldn't. After a bit of digging through various zippered pockets I found--yes, exactly $35 in addition to the $1 I'd already coughed up for the non-photo. Then the problem was that they didn't like my fiver. It was missing approximately a 1/32 of an inch off one corner (or it might just have been a bit frayed). Plainly useless currency! Rejected! But I have no other. Consultation with other officers and a superior ensued. Okay, they would atake it, but I also had to cough up another $1 for their "overtime" fee for flights arriving after 5:30. When I say this airport and entire passenger processing system was rinky-dink, I give it more credit than it deserves. I eventually persuaded them ti accept Vietnamese currency, but they demanded 40,000 for a dollar and I knew that was too much. Dealing with such a large number I spaced out the fact that I was then arguing over about 50 cents! But it was also the principle, coupled with the fact that I really couldn't hear what they were saying to me. It seemed they were making it all it up as they went along. It was actually a bit funny and I was laughing as this unfolded. Eventually, the man behind me, exasperated, handed me a dollar to cover the "overtime" fee. I was sent along to the next desk where I retrieved my passport with a visa duly entered and sent along again to the customs window. Following the instructions to the letter, I had to declare that I was bringing in more than $50 worth of goods acquired from out of the country. (CraftLink!) I considered fudging it, afraid of red tape for a few souvenier trinkets, but it is, after all, Laos, and I'd heard first-hand horror stories from a woman in Sapa about Loas officials. Nevermind that the customs form emphasized, in italic letters, that carrying drugs would result in the death penalty. Not that I had any drugs, of course, but it made clear that these folks don't fool around. So I declared my trinkets and prepared to go to the "Items to Declare" door. It was closed and locked and dark. After 5:30, dontcha know. No overtime pay for customs workers, it seems. The money exchange was also closed for the day. I was glad I had a car meeting me with a sign "Mrs. Janice Caylor."

Riding in the taxi, I was again struck by the sparse traffic. A car, a bike, a motorcycle, another bike. It was like Mayberry, softly lit by an occasional dull street lamp. And quiet. No horn honking, no aggressive driving. Calm, slow-paced. Monks floating by on the sidewalks in bright, billowing orange robes.

The Apsara is great. Lovely contemporary, stylish reception and rooms. The entire place was overhauled in accordance with the World Heritage standards. My room is gorgeous--quality dark wood furniture and floors, glass Buddha statues, blue silk curtains and bed coverings, colonial style window shutters and a balcony overlooking the river. (Can't see the view until morning. NB: breakfast served from 7 until...LUNCHTIME!) Spacious bathroom with terra-cotta tiles, lots of hot water and excellent water pressure from a REAL shower head, none of this sink-style sprayer stuff like in Vietnam and Cambodia. Showered, exhausted and in a king-sized bed soft sheets and comforter and enormous smushy pillows. This. Feels. Good. And was much-needed, I might add. Can't wait for morning, and my first day in Luang Prabang.


Monday, July 21, 2008

Onward to Luang Prabang

Hard to believe I'm getting ready not only to leave Hanoi, but also to leave the country entirely to visit yet a third, Laos. Yesterday was a long day. But I didn't need my 18+ hour CI battery going dead as I walked back to the hotel from dinner to tell me that. And it was HOT!

When I got into my hotel after wandering around like a bag lady for several hours, I was warmly greeted like a returning family member and asked how I liked Sapa. The restroom off the lobby has the standard sink/toilet/shower arrangement (standard for here, way not standard for the US). Basically, you just shower standing next to the sink and toilet, no curtain. Water goes everywhere, but there's a little cover for the toilet paper roll. Tired? Sit on the toilet! (Great for leg-shaving). Naturally, as soon as I was refreshed with a shower, clothing change, and copious amounts of coffee, my room was ready. ;-/ Too bad I couldn't sleep.

Yesterday was my day to get cash, see CraftLink, a NFP gift shop where the Clintons famously shopped, and visit the Temple of Literature, across the street. (Have I mentioned that it's HOT?) Being Vietnam, nothing is as I was told, either in directions or at the HSBC bank I'd sought out. Guess what? It's not my "local" bank after all. I'd walked out of the way (have I mentioned that it's HOT?) to get some good ol' greenbacks. The teller told me I could. Then that I couldn't. Then that I could withdraw Vietnamese and exchange it at the window. As the machine spit out a million Vietnamese dong, a manager approached me to say that the teller had misspoken. Great. Now I have all this Vietnamese money and no dollars. Grrrrr..... Well, it really was not so bad. I was able to drop a cool mil at CraftLink after visiting the temple.

I've only just gotten used to Hanoi and now it's time to go. I am no longer afraid to step off the cub into oncoming traffic without looking. Standard rules of the road, one-way streets, staying on your own side of a two-way street, and stoplights are mere "suggestions". Also, assuming you are foolish enough to trust the stoplights, the "walk" signal gives no warning. It goes from green to red just as the drivers' light goes from red to green! But once you've mastered the game, it almost doesn't matter. The key, it seems, is to stare straight ahead, try to be aware only through your peripheral vision of oncoming traffic (motorcycles, almost exclusively), which will approach from all directions, not just the ones you might rationally conclude. If you make eye contact, you're dead. It's a game of chicken and a competition over who has a greater degree of plausible deniability. If you make eye contact, a driver knows you've seen him or her and you then have responsibility for avoiding the driver. If you just look straight ahead and walk, they'll get around you. Somehow, here in Hanoi, at least, it works. Accidents in Saigon seemed fairly routine. Here, I haven't yet seen one, though have feared I'd be the object of a few. Actually, the greater danger is tripping over a parked motorcycle, which seems to be what the sidewalks are for.

I like Hanoi, and I like Vietnam, so I'm sorry to be leaving. But I'm also looking forward to seeing Luang Prabang, the entirety of which is a protected UNESCO World Heritage Site. Once there, I hope I will, as very tentatively planned, hook up with a Brit/Italian couple from our Halong Bay cruise/sea-kayak trip that's traveling around the world on a six-month air ticket--something I'd love to do. For now, time to get packed and checked out before spending a few remaining hours wandering the Old Quarter and getting a taxi to the airport. I arrive in Luang Prabang around 7:30, where someone from my hotel, the Apsara, will meet me. I hope.

Huh?

Ya' gotta love the silly things--slightly off translations (recycle those?!) , packaged-food oddities (prawn chips, egg cookies, and the melon-seed candy Dan and I sampled labeled: "Always Fresh! Smells Delicious!"), sad little museum dioramas, and my new favorite cute thing: toothpaste "ampules"! (The one pictured is actually on the larger side.)






Sunday, July 20, 2008

Lake Hoam Kiem-etics

I left Lao Cai to return to Hanoi at 7:30pm, after Day 2's trek, a local dance festival, and an early morning departure from Sapa to the Bac Ha market, some 3 hours away by jeep. Colorful and far from the realm of my ordinary reality, of course, but also a bit ho-hum now that the presence of tourism is so palpable. I'd probably more enjoyed another day in Sapa, my new fantasy residence. After the market, we visited two m ore hill-tribe families (enh...) and took a short boat ride down a river that feeds in the great Red River. We stopped, somewhat inexplicably, to gaze across to China at the border gate, and then I was deposited back at the madhouse that is the Lao Cai train station. As coincidence would have it, I bunked again with the same father-and-son duo that I'd shared a compartment with on the way up! They still weren't the most engaging travel companions I've ever encountered, and i was hard to elicit much conversation from them until we had a very disconcerting smell of smoke coming through the AC vent. I sought out the attendant, who appeared long enough to tell us "no smoking!" which, of course, we weren't, nevermind that it was a fire-like smoke smell, not a cigarette smoke smell. Another attendant appeared. "Smoke", we said. "No", she said, "no smoke." "Yes," we said, "smoke." Someone who at least appeared to have a bit more authority came by as well an then left with the air of someone on a problem-solving mission. None of the three ever returned. I fell asleep; my detached companions may have been asphixiated, I couldn't be sure and, patience and sense of hospitality and congeniality worn thin, I didn't really care.

We arrived in Hanoi at an ungodly 4:30 am, at which hour the city was still a ghost-town. I took a cab to my hotel, which was shuttered tightly. Unfortunately for me, I hadn't heard them tell me that, when I returned from Sapa, I should ring the bell (Bell? What bell?). It;'s not exactly like you can find a Starbuck's or 24-hour cafe or anything even remotely resembling it. Having nowhere else to go, I had the cab take me to the lake in the Old Quarter, where I'd read that all of Hanoi comes out to exercise beginning at 5 am. I had nowhere to go. I may have been the only one with a suitcase, but I had plenty of company. Hanoians, young and old, were circum-ambulating the lake, stretching, arm-swinging, bending, doing aerobics, massaging their and others' pressure points, slapping their buttocks, kneading facial and neck muscles and otherwise demonstrating eastern self-care. If I hadn't been so exhausted and feeling a bit lost for want of a home, I'd have taken a few better pix. Had any of these antics taken place in New York, it would be a comic sideshow. Here, it was the most mundane and routine of quotidian pursuits. It felt silly even to be aware of what was going on around me, never mind *watching* and, god forbid, *photographing*! And yet it is among the most intriguing and entertaining sights I've encountered on this trip!




Everybody's doin' it!

Saturday, July 19, 2008

Travel Nirvana: Sublime Sapa

With all the travel travails that characterized my first day in Sapa, the title of this post (Nirvana? Where?) may seem at this point like a misnomer, and you may be wondering exactly when I stepped through that proverbial looking glass. But as things are wont to do when traveling, heaven followed hell, sunshine followed rain, exuberance obliterated disappointment. Today set a new gold standard for travel adventure. It might have been the Black Hmoung boy who asked to sing for me in his native dialect, but who first clarifying that it was a gift, he wanted no money. (He refused even a foil-packeted "egg cookie". Um...yum?) It might have been the spectacular mountain vistas, our stream forges, the suspended bridges, the red-clay earth, brilliant green terraced rice paddies. It might have been the water buffaloes to which I yielded path. (Tuan: "Watch please; water buffalo poop here, yes, okay.") The chicken and noodle soup that Tuan cooked at a way station along the trail? It might have been the bamboo trekking pole he carved for me or the bamboo forests through which we climbed. Perhaps it was the enormous butterflies--blues and oranges and yellows. Was it the pack-basketed villagers in distinctive native dress? The toothless woman whose smile was bigger even than her humongous earrings? Was it the local dance festival? It was all of these things, and more, a perfect storm of sights and smells and sounds and sixth-sense experiences create travel nirvana. h, now I remember--this is why I travel!

Here's what indigo dye looks like, dripped on a path: ;)


Day 2's trek and the evening's entertainment:










Ascent to the Tokinese Alps...and to Travel Nirvana

Some travel experiences are so spectacular, wondrous, and surreal, so rich, and so far outside the frame of any personal or cultural reference, that you're left wondering whether you are where you think you are. Yes, it's on the map. Yes, I planned to be here. Yes, I knew I'd be doing this or that. But then you find you aren't prepared--can't have been prepared. You've stepped through Alice's looking glass, and what you experience is every bit as impossible as a grinning Cheshire cat in a tree, a mad hatter, and mind-altering cake. Today was once such day. Sapa is one such place.

But before that, there was...da' Vine! Divine!

Dan, Hien and I were foiled in our attempt to visit the Ho Chi Minh Museum. Well, not really foiled so much as seduced by gastronomic nirvana in the form of the sole restaurant in all of Vietnam to pass the ISO Food Safety Management Standards. Which meant that we could eat without anxiety--as if the ambiance, service, and promising menu weren't enough to induce such a state. I speak, of course, of Vine, billed by Frommer's as the top not-to-be-missed foodie experience in Vietnam. It lived up to it's reputation, but deserves a post of its own. It caused me to abandon my teetotaling ways for a Sicilian red. But what choice did I have? I was eating bruschette and risotto prepared with white truffles and shaved parmesan, dipping bread in fruity olive oil and sweet balsamic vinegar! After a solid week of unrelenting stomach cramps, almost two of delicious but constant Indochinese cuisine, I was home, home, HOME at an "International" restaurant that could have been in New York and I near wept for joy and at missing all things familiar, comforting and feeling of Gotham. After shamelessly topping of lunch with tiramisu (*THE* Verona recipe!) and bread *AND* butter pudding, we waddled out of our food womb, back out into the chaos that is Hanoi.





Dan, Hien and I said good-bye, and off I taxied to the Vietnamese Museum of Ethnology to learn about the hill-tribes I was to encounter in the Tonkinese Alps, as they are known. Alone now, I quickly slipped back into solo-traveler mode, found my efficiency and independence mojos, and navigated the city without fear. It's counter-intuitive, I know. After all, gone was my always level-headed nephew, engineer of the Halong Bay ships' quarter's bug-mitigation plan, not to mention something it's hard to be without in Vietnam--an interpreter (Hein). But there you have it. I was again a solo sojourner, and it felt good.

After retrieving my bag from the hotel, I taxied to the pandemonium that is the Saigon rail station where, naturally, I was deposited several blocks from where I actually had to be. Mass confusion ensued from the "yes, I know you have a ticket, but you need the additional *white* ticket" to the over-crowded "waiting room", a dank affair with soap-less bathrooms. I daresay I've never worked harder at not touching any fixture, knob or handle, or been as conscientious about not letting my pants legs touch the floor of any public restroom.

There was no way to know my train was on track 8, obscured by tracks 1 through 7, all of which were hidden by...train number 1, which seemed the most obvious choice. The barrage of shouted Vietnamese clued me in that I was unfathomably stupid to have even considered boarding the only visible train. A tour guide accompanying another group took pity on me and the group adopted me long enough to get me to proper track, train, and car. I was on my own trying to find my proper compartment and berth. I don't know how people without removable CI processors and Ambien managed to sleep but, mercifully, having both, I drifted off, however fitfully, having somehow collapsed myself, accordion style, into a woefully deficient length of berth space. We knocked and bumped and clunked down the tracks before, like a roller-coaster car engaging at the bottom of the big climb, felt to be ensnared by some giant cog to begin our steep climb into the mountains. In and out of sleep for the next seven hours, a gentle nudge from a fellow compartmentee alerted me to our arrival in Lao Cai, and brought be bolt-upright and scrambling to gather luggage and shoes. I stumbled, blinking and half-conscious, down the steps of the train, was quickly swept up in the morass of equally sleepy travelers, and ejected into a cacophonous receiving crowd, relieved to see "Mrs. Janice Taylor" (fitting, in view of my Saigon wedding) on a pink placard in a sea of white ones. Here was Tuan, my guide, protector and translator for the next three day.

After a one-hour car climbing still further into the mountains, we arrived in Sapa but, as we approached the "Gold Sea" hotel, my excitement turned to cautious apprehension. But stomach ailments unabated (a successful course of antibiotics having only later proven that I indeed had a bacterial infection), I saw only the promise of a clean (I hoped) bathroom. That promise was unrealized, but at least the bathroom was stationary and private.

The Gold Sea is a dreary place, a dirty place, a stained-rug and smelly place. It's a moldy and crumbling place, a place I wasn't sure had boiled the coffee water. It's just one night, I told myself. True, but that's one night too long, I replied. I was slipping into traveler's despair, sick, road-and-rail weary, and suddenly needing--like I need to breathe--an InterContinental, a Sheraton, a Four Seasons. And had there been one, I'd have ponied up. I decided to go for what, in Sapa, at least, is going for broke. "Take me to the Victoria Sapa." It's the only luxury hotel in Northwest Vietnam and I couldn't get there fast enough.

As a room was not yet ready, Tuan and I sat in the lovely lobby sipping hot tea, discussed our first day's trekking route, and then hit the path to the road to the path to the trail. The rain was stead but light. Within the hour, the rain was steady and not-so-light. Within two hours, steady and not so light became all-out pouring. It never occurred to me to bring rain pants in addition to a jacket. I was soaked from thigh to boot-top. My camera was acting weird, and Tuan didn't seem to understand my request that he hold the umbrella over the camera when I took pix. I was cold. I was tired. I hated Sapa and traveling and Tuan and our lousy picnic lunch, eaten sitting on a rain poncho on the cement at a school out-of-session, where fearsome Vietnamese soldiers were being drilled on the use of field phones seemingly left over from the "American War." They seemed remotely curious, but utterly humorless. I ate my rolls and Laughing Cow cheese triangles and green-cream-filled Yodel-like-item in abject misery, shivering. I passed on the packet-o-meat and cut vegetables because, already sick, was determined anew to adhere scrupulously to "boil it, peel it, or forget it."

On the upside--yes, there was one, although I was hard-pressed to much appreciate it -- I met my first Black Hmuong and Red Dzao villagers, the dialects of which Tuan speaks. I learned that the "black" of the Black Hmuong isn't really black at all--it' blue, made from "indigo", a basil-looking plant that is fermented in huge barrels until it turns...deep, dark blue. This is the "black" dye with which this tribe colors it's hemp to weave and embroider textiles for its clothing, blankets and just about everything else. If their distinctive black costume didn't readily identify them, their black-stained hands would have. And to be fair, my poncho-picnic did yield me two Red Dzao friends, initially intent on selling me something. But after we shared both warming smiles and one of my green-cream Yodel-like items, they were instead sold on me, the odd foreigner.

So, I'm cold and wet now, I told myself, but I'll soon be swaddled in a plush Victoria Sapa terry-cloth bathrobe after a hot bath, ordering tea service in my room, my every need attended to. Um...no. Instead, the day ended as uncomfortably as it started, bracketed on either end by hotel disappointment. I was to move yet again, but was condemned nevertheless for one night to the Victoria Sapa. Against my will, my lawyer persona emerged like an alien from my never-lose-your-cool-or-sense-of-humor travel persona and, summoning the manager to my room, I enumerated the many defects of my room (large bug next to my pillow, construction crew just outside my window, construction materials obscuring my view, wet bathrobe (I gagged at the thought that it might have been from the room's prior occupant)). I was promptly rewarded with another room with a lovely view (the sun came out!) more befitting the Victoria Sapa's reputation.

As much as I wanted just to crawl under the covers to cry and/or sleep, I instead ventured out in search of the "Sapa Rooms Hotel", a $30-a-night boutique establishment that had eluded me since early June, and where I had very much wanted to stay. As it turned out, the Aussie expat proprietor's emails never reached me. After wandering around Sapa for an hour, I found what had become my holy grail of Sapa. Peter Wilkes (Saint Peter!), his stylish guesthouse, and organic comfort-food menu were an oasis in parched travel desert. I quickly arranged to move there the following day--today, as I write. Peter arranged to have me squired by motorcycle taxi up to the Victoria to retrieve my laptop, and I sat down to a hot-pot-and-blogging dinner before returning to the Victoria for a good nights' sleep in a bug-free bed.

Here are some pix of day 1 in Sapa, trekking in the rain, the mountains shrouded alternately in fog, mist, or full-on clouds, a view of Sapa town's lake from a balcony at the Victoria (after the clear), my (second, post-making-of-a-fuss) room at the Victoria, and typical stretches and mud through which I slogged, and the red-clay path (slick as oil, I might add!), and representative rice-paddy terraces, along the tops of which we walked. You can see the green indigo leaves as they begin the process of fermenting into blue-black dye, blue-black stained fingers and/or fingernails, Black Hmoung embroidering, typical black-velvet-like skirts and hats, a gorgeous embroidered blanket of the type both used and sold by Black Hmoung women. You can also see both manual and mechanized methods of spinning hemp into thread for later weaving on a community loom. Note in one picture a clump of green leaves on the eave of a thatched roof on a Hmoung home. As my guide (and, later, a little Hmoung girl who knew a bit of English) explained, this is a message from the family to other villagers admonishing them not to come to the home during periods when the family has asked for a miracle of some sort (or, perhaps, if a family member is ill) and the spirits must not be disturbed, the home not sullied or interfered with by other than the family. Actually, I approached Nirvana at the close of the day when, in despair, I emailed and sought out Pete Wilkes at Sapa Rooms, who told me to come down for dinner. Because his menu devoted one full side of a two-sided card to their Famous Hot-Pot, I naturally ordered that, hoping to chase away the bone-penetrating chill and damp (which I'd now convinced myself, given recent history, was going to be a Big Cold. The hot pot was a broth of herbs and spices, pineapple, lemongrass, ginger, boiled at the table on a...hot pot. Into that was added handfuls of greens, vegetables, tofu and chicken. About as good as a simple meal gets, as warm and welcoming as I've had. Things were beginning to turn around.

(By the way, it was during the poncho picnic in the rain that I realized I had nothing to prove or gain from a hill-tribe hut experience, didn't need--at an arthritic 48--to brave primitive living conditions sleeping in dried sweat and dirt and damp. Hell, I've already earned those credentials. Just give me a warm, dry, soft bed and let me ease on into middle age. Methinks this is adventure aplenty.)























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