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P is for….

Sunday, February 1st, 2009

by Rach
onwards to Hanoi, Vietnam

Prince (and Pauper)
We are the only Westerners on this train. It would seem the majority take the advice we were given to take the more expensive and much faster express train. But as our dollar keeps falling, we’re in pauper mode and opted for the train that makes frequent stops and only manages an average speed of 40km/hr. That’s why it will take two whole days and two whole nights to cover the 1,726 kilometres. The berths on this train are the shortest and narrowest we have encountered, but we are feeling like princes on our four inch thick mattresses. You see, the next compartment has one inch mattresses…..the following has bamboo mats on the wooden planks, and instead of being stacked two high, there are three bunks on top of each other…..the sleepers give way to reclining (in some cases permanently in one position) chairs, which are threadbare and black with grime…..and finally there are very very straight-backed upright wooden seats, not that many people are using them – most have spread their own bamboo mats and plastic raincoats on the floor to sit and sleep on (yes, UNDER the seats).
Makes our compartments look positively palatial.

Performance
If we were paid by all the people, who stop at our door to watch us eat or even to watch us doing nothing, we’d recoup the cost of this journey easily! But we just smile, wave, offer oranges and continue sitting and eating. (And Rob declined the offers to go Vodka-drinking the first night – he was scared he’d never get back to our carriage!)

Power
No-one was allowed on to the platform without a valid ticket. And even then, not until a certain time. Passengers disembarking from a newly-arrived train were not allowed off the platform without re-presenting their tickets. Those who did not were marched away down the platform to who-knows-where? Bureaucracy with a capital B or Communism with a capital C or Power with a capital P?
Then there’s the music man. Yesterday he decided everyone should wake up at 6:30am. Piped music BLASTED through the carriages, rousing even the deepest sleepers. Thou shalt all wake up now and go and queue at the squat toilets, all together now. Thankfully the music did not last all day long – just when Mr Music Man decided we all needed entertainment (from which there was no escape).
But Mr Music had nothing on the new train driver we picked up last night. This guy sat on his airhorn all the way from Danang to Hanoi. I challenge you to look it up on a map and see just how long we listened to the Horn Symphony for – actually, I’ll tell you – about 18 hours of hearing a three-to-five second blast every minute with a ten second blast before leaving a station. Then for the final hour on the approach to the city, the horn played more than it didn’t….honestly, it would blast for about ten seconds and stop for one. Power hungry, we decided, from our too-close vantage point of the second carriage behind the horn.

 

Ploughing and Planting
A faint five o’clock shadow of newly planted seedlings shimmers across the flooded field. In the next block the earth is hard and dry. Beside it large clumps of dirt are being softened into mud as the water soaks in. The next paddy is also under water and you can still see the cracks in the earth giving it the appearance of a mosaic picture. In yet another, stalks of deepening green sway in the breeze. The harvesting we saw weeks ago is now a distant memory – these people are on to the next round of preparations. Piles of manure are dropped in each paddy, then transferred into baskets to be scattered about by hand before being hoed or hoof-trodden in to the soil. Small patches of intensely-cultivated bright green seedlings are broken up and planted out one by one in the fields; clumps are thrown into the water and lie there, waiting for women to separate them and painstakingly push the roots of each individual plant down into the mud. One by one. Field by field. Acre by acre. The oxen are worked by men trailing behind on wooden boards; ploughing, tilling, breaking up clumps of clay, breaking up clods of earth, sometimes in dry fields, sometimes splashing in water. Some are tethered at the end of a long weighted pole. Some are led along or ridden by young boys. Water is poured from channels into a paddy using a large conical-shaped basket on a stick. In another section someone has rigged up a pump to complete the task more easily. Women walk with baskets hanging from a bamboo pole balanced across their shoulders. Others scatter seeds from a basket on their hips. Bicycles and motorbikes wait on paths to transport their owners home.
There is a season for everything.

P is for Pee (or parenting)
What is it with the littlest kid (who IS toilet-trained) needing to pee in her pants at the very beginning of the two days in confinement? Three times? And what about the one who has never ever wet her bed, losing control on the mattress we were going to sit on for the next 40 hours? Ah well, these things happen.

Paragraph
taken from a letter written to “Dear Mum and Dad” on the train today:

“Having seen some really awesome sights like the bays of blue water or the sunset on the Mekong or rice paddies stretching to the horizon, I wonder how much better heaven will look. Will we even notice what heaven looks like or will our thoughts be centred completely on God?
And if we do see heaven, will we see people like Adam and Eve or Poh-poh? I hope we’ll be able to see Poh-poh! Sometimes I miss her a lot.”

p is for precious

*thankful*

Sunday, January 4th, 2009

by Rach
Phnom Penh, Cambodia
 

 

Today I am thankful for running water.
For a toilet that flushes without you having to pour the water in from a bucket.
For hot water coming from the shower.
That most of our kids are big enough to wash their own socks-n-undies 😉
That Rob does more than his fair share of hand washing (even when he’s not paid!)
And that there’s a laundry service at this guesthouse.

Photo is from Kampot a couple of days ago

Kampot Connections

Friday, January 2nd, 2009
by Rach Kampot, Cambodia

 

It's a run-down ramshackle dilapidated town. It ... [Continue reading this entry]

just like, WOW!!

Thursday, December 25th, 2008
by Rach who is still in awe (and Rob composed the title <wink>) Siem Reap, Cambodia Christmas breakfast is usually a light affair for us and this year was no exception; local oranges, baby bananas and ... [Continue reading this entry]

Missing Christmas

Thursday, December 25th, 2008
by Rob Siem Reap, Cambodia We have just spent the last month leading up to Christmas travelling through lands that will all "miss" it. In Laos in particular, there were no Christmas trees in the malls, no piped carols in the ... [Continue reading this entry]

?Christmas?

Friday, December 19th, 2008
by someone listening to carols on the ipod Vientiane, Laos to Bangkok, Thailand via Nong Khai, Thailand There are signs of Christmas in communist Laos. That is to say, there are Christmas trees and fairy lights and a Santa-at-the-north-pole-scene outside a ... [Continue reading this entry]

weekends

Sunday, December 7th, 2008
By Da Mama Luang Prabang, Laos Weekends at home are a time for the children to race up and down the right-of-way with all the neighbourhood children, who don't need to go to school. Weekends in Laos, are no different, apart from ... [Continue reading this entry]

What’s in ‘da Hood?

Sunday, November 30th, 2008

by Rob Luang Prabang, Laos 

Wats is around us? (Rach edits: I'm not sure if that's supposed to be another one of the far-too-many-wat-jokes or if it was just a typo!!!!!) What does life look like in a 1km ... [Continue reading this entry]

in an elephant’s footsteps

Friday, November 14th, 2008
by Rachael Boy, that elephant had some stamina! With some holy relic of Buddha strapped to his back, off he went walking up the mountain - the place he stopped would be the site of a new temple. All I can ... [Continue reading this entry]

burn, baby, burn!

Tuesday, November 11th, 2008
Racing Rob writes.... Sometimes it is just the simple things that bring pleasure - like being able to jump on a bike and ride into the train station to get tickets rather than having to walk or take a tuktuk. ... [Continue reading this entry]