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another day at the beach

Tuesday, January 27th, 2009

Vung Tau, Vietnam 

To my two eldest children,

I love it when I make a comment in passing and you rise to the challenge presented. Even better when I’m allowed to copy out your journal entries for the blog!
The comment:
I wonder
what the issues are regarding the pollution we’ve witnessed here.

Jboy13 wrote:
We spent all day at the beach, which is covered with plastic bags, lolly wrappers and old material. Wherever you sit, there is not 10 metres away without rubbish. In the water it’s the same; bags float under the water, dead jellyfish float on the surface (even if there were only three), and the water itself is murky. High tide washes up black sticky globs of crude oil (not that we noticed until we walked through them – and they do not wash off easily – or at all, for that matter).
That’s the problem out here at the coast, but in the city (Saigon), the city with the most motorbikes in the world, there is always (well, in the few days we were there!!!) a thick hazy smog. The big question is how to help/find a way to reduce the pollution.

One way to reduce the rubbish on the beach would be to provide rubbish bins all the way along it. Then you put up signs and get people to be more tidy. They have tables, chairs and umbrellas along the beach, but no bins. Those tables could have bins with them so that people wouldn’t just biff their rubbish on the beach.
(I don’t really know, but I think after going to the rubbish dump in Phnom Penh, I’m not sure if it’s good to send stuff to the dump, but it’s better than making the beach a dump. And if you have a dump in the city, then why not use it? Of course, that doesn’t mean you make as much rubbish as you can coz you can, but, like we did at home, you can use reusable bags when you go out shopping).

You can’t do much about the oil, but perhaps the oil rigs could set up some kind of net thing that floats on the surface to stop the oil form floating in to the beaches. I think that’s a way to help it, but in the city I’m not sure how to reduce the air pollution. You could have a public transport system that is cheap and reliable so people would use it and not have so many motorbikes. But I don’t have the money and I’m not the mayor. But you could write/email him and give him some ideas.
Well, that’s a few things to think about.

Ah yes, my dear, a few things to think about for sure. And now I have  few things for YOU to think about (you knew I would, didn’t you?!)

* how do you think you can “get people to be more tidy”? Is it possible?
* what do you think is bad/wrong about rubbish dumps per se?
* what alternatives do you think there are to dumping rubbish in landfill?
* the oil on the beach is unpleasant – do you know how it affects the living things in the water? what does it do to the waterways?
* how much do motorbikes pollute the atmosphere in comparison with cars? how much do we need to consider this in clean green new zealand? what role do we play in keeping our country clean?
* when will you be mayor? <wink>

Jgirl14 observed:

People here do not live for the future, they live in the now. So if you leave a bag of rubbish on the ground, well it’s only one bag, rather than thinking that if everyone does this it will make the problem worse. It seems to be part of the culture to “litter the country” – where there are people, there is rubbish.

She then went on to itemise some thoughts about pollution:

  • * Firstly, pollution isn’t a good thing; not for anyone or anything.
  • * It is ruining large countries as well as small, poor and rich.
  • * Even though we can personally help minimise the problem, unless heaps of people try to keep their bit clean, then it’s a losing battle.
  • * The main forms of pollution we have encountered are exhaust fumes and rubbish dropping. Perhaps exhaust fumes are inevitable in a large country, but they might not be so bad if people were prepared to walk a km or take a bike or cyclo. I guess you can’t say people here don’t use public transport – in fact, they cram twice the amount of people as there are seats!
  • * Pretty soon someone is going to realise what pollution does and how it affects your health and they might try to do something about it.
  • * I don’t think pollution CAN’T be changed, but if something isn’t done soon, it is going to be hard to reverse.

OK, my other dear, my turn to question you!
How many people do you think will need to do something to create positive change?
Is it worth you do your bit if the majority are doing nothing?
Do you think the people living in (for example) Saigon, are unaware of the health issues? Why do you think they wear face masks? What would you do if you were born there and could not go and live in New Zealand at the end of the year? What choice do they have?What are the main causes for the Saigon smog  other than motorbikes?

How could you inform people of the hazards of pollution? Who do you think needs informing?
Do you know of any anti-pollution lobby groups? (or more positively, “clean green” ones) What do they do? How do they bring about change?
Finally for now, how do you think our lives would change without oil?
Let’s keep discussing this….it has been encouraging to see you and some of your younger siblings engage with these ideas….to see the lightbulbs coming on (“Oh, so THAT’S why you try to buy products with  no packaging”)….to consider different scenarios…..to look for answers….to evaluate our own stewardship practices….Lots of love,
Mama xx

natural wonders noticed

Saturday, January 17th, 2009

by a sunburnt Mama, who got caught by surprise with mid-30s temperatures and a blazing sun after a few weeks of (more pleasant to us 😉 ) high-20s and an accompanying gentle sun
Phnom Penh, Cambodia

Some walks are full of historical features (and today’s was not lacking in those as we wandered past half a dozen wats, the Friendship Monument, the Independence Monument, the national museum, the Royal Palace and a variety of different-styled buildings)……
Some walks are a conversation with the people we walk by and linger to chat with (and there was a superficial amount of that too today – if you count “special price just for you” offers of water bottles to tuktuk drivers urging us to take pity on our small red child who was obviously suffering in the heat, and one tuktuk driver with whom we ended up making arrangements for an outing to an orphanage tomorrow)……
Some walks have a purpose (scouting out food or visiting embassies, for example, but this one had no purpose other than getting home after a cyclo ride, which finished across the opposite side of town)……
Some walks surprise us with delights from creation….like today’s….

We have seen bananas growing often enough now to have dispelled the thought that one of us clung to that they hang downwards….reinforcing this truth is the fact that bananas can be bought virtually straight from the palm, even in the city:

Also on a culinary note, in our previous experience, tamarind had come from a vacuum-packed plastic bag. Here we have seen the pods at the market, but we have still wondered how it grows. Today Mboy6 excitedly declared, “Look there’s a tamarind tree!” With a tall pine-like trunk, but a bit more gnarly, it’s an impressive-looking tree. In contrast, the leaves are tiny, giving it a delicate appearance through which the pods hang above head height, sometimes a single pod, sometimes in clumps.

Further along the tamarind street, it was Kboy11’s turn to call out.
“Look up there! It’s looks like dead leaves clinging to the tree, but they’re bats.” And there were – hundreds of them. Real live hanging-upside-down squeaking bats, a few of which were stretching out, others moving around and fighting. Nocturnal?

The rest of us were still marvelling at the bats when ER2 pointed ahead, “There’s a monkey, Mama!” A monkey was the last thing we expected to encounter on a stroll through the city (after bats and tamarind perhaps), but she was right. We stopped to watch him scavenging noodles from a plastic bag and picking through egg shells in the side-of-the-footpath rubbish pile, before he scampered up the wall and out of sight through a hole.

More predictably, we stepped over (or on top of in Jgirl14’s case!) squashed rats and a translucent half-squashed frog. We’ll spare you the pictures of them, and leave you with the cyclo ride instead…..

 

coping

Tuesday, January 13th, 2009
by the Mama Phnom Penh, Cambodia What I would like to know is who of the kids is coping the best and/or the least? How does age and personality come in to that? ~ asked by a friend Interesting questions. In a nutshell, ... [Continue reading this entry]

horrific history

Monday, January 12th, 2009
by Rachael   Phnom Penh, Cambodia Reading Khmer Rouge survivor, Loung Ung's book "FIRST THEY KILLED MY FATHER", right here in the place where it was set. Walking up the road to the school-turned-prison-turned-museum.

Standing in the ... [Continue reading this entry]

Cambodian Birthday

Friday, January 9th, 2009

by Rachael Phnom Penh, Cambodia

A long time ago Pa told me that April is a very good luck month. In the Cambodian culture, New Year's always falls in April, which means that all the children born before New Year's ... [Continue reading this entry]

history in a jar

Monday, December 15th, 2008
by Rach-the-tourist Phonsavanh, Laos

 

Having seen a few photos of the large stone jars for which this region is famous, I was expecting them to be bigger (6 tonnes is big, right?). But while ... [Continue reading this entry]

coconut afternoon

Friday, December 12th, 2008
By Rach Luang Prabang, Laos

Papa and Mama (the grandparents of the family, parents to our guesthouse owner) in the next guesthouse have a large garden up the Mekong. On Sunday one of the ... [Continue reading this entry]

culture quiz: laos

Thursday, December 11th, 2008
by Rachael Luang Prabang, Laos Part One YES or NO? In Laos, is it rude to:
  1. stare at someone when they eat?
  2. be noisy?
  3. read someone's journal over their shoulder?
  4. hug an adult?
  5. hug a child?
  6. touch a monk?
  7. wear shoes inside?
  8. hoick on the pavement?
  9. stand above a monk?
  10. take drugs?
ANSWERS
  1. It ... [Continue reading this entry]

party party…

Tuesday, December 2nd, 2008
by Rach Luang Prabang, Laos Yesterday was December first, which for us would usually mean putting up the Christmas tree. It is a much-anticipated tradition, and one the children were feeling a bit disappointed about missing.....until.....they saw, late in the morning, ... [Continue reading this entry]

same same summer

Saturday, November 29th, 2008
prompted by Jgirl14's contemplations Luang Prabang, Laos The suddenly nippy mornings caught us by surprise and we found ourselves wondering if summer was nearly over. What it has lacked in length (it's only been seven weeks), it has made up for ... [Continue reading this entry]