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travelling in the twenty-first century

Thursday, February 26th, 2009

by a tired Mama
Yangshuo to Guangzhou, China

Take a red plastic bag that’s hanging beside the door to put your shoes in before you creep along to the end where you are going to spend the rest of the night. Go quietly, because it’s almost full and even though it’s only 8:30 most other passengers are snuggled up, already asleep.
Are you in an aeroplane? No, it’s more comfortable than that.
On a train? Negative again; definitely less room than a train sleeper, and ever-so-much-more bumpy once you get going.
You’re on an overnight sleeper bus, not that there’ll be a lot of sleeping! Across the width of the bus there are three rows of berths and two aisles, all of which are narrow. Along the length of the bus, the berths are cleverly sandwiched together, heads raised above the person-behind-you’s feet. This slight incline is just enough to ensure you spend the night slipping down the bed – that is, unless your legs are big enough to NOT allow you to actually fit in the designated leg space. That would be Rob. Thankfully, among others, we had the lower berths at the very back of the bus, which were essentially mattresses on the floor and he was able to let his non-pygmy legs stretch down the aisle. We giggle to think what a night he’d have had if he had been given an upper berth. As it was, we had ER2 squeezed on the floor between us and she had a restless night – having fallen off a swing a few hours before, she was sporting an egg on the back of her head the size of a….well, a good-sized chicken’s egg….and every time she rolled onto it she stirred. Then there were the bumps we flew over aeroplane-style….and the oncoming traffic, whose lane we shared and retreated hastily from far too often. As if these factors were not enough to keep one from sleeping, there were televisions showing Chinese war movies complete with slashing swords and galloping horses and endless rounds of gunfire. Soon after midnight we were treated to a Chinaman-goes-to-rescue-princess-from-Nevada-desert Western. Halfway through this gripping tale it was lightning quick pitstop time. Poor ol’ Mboy6 was not exactly awake, and lacking the time to tuck shoelaces into his shoes, managed to fall flat on his face – twice! Better on the road than anywhere near the toilets themselves – that would have been messy, smelly and totally disgusting. Overflowing as they were.
The Western continued and I began to despair of getting ANY sleep. But it was the last movie for the night, and unlike the daytime Thai busses, it was not followed with studio-shot reality shows with hordes of screaming schoolgirls. Small mercy.

“Guangzhou. Guangzhou.”
What? It’s still dark. It’s only 5:30 – we’re not meant to arrive for another half hour. We were just about to start gathering our belongings together. But the bus has stopped and we have been gestured at to remove ourselves right now. Hurriedly we wake sleeping children, collect socks and water bottles and daypacks and jackets and boots and emergency breakfast supplies, hoping wildly that nothing has been left behind – in the darkness we can’t see a thing.
We disembark, but where is the bus station? We have been dropped at the side of the road, and not just any road. This is a major expressway, with a spaghetti-like tangle of roads snaking around us and towering over us, bridges above and beside.
Maybe we are at the right place, after all. Someone’s expecting us! Half a dozen taxi drivers are all waiting to take us wherever we want to go for the handsome sum of one red hundred yuan note. We wave the GPS unit under their noses, inform them they will use the metre and everyone laughs heartily. But first we need to find our destination. So there on the side of a humming Guangzhou highway before dawn with a background murmur of I-still-want-to-be-sleeping-grizzle from the smallest choristers, we crank up the laptop. It’s what you do when a printer didn’t make it to the list of essential travel items. And it contains directions in Chinese characters to our destination, which mean nothing to us, but enough to our chauffeurs to enable them to get us there for well under half their first-suggested price.

We are reminded later in the afternoon that we are travelling in modern times. Happily settled in our apartment, it seems prudent to catch up on a little of the lost night’s sleep. However, there’s a pneumatic drill woodpeckering away at the concrete floor directly above us. So loud it is, we cannot hear each other, even if we shout.
Children are so exhausted they all slumber despite the racket…..Rob texts (I bet Marco Polo didn’t do that!) the apartment oversee-er, and we are shifted to a new one within an hour. Seriously good service. Especially as we are now in a larger suite with city and park views depending where you look, in-room internet, daily washing and cleaning service, and best of all a shower with a door so it does not splash all over the bathroom floor and toilet seat. Modern luxury, modern travelling.

weather, shoe repairs and a haircut

Wednesday, February 18th, 2009

by those concerned (Mama, Jgirl14 and Dadda)
Guilin, China

COLD.
I don’t know how we walked down the street yesterday in summer clothes. We went out this morning morning in long-sleeved shirts, long pants, polarfleece jackets AND raincoats – and we were still cold. Wet too. Yes, it’s raining. Our first morning rain in four and half months of travelling. We had wondrous tropical downpours many afternoons in Malaysia and Bangkok, but they only lasted an hour. Then in the next three plus months we had only one evening shower in Chiang Mai and a few overnight rains in Cambodia – nothing that actually wet us.
For a family from a city where spring rains follow a wet winter and it rains half the summer in preparation for the autumn rains, to go for quarter of a year with no grey drizzly days is PHENOMENAL, bloggable, even.
So we are wet and cold, but not at all miserable. It’s fun to be putting on so many clothes (though the novelty might wear off), and our hoods afford us the invisibility we were looking for yesterday!

BROKEN.
I got new sandals in Thailand and they fell apart within a month. Mum found a man on the side of the road in Laos, who looked like he might repair shoes so she asked him. And he did. I got new boots a couple of weeks ago in Vietnam and they’re falling apart already. So we went looking for a man on the side of the road. Only differences this time were we found ladies and instead of bright sunshine, there was pouring rain. Both times we waited under an umbrella. Thanks to that lady, I now have boots invisibly stitched, and even if the sole falls apart, they will hold together (just like my sandals have done).

CHOP.
After $1 haircuts in Cambodia, the Vietnamese one I wanted seemed far too pricey at $4. I decided China would certainly be cheaper, so I waited. This wet, grey afternoon provided the opportunity to whip around the corner to the hairdresser’s that we had noticed. Finding the hairdresser was easy; communicating what I wanted was not! The language barrier meant I had to rely on sign language – can you sign beyond “snip snip”?

There was a sign on the door saying 20 yuan – so I pointed to it questioningly, indicating my own hair being cut. Nodding heads all around seemed to confirm that was the price – there must have been at least eight or nine staff sitting around in the salon… all eyes glued on me! I was ushered to a seat, and was shown another card (all in Chinese, of course) with different prices, ranging from 15 yuan up to 50 yuan. Thinking it was just a confirmation of what I wanted, I pointed to the 20 yuan and indicated my hair to be cut. This seemed to get things underway… for the next half an hour I had my hair thoroughly washed, and then, bliss…. a head massage. Following this I was taken to the rinsing area, furnished with a comfy reclined lounger – followed by further bliss and another head massage, including shoulders and arms (oh yeah, a blow-dry was in there too). Maybe you also get this in NZ if you pay top dollar….but they certainly don’t give a head massage in the budget barbers I frequent. I thoroughly enjoyed it all, and struggled to stay awake. I had to decline the facial I *think* I was offered – maybe those baggy black eyes really DID look bad!

After all this, I finally got into the chair and a young guy with a fancy holster full of scissors stepped up. I again tried to indicate my basic requirements, just a trim all round thanks! These hairdressers clearly went to a different training school to the Cambodian crew. There, you had to be careful not to be shorn clean… today I had to ask three times to get the smallest amount cut off my mop. I also had to decline the palette of hair dye options I have been shown most times I’ve been to the hairdressers in recent times… hmmmm, those grey hairs again! No, thanks, I’ll stay natural! The hairdresser used an unusul style of cutting, which was certainly NOT fast. It was not until well over an hour later that I was again ushered to the hairwashing station, followed by another blowdrying, and then finally, we were done.

I went to pay and following the hand signals ended up having to pay 40 yuan – still only about $12 NZ – and I am not sure if the extra was for the massage, the hairwashing or just because I was a foreigner! Regardless, it was worth every cent – even if it did end up costing three times the Vietnamese cut.

train day

Friday, February 13th, 2009
by Rach, who likes to know what's going on most of the time Nanning, China We'll just pop over to the train station and sort out tickets to Guilin. Steady on, not so fast! The train station is on the other side of ... [Continue reading this entry]

there was an old woman who lived in a shoe…..

Thursday, February 5th, 2009
by the Mama, who remembers how much she dislikes shopping Hanoi, Vietnam "Just wait till you get to Asia and buy what you need there", we'd been advised, advice we took regarding hiking boots, which we did not want to carry ... [Continue reading this entry]

surely

Thursday, January 29th, 2009
Vung Tau to Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam  Boy was Vung Tau buzzing this morning! People were arriving by the minute. Breakfasters spilled out of eateries onto temporary tables set up beside the road. Walking along the street felt like ... [Continue reading this entry]

waiting

Sunday, January 25th, 2009
by Rach Ho Chi Minh City to Vung Tau, Vietnam The other day we had to wait while Rob went two minutes round the corner to the bus company office. Over an hour later he returned. Then we needed to wait ... [Continue reading this entry]

salt n pepper

Thursday, January 15th, 2009
by the chief cook Phnom Penh, Cambodia We have really been enjoying black pepper on our tomato rolls......not being gourmands, we had never come across the fact that there are different sorts of pepper in the world, but we have now ... [Continue reading this entry]

food in our tummies and a roof over our heads

Thursday, January 1st, 2009
by a surprised traveller Phnom Penh to Kampot, Cambodia  Expecting to be picked up just before nine, we were cutting into our breakfast watermelon at a quarter to eight when the guesthouse staff apologetically announced at our open doorway that the ... [Continue reading this entry]

culture of corruption

Tuesday, December 30th, 2008
by someone, who hasn't quite got over it yet Phnom Penh, Cambodia

 

Unfortunately it makes us suspicious and a little cynical. Way back at the border, the tuktuk drivers tried to tell us that Cambodians are ... [Continue reading this entry]

*S*O*S*

Monday, December 29th, 2008
By Mama, who was peaceful and prayerful  Phnom Penh, Cambodia

"It was a rather un-fun morning. It felt really weird being able to open my eyes, but not see."                                                                               ~ Kgirl-almost10 Today's plan to visit the Killing ... [Continue reading this entry]