Hanoi
Flying in over a winter brown scene of flat
country, seeing beauty in the many small cultivated fields and in the order of
the place—tidy, red-roofed villages.
In the Hanoi airport, we notice advertising
on the exit doors and find the irony large:
Amway.
It takes nearly an hour to reach the old
city; the roads are good. It gives us a chance to see different parts of town,
different neighborhoods. Perhaps property is taxed based on the width of
buildings because there are lots of skinny buildings, 3 or 4 story ones looking
odd with a one story or an empty lot adjacent.
We had only a very short time in VietNam—two
nights and a day. We will certainly want
to come back as there is much to see, especially along the coast and in the
south. But son Ben tries to visit two
new countries each year (getting harder as he nears 50!) and we aim to please…
in Hanoi. See the wires overhead? |
Drum store |
Ben trying out a xylophone-y instrument |
K and T at Chin Sau restaurant, recommended by a friend. K orders banana flower salad and tries rice wine |
Laos
Next stop Luang Prabang, Laos,
Luang Prabang is a UNESCO World Heritage
city and exquisitely charming tourist haven.
We did a short Mekong cruise at sunset,
and explored several temples in the area.
On Christmas Eve Ben treated the fam to an excellent zipline adventure,
fulfilling a dream of K’s. There were 20
lines in all, four or five of them heart-stopping vertical drops.
The lines
were in a lush jungle environment near and sometimes over a series of terraced
waterfalls. At one point we passed right over some tourists who were riding
elephants through the shallow water.
Lots of temples in Luang Prabang |
Tom ready to board |
sunset on the Mekong |
ready to fly |
vertical drop--yikes! |
It was freezing in Laos—unusually so. The
upscale hotel where we had chosen to have Christmas took pity on us and bought
a space heater for our room.
After four nights in Luang Prabang we
boarded a bus for the long trip to Vientiane—11 hours. Roads are windy and slow, and there were a
number of brief stops, sometimes apparently for the driver to buy fish or
vegetables, and at least once to let the engine cool down. The scenery,
especially in the north, was lovely though, and the ride fairly comfortable.
Vientiane sight |
peekaboo |
The so-called Buddha Park is a fanciful
creation of statues put together by a now-departed local philanthropist. We had
fun climbing inside the giant pumpkin (?).
For dinner, we had made reservations well
in advance at Makphet Restaurant, excellent food prepared and served by
ex-street kids who are being trained in the restaurant business. It was a great meal and great to know how
popular the place is.
itinerant manicure ladies |
In the evening we sat by the Mekong River to watch the sun set, and were approached by ladies on bicycles offering manicures
The next morning we left Laos to travel to
Penang. There was no direct flight scheduled that day so we took it in two
chunks: Vientiane to Bangkok and Bangkok
to Penang. An added complication was a change of airport in Bangkok.
Cam and Ben were pleased to discover a
Dairy Queen in the Vientiane airport.
No matter that it was 6 am; they ordered
Blizzards. Honestly.
It was breakfast in Laos, lunch in Thailand
and dinner in Malaysia that day.
Malaysia
We sampled the best of what Penang has to
offer in the two short days we had together here: a jungle hike, a glitzy
shopping mall, and as much good food as we could manage.
monkeys seen on our jungle walk |
favorite primates |
outside cave temple near Ipoh |
New Years Eve in Melaka |
in the Cheng Ho museum, Melaka |
It was New Year’s Eve in Melaka. We broke
out the Cuban cigars we’d purchased in some airport duty free or other earlier
in the year, and found a simple café along the river where we were able to see
fireworks punctuated by the startled swarms of small birds rousted by the
noise.
The next day Ben had an evening flight out,
so we made our way to Kuala Lumpur. Cam, Tom and I had one more day in KL, which seems so much less interesting than the other cities we've just visited.
Sad to see the Camster go...:-(. Back to the unforgiving med school grind.
T and I had arranged one more night of hotel, to break up the long drive back to Penang, at a golf resort/nature sanctuary outside of Ipoh.
It turned out to be a lovely place--peaceful and relaxing. One free activity was included with the room. We had to choose between a fairly well-equipped gym, badminton and tennis courts, an archery lesson, a dip in the infinity pool, or a bucket of balls. Lacking gym or swim gear we chose the balls, which are launched into (and later retrieved from) the lake.
It turned out to be a lovely place--peaceful and relaxing. One free activity was included with the room. We had to choose between a fairly well-equipped gym, badminton and tennis courts, an archery lesson, a dip in the infinity pool, or a bucket of balls. Lacking gym or swim gear we chose the balls, which are launched into (and later retrieved from) the lake.
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