Thursday, August 26, 2010

Bangkok- last day - August 27


Okay folks, this winds up the trip, except for a little 10 hour wait in Bangkok, and a long flight to Atlanta.

I leave here at 12:30 a.m. Saturday morning, and arrive in Atlanta at 7:30 p.m. Saturday evening.

I start 11 hours ahead of Atlanta, so I think the trip takes 29 to 30 hours.

That's figuring 18 hours with no time change (leave at 12:30 a.m. and arrive at 7:30 p.m.) PLUS the 11 hours time difference .

I really need to brush up on my time figuring math - maybe my Grandson - John Buck - can help me.

I had a great trip and really enjoyed visiting the Hill Tribe people of northern Laos.

So- thanks for coming along with me - God bless,
Johnny Ray

Some things about Thailand - August 26 -27, 2010


In Bangkok, just about everywhere you go, there is a 7-11 store. Here in the city, in many places you can be in one 7-11 and see another one. In country there are 3,947 " 7-11" stores! And they are all very nice, very cold (good air conditioning) and are clean and ALWAYS busy. 7-11's.

The second picture is a corner from where I can see THREE "7-11" stores at one time.

Another thing that Bangkok has pretty much mastered is sidewalk food stalls! They have delicious fried chicken, and then many more things that I haven't had yet, but many look good - some don't quite look appetizing.


The food is convenient and inexpensive, and very popular with the commuters and others that ride the buses.



Last night when I arrived in Bangkok, it was raining. I was wearing my flip flops and they have worn smooth on the soles, so I could hardly stand up on some slick places on the sidewalk and especially tile floors that were wet.

This morning I remembered the man on the street that had sewn my day bag strap for me, and that he mainly repaired shoes.

I asked him (by sign language) could he put a new bottom on my flip flops. Nodding his head, I kinda got the -'OF course I can" look. So I gave him my shoes, sat down on little stool nest to him and in 30 minutes walked away with brand new treaded flip flops.

Wish I had though of that when I was here last time and had my worn smooth TIVAS!
It cost me $4.00, so I'll see how the retreads do. They look fine.



Another thing here is that every morning, at 8:30, all over town - speakers blare out the call to nation - and play the national anthem or praise to the King or something. It is very serious, and everyone STOPS, and with no talking stand still, until after the music. Then it's back to normal stuff. They also play the national anthem and have a picture of the King at movie theaters and other public events.

One thing I like here about the traffic - is that all traffic light intersections, there are timer clocks that count down the seconds till the light is to change. It really does help when waiting at a long 1 minute - to 1-1/2 minute red light. Even for pedestrians.

In China town I found a pharmacy. It had all kind of sticks and roots and dried plants. It was a very nice
store but only one lady spoke a little English so I couldn't get much information on the medicine - but one pile of dried wood chips was for back ache, and some vivid red bean looking things were for your eyes to help you see better.

Thursday, Aug 26, '10 Bangkok






I traveled from Huay Xai, Laos Wednesday morning across the Mekong River into Thailand.

The borders here are so much easier to deal with than the "Chinese fire drills" of Central America. One reason could be the border crossings here do not seem to as congested and crowded, but also I think it's the level of calmness that prevails here, more so than in Central America.

I checked out thru Laos immigration, then walked down to the river where I bought a ticket from two people under a piece of canvas and who had a rickety old table. The ticket cost 10,000 kip -$1.20- and the boat left as soon as I and a woman got in. The trip takes 5 minutes and when the boat hits shore, you just jump over board onto another boat or the landing. We had to get in and out of two boats to get to shore.

Then up hill to the immigration office. Neither country has any Customs or inspections. At the immigration office , I filled out an arrival and departure form, just like you get on the airplane. There is no charge to enter Thailand, and no charge to leave Laos.

The VISA for Laos is $30.00, and for 30 days in Thailand it's free.

In Thailand I was in the town of Chaing Khong. I walked through town to the bus stop to Chaing Rai. There was no bus station - just a place. The ride was a public bus - nice airy - and took two hours and cost 30 baht - $1.00.

In Chiang Rai, I kinda knew where some guesthouses were - so I just started walking and found a real nice guesthouse - kinda like an American motel. It cost 350 baht, - $11.50 - and it had AC, hot water etc, and WI FI for internet. Very nice.

I had called my friends in Chiang Rai - ( I can't ever remember is it Chaing or Chiang- so I write it both ways hoping to be right some of the time) Nancy and AJ and had dinner with them and their family. It was very nice. It was nice just to have English speaking people to talk to about just general things - conversations!

The next day I decided to just go ahead and go to Bangkok. Because I had made such good time getting out of the mountains (one day early) I have an extra day - but THE PLANE leaves from Bangkok so I decided to get closer to it. There is no telling what can happen here in any day or time!

Monday, August 23, 2010

Tuesday- Huay Xai








Tuesday-In Huay Xai

Yesterday, in Udoxai, I got an almost new bus - only 24000 kilometers on odometer.
It was a 24 passenger short bus, and there were only 6 passengers!

By the time we got to Huay Xai, 7 hours later, there was only me and a guy from Colorado
that I had met in Buon Neu two days ago.

In addition to being almost empty, the roads were in very good shape, and most of the time
wide as they should be.

It was actually a pretty boring trip!!


The day before had been another story, but a more interesting trip.

The other day On the bus from Buon Neu, everything had kinda calmed down, and the road was kinda smooth, so I pulled out my KINDLE electronic book. (my family gave it to me for fathers day!!)

It is very handy on a trip like this, because I can carry a lot of books in one small package
and in Thailand I could even get US newspapers downloaded for 50 cents.

In Laos, however, there was no access to the Kindle network. But anyway.. back to the story - I pulled out my Kindle and opened it to the index page.

I am reading "War and Peace", it's long and it was free, and so I went to push the button to open up the book to "War and Peace" ---- I had my finger on the button -- just as the bus hit several jarring bumps. ---When I looked back down at my Kindle, I found I had DELETED "War and Peace"!

It was in my archives, but I needed access to the network to get it back! I was a little
perturbed - but what's Deleted is deleted!

So I opened a Sherlock Holmes book and started it. ..... In Huay Xai, which is on the Thai
-Laos border, and a big tourist town, my Kindle signal came back, and I reloaded "War and
Peace"! So that worked out real nice. I then - just to test it - downloaded the Atlanta
Journal and got it.
(from cell phones - wi fi - and Kindles - WOW some kinda world we have today!)

Last night I had a nice hotel room , a corner room with two sides of windows, a narrow view
of the Mekong River, a fan, hot water, and a roman toilet, towel, and soap. It was
more expensive than up country, but definitely more benefits. It cost 80,000 kip ($9.87), the most expensive since the capital of Vientiane.

I looked at one room that was nice for 60,000 kip, but it was on the 4th floor - and I just
didn't feel doing the step thing! No elevators.

Oh yea - tourist town = American breakfast! I had fried eggs and toasted Baguette and
coffee this morning - 15,000 kip -less than $2.00.

Today I will cross the Mekong and go to Chaing Rai, Thailand.

That's about all for yesterday.
later
Johnny

Sunday, August 22, 2010

Sunday, Aug 21- Oudomxai, Laos

















Well a lot has happened since that rainy day in Phongsali!
On Wednesday morning it was still raining and I decided to leave Phongsali and go to a very remote village named Ou Tai.

To get to Ou Tai I had to go back to Buon Neu a town on the way to Phongsali. There were no Tut tuts in town, so I began walking to the bus station about 3 - 4 kilometers from town. Along the way, Son Phone, my very best friend in Phongsali rode by on his motorbike, and I yelled at him and he stopped. I recognized him because he had the same shirt on he had on for the last three days, but then I did too. So no judgment - please.

He took me to the bus station and I found out there was a bus at 1:30. Someone in town had told me - only one bus per day.

So I had a pleasant 4-hour wait at the bus station. The bus arrived and we had a nice trip, 5 hours , to Buon Tai. There I got a hotel room for 50,000 kip, next to the bus station. It was a nice room with dim lighting, and two big windows. It was cold water only, and a squat toilet.

I started looking for a restaurant - there seemed to be only one - and they did not seem interested in having customers or not. There was no internet, and my phone had no reception.

At about 7 I went to the restaurant and ordered fried rice. They shook their heads - okay - and 10 minutes later I had a nice greasy plate of fried rice. Better than noodle soup at night in my opinion. It was not especially good - but I ate enough to be full - that's for sure.

The next morning I caught a bus to Ou Tai. It was a 6-hour trip through very rugged mountains. But it was an okay trip -just bumpy and noisy, but comfortable.

But it was a treacherous section of road. All dirt, and cut in the side of very steep mountains. There was shear cliff on the mountain side, and a breath taking drop off on the open side.

When we would stop for "personal breaks", you could not go out into the woods, that was a 200 - 300 foot drop off. So you stayed on the road in the open. Women to front , men to back. --worked well.

In Ou Tai I got a room for 40,000 kip ($4.93) at a hotel next to the bus station. Now Ou Tai is a town with no electrical service. My hotel had lights in each room from 7 (dark) to about 10.

There were three restaurants in town, all served noodle soup, and all together in one place.

I picked the one in the middle and found the owner in and asked him for fried rice or anything else. He smiled and acted very pleased and indicated for me to take a seat. He started busying around the kitchen, the whole place is one room, and in about 15 minutes brought me a plate of delicious fried rice! Very nice.

However, the next night when I went back, he was not there , and the women that were running the noodle shop said that was all they had - FOE. noodle soup. and they were not nice about it!

I went to another restaurant and found someone that would cook me some fried rice. It was not very good, but it was not noodle soup. I had had noodle soup for breakfast, and it's good once a day - but that's all.

Thursday

This morning I got up, went and gladly ate a bowl of noodle soup (I really like it once a day), at the same restaurant. Their soup had a different taste to it -- It was HOT! So I ate the noodles and left most of the broth.

Oh yea, one thing about this area, the hotels give you hot water in a thermos in your room or have it in the lobby. So I was able to have hot coffee in my room, even though I had no electricity.

After breakfast I set out on my own to visit some Hill Tribe villages about 7 kilometers from Ou Tai. On the road out, I was able to catch a ride on one of the local tractor trailer outfits.

On the way out I saw two men working on an overhead wire, attaching it together. Then I noticed a lot of wires run seemingly haphazardly along the road on various heights of bamboo poles. I guessed these were electric wires taking electricity to nearby homes but I never confirmed it. But I could think of no other purpose for so many wires along the roadway, then turning off and heading into the bush - out of site.

Now riding on one of these trailers is always a toss up between walking or riding. The trailers, I think, sit right on the axle. No springs, no shocks - just direct - jar for jar. It was rough riding in one, and I was glad to get out occasionally to walk as the tractor went thru a special bad place.

I was going further than the tractor, so I bid them farewell and walked a while longer, I came to a Hill Tribe village on a hill. I walked into the village and it was for the most part empty. A few children here and there and woman
under an elevated house doing something.
Then this man comes out of a house and signals for me to come.

When I got to his house he invited me in. I took off my Tiva sandals, my hiking boots, off
and climbed the steps behind him. There in the main salon of the house, were about 8 men sitting on little 6 inch stools around a 12 inch high table.
The table was loaded with all kinds of "things"! Some of which were meats, some vegetables and some - who knows what.

I "sah bah deedeed" everyone (said hello) , and nodded and then spoke English to all of them. I was offered a seat, I took it, and then a new set of chop sticks were offered to me. and everyone wanted me to start eating. They were not eating.

I kept indicating no - and tried to get them to eat. They all picked a few morsels, so I picked up one that looked bad - but my host insisted. It was some kind of beef or buffalo, I like to think, and was good!..but chewy. I then ate something that looked like a fried carrot stick. It wasn't. I was able to eat it though. I think it was a vegetable.

Then in a few minutes I tried something that looked like a "lady finger' desert. It wasn't, and I put it on the table next to a bowl near me.

When I reached for the meat, I couldn't get the chop sticks to work!! So I kept working at it and no one offered to show me or help me, they just all sat and watched as I struggled. At least it gave me something to do!

Then out came the bottle of Lao Lao. Hill Tribe homemade moonshine. It was poured into every ones little glass - a jigger - and then a toast would be made. I was given one - a toast was made - and I took a small sip! WOW - it was rough and hard on the throat. The men for the most part drank about half a jigger per toast. My jigger lasted through numerous toast! and still had some.

I have no idea what the life expectancy is of people who drink Lao Lao, but it couldn't be long, but I think it could cure you if you had bugs or something in your stomach!

After about an hour - I got up , gave my farewell "SAH BAH DEE'S" and left, with much protest. I was so popular!!!

I immediately got invited into another house. I guess this was celebration day. The same thing was in the other house, but not as many men, and I avoided the Lao Lao by indicating I was leaving.

I visited several more villages, none with parties, and the people were all very friendly to this strange man walking thru town.

Back in town, late that afternoon, I washed clothes and sent my pants to get mended, I had torn them. That night it rained for 6 hours at least. I mean hard rain.

The next morning, up and at em. Got my hot water from the Hotel thermos for coffee, and then went for noodle soup breakfast.

Next I packed and walked to the bus station about and hour early. As I was sitting there, with a phone with no signal, and a NOW a dead battery, it dawned on me to buy a battery and buy a sim card for this area, and see what happens.

The battery cost me $5.00 , and new sim card cost $2.00 and I bought $2.00 worth of minutes. Then I turned on the phone and called Anna, and she answered!!! man that was nice - cool. What an age we live in! A little $25 phone I bought in Phonesali, and now for $9 more I could talk to Anna!!!!

I had asked a Belgium fella I met a couple of days ago who was going to a big town to write Anna and tell her I was okay - just out of touch, and he had. But, boy, it was nice to talk to her!

So anyway - back at the bus station. A landslide had cut off the road to Ou Tai. We waited at the bus station for 5 hours , and finally the bus from Buon Tai arrived at the landslide which was near Ou Tai. We set off for the slide area.

There at the slide, not really tremendous, but big enough to stop traffic, was the slide. The plan was for us to walk over the slide with our stuff and get on the other bus that would take us to Buon Tai.

I had on my flip flops. I got my back pack and followed folks up to the slide. They were all taking off there flip flops or shoes , so I did.

Then to cross the slide area, it was very muddy. So people had started a new trail. But this new trail was along the EDGE of the cliff! I mean one inch off and you were over the cliff! and the path was only about 6 inches wide.!
No way -Jose!

I chose the old path, through about 6 inches or so of oo-ie mud. I figured it should be soft like a south Georgia pond, but was shocked to find out that it was filled with sharp rocks!
I ouhed, awwed, woed, and moaned with each step. IT HURT my feet, but I could think of nothing else except getting thru it -- without falling. Once the pain was so bad I almost fell over, but didn't. Now that would have been bad! Not dangerous, just awful! to fall in that mud. BUT I made it.

Now something came to my mind as I stood there with mud all over my feet and half my legs, .... I never saw Indiana Jones, or those other guys in the movies get this nasty ugly thick mud on them, and that they couldn't get it off!!!!

I wiped off with leaves and washed in a little muddy water, but still had it on me. We all loaded on the bus, ..... and went about 200 yards up the mountain and stopped at a mountain stream and every one was able to get out and to wash off and get back on the bus feeling decent. That felt good.

The slide behind us, the mud washed off our feet we started the 5 hour trip into Buon Neu.

Sunday
A good night's sleep at Buon Neu, (bad fried rice for dinner), and this morning, noodle soup for breakfast, then an eight hour bus ride to here - Udomxai.

Food choices are not much better here, but I tried a hamburger - which was a terrible hamburger, but it sure was a nice change.

Tomorrow, 6 hours to Luang Nha Than, or maybe 11 hours to Huay Xai. Not sure yet.

so - all for now -= let me see what I can do for photos.

Saturday, August 21, 2010

I heard from Johnny

Johnny called during the night and said he was fine. I don't know the circumstances, but there's been a rock slide, and he is unable to get to the Internet. I'm sure there's a story that will come when he is able to send it.

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Tuesday Aug 17, '10-rainy day in Phongsali







This is the rainy season here. It rained about 4 hours yesterday afternoon, and today it

has been drizzling and raining ALL day.

I contacted my "friend" from the bus trip up here, and I hired him to walk around town

today and tell me about the town. There were some things I wanted to know that his English

vocabulary just couldn't handle. But it was still very interesting.

I've sent a few pictures. Nothing exciting, just life in a small mountain town.

One picture is of a little neighborhood store/tea house/ noodle shop with a dirt floor.
Then the noodles that go into noodle soup, a noodle soup shop, then my hotel room and bath,

then the grocery store to buy eggs.

The eggs here cost $1.48 cents a dozen and you see what they look like.

About noodle soup. I'm telling ya, that is the primary meal around here! And it is made

up one bowl at a time.

The cook has all the ingredients out on a table. She gets the bowl you will be served in,

and adds precooked noodles , adds seasonings, maybe chicken pieces, leaves of all sorts,

then adds hot water and stirs it a little. It's very efficient and quick, and no extra

bowls are used! Plus it is a large bowl. To eat it you get a funny little spoon, or a

regular large table spoon and chop sticks.

All the noodle soups I have had, are all very similar in taste and makeup, and all are

very tasty.

The Hotel Phonsali is the largest Hotel in town. As stated yesterday it cost $7.40 a night.

In my bathroom I have a "no-run", no jiggle the handle, type toilet. The large trashcan

next to the toilet with a dipper in it is for flushing. The more and faster you dip - the

better it flushes. The can is filled by the shower hose you can barely see on the right

side of the bath above the can. Not seen in picture of the wall mounted on demand

electric hot water heater. it works very well, but the room is just about too cold to take

a shower!

So far, from the time I left Luang Prabang til now I have seen no westerners. I met a business man from Singapore this morning . He was Chinese but spoke good English.

All for now -- from Phongsali
Johnny

Sunday, August 15, 2010

Luang Prabang to Phonsali --Monday Aug 16 -blog for 14-15, 2010












This is blog describing my bus trip from Luang Prabang to Phonsali - gotta love those names!

Saturday evening in Luang Prabang, I was picked up my a van at 4:00p.m. that took me to the bus station. This was arranged by the Travel Agent just as in Vientiane. EXCEPT, I was the only person going, and upon arrival at bus station, I was just dropped off, and I was the only non Lao there.

Now in fairness - the ticket in Vientiane was a VIP bus, this was a Public bus. I went to the ticket desk, handed the man my little paper from the agent, and he gave me a Ticket.

Okay - that's good,..... now to ask what time and where the bus will be. He understood my question and took the ticket back and wrote 6 - 6:30 on it. I asked where - he pointed toward the street. So - that's it. A little early, one and half hours, but better than late.

At 6:30, the ticket agent man hollers at me and points to the road outside the fenced in bus depot. I had seen some people do this earlier (the advantage of being early!), so I grabbed my backpack and set off.

When I walked across the street and climbed into the bus ---- I entered the world of National Geographic, and remained in it for 18 hours!!

Talk about first impressions! I was very glad that I have had the travel experiences that I have! This trip was gonna be fun!

When I climbed up the steps, there were packages on the top step, I had to crawl over. I looked down the aisle of the bus, and it was packed armrest high with burlap bags two feet high and three feet long of something, and plastic woven bags the same size. the bus started moving. Every face in the bus is on me.

I spotted a small hole on the third row. I climbed to it, and it was occupied by one man, crowding the entire seat. But hey, I've been here before, I signaled for him to move over, he motioned to the back of the bus, I shook my head and said in English 'NO', and waved for him to move over.

He moved a few inches. I piled in, and as my body squished down into the spot, he slid over. Then I had my backpack in my lap along with my day bag. Scrunched up is a good word. I got my backpack and put it in on the armrest high bag next to me, and suggested my friend move the bag that he had in the seat taking up room. I guess he finally decided that I was here for the duration and he moved the bag, and we both had enough room. He still maintained a little over half the seat - so I let him win that one. I was comfortable.

My backpack on the aisle made a really nice arm rest, and the bus seat was the best and most comfortable chair I had had since leaving British Airways. The windows on the bus were all open, and a cool comfortable breeze was blowing through the bus.

The bus did not stop too often, but when it did for me to get off, I had to stand up in my little hole, put my pack in my seat, and crawl up on the large bags in aisle to walk bent over out the bus.

We stopped about every three hours for a "personal" break. That means the bus stopped in the middle of the road, every one unloaded,-that wanted to - men to the rear basically, women to the front. It was at night, very little if any traffic, and we were in the jungle.

AT 2:00 a.m. we stopped for dinner break. I got a bowl of noodle soup which was very good and tasty, but I did not drink in much of the soup. I was careful to keep liquids to a minimum.

This break area had a public toilet that was good. Not pretty - but definitely NOT smelly and had toilet paper!. The toilets had an attendant and cost 2 Kip. Well worth it.

Then shortly after dinner, about 3:30 a.m. we stopped to unload stuff on top of the bus. A lot of stuff, including 3 motorcycles. It took almost an hour. Then we traveled about 15 minutes and the bus stopped and the driver was talking to two very dressed up Ladies.

They had cargo they wanted to take to Phongsali. The driver goes into their house and looks at the cargo, then comes back, yells at his crew, the nice little women take off their coats, and they start loading the bus.

Big bags went in the aisle, small boxes went into the back - and they stuffed that bus. I thought it had been full , but now - wow.

Finally the last big bag - about 2 feet by three - was placed next to me, and was higher than my head.

I stood up and started hollering 'NO!', and pushing the bag. Of course I could not do any thing but make it sway a little. (but I had learned on a trip before, from a Frenchman, that you can not let the cargo people bully you around and cover you with freight).

Of course, I considered I was already covered -- but this was just too much. The people around me agreed and we all started fussing about the big bag on top of everything. Thankfully - the attendant came and somehow got the bag further back where it sank down a little and was accepted by the other passengers.

All this took about 45 minutes. Then we were off again for about 30 minutes, and then we had a flat tire. (very typical of my bus travel in Laos). The bus crew - 4 men including the driver, are very adapt at changing tires on a Hugh overloaded bus in the middle of the night, and we were back on the road in about 30 minutes.

Things progressed, we stopped at several towns and unloaded cargo, and loaded cargo, then we got to within 45 minutes of Phongsali at 10:30 a.m., and we stopped, and finally I find out the driver and crew are having lunch. Another hour.

We arrived in Phonesali about noon.

My guide book says there are 4 hotels. I looked at two and they smelt of wet concrete!
I got a room at the Phonsali Hotel in downtown Phongsali.a town of 25,000 people, not 6,000 as reported earlier I think.

No One speaks English, and actually no one seems interested in any thing. My room is 60,000Kip, $7.31. It has a cable TV for Chinese folks and that's it.I have hot water, but no fan. The weather here is cool to cold. Took my hot shower last night, and just about froze when I got out!!!

Yesterday for lunch here at hotel I got fried rice with vegetables , $1.85, and for supper I had fried beef pieces.? and rice - it was okay, but I won't order it again.It cost $3.82.

I was and have been the only customer I've seen in the restaurant.

This morning I went to the restaurant, and a man came and politely showed me to a noodle shop down the street. I guess I was putting too much pressure on restaurant.

For breakfast I had a good bowl of Noodle soup, I got to select what I wanted in it and I skipped the cilantro which I do not like. The soup cost a $1.00, and I could not eat all of it. Yesterday, I could not eat all my fried rice. They have large helpings so far!

This morning when I woke and started moving around, my body feels like it has been twisted from here to there and then shook around for week! All my body aches. I guess 18 hours of a local bus will do that. I hope that's it!

Oh yea , most of the roads were dirt coming up here, and the sections that were paved were one lane strips. Fortunately we had no rain. Sometimes the rain causes buses to need to be pushed up the hill by the riders. I did this on my last trip.

It was a good ride.

I found a telephone sales shop that has internet, and they said I could use it. I'm going there this morning to send this - hope it's working.
from Phongsali - Johnny Ray