Indonesia- Part 4: Bali with Rosanna (James’ sister)

By James

dsc_0478-2-e1504240445178.jpg

Since my sister was caught up in the IT chaos that affected British Airways back in May, we set off for the lowland town of Ubud without her. Ubud used to be a peaceful, calm little town where locals lived side by side with small yoga studios, and was a central location in the book (and film), ‘Eat. Pray. Love.’ Unfortunately, this love letter to the town has partly been responsible for the change that has taken place over the last few years. We got our first indication of this when it took our taxi 45 minutes to drive 3 miles- the infrastructure just isn’t set up for the massive increase in traffic it has experienced. In the Town Centre boutique hotels jostled for space with shops catering to the yogi, Yummy Mummy type (think £50 yoga leggings and £100+ silver hippy jewellery) and expensive foreign restaurants.

 

We met Rosanna at our hotel the first evening we arrived, as she had fortunately managed to get on a flight less than 24 hours after her original flight time. We went out to an East Javanese style restaurant with £1-1.50 mains dishes; they were so delicious and such good value that we ended up returning there 5 times!

On the first day of our week we had together we travelled North West to a small Sacred Monkey Sanctuary. Virtually abandoned, we wandered around undisturbed by any other visitors, yet periodically assaulted by monkeys.

DSC_0475

The viciousness of this statue is only a slight exaggeration of the real thing…

IMG_7330

They shall have their revenge, Rosanna!

 

IMG_7336

Don’t be fooled.

After Chloe and Rosanna had both been jumped on by hissing primates (I had the forethought to pick up a stick, so was left alone), we left the monkeys and clambered down to a small sacred spring by a river.

 

DSC_0554

DSC_0536

 

DSC_0530

My beautiful wife

 

 

DSC_0528

My lovely sister

 

That evening we hopped on our scooters to go to a traditional Balinese puppet show. We had just enough time to get a relaxed dinner before the show. This was not a good time for my scooter to conk out due to lack of petrol! I left the ladies where they were and frantically rode around the streets looking for the little shops that sold petrol by the litre out of glass bottles. During the day they were everywhere- at night this was not the case. I gave up and got back just in time to wolf down some fried rice and do some quick shuttle runs with the remaining bike.

The puppet show itself was out the back of a small mask and puppet gallery at the edge of the touristy part of town. We were led in the dark down a path to a small auditorium with a backlit screen. Whilst we waited for the show to start (things never start in Indonesia due to a phenomenon called ‘Rubber Time’) we read a synopsis of the story we were about to watch. It told of a marauding demon king who invaded one of the Balinese kingdoms of antiquity and started eating people! Word spreads around the island of this terrible scourge until it comes to the ears of a young prince. Even though his mother begs him not to, he sets off on a bloody quest to kill his way up the ranks, all the way to the demon king; whereupon they have a big battle and the prince wins. This was all to be performed by a single Puppet Master, assisted by his two, well, assistants, on a screen lit by a flickering torch. What we did not realise is that, despite the abundance of tourists, the performance was to be in Balinese and performed at a hell of a pace.

IMG_20170531_203926973

Near incoherent madness…

Even with a broadind and this synopsis, the story was next to impossible to follow. This, combined with the discordant, syncopated Gamelan music, meant it was like watching a Jim Henson fever dream.

IMG_20170531_211415025

Viddy well my droogies, viddy well.

We left via the gallery and went home confused, but very much entertained. Rosanna and I took the first shuttle run back and managed to find a petrol pump that was about to close. Since the other bike was at least a 20-minute walk away and the guy didn’t have any bottles, we (rather foolishly) accepted his suggestion of using a sandwich bag to take our litre of petrol away with us. We sped back to the bike with the petrol leaking out of the bag and managed to get about 1/2 of it in the bike and 1/2 of it in my hands and road. It was enough, however, to get it home.

The following day, our last in Ubud, we visited Pura Tirta Empul, the Holy Water Temple. I was the only one who wanted to go in to bathe in the sacred water, so Chloe and Rosanna watched from the side.

DSC_0562

Bali’s holiest spring pours forth to the faithful from 12 stone spouts. After an offering to the Gods and a quick meditation, and dressed in a rather fetching green sarong, I got into the stone pool along with the other visitors and was startled to find fish swimming around my thighs!

DSC_0570

The first pool, the Purification Pool, is for the washing away of sins. One splashes one’s head three times, then takes a drink of the spring water and then submerges one’s head in the flow, washing away a different sin as one moves from spout to spout.

The second pool only has two functioning spouts (the rest are for festival days only) and are to wash away broken promises and evil thoughts. Although I am not religiously inclined, Hindu or otherwise, I found the constructive introspection it provided really very restorative and I made a few promises to myself to amend my behaviour, which I have mostly managed to keep. (And no, you can’t know what they are!)

DSC_0581

DSC_0590

The next day we said goodbye to Ubud and headed East to the coastal fishing village of Amed, where we stayed in a rather lovely villa for Rosanna’s 24th birthday.

DSC_0613

Unfortunately, as Rosanna got very burnt out on the roof terrace on the first day, we did not do much there. The day before her birthday we covered up and we went to visit a Japanese 2nd World War shipwreck down the coast. Little is known about the circumstances of the sinking, which only added to the eeriness.

That evening we visited a lovely restaurant called Bali Sweet, which became the only place we had dinner in Amed, both with Rosanna and two weeks later with Grace and Ryan.

IMG_20170602_201347156

On Rosanna’s birthday we woke her up with a bright balloon shower and a cooked breakfast. Due to her burns we did little during the day other than hang out, read and swim in the pool.

IMG_20170603_120929554

At dinner back at Bali Sweet the lovely owner came in with a chocolate pancake with Happy Birthday written on it, a 2 and a 4 in candle form stuck in the centre, with the whole staff singing happy birthday.

img_20170602_204803125-e1504241294615.jpg

Rosanna was so touched she even let out a few happy tears. It wasn’t long before we had to leave Amed and head back South to drop Rosanna off for her 2 weeks of sun and fun in Kuta, and to pick up Grace and Ryan. Which is where we shall pick things up in the next post.

DSC_0650.JPG

Love, The Backpack Duo x

 

Indonesia- Part 3: The Ijen Crater- masks, miners and a beautiful view

By James & Chloe
IMG_7264After a rather delayed hotel transfer we arrived at Banguwangi Homestay, a small house with a German couple staying in the room next to us and the family relegated to sleeping on the living room floor. We were pretty uncomfortable about this, but our host Desy insisted, I guess they make enough money for it to be worthwhile?

The Ijen Crater is famous for two things; sulphur mining and the lava that burns with a bright blue flame due to the sulphur. Unfortunately, as there had been some rain recently, we were informed that we wouldn’t be able to go hunting for the Blue Fire in the morning as it was too dangerous, so our lovely host lit some sulphur (bought down from Ijen) in the front yard of our homestay…it stank!

DSC_0198After far too little sleep we awoke at 12:30 am, and were bundled into our jeep and driven the hour and a half to base camp for the climb up Ijen. We were given our standard issue torches and gas masks (yes really), and told to come find Desy when we returned. So at 2.30am we began our arduous climb to the summit in the pitch black!

IMG_7251Now, in terms of distance, it may not be very far from the entrance to the crater, but in terms of height, it covers a huge amount of ground! Most of the climb up consisted of 30-45 degree slopes (if you google this, you’ll see how steep that actually is!) On our way up we encountered some very smiley, friendly local men with no gas masks and wearing only trainers or flip-flops. Whilst some carried baskets, others worked in a team of two to haul an empty cart up the steep slopes (just think of those huge hand trailers used at Glastonbury and other festivals, but much less shiny and new). These spindly, smiley, flip-flopped guys were the miners! In fact, as we worked our way up to the crater, they kept asking us if we’d like a taxi. We initially thought they were joking (everyone in Indonesia seems to offer you a taxi as you walk past), but it turns out, for a small fee they would push/drag you up the steep slopes in their carts. They had calves of steel! These guys make this trip up and down the steep slopes of Ijen at least once a day, shifting a minimum of 160kg of sulphur out of the crater in a single morning just to make enough money to survive. It put our aching calves into perspective.

DSC_0472After a tortuously steep climb on (mercifully) surprisingly well-maintained mud path, we arrived at the crater, strapped up in our gas masks against the noxious gases and sat down to try to distinguish the blue fire from the plumes of sulphuric fumes that were emanating from a far-off patch of darkness. If we squinted juuuust right, we could make out the distant flicker of blue flames, but unfortunately, we weren’t allowed down into the crater for a closer look. We gave up at 4.30am and made our way up to the ridge (more climbing!), where one can see the sunrise.

We pitched up on a cold patch of concrete and, as the first people there, got the best spot for the glorious sunrise over the sea to Bali. The sunrise was beautiful, but it was freezing, and James’ teeth were chattering by the time the sun finally rose enough to warm us up.

DSC_0303IMG_7181Once the sun was up we turned around and explored the other side of the ridge. And boy, were we glad we did! The sunlight had an otherworldly feel to it, with a slight mist adding a golden glow to the 6am sunlight. I can honestly say, I don’t think we’ve been anywhere that took our breath away quite as much as the sun hitting the Ijen crater and beautiful scenery behind it. The beautiful creamy turquoise lake you can see in the photos is renowned for changing colour depending on the concentration of sulphur in the water; the lighter the colour the higher the content. If it’s white, get off the mountain immediately!

IMG_20170528_055101842_HDR

IMG_7222DSC_0356Once the clouds rolled in and began to obscure the crater itself we headed back down to the ‘Blue Fire viewing point’ and saw the miners in action. Using basic tools, and two bamboo baskets hung on a long stick over the shoulders (as you would two milk pails), they mined huge chunks of sickly yellow sulphur out of this crater and lugged their 80-100kg loads up the steep crater rim. Think of them the next time you spark a match…

DSC_0446DSC_0466On our way down we saw those who didn’t think the sunrise was worth getting up so early for making their way up (more fool them!! As the crater was now covered in clouds). Whereas we had walked up on our own two feet, these people chose a much more decadent form of transportation.

 

DSC_0454We could not fathom how they could sit there whilst four poor locals lugged them up and down the mountain, changing shoulders every 200 meters because it hurt too much. Each time we passed them- with their looks of haughty indifference on their faces, their noses in their iPhones- James couldn’t resist greeting them as either “M’lord” or “M’lady” (much to Chloe’s chagrin). I suppose it was a way of making money for the guys and it beat hacking at sulphur, but still. More white man’s guilt… it leaves such a bitter taste in one’s mouth.

On our way back to pick up our bags, we pulled over to the side of the road, on one side a Java coffee plantation, and on the other, a rubber plantation. It was strange to tap a tree and feel the fresh rubber ooze onto your finger.

So after waking up at 12:30am, and arriving back to our accommodation at 9:30, with just 10 minutes to pack up, we got a taxi to the ferry terminal, a ferry over to Bali, and a five-hour minibus ride once on the other side to Denpesar to meet Rosanna (James’ sister). We then passed out in our hotel after an incredible, but long day!

IMG_20170528_152104394

Sleepy James on the Mini-bus to Denpesar!

 

Which is where we will pick things up next time.

All our love,

The Backpack Duo x

Indonesia- Part 2: Mount Bromo

By James

After a 20 minute walk, nine hours on a train, a 45 minute taxi ride and a one and a half hour minibus journey, we finally arrived at Ngadisari, our base for our trip up to Mount Bromo. This was the coldest we’ve been on our entire trip! I mean, hatesvabd scarves kind of weather!

dsc_0170.jpg

After a very short sleep (noisy neighbours and thin walls), we were picked up at 3.30am by our driver in a cherry red jeep, picked up our fellow visitors, and headed up the mountain in pitch darkness. Ahead of us we could see five or so pairs of brake lights snaking up the hill ahead of us, to Mount Pananjakan to view the sunrise. At 2,782 meters above sea level and a full 400m higher than Mount Bromo below, it should have been the perfect spot to view the sunrise over the plain.

IMG_20170526_044244202

Excited!

However.

As you can see from the out of focus photo here, everything was totally obscured by mist!

DSC_0003

As the first rays of light trickled through the mist, 200 people, phones held aloft, rushed over to take photos (with flash) of absolutely nothing. Then they waited there, a crush of 15 people deep, at the railing waiting for a majestic sunrise.

DSC_0006

We, along with hundreds of other sunrise seekers were very disappointed. (Including a couple of very cynical Frenchmen who were sat next to us.)

DSC_0005

Except for her; she’s got a bouquet!

We tried not to let our dashed hopes show in our faces as we faced one another on the drive back down the winding road towards the plain. Then, suddenly, Chloe noticed over my shoulder a glimpse of a valley. We called for the driver to stop, rushed out and scrambled up the steep slope to a clearing.

We were rewarded with a majestic view of a valley we had been promised, bathed in light and a volcano puffing away below.

IMG_20170526_063155989

IMG_20170526_062857393

We were chuffed to bits, as you can see.

When we arrived at the ash-blackened plain we hopped out, told the driver we could get back ourselves (one of our group needed to catch a train) and made our way to the foot of the volcano. We were joined by Charlie and Robyn, a lovely young couple we had met on the minibus the night before, and, after a brief visit to a Hindu temple where locals were praying to the volcano (presumably asking it not to explode again- its last eruption was only in November 2016!), we started to climb.

 

DSC_0053.JPG

Pleasedon’texplodepleasedon’texplodepleasedon’texplode…

DSC_0051

The climb itself was not very challenging in terms of height, but the dust made it difficult. Whilst Mount Bromo (2373m above sea level) is not the highest volcano in Java (that honour is reserved for Mount Semeru in the east of the island), the altitude, combined with the dust that was kicked up by the horses that were carrying (lazy) tourists to the steps, meant it was quite hard to breathe and slow going.

DSC_0061

You must be absolutely puffed love…

DSC_0065

Charlie

As we got to the steps that led up to the crater, we caught the unmistakable smell of sulphur on the wind and heard what sounded like a jet engine.

DSC_0107

The view down the lava-scarred plain from the top of the volcano

I do not speak in hyperbole that when I say that, when we got to the top, heard the roar, the rumble under our feet, saw the steam bleach forth and the sheer SIZE of it all, we were awestruck and more than a little humbled. The undeniable power of nature was really brought home to us all.

DSC_0101

Roar.

Many offerings were placed on the crater rim or thrown in. We saw bouquets of flowers, fruit and biscuits. As we walked around the rim I spotted an offering that was sure to bring protection for months to come.

dsc_0116.jpg

Yep, that’s a cow. It appeared to have been trussed up, slaughtered and thrown into the crater as a sacrificial offering.

DSC_0131

This was as far as Chloe let me go- as some of you may know, I don’t have a very good track record…

DSC_0127

We explored the crater’s edge for a good 45 minutes until Chloe’s hitherto unknown vertigo got the better of her and we descended for a breakfast of cold eggs, and chocolate caramel wafer bars.

DSC_0042

Tired, but happy.

Our ride now was gone, so we made our way across the southern side of the plain just the four of us, up the steep mountain road, back into Cemoro Lawang, the nearest village to the volcano. After a brunch of noodles (slimy yet chewy) and coffee (bitter and grainy), we said goodbye to Charlie and Robyn and trudged the 2.5 miles back down the valley to our hotel.

DSC_0166

DSC_0151

This was the first of hundreds of children we saw riding motorbikes in Indonesia. It must be said, though, that they are much better riders than we are…

As we had been up since before dawn and had been very physical, we were exhausted. So we quickly showered, drank as much water as we could handle and passed out in each other’s arms at 1pm. It wasn’t until mid-afternoon that we were awoken by the local imam singing out the prayers welcoming in the first day of Ramadan.

What a wonderful day, spent with the most wonderful woman.

DSC_0103.JPG

Next it’s off to Ijen Crater in the extreme East of the island to visit the sulphur miners!

Until then, all our love- The Backpack Duo x

Indonesia- Part 1: Yogyakarta, Borobudur & Prambanan

By James

After a three flight slog via Jakarta we finally arrived in Yogyakarta on the southern coast of the island of Java. Our journey involved boring waits in airports, sudden rushes to planes that were not officially announced and lots of different groups of umrah and hajj pilgrims who were all dressed in the same colours. Complete with colour coordinated bags, shirts, dresses, hijabs and even scarves- they looked for all the world like different supporters from different football clubs heading to away games, which all happened to be in Mecca.

We stayed in a place called Hati-Hati (which means ‘look out!’ in Bahasa, the official language of Indonesia’s many languages) and it was where we based ourselves for our visit to the temple sites of Borobudur (Buddhist) and Prambanan (Hindu).

On our ‘orientation day’ that we have in each new country we get to, we headed out to get money and SIM cards. To find SIM cards we headed into the strangest shopping centre I have ever seen. There were three floors: the basement was given over to laptops, the mezzanine was full of mobile phones and the top floor was kitchen appliances. As we still had our computer and were well supplied with blenders, we went to the ‘phone floor’. On it we were greeted by a ridiculous over-abundance of kiosks, all selling phones. I do not exaggerate when I say there were nearly 100 little shops there all selling the same thing. As a market, it just didn’t make any sense!

I picked one at random and started the vastly over-complicated, confusing process of getting a SIM card.  Whilst we were battling to understand their different options I had been spotted by the manager. He came over and asked me to pose with him, holding the new Samsung Galaxy 8 and looking impressed. We didn’t stay long enough to see it put up, but I am now on the side of a billboard somewhere in Yogyakarta, helping to sell phones!

Afterwards, we went off for a cup of tea in a cafe and were accosted by two very sweet university students, who proceeded to interview us for the next 30 minutes. It was lovely to feel so interesting!

After a day of orientation/rest and recovery, we were picked up at 3am by our driver Toto and headed out to the sunrise lookout point over Borobodur an hour north of Yogyakarta. We arrived at a spot that was heaving with locals, looking to make a quick buck off of the gullible tourists (this became a theme for our time in Java that grated ad nausium). We trudged up to the summit and a lovely Chinese man taught me how to take better shots of sunrises. Below is my best attempt.

DSC_0512 edit

IMG_6963

Busy doing what I’ve done a great deal of this holiday…

We headed into the main park at 7am, and made our way through the Tourist Entrance (10x the price of the local ticket), received our cup of Welcome Tea (I’d like to see the Tower of London adopt this approach. We like to think of it as our national drink, after all!), and started up to the main edifice.

IMG_7051Borubudur was built in the 9th Century by the local Sailendras dynasty and was abandoned in the late 10th/early 11th Century, after a series of volcanic eruptions. It was not rediscovered until Governor General Thomas Stamford Raffles (he who founded Singapore) ordered a Dutch engineer to explore the site, towards the end of the 19th century. The temple itself blends the Indonesian indigenous cult of ancestor worship with the Buddhist concept of attaining Nirvana. The journey for pilgrims starts at the base of the four sided pyramid and rises up the three ‘layers’ to the final platform. The monument’s three divisions symbolise the three ‘realms’ of Buddhist cosmology: the world of desires, the world of forms, and the formless world. The final platform is Nirvana, where 72 Buddhas sit, protected in bell-shaped stone stupas.

DSC_0579

Eager not to miss the sunrise, we boosted up to the top platform then worked our way down.

DSC_0595DSC_0559

One our way down we encountered groups of school children on trips and families. Every time we met a group of Indonesians, we were made a great fuss of and were forced to pose for multiple selfies, on multiple phones. This was amusing at first, however, after the tenth group it began to grate, and after the twentieth group, we had had enough. It was lucky that I was wearing sunglasses, otherwise the dead, defeated look in my eyes may have ruined their photographs…

IMG_20170523_065959599

No scratching!

DSC_0635

After breakfast (little buns we’d bought the day before) and a quick wander around the Samudra Raksa Museum of Naval Exploration- where we saw a reproduction of the ship that carried Javanese sailors all the way to Africa- we met Toto and headed off to Prambanan. (He didn’t sing ‘Africa’, in case you were wondering!)

IMG_20170523_085011846

On our way to Prambanan we stopped off at what is locally known as the Chicken Church. Commissioned by Daniel Alamsjah, who said he had a vision from God, he attempted to build a place of worship in the shape of a giant dove looking over towards Borobudur. Although the funds ran out and it looks like a demented chicken, it was still a lovely place to visit and a great viewpoint from atop its head.

IMG_20170523_093739832

IMG_7079

The view through its beak

After a hot ride and a brief nap, we arrived at Prambanan temple complex on the outskirts of Yogyakarta- a simple, if imposing series of Hindu temples, the largest honouring the trinity of supreme deities- Shiva, Brama and Vishnu.

DSC_0734.JPG

Bhrama

Brahma

We had just climbed up to the top of the first one, Vishnu I think, when I was spotted by a gang of 13 schoolgirls, all under the age of ten. At this point Chloe had completely had enough of posing for selfies, so did her level best to disappear into the darkness of the ten foot square room we were in. Unfortunately, her ninja skills still leave a great deal to be desired and she was discovered.

They all stopped and stared at us in a very awkwardness-inducing way until what appeared to be one of the leaders of the group, a short girl of nine, caught sight of Chloe and, opening her eyes wide in amazement, said ‘Oh. So beautiful!’ After such a cute compliment she was honour bound to take a photo.

IMG_20170523_123157211

(Honestly, I’ve been saying that for years and do I get an awkward group photo? No.)

We left the main complex and went exploring, finding a less frequented, yet we felt, more interesting ruin- Candi Sewu.

DSC_0747

IMG_20170523_132239016

Giant pixie foot- yay!

(Not to scale)

After such a long day we passed out back at the hotel for a while, then went out to Warung Spesial Sambal (sp). Sambal is a spicy, chunky sauce that is used to flavour rice and meat on one’s plate. This restaurant had over thirty varieties of sambal to taste and the food was lovely.

The following day we visited the rather disappointing Water Palace, which was the Sultan of old’s bathing house. I don’t know if it was the time of year, but the small amount of water there was slimy and disused. It made what should have been a beautiful building, very disappointing and shabby.

IMG_7126

When we left we were interviewed again (apparently it’s an end of year assignment) and we made our way to the main shopping street, Maliboro Road. There we were interviewed for the third time and bought some very tasty little paste cakes. Unfortunately I was too slow to get a photo, but I did bear witness to a lady tending to a barbecue on which she was cooking chicken sate kebabs, decide her current location wasn’t profitable enough and put the whole operation, smoking hot barbecue and all, on her head and walk away. Such confidence in her own sense of balance; I would have been horribly disfigured by hot coals…

After a quiet meal we packed up and moved hotel to one close to the station for our very long journey East to Mount Bromo.

Until next time.

All our love,

The Backpack Duo x

IMG_20170522_171915171.jpg

Vietnam – Part 5: Ho Chi Minh City/Saigon

By James

As the neon flashes, the beats pump and the young sirens lure customers into raucous bars, a ten-year-old boy calmly walks out into the centre of a stream of traffic and breathes fire.

Welcome to Saigon.

DSC_0493

This guy guards the street during the day

Best know in the West, thanks to war films and a well-known musical, for where the Americans finally evacuated all US personnel and as many Southern Vietnamese as possible the day the Viet Cong took the city in 1975, modern-day Ho Chi Minh City is a thriving, bustling metropolis of 8.5 million people, and almost as many scooters.

DSC_0415Renamed by the North after General ‘Uncle’ Ho Chi Minh, the city is still called Saigon by the locals and has a very different feel to the more subdued North. The bars are more garish, the young people more Westernised and the attitude much more informal.

DSC_0499

Getting down and dirty to fix a burst water main

After such a busy, activity packed few weeks with my parents, we were in need of some rest and recuperation. This meant that we did not venture very far from our hotel much and spent most of our time drinking beer and watching films in our room (at one point Chloe didn’t leave the room for 36 hours!)

DSC_0417

Watch out- that squirrel has a gun!

One excursion we were glad we made, braving the utterly manic traffic (they drive on the pavements during Rush Hour!), was to the War Remnants Museum.

DSC_0429

This inexpensive museum, set over four floors, is billed as a monument to peace and international understanding. However, the American tanks, helicopters, APCs and fighter jets parked outside hinted at the tone of the exhibits inside and attested to the old maxim: history is written by the victors.

DSC_0444

In Gallery #1 on the top floor, entitled ‘Historical Truths’, they lay out their case against a) France’s colonial oppression in support of the Independence War that started soon after the Japanese surrendered in WW2, and b) against the Americans and their ‘War of Aggression’, that started soon after the French surrendered.

Like a lot of you reading this post who were born after it all ended in 1972 (or 1975, depending on whose account you read), the only perspective on the American War of Aggression/the Vietnam War I ever had was from American Vietnam War films. In them, Martin Sheen catches only glimpses of a faceless foe on the banks of the Mekong, Robert De Niro plays Russian Roulette with a sadistic caricature of a man and Matthew Moldine is propositioned by a woman offering to “love (him) long time”. (Extra points will be awarded if you can name all three films referenced here without looking them up! Please speak to the young man at the prize desk on your way out to cash in any Backpack Duo Prize Points.)

What I never got, for reasons that should be obvious, was the story from the Vietnamese perspective. At the War Remnants Museum, they made a pretty compelling argument that denounced the Americans as an imperialistic, unreasonable and, at times, barbaric force of interference, and invasion. Alongside quotes demonstrating a duplicitous approach to diplomacy, international pronouncements of condemnation of the American’s acts of aggression and glorious calls for a free, united and just Vietnam, there was some very gruesome evidence of ‘American War Crimes’- accounts of whole villages being burnt up, whole families disembowelled and a photo that rather sticks in the memory of a groups of grinning GI’s proudly displaying their collection of decapitated heads. Undoubtedly there were atrocities committed on both sides (although the museum was conspicuously mute on the Viet Cong’s), it made for difficult viewing to have the behaviour of the Americans’ brought into such stark relief.

DSC_0438

This is the only photo I took of the inside of the museum, it was all too affecting

On the next floor down, there was a very refreshingly balanced exhibit that memorialised the war photographers who were active on both sides. It provided a small window into the decade-long conflict that chronologically told the story of the War (literally) through the lenses of these photographers. It was remarkable in its simplicity and its heartfelt lament for the loss of human life.

After a brief walk through the Agent Orange exhibit (utterly harrowing) we went outside into the dusk. We decided we weren’t quite traumatised enough by this point and made our way to a recreation of the prison on the now popular tourist island of Côn Sơn.

DSC_0432

I assume there is better accommodation now

After closing time at the museum, we trudged our way back through the streets, dodging the increasingly audacious scooter riders, back to our hotel and hid away from the world.

DSC_0399

This was a QUIET intersection…

DSC_0403

I narrowly avoided colliding into this very cool looking guy soon after this photo was taken

The food in Ho Chi Minh City/Saigon was as delicious as it had been thought Vietnam, although a couple of restaurants deserve a mention. The first was Mumtaz Indian restaurant along the main party street. The food was delicious, the flavours were excellently balanced, and the staff had a very good taste in mid-Noughties hip-hop and rap, which they proceeded to play at a volume that made the seat next to me bleed.

Eminem

Precisely Mr Marshall…

The second was The Hungry Pig. After months of either no bacon or woefully substandard bacon (I’m not sure which is worse), we stumbled across this little cafe, just around the corner from our hostel. For a country where about 80% of the meat on offer was pork, they just could not get bacon right! Started by a young British entrepreneur, this charming establishment source and cure their own bacon, then serve it in generously sized, delicious bread products. The cinnamon and raisin bagel with cranberry sauce, cream cheese, maple cured bacon and rocket nearly brought us to tears…

IMG_20170520_112826

Piggy Om Noms!

After several days of recuperation, interspersed with traumatic museums, death defying near misses by scooters and life-affirming pork products, we watched our visa expiration date creep ever closer. Rather than get deported, we made our way to the airport for our 18-hour, three flight journey to Yogyakarta, on the southern coast of the island of Java, Indonesia for temples and volcanoes.

Which is where we shall pick up things up next time!

Until then, all our love,

The Backpack Duo x

Vietnam – Part 4: Hoi An (Coconut Coffee, Clothes and Cooking!)

By Chloe

After a beautiful train journey down the scenic coast of Vietnam from Hue to Da Nang, we arrived in the picturesque and bustling city of Hoi An.
DSC_0015Now, I’m not going to lie, we spent a disproportionate amount of time with the lovely Viet, her husband Sanh and their cheeky five-year-old son, Win, at their tailor shop Win Tailors. Viet and Sanh were incredibly welcoming, friendly and helpful! Apart from making us mountains of beautifully made new clothes, they took us to the best places to drink coffee and eat in the old centre of Hoi An – we could not have asked for better hosts! Big thanks go to Alex and Abbie for introducing us to Viet (Alex has been friends with Viet for 10 years now). If anyone ever plans on visiting Hoi An, or fancies getting some clothes made – Win Tailors and a coconut coffee with Viet is a must. That is if we left Viet with any fabric at all!!
IMG_20170508_205646683
James was the picture of restraint and only had two shirts and two smart/casual jackets made. I, on the other hand, went a little crazy and had; two dresses, a coat, a smart jacket, a pair of trousers, a silk blouse AND three skirts made…phew!

On to the coconut coffee…it was the best coffee I think I’ve ever had. Picture a shot of strong smooth espresso, poured on top of a glass filled with blizted coconut cream and ice with a dash of condensed milk for sweetness…you just can’t beat it. I think James and I visited this cafe every single day we were in Hoi An, and it’s definitely a recipe I’m going to bring home with me! Two other culinary experiences stand out from what was a very tasty week; the Bahn Mi we had at Madame Khanh, aka, “The Banh Mi Queen” and the fabulous breakfasts we had at Banh Mi Opla (okay okay, we like bread!)
IMG_20170511_120522392

For anyone uninitiated into the glories of Banh Mi – it consists (at its core) of a French style white crusty baguette packed with your choice of fillings. The Banh Mi Queen’s consisted of crunchy salad, coriander, mint, a pork and mushroom pate, slices of pork fillet and slices of a type of pork meatball, with fried egg and an amazing home-made chilli chutney/sauce. All for the astounding price of 85p! Needless to say, we came back here a lot. I am actually salivating whilst writing this. Opla on the other hand is a Vietnamese type of cooked breakfast. Little beef meatballs, fried eggs, and a fresh tomato sauce are all cooked and served on individual hotplates (shaped like a cow) and served with onion and a fresh baguette. Add a dash of chilli sauce and soy sauce, chop everything up and ladle liberally onto your baguette and jobs a goodun!
IMG_20170513_123438807

Much of our time in Hoi An was spent simply wandering or cycling around the grid layout of the pedestrianised old centre, with streets lined with old wooden Chinese and Japanese clan houses, glowing silk lanterns zigzagging above us, and classical music softly playing through the tannoy loudspeakers (okay we admit…the last one was a little weird, as it seemed to play the same song over and over again!) The markets were bustling and lively, the food was scrummy, and although it seemed that the world and his wife spoke to us, only to offer their tailoring services – Hoi An was amazing. We were also lucky enough to be in Hoi An for a full moon celebration (Buddha’s birthday in this case), where countless candle lanterns are set free on the river running through Hoi An, and the streets are packed with people, food, and laughter.

Two activities stand out among the many that we enjoyed in Hoi An. The first was a sublime cooking lesson with Hoi An Eco Cooking School  – it was fabulous! We arrived at the river, were deposited into conical boats, two-by-two, and given little fishing rods to try and capture purple crabs hiding among the roots of the palms. Sue was a natural, catching eight little crabs, I only caught one, and poor James and Brendan didn’t manage to snag a single crab! After our fishing excursion, we arrived at the cooking school where over the next three hours we learned to make a massive array of Vietnamese food. We even had a chance to make out own rice paper pancakes for our fresh spring rolls!

We even got to use fire!

The second was an early more escapade to My Son, a Champa temple complex about an hour outside of Hoi An. We were lucky with our timings, we arrived at 8:00am, just as the ‘sunrise’ group was leaving, and managed to see the main sites before the hoards of day tours arrived at 9:00am. We actually had the ruins all to ourselves! You may hear that My Son is the ‘Ankor Wat’ of Vietnam, however, anyone who describes it that way obviously hasn’t been to Ankor Wat. My Son is beautiful for what it is – a few temples that remain after the carpet bombings of the US/Vietnam war, but there really are only two small areas where the temples remain in decent condition.

Hoi An was arguably my favourite place in Vietnam – if you ever get the chance to visit, you definitely should, and assign at least three days (although we stayed for well over a week).

Love, The Backpack Duo X

Vietnam- Part 3- Caves, Tombs and Citadels

By James

We left Sue and Brendan at their hotel and went to the train station for our first (and last) night train in Vietnam. Space is at such a premium in Hanoi we saw something we would never have expected: houses, barbers and even small restaurants whose faced directly onto the train tracks! It was bizarre to be chugging along in a train, sat on our beds in our own little cabin, a mere meter away from someone’s front door.

IMG_20170427_162641271

We both slept rather badly and had to get off the train very early at Dong Hoi for our taxi to Phong Nha.

We dumped our baggage at our hostel and immediately rushed down the road to join our cave tour. The Phong Nha-Ke Bàng national park is another of Vietnam’s UNESCO World Heritage sites and home to the largest cave in the world- Sơn Đoòng, which is so large that you can fit the Empire State across its widest point and two Boeing 747’s, flying side by side into its entrance! We couldn’t visit this cave though, as it’s a 7-day round trip and we only had 28 hours before we had to leave for Hue, so we settled for the first 1km of the 31km long Paradise Cave (the largest dry cave in Asia) and the amazing Dark Cave. Sometimes you’ve just got to make these tough decisions…

Paradise Cave certainly lives up to its name! This beautiful vaulted cave is home to huge stalactites, stalagmites, and strange looking pillars. The ceiling had swirls of colour that reminded me of a nebula I had seen that one time when I was in Deep Space (citation needed).

IMG_6634

IMG_6652

IMG_6629

After lunch, we changed into our swimming costumes, helmets and safety harnesses, and headed up to the launch platform for the zip wire that led us across the river to Dark Cave!
(Editor’s note: if you’re reading this aloud, then “Dark Cave” should be said in the style of Gandalf and with some serious echo on it. Try saying it in a cave, it’ll help. If you don’t have a cave to hand, then a public bathroom will do.)

DCIM133GOPRO

After a rather unceremonious landing on my part, we swam the last 50 meters to the cave entrance and made our way into the dark…

After scrabbling down claustrophobically tight crevasses we made it to the end of the cave. What awaited us was a delightfully squelchy pool of mud, glorious mud! It was so full of sediment that we could float close to the surface like filthy, giggling Buddhas.

DCIM133GOPRO

Once we had reached the light again- via a carved out slide with a hidden rock at the end that grazed both Chloe and my bottoms- we boarded canoes and headed back to base.

DCIM133GOPRO

With a certain sense of schadenfreude we watched a young Englishman desperately search for his GoPro at the bottom of the river (if you’re not going to attach a flotation device to your expensive device, don’t take it into the water!) We played on the smaller zip wires that ended with a drop into the river, then we’re taken back to our hotel, where we promptly passed out at 6pm, exhausted but happy.

*****

The following afternoon we headed back to the station for our very cramped and noisy train to the former capital of Hue. You can see from the rather blurry photo below that when there was no more room, passengers just grabbed a little plastic chair and sat in the aisle.

18596988_10155498877675809_170862503_o

Makes Southern Rail look positively saintly!

 

We met up with Sue and Brendan at our hotel- who had the loveliest staff and free infused rice wine tasting!- and went for Italian food, before an early night.

The following day we were met our driver for our tour of the main royal sites of Hue.

The tomb itself was a very interesting concrete and stone affair, with guards at the entrance. We discovered through our own research (thank you again www.travelfish.org!) that the king was so opulent and disliked that the masons had put in subtle clues that undermined the respect and reverence that he felt his tomb deserved. For example, some of the guards are holding their swords in the wrong hand, or backwards – little signs that they weren’t willing to fight for this disliked King.

DSC_0594

The guard isn’t up for a fight. My mother on the other hand… Watch your step!

DSC_0590

IMG_6672

Next, we headed to the main Citadel for a tour around the Royal City. When Vietnam was gaining more territory in the South, Emperor Gia Long moved the capital to Hue and began building his capital. It is said that it once rivalled Beijing’s Forbidden City, however, after Vietnam’s wars with the French (1946-1954) and Americans (1955-1975) the Citadel took a heavy beating and is now a shadow of its former self. It was still lovely though.

DSC_0664

DSC_0614

IMG_6747

Chloe’s Angels

Finally, we headed to Tu Duc tomb, which was our favourite by far. Set in the former king’s hunting grounds, this tomb was very peaceful and a lovely way to end the day.

DSC_0668

DSC_0700

IMG_6754

Next, we head to Hoi An and it’s UNESCO World Heritage Old Town.

Until next time, all our love- The Backpack Duo x

Vietnam part 2: Ha Long Bay

By James

So, nice and early we headed off on our 4-hour journey past rice paddies and ‘Glorious Dead’ war memorial statues for Ha Long Bay. We stopped at a truck stop/tourist trap with what they called a “Customers Corner” which was actually a display on each person who had bought a large statue, complete with their photo, phone number, email address and home address for all to see- an identity thief’s wet dream! (I’ve not added a photo of it here, I don’t want to perpetuate this absurdity!)

At around midday we boarded our boat for Ha Long Bay and the beginning of our cruise with Vega Travel.

DSC_0222.JPG

After a short break, we hopped into kayaks and went off to explore Hang Luon lagoon.

DCIM133GOPRO

DSC_0230

Next, we climbed up to visit the wonderfully lit Surprising Cave (the discoverer didn’t expect to discover it, apparently!)

IMG_6491.JPG

IMG_6484
That evening we made DIY fresh spring rolls and slept to the sounds of the waves lapping at our boat.

DSC_0212

 

IMG_20170503_074634052_HDR

Our cabin

 

The following morning we got up early to scale the 425 steps up Ti Top Hill. The view was good, just maybe not 425 steps good…

 

DSC_0263

 Meh.

 

Then came the best bit. We moored to the East of Cat Ba Island and hopped on rather rickety bikes. We cycled around a beautiful valley to Viet Hai village, where we met a woman who brewed her own rice wine. We got to try the ‘normal’ one, one infused with hibiscus and even a snake infused wine! (The snake one was the best one, in case you were wondering.)

IMG_6551

 

IMG_6541

Sue’s broken leg meant she got to join the kids for a scooter ride, Vietnam Style!

 

After getting a little fuzzy we left Sue and her previously broken leg talking to a woman who made pearl necklaces, and headed off for a trek through the jungle and up the rocks over a ridge.

IMG_6573

We got back rather sweaty and hungry, so we ate such a large meal we all fell asleep.

 

IMG_6581

All tuckered out

 

By the time we awoke we had travelled away from the crowds of Ha Long Bay to the quieter, less travelled area of Lan Ha Bay.

 

DSC_0490

 

We refreshed ourselves by jumping into the sea from the boats, daring one another to do more exciting jumps.

Until a sweet, tattooed Japanese lady messed up a flip and Spider Monkey jumped into her front. Her belly and face made one hell of a slap as she hit the water…

As the sun set, we made our way past floating villages into Cat Bay town and spent the night in a perfectly serviceable hotel.

DSC_0466

DSC_0483

DSC_0458

The following morning we headed back to the port just in time for a very localised storm, and then the journey back to Hanoi.

DSC_0251

 

IMG_20170504_105752281Next is caving, tombs and royal cities.

All our love, The Backpack Duo x

Vietnam part 1: Hanoi before James’ parents

By James

After a rather confusing journey trying to find the correct hotel (they’re all called such similar things!), we arrived at Charming Hotel 2, Hanoi.

DSC_0120

We loved Hanoi, although we did next to nothing in it before Sue and Brendan (my parents) arrived. Our days were spent wandering about looking for bargains, going to cafes, eating King Roti buns (oven bottom buns with chocolate in them) and going to see Guardians of the Galaxy 2!

DSC_0064

Livin’ the fast paced life

DSC_0104

 

 

 

 

One trip we did manage to drag our carcases out for was to the Temple of Literature, the oldest university in Vietnam, dating back to the 13th century.

IMG_6447

In front of the Turtles of Famous Alumni. And your university just sends you an annual begging letter…

 

 

IMG_6457

Sacred halls of learning

 

IMG_6451

Smiley happy people in front of the royal gateway, the symbol of Hanoi

Other than that, we just hung out and waited for my parents to arrive- bliss.

Love, the Backpack Duo x

 

 

Guest blog: Vietnam overview

By Sue (and Brendan), James’ parents

We recently spent two lovely and memorable weeks with The Backpack Duo, aka James and Chloe in northern and central Vietnam. Our first surprise was before we arrived, when I purchased £250 of the local currency, Vietnamese dong; and received 6.2 million dong, making £1 worth over 29,000 dong- we had some misunderstandings with our zeros for a while! By the time we arrived, they had already spent a week in Hanoi (hyperlink) and had found some lovely places for eating out, what to visit, booked tours, got their heads around all those zeros, etc.

Our hotel was quite close to the Old Quarter, also known as the 36 Streets, which are not far from the famous Lake of the Restored Sword where people gather at dawn for exercises. The 36 Streets were originally where the different guilds who provided services to the emperor were located. Most of them have Hang in their name, where Hang means merchandise. We did a cyclo tour which was a great way of seeing them at a good pace. We saw streets with only metal tins, or funeral artefacts, or clothing.

DSC_0124

Hanoi, cathedral from our cyclo

We also visited the Water Puppet Theatre by the Lake. This is as named, a theatre with a large bath of water with curtains on three sides, where the puppeteers stand waist high in the water behind the screen to tell folk tales, such as a fox taking the ducks that keep the rice paddies free from insects.

Our next treat was a very tasty foodie tour with our delightful guide, Lotus, a business student who wants to run her own restaurant. She had chosen the seven different restaurants/cafes we visited. We ate lots of different dishes, and they were all amazing, and gave us some very good reference points for other eating places. We also went into some eating establishments and ate things we would not have tried on our own.

DSC_0147

I think he’s the Manager here now that he’s out of the White House…

 

A number of people had recommended the Vietnamese Womens’ Museum which had themed floors, e.g. women in war, women as entrepreneurs. It was excellent with many contemporary accounts and videos which brought the lives of Vietnamese women alive. Very good spot if you are interested in the social history of a fascinating country.

We joined our tour of Halong Bay, Haiphong, Lan Ha Bay and Cat Ba Island the following day. It was a mixed group of 18 people, Brits, Aussies, and a French/Japanese couple. We had a two night, three days tour which meant we turned left rather than right when we left the quay at Halong Bay. Our guide, Chang (he insisted on calling himself Tiger, we insisted on calling him Chang- James), told us that the Asian tourists would only do a day trip, as0 they refused to stay overnight on the boats. The boat was fairly basic but the food from the galley was excellent in the circumstances. Other tours were only one night, two days. We felt we had the best option, as we saw the amazing limestone karsts (like limestone icebergs rising from the sea), went kayaking into a beautiful lagoon, saw caves, watched pearls from the Bay being strung, cycled through the countryside, trekked through the jungle and so much more.

Halong Bay, J&C on quayside.jpg

Halong Bay, on the beach.jpg.

One highlight was stopping in a Viet Hai village on the east of Cat Ba Island to sample rice wine.

Halong Bay, trying snake wine.jpgThere were three varieties on offer, plain (called white), and two infused versions, one with hibiscus flowers and the other with snake (yes really!). Surprisingly, we all preferred the snake one. Our hostess showed us the most basic still you will ever see, and we met their ‘pets’, horseshoe crabs.

Whilst the others did a scramble through a jungle and over a ridge, I watched pearls which come from Halong Bay being strung into a necklace.

Back on the boat we had a massive meal that put us all to sleep. When we awoke we were sailing quietly through Lan Ha Bay, with the only other boats around us being local fishing boats- a big change from the rather congested Ha Long Bay.

On the way to Cat Ba Island proper, we came past the floating village, where over 2,000 people live on boats as fish farmers. Each boat had a very small living space (little more than a garden shed in size), and a space to ‘raise’ their fish.

Halong Bay, fish farmers, Cat Ba Island.jpg

Halong Bay, going fishing.jpg

Halong Bay, karsts in millpond sea

The limestone karsts rise out of the ocean, often with sheer sides, and this one is used on the 200,000 dong note.

Halong Bay, limstone karst

At this point, we left James and Chloe to go off to explore Phong Nha Ke Bang caves and Brendan and I returned to Hanoi to shop, wander the streets, eat delicious food, do a tea tasting and visit the Vietnamese Womens’ Museum again. This time we did the women in war floor, which was full of rich detail about the surprisingly active role women took during what they call the American War. We were particularly struck by the underground tunnels which enabled them to move munitions and people to the front line at night. One was 27 km long, with an upper layer nine metres below for living, complete with a maternity ward and crèche; then a second layer another four metres down for meeting rooms etc.; and a final layer beneath for transporting munitions. This time we visited Madame Huong’s Bakery over the road, where you choose your cakes from an amazing display, and then sit outside and watch the world go by.

Hanoi, Madame Huong's bakery.jpg

We could see some of the reportedly 5 million scooters in Hanoi congregating over the road, which turned out to be a school. A different version of the school run, but still with mothers and fathers waiting at the school gate.

Scooters are everywhere. We were told that there are 7 million people and 5 million scooters in Hanoi, and they are used instead of cars to transport people and things, e.g. huge flower displays, and families of five, often with very young children asleep in the ‘people sandwich’. They are also used as beasts of burden, even two dragons.

Hanoi, carrying dragonsJames and Chloe meanwhile were doing some rugged caving, and we’ll leave them to describe the thrills, mud and privations.

—————————————————————————-

We all met again in Hue, the old imperial capital for just a day or so. We visited the citadel and shrines to the emperors.

Hue, J&C temple The citadel was about creating a delightful, restful place for the emperor, but also was intended to prevent his own people from entering to threaten or disturb him. The avenues of trees were lovely, and we listened attentively to our guide.

Hue, listening to our guide in citadel

We stayed at a charming hotel, La Perle, where we were greeted with complimentary fruit, tea/coffee, and welcoming staff. The next day we moved onto Hoi An by train, down the coast and through lush countryside.

DSC_0018.JPG

Hoi An has a beautifully well preserved old quarter, and we stayed just outside, and either walked in or borrowed the hotel’s rickety bikes.

DSC_0075 - Copy

As J&C found in Thailand and Cambodia, the poor/non-existent driving skills are terrifying, people happily drive up a dual carriageway on their motorbike the wrong way. So although the bikes got us to the Old Quarter quickly, it was a hazardous occupation. It is strung with lanterns, and is pedestrianised during the day, with (weirdly) piped-in classical music in the streets.

Hoi An, pink jasmine

We had arranged to meet Alex’s tailor friend, Viet and her sister-in-law, Ty, to have some clothes made. All four of us ordered clothes, such as jackets, trousers, skirts, shirts, dresses, and even coats. It was a trial trying on winter clothes in that heat, but someone had to do it!

The family was incredibly hospitable, generous, patient and welcoming, and James had a ball with their young son, Win (after whom the shop is named). We also were in Hoi An for the Buddha’s birthday when there is a night market, and people set candles adrift on the water for good luck.

Hoi An, coffee timeIMG_6788.JPG

Our next excursion was an eco-cookery course. First we explored to the local market.

Hoi An eco cooking, market stall

Then we embarked on coracles (called basket boats) for some crabbing before lunch.

DSC_0106.JPG

I was having the time of my life. Brendan was less impressed…

 

This was a big hit with Sue, who caught the most, 4.

DSC_0110

We went up the bamboo creek to a purpose-built bamboo house for our cookery course. This was wonderful, with plenty of staff, and the right mix of hands-on experience with a slick operation to ensure we had everything cooked in time for lunch.

Hoi An eco cooking, focussed!

We made lots of delicious food, including learning how to make rice pancakes from scratch!

IMG_6826

Brendan making spring roll paper

 

IMG_6837

James made his own carrot flower, even though he was (clearly) rather hot and bothered

 

IMG_6834

So, of course, Chloe put it on her nose!

 

IMG_20170510_115930181

Our finished products

 

Back to Hoi An for more fittings of our clothes, and a new experience of coconut iced coffee. Coconut cream and condensed milk are whizzed up with ice shavings to make a semi freddo to which is added cold coffee – delicious.

IMG_20170511_120522392

On our last day we set off very early with a Banh Mi in our bellies (a Vietnamese version of a filled baguette) for the temple ruins of the Champa people.

IMG_20170513_123438807

This was so beautiful, but hot, hot, hot. J&C had researched when it was best to visit, so we arrived in between the dawn groups and the mid-morning groups, and had the luxury of the place to ourselves.

DSC_0221

The buildings originated from between the 4th and 14th centuries and were built by the Hindu kings as places of Royal worship- both for the royals to use, and to deify of the King, often by making him part God in statues. However, many of the buildings were destroyed in the American War as the Vietnamese used it as a military base, and so the Americans sent in the B-52s. So now we can only see about 10% of what was discovered by a French explorer in 1898. As we were leaving, hundreds of people were arriving, so we had the best of the day, or we felt we did.

IMG_6885

IMG_20170512_091918450

We haven’t covered the amazing shopping experiences, the bartering for even the most basic of purchases, the stunning food, the constantly exuberant liveliness of the street, all the walking and looking and listening, the evident poverty tempered with smiles and kindness, and a communist country chock full of (mostly female) entrepreneurs.

What a lovely time we had with the Backpack Duo- we were sorry to leave them!

Love from Sue and Brendan x