Just a quick post today, but one celebrating a milestone.
Six months ago today, Amy’s sister Laurie dropped us off at JFK for the start of this journey. It seems like it’s been longer than six months, because we’ve seen so much, we’ve been to so many places already, and we’ve had so many unique experiences.
Amy and I have discussed this many times: when you go on a great vacation for a week or two, you go home and talk about it for months. It gets burned into your memory bank, and you can recount the slightest details – a great meal, a bad hotel room, some random encounter with a local. But with the scale of this trip, the details start to fade fast, and only the big picture sticks with you. Taking photos and writing about it helps, but the brushstrokes are much broader.
I can’t speak for Amy, but for me the “big picture” experience so far has been a bit spiritual. I don’t necessarily mean it’s been “religious,” but it has given me an appreciation for things bigger than myself, and my everyday selfish concerns.
I’ve begun to appreciate the beauty of the world we live in, having seen scenery unique to so many different parts of the planet. We’ve seen incredible sights and fascinating wildlife, visited stunning natural landmarks, and looked at the stars like we haven’t been able to before. The Great Ocean Road in Australia, The Franz Josef Glacier, sunsets in Cambodia, the Jeju Island shoreline, and the brightest Milky Way we’ve ever seen (when getting locked out of our New Zealand cabin one night) are just some examples. And when you see how much people are trashing it as well, almost everywhere along the way (except New Zealand!), you appreciate the scenery that much more.
I’ve also had a growing sense of the “mysterious ways” of the world; how things will work out, how chance or fate will put you in the right place at the right time, or how what you thought was a wrong move turns out for the best in the end. Getting lost and finding a great restaurant in Japan. Bumping into our NYC neighbors in Da Nang, Vietnam. Walking around to discover a beer festival in Melbourne. Travel will do that for you. Things work out in ways we just can’t explain.
And lastly, I’ve had an incredibly huge sense of gratitude. I feel so fortunate. Being able to do what we’re doing, seeing how other people and other cultures live, realizing just how lucky we are to live the way we do at home – it gives me a great appreciation for where I’ve come from and just how blessed I am to have this life. I will never take tap water, toilet paper, or garbage pickup for granted again. I might even appreciate taxes (maybe). But I’ve been handed a good life. There’s a lot of people to thank – parents, family, teachers, mentors – and a bit of personal ambition involved, but ultimately I think there’s something bigger at work and I should be thankful.
And I am.
Early last evening, as Amy and I were at a rooftop restaurant having a few beers and a bite to eat, the skies darkened, and there was a hail-storm that rained mothball-sized hail, in the middle of the Indian heat, for minutes on end.
A woman we were speaking to, who works in India frequently, said she’d never seen anything like it in her time here. The locals at the restaurant stood watching, in a stunned silence. The owner of the restaurant couldn’t help but laugh later. It was extraordinary. These are the sorts of things that happen and make you go, “Wow.”
And I guess that’s all I really mean by all of this, all of what I’ve been feeling. Just…“Wow.”
But not to get too heady, here. On this, the six-month anniversary of our trip, I have woken up to find that my sweat smells like curry. Bona fide. Just ask Amy. The mystery continues…
At three months we offered up a Q&A – you have questions, we have answers. Now at six months, feel free to send them to us via the contact page, message board, Facebook or email, and we’ll answer in a future post.
Namaste from India, Mom! We just finished up our first week here and it’s been…well, it’s been interesting. John and I are both working on blog posts about our first impressions. Look for those in the days to come. But in the meantime, I wanted to tell you about some of the amazing animals we’ve seen so far. Yesterday, we hired a car to take us from Udaipur to Jodhpur…about a 5-6 hour car ride (see “The Map” page). From the time we left Udaipur at 9am to the time we went to bed in Jodhpur around 10pm, we saw the following animals:
chipmunks
a hawk
green parrots
countless other birds (cranes, pigeons, sparrows, geese)
one mouse (who probably is not long for this world)
one skinny cat
dogs and puppies
cows (and cows with jewelry, painted horns and other bling)
oxen
water buffalo
wild boar (with piglets! If that’s what you call baby boars…)
goats
sheep
camels
monkeys (and wet behind the ears monkey babies!)
horses
bees (and a crazy-big scary next/hive)
All those animals in just over 12 hours! Here are just a few pictures…more to come:
Bee hive at Jain temple
Bees!
Monkey
Baby monkey
Water Buffalo
Hawk
We have a great hotel in Jodhpur (video to come!) but the internet stinks. We leave for Jaipur tomorrow…maybe we’ll have better luck there. More news to India to come soon…promise!
Last week, Amy and I left Melbourne to start our drive down Australia’s Great Ocean Road, which follows the coastline of the Southern Ocean. Did you know there was a Southern Ocean? I didn’t. Well, there is, and it’s south of Australia, which is probably why they gave it that name. The Great Ocean Road is an incredibly beautiful drive, and the vistas have been phenomenal, like driving the Pacific Coast Highway.
On our first day we stopped in the small town of Lorne, and if you’ve seen the previous video of our cabin, you’ll have seen how things got started – with a visit from our avian neighbors, the cockatoos. Any time we took a step on to the porch, the wild cockatoos would swoop in (keyword: “swoop”) and look for handouts. And not just one bird, but three or four at a time. I don’t like big parrot-like birds lurking on my porch, and frankly, large birds creep me out altogether. They stare at you, too – they don’t take their eyes off of you. Look at this:
It was like Bodega Bay in a certain Hitchcock film, and I was the blonde. I picked the wrong day to stop swearing.
Wait, what?!
I’m not Catholic, but in solidarity with Amy (who is), I gave up cursing for Lent. Last year I gave up meat, and the year before I gave up booze. This year I gave up one of my biggest vices, swearing. Anyone who knows me well knows I pepper my conversation with obscenity as liberally as a Hungarian sprinkles paprika into his goulash, the result of my years spent in a pro-football locker-room, the merchant marines, and various outlaw motorcycle gangs.
Sure, a little everyday cussing is probably cathartic, but a litany of profanity isn’t very becoming. So in the hopes that forty days of watching my language might change my behavior, I decided to give up swearing for Lent.
Big mistake.
Eventually we checked out of the cabin, and hit the open road. We hugged the coastline for several miles, and saw some beautiful scenery along the way.
Lucky for me, it kind of leaves you speechless, so no problem with the Lenten promises, though you’re apt to take a wide turn and see some incredible vista and mumble “Holy…smokes!…”
Things got more interesting when we hit the town of Kennet River, less than an hour from Lorne. In the cabin video, you heard me lament that we’d seen no koalas, no kangaroos, and no wallabies, but plenty of cockatoos. That would soon change. Kennet River is known for its colony of koalas, and here we got to finally see some stereotypical Aussie wildlife.
Even as a former outlaw biker and generally hard-nosed tough guy who used to work as a stevedore, I have to admit, these guys are cute. They were hanging out in the trees in a local park, either sleeping or feeding on leaves. They look, well,…cuddly.
Eventually we drove further into the park to see if we could find more koalas. I drove slowly, and we had our eyes focused up in the trees. I came around a bend, and out of the corner of my eye, I saw something up the road in the distance.
“HOLY!…COW! It’s a kangaroo!!”
Our drive up the road had paid off, and we spent a few minutes inching up to the kangaroo, who darted away. As we drove on, we found a low-lying koala passed out in a tree like he’d been out on a long bender. Amy got within feet of him to take pictures. The koala woke up and looked her in the eye. They communed.
I can’t say for sure, but I think Amy gained some valuable koala knowledge from him, like the Buddha under the bhodi tree. She’s like a koala whisperer.
We continued on our way down the road, and later that afternoon we drove out to Cape Otway to see its famous lighthouse, about a 15-mile drive through a wooded area. At one point, zipping through the woods, another kangaroo suddenly bounced out in front of the rental car. I slammed on the brakes: “JESU-…Golly!!”
We came within feet of making kangaroo burgers, but narrowly avoided disaster. I gathered my senses, and we headed down the road a few more miles to find some cars stopped by the side of the road, looking at koalas. We were hitting koala-rich vein, and Amy perked up, on the lookout.
When we were in Cambodia, Amy would put on her glasses to see the wild monkeys on the side of the road. Ever since then she’s called them her “Monkey Glasses.” The Monkey Glasses were working their magic apparently, because as we drove, The Koala Whisperer began to see more and more of her animal patronus charms. I was focused on the road, looking to avoid any further rogue kangaroos and Lenten slip-ups, but Amy however…
“There’s a koala!…there’s one!…there’s one…and there’s another one…”
“How do you keep seeing all these koalas?
“I just look for the fuzzy lumps up in the trees.”
“Well I can’t see sh-…I can’t see anything.”
“WAIT, BACK UP, BACK UP!!!”
“What?! What did you see?!”
“There’s like a colony of kangaroos!!”
I hit the brakes and backed up the car. And sure enough, back in the woods about 50 feet, sitting on the ground eating some grass…were two cows. The Koala Whisperer in her Ralph Lauren Monkey Glasses had misfired. And we never even went to the lighthouse, instead pushing on to spend the night in Port Campbell, near some of the greatest scenery on the Great Ocean Road.
The Twelve Apostles (well, just 2 of them)
Loch Ard Gorge
The Grotto
The next day we drove off the Ocean Road briefly to have lunch inland, in the town of Timboon. The area is best known for its dairy farms and local cheeses. We had a great cheese plate for lunch (as well as some delicious pork belly) and after, we stopped by a local landmark:
That’s right – Cheeseworld! It’s like a whole world of cheese, and we went there. We read about cheese, we looked at cheese, we bought some cheese, and had a few milkshakes. With all the dairy appreciation, you’d think the local cows would have been happy with us. But apparently not. As we got closer to our motel room in Port Fairy, we pulled behind a double-decker stock trailer. It had the words “beef bus” painted on the back, and it was filled with cattle being moved somewhere, likely for some nefarious end. We pulled up next to the beef bus, and here’s where Elsie got even. Our rental car was showered with cattle urine.
I don’t know how the cow did it, but her aim was impeccable. It was like being in a yellow car wash, shot out of a bovine Super-Soaker. Sure, the wipers could clean the windshield, but the rest of the car, dusty from a few days of driving on dirt and gravel roads, looked like a map of the Grand Canyon. The next day was the first Friday of Lent, and we had been warned – we would eat no meat.
Animals: 1 – John & Amy: 0.
Friday morning we were awakened by an odd ringtone outside our Port Fairy motel window. It would repeat every few minutes. I was getting mad that the thoughtless person wouldn’t answer or turn off their phone: “What’s with this assh-…goofball?!” I got up and looked out the window, and this was the scene:
It was a couple of Australian magpies. They have the strangest song. Google it. Wait! – DON’T Google it, here you go: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oYEYc8Ge3nw
Imagine having that waking you up. It’s pretty incredible to think it comes from a bird. That’s a bird I can respect, unlike creepy voyeuristic cockatoos.
Our first stop after leaving Port Fairy was the Tower Hill Wildlife Reserve, where you can see koalas, kangaroos, wallabies, and emus. After parking the car, we went to the ranger station to get a trail map. While there, I read a little bit about emus. Some interesting facts:
Emus are the third largest bird in the world.
Emus can grow to about 7-8 feet tall.
Emus are flightless, but can run very fast.
So, armed with this knowledge, Amy and I went out for a hike. And before we got out of the carpark, we came face to face with a prehistoric looking emu.
You know how I feel about cockatoos. Emus are a whole different story. This is a bird who can claw out my eyes, run faster than me, and likely dunk on me in a game of one-on-one. I was having none of it. We stopped and watched quietly, and the emu approached us, very slowly. I was ready to punch this animal in the face and run, but when he got too close, Amy assumed this position:
Yep – they may be big, but they’re dumb! If you stretch out your hands high over your head, they think you’re a bigger, domintant emu, and they’ll walk away. And that’s what happened with this emu. Sucker.
Animals: 1 – John & Amy: 1
So we headed up the trail, and Amy and I became very quiet in the hopes of seeing a kangaroo or koala in the wild. The Koala Whisperer kept her eyes in the trees, and I kept my eyes on the bush. And then…a rustling in the trees…and just in front of us… “SON OF A…Biscuit!”
An emu hopped out on the path in front of us, scaring the daylights out of me. This thing was the size of Kareem Abdul Jabbar wearing lifts. Hearts racing, we stopped and let it pass, and continued our trek.
Soon, in a clearing, we came upon a fresh turd. Yes, a turd. Amy, a keen bush tracker, noted that this was an unusually big turd. And like all good zoologists, she picked up a stick and started to poke it, as if it might spring to life.
“What are you doing?”
“I’m poking it.”
“It looks like an everyday dog turd. Even worse, it could be human…”
“I think it’s a kangaroo turd.”
“Do kangaroo turds look like that? What do kangaroo turds look like?”
Well, all credit to the Whisperer, because it turns out it was a kangaroo turd. And a few minutes later, in the underbrush, I spotted a massive kangaroo, with forearms the size of Floyd Mayweather’s.
This guy was big. We watched as he fed on some grass, and eventually he hopped off into some brush. We walked on a little further, and minutes later, more rustling, and with it another startled kangaroo, who stared at us as long as we stared at him, until he, too, rustled off into some impassable shrubbery.
With no other kangaroos to be found, Amy and I started to head back down the trail towards the car. Amy heard rustling. We paused, and right next to us…
“MOTHER…of Pearl!”
Just off the path in the trees, two massive emus looked us in the eye, and then slunk off. We picked up our pace, and then the best wildlife encounter of our trip happened. Directly in front of us, a wallaby crossed the trail. He hopped into a bit of brush, and nosed around for something to eat. Amy and I quietly approached.
This little guy was about the size of a black lab. We moved in slowly, and the wallaby didn’t seem to pay any attention to us. Then he turned toward us, and hopped in our direction, heading just behind us. He turned, and he very slowly started to sniff and move his ears. That’s when we noticed – this wallaby had one milky eye, and the other was missing. He was blind, and with us frozen in place, he slowly approached us trying to figure out what was going on, sniffing and twitching his ears. We were within a foot or two, like you could reach out and grab him.
It was incredible. And as a former longshoreman, amateur Golden Gloves contender, and retired hard-boiled detective, I’m not afraid to tell you it was very cute and touching. We didn’t want to move and disturb or scare him, but eventually we slowly backed away, and he hopped off into the woods. “That was fu…reaking incredible.”
Animals for the win.
Over the next few days, during our most westerly stay in the tiny fishing village of Nelson, we were warned not to drive at dawn or dusk – the kangaroos are out en masse, and will jump in front of your car like a whitetail deer. (Ed. note: see our Nelson hotel room in our last post). We also spoke to a nice woman about koalas:
“Ooh, they’re nasty little buggers.”
“Koalas?!”
“Oh yeah, if you get too close to them, they’ll scratch you up. Nasty things.”
“Wow, I didn’t know that.”
“I’ve been to Colorado in the States.”
“You have? Did you enjoy it?”
“Yes – you know what I like?”
“What’s that?”
“Squirrels. They’re cute, I like them a lot.”
I guess everything is relative, and familiarity breeds contempt.
As we headed back east, working our way back towards our current cabin stay in Lorne, we stopped in the Glenelg River State Park. There we saw dozens of kangaroos who leapt in front of our car as we slowly drove down the dirt road. When we exited the park and picked up speed on the highway, two massive emus crossed in front of us. I’ll tell you one thing: you don’t have to find the wildlife in Australia, it finds you.
As we drove on, I realized I’d stopped reacting as violently to the wildlife, Amy had stopped putting on her Monkey Glasses, and I’d stopped swearing as much. Even as I type here in Lorne, the cockatoos on the porch don’t bother me as much as they once did. Familiarity breeds contempt. And some breeds are more familiar, and some breeds more contemptible.
(We know this was a longer-than-usual post…if you’ve made it this far, congratulations! You shall be rewarded with a song:
Hi Mom! We’ve been having an amazing time along the Great Ocean Road this past week. Koalas, kangaroos, wallabies, crazy birds and amazing views! More to come from John on the flora and fauna, but in the mean time…another hotel room video! This past weekend was Labor Day Weekend here in Victoria and it’s the same here as in the States: the end of summer and a three-day weekend. What did that mean for us? Lots of fellow travelers on the road and a dearth of accommodation. But thankfully, we found a great place to crash. Perfect for the holiday weekend! Check it out! (Once again, because of internet restrictions, we had to compress the video so you need to click the link below and it will take you to YouTube…all safe, promise.)
I know we’re behind on reporting our New Zealand and Australian adventures…more to come this week. Promise! (We have to because we leave for India on Saturday and who knows what the internet will bring…)
Greetings from the Great Ocean Road! We’re currently in Lorne, Australia, just an hour or so outside of Melbourne. The GOR is Oz’s version of the Pacific Coast Highway. We’ve already seen some beautiful beaches and amazing vistas. But one of the greatest interactions with nature happened when we checked into our cabin this afternoon. Enjoy! (Because of internet restrictions, we had to compress the video so you need to click the link below and it will take you to YouTube…all safe, we assure you.)
(I realize I forgot to point out the view of the bay…it’s slightly blocked by the trees, but it’s lovely. And I also forgot to show the inside of our fridge…be assured it’s fully stocked with Aussie beer and wine!)
Hi Mom, and a big “HELLO!” to all of our faithful followers out there. I know you’ve all been clamoring for a new blog post, but we just finished a three-week car and campervan adventure in New Zealand which has kept us fairly busy, and with limited internet service we’ve been out of touch. Sorry about that! But now we’re leaving, and we’ll have a post about the campervan trip soon…in the meantime…
One thing I can tell you about New Zealand: we’ve met so many nice folks on this global trip, but this may be the nicest place we’ve been. Take this exchange, that happened a few nights ago:
(Sunday night, 11pm)
[KNOCK KNOCK KNOCK]
Me: “Sorry to wake you, but do you have a spare key for Cabin #6? We locked ourselves out…”
Campground owner, standing in doorway, in his underwear: “Oh…well, no worries, mate.”
(sounds Australian, I know, but they say it in New Zealand, too)
“We went out to look at the stars, and then I realized I forgot our key, and the door was locked behind us…beautiful stars out tonight…we don’t get these kind of stars in New York, you see…”
“No worries, mate.”
“I’m terribly embarrassed about this – I hate to be a bother – but the stars, you know; and the doors automatically lock when you step outside, so…”
“No worries, mate…”
“My wife is actually trying to stay warm in the toilets right now, she’s in there in her nightgown; so she’s not very happy with me, as you can imagine…”
(ed. note: “toilets” = “bathrooms.” Public camp bathrooms in this case.)
“No worries, mate, here you go.”
[hands me key]
“Thanks so much! Hate to be a bother…sorry again, I appreciate your help!”
“No worries, mate.”
Cabin 6 on the left, our blue Ford Focus center, toilets on the right.
More New Zealand facts: there are a lot of sheep here. A lot. So much so that during television coverage for the opening day of rugby season (opening day, people), there was a commercial for sheep mouthwash. You read that correctly: a commercial for sheep mouthwash. I can barely floss my own teeth, let alone force some ewe to gargle a belt of Listerine. But I guess you have to keep on top of your sheep’s dental care here, it’s a matter of national interest.
This guy may also need some floss.
Something else interesting: some people here walk barefoot, even in cities. And why not? There’s no garbage or litter anywhere, and abundant recycling opportunities. Hell, they even had a primetime show about recycling. And the public restrooms are spotless, stocked, and without a trace of graffiti. So yes, you can go barefoot just about anywhere.
Other things of note:
“Shopping Carts” are “Trundlers.”
Dogs kill penguins.
Bananas are scarce.
One other thing, and with this I’m being totally serious: New Zealand may be the most beautiful, scenic place we’ve ever been. Ever. Every time to you turn a corner, your eyes expand and you say, “WOW…” The scenery is really like that. It’s amazing.
And speaking of amazing, there’s this lengthy tale: A few weeks ago, Amy and I went to the New Zealand Rugby Sevens tournament in Wellington. It’s a two-day tournament in which sixteen nations compete in fourteen-minute matches of rugby, with seven players per side. Hence, “The Rugby Sevens.” But it’s more than just a sporting event. It’s like Halloween, Mardi Gras, and a dance-off all rolled into a big two-day party.
First of all, EVERYONE wears costumes. As one Kiwi told us, “we don’t really celebrate Halloween, so this is a big costume party for us.” Secondly, EVERYONE is drinking from mid-morning until late at night, like Mardi Gras. And like Mardi Gras, EVERYONE in Wellington embraces the event, which takes over the whole town. In fact, these posters were up all over the city, a friendly reminder from a tolerant community:
Things kicked off early on a Friday morning. Around 9am, as we walked down to the bus stop near our rental room, we saw people in various costumes drinking in pubs which had been open long before we walked by. This seemed normal, and didn’t phase anyone. Then we boarded a bus bound for the city center, where we joined groups of lumberjacks, construction workers, football players, and a biker gang for the ride downtown. It was as if we’d stumbled upon The Village People ride at Disneyland.
(Note: here’s another example about how nice everyone is in New Zealand – at every bus stop, nearly every person who got off the bus paused briefly and shouted to the front, “Thank you, Bus Driver!!” And the bus driver would smile and nod, or tip his cap like he was Fred Astaire. As a New Yorker, it was unnerving.)
As the day went on, we concluded that the most popular costumes, it seemed, were as follows:
#1 – Caveman/Flintstones (with varying degrees of animal skin, from the real to the cartoony).
#2 – Ron Burgundy and the “Anchorman” crew.
#3 – Superheroes (a catch-all, but again, very popular).
And finally, #4 – Mexicans.
Yes, that’s right – Mexicans! Everywhere there were people dressed as your stereotypical Mexican.
For example, look at this classic movie cast, from right to left – the Cowardly Lion, the Scarecrow, the Tin-Man, and the Mexican.
And no one seemed to take offense to this. In fact, we saw a few guys dressed as Hasidic Jews, with big-nose Groucho glasses. And we also saw a bunch of people dressed in blackface – yes, blackface. But WAIT, it gets better – including a black guy in blackface!! I did find it fascinating that this is acceptable in New Zealand. This seemed normal, and didn’t phase anyone.
Maybe it’s just culturally accepted, like they have some very advanced sense of humor, or very thick skins. I can’t really explain it, honestly. But as another example, first we saw a black guy dressed in blackface, and then – and I wish we had a better picture of this – there was this little person – dressed as a leprechaun! (Note Fred Flintstone behind him.)
Also of interest – two guys were dressed as the Blues Brothers, and some other guy came up and pointed at the bigger guy and said (earnestly) – “Hey! Jim Belushi!” Then there were the “sexy” girls. You know, sexy policewoman, sexy kitten, sexy viking…all the iterations of sexy whatever. Now you can add the following to the list of “sexy” costumes: Sexy Rubik’s Cube. Sexy Michael Jordan. And Sexy Pasta.
There were grown men dressed in adult diapers.
Please tell me if you’ve heard of this song: it’s called “Double-Bubble Bubble Butt.” Yes, that’s the song. And apparently, at the Sevens, it’s a thing to be on the Jumbotron shaking your butt – your “double bubble bubble butt” – to this song. This happened half a dozen times at least.
As hard as she tried, Amy did not get on the jumbotron.
People chugged beer, people puked.
People STOOD in puke.
People in costumes played double-dutch, in a stadium hallway.
The fleet was in town.
Fully-grown babies terrorized the venue.
..and Bill Clinton French-kissed Arnold Schwarznegger.
This seemed normal, and didn’t phase anyone.
All-day drinking combined with the anonymity of costumes equals trouble. They did something at the stadium in Wellington that they would NEVER do in the USA – sell beer in bottles. Sure, they were plastic bottles, but as the days got longer, you were prepared to be hit in the head with an empty beer bottle missle. Bottles were flying everywhere, and with total impunity.
And something totally funny: there was an actual sporting event going on during all of this mayhem. I can tell you some of the results now, if you haven’t already checked on how your fantasy Rugby Sevens team did…
The USA actually won something. They were the “Shield Winner,” and it was the Rugby Sevens equivalent of getting a participation trophy for being on the intramural squash team. We were the best of the crappy teams, beating notable rugby powerhouses like Spain and Portugal. USA!!!!
Kenya also won something. They were the “Bowl” winners, meaning they are not that bad, but frankly not that good either. And here’s the interesting part – during their award presentation, the stadium loudspeakers played “Buffalo Solider.” Seems an awkward choice to me, but then again, I was not dressed as a pants-free nun, so who am I to judge these proceedings?
And of course, New Zealand’s own All-Blacks sevens squad won it all, taking home the first place trophy. The crowd went nuts, and once the award was presented, we high-tailed it out of the stadium to avoid the crowds, the flying bottles, and the vomit. In doing so, we missed the All-Blacks doing an impromptu “Haka,” the Maori battle dance that’s become a symbol of national pride.
So this national pride came to a crescendo at the Sevens. And it should have. When you live in a country where everyone’s nice, where the streets are clean, where every vista is more amazing than the next, and where your national team dominates the world in your favorite sport, there’s much to be happy about. So much so that you thank the bus driver on your way home to wash out your sheep’s mouth with a fluoride rinse. This is normal, and doesn’t phase anyone.
Hello Mom! How ya going?! Sorry for the radio silence! Life on the road is demanding…not a lot of time for blogging. But we’ve been having an AMAZING time in New Zealand. Here’s a peek inside our rolling digs… With a cameo appearance by special guest stars. Enjoy!
*Please note: I inadvertently called our wagon by the wrong name. His name is Chuck. Chuck Wagon. Sorry for the error. I blame the Pinot!
We’ve had a blast the last two weeks on the South Island. Tomorrow, we head up to the North Island. More to come soon…promise!
The internet in Bali was iffy but it rocks in New Zealand! Here is our lovely Bali hotel room, just 30 minutes north of Ubud. A full report on the Sevens in Wellington to come in short order.
Hello Mom! Greetings from Brisbane, Australia! We’re only here for a few hours on a stop-over from Bali on our way to Wellington, New Zealand. We left Bali last night at 9pm local time…landed here at 5:15 local time…then board another flight shortly to finally arrive in Wellington at 3:15pm local time (next day). Here’s how I feel right now:
I know, I know…poor us! And poor you! I feel for all of our friends who are suffering through one of the coldest winters on record. (I guess this was a good year for us to get away!) And because of that, I won’t torture you too much with tales of Paradise. Bali was beautiful though. The ancient rice paddies and terraces were truly amazing.
We also visited a temple in Ubud which has turned into quite a tourist attraction because of the local inhabitants…crazy monkeys!
Baby monkey!
Crazy monkey licking the wall.
John and monkey lamenting over the humidity.
We also went to a coffee farm. But this wasn’t just any coffee farm. They make poop coffee! That’s right! There’s an animal on Bali called the Luwak. The Luwak loves to eat the berries off the coffee plant. But their stomachs can’t digest the beans, so they pass right through. Now, I don’t know who first had this idea, but someone digs through the Luwak poop to retrieve the coffee beans, then they clean ’em off, roast ’em and make them into coffee!
Coffee plant
Coffee loving Luwak
Me drinking the poop coffee
It wasn’t that bad…really!
OK…they’re calling us to board now. More to come from New Zealand! But I’ll leave you with this great shot of John in a skirt.
I should have known better when I saw our boarding passes were written in magic marker: this was going to be an interesting flight.
A little over a week ago, Amy and I left Myanmar for Malaysia, Singapore, and Indonesia, where we are now, in Bali. The first leg of the journey required a flight from Bagan, in upper Myanmar, to Yangon, where we connected to Kuala Lumpur.
By our count, we’ve flown about 20 times so far on this tour, from intercontinental jumbo jets to regional turbo-prop planes, and we’ve taken some carriers that give you a little pause for thought. Like Vietnam Airlines – sounds scary right? But they’re part of the Skyteam alliance, and an excellent carrier. Hainan Air or DragonAir? Never heard of them before. But both worked out fine getting us to and from Taiwan.
Then there was Air KBZ Flight 263, from Bagan to Yangon. First off, Air KBZ is run by Kanbawza, a government-backed bank in Myanmar. I like my banks to hand out toasters and invest in risky credit default swap schemes, thank you very much, not take the helm of shoddy, out-dated aircraft. If a bank wants to crash something, crash the housing market, not my flight. Air KBZ has been in business about three years and they have just six older planes in their fleet. In that time, one plane has overshot a runway, and just last week, they evacuated another plane in Yangon, right on the tarmac. With that ratio of planes-to-incidents, we had pretty good odds, right? Just the kind of odds Amy and I were willing to take…
We got to the airport in Bagan early, reservations in hand, and checked in. Check in was easy enough – we walked up to a “counter” that was basically a folding card table, where a dude in a black track jacket wrote out the aforementioned boarding passes in his blue magic marker. Then we handed our bags to another guy, and away they went…
Yep, that’s him, literally carrying our bags through a wooden door to the plane. Then there was the security screening. We went through metal detectors, and our bags got x-rayed, and that was it. No shoe removal, no laptops out, no liquids issues. I actually think my belt buckle set off the light, but they waved me through anyway – what’s the bigger danger, my belt, or the plane itself? So we went through the metal detectors, sat in some old plastic waiting room chairs that looked like they were shipped via time machine from 1975, and waited patiently for the plane to arrive. The Myanmar version of “The Today Show” was on a fuzzy flatscreen TV. They were interviewing a monk. He looked bored, too.
When the plane finally flew in, we were aroused from our slumbers, and it was basically “ALRIGHT – EVERYBODY ON!!” I was fairly excited because there were only about 10 to 15 people waiting for the flight, and when the plane pulled up to the doorway – er,…gate – it was clear this was a decent sized aircraft, so plenty of seats. Amy and I were schlepping a few extra carry-ons because we’d bought a bunch of souvenirs in Thailand and Myanmar. I was happy to have room in the overhead for the bags, and to be able to stretch out my legs some. Little did I know the surprise Air KBZ had in store for us.
We were loaded on to a small bus – for safety reasons I guess – which drove us about twenty feet to the aircraft. No joke, twenty feet, if that. The driver had barely put the bus into gear when he jammed on the brakes and opened the door and motioned for us to get out. With all the loading and unloading, we could have walked there in a fraction of the time. I could have thrown our bags that distance, if it came to it. I guess everyone needs a job in Myanmar, and this was his assignment, so no getting around it.
Here’s what should have been the next indication about the flight: the plane’s engines were still hot, and started up as we all boarded. It was like the pilot had pulled in the driveway, and honked the horn – “Okay, let’s go! I have to drop you off at the movies in Yangon, and then I have to pick up your brother from hockey practice in Mandalay – let’s hustle!!”
So we got off the bus, scurried through the prop-wash and loud whir of the engines, and boarded the plane in the rear of the aircraft. And when we got in, all was revealed. This flight had just come from Mandalay, and was already three-quarters full. The pilot had already been to pick up your brother, and the whole damn hockey team was crammed in as well! All the gear was stowed in the overheads, all the seats were taken…this flight was already packed to the gills, and now they were going to shoehorn us in somehow.
Amy grabbed the first seat she could, and I saw an open seat a few rows back from her. I opened the overhead to store the souvenir bag, and had to play Tetris with the other bags to make ours fit. I took my seat next to a clearly miserable fellow who first acknowledged me by starting up the old “elbow game” with the shared armrest. I’m relentless with that game, by the way, so it ended up being his elbow front-half, mine back-half. We were both working up a sweat, it was pretty hot and humid on the aircraft by this point, no wonder he was miserable. Then I saw what was going on in the seats directly behind me…
They were packed with luggage! Just piled up on the seats. But there were still people who needed to sit down. Where were they going to go? I looked up to see if there was any additional overhead space, and I saw this:
Yup, that sucker is broken and TAPED SHUT with cheap packing tape. I assume they used clear tape in the hope that no one would notice – very tricky, Air KBZ. Nothing was going in that overhead. So get this – they took the bags from behind me and put them a) in the aisle (to trip over, clearly), and b) in the crew’s service area, where they prepare the meals, etc. I think the crew just sat on them, probably, while they drew straws to see who would get the last parachute. Eventually we were all in our seats, and the flight took off.
Here’s an example of the kind of loose program being run on Air KBZ: do you see this guy? He’s got an ANTENNA on his head, a radio antenna. He’s listening to Burma’s Top 40, or having a short-wave conversation with someone in Bangladesh. During takeoff!
Clearly this is okay, or at least it’s not frowned-upon. I like to think he was sitting over the wing and letting the cockpit know if the flaps were actually working.
I’m normally not afraid of flying, but I thought about it. This plane was overloaded. It was an older plane (taped together, mind you), and we were flying in remote upper Myanmar. When you hear about plane crashes on the news, where “two Americans are among the missing”…this is that situation. I began to recite the old Sioux battle cry: “Today is a good day to die.”
And sure enough, about halfway through the flight, terror struck — but in non-lethal form. A sudden disturbance erupted about ten rows ahead of me. A very concerned Asian gentlemen popped up immediately and motioned wildly for a crew member. What could be happening?! And we found out all too soon: a young white girl was barfing violently, like a drunk cheerleader on prom night. It could have been the heat on that flight, or it could have been the turbulence – it could have been the fear of death! – but this poor girl’s insides were on the outside now. I’m glad I didn’t see the results, but I know this much – when she was escorted to the back of the plane to freshen up (slaloming the excess luggage, of course), her face looked as pale and sickly as the Crypt Keeper’s. And the clean up! Oh man…
The poor male flight attendant – he had nothing to use but old newspapers to sop up the mess, and he must have gone through the equivalent of the Sunday New York Times, including the Magazine, the real estate inserts, and the Sunday Styles section, “Vows” and all. This poor guy single-handedly cleaned up the likes of the Exxon Valdez spill up there in Row 12. He deserved some kind of medal. Or at least the last parachute…
With that excitement soon behind us, and a few sprays of Burmese Lysol around the cabin, we all looked forward to landing in Yangon. And what a better way to land in Yangon than to have massive crosswinds pushing the plane off the runway.
Yes, that’s right. We were basically coming in sideways as we landed – I think the pilot watched a little too much “Dukes of Hazzard” growing up. There was the first initial “squelch” of the tires, followed by a little bit of a fishtail, and then another “squelch,” and then a quick straightening out in the other direction. My stomach turned – I thought we were going to need more newspaper, pronto. There were a few gasps, and then…sighs of relief. We’d actually made it. The guy next to me looked over at me, wide-eyed and giggly. It was the sort of look someone gives you when they just got away with something, like getting out of a speeding ticket in Georgia, or returning the golf cart they drove into the water hazard. Or in this case, cheating death.
And then it was all over, as quick as it began. We all unloaded, and got put on to another bus for the twelve second drive to baggage claim. “Baggage Claim” is basically a garage door where you wait for some guys in uniforms to transfer your bags off an old pickup truck and on to a big pile of other luggage, as if they planned on burning them all, and then you pay another guy (not in a uniform) a dollar because he found your bag in the pile, and put it on a luggage cart for you.
That’s just how it works in Myanmar, all of it. It wouldn’t make sense any other way, really.
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