Tuesday, October 04, 2005

Nepal Highlights So Far....watch this space for photos!

1. Trekking in the Annapurna region of W. Nepal

2. Accidentally erasing all the photos from my newfangled digital camera, but have had to take the same route back from the trek, so was able to recapture a number of them.

3. The trek was meant to be a loop but was turned back due to being stopped and "bribed" by maoist rebels. Have a whiz-bang receipt of my "donation", which I have read is becoming the souvenir de riguer for trekkers in Nepal.

4. Ran into a friend here from 12 years ago, a Nepali, and have made some more local friends (the Nepalis are the friendliest people on earth) so have had to actually turn down dinner invitations at various friends' homes because I'm fully booked. How cool is that!

5. Took an Everest sunrise flight this am....let's face it, I am never going to see it like that in my life by foot. Amazing, but overpriced.

Next Stop: Koh Samui and Kho Phangon, Thailand....stay tuned for photos.

Sunday, September 18, 2005

C A M B O D I A !! Posted by Picasa
Photo from the back of a moto taxi in downdown Siem Reap. Interestingly, Siem Reap means Defeat of the Thais (Siamese), interesting considering the proximitey of Siem Reap to Thailand.  Posted by Picasa
This is a photo of James' hat. One of the most fun forms of transport in Siem Reap is by tuk-tuk, or basically a bench-wagon structure fastened to the back of a motorcycle. I didn't adjust the focus here to get the street, but did get a shot of James here. When you hire a ride, the driver will drop you off at the temple gates, and pull over into a food and souvenir stall area, and wait for you......however long it takes. I tried to tell him that he could go and I could find a ride when I was ready, but apparently this is not how it goes at Ankor. Your driver is yours for the day, however long you want to make it. Going rate is about $12 US for a day. Interestingly, the currency of choice is the US dollar everywhere in Siem Reap. It would be an interesting research topic to investigate the impact on the US dollar and US fiscal policy considering the various countries that use it as their defacto national currency as well.  Posted by Picasa
Ankor Wat, in all its afternoon lit glory. Posted by Picasa
Approach to Ankor Wat. Posted by Picasa
This is my friend Aeang, a high school teacher from Hanoi, which he considers the best city in Vietnam. He was traveling alone during a school holiday for a week, and I kept running into him asking different nationalities of tourists different questions. Usually when you see someone who looks local asking questions of tourists in lesser developed countries, the questions go something like, "what country are you from, what guesthouse are you staying in, do you want to buy ______, where are you going, do you have transport, do you have any coins from your country...etc. So, I was surprised to hear Aeang asking Japenese tourists what their standardized testing was like for high school aged children and what percentage of high scorers opt not to go to college. Or asking the French couple how to say "Entemologist" in French. He asked me to take his photo, and I noticed he was decked out in all the modern tourist garb. Digital camera, cell phone, mp3 player, sporty duds...unfortunately, there is such a huge economic gap between Cambodia and the rest of the world that these features really stand out on someone who seems remotely local. The next time I ran into him was at one of the relief panels and he was describing the depths of the Khmer empire when Ankor was built. It extended into China, southern Vietnam, Laos, and Thailand. He walked and talked with me for hours. While some of the information I took with a grain of salt, such as the Khmers being 7 foot tall, explaining the large holes in the huge stones that formed the temple (because the giants could pick them up with these finger grips), most was pretty informative and aligned with what I'd read. Even more interestingly, over freshly hacked coconuts for a drink, I asked him about Cambodia in the 1970's during the Khmer Rouge. He spoke in hushed tones...I know it is taboo to mention the subject to Cambodians, but thought he might take a teacherly approach to a quiet conversation after the time we'd spent talking history. Very sad...but I made a new friend and he provided excellent company for exploring Ankor Wat.  Posted by Picasa
This is the one shot I got at Bayon, in Ankor Thom, north of and larger than Ankor Wat, before my batteries died. Posted by Picasa
A buddha sculpture in Ankor Wat. Posted by Picasa
Another dancing aspara...but this one has been charcoal-rubbed (more on that below). Posted by Picasa
A dancing aspara. Posted by Picasa
This is an aspara, or a dancing nymph. They were celestial devotees to the kings who kept the secrets of the royal dances.  Posted by Picasa
These are dancing devatas. They are royal court dancers. Interestingly, the Khmer culture is the birth place of the type of royal dancing that is represented in Thailand. There are several Thai cultural traits that originated in Cambodia, but you'll never hear a Thai say that. In the 1400s the Thais sacked Cambodia and stole away with its artisans, dancers, and warriors. Thai boxing = really Cambodian boxing. Thai food = Khmer food drowned in chili paste. Thai dancing = Khmer royal dances. Same with the silk weaving, wood carving..... Posted by Picasa
One of the buddhist sculptures on the oustide of the outer gallery at Ankor Wat. Posted by Picasa
Entrance to Anchor Wat. Posted by Picasa