Friday, December 21, 2007

Favorite places in the world (not necessarily in any order)....


(Photo of the Kalalau Valley on the Na Pali Coast of Kauai, Hawaii)

—Na Pali Coast, Kauai, Hawaii
—Rishikesh, India
—Lost Coast, California
—Sierra Nevada Mountain Range, California
—Santorini Island, Greece
—Hampi, India
—Bangkok, Thailand
—Western Scotland, United Kingdom
—Highway 50, Nevada and Utah
—Highway 1, California
—Oregon Coast
—Portland, Oregon
—Denali National Park, Alaska
—land where I was raised near Willits, California
—Vancouver, B.C., Canada
—Cascade Mountain Range, Oregon
—Rainbow Gathering sites in Wyoming (1994), New Mexico (1995), Montana (2000), Idaho (2001)
—Pelloponnesus, Greece
—Tenakee hot springs, Alaska
—Bagby, Cougar and McCredie hot springs, Oregon
—Arcata, California
—Marble Mountains, California
—Grand Tetons National Park, Wyoming
—Jaiselmer and Khuhri, India

Sunday, December 16, 2007

some more about India

I thought I'd write an addendum of sorts to yesterday's message, just to fill in some details since I got to India, because some pretty funny stuff has happened. The first thing was getting a train ticket at the New Delhi railway station, which is a long story unto itself....

There's a tourist desk upstairs there where foreigners can go in order to skip over the hassle and confusion of doing it the normal way, which will make perfect sense in a second, because it's pretty convoluted. I needed to take the train (trains are always preferrable to busses in India because there are almost no freeways here, it's all two lane roads that are filled with obstacles, and is a very nerve-wracking experience, to say the least) about 4 hours north to Haridwar, where the train tracks end because it starts to get mountainous, and then it's just a short 16-mile bus ride from there to Rishikesh. So I wandered down to the train station, which was only about a 15-minute walk from my hotel, the day before I planned to take the train. I knew about the tourist desk, but also knew that it can be a long wait, and it's quicker to use the normal ticket booths downstairs once you figure out the system. But for starters I figured I'd head up to the foreigners office and just see how things looked. As you walk in there's a desk just to the left, where you basically get general information as to how to proceed from there. After that there's a bunch of seats with people sitting in them, and you have to figure out which form to fill out and then which area to sit in. So I asked at the desk and realized the first thing I need was my passport, which was back in my hotel room. So with that, I decided to go ahead and try dealing with things downstairs.

Back downstairs, there's a series of windows, with metal bars leading up to them that create a mandatory line, which avoids the usual bunching up of people at the window basically jostling to be the next person to be served. So I picked a line, and as I was standing there I read a sign up front in English that stated that you could get a ticket for any destination at any one of the windows, of which there were about a dozen. Also the line was moving quickly enough, so within a few minutes I was at the window. So far, so good. Most people working with anything dealing with tourists will likely speak at least some English, so I told the man at the window I needed a train ticket to Haridwar. He responded with: "Go to booth number 32", and pointed off to the left. I looked up and this was booth number 6 or 7. Darn, not so easy.

So I headed in the direction he'd indicated, which led outside, and then there was another room next door with another series of lines leading up to ticket windows. Of course, these ones didn't have the metal railings that helped maintain the line. I found booth number 32, and miraculously there were only about 5 or 6 people in the line, or rather the bunch. So I stood in the back, meanwhile watching out for people trying to cut in front or go straight to the window, which happened regularly. The first thing is just that you have to make sure and leave no space between you and the guy in front, or someone will definitely cut in. So everyone ends up all bunched together. Then, people still try to simply walk straight up to the counter, acting as if they hadn't even noticed there was a line there at all. Several times I had to tap people on the shoulder and point to the back of the line. Every time I did this though, they were quite polite about it and begrudgingly went to the back of the line. About halfway into the line, I then noticed that everyone had a piece of paper, which I didn't have. I pointed at someone's piece of paper and gave a quizzical look, asking where to get one. He pointed to the far side of another line, so I made a gesture asking him to hold my space. He seemed okay with that, so I went and got the necessary form. The guy let me get back in line, and then I looked over the form.

I realized that I needed to know the number of the train I was getting on before I actually got up to the window. Somebody else indicated to me that there was another window nearby marked "Enquiry", and that was where I needed to find out the train number. So with that I relinquished my place in line, and went to stand in the other line. Once I got through that line, the guy there gave me the number of the train I would be getting on, #2055. Then, back to the other line. While I was standing there, I filled out the rest of the info, my name, place of departure, date of departure, destination, address, signature, etc. Finally I got to the front of the line and slipped my form through the hole in the window to the woman there. She didn't speak any English as it turned out, but indicated that there was a problem. She pointed to the ticket woman next to her, who apparently spoke some English. I was able to nudge my way to the front of that line, with the understanding that the woman from the other line had sent me there. The woman there then told me that I could only get tickets there for trains leaving on that same day. For advance reservations, I had to go to another building, three buildings down the street. With that, I decided screw it, I didn't want to waste my whole afternoon dealing with this, so I'd just come back to the same ticket booth #32 the next day, now that I had the appropriate form and knew where to go, and hope that the train wouldn't be full.

So, fast forward to the next day. The train left at 3:30 in the afternoon, so about 12:30 I made it down to the train station. As I was standing in the line for booth 32, with form in hand, I noticed something written in English just overhead, which I hadn't noticed before, that read "Tickets issued 2 hours until 10 minutes before train departure". It was 3 hours before the train departed. But you never know if a sign is accurate, so I continued waiting in the line. Once I got to the booth, there was a different woman this time who spoke some English, and after looking over the form, she handed it back and said "Come back in half an hour". Okay, no problem, I expected that might happen. I figured the two hours might refer to the time of boarding, rather than departure, since it was still almost 3 hours before the train actually departed. I went outside and stood in the sun for about 10 minutes, then figured I might as well get back in line since that would take another 15-20 minutes anyway.

Back in line. By now I'd somewhat gotten the hang of things, and there were other Indian guys coming up and asking where to get the forms to fill out. So one guy came up along my left side, who it turned out spoke English, but in an extremely formal manner. He said to me something along the lines of "Can you please to tell me sir where must I get the necessary forms which you currently obtain as is most required as necessary." These forms where off to the right. So, I abruptly went to point over in that direction, out of my sight since I was looking to the left, and in the process I ended up punching a guy squarely in the face, who was trying to sneak up to the front of the line. Oy ve. He had glasses on and luckily I hit him in the jaw, because otherwise I probably would have broken his glasses. He stood there stunned and rubbing his jaw, as I apologized profusely and tried to explain what had happened. So eventually that was all okay, and then I moved up to the front of the line. I handed over my form again, she took a quick glance at it and said "Come back in a half hour." Of course, I was seriously frustrated at this point, and exclaimed that it had been a half hour since she'd said to come back in a half hour the first time. She explained that it wasn't possible because the information wouldn't be in the computer yet, since it still wasn't two hours before the train departed. I gave up and went and sat outside again.

Fifteen minutes later I was back in line. About twenty minutes or so after that, I was up at the counter. This time she took my form, looked it over carefully, and busily started typing away at the computer in front of her. After about 3 or 4 minutes though, she handed it back to me and said, "You come back in another 20 minutes." I was of course completely exasperated by now, and refused to do so until I understood exactly what the problem was. She conferred with the woman in the line next to her, who spoke the better English, and that woman managed to explain to me that the computer was running a little slow, the information still hadn't been uploaded, but it could be accessible at any minute. So, back out of line. At this point I decided to go get some change for the 500 rupee note that I had, because the price of the ticket was 107 rupees and I was anticipating that if there was going to be another problem, it would be that they didn't have proper change, which happens regularly. But I knew also that no one ever wants to give change, especially for a 500 note, but it was worth a try. So I tried several different snack shops in the train station, and the third one broke it down into five 100 rupee notes. I also had a 10-rupee note, so I would have it covered. Back in line, and this time, finally I got my ticket, with barely enough time to run back to my hotel room, pack up, check out and then catch the train. That pretty well sums up India.

So the trains tend to start on time if you're at the originating point, but oftentimes are late actually getting there. This was the case this time, and we got to Haridwar about 8:30, an hour late. I then walked to the bus station, and managed to find the bus that was going to Rishikesh. I sat down along with about a half dozen other people and waited. After about 10 minutes, everyone mysteriously got up and got off the bus. Then someone who spoke English came back and told me the bus wasn't leaving now for another half hour. So, I decided to just stay the night in Haridwar rather than get to Rishikesh in another hour at best, and then try to find a room late, since it's a small town. So, I found a funky place that would do and went to sleep early that night. There were a couple of things I wanted to see in Haridwar anyway.

The next morning I got up relatively early, and then left the hotel room about 9, with enough time to hike up to a temple on a hill overlooking town, and then get back in time to check out of the room by 12. First though, I wandered down to the end of town, to an area on the Ganges river where pilgrims gather on the stone steps that line the river, and where they also do a candle ceremony similar to Thailand, where they place little lit boats into the river in the evening. I took a couple of photos there just of people gathered around the river, then headed over to the steps that went up to the temple. Right where the steps went up from the street, a woman was selling little plastic bags of various things that apparently were part of worshipping at the temple. It was 25 cents, and had some incense in it, a little plastic bag of stuff to feed the monkeys along the way, some flower petals, a colored headband, and I forget what else. On the way up the steps a little later, I came across some Indian men coming down the stairs, who were gesturing at me in a strange way. One of them then explained in some English that I should put the bag away under my shirt or in my pack, because the monkeys would try to grab it, since it contained monkey food (which I think was puffed rice). Right at that moment, I felt something brush against my leg, and a little monkey snatched the bag from my hand and ran off. This didn't bother me that much since I didn't know exactly what to do with everything anyway, and now I didn't have to carry it. So we all just laughed and I continued up the steps. About 15 minutes later, and halfway up to the temple, I decided to take a break and snack on some nuts and bananas that I had in my bag. Keeping my eyes on the monkeys, I sat down on the steps and ate one of the bananas and a few handfuls of nuts. Then I heard a monkey coming up from behind me, so I grabbed my bag and got out of the way, since I was getting a little paranoid at that point. In the process I grabbed the bag of nuts, but forgot about the bananas, and the rascal took off with my other two bananas. But, I'd only paid 5 rupees, or about 15 cents, for all three of them anyway, so no big loss.

Saturday, December 15, 2007

Rishikesh, India








(Photo 1 is a self-portrait on bicycle, with a farmer trudging along in the background. The next is while on the bike trip with Dhane (who had adopted all the Burmese kids), Puck (who was also staying there for a few days) and the Burmese boys. Photos 3 and 4 are of myself with two Thai friends, Ae and Tig, who picked me up hitchhiking near Sukhothai, Thailand. Photo 5 is at Red Fort, Delhi. Photo 6 is a man dressed as Hanuman, the monkey God, in Haridwar on the way up to the Mansa Devi temple)...

I'm now in Rishikesh, in northern India right at the base of the Himalaya and on the Ganges River. But it's only at about 1,000 feet, so I'm not buried in snow or anything. It's just chilly at night and pleasant during the day, although it'll get colder if I stick around here for a little while, which I plan to. But I was last here 8 years ago during my first trip to India, and it's really an oasis from the craziness of most of India. Coming into Delhi was still a bit of culture shock, despite the fact that this is my third time here and I was coming from Thailand. But India is just a completely different world. I guess the difference between here and Thailand is pretty much the difference between second world and third world. So it's good that there are places such as Rishikesh that are a little easier to handle, but where you still get the flavor of India. But I'll talk a little more about where I'm at at the end, since first I should try to catch up with things.

Just so you're forewarned this will probably turn into a pretty long email, although I'll try to skim over things a bit. I think the last time I wrote a detailed message was from Pai, the touristy little village in a valley in northern Thailand, which I guess was just early last week, but feels more like about a month ago. From there I went west almost to the Burmese border to another small town in the hills, Mae Hong Son, the "Switzerland of Thailand" which was also a tourist destination, but for Thai tourists instead of Westerners. At that point I realized that I was running out of time and needed to pick up the pace a little. So I stayed there just two nights, and then took a bus down to Mae Sariang, which didn't have much in particular to see but was on the way and sounded interesting just to check out. So I stayed there two nights as well, spending a day just biking around the town and the valley. Then I hopped on a "songthaew" for the next segment of the journey, because it wasn't frequented enough to have a bus covering the route. A songthaew is just a pickup truck that has been converted into public transportation, with two benches running along the sides front to back, and then sides and an overhead covering. So it's relatively secure, and actually takes the curves better than a bus, but not quite as comfy to sit on, especially for 5 hours as was the case this time. So we headed down a road that skirted the Burmese border through some pretty remote areas, with just a few little villages along the way, to my destination of Mae Sot, which is a Burmese border town. There are tons of factories employing cheap Burmese labor there, and apparrently Calvin Klein has a factory there as well as other big name companies.

So the reason I was heading there was I'd happened upon this guy online who lived there and took care of Burmese refugee children. He was just a single guy living with a Burmese couple, who had one daughter of their own, and then he had 14 Burmese children he'd adopted, all boys except one girl. I came across him on the Intentional Communities website, which I'd checked just out of curiosity to see what sort of communal arrangements were going on in Thailand. There were only three entries and the other two I also emailed, but they weren't really communities, and although this guy wasn't exactly either it sounded pretty interesting to stop by. He said I could just come by whenever and stay for as long as I felt like it, hang out with the kids and go bike riding or whatever. During the day he worked as an English teacher at a local school.

I'll skip over most of the details, but basically I managed to get a hold of him over the phone once I got into town and then took a taxi out to his house which was just outside of the town of Mae Sot. As it turned out he had another American guy staying with him, who had been there about a week, who lived on a commune himself on the east coast, I think in Virginia. And the guy who was taking care of the kids was American as well, so it was cool to catch up with some fellow countrymen, especially in terms of not having to speak slowly and carefully so people could understand me. I just stayed there one night, on a mattress on the floor of their big wooden house, with half a dozen of the kids sleeping nearby. The next day was Saturday so the guy (Dhane) wasn't teaching at the school, so he, the other American, and 4 of the Burmese kids and I went on this big bike ride, that involved stopping by a market alongside the river separating Thailand and Burma, near the Burma-Thailand friendship bridge (it's a rather rocky friendship to say the least).

That afternoon I then said thanks and goodbye to those guys, hopped on a bus and headed back east to Sukhothai, which is another former Thailand capital with some excellent temple ruins. The thing is that the temple ruins are about 8 miles from the modern city of Sukhothai. According to my guidebook there were hotels and guesthouses near the temple ruins, which was on the way to the new city, so I decided to get off there (at about 8 pm) and get a guesthouse there so that in the morning I could just get up, see the ruins quick and then head for Bangkok, and avoid going there and back from the nearby modern town. Problem was, although there were guesthouses there, there weren't very many and they were all full. It wasn't a huge problem, since I could take a tuk-tuk (three-wheeled little taxi like a rickshaw) from there into town. During the day you could catch one of the shared songthaews for super cheap, but they didn't run at night and the tuk-tuk ride was going to cost about $4.50. That doesn't sound like much of course, except that you can get a hotel room for that, and I'd paid only about $3 for the past 3 hours of bus rides getting there, so didn't want to shell out that much just to cover 8 miles. So, I decided, what the heck, I'll try hitchhiking for the first time in Asia. It was worth a try, and there was a good spot under some street lamps right in front of the last hotel I'd checked that was full. I figured I'd just try it out for 10 minutes or so and if it didn't work then I'd break down and get the tuk-tuk.

To make a longish story shorter, it took about two minutes, and I got a ride in this new pickup truck with an extended cab, driven by a woman about my age and a guy a little younger, both Thai. The woman spoke just enough English to get across the basics, whereas the guy didn't speak any. But we managed to have something of a conversation along the way, and once we got into the new town of Sukhothai they drove me to a guesthouse I'd found in my book, then they invited me to go have a beer with them. I checked into a room quick, then went with them to this restaurant with live Thai music, where I was the only foreigner. We had a great time, the band was super hip, pretty much looking like a rock band back in the States, other than the fact they were Asian. So, that was great to actually get to hang out with some Thai folks one-on-one other than just doing assorted business transactions.

The next day I managed to get up early, take a cheap songthaew to the ruins, bike around there fairly quick, then get back to my room to pack up and catch a bus 6 hours south to Bangkok, arriving late in the evening. But Bangkok is pretty much open 24 hours so I had no problem finding a room there, on the legendary backpacker's haven of Khao San Road (Leonardo DiCaprio stays there, I think, in the beginning of the movie The Beach). To give an idea of what it's like there, you can buy a bucket of beer and then drink it on the sidewalk. Neon lights, clubs and pounding Western music are everywhere. Not exactly my scene, but I wanted to check it out anyway, and I managed to find a hotel room that was just down a little alley and so was fairly quiet. It was definitely a happening place, and I'd actually stay there again, since if you want a change of scene you just take off and walk or catch a bus elsewhere. Otherwise you have all the amenities you might need there, plus plenty of interesting people-watching while eating your breakfast.

Well I should wrap this up as the internet cafe I'm in here is about to close up. But basically I just cruised around Bangkok for two days, which is a really cool city, very modern and fairly clean and orderly (definitely compared to India), then hopped on a plane to Delhi, northern India, on Wednesday. Delhi was really crazy as usual, I just saw one fort yesterday and then was ready to get the heck out of there. So then I hopped a train yesterday up here. Rishikesh is just a little village on the Ganges, with an area across from the main part of town that's only accessible by two walking bridges, so there are no cars, and it's very quiet, mellow and relaxing. I'm planning to hang out here for a while, until whenever I get bored basically, then I'm thinking of heading a little farther north, just to get a little more sense of the Himalaya, without getting too far up into the snow. Well I should leave it there, so take care all and stay warm; oh yeah and Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays. Not sure what I'll be doing exactly but it will probably involve several cups of hot chocolate at least, and who knows maybe I'll happen upon something genuinely Christmassy around here.

Tuesday, December 04, 2007

hopping on a bus...

(originally written December 3rd)

I'm hopping on a bus from Pai to Mae Hong Son in a little while today. Mae Hong Son is another little mountain town basically west and then a little south (3-4 hours on the bus), so getting pretty close to the Burmese border. It's known as the Switzerland of Thailand, supposed to be a lot of hills around there and nice scenery. Basically I'm headed back to Bangkok from here but with a little bit of a roundabout route, as I have about 10 days left. Pai has been great, really a mellow, easygoing place although it's way too touristy. But I can see why, as it's in a beautiful, pleasant valley, with lots to do in town (row after row of shops, restaurants, guest houses, little bars, massage shops, bookshops, etc.) and lots of activities to do in the area in general. But things are done in a pretty cool way, it's not tacky touristy and there's no big hotels or anything, it's all just wooden or bamboo huts or little concrete guest houses that blend together pretty well and fit into the small town vibe.

So basically I spent one day here bicycling all over the valley, including a big ride uphill to a waterfall, and then I spent yesterday hiking to another waterfall, which I didn't make it to because it was a little longer hike than I'd expected, my legs were already sore and besides you know already pretty much what a waterfall looks lik. Then the other two days I just hiked to one nearby temple with a good view of the valley, and spent the afternoon hanging out at a swimming pool at one of the resorts. Also I ran into one of the guys that I hung out with by the river for the Loy Krathong festival. Well I should run as the bus leaves in about a half hour. Looking forward to the bus ride, it was fairly scenic getting here, but I think this one will be even more so, maybe even Switzerland-like, we'll see.