Hua Hin, last day - Here it is, the last hours of our great Asia escapade. We've enjoyed a wonderful last couple of days. With full mobility of our motor bikes, we've explored the downtown and side roads. Yesterday our focus was souvenir shopping, which we did at the market and the mall - yes, there's a mall. It's all so westernized, from Dunkin Donuts to Starbucks, your average North American or European tourist is well looked after.
Monday, April 20, 2009
Last day
Hua Hin, last day - Here it is, the last hours of our great Asia escapade. We've enjoyed a wonderful last couple of days. With full mobility of our motor bikes, we've explored the downtown and side roads. Yesterday our focus was souvenir shopping, which we did at the market and the mall - yes, there's a mall. It's all so westernized, from Dunkin Donuts to Starbucks, your average North American or European tourist is well looked after.
Saturday, April 18, 2009
Friday, April 17, 2009
Flight to Bangkok – I’m writing this as we take an Air Asia flight to Bangkok, where we will connect to our next stop in Hua Hin. No worries…we do not go into the city of Bangkok at all, and in any case, the news over here reports that all is settled down in Bangkok at the moment.
Our day in Ninh Binh yesterday was stellar. Len says it was one of his best days yet.
We awoke to heat like our family has never seen. Even the Renaults, who spend much more time than us in hot weather, found the Vietnam heat overwhelming. It was the first time in my life that I dripped with sweat. There was no time to complain though. After a breakfast of banana pancakes and baguettes (yum!), we hopped on mopeds and tackled the busy streets – trying unsuccessfully to act as calm as the locals - before reaching the wide-open countryside. Lisa and I each had one child with us on our motorbikes while the guys had two kids each – one in front and one in back. Compared to the locals, who travel on mopeds with babies on their laps – this was tame.
We cruised through back lanes and along dirt roads that weaved through the mountain valleys and past miles and miles of rice fields. The rice paddies, which grow in a few feet of water held a lot of surprises: water buffulo sloshing around with just their heads above water, and women up to their necks tending the plants. From the road all you could see were their cone-shaped Vietnamese hats.
We had lunch in a village hotel. Again, it consisted mainly of chicken and rice. We realized that every day our main meal has been chicken and rice (with the new addition in Vietnam being spring rolls and pha
After lunch we visited a shop where women were embroidering linens and making silk clothing. We picked up a few souvenirs and treats – handsome red pyjamas for Levi, charming silk PJs for Lauren and Julia, a Vietnamese dress for Jo. After we made our purchase (a great amount for this shop I think), we were asked to sit and have a drink and chat with the young man who appeared to be the manager. He spoke decent English and we enjoyed an interesting conversation. Lauren has become very comfortable talking to the locals and she had many questions (and answers) for him. He seemed to envy the children’s height and told us that he is looking for a wife who is tall since he wants his children not to be short like him. I doubt he is looking for a wife quite as tall as me or Lis since we are giants in this place where the women are all the size of Lauren or smaller.
As we made our way back to the hotel around 5 pm, we crossed paths with hundreds of school children just getting out for the day. They were so beautiful on their bicycles, all wearing white school shirts and red scarves and waving and calling to us with great excitement.
There are many things that stand our about this country: the beauty, the poverty, the kindness, the garbage, the happy children, the bright spots of colours, the lush greenness, the beautiful girls, the animals everywhere – chickens, ducks, cows, water buffalo, leashed cats, and roaming dogs. With dog being one of the main dishes of Vietnam, the sight of dogs in every street, home, shop and field, was slightly disturbing. They were either older dogs, mostly pregnant or nursing, or puppies. Few looked healthy and all looked hot and dejected.
At 6 pm, we all left Ninh Binh, in a mini-bus, bound for Hanoi airport. Our time with the Renaults was happily extended once again, as they changed their plans from taking a bus to Hoi An to taking a flight instead. For the three-hour journey (covering only 123 km), the children took advantage of their last hours together, creating a small riot of fun in the back seats of a mini-bus about half the size of the average North American van. I think the girls enjoyed having “brothers” for 2.5 weeks, and I’ll go out on a limb and say the boys will miss having three “sisters” too.
And here we are today, on our own for the first time this trip. We miss our friends already but are looking forward to our weekend in Hua Hin, where we will hopefully meet some elephants, enjoy the beach, eat something other than chicken and rice, and do some last shopping.
‘Til Thailand…..
g
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
Cruising through Vietnam
Ninh Binh – It’s been several days since I wrote last. We spent the whole time in Halong Bay, mostly on Cat Ba Island, where there was limited Internet connectivity. The good news is that Internet was one of the very few limitations of this area, which was breathtaking. In fact, it looked even better than the tourism pictures we had viewed online, which we all know is a rare thing.
We spent 12 hours of insanity in Hanoi; none of us enjoyed the city at all. Even at night, this city rocks in the way that George Street does at midnight on Mardi Gras. The streets are packed with people, Vespas (mopeds), street vendors, cars, and dogs. There is garbage everywhere, horns honking constantly and it feels like every step you take is a risk. That all said, we suspect that our negative feelings about Hanoi have much to do with the fact that we are a group of 10, including six children, and our nerves are a little on edge keeping everyone safe. We’ve met other travelers who enjoyed the Hanoi scene so it all depends on your perspective I guess.
So we were all happy to leave Hanoi by bus, destined for Halong City, where we boarded one of the many “junks” in the bay. These boats are wooden cruisers that, collectively and from a distance, look like a fleet of pirate ships. That analogy got stronger when we were pointed to our boat, aptly named the Black Pearl. Onboard, we moved into our cabins, all lovely, and settled in for lunch as we cruised out the islands of Halong Bay. This place is definitely worth the visit. Three thousand high, rounded islands stand like pillars in the bay and they create a backdrop that almost feels fake. The air here is hot and still so there’s not a ripple on the water.
During our day on the junk, we kayaked and swam, hiked to an amazing limestone cave that looked like something out of Indiana Jones, sunbathed on the top deck of our junk, and spent the evening chatting while Len played and sang in the background. The next morning, everyone was up early for breakfast at 7:30 and we spent another day on the bay and the islands. The highlight was a bike ride and trek around Monkey Island, where a local man took our tour group into the jungle and to a cave where locals hid during the Vietnam war.
Around 4 pm we were dropped off on Cat Ba Island, where we moved into our “deluxe” hotel for the night. After a questionable supper (unless gelatinous seaweed soup is your cup of tea), we rented bikes and cycled around the town, which is anything but your typical North American tourist town. In Halong Bay, people live and work on run-down boats. Even in Hanoi, it was evident that work and family life blend into one, with people wearing their pyjamas and walking the busy streets with their babies late in the evening. There was much to catch your attention on the streets of Hanoi’s old city at night – things like old bent over women washing dishes on the sidewalk. They actually set up their dish pans next to the road and crouch next to them to wash dishes – since there were so many dishes, we guessed they were from the restaurants. It’s all very, very different.
Back to the “deluxe” hotel (a joke among us because we had paid for the upgrade to a deluxe tour)….during our bike ride around Cat Ba, we stumbled on the area’s true deluxe hotel, a gorgeous resort on a secluded beach, with a pool and an outdoor bar and patio. We all salivated and after a quick conversation with the manager, Len and Steve got us a good deal for two nights. We hightailed it back to the other hotel, cleared out of the rooms, collected our passports, and made a bee-line for our new accommodations. Within a half hour of finding the place during our bikeride, the children were in the pool thoroughly enjoying their new digs.
What we didn’t count on was the reaction of our tour company to our spur-of-the-moment move. We basically jumped ship on the tour, since it was a package deal that included everything up to our return to the hotel in Hanoi. To make a long story short, abandoning the tour was an insult to the tour company and also a worry since we were in their care. We had not given any thought to this and realized that even though we meant no harm in leaving our tour early (and did not ask for any money back), our behaviour was not the thing to do in this culture. Lesson learned. (but we still had an awesome time in Sunny Cat Ba resort!)
So we reluctantly left Sunny Resort early this afternoon and got the bus and ferry back to the mainland. We arranged a driver to take us by mini-van to our next stop: Ninh Binh, which is only 140 km from Halong Bay, but it took 3 hours to get here. The driving is wilder than China. Cars, buses, motorcycles, cows, donkeys, and pedestrians weave their way among each other and from the front seat of a vehicle, you constantly feel like you’re about to have a head-on collision. The funny thing is, though, there really is a system to this madness. We’ve seen only one accident and all drivers seem to understand the code of conduct on the road. It seems to work around here, partly because you can never really get up much speed. The fastest our driver went today, for example, was 70 km/hour.
Tonight we’re in Xuan Hoa Hotel (more like a hostel), where we just had a nice supper that involved cooking your own meat on little grills at the tables. The children had the biggest meals they’ve had since McDonalds in Beijing. Tomorrow we’re renting Vespas and cruising around the back roads of this town. It will be our last day together with the Renaults.
g
Saturday, April 11, 2009
Arrived in Vietnam
Hanoi is a city that defies all imagination. Toronto is like a country village in comparison. It feels like all3.5 million people who live in this city live within 2 square km. This morning we are getting another bus toHalong City, where we will join a 3-day tour in Halong Bay. It's a bay filled with 6000 islands and we're traveling aboard a "junk" (Asian river boat) and then to Cat Ba island in a hotel.We will likely be out of communication for the next few days.We are all safe and well and happy.
g
Friday, April 10, 2009
Nanning...almost to the border of Vietnam - It's turning out to be a little more difficult than expected getting to Hanoi. We left Yangshuo this morning by bus. (We ended up trekking through town with our packs on since the "pick up" arranged by the travel service was actually a person arriving at the hotel with an umbrella and walking us all to the bus stop 10 minutes away.)
Thursday, April 9, 2009
Yangshuo, southern China. Another spectacular day. This beautiful little town is certainly touristy - a bit like Banff, for example, but it is the off-season so there are no crowds and we had all the wonderful views and activities to ourselves. We are nestled in the mountains and staying at the Magnolia Hotel, which is pure luxury after the string of hostels we've had. The rooms are large with high ceilings, there are big white duvets on the beds and the bathrooms have western toilets!
Wednesday, April 8, 2009
So much to report since my last entry. I'll try to back track to recall all the events.
Saturday, April 4, 2009
Markets and the Underground

After two days of the regular tourist stuff, we decided to play the role of regular Beijing-er today, flitting around the city from one end to the other hanging out and cruising the markets.
We enjoyed a lazy start to the morning since everyone is getting a little dragged out from the time change and all the activity. After breakfast – we’re now regulars at the MCS cafĂ© – we headed to the Silk Market just one block away. We went in, expecting your usual day-at-the-market experience and found anything but. After the situation at the Great Wall, we should have known better but nonetheless, we were still shocked at the aggressiveness of the sellers. “Hey lady, you buy this (shirt, iPod, whatever) cheap, cheap.” Hey, girl, you come over here.” They would reach out, grab your hand, chase you down the row. After one aisle, I began hyperventilating and had to go outside to breathe for a bit. The rest of the group adjusted more calmly but we all needed a minute to accept what was going on, and then we took the market head-on and even enjoyed ourselves. Caleb bought some sort of jet-fighter helmet (which he now has to carry around Asia for 5.5 weeks), Len bought a used guitar (he and Caleb are in the same boat), and everyone else got a few trinkets. Lisa, Levi and Joanna are the star barterers among us. Lisa got yelled at by one vendor, and Jo and Levi just use their cuteness to shave a few yuan off the price. So much fun.
After the market, we went for the ultimate Beijing culinary experience: We ate at McDonalds! After 4 days of picking at this and avoiding that, the kids were thrilled. And so were the parents. Julia ate a full Big Mac and Lis ate 2! For those of you reading this who know Julia or Lisa, pick yourselves up off the floor and dust yourselves off. I speak the truth and I have pictures.
Next stop: the subway station. As conspicuous as an elephant on a playground, the 10 of us joined the thousands of Beijingers traveling on the underground and made our way to the far reaches of the city to see Olympic Park. We were gobsmacked by the Bird’s Nest and Water Cube that we’d seen so much of during the Olympics. In real life, they are stunning. The kids flew kites in the grand concourse area and we watched school field trips tour the Olympic grounds. It was a grand afternoon.
With the wind picking up and the temperature dropping (we’ve been cold most of the time we’ve been here), we took the subway back to our end of town. Lis consulted her Frummer’s Guidebook and found a highly recommended spot that served Peking duck. Down alleys and past grumpy old Chinamen, dragging reluctant children (and Len) the whole way, we finally found it and for the next two hours enjoyed the best Chinese food ever. Lemon chicken (Steve used some interesting sign language to confirm we would be eating breast, not feet), ginger beef, cashew chicken, pot stickers, and, of course, Peking duck with piles and piles of rice. Josh fell asleep at the table and after Len plucked his hair out of the dipping sauce, he enjoyed a good nap while the rest of us feasted. It was delicious and we walked home tired and satisfied. All 10 of us fell into bed and were sound asleep in 8:30.
This led to another early rise and we were on the go today by 5, out the door by 6:45 and at the “Dirt” market by 7 am. This was a whole different breed of market - authentic Chinese everything. We bought some beautiful things, most notably an antique leather suitcase for the Pecores (to carry everything we buy) and a string of tourmalines for the Renaults (the boys just couldn’t live without them).
At 9 am we cabbed it back to the hotel, grabbed our luggage and jumped back into another taxi, this time to take us to the airport. We’re now on a 2.5-hour flight to Chengdu, a city to the south and inland, where we will visit Panda bears.
A special note to the grandmothers: We are fine, the children are happy and reasonably well-rested and well-fed, and we feel blessed to be on such a wonderful trip. Don’t worry about us because we’re having the time of our lives.
Except that my luggage still did not arrive. Lis officially gave me half her wardrobe today (I’ve been dipping in for bits and pieces since we arrived) so I am now wearing a completely different outfit for the first time since leaving home Monday morning. If anyone out there has not yet found a reason to complain about Air Canada, feel free to adopt mine. Six days, $80 in long distance calls, unkept promises “it’s on the next flight!” and I am now firmly anti-Air Canada.
But in my first new outfit in six days, I have to say….I look good!
Thursday, April 2, 2009
We conquered the Great Wall
Another action-packed day for the Pecore-Renault vacation clan. We all slept in until 6:30 this morning and then scurried to make it down to breakfast by 7:30 and out to the parking lot by 8 am for our driver, who we booked for the day to take us to the Great Wall of China.
Wednesday, April 1, 2009
Off with a bang!
What a day!
- 4:30 am: Everybody is up and on the go. No sleep left in any of us.
- 8 am: Breakfast at the hotel cafe, where we had eggs and French toast and a few things we've never seen before - like rice with scrambled eggs (rated "not my favourite, but OK" by Julia, who is normally an egg hater) and stir-fried something with cabbage that was really good. Plus lots of coffee. Bonus.
- 9 am: We join the throngs on Asians on a bus, where Len got crammed in the door by the bus attendant, just like you see on the movies.
- 9:30: Arrive at Tian'anmen Square and cross the street to the Forbidden City. Accosted by a man volunteering to be our guide. Hire him, he scams us cheap tickets and off we go. Children get swarme by Asians wanting to take their pictures and touch their heads. They are instant celebrities! And they love it.
- 12:00: With heads full of Chinese dynasty history and knowledge of the revolution and rising of the People's Republic of China, we say good-bye to our tour guide and head back to Tian-anmen Square....on rickshaws! Four crazy rickshaw drivers transport 10 crazy Canadians on a wild 15-minute ride. We get off at the new Olympic park, where a local young man tells us that's the first time he's seen foreigners hop on rickshaws.
- 1:00: We hang out at Tian'anmen Square (Gate of Heavenly Peace), where we make friends with two Chinese ladies who offer to take us on a tour of the old area of the city. The women were spending the day in the square because their heat gets turned off on March 15 and their house was too cold to stay home. The perils of living in a Communist country.
- 1-3: we tour Hutong, a maze of old alleys that make up Beijing's ancient city. We saw many sights - vendors of all sorts who chase you down to buy anything plastic or roasted ducks in foil bags, old men playing majong, and public toilets where open squats are the way you have to go, like it or not (which the girls definitely did NOT). Len got harassed big time by one cranky lady selling kites. She actually hit him when he finally said a big no.
- 4 pm: Back home on another crowded-beyond-capacity bus. Crash for an hour or two.
- 6 pm: Back in a cab, downtown to an acrobatic show, where everyone except Gina and Julia fell sound asleep. Levi even stretched out across a few seats and settled in for a good nap. (Julia and I only managed to stay awake thanks to a good snooze at the apartment). At $40 a ticket, we figure it was the priciest nap in the history of vacations.