Saturday, November 28, 2015

They must have heard I was coming, cuz they threw me a party!

My first night in Thailand just happened to coincide with their annual Loi Krathong festival. The tradition is to make or in my case, to purchase a boat made from banana leaves, flowers, incense, candles - add a lock of hair or some finger nail clippings (no idea why...) and then float it down the river. If it goes down stream it's supposed to bring good luck and renewed fortunes for the coming year, upstream is obviously bad luck! Along with the festival was a massive street fair with stalls selling anything from furniture to fried bugs.

I suppose I should back up a little bit... I took a bus from Melaka back to Penang in one long boring day. The intent was to spend an extra day in Penang and visit the Bat cave temple and a couple of other things I didn't have time to see the first time around. However, it was the start of school holidays and the hostel I'd booked was only available for one night - rather than breaking up the day and moving across the city, I just decided to head to Langkawi - an island north of Penang. The highlight of Langkawi  was a day tooling around the island on a scooter. There are a couple of geo parks, one has a gondola to the top of a mountain with beautiful views.  Unfortunately, the view for me was uni-directional, the other half was socked in. predictably, I got a bit wet on the way back to the hostel on the scooter.


After just 3 nights on Langkawi I was feeling a bit anxious to get to Thailand. It was clear that the trip to Krabi had a number of connections so I opted to buy a package for 110 ringgit (about 27usd).  The hostel manager took me in his vehicle to the ferry terminal, bought me a ferry ticket and handed me a brown stapled envelope with the name of a guy I was to ask for when the boat landed in Satun. I asked him if there was cash in the envelope and he said he didn't know what was in it - haha. When I got off the boat, there were the usual hucksters "where you go?" A sleazy looking guy (straight from a mexican boarder town I swear - gold tooth and all) came up and, after looking at my envelope, claimed he was "the guy" and I was to wait.  After negotiating with and gathering up several of my fellow travelers, we were all loaded into the back of an old pickup truck and the driver was given my envelope (re-stapled) and extensive instructions. A 10 minute ride to a bit of a bus station followed. The pickup truck driver talked to the guys at the bus place and they wrote me a ticket to Trang. I got a bit upset arguing that I'd paid to go to Krabi (Trang is about half way of a 4 hour journey). After a bit of back and forth in broken English they managed to impart that the driver of the van to Trang would buy my ticket to Krabi. Not really knowing what else to do, I trusted it. About 15 mins into the 2 hour ride to Trang, the van driver pulled up next to a bus at a stop light, they rolled down windows and chatted then pulled over to the side of the road and I was summarily moved from the nice new air conditioned van to perhaps the oldest running bus I've ever seen and was told he would take me to Krabi. Which he did. Once at the Krabi bus station, another pickup truck ride (which I've since learned are called Songthaew) got me within 2 blocks of my hostel. Someone had told me awhile back that stuff like this happens in SE Asia but this was the first time I'd seen it in action. Multiple connections involving boats, taxi's, vans, buses and who knows what and somehow it all just works.

It's late and I'm tired so adventures in Krabi will have to wait. I'll try to add to this tomorrow.

Nov 30, 2015

Railay is an area on the mainland that is only accessible by boat and thus feels like an island. Stark limestone cliffs make it a climbers paradise. Getting there involved walking down to the river, forking over 150 baht and waiting for 9 other people to have the same inclination. Then it's maybe a 20-30 minute ride on a banana boat to a uniquely beautiful place. I spent a few hours exploring the beaches and trudging through the jungle until the storm clouds started rolling in. By the time I'd made arrangements to return, all hell broke loose and in the time it took to get from the beach down the pier to the boat I was completely drenched and a bit worried about being on the water in a little boat in such a vicious storm. On the way back I just thought if I died out there, it would be at the end of a perfect day, my life was complete.



The following day I figured out how to get a songthaew to the Tiger Paw temple. I had seen the giant Buddha on the trip into town and wondered if there was a way to get up to it. There was, by way of 1260 steps. With the heat and humidity, I didn't see anyone who didn't struggle with the climb. But man what a view from the top! The land formations that made Railey so beautiful were just as stunning from a distance. So unique.







A 12 hour bus ride has landed me in Bangkok. I really wanted to take the train from Surat Thani (a 3 hour bus ride from Krabi) but not knowing if I could get anything other than an over night 3rd class seat and not really wanting to stay overnight in Surat Thani, I wimped out and just took the bus. Overnighters seem like a waste of a good opportunity to see the country. 

Sunday, November 15, 2015

Going backwards

At this pace I'll be in New Zealand by Christmas! Just kidding of course... 

After so much effort to send off the power of attorney, I was hesitant to leave Kuala Lumpur until Erik actually receives it. Also didn't want to stay in KL. So, I backtracked a bit and am spending a few days in Malacca, or Melaka in Malaysian. It is an old trading port with a long history. It has been fought over by the Portuguese, Dutch and of course the English dating back to the early 1500s.

A Famosa was a fort built by the Portuguese in 1512. Most of it was destroyed by the British in the 1800's but the gate remains:
There's the skeleton of an old church on the hill behind this gate with several massive headstones of the people who are buried beneath it. I'm sure for Europeans stuff dating back to the 1500s is no big deal, but I think it's ever so cool.
The Church - you can see the tombstones inside to the left
Since Melaka is only 2 hours from KL, it seems to be a popular holiday spot for many Malaysians. There are what they call Trishaws all over the place - they are bicycle driven rickshaws decked out with extraordinary amounts of fluff in themes like Hello Kitty or Frozen. Some of them even have sound systems pounding out sappy love songs.

 More fort remains overlooking the river:

Thursday, November 12, 2015

Like a bad penny (I keep turning up)

Amazingly I am back in my least favorite place - Kuala Lumpur round 3. The good news is, the land I had in South Park has sold! The title company wasn't happy with the power of attorney I'd executed for Erik before leaving the States so I had to find a US Embassy to notarize a new one. I wouldn't recommend it btw, at $50 usd per signature it's the most expensive notary ever. So I will find an overnight shipper today and leave this pit tomorrow, not sure just yet to where... maybe back to Penang?

Penang was lovely as expected. Carol (from Gili Air fame) met me for a couple of days there - we hired a scooter and had a great day touring the island and hiking in the national park. We parked the scooter and went for food, leaving the helmets with the bike as everyone else seems to do. When we returned, one helmet was missing. Luckily, a local took pity on us and got us a new one for "local" prices - 30 ringit or $7.50 usd. Could've been worse.
  

Thursday, November 5, 2015

Cameron Highlands

Spent 4 nights in Tanah Rata - the main city in the Cameron Highlands area of Malaysia. CH is somewhere around 6 or 8k feet above sea level and is much cooler - it was a welcome relief from the heat and a beautiful area. There are some muddy trekking trails in the area so I spent a couple of days back in my element :)   Apparently the climate is good for growing tea, the area tea plantations were quite lovely and kind of surreal - they look like a funky carpet or something laying on the hillsides.
Beautiful Cameron Highlands
I'm currently in Penang (arrived late yesterday) and am finding it quite interesting and full of character. Much of today was chewed up by a long walk to the Thai embassy in round 2 of an attempt to obtain a 60 day visa, I have to go back tomorrow to pick it up - hopefully all is well.

Penang is known for it's food and I have found some delicious food here - but then it's been pretty amazing all along since leaving Australia. I'm staying in the Georgetown area which is a world heritage site and clearly has a lot of history (something I'm looking forward to learning about). There is a National Park here (Penang is an island) and lots of other interesting looking things to explore in the area so I think I'll be spending several days here before moving on to perhaps Langkawi? or another island in the area.

This meal looks like it would eat you back!