fishing boats |
My hotel (brand new) In less than 5 years this will be a solid wall of beach-front hotels |
The sunlight is ERUPTING from a VOLCANO of clouds !!!
And then, after over 1 hour of dawn and sunrise, the sun is out:
After borrowing their bicycle 2 days ago and playing monkey on it for a bit, I ask the receptionist where one could rent scooters.
It seems I can rent one at the hotel for 150,000 (CAD 8?) per day.
The tank is almost empty. Mute Busboy (he actually says a few words but he might as well be mute for all that I understand) points down the road. At first I'm stupid enough to look for a gas station sign. Realizing my mistake I look for someone sitting on a curb with 3 plastic 1 L bottles filled with greenish liquid (gasoline). Then busboy drives me there.
They used to have these pump-action fuel-filled glass cylinders in Germany for 2 stroke engines 30 years ago. I get a few liters for 50,000 Dong and now the tank indicator says half full, although since neither the indicators, the speedometer, or the rearview mirror works, I won't trust the tank indicator too much.
As soon as I'm riding, I notice a slight purple glow on my skin where I burnt myself yesterday. No No NO, this will NOT do, I need a long-sleeved shirt. I head straight to the market, which is even busier than yesterday and find a dress shirt in size medium for 170,000 Dong (~CAD 10)
HINT: If you just rented a scooter / car and park it among dozens/hundreds of pretty much identical looking devices make sure to take a picture of 1) your ride, and 2) the location. This can save you from quite a nightmare !
I find the HSBC bank machine in exactly the spot that Google Maps advertises. Good, I won't run out of cash.
The supermarket and shopping complex are next but first I stop a few times on both sides of the Dragon Bridge, which is en route.
My guide My (Yes, that is confusing) yesterday told me that I should visit the bridge this evening, because it should be spewing water and fire.
I won't go back in the evening, because I will be here again when the bridge will definitely be spewing fire. Tet 2016, and this is what the bridge will look like ;-)
Da Nang's 'Wheel' is much larger than the one in Hong Kong |
hand-woven fishing tubs, more modern fishing boats, and modern Da Nang |
First I have to drive into an underground scooter parking complex though, with attendants handing out time stamped mag-stripe cards. I spend about 30 - 45 minutes in the mall and pay 2000 Dong for parking. Yes, parking set me back 12 Canadian cents ;-) In an electronics store I get a USB cable and a couple of flash drives (I take too many pictures).
My first time in an underground scooter parking complex ;-) |
In the Supermarket I try to get some Nivea, but experience a shock. Regular moisturizing lotion is not to be found; 95% of the products being sold contain WHITENING agents. This is SO fucked up and might be a remnant of the French colonial times. Now I finally realize why I have seen quite a few people with pale skin with what looked like burns. No matter what shade, Vietnamese women are so bloody gorgeous, and some bizarre plot causes them to self-mutilate to look like westerners.
Downtown Da Nang |
A glass of Rose and Moneybags in a touristy restaurant |
Today is the 12th of December and a rest day. I have been running around Asia for 2 weeks now. And I can feel it ;-( Good thing I didn't plan anything for today. On the other hand, in 8 days I will be standing on Canadian soil again. NEED to SEE MORE ! A rest day is good for that. My remaining flights are booked and I will touch down in 2 more never visited countries in the next week. Almost every day is pretty much planned, but nothing is really written in stone.
Did I say Rest Day? I fall asleep for 2 hours.
I head to my room to eat an instant Vietnamese Noodle Soup (YUMMY) and then head down to the lobby to smoke. There is a Viet guy in his early 20s in the elevator. The elevator doors are polished to clean that they act like a mirror. At 6 feet and 170 pounds, no one would ever think of calling me fat. In the reflection that shows me standing next to the Vietnamese guy I look like an elephant!
Hungry again. I walk over to Be Man B again and this time order something without knowing its price. Ah Well, I did find a bank machine today. I decide to put one of these crabs out of its bound misery! Of course when I try to order French Fries I again run into the fact that NO ONE in this restaurant speaks any English. I have to drag the holding my crab in a basket into the kitchen and point at a cardboard box full of fries. Tomorrow I'll know better because I googled fries in Vietnamese:
khoai tây chiên The fact that the food is to be delivered to table 36 is communicated by me at first holding up 3 fingers, followed by 6 fingers. The only thing easy to order is Beer. Bia LaRue I say and they instantly nod.
I point at one of the crabs to seal its fate |
et voila |
Different day, different sunrise
When I finally complete this post on January 1st 2016, I realize HOW MUCH I miss being able to walk to a beach at sunrise, take my shoes off, and wade through the surf. There is a polar bear swim in Roberts Creek today, but that is not quite the same ;-(
Now how do I call Grandma? No internet. Vietnamese phones don't have their power supplied through the line or that one went down too?
I take the scooter and ride to Be Man B. Their internet is ON so they must have power. I grab the laptop and make my phone call from the street.
People give me slightly strange looks standing at the edge of a wire-mesh fence that surrounds a restaurant hunched slightly forward and shouting at a small black rectangular object in my hands that is obviously NOT a cell phone.
I take the scooter downtown and eat again. Actually I only eat half my plate but I finish the TWO glasses of Rose while uploading gazillions of photos. The price is outrageous by Vietnamese standards, but the place is exclusively occupied by Westerners watching Ultimate Fighting or whatever the show with muscular hunks feeling each other up is called, who would pay US$ 16 for a full English Breakfast and 2 glasses of Rose without batting an eye lid. For that price I got an entire chicken killed, plucked, cooked, and served together with a cold beer only two days ago!
When I stumble out, I get accosted by a man with a familiar looking auto-motive device. The front fender carries a metal sign with the words Easy Rider. But it is not My (pronounced Me) from 2 days ago, it is Trang this time, as I find out after he gives me his card. Middle-aged balding men must be their target audience if I have been selected twice in 3 days!
I get to the hotel (still no power) and at noon fall asleep like a log. I awake at 1:30 pm hearing the sound of the air-conditioner. Power has been restored !!!! I drink tea to restore consciousness and then check weather forecasts: Vancouver Rain Warning AND Wind Warning. That is about the 10th storm this fall. But I'm sure your typical gullible Vancouverite still believes the assurances that that is normal. Da Nang RAIN, starting Tuesday evening. Heavy rain too. But I'm not worried. They've been forecasting rain for a while now and I got hit by 5 water drops so far in Da Nang. And I'm leaving on that day ;-) For a place where it will be 33 degrees Celsius ( I feel I have to add the Celsius all the time so that any US readers living in areas where it is 33 degrees Fahrenheit right now can rest assured that water is not about to freeze where I am) and a mix of sun and clouds no less.
After lazily drying for a while on the hotel-provided wooden loungers, I get the bottle of Da Lat Vietnamese white wine from my fridge. I am reminded of that T-shirt sold by The Man in Seat 61 (Thank you, Man in seat 61, without your site this trip would only been half as much fun!)
Fortunately, there are two receptionists on duty right now, because when I lift the bottle and point at the cork, one just gives me the look that a cat gives you when it just failed the uncooked-strand-of-spaghetti test. Blank Ignance! But the second receptionist instantly makes a twisting hand motion to explain to the first what is wanted by the strange foreigner. They even have one in their desk drawer!
The wine from Da Lat tastes like nothing I had ever tasted before I had that very first glass in Hue. But I liked it so much I bought a bottle and it doesn't let me down this time either ;-)
Propeller Head |
I start to understand why Karl Lagerfeld always wears HIGH collars |
I book a hotel for the last night that wasn't spoken for on this trip. Another night in Hanoi. I'm not heading back to my usual abode. Not only because the train-ticket affair but also because the room lists for over 100 CAD on the travel websites. I know I can get it for US$35 if I e-mail the hotel, but why not try something different. Might be even more fabulous, so I book another moderately priced room with a balcony in a hotel close by.
I head out for a cigarette. There sits a 60 year old Aussie who works in the Mining Industry. Seems his 2 to 3 week shifts pay so much, he can spend every one of his 1 to 2 weeks off in Thailand but this time it is his very first time to Vietnam. He has travelled far and wide, can tell me tales of many countries and places (Vietnam apparently is like Thailand was 20 years ago), has had his mind opened by the diverse people and locations he encountered, but is still puzzled why his Vietnamese lady friend is upset after he said that the Americans came to Vietnam to help the Vietnamese.
Talk about putting one's foot into one's mouth!
This is the time to put my foot on the street and head over to Be Man B again where I duplicate the dinner of 2 days ago (Soi Ma with fries).
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