The Other Side


Thailand – Phi Phi
March 16, 2009, 8:13 pm
Filed under: Thailand

Days 206 – 209, Friday 13th – Monday 16th March 2009 (Cath)

While we were in the area, we thought we’d pop over to Koh Phi Phi and see how my favourite little tropical island was going. I absolutely loved it the first time I came to Thailand and was interested to see how it had changed – years of development, then the tsunami, then several years of rebuilding later.  

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View from the ferry, Ao Nang to Koh Phi Phi Don

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The fancy pier was new (last time the big boats stopped further out in the bay and we all transferred onto smaller ones to bring us to shore), but the very, very tempting, gorgeous, stunning water looked familiar!

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High tide 

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Same

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Our bags, taking a break on the longtail boat from Tonsai pier to our accommodation

It’s about time our backpacks made it into the blog – they’ve been our trusty and constant companions. Mine’s the blue one, and Al’s (well, really his friend Virginia’s, since she kindly let it come with us) is the red one with the huge black thongs attached.  Those thongs were very popular in Africa – lots of people offered to trade Al some wood carvings in exchange for his shoes (it’s obviously a bit hard to find a pair like them in the shops in Malawi), but he clung onto them, so they’ve made it the whole way around with us as well. Meanwhile I have gone through two pairs of Havaianas. 

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Our balcony!

We splashed out a little on our accommodation (mainly because it was a last-minute decision to come here, so there were no rooms at the Viking backpacker place we’d heard good things about, and we wanted to have somewhere booked so that we could focus on doing nothing for our last few days). If you ignored the smell from the pipes just outside (which should be pretty easy for you to do, assuming you’re not using your computer anywhere near raw sewerage), the place really was lovely. It was just far enough away from the busy part of the island that it felt quiet, and just close enough that we could walk along the beach for twenty minutes and find a bit more action, and tastier food.

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We thought a hotel pool on an island like this was a really unnecessary touch. But with cushioned sun lounges and a ready supply of cool drinks, it successfully tempted us away from the beach on the first afternoon. I was also intrigued by the poolside chalkboard, which read ‘NEVER SCUBA DIVED? TRY IT FREE HERE TODAY’. I had decided a long time ago that if I ever tried diving, I’d do it in a pool before getting into the ocean, so I thought I might just take this chance while my schedule was otherwise completely clear. Unfortunately there was another couple having a lesson at the time, so I had to wait. Somehow we managed to pass the time, swimming, reading, sunbaking and napping – it was a struggle – and when they had finished I had almost convinced Al to join me. The instructor (Pierre, whose French accent made us think of him as an older, less sleazy version of Brendan Fraser’s character in Along Came Polly) did the rest of the convincing, so suddenly Al and I were all kitted up with weight belts and tanks and standing in the pool, learning how to breathe underwater and not drown.

As you might know, I love almost everything about swimming, while Al’s never really been the underwater type. And I’ve snorkelled a lot, with no difficulty. But I really struggled psychologically to put my head below the water and breathe through the SCUBA mouthpiece. Al was much more able to stay rational and trust the equipment, so he and Pierre were crouched underwater for a while signalling for me to come under, while I kept bobbing down, almost getting my face underwater, then standing up again. But eventually I just did it, then struggled to keep myself calm through all the ‘your mask has been knocked out of your mouth! Don’t panic but get it back as quickly as you can or you’ll die!‘ underwater run-throughs, and finally somehow found the guts to tip myself into a horizontal position and start doing slow laps of the pool, kicking my flippered feet. It turned out to feel a lot more comfortable than squatting in the shallow end. I still felt restricted by the weight, and by not being able to lift my head up to look around, but Pierre assured me this was only because the gear I had on was way too big. ‘That’s good’, I thought, ’so now that I almost feel comfortable in a pool, that means one day when I feel comfortable with a reputable company in Australia I might actually be able to go diving in the sea’. After a couple more laps, taking in the view of the hairy white legs and beer guts of a few big German men, I was feeling satisfied. 

But for some reason, just as I had taken off the SCUBA gear and was enjoying the safety and warmth of dry land, I had a carpe diem moment. A few minutes later I was ticking the box next to the basil chicken I’d chosen for lunch on my diving trip the next day! I spent the night making Al reassure me it would be OK, and that I could pull out at any time if I felt uncomfortable. The day of swimming, sleeping and sunbaking he was looking forward to sounded lovely to me.

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Fire twirlers – your Phi Phi bar is nothing if it doesn’t have at least one of these performing each night

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The boat to Phi Phi Ley the next morning – the other couple booked on the diving trip had cancelled, so it was just me, the Frenchman and the driver.

I once again had trouble getting my head under water at first. I told Pierre I was going to come under, then come back up and get totally comfortable, then come under again for real and keep going. What actually happened was that I went under, went just a little bit further under, got into a horizontal swimming position, and then Pierre showed me on his watch that we were already at 3m. I felt surprisingly calm and started to enjoy the surroundings. Then Pierre showed me his wrist again – 12m! Wow, maybe I’ll actually be able to do this, I thought. Apart from a few moments when I found it hard to equalise my ears despite my best nose-squeezing and yawning efforts, it all went very smoothly. I did get very focussed on the ear equalising, and I’m sure I was doing it at least four times as often as necessary, but at least I didn’t get any pain afterwards. And that really was my only concern at the time (although later I did think it may have been silly to dive in just bathers and a t-shirt, with no stinger suit, once I knew the kinds of things that were down there)! It helped that I knew I was the only bumbling novice my instructor had to worry about. 

I absolutely loved the feeling of swimming for such a long time in the underwater world. It felt the way flying felt in a dream I once had – it was surprisingly comfortable. And the diving scenery was much more exotic and spectacular (partly since in the dream I was flying just a few metres above the ground, following a road). It was easy to forget how far down we were – there was so much going on around us that the surface above seemed irrelevant. It looked choppy and noisy up there, but around us was calm and quiet, apart from the noisy bubbles we breathed out. As impressed and excited as I was when we found the underside of our little boat (which had moved to where the driver knew we would finish), resurfacing really felt like I was coming back to the reality I had known and leaving behind a whole other, wondrous world. 

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Fresh from seeing a black-tipped reef shark, some lobsters in their holes, a black and white-striped sea snake, a few pairs of clown fish, a lionfish (or leopardfish?), lots of other lesser-known but equally beautiful fish, and coral in almost every colour of the coral rainbow. All except that peachy-orangey-pinky colour lipstick manufacturers call ‘coral’, strangely.

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Lunch stop – the basil chicken was deliciously spicy. We picked up about three supermarket bags full of rubbish from this tiny beach, and took them away with us. 

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Just around the corner was Maya Bay, where The Beach was filmed – not quite deserted anymore. We didn’t stop.

My second dive was a little bit further around the island, more exposed to the waves than the first one. By the end, I was getting quite tired and ready to come back up, but I certainly couldn’t complain about not getting my money’s worth. It had been one of my favourite mornings of the trip, and it was capped off by discovering Al just sitting down to lunch at a table by the beach, so I could describe it all to him while he ate. I’m not sure he loved hearing about it as much as I loved reliving it, but he seemed to enjoy his food.

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Night storm – we sought shelter in a pancake stall and bought a ‘milkshake’ (=ice-shake) as thanks

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A couple of ladies sought shelter from the lightning in this PHONE booth, holding UMBRELLAS. Hmmm.

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We found time for a bit of rock scrambling the next day.

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Surveying the bay

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The white pontoon in the background was apparently built as a floating restaurant – someone’s ‘good idea, wrong place’ according to Pierre

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We managed to fit in a quick swim back at ‘our’ beach before this storm hit

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Then walked to this bay on the other side of the island, avoiding nasty-looking pieces of corrugated iron blown loose by the wind. The rain set in, and we found an indoor table for a leisurely lunch and drinks.

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Finding this lookout in time for sunset was not as straightforward as we expected. At one point, totally lost, we were relieved to see some other people coming along the path behind us, so we waited for them. Our relief was shattered when they said ‘oh, we asked some people and they told us to follow you!’

We got there eventually, but we never did find the Tsunami Memorial. The signs seemed to lead us in circles. We learnt not to trust signs.

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This sign just made us laugh. But we still don’t trust that a lady can walk on water, like that one on the right, even if she does have a pole.

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Breakfast on our last day in Thailand

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Al’s final (and possibly his 23rd?) Thai massage

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Kids at Tonsai Pier

Koh Phi Phi is certainly not suffering from a lack of tourists. The central part of it is more highly developed than I thought possible after the devastation the tsunami must have caused. Lots of shops and restaurants in town had a framed ‘after’ photo on the wall showing the extent of the damage – the whole middle strip of the island was almost completely wiped out. But apparently it took so long for new safe building guidelines to be developed that people started rebuilding anyway, in their desperation to get their lives back on track, with the result that now a lot of areas deemed unsafe are once again home to densely packed, fairly ramshackle structures. At least most of the actual housing for the community seems to be on raised land, mainly up the hill where we eventually found the lookout. The most poignant reminder of the day we saw was a tree with colourful ribbons, like the ones usually attached to the prows of longtail boats here, tied around its enormous trunk. It was near the bottom of the hill, and we wondered how many people it might have saved.

And suddenly it was Monday, and time for us to go. We caught the ferry to Phuket, then shared a mini bus from the pier to the airport, where the driver gave us an elaborate and fun handshake goodbye after seeing us high-five each other (in a corny but ironically cool way, you know) for completing the trip. 

Home time.



Thailand – Krabi
March 13, 2009, 11:05 am
Filed under: Thailand

Days 203 – 206, Tuesday 10th – Friday 13th March 2009 (Cath and Al)

The taxi drivers are on to a good thing at Phuket airport.

We were actually staying in Krabi (Cath had been to Phuket back in 2001 and it wasn’t on the top of her must-go-back-there list), but Phuket was the only place in the region we could fly into using our round-the-world ticket, and the Lonely Planet told us we should be able to catch a bus from there to Krabi. So, all prepared for but not looking forward to a cramped and hot 4-hour bus ride, we ignored all the ‘transport?!’ touts in the airport foyer and tried to find out where the bus stop was. 

It turned out we would need to get a taxi to the bus stop on the main road to make it in time for the next departure. So we joined a few other backpackers at the official taxi rank, insisting to the drivers that we didn’t need a taxi the whole way to Krabi, just to the bus stop. We couldn’t help feeling we were being sucked in, and I’m pretty sure we were all looking at each other thinking ‘we might be gullible, but these other people haven’t found a better way to get there either, so at least we can all be suckers together’.

Ten minutes later we were zooming along the road to Krabi in the taxi. The driver was very persuasive, let us feel we’d driven a hard bargain, and turned out to be quite an entertaining singer. And he had air-conditioning. I wonder how many backpackers ended up on that bus!

I did regret our decision at times – mainly the times I looked at what was left in the wallet, or when I looked at the road and saw how close we came to having head-on collisions or taking out pedestrians in the emergency lane – but it was hard not to give in to relaxation, with the bright sun soaking us, tropical green plants whizzing past and limestone cliffs appearing. Even the Thai pop videos on the in-car DVD player were making me happy.

True to his word, our driver got us to Ao Nang more than two hours earlier than the bus would have. We were staying further west of Ao Nang, on Noparat Thara beach, but we had time to stay in town for a bite to eat. That first Thai lunch could best be described as a flavour explosion. We had missed sauces and spices and vegetables so much! I felt like all I ate in Hong Kong was noodles, rice, batter, dough, and a bit of potato. Basically beige, with a touch of soy sauce and chili. But here things were green and red and delicious and people realised that stuffing things with meat wasn’t the only way to make them tasty. Paradise.

And then a lovely and quiet Thai-speaking man came and picked us up and drove us to P.A.N. Beach Bungalows, a family-run collection of wooden bungalows lining each side of a rectangular paddock, with a small open-air restaurant and bar at one end. And at that end happened to be a white sand beach, an expanse of turquoise water, and an island in the bay we could walk across to at low tide.

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Our bargain basement bungalow!

(One of the cheapest on hostelbookers – great find by Al)

The only reason I was still wearing my jeans was that it was physically impossible to fit them in any of our bags by this stage, and this was a quick photo before we unpacked and totally messed up the room. There was no electricity during the day to power the ceiling fan, so it was time for cold showers (again, no electricity – but they may as well not bother with a hot water tap in this climate), and then a bit of exploring.

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Low tide

We walked over to the island, avoiding sea cucumbers underfoot (which Al kept referring to as ‘Sea Turds’ – gross), and trying to shoo off a mangy dog who seemed to want to play but needed to work on its social skills (it kept barking and rushing at my feet, and I’m not usually scared of dogs, but I really thought it might take a playful bite).

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Reading in the hammock on the porch

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Nap, swim, read, nap, swim, read – aah, there’s the turquoise water we were expecting!

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Eat, drink, play cards

The restaurant served really tasty Thai meals, which were good value considering how isolated we were, and the family were really welcoming – the set up seemed to be that dad did the driving, mum ran the front of house, and the kids manned the desk and waited tables. A guy who seemed to be either a cousin or a young uncle ran boat trips, and even though our plan had been to just continue the nap/swim/read/eat cycle, we were convinced to join him one day and disrupt our relaxation with some snorkelling. 

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Yellow and black stripy fish were everywhere, looking for a feed

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Hong Island – that little gap is the only connection between the interior of the island and the sea outside

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We were the only boat in the Hong Island lagoon, surrounded by the karst cliffs – our voices echoed

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Lunch stop

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After lunch (honestly, I was wearing 50+ sunscreen) 

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Night out in Ao Nang, the place to go for Al to have a Thai massage and for me to have some very classy tropical cocktails

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Nopparat Thara was really the perfect place to be for us right now. I know this will sound ridiculous to read from home, but we had really needed a holiday! We got one, and with it we got our travel-mojo back.

 



The Complete Guide to Hong Kong
March 9, 2009, 10:41 pm
Filed under: Hong Kong

Days 197 – 202, Wednesday 3rd –  Monday 9th March 2009 (Al)

It was cool, it was rainy, we were tired. We arrived in Hong Kong lacking the energy to get out and explore it. But having seven days here allowed us to take our time and spread our sightseeing out, and mix it with late night internet sessions instead of sleep, as we are still on Europe/Africa time. Our standard day seemed to be 12pm – 3am…

Hong Kong did grow on us as we saw more of it.

Our modest accommodation was located in Tsim Sha Tsui (TST) on the Kowloon side of Hong Kong. I could stand in the middle of the room and touch each wall with my outstretched arms. But it was clean, relatively quiet and centrally located.

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Our street in TST

The only thing we really did on our first full day was go to a Chinese medicine class in the Central district on Hong Kong island. It was basically a Powerpoint presentation mixed with a little show and tell. It was interesting to hear about Yin and Yang medicine – although a little more discussion on how this can link into Western medicine would have been useful.

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Elevated, covered walkways in the Central district seemed a nice, futuristic way to get to work

A handwritten protest sign outside a bank (and there were many protest signs and loudspeakers outside many banks), one of the only indicators we could see of the ‘Global Financial Crisis’, read:

‘Mini skirts are skirts

Mini mooncakes are mooncakes

Then why aren’t minibonds bonds?’

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On the way back we spent some time on the waterfront, enjoying the city lights illuminating the clouds.

Yes this is night time!

To learn a bit more about Hong Kong’s past we visited the Museum of History – which happened to also have an exhibition on the French Revolution, reminding us of our time in France – complete with replica guillotine for cheesy photos that local high school students seemed to enjoy. More enjoyable for us was our visit to the Nan Lian Gardens (a replica of a traditional Chinese Tang Dynasty garden) and adjoining Chi Lin Nunnery.

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Waiting inconspicuously at the metro station

Beautiful architecture and flora set against modern apartment towers is a good example of what can be found all over Hong Kong – a mix of the old and new. This is sometimes harmonious, and sometimes clashing.

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We decided to keep the flora theme going by visiting the flower market area of Kowloon. There’s probably about fifty stores lining two streets that look something like this:

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That night we met up with my old school friend Jeff who lives in Hong Kong. By chance it happened to be his birthday! We went out to the suburbs, to the sort of area where most locals live in their shoe box apartments.

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Hot pot birthday dinner with Jeff and his girlfriend Jenny

The next day we decided to go to Lantau island and get the cable car up to Ngong Ping village – which turned out to be a really cheesy and overly fake ‘traditional’ village. I would think most traditional Chinese villages would not have a 7-Eleven and synthetic trees. The big attraction, pun intended, is the world’s largest seated Buddha statue nearby. We followed this with what was billed as a traditional vegetarian meal at the monastery – this turned out to be niceish, but bland, cafeteria food served by grumpy ladies in a mess hall.

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Cheesy

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Cheesier – it’s what the monks would want

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Cold, misty and atmospheric

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The Buddha and surrounding statues all have amazing expressions of calmness

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Po Lin monastery

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Elaborate interior

What better way to follow the calm, peaceful atmosphere of Lantau than with the hectic neon commotion of Tsim Sha Tsui and some karaoke! This was to celebrate Jeff’s birthday.

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Busy street scene below

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Jenny and her friends were much better at this than we were. Meanwhile we were masters of collecting food from the buffet (and eating it).

Jeff and Jenny offered to spend the following day with us in order to show us a different side of Hong Kong. We first wandered around one of the older suburbs, near Jeff’s apartment, where he went to school and which has not YET been overtaken by modern high rises. People were out at markets, and playing soccer and basketball in the park on this weekend morning. The elderly were out doing tai chi or, more adorably, their own brand of exercise. One older woman slowly walked backwards past us whilst swinging her arms back and forth.

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After a quick Yum Cha dumpling brunch, we visited Wong Tai Sin temple and gardens, where Cathy had her fortune read. The results were mixed…

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A visit to the Tai O fishing village rounded out the day. It was still cold and misty, but it was really nice to visit one of the only remaining villages in Hong Kong that still lives in a more traditional way. A highlight was an elderly Chinese man who came up to me for a chat. “Are you from Finland?”, “No”, “Sweden”, “No” (this line of questioning was clearly influenced by the mullet, and went on until we offered that we were from Australia). ‘Aah – are you from Pymbo?’! When we said we were from Melbourne, he said ‘I have been fortunate enough to obtain several copies of The Age and the Herald Sun’. He went on to ask us several questions about Pymbo (a town in NSW), Gundagai and Geelong! He explained that his relatives would send him copies of The Age, The Courier and other papers; also that he loved geography and had worked in a shipping yard that had maps on the wall – so he knew the names of many cities around the world but nothing more about them. We’ll always remember being asked “So is Pymbo warmer than Gee-long?”

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Tai O village: simple, pretty, misty and smells like fish

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A surprise treat – there is a Shaolin martial arts school here. Check out our form!

My style is classic wing chun kung fu whilst Cathy’s is more sloppy Karate Kid.

It was a great day that delivered the other sides of Hong Kong that Jeff and Jenny promised.

Probably the most popular sight in Hong Kong had not even been visible for our entire stay there, that is until the last day. The Peak was no longer covered in cloud so we decided to venture up. To do this, we took the ferry across to HK island, then walked through to the Mid-Level Escalators – a series of escalators that help people walk to and from work on the hilly island. 800 metres long and climbing 135 metres, the escalators see some 55,000 people use them daily (thanks Wikipedia).

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What followed should have been a straight forward walk to the cable car station – but it was easy to get lost. Asking for directions three or four times helped us find the station eventually, and so we made it to the top for this fabulous view:

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Another great surprise, two eagles swooping around the buildings and Peak looking for food. They soared only a few metres over our heads at one stage – amazing.

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Walking around the Peak, Cathy was successfully sidetracked by this diversion I created

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Which ended soon after

Before our final dinner with Jeff and Jenny (a tasty Korean cook your own bbq) we viewed the world’s largest synchronised sound and light show which incorporates buildings on both sides of the harbour. It tried a bit too hard to be Hollywood-style dramatic, and made us hope that Hong Kong uses green power wherever possible, but was a spectacle!

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And that was Hong Kong. Despite the cool, wet weather and jet lag, we definitely warmed to the place and enjoyed the sites we got to see and the friends we were able to catch up with. It was a good stopover that had us ready for the sun and sand of Thailand!

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But we still have no idea what this sign, outside an internet cafe, meant.



NEW POSTS
March 5, 2009, 4:32 pm
Filed under: Hong Kong

Find these most recent posts from Africa by clicking on their dates on the calendar on the left:

UPDATES 2nd APRIL – Lake Kariba – Eagles (Jan 29th), Lake Kariba – Houseboat (Jan 31st)

UPDATES 1st APRIL – this is not a jokeEgypt – with special guest writer AL! (Dec 30th), Obama Day, Pig Day, Bilharzia Day (Jan 22nd), Lilongwe & Chipata (Jan 24th), Lusaka (Jan 26th)

UPDATES 28th MARCH – Malawi posts: Chitimba (Jan 19th), A Killer Diversion (Jan 20th)

UPDATES 23rd MARCH – New Tanzania posts: Stone Town (Jan 12th), Zanzibar – Nungwi Beach (Jan 15th), Return to Stone Town (Jan 16th), Ta-Ta Tanzania (Jan 18th)

UPDATE – Serengeti post is now up (Jan 7th, Tanzania)

Click on the January archive and check out the new posts (Nairobi, Maasai Village & Ngorongoro Crater) from the 4th, 5th and 6th of Jan (Kenya & Tanzania) – hot off the press and complete with photos!



Hong Kong
March 4, 2009, 6:39 am
Filed under: Hong Kong

Day Ish, Wednesday 3rd March 2009 (Cath – on the spot)

We’re out of Africa and gradually moving along through the grieving process – miss it, and the people we were with, a lot!

It’s been harder to find a reliable internet connection here than we expected, but we’ve just found this lovely internet cafe, and will hopefully be back later today after the Chinese medicine class we’re about to attend.

Keep your eye out for ‘new’ blog posts about things we did several months ago, which might be published over the next few days. Egypt (late December) is on the waiting list, and I’ve just posted a summary of our time in London over New Years. Look through the date archives or click on country names to find them. I’ll try to write an announcement like this whenever something is completed.