All over this city there are many steel frame bikes that tow make shift carts for human transportation and product.

The adventures of five guys who, for various reasons, decided to revamp their lives away from the comforts of California and American life to discover their heritage, tolerance with culture shock, and the camaraderie of their new lives together. This is their ongoing perspective on how to make it in Saigon, Vietnam.
Showing posts with label Travel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Travel. Show all posts
Thursday, June 23, 2011
American Pickers : Colnago Master in Can Tho, Vietnam?
Tuesday, June 21, 2011
Holiday in Cambodia Part 2
Partner and I arrive at the bus station and are immediately swarmed by Tuk-Tuk drivers barraging us with their offers to drive us around and be our guide for whatever vices we desired. In the distance a guy with a real genuine smile comes and greets partner with his real name. He was the Tuk-Tuk driver that partner had been in contact with the previous week. I felt elated, that there was someone there that we could somewhat trust, I felt at ease and we decided to go to our hotel. Driving around in a Tuk-Tuk was similar to my experience in Thailand. It was nice to sit back and survey the new land two American guys would hopefully conquer. I was quite surprised to see that Cambodia was very similar to Saigon, not the big glitzy streets of Dong Khoi or Nguyen Hue, but maybe the streets of Can Tho or Binh Thanh Disrict.
Sunday, June 19, 2011
Saturday, May 28, 2011
Holiday In Cambodia Part I
I recently went to Cambodia on an excursion with a good friend of mine, a man well versed in travel boasting nearly 70 different countries and counting. A man that has gone far and wide around looking for treasures of experience. When he told me of his previous trip toCambodia, I was immediately sold. My eyes round and big with delight with hopes of a memorable trip I was promised the wild wild west of the east. And it turned out to be somewhat true….It was great to get away from the bustling and booming city of Saigon where It has left me… jaded.
The road to Cambodia was an easy bus ride. We stopped at the bordertown of Moc Bai/ Bavet to go through customs and immigration. The border town office was a small compound with somewhat run down building with no air conditioning. It looked very third world. We were on a voyage to another land, another culture, and hopefully another adventure. I was excited. I was a bit apprehensive of handing over my passport, it felt as if in that moment of time I would relinquish my sole power of persuasion, being an American in a far distant land. I put myself at ease and handed over the passport, and wandered outside to smoke for a bit and talk with a local that was selling phone card. I come back in to check the status of my passport with the immigration officer. I saw the look of the person handling my passport and I knew. I was going to be paying for something, maybe because I am American or is it because I am an American born Vietnamese. Either way I paid 140 US dollars to get through, quite the ding to my wallet, but now I start my journey…..
The road continued through a whole town devoted to gambling for Vietnamese nationals that cross the border to try their luck, and most likely lose it. With names like Las Vegas Sun Casino and Winn Casino how can you not like that effort on creativity?
We come to a giant river and cross via ferry. My friend and I both look at each other panicked, South East Asia a careless place or were we both paranoid? We promptly exited the bus as the ferry took across, afraid that some freak accident might occur and literally be dead fish in bus with no exits. We were greeted by local Cambodian folks. I was taken a back, they looked very similar to Saigon-ites but a little darker. When they opened their mouths was when I realized I was in a different land, their Vietnamese even more broken than mine offered treats and refreshments. Looking around on the ferry I saw the usual scene in country side Vietnam, dozens upon dozens of people crammed in minivans looking miserable because the air conditioning isn’t on and someone just vomited next to them.
Back on the bus we went as the ferry reached land, from there I fell asleep and awoke in Phnom Penh, it was looked like the suburbs of Bangkok or Vietnam. It looked all familiar and I was in relief that our bus wasn’t hijacked by some Khmer Rouge toting AK-47’s.
Sweet.
I’m here in the city and I haven’t been sold into a lady boy slave hotel just yet.
….to be continued
John
Friday, May 27, 2011
Trip Report: Hong Kong and Macau
One of the best things about living in Vietnam is the ability to fly out of the country for a weekend and experience an entirely different culture. Living in California, I'd get excited about going to San Francisco or Las Vegas, but it's basically the same shit, different setting. Whereas, when you go to somewhere like Cambodia, you're gonna have to adapt to a entirely different language, different food, and different people.
Recently, David and I were invited to Hong Kong to see Maroon 5. We decided to wing it, less because of the concert, but because I wanted to take David on an adventure and out of his everyday rut. Instead of having to write two different trip reports, we thought it'd be better if we put our conversational thoughts into words and shared with you the two different perspectives of our recent trip. One from a person who's been to Hong Kong numerous times, and the other from a newbie.
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