Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Langkawi to Kuala Lumpur

So after nearly five weeks in Langkawi, Nate and I made the rather quick decision one morning to leave Langkawi to head for Indonesia. We planned on going to Penang to catch a ferry to Medan in northern Sumatra, but the ferry was sold out so we caught a ferry to the mainland of Kedah, got a cab to Alor Setar, took a bus to Butterworth and then finally a ferry in Georgetown on the island of Penang. Once we arrived we realized that the ferry for Medan was sold out for three days, so we made another hasty decision and made a brand new plan to head south for Kuala Lumpur, to either catch a ferry from somewhere nearby, or keep moving south. Before leaving Penang early the next morning for KL, we went to our favorite Indian cinema in town and saw Silambataam, a Bollywood movie about a devoted Hindu who turns out have a killing machine waiting inside of him, only to be released when coaxed out by the violence of others. Luckily for him, he is also an extraordinary singer and dancer. Very good stuff. Three hours long.
Last night, our first night in Kuala Lumpur (KL), we met up with our friend Pitt who we had met in Langkawi, who is the brother of a good friend of ours in Langkawi named Aji. He works at an incredibly nice bar near Bukit Bintang, the main shopping district in KL, called The Social. We ended up hanging out with him as he worked for a few hours, and somehow the Langkawi trend continued and we didn't have to pay for a single drink. Nate and I figured our tab would have been close to 200 RM, nearly $60, not because we drank a lot but because alcohol is incredibly expensive in mainland Malaysia, and especially KL. Once again we were shocked by the kindness of the people here, and promised to buy Pitt a meal the following day.
Today we plan on walking around the city and finding a used book store, maybe going to the lake gardens and the city center tonight, and tomorrow we plan on waking early tomorrow to go up the Petronas Twin Towers, something I have wanted to do since I was a young boy.
And the decision we're facing right now is this: catch a ferry from Klang, a nearby city, or travel south to Melaka to catch a ferry to Dumai (Sumatra), or possibly head for Singapore to catch a ferry to the small island of Bitam and then fly into Jakarta (on the island of Java). Knowing the two of us the decision will be made on a whim as neither Nate nor I possess the ability to plan ahead, nor do we really want to.
We'll let you know when we figure it out.
Love,
B

Thursday, December 4, 2008

Back in Langkawi







Nate and I made it back to Langkawi a week ago and realized very quickly that the tourist season was in full bloom. Apparently Malaysian students all across the country get "summer" break during December and January, and many of them, along with Europeans and Australians and all manner of white folk, flock to the island at the same time. So, with a little help from our old landlord from our last time here, we got what may have been the only room left in Langkawi. She had to spend an hour just getting it ready for us, and she charged us a ridiculously low price in accordance with it's quality (there was no water). The worst news, however, was that she no longer had a room to rent us out for the month.
So for the few days we stayed there, we started thinking of moving on, back to the mainland to see what the rest of Malaysia was like. But then we met Lan and his girlfriend Joanna, who own the only local art gallery right on the main road. We initially just stopped in and started talking to the two of them, with no intention or motive, but somehow the topic of us looking for a place to rent for a month came up, and within half an hour we had been invited to come and live with them for 200 RM a month, 150 Ringgit less than what we were willing to pay for a guesthouse. The next day Joanna took us to look at the house, which is set back from the main road, about a five minute walk from the beach, and secluded nicely by palm trees and local families. We loved it right away. We have our own large room, a big kitchen we can use to eat for cheap, a living room with cable tv and dvd player and a separate space for the shower and the toilet, something I've learned I greatly enjoy. We moved in on Monday and have been busy settling into life in a home, buying groceries, pillows, sleeping bags.
We also rented motorbikes for the first time, and spent two days riding all over the island. We rode to the top of the highest mountain on Langkawi (890 KM). We saw many small fishing villages as well as the five star luxury resort beaches where they told us we couldn't sit in the chairs or swim in the pool before we were anywhere near either of them. We watched monkeys tend to their children. We saw a Chinese man crash his motorbike into an SUV and flip. Nate road on the wrong (right hand) side of the road a few times. We have made a firm decision to rent a motorbike for the entire month we'll be here, and with the help of Lan who gives us all the local inside information, we found a shop that will rent one to us monthly for 250 RM. Most bikes are rented daily for 20-35 RM, so this would save us tons of Ringgit.
Life has definitely slowed down. We don't have to think about moving or how to get to the next city or when to catch the ferry or the bus or the train and it's a nice change of pace for a while. We've watched a little television, which is very different when you haven't watched one in a while. Luckily Lan only likes to watch National Geographic and Discovery, so at least we're learning. We cook at home now instead of eating out every night. We went out for Joanna's birthday and met even more great people, like Vladimir the Russian, Johan the Swede, Wan the Malay artist, Zool the Malay husband of a very rich local German. Nate met a Malay girl that he likes. Lan very quickly told him she was bad news. People are very good to us and treat us like old friends. We can't walk down the street without seeing people we know and having a conversation. I can't say I've ever felt that way anywhere I've lived.
All is well, more soon.
Love,
Brent

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Pictures

I uploaded some more pictures from Nate's camera to Flickr, and hopefully Kinsey will able to upload the thousands that we took on her camera from back home in Austin at some point in the future.
So, if you'd like to see them, head on over to www.flickr.com/photos/whales-were-deers.

Also, happy Thanksgiving to all our friends and family back home. We love and miss you all.
Hug a Native American.

Brent

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Malaysia

The first thing different that we noticed about Malaysia, at first struck us as something similar. Getting through customs we encountered the same throng of desperate men hawking taxis and guesthouses and foot massages and snake oils and, as we've grown used to them, we now just push through the group to find the honest people on the other side. But this time we met a man who looked as shady as any we've seen, who tailed us and kept offering help. As I often do, I kept walking and let Nate get ensnared because he is often too kind to tell them to fuck off with his body language. This man followed us for a few minutes, guided Nate to a money changer and Kins and I to an ATM, then passed us on to his associate. This new man then followed us for a few minutes, answered a few of Nate's questions about the city and how to get to the Pantai Cenang beach, and then did the strangest thing. He wished us luck and walked away. He was only there to help us, which we had not yet encountered at a ferry terminal, bus station, train station, taxi terminal or anyplace where travelers arrive.
This was our first impression of Malaysia, and it would prove to be very telling.
We caught a cab to the beach and found that since it was the weekend and there was a school holiday, everywhere was booked. We eventually found a guesthouse that rented us a room that was not meant to be rented, as it had wallpaper on the floor, was dirty, small and had a secret room built into the side of the wall and covered by a curtain that looked fit to hide stolen children in.
So the next day, Sunday, we set out to find a better room, and since the weekend was winding down we found a place right next door with two big beds, a nice shower and even a large piece of furniture that we couldn't really figure out what to do with. The next day we moved to a different room in the same guesthouse that was just as nice if not better, and this is when the landlord informed Nate and I that she would rent this room out to us on a monthly basis for $350 RM (almost exactly $100) total. This is the moment when Nate and I began to think differently. We had planned on spending a few days here then moving on south to another island then to the mainland. But if we took this offer we'd be paying $50 each a month, less than $2 a day to stay in a perfectly nice room. She also told us she was opening a Rasta Bar in the next few weeks and that she was looking for a cook and a waiter, so we might be able to work as well. So, we decided to spend a few days in Langkawi to see if we liked it before we made the decision.
This is what happened while we were deciding.
One night we stumbled upon a bar called Submarine (so named because the bar right next to it is called Yellow) and we met some really nice guys that happened to be the house band. We all sat around playing guitar together, and when it was time for them to perform they invited us to play with them. So Nate and I fumbled our way through a bunch of cover songs, from the Beatles to Radiohead to U2 for about an hour. After we played, one of the guys in the band, Saiful, sat us down and paid us 20 ringgit for playing. It was the sweetest thing anyone has done for us yet and this led to Saiful and I spending the next five hours talking about music and religion and politics and to us becoming good friends. He teaches music to children and cooks at a restaurant, and when he's not working he plays in three bands. After the show we ended up going to a dance club called Sanba (still don't know how I was convinced to go to a dance club) with some friends we met at the bar. A.C. cleans yachts and looks like Jack Sparrow if he was a boxer (he's missing teeth). He's offered to see if he can get us jobs with him and wants to take us to South Africa with his company. He's also normally drunk, so I'm not banking on it. Mi sings in the band and has a great voice, and he can speak English very well (most people here can) but he can sing it fluently. His girlfriend Atti also plays music and sings, and Kinsey thinks she is the most adorable girl in the world. Yen plays upright bass and djimbe, and sings like John Fogerty. Matt and Lisa are from Canada and are brother and sister and somehow have found a way to travel with each other without killing one another. Brooke and I would never survive. Jevin is from Melbourne and gave us great advice on getting jobs in Australia. Jack is the employee at the mini mart where I go to buy beer and snacks and last night I found out that he is a tattoo artist who moved back to Langkawi to help his family run the store. He showed me some of his tattoos and they're remarkable. Jai and Bet are from the mainland in Kuala Kedah and they are our neighbors at the hostel. All the employees at our favorite Indian restaurant in town live a door down from them, and we're hoping to become good friends with them in the hopes of getting free food or cooking secrets.
So it was pretty easy to love this place, and we had all but made up our mind when the following day, Yen passes us on the street as we're taking a walk. He asks us to get in a then drives us out to a beautiful new restaurant right on the water. He tells us his band is playing there tonight, and since it's the grand opening there will be free food and drink. We tell him we'll meet him there later that night, and continue our walk where we eventually veer far off the main road and find ourselves in a small village apparently populated only by children who want to smile and wave and yell "Hello!" and "Goodbye!" at you over and over. At one point there were probably twenty kids yelling hello at us. On the edge of town as we walked by a small house we hear a very desperate sounding hello coming from behind us. We turn around to see this gigantic child (seriously he was less than five feet tall and weighed at least 160) running after us wearing nothing but his bath towel which he is fighting to hold up, and when he finally comes face to face with us he simply says, "hello", then takes a moment to catch his breath and triumphantly announces, "goodbye".
We arrived at the restaurant at seven and found Yen and his band mates eating before their performance, and we were instantly encouraged to go get as much food as we could handle. So we loaded our plates then sat down to watch Yen cover everything from CCR to Pink Floyd to Robbie Williams. Apparently the only music people in Malaysia want to hear is classic rock or pop, because that's all every band around plays, and they can make good money doing it. While eating we met Adam, and Australian who started the restaurant with another man with the help of some locals and a connection to a powerful politician. We attempted to sweet talk him in hopes of getting a slot to play at his restaurant, which pays a few hundred RM (ringgit) a night. Nate and I live off of 35 RM a day, so that would be quite a bit of money to us right now. Later in the night Adam smuggled Nate and I free beer which endeared him to both of us. Some of the more strict Muslims expressly forbid alcohol, and since there were some rather powerful people in the Malaysian government (which is comprised mainly of Muslims) in attendance, we had to be careful for Adam's sake.
So we spent a few hours eating and drinking for free, watching our new friend Yen play music, and when he was done he offered us a ride back to town where he was performing at another bar on the beach. This was basically the same band but since they play on the beach they are allowed to play at a much higher volume and use electric instruments. As seems to always happen now that people know Nate and I play music, eventually we are called on stage and told to start jamming. So, I picked up a guitar and Nate picked up a bass we started playing something very random and thought up on the spot. Of course, Nate and I thought it was total rubbish, but the crowd would explode into applause at certain points, and there was a very drunk, very white, very just-graduated-from-college-and-I-miss-my-frat-buddies dude about our age that danced very badly and very near to me the entire time I played. He loved it, so I guess we succeeded.
After the show we sat down with Yen and talked to him about his life and family and how he liked living on Langkawi, and like everyone before who we asked the same question, he thinks it the best place in the world and has no desire to ever leave.
At this point, Kinsey was pretty sure that she was going to fly back home in a few days from Singapore, since it was much cheaper than flying out from anywhere else. To get there, she needed to take a ferry down south to Penang to get back to the mainland and catch a bus to Singapore. So, Nate and I had planned to go with her to accompany her as far as Penang to see her off, then return to Langkawi. We told Yen about our plans to catch a cab to the ferry the following day and he would have none of it. He had a car and the day off, so he would wake up to drive us there himself.
And he did. The next day we came to his house and woke him up and he drove us all the way across town (a taxi would have cost 28 RM, $9) to the jetty, then had lunch with us and hung out until our boat left.
At this point our minds were well made up, we would stay in Langkawi for the near future. We had already made some great friends, found an outlet for music, could live for incredibly cheap, maybe work, swim in the ocean every day and stop moving for a little while.
Right now, after spending the last week in Penang, a loud, congested, busy city of over two million people where beer is more expensive than it is in the states (I haven't had one the entire time I've been here) and the people are noticeable less friendly (except Durai, who after ten minutes had invited us to stay at his house and use his car and his motorbike), we are even more certain of our choice.
Kinsey left us on Sunday to catch a bus to Singapore and a flight back to Austin in time to be with her family for Thanksgiving. We all had a great time together and we wish her the best as she now faces the very scary world of working for a living. Oddly enough, since she left, Nate and I have been to three malls, one of them the biggest in Southeast Asia. She probably would have enjoyed them more than we did, as we were trying, unsuccesfully, to find guitars. We did have a chance to catch the new James Bond movie, which we both thought was great, so it wasn't a total waste.
We head back to Langkawi tomorrow.

Travel day

As normally happens after you spend a good deal of your time doing little more than sleeping and eating and drinking and reading and swimming, you eventually must pay the world back for your excess of luxury by submitting to the travel day. So, after weeks on Koh Tao and Koh Samui, and motivated by the fact that Nate's Thai visa was about to expire, we embarked upon our thirty some odd hour quest to make if from Thailand's East coast all the way to Malaysia's Northwest coast.
We started out by walking for two and a half hours towards the ferry. Then we boarded a bus that drove us around the island to a different ferry terminal. Then we boarded a very large boat. Then the bus we had just arrived in boarded the same boat in a hold beneath the boat. Then we sailed across the Gulf of Thailand. Then we arrived at Donsak where we got off the boat. Then we got back on the bus. Then we drove for an hour and a half toward Surat Thani. Then we found out that the direct minibus we planned to take straight to Malaysia was twice as expensive as we thought it would be. Then we changed plans. Then we boarded a local bus toward the train station. Then we found out that the train ticket to Malaysia was twice as expensive as we thought it would be, about the same as the minibus. Then we changed plans again. Then we bought very cheap night train tickets to Hat Yai, a city close to the border. Then we played cribbage and rummy while we waited five hours for the train. Then we slept for a few hours. Then we woke at the crack of dawn. Then we found out that a minivan to Satun (where we need to get to catch a ferry to Langkawi, Malaysia) was more expensive than we thought. Then we changed plans once again. Then we caught a cab to the local bus station. Then we caught a local bus towards Satun. Then we arrived in Satun and caught a taxi to the ferry. Then we found out that Nate was being charged 500 Baht ($15) for overstaying his visa by one day. Then we sat down and waited three hours for the ferry. Then we finally boarded our ferry, taking us an hour and a half towards Langkawi, a place that we would find to be lovely, would change our idea of traveling for a while, and would wholly justify the effort. When we found out that it is also a duty free, and that everything is ridiculously cheap we all wept just a little bit.
By traveling in such a circuitous way rather than just taking a bus or train direct, we cut our expenses in half and saved ourselves over a day of living on the road.

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

The Thai islands

Getting of the boat at 5am on the island of Koh Tao last week we had no idea where we were going or how to get anywhere and it was pitch black and the city was asleep and it may have been the only time we'd arrived anywhere in Thailand without throngs of people offering us hotels and taxis and guesthouses and exotic foods and massages and as we were walking what we could only assume to be the main drag a drunk native told us to beware of the tigers and dragons and we had put ourselves in this situation because Nate and I especially are incredibly cheap (I like to describe it more as having a discerning eye for value) and we had saved a few dollars by taking the night boat instead of the faster, more reliable morning boat that gets you to the island at a respectable time and amidst all of this uncertainty we meet Adam, the only American we have seen so far in Asia, a very well-prepared college grad from Missoula, Montana, toting with him the holy grail of travel literature to the congenitally under prepared likes of the three of us, the Lonely Planet Thailand Guidebook.
So, after a little walking, we found a place to stay for $4 a night right near the beach, and then spent the next week traveling with Adam all over Koh Tao, from the tourist geared beach of Hat Sai Ree, to the opposite side of the island, Hat Tanote, where we shared a desolate beach with maybe 20 other people.
I hold a small level of disdain for the gigantic all-consuming guidebook, but I would be lying if I said it didn't help us out quite a bit while it was in our possession. We never would have made the hour trek across the island through the jungle and up the sheer cliffs and down the other side to find Tanote, but in the end it was the most enjoyable part of our journey so far.
I convinced Kinsey to swim in the ocean by telling her there were no dangerous sea creatures lurking just beneath her and waiting to attack, and about ten minutes later I was attacked by a very mischievous and pissed off crab that latched itself onto my head and did not want to let go. We also were the only customers at a beautiful restaurant high on the hill overlooking Tanote beach where we ate the best food we've had so far and then proceeded to somehow get trapped into a game of dress up that "Momma", the proprietor, drunkenly insisted on. So we put on wigs and cowboy hats and I was forced to wear a hideous cat mask, and then Momma took a bunch of pictures of us. It all seemed very creepy for a while and we thought we may have stumbled into a horror movie, but once she started giving us free alcohol we realized she was just drunk and a little bit bored and lonely since the tourist season was in a lull. So we placated her for a while, posing in preposterous ways and taking pictures for half an hour, and she rewarded us with free scotch. In my mind, a very fair trade.
So after a week in Koh Tao relaxing and reading and eating and drinking and playing a lot of cribbage and rummy and hearts, we parted ways with Adam as he went back to the mainland and we travelled on by boat (a ride that both Kinsey and I threw up on) to Koh Samui.
We decided to bypass Koh Phangan, the middle island, as there was a Full Moon Party (if you don't know what this is, google it - I'm looking your way Mom) tonight, and Kins, Nate and I weren't really in the mood for it. The good thing about the party is that it took a good amount of the people who were vacationing on Koh Samui and deposited them in Koh Phangan, so now we have what is normally a rather busy and rowdy island to ourselves and the few other travelers looking for a peaceful time.
So that's where we are right now, and we'll be here for two more days until we catch a boat back to Surat Thani on the mainland. From there we'll catch a bus to take us all the way down into Malaysia before the 15th, as Nate's visa expires then, and we chose rather than paying for visa extensions or border hopping just to jump back into Thailand, to just continue south through Malaysia and onto Singapore and Indonesia. It looks like Kins will survive with us for another couple weeks, and then she'll probably take a train to Singapore and fly back to Houston from there, as it's much cheaper than Bangkok or Kuala Lumpur.
On a side note, we have all developed this amazing ability to attract dogs of varying size and demeanor to follow us everywhere we go, whether we encourage them or not. It's gotten to the point where we have to deliberately pay no attention or even be mean to them to get them to leave us alone. Not that we don't all love dogs, but it's getting us into situations where we feel like we have to take care of them, and a lot of these dogs belong to other people and when we leave, as we invariably do, it puts the animals into difficult and sometimes dangerous situations.
On another side note that only one or two of you will care about, even from Asia I am winning my fantasy football league by two games, and I haven't even seen a game since I left.
On a very final side note Kinsey and I woke up at 6am last Wednesday morning to watch seven straight hours of election coverage over a few Chang's and some of Thailand's best "blended spirit", Hong Thong. It was a very exciting day for us, and it was remarkable to see how many Thai people were concerned with the outcome. Over the last week we've spoken to people from all over the world and when we tell them we are American the first thing every one of them talks about is Obama. There is enormous support for Obama all across the world, and we are all beginning to understand how big a role America plays in the lives of people whose countries we know little about, and about whose politics we know even less.
Love to all, and with no malicious intent towards McCain supporters, let me quote my good friend Tyler Romes and say...
Barrack me Obamadeus
B

Sunday, November 2, 2008

Since Tokyo

After meeting up with Nate, we all spent a week in Bangkok and met some great people both staying in our hostel and running the art gallery two doors down from us. We went to markets and ate great food and walked for days and days and at the point where it was a little hectic we decided to leave the big city for the country, or rather the jungle. We took a train to Kanchanaburi, then walked for a couple miles, caught a bus for an hour or so, drank a beer and finally hired a man who had a truck to take us six miles up a mountain where we found the Shanti Farm, run by a small family of five (Wan Pen, Mr. Hey, Nat and her two kids Bang and Ben) who we spent the next three days with, doing little more than eating and exploring the surrounding temples and jungles and monkeys chained to shrines.
After the farm we got a free ride down the mountain from a nice man then took the bus back to Kanchanaburi where we spent the next four days at a guesthouse directly on the River Kwai. We had planned to stay there one night as a transfer point back to Bangkok, but we were all too relaxed too often to motivate ourselves to leave. So we spent most of our time reading and eating and walking and then reading again and then avoiding the monsoons which came in every night near dusk.
Right now we're in Bangkok for the last time, staying at a hotel near the train station as we leave tomorrow at 1pm toward Chumphon, where we catch an overnight boat to Koh Tao to spend the next couple weeks living on the islands (Koh Tao, Koh Samui and Koh Phangan) off the eastern coast of Thailand.
Sorry that we haven't posted more pictures, as Kins stated below we're having a hard time with our memory card and Thai computers, but we'll try to post more soon.
Love to all,
B

Saturday, November 1, 2008

my failed love affair

so, computers and traveling. Seems like they would have a decent relationship, but don't be fooled. The computers in Thailand are racists. They hate white people and they especially hate white peoples photo uploading devices. This is of no fault of mine. I have tried everything, bribes, sex, sex and bribes. The computers are not having it. And so our pictures upload at the snailish rate of 30 PER HOUR. I will have you know that we have shot over 1300. Pictures, that is, not computers. (though tempted). And as soon as I figure out the right combination of money, booze, and boobs, I will have thos pictures uploaded for your viewing pleasure. Until then, enjoy some of Brents handsome writing!
love, k
miss all you assholes.

Tokyo










So way back on the 13th of October Kinsey and I flew to Tokyo for what was supposed to be a two day stopover before flying on to Bangkok to meet up with Nate. However, instead of saving enough yen to buy train tickets back to the airport two days later, we got thirsty and decided to buy the biggest container of orange juice imaginable, and upon arriving at the Nippori train station realized that we were 60 yen (basically 60 cents) short. We were already late because we had been walking around Shibuya with the two English kids we met and spent most of our time in Tokyo with, Nicky and Tim, so I was sent on a mad dash around Nippori trying to find an atm that accepted Kinsey's American bank card, which is much, much more difficult than you would think in such a cosmopolitan city like Tokyo, while she stayed back at the station with our packs (mine being of exemplary quality, thanks pops). So, five atm's and half an hour later I make it back to the station but am not allowed to enter the area where Kins is waiting for me, and after buying our tickets am directed directly to the platform where the train picks up. So, coupled with the dual emotions of complete panic and complete terror, I double back around and break through a toll gate going the wrong direction, find Kinsey literally bawling her eyes out, slap some sense into her (just kidding), grab her and my shit and rush back through the same gate I just broke through to make it onto the train seconds before it leaves.


"Thank God, everything's going to be okay, they've got over two hours to make it to the airport and the train ride only takes about an hour" is surely what you're thinking at this point.



Nope.



Kinsey and I have this amazing ability to form some kind of horrible anti-superhero team when we combine our powers, and these great things tend to happen to us, like getting on trains that go almost all the way to the airport but then divert to local access and take us to the middle of nowhere before we see a station attendant running at us telling us to get off the train because there is truly no more track left.



So, we scramble around the station, find a train going back the other direction, realize where we made the mistake, get on another wrong train going the right direction, realize our mistake quicker this time, jump off, jump right back on the last and final and right train that does in fact go to the airport which gets us there with just enough time to make it to the United counter at 6:30 pm, the same time our flight is scheduled to leave. It is at this point we are told that we can't catch a flight out of Tokyo for Bangkok until two days later.




So from here our worry shifts to Nate, who is currently boarding a plane in the same airport and expecting us to meet him on the other side of customs in Bangkok. We run, and I mean that, I actually ran, across the South terminal of the Narita airport to find the North terminal where at the Northwest Airlines counter I am lucky enough to find a woman who speaks nearly perfect English, and who can translate a message to the attendants on Nate's flight, letting him know we missed our flight and will e-mail him with all the details.




At this point neither Kins or I really have any energy or motivation to do anything. After an hour or so of silence, we finally decided to head to the city of Narita, about a ten minute train ride from the airport. Neither of us have any hope or desire of finding anything of merit in Narita, we just don't want to go all the way back to Tokyo. So we eventually find a hostel, after walking the city for hours due to horrible directions, and fall asleep right away. We are woken early in the morning by the lovely sounds of two Englishman snoring, and that oh so delightful smell of whiskey and beer finding it's way out of the body through the skin. In the morning we begrudgingly talked to these two men because proximity forced it, and we found out they were flying to Las Vegas later in the day. Such surprise rushed over us.




But after all of this, all the hassle and toil and running, we were given the chance to explore a quiet, quaint little city, tucked away in the Japanese countryside that we never would have gone to otherwise. It is always amazing how in the bad moments there is no way to see outside of them, even when you know the only place they can lead you is somewhere sweet and unknown.




We spent our two days roaming outdoor markets filled with traditional foods and instruments and old country people so separated from the crush and flow of Tokyo. It was here, while walking down a long winding road, happy with what we were seeing, content in the culture and kindness of the people, that we turned a corner at the bottom of the hill to find a temple complex as big as any I'd ever imagined, unassuming and shy in it's placement, here, in the middle of nothing, with only the trees and the waterfalls to speak of it's existence. It was here that we found the Japan we had seen in our minds since youth, unaffected by the way memory can change things, natural, silent, green, bigger than our ability to accept it.




At night we stayed in a traditional style Japanese room where we watched Japanese television we couldn't understand but still found all of the hilarity in. We had the entire upstairs to ourselves and were drinking very cheap and very bad Sake when Austin walked in and instantly became our friend. He was from Galveston, and his family had recently suffered from the latest hurricane whose name I can't remember. He had been teaching English in Taiwan for the last few years, but had finally run into trouble with his visa and was in Narita because he missed his flight due to the hassle with customs. We spent the next day at the temple again, showing him all we had seen the day before and finding new paths in the walkway that led to fish ponds and graveyards. In this way you make new friends, when for no other reason than random chance you stumble upon people with common interest and purpose, and you have no reason to not accept them into your life.




Later in the day, after eating grilled sweet potatoes and watching traditional Japanese music performances, we said goodbye, and shortly after, Kins and I caught our train, this time far earlier than we needed to, and made it to the airport on time. On the plane we watched The Hulk and ate awful food, waiting to greet Bangkok, but really, waiting to greet Nate.


Love,
B

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

The beginning

I promise you, this blog does exist and we really are traveling around Asia. In fact, I have been derelict in my writing duties for just that reason: traveling is generally more fun than writing about it.
However, that changes now as this first blog will be the one to get everything moving.
We are having quite an incredible time, and have already spent time in the Jungle (deep, deep jungle), saved a hurt dog, eaten Tom Ka the best soup ever, missed airplane flights, slept in a guesthouse on the River Kwai, been given Thai lessons by kids and have enjoyed many a Chang, local Thai beer that is surprisingly delicious and costs almost exactly one US dollar.
More soon, love to all,
B