Monday, November 11, 2013

Typhoon vs hurricane and more hard times in Asia


                                            China's Hainan island, 10 Nov

How about the difference between a hurricane and a typhoon. 

Both are tropical weather systems with their difference being  in what part of the planet they happen in.

Tropical weather systems that happen in the Atlantic basin with winds in excess of 74 miles an hour are hurricanes while this occurrence in the northwest Pacific / west of the international date line are Typhoons.

Typhoon Haiyan (going on now) due it's intensity is in it's own class and weather services are classifying it as a super typhoon due to it's intensity with sustained wind speeds in excess of 175 miles per hour and gusts of over 200 miles an hour, yikes.  For me it's hard to put this in perspective so I got in my truck and at 50 I stuck my head out the window and in my mind multiplied it by four, yup, yikes again. Compared to a class 5 hurricane  such as Sandy, with winds of 156 miles per hour and over.

With winds of the magnitude of typhoon Haiyan, combined with heavy rain and breaking surf of over 20 foot that just struck in the Philippines I just can't imagine what the survivors in places like Tacloban are feeling like. Families and friends unaccounted for, lack of proper drinking water, food shortages, home and all their possessions gone and surrounded with the mass destruction the typhoon left in its wake.

Haiyan's storm tract had it coming to shore in the northern part of Vietnam and heading for the China border.  It is said that Vietnam evacuated over 500,000 people from the path of the storm and so far only 6 deaths are reported dead and another 8 from a fishing boat along with the boat are missing.  On land fall the typhoons winds had diminished to the 100 miles per hour range, while dropping 4 to 8 inches of rain.  Though thinking back on my car experiment, even at 50 miles my eyes were watering, so 100 is still a very impressive number and 4 to 8 inches of rain in one shot is big.  I'm not that familiar with the north of Vietnam but if Saigon received rain in that volume the only way to get around most of the city would be by boat.                                                                

After injuring my leg 8 months ago in Saigon.



Not fully recovered and walking most of the time unassisted but carry my cane on longer jaunts.  Interesting in that I was very self conscious of using my cane or even carrying it but people don't seem to notice if I have it or not. 

It might be due to the style or lack of style of my cane.  It's an old rugged looking family heirloom I talked my mom into giving me.  Well really didn't have to talk her into it but need to calm her suspicious of why her avid runner son had interest in an old ragged looking cane. Then remembering when it was time to head back to California and asking my son how I should carry it back and his reply - "just carry it". What a joke I thought it was until the TSA man asked if I could make it through the security check without it, little did I know how this was a harbinger of the future of when I would really need it to get around. 

My cane came to the USA from Europe when my great grandfather emigrated to America.  Our roots are in Scotland, so it could be from their.  In my mind it is from Scotland and I can see great grandfather trudging from glen to glen in search of a sturdy and straight tree branch from the crotch of  a hardwood tree. No thought to it's appearance but just something practical to help support him as I'm using it now.  I know very little about my relatives back in the old country, I like the ring of that - "old country" dramatic sounding isn't it, so I might write a book about them and not have to worry about the facts getting in the way of a good story because all my family is gone and so are the facts.

Lets get back to me - in case you weren't aware I injured my leg exercising at 9-23 park in Saigon in February.  Unlike many I thought I could power through the injury but after a week of my exercising regime I had to give up as I was hardly able to use my leg, which as you might know makes walking a real challenge, especially on or along the street of Saigon.

Bound and determined to find some relief without tossing in the proverbial towel and heading back to medicare land and to be Obama Care for you youngsters. I visited expat doctor Padro at Family Medical Care and he was all that a GP should be.  Referred me to some French orthopedic guy in the same group and as Dr. Pedro was all he should be the doctor was all he shouldn't be. While confirming all the stereotypes I knew of French and their behavior.

Though still with a firm grip on that towel, I decided to give acupuncture a try.  Two weeks and about the same amount of dollars spent and very little relief so I tossed that towel as hard as I could and booked a flight back to the US of A on Cathay Pacific.

A new ortho guy and a course of physical therapy but with no results, then an MRI and the diagnoses is AVN (avascular necrosis) lack of blood flow to my hip joint.  So go visit a another orthopedic surgeon for a second opinion, takes an ex-ray and says there really wasn't a need for the MRI it was very clear from the ex-ray it was AVN and my hip joint was a mess.  The only fix option was to operate and replace the damaged hip a new one.

About three months ago I had the surgery, recovery for a couple days in the hospital after, then home with a walker which I used for a month or so, and all the time intensive physical therapy.  I'm still doing the exercises the physical therapists prescribed combined with walking a good part of most days with very little pain.

We will see how good I really am doing as I'm off to Saigon soon and will be flying back from Bangkok in a few months or so.  Much shorter than my annual trek but should amount to a few interesting stories.  

Soon will be writing about Vietnam visa's and my quest for a better lodging option then my rented room in Saigon. If you have any thoughts about lodging options by the month, drop me a note or make comment on the blog, thanks.
    

Sunday, November 10, 2013

A look at Saigon with photos












One of the questions I'm most often asked is "when I visit Saigon - what attractions "are must see's"   My reply is that the must see's is the daily life of the city and the daily life of the Vietnamese people. Grab yourself a street corner and watch what goes on around you, get bored take a walk, hire a cyclo or a motorbike to drive you around.   Though, if you go for a cyclo or a motorbike make sure you negotiate a price before mounting up.  My self I like walking but carry a business card from the place I'm staying and when I tire or get hopelessly lost I grab a taxi or a motorbike and hire them to take me to the address on the card.

Whatever, take your time and do a lot of gawking, Saigon is like unfolding an onion, it's multi-layers of things that some times are not what they seem or there's more to it than you thought.  I still walk down street I thought I knew and make new discoveries.

The following photos and some examples.  

Note:  click on an image to expand it and at the bottom you will thumbnails of the photos - 






streetside mechanics
Banana motorbiking

What a smile

Drive- in fruit market

Fresh fruit snacks on a roll


hem - Pham Nhu Lao backpackers area



Vietnamese girls bedecked in traditional ao dai's

quickly disappearing French colonial architecture  

cyclo mounted tourist




hem


Add caption




 vendor, peddling her wares 









               
coconuts 
low tech alley eatery - specializing in - you may have guessed it eggs

Saturday, October 05, 2013

Gearing up for holiday travel from Agoda's blog



TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2013

Book Now to Save on Holiday Travel

Ready or not, the holidays are around the corner, and it's time to start planning your travel. We analyzed hundreds of millions of queries performed on KAYAK last year to predict the cheapest times to book and travel for this year's holiday season.

When to Book (Hint: Now)


For Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year's Eve travel, on average the cheapest airfares were found between September and mid-October. Procrastinators beware: after mid-October, airfares for Thanksgiving increased up to 17%, 51% for Christmas and 25% for New Year's Eve.
For those traveling abroad throughout the holiday season: try to book international travel as soon as possible. Last year, there was no low period for international airfare for Thanksgiving, Christmas or New Year's Eve; instead, airfare steadily increased closer to departure.

When to Travel
Thanksgiving
For those traveling domestically, the best days to depart were Monday and Tuesday (15-23% below average). Try to return Thanksgiving Day, Friday or the following Tuesday; returning these days saved travelers more than 20%. International travelers should try leaving close to or on Thanksgiving Day or stay through the weekend to save as average airfares tended to be lower on these days.

Christmas
For domestic travelers, try departing as close to the 25th as possible - last year this saved travelers more than 20% on average. Try to avoid departing and returning during the weekends surrounding Christmas (fares were up to 24% above average). For international travel, trips 3-5 days in length centered around the holiday offered the best savings.

New Year's Eve
For domestic travel, shorter trips centered around New Year's Eve/New Year's Day displayed the cheapest fares (more than 15% below average). For example, travelers who departed the 29th-1st and returned the 31st-3rd found savings up to 30%. The same goes for international travelers, but be sure to avoid returning after the 1st as the airfares steadily increased daily up to 27% above average on the 5th.

You may be able to put off family plans and gift shipping until the last-minute, but booking your travel early could save you serious money. Happy Holiday travel planning.

Thanks to kayak POSTER JESSICAA - TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2013 © http://www.kayak.com/news

Thursday, October 03, 2013

living in Saigon


So you're living in Saigon. followed by -  Oh, ya, had a friend who visited Vietnam and said it was very beautiful. I respond by saying, ya that's true but mostly I am in a part of Vietnam, Saigon, that's not so beautiful. This leads to the question, why - do you stay.

Funny, it's at this point I'm always a little stumped even after 13 years of fending the question.

There is a line in the movie the "Quiet American" where he says something about how the country gets to you, gaining an unexplainable hold. That goes a long ways toward describing the hold Vietnam (Saigon) has had on me.  

However, as Vietnam rushes to embrace economic growth a lot of


old school Saigon
Saigon's character and mystic is in jeopardy as developers move in, building high rise buildings and new modern shopping complexes housing designer shops and chain stores like Gap, Body Works, Levi and the like. The latest big deal to come along, strategically located on one of Saigon's major roundabouts is the largest Starbucks in the world.  Okay, maybe not in the world but very,very big - selling coffee at four times the cost of Vietnamese ca phe (coffee). For guys like me these new developments, while attractive, seem contrived and artificial, lacking the sole that was Saigon. As the uniqueness of the city center disappears Saigon's hold is loosening on me.

Ben Thanh Market and new Saigon skyline

Of course all this modernization makes a visit to the area much more costly than before and probably why mostly what you see in the city center is foreigners and spiffy looking Vietnamese. A view of this is what probably is at the core of tourists comments exclaiming that communism is dead and capitalism is the new norm in Vietnam and they report seeing an expanding the middle class. 

Though, interesting enough just a few blocks away from this

modern upgrade you'll find the gritty realities of Vietnam populated by mostly Vietnamese workers who live a hand to mouth, day to day existence. Here it's not for show so the only Rolls, Bentley's, BMW or Mercedes you will see are just the ones passing through on their way to or from the Dong Khoi area of city center.  

According to data published by the Vietnamese government the
average Vietnamese worker is between 18 and 40 years old with 58% of these folks earning 2-3 million dong (95.00 - 140.00 US) a month.  At 40 years old many are worn out and sick so if employed, are fired by their employers. The government has an ongoing study to gain an understanding of why these folks are unhappy. Initial results of the study blame the cause of the unhappiness on *Social evils * Government red tape  and Environmental problems.

Anyway, in the eyes of a 13 year veteran of life in Vietnam (Saigon) the city is gaining an unnatural feel, though still interesting. Thailand calls itself "the land of smiles" and up until a few years

ace motorbike driver Vu,  call - 01203724016
ago I thought the title fitted Vietnam even more than Thailand but not now.  People don't smile as much as they used too, maybe due to *Social evils * Government red tape  and Environmental  problems or they are just too tired.

All the changes aside, I'm still looking forward to my return to Saigon but mourn the loss of what it originally held me. Vietnam still has a lot too offer but "the times they are a changin".


Tuesday, October 01, 2013

Rainy season hits hard

Thailand, Vietnam brace as typhoon batters China

Published: 7:56PM Monday September 30, 2013 Source: Reuters
Seventy-four Chinese fishers are missing after a typhoon sunk three fishing boats in the South China Sea, as Thailand and Vietnam braced for torrential rain and flooding.
The ships were hit by Typhoon Wutip on Sunday as they navigated gales near the Paracel Islands, about 330 km from China's island province of Hainan, state news agency Xinhua said, citing sources with the Hainan maritime search and rescue centre.
Rescuers had rescued 14 survivors, the sources said. The boats were sailing from the southern province of Guangdong.
Rains from the storm were expected to reach Vietnam today before hitting Thailand tomorrow.
Thai officials warned that more heavy rains could inundate already flood-hit areas of the northeast. At least 22 people have been killed in this year's flooding.
"We're expecting more floods," Teerat Ratanasevi, a government spokesman, told reporters.
"Soldiers have been asked to help evacuate people trapped in flood zones."
Authorities in central Vietnam have moved children and elderly people to schools and other more solid buildings ahead of the storm.
In the central province of Quang Tri, an estimated 82,000 people would need to be evacuated if Wutip made a direct hit, a government statement said.

Typhoons gather strength from warm sea water and tend to dissipate after making landfall. They frequently hit Taiwan, Japan, the Philippines, Hong Kong and southern China during a typhoon season that lasts from early summer to late autumn.
Vietnam said heavy rain had been falling in several central provinces while flooding and landslides could strike the region later this week.

Monday, September 09, 2013

lets Talk Cambodian politics and look at some photos of Phnom Penh



A Cambodian kid intent on taking a chicken, over looks a low hanging tree branch .  The story goes, engrossed in snatching the chicken an overhead tree branch poked out one of his eyes and the kid was young Hun Sen, just re elected to his fourth them as Cambodia's Prime Minister.  I liked that version of how Hen Sen came to have one glass eye, told to  
me by a Cambodian/American so I stuck it in. Have no idea how true the story was as his official bio has him losing the eye while participating in the Khmer Rouge offensive against Phnom Penh in April 1975.

Battalion commander - Eastern region of Democratic Cambodia  with the Khmer Rouge and during the purge in 1977 fled to Vietnam with his battalion..   To return as a rebel leader backed by the Vietnamese government as they beat back Pol Pot and took over Cambodia, as the Vietnamese withdrew he was appointed deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister to the Peoples Republic of Kampuchea (the Vietnamese's given name for Cambodia) in 1979.   Giving the bases to Cambodia's Prince Norodom Sihanouk's referring to Hun Sen as  "the one eyed lackey of the Vietnamese".

As of yesterday it was confirmed  by the NEC (Nation Election Committee) and the government that Hun Sen's  party, the CCP (Cambodian Peoples Party) won the majority of the parliament's seats and once again he is Prime Minister.  

Meanwhile there's a strong movement by the CNRP ( Cambodian National Rescue Party) lead by Sam Rainsy protesting the legality of the election results.  However, it appears all will be going on the same as usual in Cambodia, the rich get richer, the poor struggle on in the countryside and for foreigners it's still cheap, interesting and a fun place to visit. 
   









Doug

Thursday, September 05, 2013

Pattaya - play safe

Thailand's first tourist court opens tomorrow


Monday, August 19, 2013

A leg up and a way

Sorry about the lack of Southeast asia posts, I'm still in the states but do have things to write about Vietnam, Thailand and Cambodia but it's been a full time job coping with the hip I damaged while working out and running at 9-13 park in Saigon the middle of February.   While in Saigon I tried using traditional western doctors, the a course of acupuncture through a traditionally trained Chinese doctor.   Hobbled back to the USA, first diagnoses was a hip flexor problem, couple weeks of therapy with no results, then an MRI. diagnosed  it's cause as Avascular Necrosis  ,irreparable other than cutting out the hip and transplanting a new man made one in it's place.  THe surgery was done on 7/31/2013 and now I'm in the nist of recovery and relearning to walk on my left leg.


Now it's Sunday, August 18, and things are improving, stopped the pain meds yesterday and the pain in tolerable but my stomach is queasy, guess it misses the narcotics. Making a couple trips a day up and down from my second floor apartment with minimal drama but very slowly.. Still using a walker, you know one of those things that mostly older people (hate to think of it but guess I'm one also) hang on too and push around but working on replacing it with a cane (Got this cool old antique cane that my great, grandfather brought with him from Europe) though hope be walking unassisted soon.


Still fighting the anxiety of knowing my hip repair was done by cutting into my butt to reach inside and disassemble my left hip, then cutting off the ball on my femur and installing a metal and ceramic replacement, (drill and force fit) reassembling the hip and sewing me up, Good to go, yikes!



Wish me luck and I'll do my damndest to get us from beyond but back to Southeast asia. 


Thanks for your interest -   Doug

Thursday, July 25, 2013

Double decker tourist bus on route from Roi Et from Bangkok crashes, killing 19 and another 20 injured.

This style of bus was involved in the crash.


BANGKOK: Nineteen people were killed and 20 hurt Tuesday when a double decker coach collided with a truck in central Thailand and burst into flames, authorities said.

"Altogether there are 19 dead -- 18 died at the scene and another one died at the hospital," said an official from the national institute for emergency medicine in Bangkok, who asked not to be named.

She added that 20 people were injured in the early morning crash in central Saraburi province.

The inter-province bus, which was travelling from Bangkok to Roi Et in the northeast of the country, caught fire after the crash.

Images from Thai television news showed the extent of the damage to the vehicle, which appeared to have been completely incinerated and reduced to its metal shell.

Authorities said the crash was a head-on collision involving three vehicles.

Police have arrested the driver of the cement truck, who they said appeared to have lost control of his vehicle just before the incident.

"The truck crossed from the opposite lane of traffic and hit the bus," said local police officer Lieutenant Colonel Assavathep Janthanari, adding that a pickup truck behind the bus had also been involved in the crash.

He said the dead and injured were from the coach and the pickup truck.

It was not immediately clear how many people had been travelling in the coach.

Witthichart Kallayanamitr, director of the company under the ministry of transport which owns the bus, said its normal capacity would have been 32 people.

Safety standards are often poor in Thailand and transport accidents are relatively common.

Earlier this month an overnight sleeper train travelling from Bangkok to the northern city of Chiang Mai derailed injuring 23 people, including 18 foreign tourists.

In April, at least five people were killed, including a seven-month-old baby and a Belgian woman, and 53 were injured when a Thai tour bus plummeted off a hillside in northern Phitsanulok province after its brakes failed. (AFP)
thenews.com.pk
  
Founded by: Mir Khalil-ur-Rahman

  
 
 

Sunday, July 21, 2013

Crutches are evil -



Looks like I'll really will be  in the states longer than my original plan.  Got through the heart pre check up with my cardiologist and received his clearance for surgery to get my hip replaced. Though I'm also going to have a nuclear test on the effectiveness of my heart arteries but guess they think all is ok because they've scheduled for the surgery on the 31 of this month (July).  Guess a total hip replacement is the only way to deal with AVN (avascular necrosis) the problem that causing all this trouble and pain

Decided on dr Paul Sasaura of Summit Otho to do the job.. He seems like a pretty sharp cookie, using the new, up today, minimal invasive technique.  A small incision about 2 inches square and then once inside he works to minimize the trauma induced to the tissue surrounding the bone with the help of a computer map.    


Still working on some new Vietnam stuff along with Cambodia and it's national election next week.

Anyway,folks if you're anything like me (over 65) don't push too hard on those work outs. 


Doug

Wednesday, July 03, 2013

A few photos of Angkor Wat, hometown of the Khmer empire, built around 900 AD - Siem Reap, Cambodia







Always thinking of you
Doug
                 

From the needle in Saigon to California on crutches



Okay, acupuncture, physical therapy, stretching regimen, light exercise and don't even think of moving were all things recommended by Doctors to repair my damaged leg I hurt while working out in Saigon. Meanwhile, I've been in pain and barely able to walk for going on four months.  Also to my consternation doctors look at me and my white hair then seem to lose interest in doctoring, relegating me to the group of over the hill guys not worth their time. They don't really say that but since my injury the traditional Chinese herbal and acupuncture doc was the only one that came up with a treatment plan except for the crutches which Dr Shea sports medicine specialist at Mercy Medical Group prescribed to keep my weight off the leg in the hope it would heal itself.

Though it’s interesting that Dr Shea's strategy came to pass as a result of my complaints about the failure of physical therapy to improve my condition and was more of a shot from the hip (no pun intended) than a real plan. Waiting in one of those little exam rooms for an hour as they looked for the results of my MRI report, once found, minutes pass, he mumbles about the sad state of my hip and something about a hip replacement to fix it. I add that I had been running/walking 2 – 3 miles a day for as long as I can remember and this is my first problem but I add I'm still in pain but not as bad as it was. So the injury seems to be slowly improving but it’s so slow I'm getting depressed. All this as he is trying to slip out the door and over his shoulder he tells to keep my weight off of it and use crutches and would leave a note with the receptionist referring me to a surgeon and he was gone. His referrals first opening was months away but after I made a scene in the reception area they found another doc with a sooner opening but still a couple weeks away, not good but better.

Meanwhile, I'm conflicted over this whole deal, they are talking hip replacement and as I said I had never experienced any problem before until this latest injury. Even then the pain wasn't really in the hip but generally in the upper part of my leg. Nobody wants to hear my explanation of where it hurt when I injured it so have had an MRI 
and ex-ray of the hip and from this they all say my hip is warn, arthritis they say. They are probably correct about a warn hip and arthritis but up until the injury I had no problems with it. Doctors I fear have become just parts changers like auto mechanics and feel doctoring just takes too much time and time is money.

Meanwhile, I'm here in California but have a lot of stuff to write about on Vietnam. So please follow me and become a member.

Doug

Sunday, June 30, 2013

Get your motorbike on



motorbike salesman
                                                 
highway patrol Vietnamese style




take a nap
Saigon is crowded, a little grimy around the edges, air is chocked full of exhaust fumes and the noise of motorbikes, truck and bus horns along with the ambient sound of 11 million or so people going about their lives.  At any one given time you'll see Rolls Royce’s, Bentley's, big, high end 
Mercedes and BMW's along with push carts, bicycles and so many motorbikes that they overflow onto the sidewalks.  Most piloted by steely eyed,expressionless drivers moving at such a sedate speed that it’s not uncommon to see motorbike drivers chatting with each other between bikes. Adding to the crazy, surreal traffic scene - pillion riders (passengers) holding large panes of glass, plumbing pipe, animals, fish tanks including water and fish, plants and trees, televisions and assorted computer components. Often you will see solo motorbike guys balances all sorts of cargo on the bike, propane gas tanks, bottled water, cases of beer, gallon containers of cooking oil, bunches of bananas, of course refrigerators, fans and air-conditioning units, mega bunches of empty plastic bottles for recycling, pigs
get  your motor running


boutique motorbike shop
and chickens and just pretty much anything that has to be transported.

An example of this was at one of the places I stayed, they had a new refrigerator delivered and it arrived riding pillion, the driver steadying it with one hand and operating the bike with the other.  As I've mentioned this is a common way of delivery but what I hope isn't common is that when the driver got the frig inside he lost his grip, recovered but ended up setting it down on his toe and I'm sure those standard issue flip flops weren't much help against the impact. However, those Vietnamese are a tough folk, saw him wince but no sound was uttered, just lifted it off his toe, pulled out the old frig, slid the new one in, carried out the old one out and positioned it on the back of the seat on 

modern motorbike food vendor


old style food vendor
his bike, slid in front of it, all the time steadying it with one hand and his free hand to drive off.

No matter how many times I see some of these events I'm never failed to be amazed.  The number one example is the bike carrying a large sheet of glass or mirror steadied by the pillion rider and I'm talking large, like three foot wide by four foot or so high. The sheet sitting on the passenger's lap with his outstretched, bare hands holding the edges of the pane.  

Then you have the one where a pillion passenger sitting in the seat backwards holding the handle of a two wheeler, like used in warehouses to move freight, and strapped on it is tank filled with welding gas as they move through traffic. Then there is the friend helping his buddy with a non running motor bike by driving his bike and pushing the other with his outstretched, flip flop sheathed foot and keeping up with traffic.

motorbike pickup


Yes,  its mind boggling the kind of stuff motorbikes transport but even crazier is the way they have been modified to do special things, adding a trailer hitch to carry additional cargo in cargo trailer, the addition of two wheels in the back for handicapped drivers, racks built over the back part of the seat to hold bottled water or propane gas and only the imagination limits the modifications and uses of the commonly motorbike that is the USA are called scooters.    
Thanks for stopping by 
Doug