Friday, February 27, 2009

dragon bay

From vietnam w alicia & nico

From vietnam w alicia & nico

From vietnam w alicia & nico


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with my sister alicia and her boyfriend nico we took a 3 day tour of halong bay- or dragon bay as its called in vietnamese. its a pretty extraordinary piece of geography- there's easily 500 limestone mini-islands strewn throughout the bay. some are as big as football fields, but most are much smaller mountain tops jutting out of the ocean. and one, cat ba island, is big enough to have a national park on it. we went for a bike ride on the island, and then for a short hike with an old vietnam vet- not an american vet. he showed us a cave he used to hide in when the US was bombing. he also showed us some bullet holes in his leg- he had 7 bullet wounds. it was amazing to hike around with this guy... he didn't speak much english, but seemed to appreciate how interested we were. later on when we were having a soda, he told us (through another tour guide) that he keeps strong by having a shot of this stuff every day- its rice whiskey infused with dead animals. the floating bits and pieces are for extra flavor.
From vietnam w alicia & nico

Saturday, February 21, 2009

bipedal bears

saw these asiatic black bears in laos, outside luang prabang. they're a few small stone tools away from taking down great apes as the heir apparent to the human dynasty. seriously, when you see these bears start walking around, your inner animal alarm goes berzerk- if they had evolved a few millenia earlier, you know that they would be hunting you down with spears and stone axes. as if the claws and teeth aren't enough.

bipedal bears from kevin smith on Vimeo.
read carl sagan's 'dragons of eden' recently. its about the evolution and the human brain... pretty interesting short book, and lots of good tie ins to 'guns, germs, steel'. given the book's age (it was written in 1976) its held up pretty well. except where carl sagan talks about the future of human intelligence with references to an unreleased video game called pong. then its a little bit dated.

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

ralph wiggum in laos

this is my favorite sign so far
From laos part 2 (the other side of laos)

lao librarian crossing
From laos part 1 (spring break 09)

no trumpets allowed
From laos part 2 (the other side of laos)

Monday, February 16, 2009

vang vieng video update

got some more footage from vang vieng tubing. this... didn't work out how i planned.

ksmith unsuccessful back flip from kevin smith on Vimeo.

Friday, February 13, 2009

hanoi bia hoi

From vietnam

bia hoi is 'fresh beer'. its locally made, superminimicro-brew beer in vietnam. we hear different rumors about it, like its brewed from rice, or that there's no fermentation process involved, and that its not sanitary. all we know for sure is that its delicious. its refreshing and light and can be found at most any intersection in hanoi. two days ago we sat ourselves on a street corner for five hours drinking bia hoi and people watching.
From vietnam

got two short videos of the intersection on vimeo... nothing much happens in the videos, but you get a sense of the old quarter on any given night. check out the video below for what happens when the cops come... the vendors seem completely terrified and i'm wondering if the tourists should be slightly more alarmed given the reaction of the locals.

oh shit, its the cops! from kevin smith on Vimeo.

last night we took a cyclo around town near sunset. cyclos are like a human-powered bicycle tuk-tuk, except you sit in front of the driver. and its a helluva lot slower. we took a 1.5 liter bottle of bia hoi with us for the sunset cruise around old quarter. this city is amazing... its got small, crowded streets, incredible french colonial architecture, and a good amount of old gnarly trees. its a vibrant, busy city. and the food has been fantastic.
From vietnam

From vietnam

From vietnam

lkm got real excited when she found the balloon lady. she got her own rooster.
From vietnam

my sister alicia and nico are on their way to vietnam right now. we're going to feast our way through vietnam for the next few weeks, from hanoi to saigon. its gonna be great.

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

sapa white out


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From vietnam

got into vietnam a week ago. after 3 days on boats and buses (traveling from laos), we splurged on a room with a fireplace and a view. sapa is up in the northern mountains of vietnam, not too far from china. its cold, and while we were there, rainy and foggy. we got a 4 day white-out. the photo above is the only look we got at the huge peak dominating sapa, and we didn't even get a good look at that. the shots below show how foggy it was in town every day and night.
From vietnam

From vietnam

we got to check out a local festival in a nearby hmong village. everyone was decked out in traditional garb and playing traditional games... like tug of war and pole climb. the best part was that we were surrounded by 300 local vietnamese and i think i was far and away the tallest person there. this has never happened before. now i know how thompson and manute bol must feel. it was awesome.
From vietnam

From vietnam

Monday, February 9, 2009

takraw voodoo

the thais and laos play a volleyball-type game with their feet. they use a wicker ball- its called takraw. and they got some badass moves. we saw these guys playing in vang vieng, laos, at a school... i think it was a practice. almost every point ended in a bicycle kick spike. even more impressive is when they do a jump kick to try to block the bicycle kick spike.

takraw voodoo from kevin smith on Vimeo.
i played few times with locals. its fun, but takes a while to get used to. in other words, i sucked at it.

Saturday, February 7, 2009

muang ngoi fishing and trekking

From laos part 2 (the other side of laos)

i'm sure this old fisherman is asking himself why he took these farang (foreigners) with him fishing. with this old fisherman and 2 younger laos, we went net fishing one day in muang ngoi. the nets are incredibly long but only about 3 feet tall. and they have weights tied to the bottom.
From laos part 2 (the other side of laos)

they have a pretty elegant method for net fishing... they drop someone in holding one end of the long net near an upstream bank of the river, then the boat arcs downstream towards the opposite bank. the boat continues its huge arc back to the first bank, about 50 meters downstream from the starting point, casting the net along the way. the fishermen reel in the net as they close the distance between the two ends. this traps any fish in the ~50 meter diameter half-circle, and corrals them into the shrinking net space.

we casted about 6 times during the day. its mad hard work, especially for the person who gets dropped off in the river and has to swim to the shore towing a huge net in the current. it was exhilarating to do it twice... but i imagine it gets old fast.

its getting to be the dry season, so the take is diminishing... we only caught 3 fish. this is jay - our entrepreneurial young lao guide - with our first catch. below that is our lunch spread.
From laos part 2 (the other side of laos)

From laos part 2 (the other side of laos)


2 days later, we attempted a 2-day, 1-night self-guided trek from muang ngoi. we talked to a few guides about tours and decided we could do the trek ourselves for about 1/10th of the price they were charging. so we took a picture of this map below and decided the route: boat from m. ngoy (on the L) to ban soupkong, hike to the waterfall, then boat over the nam om river and hike to talden ban to spend the night before trekking home. we packed light, got some food & water and set out.
From laos part 2 (the other side of laos)

the hike from ban soupkong to the waterfall was not as straightforward as the sharpie-drawn map suggested. 100 meters out of the village, the trail started forking. we stayed on the major trail, but really had no idea where we were headed. got some great views though... so we were happy to keep hiking.
From laos part 2 (the other side of laos)

From laos part 2 (the other side of laos)

after ~1 hour hiking through rice fields and streams, we ran into a young girl tugging a huge water buffalo behind her. the only english she knew was "waterfall" and she pointed us back the way we came, as she probably had done countless times before to other farang. back in fields we ran into a dude with a machete who mimed that he could take us to the falls for about $2. we liked the idea of a guide with a machete, so we agreed. we hiked from dry rice fields into the jungle, up a cascading stream and many levels of small waterfalls. we got to the big waterfall and swam around for a while.
From laos part 2 (the other side of laos)

From laos part 2 (the other side of laos)

From laos part 2 (the other side of laos)

From laos part 2 (the other side of laos)

From laos part 2 (the other side of laos)

on the walk out, we ran into this guy hunting birds. he had an old tyme musket and had shot a few little birds. also ran into some kids and found a small scale hydro power unit. lots of the villages have these.
From laos part 2 (the other side of laos)

From laos part 2 (the other side of laos)

from ban soupkong we boated across the river and headed to another village to spend the night. unfortunately we had no idea how far away it was, and again the trail started splitting. after hiking for a long while we realized we had no idea where we were going. and then we remembered that laos still has loads of landmines throughout its wilderness. so we turned around and hiked out. this is laura tired and lost.
From laos part 2 (the other side of laos)

hitchhiked on a boat back to muang ngoi. never found the our overnight village, but we did hike a good long way in beautiful surroundings. one of my favorite days traveling yet.

Thursday, February 5, 2009

muang ngoi nuea

From laos part 2 (the other side of laos)

this is main street in muang ngoi nuea. most of the hustle and bustle is from chickens running around. they crow at all times of the day and sometimes they sound more like a bark than a 'cockadoodledoo'. i feel that my childhood of foghorn leghorn and looney toones cartoons did not fully prepare me for this fact (wtf mel blanc!?!).

these are the fields surrounding the village- they're dried up for the season, and cattle and water buffalo roam around the fields. everywhere you looked there were mountains in the background.
From laos part 2 (the other side of laos)

From laos part 2 (the other side of laos)

got to get more room on the picasa page from google before i can load up any more pics...

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

no cars go


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spent the last week in lao villages on the nam om river. most of the time was in muang ngoi nuea (an hour north of the town on the map). probably one of our favorite places to visit yet... no motos or cars, just a small village on the river that fishes and farms. there's giant limestone mountains along the river, looking like they were cut by a glacier long ago and then covered by dense jungle.

we'll get some pics up soon, but to get a sense of the place: we ate fresh garden salads and lots of curries and soups. got to go hiking to neighboring villages and had to mime words to get fed cause no one spoke a word of english. trekked out to hidden waterfalls and got lost in rice fields and among water buffalo herds. went fishing for a day with the locals with long nets that could circle half a soccer field... caught a few fish and cooked them over a fire sitting on sand bar in the river, eating the fish on banana leaves with salt and crushed red pepper. wandered around in long, snake-like caves where villagers lived in the 70s while the US was bombing laos back to the stone age. we even got to river "hitchhike" to get from a hike back to the muang ngoi nuea village. all in all, it was an incredibly fulfilling week in the villages... and we gladly left it all behind for the promise of hot showers and indoor plumbing in vietnam.

if you navigate on the map above, you can follow the river north all the way to muang khuea, then on highway 4 over to vietnam. thats the path we took. we stayed in the muang khuea village last night before crossing over into vietnam today. at about 4 am, i heard a rat frantically scratching its way across our room. it ended up climbing up a wall and falling off onto the bed. it clawed across laura, waking her up and giving her a 2 hour psychosis. she doesn't like rats. at all. terrified of them. she didn't get back to sleep and spent the rest of the night like a petrified mummy wrapped up in a sheet from head to toe. pics are on their way.