A resort in
You knew when sitting next to the fireplace in
freezing, wherever, that booking a trip to
Straight off the airplane in
So you do the tours in both major cities. Yes, good,
lovely, hang on honey! I want a picture of you in front of that tiny man with
the ice-cream hat! You did the cyclo, the museums, the lake, the river and
bought something for your loved ones back home, which you’re going to carry
around
I often wonder about some tourists. It seems like they
wander around with a checklist in their heads. Souvenirs – checked. Tried to
negotiate with local people for a ride around town – done it. Visited every
place the Lonely Planet said I should see – yep. Maybe it’s just me, I do
live here after all so perhaps I’m a little bit too harsh towards tourists. I
know a tourist’s time is short and often exhausting. It makes me wonder
why we call modern tourism a ‘holiday’ because it seems more like the pain of
paying a traffic fine.
You’re getting tired and feel the need to get out of
the big cities. It’s all too busy and reminds you of why you needed a holiday
from your busy world in the first place. A great holiday is full of
surprises.
It’s time to go inland or upland or to the sea. Open
Lonely Planet to page whatever and spend the morning reading it out aloud to
your partner. Have a small argument – decide on somewhere. Terrific! With any
luck, you’ve ended up in my neck of the woods – central
I’m not sure whether you’d agree to my proposition that
the trick to enjoying
Here in the center there are a thousand places to visit
– sure, not that accessible but doable. A lot of tourists grab the
opportunity to ride bicycles in Hoi An and some of the smaller places but you
could also just take a boat for the day and throw the travel guide book into
the harbor while you’re at it…
Life outside the cities is full of surprises, little
unexpected things.
Even as I’m writing this, a gecko, that small lizard
with the fat, round fingers that walks up the walls and gobbles up the flies
is slowly crawling across the TV screen in the bar where I’m sitting. You
never know what will happen that’s nice and usually not dangerous!
Sure, do the sights, but why not get your horoscope
read by the local Sharman? Get a decent map and walk for a few blocks –
yes, walk - check how people live for all the world to see – the local
hairdresser with a lamp on her head picking out ear wax. Check out the dude
down the street welding metal in open toe sandals or the motorbike seat
tailors plying their trade between the mobile phone shops.
Shopping is a scream in the local shops. Prepare to be
pushed, shoved, nudged and generally treated like a nuisance! It’s even
better fun trying to tell the difference between the blue 20,000 dong note
and the half million dong note in the dark lighting of a local café. Gotta
watch that one! Check your notes by the way and learn to give the cashiers
the faded old notes but don’t be surprised if they refuse to take them and
demand fresh money!
I love watching the farmers cart pigs in baskets,
stacked four or five high on an old Honda cub. I also like seeing the
electricity guys carrying a four meter bamboo ladder across four lanes of
traffic. Even better is when you have four of these guys in the middle of an
intersection – no warning gear – three holding the ladder and the fourth
swaying back and forth at the top wiring up festival lights. Cirque de
Soleil, you guys should visit
A motorbike tour is a must-do. Either ride it yourself
or get a guide and driver. There’s nothing quite like having to swerve
around a tourist bus, a taxi, and cows crossing the street. You can marvel at
the dogs sleeping in the street with the same disregard for personal safety
as their owners. The most fun is scratching your head trying to figure out
why someone decided to extend their wedding venue to part of the road at peak
hour. Wedding music is the only sound I know of that can drown out a
construction truck horn! You can’t see or experience this stuff in the big
cities.
Unpredictable, unexpected, “what just happened?” moments are all around you in central
For the average Vietnamese in the countryside,
foreigners are just obstacles to go around. We’re part of the background as
they focus on the need to make a living or chill out over card games in ‘a
million’ bamboo shack coffee shops.
It’s quite easy to get up close and see what they
do. A local market outside any main town is a real revelation, a blast from
the past; the way humans have haggled and bartered for centuries in between
gossip and hard bargaining. Have you ever heard a thousand women shopping at
the same time? Do buy some fruit, you’ll quickly discover the taste different
to what chemical preservation is in a modern supermarket.
Above all, get to the mountains and look back at the
beach.
Someone once said that the best way to travel is just
to pick a direction and go.
Tuoitrenews, Stivi Cooke
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Chủ Nhật, 16 tháng 3, 2014
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