Monday, September 17, 2012

Dengue, big bad Bangkok and a wonder.







Honestly I really want to update the blog more often. Please believe me!


The other day though finally the excuse had arrived. Dengue fever. The last blog said we would be hanging around in Kanchanaburi for a week. This turned out to be a bit longer with the help of a mosquito friend. 


My room in hospital. Unfortunately no honey around for me or Mr Pooh. 

It all began (well the symptoms anyway) when we went out into the main street for a feed and a few beers. Normally, with budget constraints, we wouldn't eat food or drink beers but this was a special night. My age had caught up with me again. Once again for the period between August until March Clarissa could claim that we we're the same age. She could also claim ignorance that she thought I was almost 10 years older than her when we met. Although now as my beard becomes infused with the power of Zeus and the flying spagetti monster one may claim that physically I look 48. She's not a huge fan of the beard but 98% of Cambodian's compliment my beard on its length and thickness. So its not all bad news. I'm not going to be regularly blowing my beard horn here but because it was my 27th birthday I get one blog post to tell the world that in my own humble opinion its getting longer. On that note a special shout out to my beard idol, Costa from Gardening Australia. He keeps it real!


Dengue. Sorry about that. So we were enjoying a few English ciders at an expat bar in Kanchanaburi. Rumor has it that I had more than 3 of them and we got back after a hazy evening to bunk down about 3 hours before the rooster tells everyone to get up. Now here lies the problem. When you wake up with the hangover from hell, you automatically take all abuse dished out to appease the beer gods. Its the punishment we all normally suffer. I drank a lot of water before going to bed but still the hammer of Thor was smashing inside of my skull and the body was weak and mind not willing. Sounded to me like a perfect time to move guesthouse. Bad idea. 


100m up the road we motored, the cold engine mirrored my zombie like state. The bikes had no time to stretch their legs before being parked up again at Tara guesthouse. By this point while lugging gear up the stairs to our room, the hangover had proceeded to also include a fever. Bingo!
Now over the next three days I was in and out of bouts of hot and cold awesomeness. Eating lost its appeal and drinking water and electrolytes was the only thing I moved for. It wasn't the end of the world though. There's worse things my body has had to endure than malaria's shitty little brother.


Luckily to the rescue came an unlikely hero, a frenchman. Mr Matt, a fellow overlander, on a BMW to boot, told Clarissa and I that sick boy will goto hospital or he would make us eat snails and whip us with baguettes (this is not 100% true, but sounds better). Mind you, we didn't know I had dengue at this point. Using as much online help as possible it seemed unlikely as I didn't have the 'rash' that many do.


Now the committee in my fever ridden head decided that riding to a super excellent hospital in Bangkok was not going to happen and the traffic would kill me before we get close. So after enduring a spine numbing tuk tuk ride (the body aches/malaise was probably the worst part of the whole ordeal) to get out Thai visa extended, we ended up at the Kanchanaburi Memorial Hospital. To prevent this blog post from turning into a short story though, this turned out to be a good experience. Professional staff, good food and a doc that spoke english. The doc had me punching drips into my arm day and night and chewing down a tasty cocktail of pills to help the body mend. Even though dengue is one of those 'suck it and wait' things, it was good to know the daily blood tests were proving the evil was leaving the body. Three days and about $600AUD later, we left the hospital. No more fevers and I was dancing the hand jive after getting the drip out of my arm. On drips - drives you mental when you get shitty wheels on your roller jigger doesn't it? 


Eating food was not appealing for almost a week after leaving hospital though. Funnily enough Dr. Ronald McDonald's famous Big Mac somehow fixed it though. Its Clarissa's theory that western food helps reset the appetite. I generally agree after both of us have now been sick a couple of times each on the trip so far. We don't hesitate with eating ice or street food though. Fingers crossed that our bellies are evolving into demonic entities that will rule the food poisoning realms soon enough. As getting sick is not character building anymore.


So after escaping hospital we finally got to visit the Hellfire Pass memorial 70kms up the road. This was my second time to the place, the first being about 4 years before with my legendary good mate Richard. The second visit was as much a reminder if not more than the first of the terrible atrocities committed against the Allied POW's and the local South East Asian labour force. A 415km long railway was built over 15 months to support the Japanese advance southwards towards Australia. Hellfire pass (a large cutting through rock) in particular is a horrible site when you realise it was virtually dug by mens hands. Many large cuttings through the stunning jungle scenery exist though.  About 12,800 allies and 90,000 local workers perished from disease, starvation, accidents and beatings at the hands of the ruthless Japanese. It brings a bloody tear to the eye that there was that loads of aid parcels were locked away and not handed out. They were sent from the Red Cross to the POW's. The tragic loss of life should have been significantly lower if the bastards had handed them out for a start. Travelling through south east asia is a constant reminder of horrors committed by the Japanese here unfortunately. Its a burning pain in my heart as they don't teach anything about WW2 in schools and they need to chisel the names of convicted war criminals out of their bloody war shrines! Argh, the madness!


Bikes in front of the Hellfire pass information building.


Such a breathtaking view despite the horrors committed.

Hellfire pass cutting.


So we had spent plenty of time in Kanchanaburi, walked the bridge over the river Kwai, indulged in the strange WW2 museum near the bridge and realised that the Jolly Frog was a guaranteed good feed.





 Most of the time was spent certainly spent indoors recovering from a fateful mosquito bite. Speaking of the WW2 museum, which we must point out has an amazing paintings of the province's history and rulers but was a bit of a strange and bizarre take on WW2.


Kanchanaburi crowd.

 We know we did miss out on seeing some great temples but when you know you need to push on, you get on your bike and ride. Ride we did.


Being extremely edgy to just get on the bike and spin the tyres I decided to ride a bit blind. With little help from the GPS or map, we may have done a few extra kilometers than needed but we finally descended on the outskirts of Bangkok. Bloody hell. Outskirts. The whole city CBD seemed to stretch right out to the edge! Traffic was chaos. You really need to know where your going otherwise Taxis/buses/trucks/scooters will just push you out of the way! Last time enjoying a taxi ride through Bangkok, I thought 'holy shit, don't particularly want try and navigate this stuff myself'. I can only say that this is still true. 


She rode like a demon in the city traffic!


Spirits were kept high though as we laughed off the near misses and rode through the seventh layer of hell. I'm sure if we rode through India this would view would be moot but for us two lazy bums cruising the world this was new (we have decided to avoid cities as much as possible in SEA). Clarissa certainly earned a minimum of 1000 experience points towards her next level of riding skill.


Starbucks internet.
Finally after deciding we had both had enough we stopped to eat and relax at Dr. Ronald McDonalds. It was here with a magical big mac that my appetite returned and once again started to enjoy food. Probably sounds weird but it was a welcome relief for both stomach and having a simple meal. After realising there was no free wifi in maccas we had to go into Starbucks and pay for wifi. Now we are qualified flash packers. The internet was 150 baht for two hours, shazbot! To put that in perspective we normally eat dinner for 80-110 baht for the both of us.



Western evil return thy appetite to Neil!

We googled a hotel with free transfer to the city/pool/secure parking but didn't find it funny enough. It seems the limit of the GPS maps was the main roads, not the suburban nightmare streets. 


Common theme of suburban traffic.

We entered the maze to only get completely disorientated and led directly away from the hotel but luckily found a 24 hour 'establishment'... I guess if your main customers only stay for 2 hours you don't need a soft mattress. A piece of broken wood will suffice. We ended up staying for two days as shopping was on the cards.


This must say 'get out of the way, I live in Bangkok'.

Finally after suffering migrane like headaches for the last 2000kms of riding (while wearing my helmet) we got a new stack hat for me. The verdict is my large mass of hair has been crushing my head. An unfortunate dent in the budget but I couldn't come to bring my self to cut the hair yet.


As long as your not riding an air-cooled BMW in the busted city traffic.
The same day as getting a new lid we ventured into the middle of the city and experienced some good food and bad air pollution. It was a fun taxi ride in as we enjoyed not being on the bikes as we passed the chaos by. Clarissa breathed a sigh of relief in the cab in the sweet air con.


High rollers. Mind you we will probably be eating from the bin by the end of the trip by ignoring the budget!




Take that Bangkok. Couple of easy riders!


 The ride back to the hotel was hilarious as we sat through 35mins of an Indian prayer/song playing on the taxi's dvd player. Free of the Hindi mantra and bellies full of sushi we slept well and left the next morning knowing we had the arduous task of escaping Bangkok. One thing to note is that motorcycles are not allowed on the expressways in and out of the city. This makes its pretty ordinary trying to ride through/skirt around the city. After a couple of hours of mystery u-turns and navigation by GPS compass we got out. The free GPS maps available for SEA are excellent for Malaysia but are lacking severely for the rest of the joint. Obviously can't complain too much, they are free after all. Our paper map is a little small on the scale for that sort of riding too.



I mentioned you can't ride on the expressway - but we ended up on it anyway, all roads lead to Rome type of thing. After playing clueless farang at the toll booth the policeman nicely let us through but I was always worried about big bike 'tax/bribe' if we were to be pulled over by highway patrol. So we got off and managed to zig zag our way towards the border crossing of Aranyaprathet(Thailand) /Poi Pet(Cambodia). Getting tired after a big days ride and with failing daylight we stopped at yet another 24 hour hotel and were treated with a nice mattress, but bugs/cockroaches galore. Crud.

 Not to worry as they had tasty milo ice creams which we had for dinner. We couldn't be bothered to head out for food that evening. Mind you none of these places say 24hr in english that we've seen. Its only a give away due to the free contraception next to the soap.


I think this chicken wasn't for sale at Tesco Lotus. But amusing to watch running around the car park.


We needed a good breakfast at Tesco Lotus to prepare us for the border crossing the next day though. In a short summary we did get ripped off by some quick english speaking characters on the Thai side and then proceeded to get sent on a wild goose chase for our Carnet stamp on the Cambodian side. 



Cambodia!

After a couple of hours we had it sorted and were now driving on the right hand side of the road in a new land. The ride out to Siem Reap was a wild ride dodging all sorts of crazy traffic. A truck managed to roll on the longest stretch of straight road we have ridden so far and everybody stopped the recovery effort to wish us peace and a thumbs up! Didn't stop for a yarn in fear of someone cracking a bottle of booze and a party starting in the middle of the highway. 




Arboretum's icy cold beer. Horrible.
We got into Siem Reap right on cue in busy afternoon traffic. Although being here for three days now we realise traffic is pretty gnarly most hours of the day and night. Tuk Tuk drivers still harass you with offers of a ride constantly. If you don't need a ride then maybe a ride tomorrow to the temple and failing that it starts with shout for marijuana and leads up to a whispered offer of ecstasy and opium. This usually happens within earshot if not arms length from a 'policeman' nearby. Still the same as I remember from 4 years ago but the choice for accommodation is now much better. With boutique guesthouses coming in and offering some refuge in the madness. We're staying at the lovely Arboretum guesthouse. Absolute gold dust. The place to stay in Siem Reap without a doubt.


Big bike. Big temple. Note the new helmet!

At a guess most people visit Cambodia for the great Angkor Wat and surrounding temples. The history of it all is a bit over my head but its definitely worth visiting. My second time here and its just as magnificent as the first.


Tuk Tuk to the temple. Ferrari red in color and similar ride characteristics.


The great temple in the background.

Ancient water bottle dispenser. 

Photo bombing Clarissa's panorama.
Temple foolery was at an all time high.
Auditioning for the job as a pillar.
Getting my ommmm on.
Clarissa's Aspara pose. 8/10.
Do the Aspara pose. Oh yea.
Holding the big bugger together with aircraft straps! Awesome!

Tree 1 temple 0.


A lot of the ruins looked like a mega lego set waiting to be ripped into.

It somehow didn't rain during our visit, but bucketed down that evening. 
Please buy something.

She tried valiantly to get Clarissa to buy a scarf. 
She just smiled. Must have come over to check out the beard.
 Held this up while they got some wooden supports in place.
Clarissa had to hold this balustrade up as it was falling to bits.


Cute now. But in 2 years time they will be armed to the teeth with trinkets. 
Do the bird man!
Ye old' tweak.



Even had a go at a serious documentary. 



 Its a shame of the harassment in town but it shows the extreme competition for your US doller. Cambodians so far are extremely friendly people and their smiles seem well genuine. Even if you don't end up buying what they're selling you don't feel as bad walking away. It really does help here as it gets a bit overwhelming every time you venture into town for food. Be prepared for the constant harassment of begging and children asking you to buy them infant formula (only to return it for money after you leave) and you can survive here. Thankfully I've noticed my beard will scare away most and leave us with only the real dedicated ones. Not to say we haven't given a few dollars away to those that look like they need it but it gets a bit pricey doing it every 2 minutes.

Make sure you get your feet 'fish massaged'. Pick the tank with the biggest fish for a grand old time.

We also have eaten some delicious local food and there's some well regarded and reviewed up market places to eat on offer. We tested one midrange place last night for some pizza and came away having eaten our best (western) meal of the trip so far. The cheapest bottle of red wine turned out to be excellent and we felt mega yuppy when paying the $48 dollar bill. With a plan to venture off the beaten track in a couple of days we look forward to the adventure. Although with the wet season in full swing the roads will be highly interesting. The visa idea for our semi-complicated itinerary for the next 5 month will have us hanging around in Cambodia for the next couple of weeks trying to get off the beaten track and experience some of the less touristy spots. This will no doubt be interesting as we know the roads will be our worst enemy during this weather season. Hopefully it will be excellent off road training for Clarissa and she doesn't bury me for putting her through it. Don't fret too much about off the beaten track - I've no want to find any landmines!

The road less travelled?

Until next time! (which will probably coincide with a return to civilisation!)





Thursday, August 30, 2012

Up the coast


We've been enjoying ourselves a little too much as usual and with great enjoyment comes great length of time between blog updates! (that's my excuse anyhow...hehehehe)


After somehow managing to leave our favourite Thai island Koh Phangan, we rode (a little wet) north west towards Ranong. 

Notice the empty grog bottles to the left. Bikes hiding from them on the right.
We had a night in a strange little seaside town were we stayed in interesting lodgings. We ended up with a pretty ordinary sleep as the place sprung to life at 11pm with karaoke blasting at max volume all night. It seemed to explain the load of wine cooler bottles outside our room.



We left the small noisy town and headed over the center of the country to the western side. A gorgeous ride through the mountains. Ranong initially greeted us with its great mountain backdrop. Bald mountain could have been mistake for almost any old farm on the east coast of Australia. Attempting to ride up on the very slippery clay proved fruitless, almost falling off many times.


Clarissa dominated the scale model nearby on foot. The mountains were fantastic with their big long snake like waterfalls running down the side.


Without a center stand some interesting new methods are used for the servicing of the bikes. The center stand bangs around a bit too much and steals valuable ground clearance from the bikes.

'A border run town worth visiting' said our friends. With some great food and a great place to stay we enjoyed some time to work on the bikes in a peaceful place. After a phone call and some 'hand the phone to the nearest Thai person' we were guided to the Ranong Big Bike shop. This was to do our first service of the trip. 5000kms already... We also washed them! Wow. They looked amazing until it rained the next days ride...


Ranong Big Bike is the place to go for anything bike related. Give them a call if your in town. They went and grabbed all the goodies they didn't have within minutes and were very generous on the costs of lubricants. I managed to make the first oil mess in the new workshop!


'A' was the man behind the shop. Currently upgrading from his smaller shop in town to his own home. He had his own bike in pieces in the kitchen. Awesome. Customers bike's were in various states of rebuild in the lounge room!




We left Ranong with smoother running machines and having made some good new friends. Continuing on north we encountered the shark energy drink guys at the petrol station. Did some promo shots on the bikes and they gave me a freebie! Not having had an energy drink for well over 6 months kept me going throughout the rest of the day.



Including the hard time on the beach/mangrove having a rest. 



Clarissa is seen here enjoying ordering her first noodle soup. Noodle soup aficionado's will be shocked that it has taken so long before making the plunge.


Clarissa had the same sans fishballs. FISHBALL!


I put far too much chilli in my soup. Way too much. Holy crap. My entire face was on fire and beard  full of flaming lava!


The local girls except the young lass were impressed with Neil's attempt at eating a bowl of the sun. 


Clarissa cruising along the scenic route from Ranong to Prachuap Kiri Khan. Scenic route always trumps the highway so far in Thailand. Its so quiet compared to the hellish main highway to Malaysia.



This person with the white arm was quiet rude!



Wish we got better shots of the Ranong hot springs. Wow. This was an amazing place to spend a rainy day at.


Filling up on the way out of Ranong. Its nice to be able to jump off the bike and pop the fuel cap without having to loose the helmet/gloves. Very fast F1 style fuel stops.


Our new view! Its horrible! Prachuap Kiri Khan. What a great little town.


This is what happens after a couple of beers at dinner. Apologies for the offensive bits :)


We call it 'doodle wars'. Maybe it has an official name?


A new favourite dish 'fried pork with garlic and pepper'. Potentially not the best for you, but yum. I endured some horrible food poisoning from some oyster/chilli sauce with another dish. So simple foods have been on the go for a week or so.


You can see our place by the 'touch' of color. Ning's guesthouse was an awesome place to rest and recover after my second bout of food poisoning of the trip. Garry is an Austrian chap. Basically an Australian and visa-versa as a fair few people get us mixed up so far in south east asia.


Ning and Clarissa. Ning was very caring to us as she counselled us on the woes of Thai food and the western belly.


Crazy evil clown mannequin. A bit unnerving and not the best for selling clothes.


Temple. We have been slack on seeing temples thus far but we're about to go on a temple seeing rampage.




Some art on the side of a water tank at the Force 5 Airforce base. 33 hours after the Japanese landed in Thailand the amnesty was signed. The Siamese fought a serious resistance movement until they regained control of country near the end of the war.


A little strange.


Monkeys sitting on their likenesses. Also slightly strange.


This is the new monkey bike.



Just handing a monkey a banana, on a motorbike is not enough. They must be fed in exciting and challenging ways.




I'm keeping an eye on you, strange orange creature. Both Neil and the baby were thinking this at the same time.


Fishing boats at night from our balcony. This hardly gives it justice. There's a lot of them.




This was a bin. A tall foreign person had to really bend down to use it.


Most of the footage we have from the Ranong Aquarium is in movie format. This was really worth visiting. Very professional and excellent underwater things on display. Only 60 Aussie cents per person!



Tesco is a favourite for stocking up on goodies and when hungry. They always seem to sort us out for cheese at a minimum!


Clarissa relaxing in the sweet air-con at the Jolly Frog in Kanchanaburi.

So we're hanging around in Kanchanaburi for a week waiting for some mail to arrive with our GPS maps of Laos and northern Thailand. We will head over to Cambodia next week.



 We visited the WW2 war cemetery here on an extremely sad day today. Australians have lost five Diggers and more injured in Afghanistan. Let alone seeing all the lost Soldiers, Sailors and Airmen here at the cemetery. Our thoughts and prayers with their families at this immeasurably sad time.

Lest we forget.