Saturday, November 7, 2009

Picture Update


View of Koa Loa



Koa Chang at Sunset



Aston, my Camel



Lizzy and I in our Saris and the graduate students who did our henna



Me at the Taj Mahal



The Taj Mahal

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Ko Lao and Ko Chang

The past week has been very fun, but also very hard. Ko Lao is very literally a slum island. The people were very nice, but unfortunately they only spoke Moken, so communicating was very hard. We were there to begin building a community center. We got the foundatuion down, so the next Youth International group to go can actually finnish it, but the foundation is the hardest part to do. The only peice of land left to build on was this marshy, low-land area behind the village. It was half mud, half sewage and water was continually seeping in. Basically it was the most disgusting thing i've ever done. We had to dig 12 holes, fill them with cement, lay the tall cement pillar(its an above ground building), and then fill it back in with cement. In theory its not too hard, but walking around was impossible because the mud would suck ur boot down and then three people had to get you unstuck.
Besides being gross, the community was nice enough. The kids were great. They loved playing with us and they tried repeating everything we said to them. The worst parts were the way they treated the straY dogs and that the kids never wore shoes. There were a surprsing number of strays for it being an island. There were at least two litters of puppies while we were there and we adopted two of the puppies. One, we named King because he is cock-eyed like the Thai king, we discovered when the kids were using him as a soccer ball. I, obviously, ran over and quickly stopped that and from then on we tried to teach the kids by example to be nice to animals. We actually think that we made a pretty big impression on them. By the time we left they never put King down and he was constantly being passed around and pet.
The island was extremely dirty and the sea around it was filled with trash, but the food was great.
After being there for about five day we went to Ko Chang for our "vacation." It was great. The island was completely desserted and we had bungalows right oni the beach. The water was the perfect temperature and crystal clear. Even though I used up an entire bottle of sunscreen I still got seriously burned. The second day we were there I woke up and my lips were so swollen it looked like I had gotten collagen injections during the night. Apparently thats how my lips react when they're sunburned, but they got back to normal pretty quuickly. I also found a coral reef and two local girls showed me around and let me help them catch a crab, found me sea shells, and showed my sea urchins and things to poke with my stick.
It was sad leaving there, but I was so burned that I was actually releaved to get back to civilazation. We spent one last day in Bangkok before leaving. This time we were in modern Bangkok, which was completelty opposite of where we were in the beginning. It was a lot of fun, but exhausting. Right now I'm actually in India! We havn't really done much yet, but I'm already falling in love.

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Ayutthaya; Oct. 8th to 9th

We got to Ayutthaya this morning at 4am. And I forgotto mention that at the end of our trek we rode on elephants! It was so much fun. Lizzy and I named our elephant Snorky because he liked to spray himself/us with the water(snorkel) in his trunk. We were going to have a boat tour tonight but since its the end of the rainy season the water is too choppy so we can't. Tomorrow we go to Ko Lao(sp?) for a week to build a community center. The island is supossedly just a slum, so it is pretty much garanteed to be interesting. After though,we go on "vacation" to Ko Chong for a couple of days where i should be able to update again. Here are some of my latest pictures:

 This is the resovoir where we went swiming in Mai Jo


This is Pe Mon's house. Right behind it is Pe Noy's house.


Me and Pe Mon at our Going Away Party.


Me getting my bracelet that "ties my soul to Mai Jo"


Everyone riding their elephants



Snorky

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Trek in Northern Mountains; Oct 2 to 7, 2009

The trek was incredibly hard. Obviously a "trek" is different than a "hike," but for some reason I just thought it meant a "particuarly hard hike." I was wrong. "Treks" mean walking through dense jungle vegetaion with a 6in trail, completely covered in 5ft ferns, under you with a 20ft drop into even denser and very sharp vegetation below you. Thye first day we hiked for about 2hr before we got to the first hill tribe village. It was pretty difficult, but the village was very welcoming and fun. The second day sucked. We hiked for a good 8hr almost continually uphill. It was not fun. No, it was fun after I had completed it. Then it was fun. The thing about trekking in such a beautiful place is that since I have to be so concerned with where I step and continuing to breathe, its very hard to appreciate my surroundings. The second village was slightly disapointing. The first village was pretty modernized, but I thought that was a given since they were closer to the city, but the second village was actually in the middle of nowhere and they still managed to have DVD players and satelite TVs. Since we had trekked all that way to stay with Hill Tribe families, I had, I thought, rightfully expected them to be a more traditionally focused culture. Unfortunately I was wrong. True, they did perform a tribal dance for us on our second night there, but even then we had to wait for the cheif to come back to the village on his scooter before it could start. You would think that globalization would end up bringing the good technologies to the underdeveloped world before it brought pop music and non-biodegrabable waste to Hill Tribes, but this village still ran off of battery power and the nearest toilet to town was a good 5min walk up a hill. And it was a really gross bathroom.
I went into the trek thinking that I would see grandmothers weaving baskets on the porch while men drove trucks instead of walking to their rice feilds, but instead I got Thai pop blasted through cell phoines at 3am. According to Casey, when she trekked through the area in 2001 that is what she saw, but in just 8years they have lost the great majority of their traditional way of life. Yes, in some ways I'm sure there life is much better, but how musch better is it when a Thai family, all with cell phones, scooters, and cars, end up selling their daughters into prostitution anyway because it brings in more money than sending her to school would?
After a very long day of being on literally every source of transportation used by mankind in the past three centuries, we are at a hostel in Chaing Rai. Tomorrow we head to Ayuthaya where we get to bike around old Wat ruins. I'll try to upload some more pictures soon, but this computer is in Thai and I couldn't find out how to upload them here.

Homestay and Pun Pun; Sept 25 to Oct 2, 2009

Our village home stay was amazing. None of us wanted to leave. We were in a village called Mai Jo. Its pretty much a road with houses on either side and everyones related to one another. I stayed with a woman named Pe Mon, but ate and spent a lot of time next door at her son's house, where Natalie and Eliza were staying. Every day we would eat breakfast then head to Pun Pun, just a short walk up a hill from the viaalge. Pun Pun is a seed-saving farm that also gives seminars on earthen housing and community self-sufficiency. Each day we focused on something new. One day it was plastering an earthen home's walls, the next day clearing and seeding a garden, then making natural shampoo and soap, and so on and so on.
The view from the village was great. We were completely surrounded by mountains and farmland. In a 20min walk to the end of the road you could get to a resovoir, the village's water supply, and go swimming. I did, however, discover that I hate chickens. Particuarly roosters and mostly when they decide to crow from 2 to 4 in the morning. Everyone in the village was so nice. No one spoke english very well or at all, but we got along just fine. Pe Noy, Pe Mon's daughter-in-law, cooked us all of our meals, which was great because she is a fabulous cook. After we left the three of us missed having her food twice a day(we ate lunch at Pun Pun).
The last night we were there they threw us a going away party and had a village elder bless us and tie a string aruond our wrists that was supossed to "tie our souls to the village." I can't imagine that we'll get so attatched to all of our homestay families so strongly, but at least I'll have plenty of places to stay if I ever come back.

Thursday, September 24, 2009






Sept. 23, 2009

Sorry I haven't updated in a few days. Last time I was online I started to write something, but then I chatted with Richard on facebook instead...
So, the plane ride wasn't really all that bad. It was long, but Korean Air is really nice so I watched like 4.5 movies and played games on my tv. I didn't sleep at all but that actually kind of helped me adjust better to the time change.
Bangkok was great. It was so different from any other city I've been to and everyone was so incredibly nice. First off our Hostel was incredibly nice, so that was a good surprise. I havn't had any problems with the customs changes here except for the toilet paper thing. They don't use it and instead use a kitchen-sprayer-type-thing next to the toilet. It would be fine I guess, but I can't stop thinking about who else its been close to...
Our first day in Bangkok we went to the Golden Palace which also houses the emerald Buttah. They were both amazing, of course. Everthing here is just so beautiful and old. Like next to slums and fish markets will be the remains of old Wats (Buddhist temples) that all have the "same" glass decorations and tipped roofs. Monks are everywhere too. Once when we were waiting for a water taxi a monk just asked us out of the blue "How much is fare?" in an Australian accent! When we told him we didn't know he said, "Oh well,  Monks get in free and its cool as hell." It was the most unexpected thing ever.
After the Grand Palace we went to a Pad Tai place that Casey says is the best in Bangkok, therefore the best in the world, and it was really good. After we got the choice to either go to a Thai "Cabaret", which was kind of like a tranni-show, or a Muay Thai boxing fight. Obviously I went to the Muay Thai. It was really badass, but incredibly hard to judge. For instance guys u sworn were the winners actually were the losers, but it was still fun.
Our second day we took a "gondola" ride through the canals of the city. It was so much fun. Casey got us our own "private" boaty thing and the driver was really good. The motor of course was reall loud, but several times he stopped us in front of a dock where wild monitors, that were easily 6ft long, were sleeping. During the boat ride I discovered that I'm in love with the Thai Spirit Houses. Thai Buddhism is mixed with a bit of animalism, so every dwelling has their own little spirit house, about the scale of a birdhouse, for the spirits to live and take their offerings. I don't know how many pictures I have of them, but I can't wait to build my own when I get home. After the boat ride we went to see a famous Reclining Buddah statue. He was huge. He could've easily smushed The Barn at The Loveless (I fail at comparisons). Next me and a couple of the girls went shopping at a touristy street. I bought some cute fake-RayBans for ฿200, which is like $3. I LOVE the exchange rate. Most meals we get here are less than a dollar and taste awesome.
Last night we took an over-night train to Chiang Mai. It was definitely not as nice as the over-night train I took in Spain, but was still fun. We got to Chiang Mai, where I am now, at about 8am our time, checked into our hostel, then went to another Wat. This Wat is the oldest in the city and gives a great view to all of Chiang Mai. Tonight we're going to a night-market, which is what Chiang Mai is famous for, so I'm really excited for that.
Tomorrow we go to our first home stay and I'm a little nervous. Everyone in Thailand really is unbelievably nice, but still the language barrier can be a little tricky sometimes. I probably won't be able to log on for another week, so I hope I've covered everything. Oh, and I LOVE tuk-tuks. I am seriously considering buying one when I get home. They are so much fun.

Okay, well I hope my spelling isn't too horrendous, this computer doesn't have spell-check. I hope everyone is doing well and I'll try to update again in a week!

Saturday, September 19, 2009

Sept. 19, 2009

HI!!!!
So tomorrow we leave for Asia and Natalie and I were able to find free internet, so I thought I'd try this thing out.
Estes Park has been really great. We've mostly just been doing orientation stuff, like "getting to know u" games, and health and safety talks, but at least they keep us busy. Driving up from the airport we saw the hotel where The Shining was filmed, so that was kind of a freaky surprise. I've officially met all other 6 people in my group, but the South America group is here too and they have 16 people, so we're having a lot of fun. We break up into specific "teams" a lot, but we're all together for the most part. I'm traveling with Natalie, 19 from San Fransisco, Calley, 18 from Minnesota, Eliza, 18 from Louisville, Jamie, 18 from Chicago, John, 20 from DC, and Lizzy, 20 from Brooklyn. We all get along really well so everything turned out really great. Our leaders are Casey and Ben, who is really cute but is dating Casey.
Yesterday we went on a hike in the Rocky Mountain National Park, which was exceptionally beautiful. It was a bout 3 miles round trip and went past 3 lakes. I hadn't taken any pictures, but on the way back we saw elk right up next to the road! I was really excited, cause I've never seen them before except in the Denver museum (but they're dead and stuffed so that doesn't really count). We saw 3 bucks and a bunch of mamas and babies. I haven't heard them "bugle" yet, but I'm gonna try and walk outside tonight to see if I can.
Its already been great, but I can't wait to leave and actually get started. Our plane to LAX leaves @ 8:30 tomorrow, so we have to be in the van by 4am. I'll get back on when I can!
~Harper