I am absolutely overwhelmed by how much I think I have to
say about my trip to Vietnam. I feel
like I did so much that I have to use my journal to remember each day. Before I start typing more, I’d like to say
that I added pictures to the last post, and that for a short while, the
frequency of my posting will be irregular.
Now. Let us begin at the start of my trip. On Saturday, October 13, I woke up in the
morn with butterflies in my stomach. I
was about to travel in a foreign country by myself, for the first time
ever. I was excited and nervous- I made
sure to try to leave messages with all my loved ones just in case I got
abducted or something. BUT OBVS I’M ALIVE!
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Admire the cartography, and pinpoint Ho Chi Minh City's location. |
First stop was Ho Chi Minh City, also known as Saigon, in
the south of Vietnam. On the plane trip from Bangkok to HCMC, I slept most of
the way, but when I woke up after landing, I was adopted.
A Thai couple and their two buddies started
talking to me, and they reveled in the fact that I was studying abroad in
Thailand.
They herded me into their
group, and after exchanging our Thai baht into Vietnamese dong, we grabbed a
taxi (taxis are rip-offs- try to get to Vietnam before 6 pm so you can take the
bus which costs 30 cents. THIRTY CENTS!) My first impression of the city when
driving toward the
Pham Ngu Lao district (the backpackers district where all
the sights are) was HOLY CRAP SO MANY MOTORBIKES!
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Ma plane and taxi buddies. |
HCMC is a very bustly city.
And it’s a thing in Southeast Asia for people to ride motorbikes. I thought there were a lot in Thailand. I was wrong.
I parted with my new friends at their hotel, and went in
search of my hostel,
NgocThao Guesthouse.
I passed it because this hostel is down a tiny, insignificant, kinda
grimey alley.
It’s scary if you let it
be scary.
The hostel itself is very nice,
clean, friendly, and offers a lot in terms of day trips (to be explained
later).
The only qualm was that
breakfast was an additional 30,000 dong each morning. The breakfast was super
tasty though- BAGUETTES! (the French imperialists were expelled from Vietnam in
1954 after the First Indochina War) and pancakes.
It was amazing to see decent bread again.
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Ze hostel. |
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Ze hostel's alleyway in the daylight. Much less questionable than it is at night. |
I met another new friend, Mindy, who was my roommate for the
night. We walked around for a bit, had
dinner, talked about life and experiences and whatnot. Then, we sat on the street along with
everyone else atop tiny chairs to have a couple of Saigon Greens (cheap beer
for 10,000 dong, which is equal to 50 cents).
I LOVE this part of Vietnamese culture.
Day and night, you will find people crowded on the sidewalks around tiny
tables, atop the smallest chairs, drinking beer, eating food, and
chatting. This kind of community is also
seen in the parks where all the couples sit on benches, friend groups sit or
play sports, and the older folk even do salsa dancing under the pavilions in
the evening. I fell in love with the
community of Vietnam.
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Note how crowded this tiny chair drinking sesh is! |
So, that’s day one concluded. We move onward to day two.
Day two was a busy, busy day.
I set out with my handy dandy map at hand, given to me by
the lovely people at the hostel.
Normally, I am incredibly directionally-challenged, even with a
map.
But, I put my noggin to it, and
conquered those streets!
I saw men in
green uniforms everywhere, many pastry shops, the longest line of boy scouts
and girl scouts known to man (they started chanted which was most excellent),
and I learned how to cross the street.
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This map was my savior! |
Crossing the street is almost a death wish. It’s not as terrifying as it is in Hanoi
though, as I found out later that week.
Basically, unless you are INCREDIBLY patient or lucky, you baby-step
across the road where a line a cars and motorbikes may be coming at you. You
take a couple of steps at a time, stopping in between passing vehicles, until
you get to the end. Sometimes though,
there will be tourist police who guide you safely across the street, and cars
usually stop for them.
SO! First stop was the
War Remnants Museum.
Definitely an excellent museum, and worth
seeing.
It was all about the Vietnam
War, the other side of the Vietnam War that we don’t hear about in Western
education.
It’s three floors, and an
exhibit of prison life, of depressing history. I had to sit down after viewing
each floor to regain my composure.
I
think pictures speak louder than words in this case, so I’ll showcase a few
photos below.
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Remnants of a prison. |
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The guillotine was last used in Vietnam in 1968. |
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Tiger cage used for torture. |
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An iron grill used for torturing prisoners. One of many many methods. |
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Some burned draft cards. Some burned themselves, and some of the enlisted refused to bomb cities. |
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This is just horrific. War is something I hope to never truly understand. |
Next, I walked toward the
Ngon Restaurant for lunch, which
was recommended on my map.
But on the
way, I was stopped by Manh, the Saigon native and motorcycle taxi tour
guide.
I tried to shake him off, but he
pulled out a five-inch thick notebook filled with pictures of the people he’d
taken on a tour next to their own positive statements about his tour. I decided
to get on his bike because the
Jade Emperor Pagoda in Chinatown and another
Chinese Buddhist Temple were a bit far away.
He took me to see those, but then purposefully made the tour longer by
taking me past the Saigon River to show me how the government was buying the
property of people who live by the river to gain land for development.
It’s rather sad- there are a lot of people
living on boats or under bridges by the river now.
Manh was really informative- every so often
he would tell a random fact about this old building, or that old building.
Much of it I don’t remember because I couldn’t
hear him over the honking and the wind, but I appreciated the gesture, and I
recommend his tour to everyone.
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With Manh on his motorcycle |
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Freeing a turtle at the Jade Emperor Pagoda for good luck. |
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At the old temple. |
He took me back to the
Reunification (Independence) Palace
where I took a tour.
It’s really just a
bunch of decorated rooms.
The coolest
parts were the in the basement where you got to see the planning rooms with all
of the old maps and radio equipment.
My
blood sugar was low from no lunch so I wasn’t really interested in this
experience.
I ate at Ngon Restaurant
soon afterward, which was yummy and a bit fancy.
I soon found that papaya shakes are my
favorite, and Pho Bo, the famous Vietnamese soup, is super yum yum.
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Reunification Palace |
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LUNCH |
Then, I walked to Notre Dame Cathedral.
Along the way, I noticed that a lot of the
street names are still French.
One
street was called Duong Pasteur, named after an important figure in the history
of medicine.
Anyway,
Notre Dame Basilica was really beautiful, very large, and modern.
They had several tv screens between the pews
so that people could sing along to hymns, karaoke style.
Next to it was the
Saigon Central Post Office, famous just because of its
French architecture.
Inside were
telephone books, postal service, and some souvenir shops with some pretty great
stuff.
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The basilica to the left, the post office in the back. |
I walked toward the
Opera House where I got invited to go to
a cultural performance held twice a month. I really wanted to go, and I would
recommend that anyone who travels to HCMC go see it, but I had other plans for
the following day.
In that area are a
bunch of ritzy, rich people hotels and shops.
Mila Kunis was plastered over the shops, advertising for Dior.
I got out of there as quickly as possible.
Then, I stumbled across the
Golden Dragon Water PuppetTheatre.
This is a really special and
cultural puppet performance that I think everyone should see. All of the
dialogue and singing were in Vietnamese so that I couldn’t fully understand
everything, but the plots of the stories were easily summarized by the titles
in the brochure.
The performance was
divided into fifteen short segments in which the puppets glided across the
water, acting out unicorns playing with a ball, or village people catching
fish, and more!
The musicians to the
side of the stage provide the musical accompaniment, and the voices of the
puppets.
45 minutes well-spent.
I got dinner after that, somewhere. Each night in HCMC was typically, dinner at
some restaurant while reading Clash of Kings,
journaling in the park, then beddy bye.
So there you have it, the first two days of my trip to Vietnam. There’s plenty more to come!
October 24, 2012 at 3:09 PM
Awesome post, JR. Thank you for sharing your adventure with us. Looking forward to the next. Sounds like you were in a real life game of Frogger crossing the road. We miss you!
Mom and Tad