9/30/2009

Home sweet home

Tomorrow I receive my certification. I am officially qualified to teach English. Now let's see if I can actually teach!

I spent quite a bit of time finding a hotel in which to stay while I was taking the class. When traveling I usually don't care much where I stay. If I'm only staying for a night or two all I want is a bed and a shower.

I needed a place for a month. I also needed a place where I would feel comfortable, someplace I could do homework and get a good night's sleep. I spent quite a bit of time looking at places. I must have looked at 25 hotels. The one I settled on is the first one with a white sign, the one which has what appears to be an unfortunate name for a hotel.


But this is southern Vietnam, where Dung is pronounced 'yoom'. In the north it's pronounced 'zoom'. It's the name of the owner and also the name of one of the girls who works for her. Two other girls work there, Nhi and Thao. They're all very sweet and helpful. I have felt very much at home.

I was surprised at how many people have asked me about my living arrangements. Here are a couple pix of the room.



The room is quite large. Two beds, a wardrobe, a desk, a refigerator, A/C, cable TV and hot water.

Cost: $300. Per month.

Heck, when I find a job I might actually live in the hotel! If I rent an apartment I'll have to furnish it, pay utilities and find someplace to use the internet. Now all that is included in the cost.

My room also has a balcony overlooking the alley.


At the far end is the hotel where I stayed on my previous visits to Vietnam. I was perfectly happy there for a night or two. Little did I know all I had to do was walk down the alley to find a cleaner, bigger and nicer room for the same price!

My hotel is almost on the corner of Pham Ngu Lao Street, which gives the neighborhood gets its name.


Across the street is a big park. It doesn't look like much here but walk a little further to the left and it's quite nice, with walkways winding around gardens and ponds. In the morning it's packed, as are most city parks in Vietnam, with people walking, playing badminton or doing aerobics.

I've been asked a lot what I'll do for food here. There's no need for me to even think about cooking. I love the food here. Even though I'm staying in the tourist district, which is by definition more expensive, I can get a get a bowl of phổ or bún for 25,000, about $1.50. There is nothing I could buy and cook that cheaply. And it's good!

When you get away from tourists and into the neighborhood it's even cheaper. One of my instructors told me in his neighborhood there's a sidewalk restaurant near his house where he can get meat, rice, veg and soup for 6,000 dong. Which means he can eat three meals a day for exactly one dollar.

I've also felt at home in Saigon because I have a few friends here. Several months ago I took a night "sleeper" bus to Nha Trang, the big beach town in Vietnam. Next to me on the bus was a gorgeous local woman. My first attempts at conversation went nowhere but we ended up talking for hours. She got off in Mui Ne, but we kept in touch.


Thanh is on the left. She's a fashion designer and is working on a graduate degree, so I haven't seen much of her since my return because she's so busy. She introduced me to Thu, who I see quite often. She works in a hotel around the corner from mine so she knows where to find everything. She's been a big help and a good friend.

Thu took me to see "The Hangover" here. I had seen it already, but I thought it would be interesting to see which jokes translated and which didn't. And what the heck, she paid! There were parts where the crowd laughed uproariously and other jokes which didn't get a laugh at all.

The proverbial accident waiting to happen

One of the signature sights of Saigon are the crazy nests of electrical wires. Just around the corner from my hotel is a big intersection with a tourist bar on the corner. Here a utility worker flirts with death about a dozen different ways. Note the ladder he climbed. Better yet, look where he's standing!

9/27/2009

Stay classy, Saigon

Tomorrow I start my last week of TEFL class. By Friday I will be certified to teach. After months of thinking about it, planning it and doing it, now the fun will really start. I'll start job hunting.

I'm still pondering whether to work in Saigon, or to go someplace less hectic in Vietnam. I'm also still considering Phnom Penh. Much to think about.

Last week one of the girls in my class celebrated her birthday. Hope turned 21. I was certainly happy for her, but I couldn't help but dwell for just a moment on the fact that she's half my age. Sigh... And she's not even the youngest one in the class!



The school was nice enough to buy her a birthday cake. Here she is cutting it as Diem, the primary course instructor, looks on. Diem is wearing the traditional Vietnamese áo dài.

Rosie is the girl taking the photo. Alice is in white behind her. They're both British. They're also the two best teachers in the class. It's a pleasure watching them teach lessons. Sitting next to Rosie is Thu, a Vietnamese woman from Hanoi who already works as a teacher.

One of the odd quirks of teaching abroad is that locals have a harder time landing jobs than foreigners. Schools and students expect a white person to teach English. Thu is going to teach English and then move to Australia to earn a doctorate degree. Smart cookie.

In the corner are Nhi and Nghiem (in black), the two course administrators. Nghiem goes by Nina because her name is so difficult for English speakers to pronounce. She has her own business helping foreigners arrange paperwork like visas, work permits, and the like. She is also working towards a degree in finance at an international school.

She has two jobs where she speaks English and goes to a school where English is the primary language. She said in all seriousness that she speaks English now better than she speaks Vietnamese! A Vietnamese woman living in Vietnam! She also said she dreams in English.

Store-bought birthday cakes in the US taste like styrofoam. This cake was delicious. We demolished it.


(I have no idea of why this photo insists on getting uploaded at a 90 degree angle.)

I usually go to lunch with two guys from class to a food stall in a local market. There we get rice, veg, soup, one meat (fish, pork, chicken, etc.) and iced green tea for 21,000 dong, or about $1.17. I love Vietnam.

A bunch of my classmates have made habit of going to a British-themed restaurant around the corner for lunch. I usually avoid such places, in any country. They're always expensive and the local interpretations of foreign fare can be quite ... creative. I generally eat local food. If I crave Western food I'll get a pizza. I've been able to find edible pizza just about everywhere I've been.

I was pleasantly surprised by this place. It was packed at lunch but, much to my surprise, we were the only foreigners there.



At the suggestion of one of my classmates I took a chance and ordered a bacon cheeseburger with fries. It was awesome, the first really good burger I've had outside the US. Not only was it good, it was reasonably priced: 50,000 dong, or about $2.75. We're all drinking the ubiquitous iced green tea, trà đá.

Our classroom is close to the famous Ben Thanh Market. It's a real market for real Vietnamese people, but because of it's proximity to the tourist district you have to walk through a lot of stalls selling, well, crap before you get to the good stuff.

In the shade you can see a xích lô driver sleeping on the job. (It's usually written cyclo in English.)

It's a hell of a way to make a living, riding a clunky old bicycle contraption around in the tropical heat all day. Late at night they'll be lined up along the streets with tarps over them, the drivers asleep inside.

9/26/2009

Komodo drag


This is the airport in Labuan Bajo, on the island of Flores, Indonesia. The town is the jumping-off point for the island of Komodo, which lends its name to the komodo dragon, the world's biggest lizard. This sculpture of a dragon is the closest I came to seeing one ...

I didn't have the time to visit Indonesia properly, but I couldn't pass up the opportunity to see
A) a travel buddy of mine, who was working there
B) komodo dragons
C) manta rays

I saw
D) none of the above

The trip to Flores was the worst travel experience I've ever had, a hideously expensive, frustrating, time-consuming, infuriating, exhausting, humiliating fucking nightmare. It was also literally sickening, as it took weeks for my digestive plumbing to recover from the culinary abomination I detailed in my post entitled 'The worst meal ever'.

I've been struggling about what to write, if anything, about the experience. It's been hard to put my thoughts in order because every time I try I am overwhelmed by anger and humiliation at how rudely I was treated by my friend there. I don't want to write a post that is just a hatchet job of someone I once considered a friend, someone I will refer to in this post as The Collector.

Flores is not easy to get to and from even though it's the gateway for visitors wanting to see the lizards on the islands of Komodo and Rinca. People make the trip to see something they can see nowhere else on earth: lizards 10 feet long and 150 pounds that can eat virtually anything, from king cobras to horses and buffalo.

Big.

It's the sort of thing that makes nature nerds like me go wobbly in the knees.

I didn't worry at all about being able to set up a trip to see the dragons because The Collector had landed a sweet short-term position as a communications consultant for a conservation group working at Komodo National Park. The dragons were her job.

Indonesia is fast becoming the world's premier scuba destination. Around Komodo are some of the best sites in the world for diving with manta rays. The Collector is an avid scuba diver and underwater photographer with hundreds of dives under her belt. Living on Flores she would know the best dive shops and sites. So I wasn't concerned about that either.

The Collector almost completely ignored me. Truly bizarre. I spent virtually every waking minute trying to make arrangements for my return flights to Cambodia and trying to set up a boat trip to see the dragons. I spent a lot of time, energy and money to get there. It's not like driving from Baltimore to Philly to visit someone. It's more like driving from Cancun to Mount Rushmore. And then not seeing Mount Rushmore.

She set up a dive trip, true, but to two sites where there was no chance of seeing mantas. She did, however, go on a memorable dive where they saw at least fifteen mantas. This happened the day I arrived, so she was experiencing a once-in-a-lifetime dive while I was on the island waiting to hear from her.

Getting to Komodo Island, or Rinca Island, which is an even better place to see the dragons, was surprisingly difficult. I only had two days on the island. I wasn't able to arrange anything. If I wanted to go I would have had to hire a fishing boat by myself. It would have been expensive, but I was willing to pay. What worried me was spending eight hours in a wooden fishing boat with two men who don't speak English. The list of things that could go wrong is endless. The Collector provided absolutely ... no ... help ... whatsoever.

While we were on the dive boat I was talking to another diver, since even on the tiny boat she still managed to avoid me. We stopped briefly while some divers offloaded into a smaller boat which took them to a beach on a nearby island. I made a mental note to find out why later.

I was flabbergasted when I did. The island the other divers stopped at was Komodo. I don't want to put on my tinfoil hat and get all conspiracy nut-ish, but it's baffling that it didn't at least come up in casual conversation that, oh, by the way, we'll be stopping at Komodo and you can get off there or Hey, that's Komodo Island over there! Even the divemasters didn't say anything. Weird.

I'm confident it's the last time I'll ever see her. The rudeness was so calculated and so complete that even now I can't think about the trip without getting riled up. I've never felt so offended.

Because it was so difficult to arrange a flight back from Flores to Bali I had to wait to book the bigger flight, from Bali back to Phnom Penh. Every traveler knows that the longer you wait to book the more it costs. It cost me $250 to get from Phnom Penh to Flores. It cost me nearly four times that to get back. I could pay for my hotel in Vietnam for four months on the $1200 I spent on airfare, which is especially maddening since I spent all that time, money and effort and didn't see a dadburned thing.

This is Labuan Bajo as seen from the dive boat. From the outside it looks charming and quaint but from street level it was dirty and drab.


The weather was sunny, which made for some pretty pictures but also some sleepless nights in my hellish hotel room, which was as comfortable as the inside of a crab steamer.

Whie there is some tourist infrastructure Labuan Bajo is still primarily a fishing village. As our scuba boat moved from site to site we passed fishermen paddling along in wooden canoes.

Getting from Bali to Flores and back again was a case of "you can't get there from here". There are three airlines that fly the route. The Labuan Bajo airport doesn't have lights on the runway so they can only fly during the day.

I couldn't book my return ticket from Bali (huh?) so I spent virtually every waking moment trying to make arrangements to get back. Every time I mentioned my difficulty to The Collector or another local they would tell me that Stevan, the owner of the hotel hell I was marinating in, knows everyone in town. Surely he could help me make arrangements. I would reply in my most sugary-sweet voice, "Is this the same Stevan that forgot to pick me up at the airport?"

One of the airlines was booked for the next month. Every flight, every seat. One was booked for the next two weeks. One had seats available for a flight later that week, but that was still much too late.

I found a travel agent who knew of a passenger who bought a ticket but couldn't use it. She asked me if I wanted to buy it from him. After several phone calls and trips to her office I finally got the ticket. My confidence in the likelihood that I would actually be on the flight nosedived when I saw the ticket.


Handwritten tickets are not uncommon for small airlines. But they literally crossed out the original traveler's name and scribbled mine over his! I expected them to laugh when I presented the ticket at the airport but after three hellish days, finally something went right! The nightmare was over.

The airport had been described to me as 'ghetto' but I've seen much, um, ghetto-er. I got a kick out of watching them push the baggage carts by hand to the 'Baggage Claim', where they would pull bags off the carts and stack them on the floor.

9/17/2009

First day of school

Today I taught my first class. Part of the reason I'm taking the TEFL class is that it gives me time in front of students in a more or less controlled environment. For most of my training sessions there will be an instructor in the room with me. For our first teaching practice we worked in pairs.

I was incredibly nervous going in. I didn't know how well I would remember the lesson. I didn't know how smart or well-behaved the students would be. I didn't know if I'd like it. I didn't know if I'd be good at it.

The verdict is in.

It was a blast.

It was so much fun. I felt comfortable and relaxed. We taught a group of 30 generally well-behaved sixth-graders for 90 minutes. Our observer said he struggled with his evaluation because he couldn't think of many areas where there was room for improvement.

I found out that my fellow students thought I already was a teacher, which has to be a good sign. One of them said she thought I seemed "teacher-y", which probably isn't a word, but it's a nice compliment all the same!

Tomorrow I teach a lesson by myself. I'm happy to report that I'm really looking forward to it.

9/15/2009

The worst meal ever

After getting stranded at the airport by the owner of my hotel, and then waking up in a pool of my own sweat in my suffocatingly hot room, I trudged down the hill into the town of Labuan Bajo, on the island of Flores, Indonesia.

The entrance to the town is deceptively picturesque, like something out of a Hemingway story.


This road goes more or less straight but then makes a hard left. Everything I needed as a tourist was on the far end of town so from my room it took about 30 minutes to get to anything. I don't mind walking, but the walk was pretty unpleasant.

Once around the corner the town becomes a dirty, dull and lifeless. Red and white are the colors of the Indonesian flag, and the only real colors in this photo.

There are a few tourist restaurants, dive shops and travel agents, but mostly it's just a series of non-descript shops. The owner of my hotel and my friend in Labuan Bajo both used the crappy celphone reception as an excuse as to why they weren't easier to reach.

I tried to make calls that didn't go through, but I was able to talk to a travel agent a half-dozen times on the phone. That the locals insist it's impossible to make a celphone call there is hilarious considering that every fourth shop in town sells phones or SIM cards.

I've traveled for months in Southeast Asia, but on the mainland. The people on Flores are not ethnically related to the people in Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam and Laos. They are Muslim or Catholic, not Buddhist. Perhaps I shouldn't be surprised at how different it was.

The Southeast Asians I'd encountered until then were unfailingly friendly, even those who work in the sun for 16 hours a day and live in abject poverty. Here the people ignored me or simply stared at me as I walked by. I rarely got any response if I said hello in Indonesian or English.

I had recently been in Cambodia, where the people are incredibly industrious, and Vietnam, where the work ethic is positively maniacal. It was a shock, then, to see so many people sitting around doing nothing. I would have expected all the menfolk to be out on the water fishing, but there were large groups of teenage boys loitering in front of storefronts.

It reminded me of some of the rough neighborhoods in Baltimore. It also called to mind some of the bleak, dusty whistle stops on the chicken bus routes in Central America. There local buses go through one-road towns which aren't destinations, but rather places you pass through on the way to someplace else. Labuan Bajo has that "stop on the way" feel even though it is a major tourist destination. Very strange.

If I had to compare to anywhere it would be Livingston, Guatemala, which is one of the worst places I've ever visited. That's another tourist gateway populated by indolent youths. There was the same vague sense of menace in the air. In Livingston I wouldn't leave my hotel at night because I didn't feel safe.

I spent months in Southeast Asia and I never, literally never, felt scared. I was scared walking through the dark streets of Labuan Bajo at night. I'd pass groups of boys drinking beer who would yell at me in the local language. I don't know what they were saying but I would just laugh as if I was in on the joke and keep moving.

The young boys who don't simply stand around staring at tourists all day drive or ride shotgun on bemos. Labuan Bajo has one circular one-way road. Bemos are taxis that ride around the circle. They're mini-vans that have been modified in the most ridiculous ways.

I needed to get to the one ATM in town, which of course is at the furthest corner from my room. I hopped in a bemo, told them where I needed to go. I always ask locals what to pay for taxi rides so I knew it would be 5,000 rupiahs, or about 50 cents. I asked the guy how much it would cost. He said 5,000. No problem so far. As I got out I handed him a 50,000 note. He handed me a wad of change. I hopped out. As he pulled away I looked at the money. He gave me 5,000 in change. I paid nine times what I should have.

As a tourist I'm accustomed to paying more than locals. I know when I go to the market I will pay more than I probably should. But I'd never had anyone in Southeast Asia just blatantly rob me until then.

On that first afternoon, after visiting all the travel agents and airline offices and discovering that it was going to be difficult and expensive to get back, I decided I needed to decompress a little. I'd find a restaurant on the water, have some food and a beer and watch the sun go down.

The view was great.

The waitress was a young girl, very sweet. I ordered one dish. She came back and said "So sorry. Finish." I picked again. She came back again. "So sorry. Finish." And again. It was about 5 p.m., I was sitting at a restaurant on the water in sight of dozens of fishing boats, and yet they were out of seafood! I went down the menu line by line until we came to a dish they actually had.

Tuna in Indonesian sauce with chips (fries). Sure. I love tuna.

It was perhaps the worst meal I've ever had, and I promise I am not exaggerating to make a point. I don't know what Indonesian sauce is supposed to be. I think it was inspired somehow by the nation's islands and beaches because it was the color and consistency of wet sand. But when I tasted it -- actually, it tasted like wet sand, too.

Knowing that people would think I was being unfairly harsh, I took a picture. Consider yourself warned. It's not pretty.


I tried to pick the fish out of the wet sand. See the bones on the top left? It's not even tuna! The one thing they said they had they didn't. I was famished when I walked in but I could not gag this down. I have eaten bugs, bird's nests and congealed pig blood, but I could not eat this fish.

Two nights later, having not learned my lesson, I ordered a tuna dish at another restaurant. It was supposed to be a tuna filet and vegetables on a sizzling skillet. What it was was a few chunks of fish, probably not tuna, swimming in oil with a couple slices of onion and jalapeno.

I traveled for nearly one year in 15 countries on four continents. I did not limit my eating at all. I tried anything I wanted. I didn't get sick once until I got to Labuan Bajo. It took three weeks for my system to recover from the oily fish chunks. I a cache of antibiotics I had carried for over a year and never needed is now gone.

If you go to Labuan Bajo, don't eat the fish!

9/14/2009

Indonesia lessons: How not to build a hotel

I try to avoid writing negative posts. I don't want to write and I don't think anyone wants to read an angry screed unless there is something funny or instructive about the situation.

I've been letting the dust settle from my Indonesia trip. It was so awful I couldn't write about it with any sort of detachment. But I think enough time has passed that I can find the humor in it. I'll start with my hotel room in Labuan Bajo.

I flew there to visit a travel buddy I met who is living and working there. She said she would reserve a room for me in a hotel owned by one of her colleagues, supposedly the best place on the island to view the sunset. Schweet.

I called Stevan from Bali to make sure the reservation was in order. He said he knew I was coming but didn't know what days. Uh oh. That was the first sign this trip wasn't going to go as planned. I had a few questions for him about how to make various arrangements on the island but he said we could talk about that when he picked me up at the airport.

He didn't pick me up at the airport.

I waited around with approximately 5,000 taxi drivers hanging over me. I tried to call him a couple times but he didn't answer. Finally I took a taxi to the hotel. The driver stopped at the entrance to a restaurant on the hill above town.

I thought, Great, I have to wait while he runs an errand or talks to someone or drinks a beer. The truth was worse. We were at the hotel. I've traveled enough to be able to recognize a hotel when I see one but I couldn't tell.

The driver indicated I should walk down a dirt path to a house on the hill. I thought I was staying in a hotel, not a guest house, but no matter. On my way to the house I walked past the "hotel" and didn't even know it. I asked for Stevan. There were two women there who didn't speak English. One of them ran off down the hill.

At this point, under normal circumstances, I would have gone back to the taxi and asked him to take me into town to another hotel. But since I couldn't do that since I was staying with a friend of a friend. It would have been incredibly rude.

A few minutes later a man came up the hill. He was friendly and spoke English. I think his name was Pepin. He walked me to my room.

There may be a hotel there at some point in the future but for now it's just a duplex with other duplexes under construction. The rooms are so horribly misconceived it's hard to imagine the place staying open long enough for construction to finish. This is it as seen from the dirt path.


Note the wooden furniture on the deck. Note the wooden furniture on the deck with no cushions.

I have always said that when I'm traveling alone in budget mode that all I need in a hotel is a bed and a shower. For once I got what I want! The room had a big bed, a tiny end table with a lamp that didn't work, a shower ... and that's it.


I took this picture standing in the doorway. The end table is just off camera in the top right corner. The shower is on the other side of the wall on the left. At least I had a big new bed to toss and turn in.

There are two lights mounted in the ceiling close to and parallel with the front windows. They use compact fluorescent bulbs, which is good. They use decorative bulbs, which is bad. The light barely made a dent in the dark. I read just about every night before bed. This was like reading by candlelight, except the candles were in the ceiling. Similarly, there's a light on the wall outside, but it's too weak to do anything except attract mosquitoes.

The view was as good as advertised. This is what I saw sitting on my bed.


The front wall of the room was all windows. Windows that don't open. In fact, the only way to get air in the room was by opening the front door. Oh, and through the bathroom ceiling.


For reasons I can't fathom the roof of the shower is open. (The giant Flintstones shower knob was a nice touch, though.) There are trees above the opening so the floor of the bathroom was littered with leaves. Even though the place is brand spanking new the shower drain is already clogged with leaves, so there was always nearly an inch of standing water. Before I took a shower I'd have to bail the water off the floor and into the toilet.


There was no hot water but part of the water supply line was in direct sunlight, so the water temperature would swing from cool to scalding hot and then back again without warning. Fun stuff.

I suppose it makes some sense to have an open-ceilinged shower, since the air needs to be vented somehow. It's not like anyone can look down into where I shower, right?

Wrong.


The purple tower is the shower vent. The footpath goes within two feet of it!

At the end of the footpath is the restaurant. Pepin told me there was a live band at the restaurant every Saturday night. He said this as though it were a good thing. Needless to say I didn't sleep Saturday night until after the band quit around 3 a.m. But in all fairness, I wouldn't have slept anyway.

The day I arrived I flopped on the bed to rest and wait for Stevan to call. I knew he would call soon to apologize for ditching me at the airport. He would, right? Of course he would.

He didn't.

He showed up about eight hours later, leading to this exchange.

A: "I was late to the airport."
B: "I know."

(awkward silence)

This is part where traditionally the person playing part A would say "Gosh, I am so, so sorry about that." That page was apparently missing in Stevan's script.

He said he'd heard I'd taken a taxi. He asked how much it cost. I said 50,000 rupiah (about five dollars). This is the part in the script where his character would say "That was my mistake so I'll just subtract it from the bill." Instead he said, "That's too much. You shouldn't pay more than 20,000."

Thanks for the timely information.

After I arrived and before this bizarre conversation took place I fell asleep and discovered the biggest problem with the unusual ventilation system. I awoke a few hours later drenched in sweat. The sun pounds through those floor-to-ceiling windows all day long. Because there's nowhere for the air to go the room gets so hot it's suffocating. At night the island gets pleasantly cool, but my room was still like the inside of the hot dog machine at 7-11. I didn't sleep a wink the entire weekend.

Labuan Bajo is a small town. Everyone knows Stevan. When I told people where I was staying they would always say, as if on cue, "Best place on the island to view the sunset." After two sleepless nights in the sweatbox, and after all the other frustrations I endured on the island (to be detailed in another post), I got a wee bit tired of hearing about how lucky I was.

After all, I was in a fishing village on an island. You can watch the sunset from virtually anywhere. I took this shot from a restaurant quite far away from my room, where I had perhaps the worst meal ever.


That's a pretty good view. I got to the point where I was ready to crack the next time said, "Wow, great sunsets up at Stevan's place."

I don't @#$%ing care about the @#$%ing sunset! I can @#$%ing watch the @#$%ing sunset from @#$%ing anywhere! What I @#$%ing want is some @#$%ing sleep!"

The third night I was so deliriously tired that I covered myself in bug spray and tried to sleep with the door open. But it was too little, too late, and I couldn't relax anyway knowing that I had basically just issued an invitation for someone to rob me. I think sleeping (or trying to sleep) in what was basically a giant microwave oven fried my brain and gave me all sorts of weird dreams.

I imagined how the news might report my death.

An American tourist was found dead in his hotel room today, having apparently cooked to death overnight in his bed. The doctor described his condition as "medium-well". Local residents said it was especially sad that he died last night, because he missed a really nice sunset today.

I wish I could have enjoyed the sunsets more.


I couldn't, though, because I was so miserable.

Even though Labuan Bajo is a major gateway for tourism in the area it is still just a small fishing town. At night there aren't many lights, so it gets quite dark. It's a great place for stargazing. At night all the fishing boats are on the water. Their lights on the water make it look as though the stars come all the way down from the sky and into the sea.

9/13/2009

Hot for teaching

I finished my first week of TEFL (Teaching English as a Foreign Language). So far, so good. I was, well, terrified isn't too strong a word to use how I felt the day before class started.

It could have been disastrous, 14 students from ages 18 to 56 from all over the world crammed into a tiny classroom in tropical heat. Luckily the air conditioning does a decent job and the students are all good people who take the class seriously.

The instructors are good for the most part. Andy is a British expat who has been teaching for years and loves it. With him you have to think before asking him a question because there's a good chance he will go off on a tangent for 20 minutes. Which is good. It's encouraging to see his enthusiasm.

Diem (pronounce yee-UHM, but as one syllable) speaks English with a pronounced Vietnamese accent but her grammar is absolutely perfect. She's a quite capable teacher.

Sa taught one lesson in "direct teaching". One of the primary philosophies behind the teaching methods we are learning is that only the target language is spoken in the classroom. If you have a class full of people who speak no English whatsoever you have to be able to teach them without using any Vietnamese.

To demonstrate the basic methods Sa taught us phrases in Thai without speaking any English (or Vietnamese). This was a particularly unnerving session, although it was encouraging to see that it can be done.

We've had two lessons in Vietnamese langauge, which I was looking forward to. Unfortunately these almost did more harm than good. The instructor, Mr. Vu, was atrocious. All you really need to know about Vu is that when students would make a mistake he would laugh.

I've spent several weeks in Vietnam and have tried to learn basic phrases and pronunciation rules. A few other students had also tried to learn some of the language on their own. We ended up coaching the other students. You know the teacher is bad when students are asking ME to help with their pronunciation!

The next day Andy asked us what we thought about Vu's methods. I was happy to learn everyone in the class was disappointed. Andy explained that Vu works for UNESCO, which happens to be the organization that the school rents the room from. So they're stuck with him. In the end, though, it was a good lesson in how not to teach a class.

Here are my classmates working on a project. You can see drawings we did for previous lessons taped to the walls.

I'm standing in the doorway to the classroom. The desks on the left are against the wall, which gives an idea of how cozy the room is. Behind me is the office.

These are the two camera shy course administrators, Nhi (left) and Nghiem (or Nina, on the right). We walk through the office to get to the classroom, which perhaps explains why the office is bigger!

This is the exercise we are working on.

This week we will observe one of our instructors teaching a lesson in a classroom. Later we will work in pairs to teach our first lesson in front of actual students. Yikes. My partner is Thu, the only Vietnamese student in my class. Yesss... She is confident in front of the class and has firm opinions on how to teach. I am more than willing to let her drive on my first trip in front of a class!

9/02/2009

Bali

I recently spent a week in the world's fifth-most populous country, which is ....

Indonesia.

If you knew that you're a heck of a lot smarter than me. I'm a bit disappointed in myself. It's the sort of otherwise useless information usually found on the tip of my brain. There are over 200 million people in Indonesia, a nation comprised of nearly 18,000 islands, with as many as 500 languages and dialects spoken.

I've talked to travelers who have been there and loved it. They said because it's so geographically, ethnically and linguistically diverse it takes time and patience. Seeing the country properly requires lots of time on buses on bad roads and boats with erratic schedules.

I didn't have time, but I did have a great opportunity to visit a friend there on the island of Flores. More on that in a separate post. To get to Flores I had to fly through Bali, one of the most famous beach destinations in the world.

A travel buddy I met on the way from Cambodia to Vietnam months ago was in Bali. It turned out his last night there was my first. There are beaches all over the island, catering to every type of tourist. If you want peace and quiet, or to stay in a ritzy resort, Bali has a spot for you. Nick was staying in Kuta, the beach with a reputation of being a sleazy backpacker hangout. This, of course, I needed to see for myself, so I squeezed in a couple days there.

Indonesia is primarily Muslim. Bali is the only Hindu island. As such, and as a popular destination for western tourists, it has been the target of several terrorist attacks in the past few years.

There were offerings left everywhere, even on the beach.


These little flower arrangements were everywhere, but aside from that Kuta seemed about as Hindu as Salt Lake City. This shot was taken at a local storefront showing a common souvenir.

Yep, it's that kind of place.

I didn't meet Nick and his sister until nearly midnight. We had a bite to eat and a beer but soon the restaurant closed. At that time of night the only place to hang out are the clubs. They took me to one. As we walked in Nick laughed and said over the thumping music, "Look familiar?"

It was very much like a club called Apocalypse Now that we had gone to in Saigon. In fact, it was very much like a tourist nightclub in any Southeast Asian city. We talked and drank frou-frou drinks from fishbowls and watched the freak show. There were working girls, of course, and even more shirtless guys than usual. I was a knucklehead college kid once upon a time but I can't ever remember saying, "Let's go clubbing. Wait a minute while I take off my shirt." Do I sound like a grumpy old man? Okay, I'll shut up.

Nick and Courtney went straight from the club to the airport, from which they flew to Kuala Lumpur. I slept a few hours and hit the beach.

The beach itself was awesome. Long, wide and relatively free of people asking me for money. It was outrageously expensive to rent a sunbed, though. In Vietnam I could rent a sunbed for just over a buck for the day. I seem to remember it being about the same in Thailand. In Cambodia they haven't caught on yet and don't charge for sunbeds. At Kuta beach I had to pay TEN dollars, just for the bed. Crazy.

But it was worth it to hang out with Maya, who looked ravishing even after waking up from a nap on the beach.



I find surfers, by and large, to be a pretty insufferable lot. I should clarify: I have a problem with people who think they're surfers. They tend to be arrogant and dismissive of other tourists because "we" ruin "their" beach paradises. In Kuta there were motorbikes everywhere with side racks meant to hold surfboards. But no surfboards...

There were plenty of people in the water with surfboards. Most of them couldn't even stand up, let alone surf. And no wonder. Look at this raging surf!

I was talking to one of the guys who fleeced me for a sunbed. I asked him when the surfing was good. He said this was pretty normal. I couldn't believe it. It makes Ocean City look like Hawaii. He said people don't go to Kuta to surf, they go there to learn to surf. Other Bali beaches have better surfing. I don't know if it's true but it would explain a lot.

Hence my problem with "surfers". Real surfers don't hang out in places like Kuta. They go to where the waves are. The people who surf in Kuta are more concerned about impressing other tourists than actually surfing.

End of rant.

Kuta is framed by Poppies Lane 1 and Poppies Lane 2, two narrow lanes that run more or less parallel to each other and perpendicular to the beach. Both lanes are packed with budget hotels, restaurants, travel agents, etc. Nick suggested a hotel there which was one of the best deals I've come across. From the outside Masa Inn doesn't look like much.



But inside it's huge. It looks like Melrose Place. This is one of the two pools, with my room just on the other side. Pretty sweet for $22 per night.



Navigating the lanes is, well, terrifying. There's no sidewalk. The lanes are about as wide as duck tape. Motorcycles zip by in both directions because, amazingly, the lanes are open to two-way traffic even though in places they're too narrow for one-way traffic.

9/01/2009

Back in blog

I've been traveling for the past few weeks in places where internet service is slow or non-existent. Today I took the bus from Phnom Penh to Saigon. Monday I start a four-week class that will certify me to teach English. Then I need to find a job.

The upshot of this is that I'll be stationary for awhile. I hope to get caught up on the blog this week. I have some good stories and pix from Cambodia. I have some pix from the week or so I spent in Indonesia, although the trip itself was a complete disaster.

So if anyone is still actually reading this, hang in there. Updates are on the way!