Thursday, August 4, 2011

"Ethan's Blog Part III"




[This blog written by Ethan Collings Hawkins]


So, officially, I'm not in Bhutan anymore, but I'm still going to talk about it. One weekend we went camping and rafting. Even Kai and Noah did it! We rode class three waves, with some 4's thrown in. We made a gigantic sandcastle kingdom. There was an eddy beside the river where I made my largest sandcastle ever. It was 3-4 feet tall, 2-3 feet width. Then it rained and the river rose overnight, ..........(*sniff*). I played volleyball (feet style), archery, frisbee and darts. I was really good at darts, and tied with a "master". Let's say experienced. One time I was losing, so I threw the dart really hard, and it went through the ground and hit the part that is in the ground. It still counted though. There is a picture of me throwing a dart by the river at the top of the blog. In archery, well I was never really good at it. We hiked up to a chorten that I think is called, BUM-BUM-BUM.... The Dark Room of Evil Demons That Like Eating Human Shish Kabobs. We walked up to the very top of the chorten, with each of the demons glaring at us all the while. An Ethan paradise. It was a very tiring hike. Dad, who was carrying a 1,000,000 ton backpack looked like he dove in a swimming pool. It looks really cool in the night when lights shine all over it.

Another day, we hiked up to the most famous monastery in Bhutan. It is called Tiger's Nest. It is built right on the side of the cliff. When you walk in the temple, you can see the side of the cliff through the walls. Where the side of the cliff is there is no wall. There is a waterfall on one side too. There is a picture of it at the top of this blog.

The story of Tiger's Nest is that these people were taking a statue to another monastary. When they got there the statue spoke and said, "Hey buddy, what the heck am I doing over here?!? I should be over at Tiger's Nest!" The people almost lost it and the statue said, "Well a fellow is going to pick me up and carry me the rest of the way, so sup and rest easy pilgrims." So the "fellow" came along from Tibet and carried him to Tiger's Nest. Then he meditated there for three months, then gracefully flew or rode on a TIGER back to Tibet.

I think I'm overloading this, so I'm going to stop now. See you all soon in the States.

Saturday, July 30, 2011

"Good Niiiiight, Vietnam..."


What a four year old looks like at 7PM after:
getting up at 3AM to get picked up by a Thai taxi driver with no English and a trunk secured by packing tape, who stayed up by chewing coffee beans & had never been to the Bangkok airport before and didn't know how to get there; navigating through customs to get to a country where we weren't sure a visa would be waiting for us; flying over 600 miles into said (communist) country; finding a visa; watching his parents pull their hair out trying to figure out ATMs and costs where the exchange rate ($ to ɗôŋm) is 1 to 20,000 (lots of zeroes!); finding another taxi driver with no English to take him to a dirty, loud bus station where nobody spoke English except enough to say "no tickets -- storm"; finally learning a typhoon was approaching and he couldn't get on a bus to his next destination; getting some bread; finding another taxi driver with no English to take him to a hotel; getting yelled at for jumping on the beds in the hotel; finding an amazing hidden restaurant with fantastic Vietnamese food; learning that, in his opinion, this "fantastic Vietnamese food" every tells him about is really just not as good as Habaneros in Morganton and that, after all, he isn't even allowed to have the coffee his parents are raving about; exploring the Old City of Hanoi in the rain (remember the approaching typhoon?); learning there are no tickets for days to the biggest kiddo attraction, the Water Puppet Show; getting a milkshake instead; walking around some more; returning to the Puppet Show and scoring tickets; watching a loud and foreign, but very fun, puppet show; going to look for 550 lb tortoises in Hoan Kiem Lake; walking back to the hotel and getting some pizza;...
...and then seeing a bed.
His parents look pretty much the same right now.

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

"Kai's Blog Post"












[This blog written by Kai Collings Hawkins]

Welcome to the Thunder Dragon!

In "Enter the Thunder Dragon" you will find out about chortens, monasteries, stupas, and much, much, much, more.

Starting where I live, "Kai!" There are kids, dogs, and a lot of pigeons. Usually, the pigeons are near my apartment, where a lady upstairs drops down food for them. And, whenever they get scared from where the food is, it feels like a blowdryer, and it sounds super loud.

There are a lot of dogs here, named Boss Dog, and Puppy, and Tommy. When we were walking to a restaurant, Tommy walked with us halfway there. Puppy was the first dog we met here. Boss Dog was second.

We have been in many places, like a huge 50 meter tall Buddha. And, on our way to Bhutan, we stopped by Bangkok and we saw the Reclining Buddha.

I went rafting here at 8 years old. It's really fun! In America, you have to be 10 years old, or older, to go rafting. And while we were rafting, we were on a camping trip. There was a whole lot of sand there, so me, Ethan and Noah made the biggest sand kingdom we've ever made. And then, on an eddy, there was an island where we made a small castle with a couple of battle forts. I was really hoping there was marshmallows to put over the fire, but there wasn't, so we just caught the ends of sticks on fire. And then, we threw pine needles in the fire and they burned and made a lot of smoke.

Behind the market here in Thimphu, there is a whole lot of souvenir shops where I got a long bow and arrows and arrow points. Ethan got a knife, the handle is made of yak bone, and the rest is made of silver, and Noah got a dragon shirt.

At the camping spot, they had a long bow and arrows and a target, and I started shooting the long bow and arrows. And they also had darts, so I learned to throw them.

Today is last day at Bhutan, so I'm finishing up my Blog. I'm probably going to write another one in Vietnam (that's where we are going next). I'm going to be really sad about leaving Tommy, Puppy, Boss Dog, and all of my friends. So, I think I'm going to go buy Tommy, Boss Dog and Puppy a bone and I'm going to leave my toys for all my friends.

Monday, July 18, 2011

"Ethan's Blog Part 2"


[This blog written by Ethan Collings Hawkins]

There is another kid named Kilay. He is 8 or 9 years old. He likes building forts around the neighborhood with his friends. I play badminton a lot with him. I don't know how the score works, so he might be taking advantage of me. I play soccer against him too. There is a 6 year old boy named Ashish. He likes building other things, like bows and arrows with Kai. Samuel is really cool. He showed me the best climbing trees (and roofs) around the neighborhood. (I also learned what nettles are the hard way climbing a tree, but Samuel rubbed some leaves on my legs and they felt better.) He can kick a soccer ball really hard! One time he kicked it at his highest and it went over a wall and a fence! He has a sister named Rachel. She introduced us to........SUGER CANE!!!!!!! It tastes like......apples. with plenty of sugar. There is another kid named Sonam. He really good at soccer and badminton. (I forgot to say that Dowa was the champion of badminton.) A good description of him is that he has freckles all over his face. He is known in the neighborhood as the champion of climbing fences to get soccer balls. (Sadly, even I haven't been able to master that technique.) There are a couple of other kids that I forgot to mention, because I don't know their names. We are thinking of leaving some toys for the kids. Stuff like nerf guns and soccer balls. Mom is going to replace them though. There are some younger kids (a little younger than Noah) who are proud of learning two foreign names. So they go around yelling ETHAN!!!! NOAH!!!!!! over and over again. I think I've wrapped up about the kids.

Sunday, July 17, 2011

"Blog Posting from Ethan"















[This blog entry written by Ethan Collings Hawkins]

I've been in Bhutan for 2 weeks and this trip is pretty fun. I play soccer, I mean football every day with the local kids. I also play a game called badminton. It is a pretty cool sport. The kids here are so good, they cream the adults. In your face adults!!! The first kid I met here was named Samuel. He is 14 and plays wicked soccer. Since I'm playing 2-4 hours of soccer every day, I think I'm getting better too. There are three dogs here. One is named Boss, because he leader and helps keep mean dogs away. When you first look at him, he looks like a 20ft. demon sent from hell. Then, You get used to him when you pet him. Then, you think he looks like a very territorial bunny rabbit. We call him Boss Dog. There is another boy-dog named Tommy. He has spotted legs an black and white fur. (Boss is all black.) He is Mom's favorite dog, until he decided to take the 1-3 AM barking shift. Another annoying thing he does is lay down and take a nap in the middle of our game. Badminton or soccer. Only Samuel can move him. Other than that, he is a great dog . There is another dog named Puppy. We called her Calypso. She had babies, but they were stolen by a gang of older kids who go around at night stealing stuff, then selling them at the market. She is probably the most peaceful dog. She is the first dog we saw. All three belong to Samuel. If he whistles, they come pelting at full speed towards him. Samuel owns another dog name Happy. Happy messed up his leg when he was a puppy they took him to the vet, but unfortunately I'm leaving before I could see him. There are dogs that come and go, at the end usually chased off by Boss Dog. Don't argue with him. There are some cats that come by. If you want to know how they ended up, watch Tom and Jerry. There is a clever cat that always outsmarts Boss Dog. We call him Kitty. He visits sometimes. Enough with animals. Let's move on with kids. There is a kid named Dowa. He is my age (6th grade) and plays really good soccer. I'm assuming he likes Spider-man, because thats the only logo on his shirts. The logo on probably every other kid in the country is Ben 10. That cartoon is probably more famous than some of the actors here. There are Ben 10 shirts, pants, shoes, even commercials! Well that's enough for this blog. More about the other kids in the next blog.


"Bhutan Soundscapes"


I think of my brother often here.

Daniel is a composer, and while trained on the cello, he composes pieces around "found sound" -- he makes recordings of ambient sound and builds music around them.

The sounds here in Bhutan are so important to the experience that I can often imagine him here, alongside me, imagining ways to incorporate all these sounds into a Bhutan symphony. For instance...

• Chili & garlic. For many nights Kelly and I couldn't go to sleep with pipes rhythmically pounding in our house above our heads. Then they would wake us up again early in the morning. Eventually we realized they were not pipes, but our housemates in our apartment pounding chili and garlic. Now we are more accustomed to the sound, and it makes a reassuring rhythm that speaks of nourishment and comfort. Unlike...

• The infamous dogs. The city of Thimphu is full of dogs. They sleep in the roads and are found at every corner. Some are "owned", but most are just residents of the town along with human inhabitants. Not only does this make it a very hard city in which to be a cat, it also makes the nights hard. The barking is infamous, and last night we discovered a new and more uncomfortable twist when there was a full moon and the howling began. More than once my dreams have morphed into "Planet of the Dogs" nightmares. Any Bhutan symphony would need a dog tympany section.

• The dzong and monastery horns and bells. The deep chords hit by the horns of the monasteries (often shells or huge, long trumpets) resonate through your chest and intentionally hit a deep spot in anyone's soul. The word "om" (ओम्) is supposed to stimulate the central nervous system of the human body in healing and spiritual ways (which has always linguistically fascinated me, since "ohm" in Western parlance is a measure of electrical activity too). The sound of the monastic horns is like a musical "om", stroking your central nervous system with its deep resonant timbre. Small bells tinkle in a higher register as they are struck by spinning prayer wheels -- usually spun by humans, but there are also massive prayer wheels spun by hydropower from the powerful rivers and even some solar-powered wheels. In between these two sounds are the undulating sounds of chanting monks, like a Middle Way between the horns and bells. Deeply beautiful and moving, especially in the context of towering mountains and barreling rivers.

• Car horns. By way of contrast, my two least favorite things about Thimphu are very western and familiar (but intensified here): the trash and the car horns. The trash is ubiquitous and somehow unbelievable to my liberal western sensibilities -- that with all the introspection, extreme care with development, national recognition of the unique environment Bhutan enjoys, and the GNH concept, that the basic idea of not trashing the immediate surrounding environment would not hold more sway. Trash clogs the streams and gutters and is piled on street corners. In the context of noise pollution, the car horn is used much more freely than in Western towns. Part of it is because the roads are so narrow, so drivers feel it's necessary to alert pedestrians (as well as dogs and cows) when they are coming. Part of it is just cultural and communicatory. In this sense it is friendly, and eventually I interpreted it as such, but the horns themselves are built by Hyundai, Toyota, Mahindra and Tata rather than Bhutanese Buddhists, and are thus engineered to be shrill and penetrating alerts, not pleasant advisories. This makes walking around the city much less pleasant until the subconscious screens it out -- however our symphony would include it as a fundamental countermelody for the urban Bhutan environment. And just so that the description of urban Bhutan life is not portrayed too grimly, I have to point out a non-musical but charming feature: there are no stop lights. None. Possibly the only national capital in the world without a single stoplight, and intentionally so. When a few were installed, the Bhutanese population complained they were too "impersonal" and so the white-gloved police choreographers were reinstalled, doing a rigid and extremely formalized dance every 2 minutes to redirect traffic at the major traffic circles, almost like they are hearing a musical score of their own, invisible to the pulsating traffic around them, but as quietly critical to it as the moon to the waves.

• Workers breaking stone. All stone here, for construction and concrete, is broken by hand. It follows a musical score of its own, a thwunk thwunk thwunk *thwack* as each stone is broken. The construction goes incredibly fast, despite the manual stonebreaking and the fact that all concrete rebar is bent by hand (an amazing thing to watch). There is tons of construction going on in Thimphu, presumably as the city develops its infrastructure to accommodate the diplomatic changes that continue to open its culture to other countries. The predominance of "construction by hand", however, generates a completely different rhythm and soundscape than a Western construction site.

• And finally, my favorite Himalayan sound. The Bhutanese laugh. This is particularly true in the Emergency Department, maybe once you have a slightly more personal relationship than just meeting on the street. It is not a slow chuckle or an intrusive guffaw. The eyes widen, the face crinkles, and the laugh envelops you, bringing you into the hilarity with a jedi mind trick so strong you can't resist it. Beautiful. Ha!


Wednesday, July 13, 2011

"Little Dragons"

















So the kids have fit right in to the neighborhood crowd an sports scene
here.

Kai in particular was all fired up to get archery lessons. We figured this would be easy since archery is the national sport of Bhutan, but after going to every archery shop in town, and even to the Bhutan Olympic Committee offices, we learned there are no lessons for kids. Nonetheless, Kai did get to handle some of the adult archery equipment, and built his own bow and arrow with Ashish, his new buddy here in the neighborhood. Ethan has hooked up with Samuel, a new 14 year old pal, who plays furious soccer. And Noah has made friends with Jim-Jim, pictured above shaking hands with Noah, the four year old son of the owner at Ambient Café. Noah is very quick to point out that he is four and a half, apparently giving him some authority in that friendship...)

The neighborhood crowd finds endless adventures in the environs around our apartment. In the picture above, Kai and Noah are going shoulder-in-shoulder to check out some of the night-time attractions. So far these have been a ghost that, by report, lives in a tree in the neighborhood. The ghost, when living, was hung from the tree because his wife beat him in a drinking contest and "clonked him on the head". More recent attractions have been a dead cat in a cornfield -- quite spooky after dark! The trees and roofs in the neighborhood make for great climbing, and Ethan is showing the kids here all sorts of TAASC climbing tricks.

There was an abrupt change 2 days ago. Suddenly there were no knocks on the door at 9AM, and we learned that school had started again here! Although all the same activities pick up again after 3PM, we suspect the kids will be finding new daytime adventures now in the second half of the month...

Monday, July 11, 2011

"The Red Panda: Mill Mountain to Maurer"


Red Panda Beer, the best beer in Bhutan.

People ask how Kelly and I can travel for a month throughout the Himalayas with our three tsunamis -- er -- children in full gear alongside us. Our answer?





Red.


Panda.


Beer.

This weiss beer is brewed in Bumtang by Fritz Maurer, a remarkable Bhutanese citizen of Swiss birth. His story is as good as the beer. Uncharted Travel tells the story much better than I can...*

"Fritz is an unusual name for a Bhutanese man, but then Fritz is no ordinary man.

Fritz Maurer was born in Switzerland and came to Bhutan in the mid 1960’s to help develop farming in the Bumthang region of Bhutan as part of the Pro Bhutan Foundation. He eventually married and started a Swiss cheese factory.

He now runs a Swiss Lodge style guest house, and produces not only cheese, but also honey and Schnapps. He speaks the Bumthang dialect better than most Bhutanese, and the locals refer to him as Dasho, a title reserved for high ranking officials. No one can remember the last time they saw him in western attire.

According to recent folklore, when Heinrich Harrer came to Bhutan he haughtily introduced himself to Fritz Maurer as “Heinrich Harrer, Seven Years in Tibet”, to which Fritz Maurer replied “Fritz Maurer, thirty years in Bhutan.”

Fritz Maurer is one of the few foreigners lucky enough to immigrate to Bhutan; of the others the vast majority are also Swiss. You can already hear rumblings on the streets of Thimpu over the number of Swiss immigrants, I think there are three altogether now. Others in the past included a Canadian Jesuit who was very proud of the fact that he didn’t convert a single person."*

It is worth noting that Kelly chose the red panda as her favorite animal long before we arrived in Bhutan. She saw her first red panda at Mill Mountain Zoo (www.mmzoo.org) in Roanoke VA, and instantly fell in love. Never mind how improbable it was that we find this zoo in the first place (a story of its own), or that there should be a Himalayan panda living in a small Virginia community zoo in the middle of the summer. It was meant to be, and her red panda love affair continues via the beer here in Bhutan.

*full credit for this excerpt: www.unchartedtravel.com/asia/bhutan/attractions/bhumtang.php?country=bhutan

"Picture Library"


For those of you interested in more Bhutan pictures, we are building a library here (Seth):
https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.2103976191874.121834.1019573818&l=19c14db1a0

and here (Kelly):
https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.10150308389814274.383974.647979273&l=0fba6f31c2

"EMS in the Himalayas"












The Health Help Center (HHC) in Bhutan is the centralized dispatch and EMS center for the entire country.


It is fascinating to see this being built from scratch. It is only a few years old, and the new EMTs only a few months out of training. There are numerous challenges to building an entirely new EMS system in a Himalayan country, not least of which is training an entire cadre of new healthcare providers of a type never before seen in this country. There is some skepticism here about the ability of non-physicians to be able to provide adequate field care -- reminds me of the United States in the 1970s, in the era of "Emergency!" and the first paramedics -- and I am proud to be able to share what great care non-physician paramedics can and do provide in the States.

On the other hand, there are unexpected benefits to building a system from scratch. I had wondered if there would be difficulty in citizens in an extremely rural country being able to access 112 calling (the version of 911 here). It would be a classic administrative mistake to spend millions of dollars establishing a communications center that nobody could reach due to insufficient access to phones. In fact, not only does everyone have a mobile phone (including in the rural areas), but the coverage is fantastic. We have not yet found an area, including wilderness areas, that we did not have full coverage... and this is in a country that, by law, protects over 60% of its forests as protected/wilderness areas, and has the highest fraction of protected land areas, as well as the highest proportion of forest cover, of any Asian nation. Kelly has a hypothesis that I think is correct: the national telecommunications infrastructure was established so recently that little effort was put into establishing landlines, and as a consequence, mobile telecommunications (towers) are extremely robust. This means that personal landlines may be minimal in rural areas, but mobile phones are ubiquitous, and have even better coverage than areas in the States with similar terrain. This also is helped by fewer telecommunication companies, meaning more consolidated networks. The beneficial consequences for Search & Rescue, rescue operations, and EMS are obvious -- and in ways like this, ironically, a robust EMS/rescue system may be easier to establish than in a country with a longer history of development. Other interesting technological advances include complete GPS control of each ambulance throughout the country via Google Earth (they are green when moving and red when stationary), and the use of the HHC as a "health advice" line. Telecommunicators can even send prescriptions via SMS to callers, and there is a full-time physician assigned to the HHC for on-line medical consultations from citizens who call in with medical questions.

It is extremely exciting to be a part of this project, and my hat is off to the Bhutan Foundation, the Bhutanese Government, the Ministry of Health, and the American HVO emergency physicians working here for recognizing that EMS and EM must grow together, with parallel progress, for either to fully succeed.

Thursday, July 7, 2011

"Flight of the Thunder Dragon"

"Fire leaped from the dragon's jaws. He circled for a while high in the air above them lighting all the lake; the trees by the shores shone like copper and like blood with leaping shadows of dense black at their feet." --J.R.R. Tolkien


On July 2nd, we flew from Bangkok into Bhutan on Druk Air ("druk" is dragon in
རྫོང་ཁ་, the native language of Bhutan). We were all hoping to get to see Everest -- the flight path goes right by it -- but the skies were too cloudy. We're hoping for better luck on the way back...

The landing in Bhutan is remarkable. It is best encapsulated in this excerpt from Travel & Leisure's 2009 article "World's Scariest Runways", in which Paro was the first airport profiled:
It’s 10:45 a.m. on a cloudy day, and the crew of Druk Air flight KB205 is preparing to land at their home airport of Paro, Bhutan. Suddenly, ominous warnings start blaring, alerting them that their flight angle is all wrong and their rate of descent is far too fast. They fly a series of unconventional right-and-left banks through a narrow channel of hillsides before centering the swaying jet and putting it on the tarmac.

An emergency situation? Not quite. In fact, this is a completely normal—however nail-biting—landing at Paro Airport, set 7,300 feet above sea level. Because of the airport’s tightly cropped valley, surrounded by 16,000-foot-high serrated Himalayan peaks, this drama replays itself on every flight.
According to the article, only eight commercial pilots in the world are licensed to fly in to Paro Airport. Indeed, on our flight the pilot got on the intercom before our landing to reassure us that the upcoming maneuvers were routine, and not to be alarmed. It was incredible to fly in to an airport, while seeing cliffs out the window only a short distance away.

Kinda like flying into Linville Gorge in a 747.

Protocols


Kai, ever the stickler for protocols, reviewing the hostel's copy of Do's and Don'ts in Thailand. (It must be said that this is after Ethan had devoured the entire book the day before -- well, except for the parts banned by his parents about Red Light District etiquette.)

After reading the book, Kai in particular took great delight in bowing deeply to every monk he saw. This made for a lot of bowing. And a lot of puzzled monks.

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

"Bonus Picture"

And now, playing off Noah's famous "sometimes it just doesn't matter how cool the next DC monument will be" picture...

Sometimes it just doesn't matter how cool the next buddha statue will be!

Monday, July 4, 2011

"The Land of Rivers & Buddhas"


Bangkok truly earns its name of Venice of the East, with a remarkable series of canals and rivers. We loved the Jim Thompson house and got all sorts of ideas from this house-on-a-river for our own Riverwoods home (get ready to go Thai, Greg Hoff!) The kids were amazingly enthusiastic about touring various religious sites, partly because it meant cool rides on funky river ferries. Ethan in particular developed a fascination for the various Buddhas and lead a long and comical trek to find the enormous Reclining Buddha, which indeed was worth the effort in the end (thanks Ethan). In the picture to the right, Kelly, Kai and Noah give their own interpretation of the Reclining Buddha.

"Electronica and Ozonation"



So a few years ago I made my grand entrance into Asia by blowing out the wiring in an entire Hong Kong hotel room trying to step down from the standard 220V outlet there to standard American 110V... with a surge protector. At the time I didn't really think through why it had happened, mostly because I was so jet lagged I could barely remember my first name. The passage of time apparently didn't add to my insight. Arriving in our Bangkok hostel after a gazillion miles in the air, I dutifully set about protecting my electronics by plugging in my surge protector before anything else. Like, anything else to step down the 220V source. This time I actually singed my hand and there was a pretty impressive bang. Good thing I was protecting my stuff against any surges, like, oh, maybe, the entire 220V circuitry grid in Thailand! The only small consolation was that this room was also the only hostel/hotel room I have ever seen that actually mounted the room's fuse box above the door. They must have suffered American visitors before us. Still, it sure was handy (and less embarassingly dumbass) to be able to get to the fuses and make the fix on my own. Handy fuse boxes above the door is only the beginning at Sivalai Place, the fantastic hostel we stayed in during our Bangkok layover. Oillie and the rest of the staff are fantastic and extremely personal and attentive to travel needs and questions, they have a great coffeeshop in the lobby, and their claim to have the best (ozonated) pool in Bangkok is probably well-founded. It was just the place to transition our jet-lagged, travel weary selves into our new 220V Asian lifestyles.

"I'm Famous"

"I'm Famous"

What they say about Himalayan cultures valuing children is really true. At first it has been really hard for Noah in particular to adapt to this. Boundaries are very different, and everyone here feels very free to touch him and talk directly to him which spooked him out for a while. But then he made an abrupt transition and announced one day "I'm famous." Thereafter it was game on, and now he seems to welcome the attention. "Everybody here really likes me," he says now. Here he is getting a blessing from a monk at the Temple of the Dawn -- one of many high points of attention for him. Next, he says, he plans to become a rock star. Watch out world.

Thursday, June 30, 2011

Busted Flat


"Busted flat in Bangkok, waiting for a plane... feeling 'bout as faded as our kids..."

So here we are in Bangkok, waitin' for Bobby McGee. Not as faded as all that, although there are moments when the jet lag catches us! Our visa drama continued for 2 days, as it looked like Bhutan had shut down visas for families a few days before ours was due to be issued. Just as we were looking into giving up the medicine-in-Bhutan idea and becoming ex pats in Bangkok (this would probably involve becoming dishwashers to support our growing need for iced milk green teas and the kids addiction to their ozonated Thai pool) the visas came through this afternoon! Kelly attributes this to diplomacy, while I am sure it is my sudden boost in karma from all my donations to the elephant funds. When I wrote that in a note to our friend Allyson Whyte, Kelly claimed I was lying. But I never said these were financial donations. It was spiritual money. My soul was with the elephants. Deeply. In fact, I thought I might have to ride them into Bhutan if the damn visas didn't come through.

The Journey




"The Journey"

As expected, The Journey was indeed epic. Particularly poignant was Noah sobbing and flinging himself around in utter frustration somewhere over the Northern Pacific Ocean between Minneapolis and Tokyo. We were also disappointed not to get the cool, seat-specific television screens and instead got a single crappy projector screen, which doomed the kids to watching Seth Rogen's abysmal "The Green Hornet" three times over. There were, however, higher points to the trek, including:

• Seeing snow in summer! Flying over an amazing Alaskan mountain range and watching snow fall below us while traveling from Charlotte (85˚F) to Bangkok (88˚F). It seems like a surreal memory now as we drip sweat in the Thai humidity.

• Ethan on the airline meal: "Wow, this is the fanciest meal ever! This is gourmet chicken!" I think he was really hungry.

• Noah, arriving in Bangkok, said in amazement, "they have cars what drive by themselves!", seeing cars with no steering wheels (not knowing the steering wheels are on the right)

• We had a long discussion about the immigration policies of different countries, including our own, and countries that do not actively seek immigration like Bhutan. Ethan's opinion: "I think the king of Bhutan would make an exception if there was a really pretty Irish girl."




Monday, June 27, 2011

Welcome to our blog! We will be describing our travels during Seth's sabbatical in Bhutan in July 2011. We'll also be in Thailand in June, and Cat Ba Island, Vietnam in August.

Please be patient with us as we figure out this blogging business -- we are new to it. I suspect we'll finally have it all figured out just when we are on the plane heading home...

Thanks for joining us on our adventure: Seth, Kelly, and our three little typhoons launch tomorrow!