Thursday, August 4, 2011
"Ethan's Blog Part III"
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"
Monday, July 18, 2011
"Ethan's Blog Part 2"
[This blog written by Ethan Collings Hawkins]
Sunday, July 17, 2011
"Blog Posting from Ethan"
"Bhutan Soundscapes"
I think of my brother often here.
Wednesday, July 13, 2011
"Little Dragons"
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):
"EMS in the Himalayas"
Thursday, July 7, 2011
"Flight of the Thunder Dragon"
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.
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.)
Tuesday, July 5, 2011
"Bonus Picture"
Monday, July 4, 2011
"The Land of Rivers & Buddhas"
"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"
Thursday, June 30, 2011
Busted Flat
"Busted flat in Bangkok, waiting for a plane... feeling 'bout as faded as our kids..."
The Journey
"The Journey"