Beer vs Water

Would you believe that sometimes it is cheaper to drink beer than water.  In some restaurants a bottle of beer costs 13,000 VND ($0.76 AUD) and water costs 15,000 VND ($0.87 AUD).  To back up my claim, the BBC has reported that Vietnam is the 6th cheapest place in the world to buy beer.

http://www.bbc.com/capital/story/20160316-the-search-for-the-worlds-cheapest-beer?ocid=ww.social.link.email

Another different thing here is you get served your beer with ice and a straw.

Rice wine is also very popular and often drank in the rural areas as it is cheaper than beer, ie more bang for your buck!  There are three major kinds of rice wine in Vietnam: the conventional distilled variety known as ruou gao (literally “rice alcohol”), wine brewed in large ceramic jars called ruou can (party wine), and distilled alcohol infused with plants and animals, known as ruou thuoc (medicine wine).

I have tried the first rice wine and it is strong, about 40% and you drink it straight.  I thought it tasted like rocket fuel.

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From what I have seen and heard there is quite a big drinking culture here and they like to drink fast, not real sipping and appreciating the alcohol.

Xe ôm

A great thing here in Viet Nam is you can get a motorbike taxi (xe ôm) instead of a taxi. They normally hang out on the corners of streets and yell out to you, “motorbike” and they do the hand signals of riding a motor bike.  I have never seen a female driver and I don’t think there are any licences required other than the motorbike licence. The other clue they are a xe ôm driver is they have an extra motorbike helmet on their bike.

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Now once you find your driver, it is normally a good idea to do a quick ‘risk assessment’.  I think that one of my drivers was drank once and that another had a condition involving involuntary head movements.  It is a good idea to have the place where you want to go written down as I have been delivered to the wrong location before because of my pronunciation!!!

Once there is an understanding of where you want to go, now comes the fun part, the price.  It is the only time in Vietnam that I have to barter.  The price varies a lot between different drivers.

They then give you a helmet and you don’t think about how many heads it has been on.  You then get on, now you would think that you hold the driver around the stomach, but no, I hold onto the the handles just behind my seat at the back.  Once on board, be ready for some exciting times.  Some go fast, some go slowly but you are guaranteed to be weaving in a out of traffic.  I highly recommend it, it is a great way to see the city.  I have walked off numerous times with their helmet still on my head, they have chased me down:).

A little side fact, the ‘ôm’ in xe ôm means to hug which I think is very cute.  

 

It is not always what it seems…

I arrived in Da Lat for my mountain bike race and in most Hotels you get a complimentary water. It was a very nice hotel.

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I spotted mine and because I was in pre-race mode I ripped into the bottle.

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Well that was very quick lived as I almost spat it out, t tasted like corn.  For the rest of the day I would see half drunk bottles of this water around and everyone was talking about it.  I don’t understand the fascination with corn here.  Their birthday cakes are a sponge cake with bits of corn in it also.

 

The Choco Pie Incident

Many things can be blamed to have caused accidents and I am not sure if a Choco Pie has been used in combination with a Russian Photographer…

I spent the weekend in Da Lat for a mountain bike race. It is north east of HCMC.  Here is an exert from the Lonely Planet describing the place:

“Da Lat is quite different from anywhere else you’ll visit in Vietnam. You would almost be forgiven for thinking you’d stumbled into the French Alps in springtime. Da Lat is small enough to remain charming, and the surrounding countryside is blessed with lakes, waterfalls, evergreen forests and gardens”

Anyway enough about Da Lat, this is a Choco Pie!

On Friday I started the race and the first stage was 45km and it was hard.  Only 5 of the 170 competitors rode the whole way, the rest had to walk up a lot of hills.  I made it to the first aid station and had a banana and I spotted the Choco Pie just as I was leaving.  So I decided to take one for the road and stuff it into my mouth.  However, the next part was a down hill so I concentrated on the descent.  I then spotted some water buffelo and then to my horror the Russian Photographer.  So here I was descending with a Choco Pie stuffed in my mouth and I thought he is going to take a photo so I took my left hand off the handle bar and proceeded to stuff the Choco Pie further into my mouth.

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Well, as you can expect, that ended in a complete disaster.  My front wheel skid to the left and I came down hard and the right handle bar hit me in the ribs.  So I was laying star fish, face down on a gravel hill with a Choco Pie still in my mouth, winded.  I then heard the photographer start running up the hill and I felt better that help was on its way.  But to my horror, he said, I want to take a photo, so he proceeded to get on the ground and take photos of me and all I could say was “help”.  This went on for about 30 seconds and I was trying to take Choco Pie from out of my mouth!  All I could hear was “sorry, I need to take a photo”. Well they finally helped to get my bike off me and I got up and had to straighted my handle bars.

My only real injuries were my ribs and a sore right elbow and my bruised ego.  I then hastily got back on my bike and took off.  The next hour I kept cursing the photographer and the Choco Pie!  Why do they have to make something so delicious..

Well, karma came around,  the photographer was on the back of a motorbike and when they were coming out of a creek crossing, he fell off, KARMA.  I just kept cycling.

The next day, Saturday, we did the course in reverse which was slightly easier and I saw the photographer at the end of the course.  He asked if I was OK and then told me he was a doctor, a Russian doctor working in Germany.  Well that explains it.

Anyway to prove that the Choco Pie hadn’t beaten me, I got another one at the same aid station, but I ate it at the aid station.

Here is the start of the race

Here is some of the team that I ride with, Joost and James

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And during the race:

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Great value

I am competing in a mountain bike race in the weekend in Da Lat, so I wanted to get my bike serviced.  I talked to quite a few foreigners and apparently it is quite hard to get good bike mechanics.  I ended up finding one that was recommended to me so I dropped my bike off after getting horribly lost. It was suppose to take me 30 minutes to get there and it took me 1.5 hours!!

I went back later in the day and they insisted that I test ride my bike to see if it was ok.  I did this and it was good.  I then went back and paid for it.  It cost me 250,000 VND, which is equivalent to $15 AUD.  Something similar in Aussie would cost be $100 AUD.

My handbag broke while walking along the street which is quite a bizarre thing to happen so I went in search of someone that could fix it.  I first went to a shoe guy but he said no.  A Xe Om driver (motor bike taxi) who I know then came over to me and looked at my bag and then took me to a guy who had a sewing machine on the street.  He then negotiated for me.  I picked it up this morning and it is great work and it cost me 30,000 VND which is $1.80 AUD.  Again, great value.

Different situations…

Two situations that have made me laugh.

  1. I landed in Singapore to meet Niels for the weekend and on the arrival card I had to put an address for the hotel.  However, Niels booked it and I didn’t have the details so I wrote “Hotel”.  I got to the immigration counter and the officer said that I needed an address, I said that I didn’t have an address.  I then pretended to look at my phone and I wrote “Marigold Hotel, Orchard Rd”.  The officer looked at it and let me proceed.  No Hotel named this exists.  When I saw Niels, all I could do was laugh.
  2. I rented a motorbike in Da Nang and as security they asked for my passport.  I said that I needed it and so they asked what other documents I had.  I said a credit card and they said what about your drivers license.  I said, won’t I need that since I am hiring a motorbike and they said, you never get stopped, you will be fine.

I am sure that I will have many more of these incidents.

Hitting the trails

I spent a wonderful day in Ho Tri An mountain biking, about 2 hours north of Ho Chi Minh.  The Bike Shop organised a bike trip where we loaded our bikes in a truck and drove to the area.

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We rode around the base of a hydroelectric dam in the forest on single track.  Single track in Vietnam means it is used by motor bikes so it is compact but was very dusty.

To get to the area we had to take a ferry.

 

The trials were lots of fun and there were a few hills which was great preparation for the mountain bike race I am doing this weekend in Da Lat.  This is someone’s house in the middle of the forest.

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We also went for a swim in the lake.  It was fantastic.

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Langkawi

Langkawi is an island off the coast of Malaysia and you can get there by ferry or plane and it is not far from Thailand and is similar to Phukut but not as developed.  I went via a ferry from Penang during the TET holiday.  It took about 2 and 1/2 hours and it appeared to be quite an old ferry inside.  I decided I would be ok as I could swim, the water was warm and there were no great whites.  The only item I decided to take was my passport and I would take my sneakers off and my long pants if we had to jump ship. Anyway enough about that. When I arrived I noticed this massive bird.

I arrived there and immediately noticed that things cost more, taxis, accommodation.  I had a lovely two days cruising around the island on my hired motorbike and swimming in the ocean.

I went up a cable car that was at an angle of 42 degrees which is the steepest in the world.

I then visited the 7 waterfalls.

 

On the other side of the island is a beach with some black sand.  I then went up to the highest point on the island, 900m above sea level

 

 

Da Nang

I spent a week in Da Nang which is half way between Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh.  I was there for our yearly Habitat Vietnam conference which involved about 50 people.  It was a great week catching up with people I had met before and meeting new people.  I did my first presentation with a translator and it went well.  The advice that I was given was to keep it slow and short.  This is harder than you would think and if the translator doesn’t quite get what you are saying, you then have to word it differently.  It was also the first time that I have had my photo taken during a presentation that I was giving.

We had a Gala dinner the first night and celebrated Habitat Vietnam’s 15th birthday.  We then had a music video dance competition.  Yep, you heard it, we were divided into 4 teams and each team was given a music video and we had to create costumes and then dance to it.  It was hilarious.  We had a K-pop song (Korean Pop) and even though it was a draw between all 4 teams because we were allowed to vote for ourselves, I think we were the best.

We also had an interesting presentation on Asbestos.  It is currently still legal here in Vietnam to manufacture and construct with, so Habitat is working on educating people on the health risks.  We had a demonstration about what to wear if you are handling the material.

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Hoi An

During the week while I was at our conference we had a company day visiting Hoi An and some nearby ruins.  The ruins dated back about 1000 years and are Hindu Temples which is interesting since the majority of the country is Buddhist.  They were rediscovered by a Frenchman and then some got taken to museums in France and Vietnam and then they were bombed during the Vietnam War.

From there we went to Hoi An and had a tour around and walked over the Japanese Covered Bridge and through a Vietnamese house that had architecture from Japan, China and Vietnam and the tour was conducted by an 8th generation relative who still lives there.  In the picture, the Chinese were on the left and the Japanese on the right.

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We also visited a sculpture garden which was fascinating and all the statues were made out of marble.  Here is an impersonation of one of them:

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