30 November 2019

Koh Tao - Thailand Pt 1

We have been here in Koh Tao - Thailand for 5 days now after leaving Nepal on the 26th and on the flight out of Kathmandu we were able to catch our last glimpse of the Himalayas:



It was a very loooooooong 25 hr journey we had ahead of us as we'd decided to go straight from Kathmandu to Bangkok and then take the over night bus to catch the Ferry to Koh Tao the next morning.



The bus was super comfortable and we managed to get a bit of sleep. Then at 6am the next day we arrived to the Ferry and took the 1 1/2 hours trip over to Koa Tao.

Lomprayah Overnight bus
Lomprayah Catamaran
The crossing was really rough and choppy and at least half of people on the boat were suffering badly and vomiting 🤮 which was not so pleasant! Me and Wout we’re both fine though and managed to sleep - or at least I was asleep until my earphones ran out of battery and I was woken by the vomiting noises!!! 

As soon as we stepped off the boat and walked down the pier we found our ride to the dive shop which is on the other side of the Island from the pier where it's much quieter - The dive shop is called Big Bubble Dive Shop. This place had been recommended to us by my friend Gerd (aka PaPa) who I dived with in Honduras 6 years ago.



PaPa is from Germany and is 74 - he has over 3500 scuba dives under his belt and is quite the legend in the diving circles here in Thailand and across the world. He comes to Thailand for a few months every year and I’m really happy to get some more time together and to introduce him and Wout.

We’ve taken our first two days here trying to acclimatise to the humid hot hot weather and we just chilled and caught up on our sleep in our little jungle bungalow.... then on Thursday we took a refresher dive as we haven’t dived in 3 years so needed to brush up on our skills.

Jungle bungalow

Views from our Dive Shop
Wout was absolutely fine and got straight back into it however I on the other hand had a few issues relaxing back into it - my first dive was okay after I’d swallowed half the ocean trying to clear my mask under the water - then I was okay for the second half and managed to catch sight of some big parrot fish and angel fish amongst others. The second dive site was super windy and choppy and I struggled to equalise in my decent, that teamed with the poor visability and me feeling a bit overwhelmed and I decided to pull out of the dive and go back to the boat.




Wout started his Advanced open water course on Friday which he has been doing the past two days now and is finishing this evening with a night dive!



Night diving is not for me plus the visibility and windy weather have made the conditions for diving not that great so I’ve been staying to dry land and drinking lots of fruit smoothies and sun bathing.

Smoothie Spot

My new Fav Pineapple Smoothie!


We have made some really nice friends here with 2 of the dive masters so in the evenings we’ve been having dinner and drinks together and tonight we’re going out celebrate Wout passing his course with a few beers.

Raj / Felice and PaPa


We have another week here before we move onto Koh Samui for another week of sunbathing and relaxing - it’s a hard life! We've decided to move out of the Jungle Bungalow to a bigger room which has a fridge so we can buy some food and drinks in to try to save some money as eating out for every meal is getting expensive, even with how cheap it is here.

Missing home but not as much when I see all your pics of frost and snow!




05 November 2019

Working in the fields - Traditional rice harvesting - Lamatar


On Tuesday I went out into the our host families field to harvest the rice.

Here's my experience in getting the rice from the fields before we get it on our plates.

I started helping in the second shift from 10 am. The hired worker do two shifts everyday, 6am-10am then 10am-3/4pm. The hired workers work really hard and do very long days for about 12 hours 6 days a week.

So my start was time at 10 o'clock and i walked with our host mother for about 20 minutes to reach the family field. The family told me not to cut the grass down because the sickle is too sharp for amateurs like I am. My job would be to carry the grass once it had been cut. None of the workers did speak English so i just had to wait around till it was my turn, great time to make some snaps of them doing their work. After about a little 45 minutes it was my turn to start do some work. First i laid out the plastic cover sheets where the harvest machine is getting put on so the rice doesn't disappear into the soil.

workers doing work
more cutting workers

Waiting till i can start doing something
Setting up the machine
After everything had been set up, and they started doing their job, I decided to help the workers to collect the grass and carry it to the machine and take the harvest grass to the spots where they putting it down. This simple task went on for about 2 hours and then i heard a snapping sound... and there was quietness in the hot rice fields, the machine  has broken. the bolt has snapped off from the pedal where they where standing on to get the drum spinning. So there where two breaks going on at the same time.

After a phone call and a small 30 minutes it was all fixed and ready to go, back to work Englishman as they called me!

Soon after the break down all the grass in the big field had been collected and been spread out to dry, we had to collect all the rest from the lower field and carry it up, This is quite an good cardio workout, after about 3 more hours of collecting and of course a lot of sweat!


setting up the machine

all set up



The break when something broke














Sarah and our host sister Prabha came with more water and food, beaten rice and cauliflower curry is what they put me on the plate.  Beaten rice is cooked rice that is then squashed, so they call it beaten. then it is dried, its like oats but then crunchy. While on the break i decided not to walk anymore up and down the fields or even worse trough the muddy bit where the last rice grass needed to be collected from and i was allowed to finish for the day and i walked home with Sarah and Prabha.



After arriving home the fun was not over yet, i had to wash the clothes which where covered in mud and clay. Of course there is no washing machine so this had to be done all by hand. While washing my clothes the workers had finished everything on the field and put the rice in big bags, what weights about 30/35 Kg they carried it up 4 sets of stairs and dumped it on the roof to be spread out and dried for the coming year, even the woman who are not coming higher than my chest when they stand next to me did carry these big bags up to the roof, so i had to try it myself and ran down from the roof to collect a bag and bring it all the way up.

Finally after this last task the Chia tea was waiting for us and everyone could now rest and go home.

So now i understand where the rice comes from before it ends up on my plate, instead of buying it in the supermarket.
      
The following day the family asked me to help closer by the house to collect the dried rice grass what they give the cow, me being Wout doesnt say no to do some manual labour and helped a few hours in the afternoon.
Again there was no English so i had to look and learn. Collect a bit of grass get a few (grasprietjes I don't know the English word) and wrap it it around the bunch. after about 7 or 8 being done they get put on a big pile and wrapped up by a rope and carry it to the house, and put it down next to the cow shed.

The Cow

Grass spread out
Bunch

big bunch

Carrying big bunch


Sprietjes what weren't dry enough
Have a look down here for a couple random pictures what I've taking during these days in the fields



couple bunches of rice grass

I'm somewhere down there!


 

This is our host mother Tara - shes the boss -
I like this one.








Engineers fixing the machine
uncollected piles of rice

02 November 2019

Lumbini and a looooong ass drive to Pokhara!

ON the second day we woke up early doors to get back down to the River Bank in Chitwan to see if we could spot any more wild life, unfortunately it was very misty at 6am and there wasn't much to see other than hoards of tourists queuing up at the River bank to take their jeep tours into the park itself. We actually felt quite smug that we'd decided against taking a tour and yet had seen so much from the comfort of the cafe as the jeeps were packed with as many people they could fit in and really did not look fun at all!

Our driver came to collect us and we set off to Lumbini, which is known to be the birth place of Buddha. We really hadn't done much research at all about Lumbibi and had left all of this part of the trip to our host brother. The drive to Lumbini was pretty awful in all honesty as the road was really terrible. The drive took around 6/7 hours and the last hour was awful as the road had been dug up to be resurfaced so for about 8 miles we were basically 'off roading'!






Here a little snippet from welcome nepal.com which better explains Lumbini:

Lumbini is the Buddha's birthplace, one of the world's most important spiritual sites and attracts Buddhist pilgrims from around the world. Today you can visit over twenty-five Buddhist monasteries built by diverse countries from Vietnam to France, study Buddhism, meditate and visit the birthplace within the sacred Mayadevi Gardens.








  



Because the site was so big and it was already starting to get late we decided to take a moto rickshaw to drive us around to a couple of the temples and pagodas. We were all feeling really tired and it was getting toward sunset and we still had no place organised to stay. There were 10s of thousands of people in Lumbini so we were really not confident that we were going to find a room and instead decided that we would head straight for Pokhara. 





In hindsight this probably was not the best idea as the drive (which was 165km away) that we thought thought was going to take about 5 hours in fact took more than 8 and the mountains roads at night are an extremely scary place to be. There is again on one road between Lumbini and Pokhara most of which were very uneven, winding and VERY high up. To add to this the Nepalese coaches and trucks have no road safety consciousness and the entire journey we had huge trucks over taking on blind bends! We made it in one piece thankfully and all feeling very exhausted and sick of the inside of our car we reached our hotel in Pokhara at around 10pm.

We spent the next day exploring pokhara and visited Devi Falls and the peace pagoda before heading to see sunset from Sarankot (unfortunatly it was a bit cloudy so not the best views) then in was back to our rooms for some well deserved sleep before the long drive back to Lamatar the next morning.

Phewa Lake Pokhara
Peace Pagoda - Pokhara







These huge swings are everywhere in nepal - we stopped here on our drive home so Putal and Wout could play!




Wout trying his hand at nepalese style merry-go-round!
  










VIDEO - Langkawi, Malaysia -Cable cars and sky bridge

Click here to see the video here