Wednesday 31 October 2018

Bangkok; Thailand

Yesterday I crossed the Cambodian/Thai border, legally, and had a short(ish) drive to Bangkok. Our original plan was to spend 2 nights in Bangkok and fly to the Maldives at 09:25 1st November, but AirAsia rescheduled our flights to 22:00 that evening so we changed them to 31st October to get an extra night in the Maldives at the expense of one in Bangkok. 

This was the last night of the tour which had taken us from Ho Chi Minh to Bangkok. We had an emotional farewell dinner, followed by drinks at the hotels rooftop bar with stunning views of the city. I’ve never had the pleasure of travelling with such a collectively wonderful group of people before led by the most incredible guide - Bamboo. 




If it weren’t for Bamboo, I’d be stuck in a Vietnamese immigration detention centre dying of anaphylaxis. He made sure I exited Vietnam and got into Cambodia (his home country). Despite having minimal experience of dealing with severe food allergies he made it his business to learn, and at every meal ensured the restaurant staff fully understood what I couldn’t eat, and how my food should be safely prepared. On the one occasion where a restaurant made an error he made sure it was immediately resolved and stayed with me whilst the reaction was being managed, frequently checking up on me via Ben and Clare. No favour was too much for him. It was his job to take us through Vietnam, Cambodia and to Thailand but he didn’t have to make such an extra effort to teach us about the culture, history and food of his country - but he did, happily. The world would be a better place with more Bamboos in it.

I’m now at Bangkok airport with Ben and Clare, ready to fly to the Maldives for the final leg of our adventure.


Love Emily x

Tuesday 30 October 2018

Phnom Penh & Siam Reap; Cambodia

After a cracking night in a karaoke bar with $0.50 beers I visited Cambodia’s infamous ‘killing fields’ and the prisons used to detain prisoners of the Pol Pot regime, known locally as the Khmer Rouge (translating as Cambodian Red, i.e. Cambodian communists).

I expected there to be some introductory information boards between the car park and the mass graves, almost like a buffer zone, or at least some warning of what was about to come. Instead we immediately arrived at a sign saying “please do not walk on the mass graves”. 

The things we saw were awful: as it was the end of the rainy season, teeth, bone fragments and victims clothing were rising out of the  waterlogged ground, and our tour guide told us this happened daily. I saw the skeleton of a child and the suture lines of their skull weren’t fully fused together so they must have been less than 2 years old. Worse than the sights, though, were the things which were explained to us. The victims of the Khmer Rouge totalled almost half of the Cambodian population, and that doesn’t account for the ‘free’ people who died of the famine. Initially government workers were targeted, then political critics, then ‘intellectuals’ (which even included anyone who wore glasses). The idea behind this was to remove from society the people who would criticise Pol Pot, and might give less educated people negative ideas about the regime. These people were detained and tortured with the aim of them disclosing the name of other ‘criminals’. They were told the torture would continue until either they gave up names or died, or they could provide names be provided with a new house. The majority of these victims didn’t know of any ‘criminals’ so they named innocent people to get their abuse to stop. Only it didn’t. Their ‘reward’ for complying was to be sent to the killing fields to kill those prisoners who didn’t provide names. It wasn’t just adults who were sent to do this; children were too. We saw photos of many of the children who were ordered to kill - most were between 10-12 and looked horrified and broken by what they were being made to do, but others had a tiny smirk and defiant look which suggested they enjoyed it. 

How were innocent people killed in the fields? I assumed they would have been shot, but our guide explained this would have been too quick and easy a death. Instead they were blindfolded, made to kneel at the edge of a mass grave, and struck at the base of their skull with a hammer. If they survived this, their throat was cut using the bark of a palm tree which has a sharp edge - but not sharp enough to do it quickly. We saw a tree named “the magic tree” where speakers were hung to blast out music to cover the screams, meaning nearby villagers weren’t aware of what was happening. If you were a woman with a child, your fate was worse. The women were lined up with their children, and one by one the children were taken by Khmer Rouge, held up by their ankles, and had their heads clubbed against a tree - in front of their mothers. After the children had been killed the women were raped, and then murdered. 

I left the field feeling pretty somber, and then went to the infamous S-21 prison in Phnom Penh. Once Vietnam became aware of the genocide in Cambodia they (admittedly not entirely altruistically) invaded Cambodia to intervene. Khmer Rouge got wind of this and increased the rate of executions to attempt to destroy evidence of their crimes. They succeeded in ‘emptying’ thousands of prisoners from S-21 (bearing in mind this was one of hundreds of prisons in the country, and the same was being done at each) and only 7 remained by the time the prison was liberated by the Vietnamese. Two were babies, two were brothers aged 8 and 6, and three were adult men. The 8 year old and two of the adults have now returned to S-21 to tell visitors their stories which must have taken an unimaginable amount of mental strength. My mind struggles with getting on a bike or going to Kettering hospital, so I don’t know how they survive returning to the place where their mothers and fathers were killed. 

It was a tough day so we needed a bit of down-time in the evening, which came in the form of a sunset all-you-can-drink boat party on the Mekong river. Clare and I (badly) re-enacted the ‘Jack and Rose’ photo, and I gave Ben a nosebleed: I owed her $5 which I put down her top, she said “I feel like I should give you a lap dance”, I said “go on then”, she straddled me and leant my head back, my sunglasses almost went overboard so I swung my head forwards, and make quite hard contact with her face. Whoops. 

A couple of days later we set off to Siam Reap which has a brilliant night life. We drank at a rooftop bar complete with a pool, and then Clare and I hit the night market whilst Ben had a massage (which she described as “like being stamped on”). There’s a road called “Pub Street” which is a cacophony of neon lights, loud music, and smells of delicious street food. It was brilliant. We didn’t stay out too late though, because the next morning we had a 4am start to reach Angkor Wat (the worlds largest religious site) for sunrise. It was beautiful, and once the sun had risen we explored the temples which were a fascinating fusion of Buddhism and Hinduism. One of the temples had been abandoned for hundreds of years and had been buried under the jungle which has overgrown it. Restoration work is underway but it was still stunning to see trees growing on top of buildings, and wrapping their roots around walls. Most interestingly, though, was the explicit instruction on the back of my entrance ticked forbidding me from “exposing sexual organs”.

We left Angkor Wat just before midday, and the temperature was 34 degrees. Hot, sunburnt and drenched with sweat, I have never been more grateful to get on an air conditioned coach. We stopped at a local ‘training restaurant’; designed to help local village youths learn English and the necessary skills to become chefs or waiting staff. The food was absolutely delicious, but a learning need was identified re. allergens and cross-contamination. I felt very itchy and my lips tingly, but that was probably psychological after seeing peanuts so I didn’t pay it much attention. I developed a rash but no airway symptoms, so I just took some oral antihistamines. On the bus back to the hotel I had a sense that I was going to die. This feeling is easily dismissed as a panic attack, but it’s not. I’ve had a panic attack before but this sensation is entirely different: it’s a symptom (‘a sense of impending doom’), not a feeling. Within minutes my chest was tight, I had abdominal pain, I was jittery and was very tachycardic - adrenaline time! This meant I was down to a grand total of 0 EpiPens so as soon as I’d slept the reaction off Clare and I went on the hunt for replacements. We couldn’t find an auto-injector anywhere but we did manage to get hold of some 1mg vials of adrenaline, plus needles and syringes to draw it up. One vial is the equivalent of two EpiPens, and that plus some diazepam to take the edge of the bloody horrible adrenaline come-down cost me the meagre sum of $9! 

Today I feel lethargic and still a little bit queasy, but ultimately fine and ready for this 9 hour bus ride to the Thai border!


Love Emily x

Thursday 25 October 2018

The Vietnam/Cambodia Border

Today we got a bus over the Vietnamese/Cambodian border. When I entered Vietnam I was distracted by tiredness and an allergic reaction, so whilst I recognised the slowness of the immigration officer at the airport and irritably questioned his competence, the significance of this observation wasn’t obvious, but became very clear when I tried to leave the country. Long story short: I’m technically an illegal immigrant. Work Experience Immigration Guy had stamped my passport with the date of my entry but hadn’t marked my visa as ‘used’, ergo, I had entered without a visa (despite having one). The immigration staff at the border spoke about as much English as I do Vietnamese so it was a tricky one to resolve. I watched my friends walk over the no-mans land between the two countries and wondered what life would be like in a Vietnamese immigration centre. Luckily that thought didn’t become reality because I re-joined the back of the queue and found the equally lax colleague of Work Experience Immigration Guy, he stamped my invalid visa, and I went on my way to Phnom Penh - which I’m about to explore via tuk tuk.


Love Emily x

Ho Chi Minh; Vietnam

Ben, Clare and I have been in Ho Chi Minh City for the past few days and met up with the group which we’ll travel with through to Thailand. This city borders on sensory overload: the lights, sounds, traffic and heat are inescapable but thankfully none of the smells which have almost overwhelmed in previous places I’ve been to. Compared to India the driving is (relatively) safe. There are traffic lights and road lanes which are occasionally observed, and no roaming cattle on the roads. Most foreigners I’ve met are on an adventure and there’s an amazing culture of sharing stories and advice. I’ve never been to a city anywhere in the world with such a great ‘traveller community’ and I love it.

Soon after we landed Clare and I left our hotel to explore. We were given the least interpretable map in existence by reception, which was so useless it may as well have been created by J.K. Rowling. Visibly lost, a man approached us and asked if we wanted a rickshaw tour of the city. Neither of us are inexperienced travellers and we followed all the usual steps (primarily agree a price in advance, 5,000 dong 
per bike, bargain!), were confident we’d got a great deal, and hopped on the bikes. The tour was great: they dropped us off at loads of places, waited for us until we were done, and then took us to the next one. We visited the war museum (harrowing, but well worth a visit), Notre Dame cathedral (an out of place but fairly accurate replica of Paris’ famous building), the Reunification Palace, and the river bank. At the end of the tour we profusely thanked our riders, and they demanded 1,500,000 dong. That’s the original price multiplied by 10, and then trebled. I paid 50,000 dong which is about £6.50 - still significantly more that the agreed rate but an amount I was happy to pay given the great time we’d had. We argued the toss with them about the rest, they pointed at a cash point for Clare to withdraw the money from and grabbed my arm to keep me as a ‘deposit’. Luckily I’m a big white girl and they were little Asian men so it wasn’t at all difficult to get away, which I did. We then legged it, saw one was following us, so dived into a heaving indoor market to take refuge. We stayed there for about half an hour and tried to second guess which exit they’d be expecting us to leave by. We picked the obvious choice, tentatively peeked out to make sure we weren’t still being followed, and then merged back into the anonymous crowds of the city.

The next day we went to the Mekong delta which is a series of small inhabited islands at the mouth of the river Mekong, just before it reaches the South China Sea. We hopped between islands via boat and tried lots of local foods (fruit, honey, cocoa, coconut candy, snake wine), petted a python (2 were kept in captivity so their shedded skin could be used to make soup), and wore traditional conical hats. After we returned to Ho Chi Minh we headed to the street food market for dinner which was amazing, and a far more Western interpretation of ‘street food’ (or vice versa) than I saw in India. 

Today we’ll be getting a bus to the Cambodian border and getting some more ink in our passports.


Love Emily x

Tuesday 23 October 2018

Hà Nội, Hà Long, & Ho Chi Minh City; Vietnam

I’m currently in Vietnam with Ben and Clare: I’ve been to Hà Nội and Hà Long, and at the moment I’m in Ho Chi Minh City. 

The flight here was interesting. I have a severe peanut allergy. It’s recently got to the point where being in the vicinity of peanuts causes a reaction. In light of the sad recent case of Natacha Ednan-Laperouse and an 11.5 hour flight coming up with Vietnamese Airlines I boarded the plane with plenty of safe snacks and cards explaining my allergy in Vietnamese.

I looked for an option online to let the airline know about my allergy in advance, but there was none. The moment I stepped on the plane I let a hostess know and requested no peanuts be served on the flight. She seemed confused, so I told another hostess, and finally a third so I could be certain the message had been received by someone. 

It had not.

Within 30 minutes of take off staff were merrily chucking bags of peanuts at passengers, wether they asked for them or not. I asked them to stop, to which their reply was “oh yes, no nuts for you”. No - no peanuts for ANYONE! There was a complete lack of understanding of why this was a potentially fatal safety issue and one steward I tried to explain it to walked away from me laughing and saying “no, no, no” and refused to make an announcement asking other passengers to stop opening packets. 

Ben was becoming upset because she could see a rash start covering my chest, neck and face. She is one of the strongest women I know: I have never seen her tearful before, but she was in this situation because she thought I was going to die and there was nothing she could do to help me. We recognised that the mistake (the serving of peanuts) had already happened and couldn’t be undone, but wanted to make sure our plans B, C and D were foolproof. The staff had no idea of the potential need for an emergency landing. Their ‘medical box’ contained plasters and out of date loperamide. They couldn’t tell us where the defibrillator was. Looked at us blankly when we asked if there were non-nutty seats to move to.

I spent the final 11 hours of the flight dosed up on antihistamines and physically uncomfortable with a mild allergic reaction, but the mild nature of it was better luck than judgement. Mentally though, I was entirely unable to sleep because of the paranoia I felt each time I heard the rustle of a packet which may have been peanuts from earlier. A sleepy itch wasn’t just an itch: it felt like the first symptom of anaphylactic shock in my panicked mind. The cabin staff had demonstrated I couldn’t trust them with my safety, so I clutched my adrenaline all the way to Hà Nội and hoped something of what I’d been saying to the cabin crew had sunk in.

Majorly grumpy after walking away from the Peanut Incident and waiting an age for my backpack to arrive on the luggage carousel, Ben and I got a cab to the hotel we’d booked. We arrived after 45 minutes, which was remarkably good time because my research said the journey would take 2-3 hours. We checked in to the hotel, bedded down for a power nap, and then it hit me - we were still in Hà Nội, not Hà Long. Faced with 2 choices: stay in Hà Nội until our flight to Ho Chi Minh the next morning, or squeeze in the briefest of trips to Hà Long and meet Clare there as planned, we opted for the latter, stayed in an amazing 5* hotel in a 15th floor room with a panoramic view of the bay, and had the most brutally effective massage of my life (seriously, it was like BDSM with aromatherapy). Unfortunately it emerged that there had been further confusion when I tried to make plans to meet up with Clare: she had left Hà Long fo Hà Nội that morning. 

There was further narrowly avoided disaster with catching our flight from Hà Nội to Ho Chi Minh. The hotel receptionist was adamant that we could leave at 7:00 to get a 9:40 flight. Dubious, we booked a shuttle for 6:00 instead, and even then cut it incredibly fine. At one point on the journey I resigned myself to having to renounce my claim to have never missed a flight, Clare had checked in at a sensible time and was on the verge of giving up on us and going to the gate, but somehow we made it!!

I’m off out now to explore the Vietnamese capital.


Love Emily x

Sunday 21 October 2018

Off on another jolly

I’m writing this from the Heathrow departure lounge as Ben and I wait for our flight to Hanoi, where we’ll meet up with Clare (who I serendipitously met at Delhi airport who turned out to live <1 mile away, and has since become an amazing friend and travel buddy). The trip has barely started and already it’s been eventful, largely because Ben forgot her passport. She had travelled down south to stay with friends in Reading, and anxiously text me on Friday evening to let me know that her passport remained at her flat. Luckily her flatmate is one of the doctors at work, and was working on Saturday, so I spend a chunk of the day trying to track her down. Someone eventually responded to her pager and told me where to find her, so I went to theatre and she explained, whilst operating (on a patient who was luckily under general anaesthetic), where to find our friends travel documents. 

My body didn’t want me to be lonely on my travels so it gave me another kidney stone for company. It started off as a bog-standard UTI which didn’t clear up after 2 rounds of oral antibiotics and evolved into pyelonephritis, which then turned into a stone. My GP referred me in to hospital, and they advised admission, but I’d rather be in pain in my own bed with the same analgesia as I’d get in hospital, plus cats, so I declined. I don’t think it’s come out yet (if last time was anything to go by then I’m sure I’d have noticed!) but nor is it causing me significant grief at the moment. It’s just hanging out in there; biding it’s time. I look forward to it.


Love Emily x

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