This weekend would be the last weekend
we could hang out with our friends Pete and Joelene
while in Manila. They are leaving on Thursday for a
five week trip back to the UK (five bloody weeks!!!
Well done! ),
so when they return, we'll already be back in Europe.
So we figured we had to do something special. Kuala
Lumpur has been high on my list of cities to visit.
Pete and Joelene had been there in the past; they liked
it and didn't mind going back so we got ourselves a
nice package: Singapore Airline flights and a stay in
the famed Shangri-La hotel, for a long weekend (Monday
was a Filipino holiday) and all for a nice price.
We left on Friday, Pete couldn't take time off of work
(figures: he only just started last month and buggers
off for five bloody weeks to the UK) so they would come
a day later.
Getting there wasn't great. We had
a stop over in Singapore, which for such a short distance
really sucks as it suddenly doubles your flight time.
On top, we spent three flippin' hours in the taxi from
KL airport to the city!!! The driver, who had been doing
this work for like five years, said the worst he ever
experienced was two hours. Dammit!!
When we finally arrived, 13 hours after we left home,
we managed to still kick ourselves out on the street
for dinner. And I'm happy we did as after dinner we
went to the park outside the famous Petronas Twin Towers,
and it was a beautiful sight to behold. We sat down
for a while and just talked and watched before we walked
home to crash into a soft, luxurious, five star bed...
The Petronas Twin Towers...
...very impressive at night!
Our hotel lobby...
...luxury day and night!
The next day we started off in the
direction of the park around the KL television tower,
which was right behind our hotel. As we approached the
tower however, we saw people gazing at a couple of parachutes
solemnly floating through the air. Turns out there was
some international base jumping tournament going on
and before we fully well internalized that piece of
information, we saw people jumping off it. A truly breathtaking
sight to behold. They wait long before opening their
chute and every time it feels as if you're just watching
live suicide - how's that for a reality show!
There even were people jumping off in duos or even threesomes.
Can you imagine how tricky that is??? You have a few
seconds to pull your chute, and with two more jumpers
around you you have to be REALLY careful you don't get
entangled in each others wires... crazy!
I plan to put up a video but as long as
we don't have internet at home that will have
to wait...
###
After enjoying the show for a while we moved on to
the 'tropical rainforest right in the city center'.
Somehow the Malaysians managed to keep a functioning
little ecosystem right in the heart of town - I read
that they even maneuvered around a big tree when they
built the TV tower. The forest is home to scorpions,
snakes and even silver tailed monkeys! Fortunately all
we saw were monkeys
and at one point we were even chased by one!!! Or at
least that's what it looked like as this one meter high
primate jumped onto the path about 50 meters before
us and started half walking half running right at us.
We made a gracious retreat to the side
and Mr. Monkey was kind enough to swoosh straight past
us... phew!
The forest was nice, albeit steep in some places (hot
hot hot!!!); a lot better than the so called forest
walk in The Farm! The funny thing is though that no
matter how dense the foliage, we always heard modern
dance tunes blasting from somewhere, no doubt the base
jumpers were having a smashing time...
We did a bit more sightseeing; we saw a cathedral where
Asians were practicing at the (electric) organ which
was interesting to see, we saw one of the main mosques
and even checked out some malls that, oh great surprise,
were pretty much just the same as those in Manila.
At lunch time we went back to the Shangri-La to meet
up with Pete and Joelene. We ordered sandwiches and
beer at the pool side, incidentally with a nice view
of the base jumping madness next door. Unfortunately
the weather turned south all of a sudden and we went
from a gentle sunshine to a bad ass Asian tropical rainstorm
in a matter of minutes. So we waited for the night to
fall, and paraded around town a bit , gazing at places
with crazy lights and even saw an army parade in the
streets!
Fortunately the weather wasn't like this
all the time!
Crazy lights
And the midnight army parade
Weird!!!
The next day we got up a bit earlier than Pete and
Joelene, so we decided to head off to the park at the
foot of the towers as we hadn't see that by daylight
yet. Amazing! Makes you realize how far behind Manila
is in terms of development of a liveable city!! The
park was beautifully landscaped, quiet, green and with
a full blown public pool right smack in the middle!!!
All the kids were playing while the adults just relaxed
a bit in the shade. Very nice indeed!
At the kiddy pool we joined up again with Pete and
Joelene and we set off walking through town to take
in the sights. We checked out all the nice architecture,
from the colonial buildings around Merdeka Square to
the mosques to Little India, where we bought 40s and
50s advertisement posters at a quaint little shop, flowing
over with Chinese trinkets and a suspiciously large
collection of Mao Zedong statuettes and even one of
those original little red books from the 1940s!
Meanwhile, the heat had gotten the better of Pete so
we got him an umbrella at 7-eleven... NOW WHO'S A SEXY
BEAST?!??!
A British gentleman in Malaysia... ;)
Me and the famous towers
Nice dolphin sculpture with the
kiddy pool in the background
Close up of the kiddy pool
Having walked quite enough, we ended up at the foot
of the Petronas Twin Towers for a cheeky beer and some
sushi. Now, Malaysia is a Muslim country and my parents
who had just visited had told me that outside KL it
was nearly impossible to order a beer. Imagine our surprise
that at this particularly popular spot they not only
sold beer in pints, but even in jugs. And as if that
wasn't enough encouragement to get drunk, they even
when one step further and server a ... *drum roll* ...
beer tower!!!
That's right, a tower of beer. Never seen anything like
that anywhere else. Not even in England or Germany or
Belgium, all notorious beer drinking countries!!! So
much for religion banning alcohol - not in the country's
sparkling capital!!!
Of course we ordered one. After two pints, sure why
not?
Sushi didn't do for dinner so we freshened up and went
to have a bite in a labyrinth of cool little restaurants
in the basement of a flashy mall. For after dinner drinks,
that special in-between time before you can really go
clubbing, we decided to check out a swanky place called
Luna bar: a pool side cocktail lounge on the top of
an apartment building with spectacular views of the
Twin Towers in the background. Why don't these places
exist in Manila, I wonder?? A few vodka-tonics later
we were ready to dance and took a taxi to a place called
Zouk. It was supposed to be one of the hippest clubs
in town, but to be honest I thought the dance music
was so-so and the place was filled with foreigners either
really drunk or just staring at the dance floor. The
drunks were mostly whites, the 'starers' mostly Arab
guys ogling girls. For a moment it felt just like Enschede,
the place where I went to university and where the clubs
were infested with frustrated geeks drooling over the
only ten tomboys in the place.
Gorgeous girls at the pool bar...
...with matching guys, naturally... ;)
Speaking of which, it was apparently some sort of Arab
holiday as it was full of Middle Easterners. I've never
seen so many burkas in one city. Even our hotel had
its fair share. I really don't like burkas (these black
dresses Muslim women wear that cover up all except their
eyes), you never know if a person is looking at you
friendly or angry or sad. It takes away 95% of all communication
and I'm definitely not a fan of that. What was interesting
though is that most of these burka women do wear sexy
high heels and have lots of make up on their eyes. So
I guess it's do whatever you can to look sexy, as long
as you keep the black dress on top. Makes you wonder
what's REALLY underneath... What share of Victoria Secret's
business comes from these countries, anyone?
The weekend was over quickly, but we all really enjoyed
it: short and sweet!! And probably the best way to say
goodbye to Pete and Joelene!
Sunday,
September 23, 2007
Pump up the BASS
Today,
I bought a bass guitar. Just like that! We happened
to be in a guitar shop with Marieke to buy a guitar
for Harry's (Marieke's dad) upcoming birthday and I
saw a great looking bass guitar for only about 150 Euros.
I've been wanting to get a bass guitar for a while,
but I never got very serious about it - until now. I
hesitated in the shop, I bought the thing in a few minutes
without even trying (I wouldn't even know how to try
out a bass or what to look for and the staff were not
exactly helpful) and I felt weird about it. A bit guilty
even I guess. But then Marieke pointed out that I spend
that kind of money in a clothes shop back in Europe
without thinking twice, which is absolutely true of
course. Besides, a bass guitar like that would cost
a hell of a lot more back home. So when I looked at
it that way, I figured I may as well get it. So I did.
Complete with bag and stand, for a total price that's
unthinkable back home. I've been playing it for a little
bit now. At first it was harder than I thought it would
be - I play the guitar and the bass really is a simplified
version of it, at least in my opinion (I'm sure plenty
will disagree )
- but I'm getting the hang of the fat strings now and
I'm enjoying it even more than I thought I would. It
looks really cool too, a fat bass guitar around your
neck. Yeah!!!
Click on the picture on the right to
see a bigger picture of the bass guitar and its beautiful
mother of pearl inlay. It's a pretty poor picture, but
it's nearly midnight as I post this so I can't be bothered
making it any better. Maybe later. (Probably not)
Saturday,
September 8, 2007
Saguijo once more
I took Marieke to Saguijo
to see what we have both been missing out on all this
time. The plan was to go see Chilli
Tees, a band I saw there last time and that I liked
so much I bought their CD (Extra Rice - it's brilliant!),
but we were too late. Or I'd like to think that they
were too early, really.
We did however see a whole bunch of other cool bands
that we also bought CDs of right away. I like that,
buying CDs straight off the artist (one was just a burned
CD ),
I like to think more ends up in their pockets that way.
Since I'm in the middle of our move while I'm writing
this, I don't have all CDs here with me, but for what
it's worth: here's what I have in front of me:
Sinosikat?
- Sinosikat? (Yes, with the question mark!)
Sleepwalk
Circus - I downloaded some tracks from myspace
as they don't have a CD yet
Worth checking out if you'd like to
own some authentic and cool OPM (Original Philippine
Music)! And Saguijo
is definitely worth checking out if you like
quality live music in an informal setting - much, much
better than all the other venues and bands I've seen
in my three years in Manila!
Thursday,
September 6, 2007
Guangzhou
I went to Guangzhou (in China, just north of Hong Kong)
for a business trip. Nothing special, but every time
I go there I am SO amazed at how little English people
speak there! For example, we had dinner one evening
in our (international) hotel with Paola, Lukasz and
me. Of the staff, only the supervisor spoke a bit of
English so she helped us. After Lukasz had finished
his first Asahi beer, he wanted another, but this time
the Chinese variant, called Tsing Tao (I'm sure I misspell
it but that's beside the point). The supervisor was
out of sight so he called over one of the other girls,
and pointing at his glass he said something like:
[Lukasz] I want another beer please, but I want a Tsing
Tao.
[Waitress] Tea?
[Lukasz] No, beer! Tsing Tao.
[Waitress] ...*silence, a puzzled look* Tea?
[Lukasz] No! Tsing Tao! Beer!
[Waitress] ...*more silence and puzzled looks* ... Tea?
At this time the supervisor comes over and the girl
turns to her. After a brief exchange, the supervisor
turns to Lukasz, shows the Great Grin of Understanding
and says: "Ice tea?"
Fortunately she got it when Lukasz asked her, but it
gives you a bit of an idea. People don't even know the
word hello. They can't count in English. And they don't
understand us when we try to pronounce Chinese words
either. It makes communication really, really hard.
Consider this other example, the same night. Paola had
to go to the airport and Lukasz and I were up for another
beer, so we exited the hotel in search for a bar. As
we turned the corner we immediately got to small the
small streets that I associate with China: dark, wet
(it was raining a bit), dirty and alive. We didn't have
to walk far to pass a bar-come-restaurant - imagine
a room without a wall on the street side: like a garage
without a door. People were sitting and eating, so we
figured we could sit down and have a beer. The guy was
standing outside, trying hard not to interact with us,
probably fearing neither would understand the other.
(How true that would soon turn out to be!) First we
tried to just ask - you never know, right?
[Me] Can we have a beer?
[Bar guy] *confused look*
[Me] Beer? Tsing Tao? (We thought we might have more
chance with the name of the beer)
[Bar guy] *confused look*
[Me] Beer! Tsing Tao!
At this time I proceed with a shining example of charades:
I mimic popping open a bottle of peer *pssshhht*, pouring
it into a glass *gluck gluck gluck* and drinking it
*gulp gulp aaahhh*.
[Bar guy] *confused look*
How much more can you do???
Lukasz tried one last resort and actually pointed at
a half liter bottle that stood on one of the tables
inside the bar.
We gave up, went to 7-eleven, got ourselves a nice
cold one, walked to the park in front of the hotel and
drank it there. If you live here, you have no choice
but to learn the language. You won't survive with just
sign language, pointing and charades. Makes me appreciate
living in the Philippines so much more, where nearly
everyone speaks English!!
Saturday,
August 11, 2007
My 34th... (time flies when you're
having fun!)
Last Wednesday was my 34th birthday
and Marieke had surprised me with a pure relaxing weekend
getaway to The
Farm in San Benito, Batangas, an hour or two drive
south of Manila. I'd been there once before (click
here for the story) and absolutely loved it, so
I was really looking forward to going again. Two friends
of ours, Debbie and Dino, had done an overnight once
before as well and they told us there was no possibility
to have a late night glass of wine with something to
nibble, so Marieke had stuffed a bag full of the goods:
wine, olives, chips, chocolate, even champagne!
The stay at the farm was as good as
ever. They still give the best massages I've ever had
in my life! Seriously, it's worth going just for that.
You lay down on a table in a small cottage in a private
garden with glass walls on two sides, a shower that
opens up to the outside, water flowing through besides
the walls, with gold fish swimming around... it's so
relaxing! Our cottage waas great too. A private garden
surrounding it, it had a high ceiling, elegant lighting
and a small veranda with a set of chairs and a table,
where we enjoyed our wine and finger food in the evening.
The only thing that we didn't quite care for was the
food. The restaurant at The Farm is vegan and when we
went before they had a German chef who served delicious
dishes. Well, something has changed. Everything we ate,
from lunch, dinner and breakfast, it was all bland and
tasteless at best. Some things were outright nasty!
The worst must have been the mock cheese and the mock
milk for the organic coffee. Listen, if vegan's don't
eat cheese, then don't try to use veganist products/ingredients
to try and imitate it! It's like that restaurant in
Thailand that served tofu that was supposed to taste
like meat and fish. It doesn't work!!!
Just stick to the strengths of your ingredients, like
herbs, fruits, vegetables, and so on. Nothing beats
a good home made pesto! Or a rich salad with fruits
and nuts! Just stop trying to imitate other food; it
does not work!
On Sunday morning we spent most of
our time at the pool, reading a bit, swimming a bit,
relaxing a bit. There were a whole lot of red dragonflies
having a good old time and at one point, they decided
our feet were a great vantage point from where to take
in the surroundings!
We went home at around lunch time, swapping the vegan
restaurant for a nice Starbucks coffee and pastry on
the way home. It was a short stay but it felt just right
- just the right length to really enjoy it and go with
a feeling that you'll come back here again, one day...
PS Indeed we forgot to bring our camera,
so I could only take pictures with my Blackberry...
Not ideal, but I'm happy we have at least something!!
Monday,
July 30, 2007
A little rant (forgive me)
Living in the Philippines really has
been one hell of an experience. All in all it has been
great, but let me tell you, the way things work in a
developing country can sometimes be mind boggling...
and annoying! For example, see this letter I got in
the mail recently. It's from my car insurance. Read
the dates carefully.
So on July 12 they're telling me that
my insurance is GOING TO expire July 1!
Thanks guys, that means we've been driving around in
Manila, uninsured for 12 days already by the time you
sent this letter.
It reached me July 26 and I immediately called them
and arranged insurance, but seriously, would this ever
happen back home? No! Not only are things like this
better organized, but we have a neat little thing called
direct debit. You just sign a piece of paper once and
then they can automatically deduct the yearly (or whatever)
amount from your account. Easy! But they don't like
it here, everything has to be paid by checque, or if
you're lucky you can do an online transfer. That's not
automatic by the way, and you have to 'enroll' your
merchant first, which means the merchant has to have
a special account set up at your bank. That also means
you cannot transfer money to a friend or relative (unless,
again, you set it up specially with your bank). It's
hard to understand why banks make moving money around
so difficult.
Sigh. Aaaaaanyway.
Another
thing that bugs me is our supermarket. First of all,
the layout, recently overhauled, makes NO SENSE at all.
You will find the same items in different places, and
you will find similar items placed well apart. For example.
Isle 1: home cleaning products, isle 2: pet food, isle
3: laundry detergent.
Last weekend I saw beer cans at the end of the cleaning
product isle across from the dairy section. All beverages
are on the other side of the supermarket. And everything
is CONTINUOUSLY out of stock. We cycle trough two to
three brands of orange juice simply because they won't
have our preferred brand for MONTHS.
When they redid the layout they actually moved the food
AWAY from the entrance (the opposite of what you should
do if you want people to buy more stuff) and the vegetables
are now right next to the fish department. The smell
is just horrible.
And then paying... if you now give them your bank card,
they have to swipe it, then MANUALLY type in your name!!!
And when the receipt is printed, they have to type in
a number from it and have it printed again. Terribly,
horribly, inexplicably ineffecient. Especially the typing
of the name... And of course they always have to look
four times before they get my last name right!
It's the people, not the processes,
that keep this country going. If it weren't for the
patient, fun loving Filipinos, this place would be deserted.
(That is so logical that it doesn't even make sense.)
Saturday,
July 28, 2007
Dinner at Chez Daniel
We watched Everyday Italian the other
day on TV and the host, Giada De Laurentiis, was making
a Tuscan bread salad called Panzanella, and it immediately
made me want to cook for people again. I don't know
why but every now and then I just love doing that. It's
weird. So we invited Pete and Joelene over for dinner,
before we'd go down to club Embassy to celebrate James'
birthday. It took me (and Marieke) a good 3 hours to
get it all ready (I love cooking but I seem to not be
terribly efficient at it), and all but one dish (grilled
tuna with my newly invented white sauce) was a new experiment,
but fortunately it all turned out really well. Never
mind that halfway through the process I had to run down
to the Santis deli store to get a new loaf of bread
as I let the first one burn under the grill - and managed
to almost burn the second one as well! D'oh!!
Anyway, here's last night's menu in
Chez Daniel... I have linked to the online recipes except
for the roasted bell pepper soup. If you're Dutch you
can find it in a great book called De Soepbijbel. If
you're not, well, your loss!
I got this video from Pete, a friend
here in Manila. This is taken at a Manila prison. A
PRISON, mind you.
And it's real. Oh yes, it is. And you know what, I'm
not at all surprised! This is typically the kind of
thing Filipinos love to do! Song and dance is present
everywhere, as I've experienced at work, out in the
province, and in the karaoke bars of Manila. Enjoy!
Friday,
July 20, 2007
Gollum vs. Barry White
Someone put a small video together
to try and find the answser to a theory that has been
bending the most sophisticated minds for decades:
Women
find anyone singing Barry White attractive
Here it is, decide for yourself!
Friday,
June 29, 2007
Peter Gabriel Revisited
Marieke and I had gone to Peter Gabriel's Growing Up
tour back in 2003, and we absolutely loved it; one of
the best - if not the best - I've ever
seen.
So when I saw that he was coming to Amsterdam to do
a special concert (not tour related), I jumped on the
occasion. We called Marieke's dad, my parents and Emiel
and everybody was in! We picked up my mom and dad near
Eltjo where they parked, and after a short stop at Emiel's
place we all went down to cafe Gent aan de Schinkel
(Theophile
de Bockstraat 1, food may be a bit pricey but the
atmosphere is great and our dishes were very
tasty) where we ordered wine, cheese, salad, soup, bitterballen,
the works!
Harry and Bep joined us as well a little while later,
and we managed to anchor ourselves well on the terrace,
despite a few flooding attempts by the rain clouds above
us. It helped we were the only ones (insane enough)
to stay outside and there was a balcony, overgrown with
grapevines, that covered just enough space for us to
stay relatively dry.
Dad on the couch under the grapevine
Mom and Marieke, still dry and all smiles!
We
left Eltjo and Bep at the cafe (neither in for concerts
in general) and made our way to a superb location
for concerts: the Westergasfabriek.
It's an old gas factory that's kept in perfect state;
the architecture is typically Amsterdam and it is simply
stunning!
(Funnily enough it wasn't easy to find a nice shot of
the Westergasfabriek on internet, but I came across
the photo on the right on this
site. It's got a whole set of really beautiful pictures
of our soon-to-be home town, Amsterdam - check it out!).
The concert was outside on the field behind the factory
and it was brilliant. As the concert went on, the sun
started to set behind the stage which made for a truly
magical view. At one point we also had the sharpest
rainbow I've ever seen in my life behind us. As location,
weather and surroundings go, this was ace!
Dramatic views at the stage
Me. Harry and the rainbow
;)
Oh by the way, these pictures were taken
with my old camera. It's digital but the display
is broken and there is no 'looking glass'. So basically
you have NO IDEA what kind of
picture you just took! Even more 'spontaneous' than
the olden days!
(Also explains the weird shots )
Peter Gabriel's concert was nice, the parents enjoyed
it a lot. It wasn't as spectacular as before as it was
'just' a concert and didn't have the grand show that
blew us away before. The idea of the little tour was
that they were doing songs that fans had requested through
his web site. As a result, there were a few pretty obscure
songs that I never heard before. In all honesty, about
one third was actually pretty boring stuff in my humble
opinion. But no man over board, the other two thirds
easily made up for it - this man has made some brilliant
music I tell you! And the fact that our parents, who
had never been to something like this before (my parents
never even to a concert, period!), loved it totally
made it worth it!!
There are a lot more pictures here
in the photo album.
My heart going BOOM BOOM BOOM!
The next day we all went to Heerhugowaard,
where my grandmother (Oma) came to our house for a barbecue
in her honor; she had just turned 87
the week before!
Normally we do a family dinner in a restaurant somewhere
but this time our timing didn't fit with that of my
uncle & cousin so we split and Oma preferred the
home thing, so that was an easy deal. As always, it
was very gezellig (cosy, hard to translate
really), especially now that my parents are on a mission
to make the garden their second living room. They have
see-through hard plastic covers at the far end, a cast
iron stove that burns just about everything, and even
a fully equipped outdoor kitchen with stove, grill and
BBQ! Nice work!
Dad at the BBQ
The birthday girl... for the 87th time,
no less! :)
Oh and look at what we walked past in Amsterdam...
Even a little kid's bike has to be chained to the wall
or it will be stolen. Makes you wonder though how small
the house is these people live in - that it can't even
fit a three year old's bicycle!! They must be po'!
Lock it up, kiddo!
June
22-25 , 2007
Boracay. Once more. (Is it getting
silly? ;) )
We're trying to get all the tropical-island-in-the-sun
we can get now that we're slowly but surely on our way
out. This time the 'excuse' was Megan and Shawn's last
Boracay stint (and coincidentally two of Pete and Joelene's
friends, or to be more precise, friends of Jo's brother:
Mark and Jamie were visiting). Well there isn't all
that much to tell about the weekend, it was pretty much...
Boracay!
But I do have to say we really hit it off with Mark
and Jamie. At one point the three of us were just floating
around in the Chinese Sea, talking for ages about our
lives, what we do, what we did, and so on. Really nice.
Oh and we invented a new sport: tossing the coconut!
Lack of a ball or frisbee drove me to this; I saw one
of these small, young, grenade shaped coconuts lying
on the beach and thought it might be a good idea to
use it to throw. It worked perfectly!
Although it can f#*%ing hurt your hand!!
All in the game.
Sica & me and a whoozy swirl around
us ;)
Pete and Marieke whoozy yet cool!
Marc Jamie & Marieke: Hard as Blue
Steel!
Jamie and me
Me and Joelene Steelin' Blue as well
The obligatory Boracay Fire Dancers...
Marieke and I also realized this weekend
that we get along better with Brits than with any other
nationality. Funny that. Definitely want to live in
th UK at some point in the future. The not too distant
future. Any job offers for a high flying IT/management
career dude out there?
Saturday,
June 16, 2007
Giving back to society :)
I think it was Jayan's idea to do
a team building event at Gawad Kalinga. GK is an organization
that helps the very poor by having them work together
to build houses. But I'm going to be lazy this time...
Tin already
wrote a nice article about it, including her signature
layout design skills, and I'm just going to leave it
at that! Ha!!
It had been ages since I had seen
my old Frankfurt buddies Shawn and Claudio. Both poor
souls have moved to Cincinnati by now - only god knows
what got into them - and both are married - only god
know what got into their girlfriends...
So I was very pleased when we could arrange a get-together
at Shawn & Hasnaa's place with Claudio bringing
his lovely better half Angela with him. Shawn and Hasnaa
have totally turned into land lords, they own a little
3 storey apartment block where they live downstairs
and rent out the other five or so apartments. It's completely
shanty town; as I readily pointed out to Shawn, there
were more lots for sale than not in his very street!
But jokes aside, the place isn't all that bad, they
have a nice place, a basement that they can do all kinds
of cool stuff with (my vote is for a club, but I'm not
sure they're going for that), and what can you say,
they are land lords - that's pretty cool in its own
right, right?
While Shawn showed us around, Hasnaa
cooked us a great dinner, I think every region of the
planet was represented.
We tried to repeat an old trick, opening a beer bottle
with a spatula, but failed miserably - probably because
the spatula was plastic. We bantered on most of the
evening, until Shawn drove me back to the hotel. It
was really nice to see the guys again, made me miss
the good old times in Frankfurt. I hope we get a chance
to be back together with the fantastic four (Angus was
the only one missing)... Now that would be cooooool!
June
1-3 , 2007
Chicago - Or the first US city I
truly like!
Two weeks. That's how long I had to
be in Cincinnati for. That means spending a weekend
there. Not exactly your dream weekend getaway destination
thank you very much!
Luckily though, I wasn't the only one. Paola, one of
my team mates that I get along with really well, was
in the same pickle and she had the brilliant idea to
fly to Chicago for the weekend. The second she made
the the suggestion I had my travel agent on the line,
turned out it wouldn't even cost my anything extra to
fly up and down from Cincinnati to Chicago for a weekend!
Something to do with flying international business class
in combination with short domestic economy flights...
Nice one!
Well
getting there wasn't so nice. I flew North West (a nightmare
experience by the way) and they don't fly direct from
Cincinnati so I had a stop over in Detroit - basically
meant it took as long by plane as it would have by car
but who cares? It's free! Anyway, I arrived a couple
of hours before Paola, got into a taxi and showed the
driver the address of the hotel that Paola had reserved
for us. In half a minute I was out of the taxi again.
Turns out the hotel wasn't in Chicago but in some suburb
called Itasca, a 30 minute drive (at night on the highway)
away from the city! To cut a long story short, we both
spent hours trying to get another hotel, but the only
available rooms we could find were over $350 a night,
so in the end we had no choice but to stay in Itasca.
They really shouldn't call it the Westin Chicago Northwest
in my opinion. I arrived at the hotel around midnight
($60 for the f#*%ing cab ride), Paola even later as
her plane had been delayed for hours on top.
But the worst was over now. We met
at the breakfast table the next morning, we looked like
such a couple, both out for a weekend on the
town.
We decided to take the train to downtown. We were told
it wasn't much longer than taking a taxi and we were
up for the experience. The hotel bus took us to a lovely
station where we waited only a few minutes in the pleasant
morning sun. The inside of the train was a mix between
a tram and a train. It had two levels, the top level
having seats only on the sides, so all are facing inwards,
and in the center there is no bottom so you look straight
down to the lower level. Of course we were on the top,
and when we bought tickets from the train guy, he stuck
them behind a little pin at our feet. So cool!
The
first thing we did was go to a ball game. I know nothing
about the sport, but Paola is a big fan. She's from
Grosseto
in Tuscany and they have a pretty good baseball team
there, and her parents live very near the stadium. So
she suggested to go see the Chicago
Cubs in their famous Wrigley
Field stadium. Needless to say I had never heard
of either. We got tickets outside, the game had already
started but the hawker was in no mood for bargaining,
and neither were we (as he probably knew), so we paid
full price anyway, some $40 a head. Hey what's 40 bucks
for some wholesome, true American family entertainment,
right?
And boy did we do it the American way! We got ourselves
a hotdog and a pint of beer in a plastic cup, and made
our way to our pretty good seats. I knew nothing about
the rules and it amused the old geezer next to Paola
to no end that this Italian lady was explaining this
American sounding guy the rules of baseball.
We got some cotton candy and saw Cubs manager Lou Piniella
being sent off the field for scoffing the referee. It
was funny to see, Piniella is huge and he was shouting
at the ref, kicking sand over his shoes, throwing his
cap on the floor, kicking his cap to the ref, it was
hilarious! Like a little spoilt kid that didn't get
his new toy!
Then something weird happened: all the Cubs fans threw
their baseball caps onto the field!! Hundreds of them!!
It all took a few minutes, then a little army of men
in blue came out, collected the caps, and the game resumed.
Later I heard that this is tradition at Wrigley Field
and that the caps are returned after the game. No idea
how that would work... Anyway, we sat it through to
the end, saw the Cubs lose to the bears, bought a baseball
as a souvenir and went on our way downtown to meet up
with an ex-colleague of Paola (and in a sense of me
as we work for the same company, only I didn't know
the guy ).
What was really nice at
the Cubs vs. Bears baseball game was that fans
of both sides were entirely mixed. We saw two
friends sitting side by side, one wearing a
Cubs cap, the other a Bears cap. That's the
way it should be of course, and it makes you
wonder, really wonder, why football in Europe
is so violence ridden. It baffles (and annoys)
me to no end, and I really really really fail
to see how this could have come about. Shame
on all hooligans!!!
We met Francesco and his German colleague
Matthias in the Millennium Park downtown. There's an
incredibly cool sculpture there called the Cloud Gate,
made by British artist Anish Kapoor. It basically looks
like a huge chromium bean, and it reflects everything
around it in a spectacularly twisted way. You can walk
underneath it and there, as you look up, you see everything
around you coming together in some sort of worm hole
in the ceiling, seeing multiple copies of yourself moving
around. It's by far the coolest scultpure I've ever
seen - go there if you get to Chicago!
Look at the reflection of the sky and
skyline
The Cloud Gate from the side
Don't go inside high on psychedelic drugs...
Even more enchanting by night!
Both Matthias and Francesco work at
Kraft and we met up with a few more of their colleagues
that were in town. The first thing we all did was take
a boat tour through town. I love this kind of thing;
you get to know so much about a city this way (I also
recommend doing a boat tour in Amsterdam if you've never
done that!). Apparently, Chicago is called the Second
City as it was completely rebuilt after theGreat Chicago
Fire of 1871. At one point, the Chicago River was so
polluted that it caught on fire!
That's when the citizens did something astonishing:
they reversed the flow of the river by digging a canal
deeper than the river itself that flowed into another
river, carrying the water away... Pretty amazing!
After the tour we went for dinner at
the famous Morton's
steakhouse. I love steaks in the States - it's definitely
one thing (one of the very few things) they know how
to cook well.
Dinner was great, but the next stop was even greater
as we went for some drinks in the Signature
Lounge at the 96th (!) floor of the Hancock building.
It was already dark at that time and the view was simply
spectacular! Unfortunately there was a line of about
30 people all waiting to be seated, but then it turned
out we had a trump card. He was called Sanjeev, one
of the colleagues of Francesco and Matthias, who knew
pretty much everybody in Chicago one needs to know.
He told us to go enjoy the view for a bit as he disappeared
into the bar. Five minutes later he came back, we strolled
leisurely past the line of waiting hopefuls and were
shown our great round table with plenty of space for
the six of us and then some! Ha!
Despite some initial reservations from my side (that
drink is simply too gay to be cool), we all ordered
the signature Godiva Chocolate Martini. And I must admit,
it was delicious, simply because it tasted just like
spiked Baileys, or if you know the drink, just like
a White Russian. The only add was a few streaks of chocolate
syrup and a (gay) cherry. C'était pas mal,
pas mal du tout mon ami!
Contemplating orangutan
Baby orangutan playing in the trees
By this time, Paola and I had already
decided we would take a taxi home rather than the last
train (after I promised to carry her home if she'd fall
asleep), and we went on to a live music bar called Howl
at the Moon. At first I was afraid I wouldn't get
in as I had forgotten to bring ID (I always forget,
I'm just not used to it you know!), but we managed to
convince the bouncer I was indeed (well) over 21. I'm
sure it helped that all the others were on the wrong
side of 30 as well.
The place rocked! They have a concept they call the
"dueling piano sing - a- long format". Basicall,
you have two (grand) pianos on stage, facing each other,
and a band around it. They play all kinds of music,
from R&B to metal with everything in between, and
everyone just dances and sings along. They even did
a play off between universities, where students paid
the players to play their fight song and they changed
tune every time one university got outbid by the other.
Great fun!
Here's a little You
Tube video showing you kind of what's going on.
The
next day we first went to do some shopping. I got a
Calvin Klein two-piece suit for only $260 and a couple
of Kenneth Cole shirts for only $25 a piece - ridiculously
cheap! I still don't understand how clothes can be so
cheap in the US compared to the rest of the world. Are
we paying high prices in Europe (and even Asia) to compensate
for US losses??
Whatever, we didn't spend much time at the shop as we
still wanted to go to the Field
Museum of National History, where they Sue, the
largest, most complete, and best preserved Tyrannosaurus
Rex fossil ever discovered. If you've seen A
Night At The Museum, you'll know exactly what I'm
talking about! It's really cool to see and it's really
frightening to imagine ever being faced with such a
creature... They have teeth the size of baby arms!
The musem was also the end of our trip
as we made our way to the airport. I really enjoyed
Chicago, there is a lot of life outside: there was live
music in the Millennium Park, terraces on the streets,
etc, something I haven't seen anywhere else in the US
(yet). The people were young and friendly, the city
big enough to entertain for a long time, small enough
not to have to drive everywhere. And it's on Lake Michigan,
which is the size of a small sea, which is really cool
as well. Oh and it's full of (public) art! Chicago rules!!
May
18-20 , 2007
Boracay! Again?? Yes, again!!! :)
Was it the sixth time? Seventh time?
More, less? Well I've reached that point where it really
doesn't matter anymore. Much to the envy of my office
mate, I've officially made Boracay my Filipino home
away from home! Everytime we go, Marieke and kick ourselves
for not going more often. Last time was last December,
when the typhoon struck - half a year ago!!! To a tropical
island less than an hour's flight away!!! Up and down
for under 100 Euros, accomodation around 30 Euros a
night for a great aircon room with balcony and sea view...
why aren't we there every weekend!?!
So we are making it a point to go more often now. The
next trip is already planned somewhere in June!
This time the weather was gorgeous,
as it should be. We did what is done best on Boracay:
lazed on the beach in the afternoon, partied at night.
Pete and Joelene were there with a couple of English
friends, Daz and Gaz - very cool guys and total party
animals - I think that first night I set another personal
drinking record... well not quite, but it was full on
for sure!
Amazingly, I felt fine every 'day after'
- must have been the sun shine. One afternoon, Marieke
and I went up to a small beach that's all the way up
past station, behind some big rocks protruding from
the island. It was very nice indeed - just the two of
us and a Filipino family around. We just lay in the
surf, in the sun, swam some, talked some, really relaxed.
Just as we started walking back we also realized we
got sun burnt - happened in like five minutes, I swear!
But fortunately it was just enough not to hurt too much
yet to leave you with a beautiful tan... HA! Who's your
daddy!??
Monday came way too soon, but no worries!
The next trip is just around the corner......
May
11-14, 2007
Singapore
I had been planning a trip to Singapore
for the longest time already, mainly to meet face to
face with Malong, a guy in my team. Normally this wouldn't
have been worth much to talk about, were it not for
the fact that Marieke had never been to Singapore yet
and very much wanted to see the place. So be it! We
booked an extra flight and arranged to stay in the hotel
on points. I have to pause here to make a point about
that. I stayed at the Sheraton Hotel, part of Starwood.
They are reputed to have the best reward system of all
hotels, and I can vouch for that at least concerning
reservations: I was able to book the hotel online with
points at 9 PM the night before we arrived. Awesome!!!
I remember a long time ago I booked a Marriott hotel
on points as well and it was a right hassle: after booking,
they sent vouchers to my home that I then had to take
down to the hotel. Not sure if that's still the case,
but this Starwood experience was excellent!
We had about a day and half together
in Singapore, Marieke had an extra day on Monday while
I went to work. And to tell you the truth - it's kind
of enough. Sure you can add an extra day and go to Sentosa,
a little island off the coast turned resort / amusement
park, but all in all, it's a small city and there's
really only so much to see and do. And we pretty much
did it all:
Shopping on Orchard Road.
Not much different from the Manila malls. Shops
are marginally nicer and there are some outside
terraces with lounge music. But honestly not much
better than shopping in Glorietta and a coffee in
Greenbelt.
Boat quai is where
we had our dinner. It was in a fancy place opposite
the strip filled with bars, restaurants and hawkers
which was way too touristy for us. The place where
we ate had live jazz music, a long lit table that
changed color and atmospheric candle light. The
dinner was absolutely fantastic. The grilled sea
bass one of the best I ever ate!
The next morning we had our breakfast
in charming Little India with Indian
hospitality and pancakes here the second day. Had
a truly Indian feel to it. It rained when we were
there but that didn't bother us much. Lots of gold
and colored bracelets for sale. A small area though,
we were done pretty quickly.
We got instantly bored at Chinatown.
None of the small gritty streets that give Hong
Kong its charm. All big wide roads full of cars
and department stores. A disappointment!
So we took a taxi to the Singapore's
national pride and the highlight of our visit: the
Singapore Zoo & Night Safari.
I've written more on our experience there below
this list.
Clark quai is where
we had our final beers of the day. This is a purpose
built little area around a canal filled with fancy
restaurants and trendy bars. It's the Greenbelt
of Singapore. It looks a bit sterile but in all
honesty, it was pretty nice to be at. They had a
fountain spraying streams of water directly out
of the floor tiles and lots of kids were running
through them. There were little colored lights in
the flooring and big flower-like structures that
shield the area from the afternoon sun and in the
evening showcase a display of light constantly changing
colors. We had a few pints at a nice Scottish pub
before heading back to the hotel.
Now I have to spend a few more words
on the Singapore Zoo and the Night Safari. I haven't
been to many zoos in my life so it's not like I have
a lot of benchmarking material, but this zoo blew me
away!
Marieke has a lot more experience with zoos and she
completely agrees. It's amazing. There are practically
no cages. All separation between men and animals is
by natural boundaries, or sometimes even completely
absent. The orangutans for example, are completely free
ranging and climb high up in the trees that visitors
walk beneath!
Flamencos are separated from curious people only by
a creek no more than ankle deep. For some reason, the
animals don't need to come out of their area, and naturally
we don't invade theirs. It was really amazing.
Contemplating orangutan
Baby orangutan playing in the trees
We didn't have a lot of time as we
arrived late in the afternoon. And we arrived at exactly
the right time. They were going to feed the polar bears.
Now it was completly by chance that we were at the polar
bears at the time of feeding because quite honestly,
neither of us expected much from it. Ha! Nothing could
have been further from the truth! Imagine a white bear,
the largest bear species in the world, 5 to 6 meters
long and 2 meters wide. Now imagine standing in front
of a big window, 3 meters high and 20 meters wide. The
upper half of the window shows you the bear, sitting
on a rock, the lower half shows you the underwater world
of the pool that belongs to the creature's den. Then
some food is thrown into the water and the bear gets
up slowly and then makes a majestic jump into the water,
where it floats with so much ease, as if it's weightless.
Then they threw in a live fish. It took the bear only
a few moments, never moving very fast, to drive it into
a corner and effortlessly took it between its jaws,
showing his new treasure off to the crowd before eating
it. Seeing that huge white animal move so elegantly
in the water was truly amazing, almost magical... If
you ever get the chance, you have got to
see it for yourself.
Whitey bear effortlessly swimming...
...showing off to the crowd...
...resting on the rocks...
...and clapping for a cookie. :)
The pygmy hippo - the golden retriever
under the hippos - very cute! :)
More beautiful than cute: the amazing
white tiger thrashing in the water
By
the way, this story reminded Marieke of a great book
called the Life
of Pi - it actually won the Man Booker Prize. It's
one of the best novels I've ever read, and especially
the beginning is very relevant as it describes the lives
of animals at the zoo. After reading it, I felt a lot
better about animals in zoos, especially the one in
Singapore, where there aren't all that many cages.
If you'd consider buying it, using
the link
here to Amazon will actually sponsor my site. I
probably won't make much off it, but hey, it's worth
a shot, right?
Oh and it's less than 10 US$! What a bargain!!!
March
- April 2007
Traveling through South-East Asia...
finally!!!
So far our holidays
have mostly been spent going back home to the Netherlands.
But it would be utter madness not to take advantage
of the fact we're living in South- East Asia to take
a round trip through the region! So we booked ourselves
for two weeks to visit Bangkok, the temples of Ankor
Wat and Hanoi. Below is a day by day recount based on
the notes I made throughout the vacation plus photos
with commentary. Some comments are more detailed than
others, but you get what you get.
If you want to see all the photos, look in the photo
album.
Highlights
of the holiday
In order of appearance:
Bangkok's Chatuchak weekend market
Wat Phra Kaew and the Grand Palace
in Bangkok
Vegetable market and Chinatown in
Bangkok
The mysterious faces of Bayon in
Cambodia
The bas-reliefs of Cambodia's most
famous temple, Ankor Wat
The overgrown temples of Ta Prom
in Cambodia
Cambodian Buddha statues dressed
in orange cloth
The Asian-French atmosphere in Hanoi
Hanoi's art galleries
Lowlights (to be avoided):
Dusit, Bangkok's boring park with
boring royal buildings
Sunset at Phnom Bakheng, Ankor, Cambodia
Vietnam's many hustlers and scammers
The Women's Museum in Hanoi
Places
we stayed (in case you're planning to go too)
Bangkok
- Nice & quiet: There are a few places along Thanon
Sri Ayutthaya, near the river (towards Wat Thawarad
temple). They're all very much the same and some are
even run by the same owners. It's a short taxi ride
away from the Banglampu action. We stayed here two nights.
- Closer to the action: There is a bunch of hotels and
hostels on Soi Ram Bhuttri, around the Wat Chana Songkram
temple. It's quieter than the madness at Thanon Khao
San, but has plenty of bars, restaurants and street
life to keep you entertained. We stayed here the rest
of the time.
Siem Reap
We stayed at the Golden
Banana. It's a lovely place with high-ceiling bungalows
and a beautiful swimming pool complete with water fall
and flowers. It's run by a gay couple but 'family friendly',
as long as you don't mind the overly gay staff staring
at you. (see also below in the story). It's annoying,
but the location was superb so we put up with it.
Hanoi Thanks to all the scamming in Hanoi, it's not
easy to find a good place here. Your best bet is probably
to walk in a reasonably cheap place for the first night,
then go out finding a proper place and move. You're
a less 'easy sell' without your luggage. We ended up
staying at a place called Central Stars Hotel in an
alley so small it wasn't on our Lonely Planet map, between
Dao Duy Tu and Pho Ta Hien, north and parallel to Hang
Chinh. We paid $16 for a double with TV, fridge, A/C
and free internet and breakfast. The staff was young
and friendly and we really liked it. Hotesl all use
nearly identical names, so make sure you get the right
one! For example, I checked this place on tripadvisor.com
and it gave me a different hotel.
Bangkok,
Thailand
A miniature temple in the middle of the
chaos at Chatuchak
Sunday, March 25
We went to the world famous Chatuchak weekend market,
a magnet for locals and tourists alike, selling everything
from pets to clothes to beads to electric fans - everything.
This is one hell of a market! It's great fun just to
walk around, you can lose yourself for hours here and
never get bored! The smell of food, the tingling of
shell curtains, the glitter of gold of all that's on
sale, a pleasant attack on all the senses at the same
time.
We didn't get anything apart from a few bags full of
t-shirts, but we did see some excellent Thai china that
we are planning to buy already for years (since we first
saw it in a Thai restaurant in Frankfurt). But we decided
to get that some other day and first to shop around
some more in the city.
Monday, March 26
Our hotel was pretty close to the main attractions,
so we decided to walk over, taking in some local neighborhood
scenes along the way. We first passed a university which
grounds were completely open to the public. No sooner
had we passed in between the economics faculty and the
canteen or we stumbled upon our first little temple
(Wat Mahathat) and in we went. We were so lucky: the
temple wasn't anything special but we happened to walk
straight into some service. There were only ladies,
all dressed in white. One invited us into the temple,
where a single monk in orange was praying and all the
ladies were sitting along the side of the temple, watching
him, chatting a bit among themselves, really nice!
We went on to Bangkok's main attractions.
We first skimmed Wat Pho, which is mostly famous for
its enormous reclining Buddha. It was beautiful. And
HUGE!
There was also an interesting little open hall outside
with a golden statue of a man, with lots of little pieces
of gold leaf stuck to it.
Thailand's longest reclining Buddha
Gold leaf man ;)
The next stop was the most dazzling
visit of our entire vacation: the temple of Wat Phra
Kaew and the Grand Palace where the royal family resides.
Words can't describe the beauty of this place. All is
glitter and gold here. There are tiny mirrors everywhere
that catch the rays of the sun and beam them back and
forth all over the complex. It's mesmerizing. We actually
went back another day to see it all again. I'll let
the pictures speak for themselves, but really, this
should be on your list of things to do before you die.
It's simply amazing.
I shot a video of demons carrying a golden chedi (Buddhist
structure) - you can see the sparkles as the sun catches
the pieces of colorful glass. Truly spectacular!
Dazzling demons carrying a golden chedi in Wat Phra
Kaew
Here they are in pictures (there's more
in the photo
album):
And just look at all the sparkles:
In the evening we went to Suan Lum,
Bangkok's night bazaar. It was pretty nice, especially
the one quarter where Marieke bought a designer shirt
in a little boutique, run by just the fashion designer
himself, for something like 5 euros. And a really nice
shirt too!
Tuesday, March 27
Shopping in Bangkok.
Wednesday, March 28
We went to visit Dusit - the royal palace grounds. Wow,
this place is really boring.
It's like a badly planned park with little to see really.
There was a throne hall which looked like a direct copy
of the St. Peter Cathedral in the Vatican which was
interesting to see. We went inside and an interesting
detail is that although this building is clearly from
Christian origins, there wasn't a single reference to
Christianity inside. Only natural of course in Thailand,
but it was a strange notion. One of the domes had a
golden Buddha painted on it.
Unfortunately I wasn't allowed to take pictures inside.
We went on to Chinatown by river boat to do a walking
tour in the Lonely Planet condensed guide, leading from
Chinatown into little India. This is a superb area to
visit! We walked over a real vegetable market, I've
never seen so many chilies in one place! We bought some
orange juice with salt in plastic bag off a street vendor.
Neither of us liked it but I ended up drinking it anyway.
Don't ask me why. Yuk!
Sampeng lane was great, full of stalls selling cloth
(in the little India area), food (in the Chinatown area),
trinkets, beads, flowers, etc. A feast for the senses...
We had a late lunch in The Atlanta,
an expensive looking yet strangely cheap 1950s hotel
come coffee shop, still completely in 50s style. A very
nice looking place, in the street down from the Marriott.
At the end of the day there was too
much traffic and no taxi wanted to take us back to our
hotel, so we took a moto - basically just jumped on
the back of a motor cycle. :) In a few words: fast,
cool, no helmets (at least not me), do like the locals
do, eyes burning from exhaust gas, exhilarating. Definitely
recommended as an experience!
Thursday, March 29
Had food poisoning last night. Didn't sleep, a bit delirious.
Got up at around 1 PM. Marieke got medicine and paracetamol
and I was doing OK again. Think it was either the orange
juice with salt from the vegetables market, or the prawns
in the tom yum soup at The Atlanta as those where the
only two things I had and Marieke didn't, or only very
little. Went to Wat Phra Kaew again today. Still as
beautiful as ever. One of the most impressive sites
we've ever seen. Here are some more images, check out
the photo
album for more.
The lush structures of Wat Phra Kaew
Demon guardians - right ugly buggers...
Girls love glittering glamourous gold!!!
Strolling monks in their own habitat
Me and one of the many intricate patterns
So much glitter! Sunglasses required!
B)
Some
general observations about, and funny moments in, Bangkok
Some examples
of Thai
obsession with the King
Thai are obsessed with their king.
Yellow, the royal color, is everywhere. People dress
in yellow, there are yellow flags everywhere, the majority
wears one of these no-longer-trendy rubber armbands
in yellow, etc. The words "Long Live The King"
are written everywhere. We read a story of a drunk foreign
resident of Bangkok who ran out into the street cursing
the king to death or hell or something similarly unsavoury
and was subsequently arrested and charged with ... THIRTY-FIVE
YEARS in prison!!!
Needless to say, we kept our peace. Although I did scare
someone unintentionally. We struck up a casual conversation
with a lawyer at Wat Phra Kaew and I asked a question
about succession of the crown (when the king dies, and
the king is like god in Thailand). He got all weird
and scared, having the two concepts of king and dying
in one phrase, but after I explained what I meant -
and that I was not wishing death upon their
king, it was all OK again.
Thai are so far the friendliest people
I've ever met. So far. Turks are a close second.
Thai food simply RULES!
It deserves every bit of its reputation. It's
a bit of a shame we didn't get to venture out
into the country side to sample all of the different
dishes and styles, but even just nin Bangkok
it is wonderful. You can wake me up at any time
of night for a proper Tom Yum soup or an authentic
Thai green curry!
Left: Obviously the Thai have a
sense of humor. Just look at these icons depicting
toilets in one of Bangkok's malls.
Right: English anyone? The Starbuck
cup advertises "make it your drink".
I ordered a tall cappuccino. But somehow,
"my drink" had become some caramel
flavored foam coffee! Apparently 'cappuccino'
became 'caramel'... Ah well, I've had worse
drinks in my life. (Sambuca anyone?)
These packets were in the
display window of a tiny little drug store near
Chinatown. Watch out, this is not your average
soup ingredients, but rather just the right
mix to cure you from influenza, fever, or whatever
it may be. 100% natural baby!
Very close to our hotel
there was a little park on the waterfront, where
every night a group of locals (and the odd tourist)
come together to work out. There's a teacher
in front of the crowd who leads the moves, dancing
on a distorted beat blasting from a small portable
radio. Some of them have already internalized
all the moves and don't even have to watch the
teacher anymore!!!
Beautifully stacked, shiny
dried fish on one of Bangkok's little back-alley
markets.
Ankor,
Cambodia
Friday, March 30
Moved our flight to Siem Reap to 18:20 to go to Chatuchak
to buy Benjarong. Bought nice sets, cups and dinnerware.
In the afternoon we flew to Siem Reap,
Cambodia; the town closest to the famous temples of
Ankor. The road from the airport to the city of Siem
Reap looks like a Las Vegas strip of brand new luxury
hotels, shocking really.
We checked in at the Golden Banana, a really nice place
with its own little high-ceiling bungalows and a lovely
swimming pool complete with water fall and flowers.
As you can guess by the name, it's run by a gay couple
but according to the book it was family friendly. Well.
While it's true that all the other guests we met were
families and straight couples, the staff never stopped
staring at me and all the time they were all over each
other like bees on honey. I don't really like it when
I get back to my room in the afternoon only to see four
members of staff stroking each other's hair or back
on a picknick table right alongside my window - gay
or straight.
But having said that, the location was superb so we
put up with it...
Saturday, March 31
We got up early, though not early enough for sunrise,
exited to see the famous temples of Ankor Wat. We hired
a remorque (a little moped with a cart behind it) with
driver, although I have to admit that our driver wasn't
exactly the greatest guide in the world. But that hardly
mattered when we arrived at the main temple site at
around 9 AM. The complex of Ankor is beautiful, and
much, much more than just the (largest) temple of Ankor
Wat itself.
Here are the highlights, in order of leaving a lasting
impression:
The
mysterious faces of Bayon
The
Bas-reliefs of Ankor Wat
The
overgrowth of Ta Prom with the now blockbuster-famous
Tomb Raider tree
Buddha
statues dressed in orange and the few monks that
wanted to share the spiritual experience with us
without asking for money (one old man grabbed me
at the shoulders after he had prayed with his family,
and smiled broadly as he gave me a friendly hug)
The carvings were still in a very beautiful
state: the bas reliefs but also the typical round breasted
khmer women that were everywhere. We wanted to buy a
replica but it was ridiculously overpriced. They haven't
understood the economy of tourism very well yet in Cambodia.
Me in front of the famous Ankor Wat
Praying to a dressed up Buddha statue
Beautifully preserved bas reliefs
Khmer women carvings
The jungle taking over man-made structures
The mysterious faces of Bayon
The whole site was more
in ruins than I expected, but that's usually
the case. If it were up to me, we'd just restore
all ancient ruins to their former glory; Ankor,
the Maya ruins, the Colosseum, and so on. And
why not? What's the use of just building something
only to then let it wither? We don't do that
with anything else, like our homes, or even
houses built in the 16th century; they get constantly
repaired and maintained to keep them in a good
state. Why let a few centuries of neglect destroy
a beautiful thing forever?
We went to Phnom Bakheng which is known
for its spectacular sunsets with a view of Ankor Wat
itself. Bah! What a load of drivel! First of all, from
up there, Ankor looks tiny! It's more than
a kilometer away from the site and half obscured by
trees (cut them down people, please! They are not part
of the site anyway!) But even worse, the sun didn't
set over Ankor at all. It set on the EXACT OPPOSITE
side over some stupid lake!!! And believe me, it was
nothing special. Just a red ball sinking in a lake,
no spectacular colors in the skies, nothing. I've seen
many a better sun set in in Holland or on Boracay. A
waste of time really.
Fortunately we were smart enough to bring some beer
and crisps with us, so at least we could relax properly
while waiting for something to happen!
A regular sunset over a lake...
...and Ankor on the other side: far,
far away
Luckily we had the wits to bring beer...
...unlike these monks! ;)
Sunday, April 1
So the next morning we got up extra early (at 4:45 AM
!!) to compensate last night's disappointment with our
solar system's center point with a second take: viewing
sunrise at Ankor Wat itself. The whole thing wasn't
off to a very promising start. We stood there for almost
two hour, just seeing the sky get lighter, but no overwhelming
color changes, and no sun to be seen anywhere. It just
'got light'. Then finally the sun came up behind Ankor.
Granted, it was a really cool sight, but we could have
just as slept two more hours and see the exact same
thing, only more awake. And with a coffee and a baguette
in our grumbling stomachs. All in all it was nice, but
if you don’t like getting up early, I wouldn't
say you miss much by skipping it. Having said that,
the hours right after the sunrise, walking through Ankor
in the magical morning light with almost no one else
around was definitely worth doing!
Strolling around in the magical morning
light with no one else around
Funny isn't it how it always
seems so spectacularly fast when the sun is
just rising or setting. It seems to move really
fast when it's just about to (dis)appear...
Why is that?
We saw three or more temples and then
went back to the hotel. We slept for a few hours, then
went out for coffee and baguettes. Finally!!!
A gracious religion
Monday, April 2
Today we rented two bikes and went biking to Ankor.
It was pretty hot, but nonetheless a nice experience
that I'd recommend to anyone who has some time to spare
in Ankor. In the afternoon we checked out some of the
art shops. Stuff here is ridiculously expensive and
looked mass produced, so you don't even get something
unique in return for you entire wallet's contents (and
then some). We went back to the hotel to swim some more
in the pool. There we met up with an English couple
called Sasha and Ollie who were traveling around Asia
as break from setting up a beach resort in Kenya. We
had dinner with them in Khmer Kitchen, a great restaurant.
In the evening we drank some more wine at their apartment
before calling it a night.
Biking around the grounds of Ankor...
...with its immense gates
The pool by day...
...and by night. Romantic eh!? :)
Some
general observations about, and funny moments in, Cambodia
Overall, Cambodians have chiseled faces,
quite beautfil people really!
The smallness of men
Right: Believe it or not, but this wall
Marieke is taking a step off was the ancient
elephant mounting place! The kings and priests
and other generally important people that
could afford these pets would have them manoeuvre
outside by the side of the temple where they
would step onto them. And I can tell you,
this wall is HIGH!
Left: Tiny doors in the temples show
how little these people must have been - especially
compared to a tall Dutch goddess!
Street life
Left: Ducks for dinner don't get a whole
lot of consideration during their transport.
Almost as uncomfortable as a Japanese metro
at peak hour!
Right: Loads of kids ride a bike
to school in Siem Reap. And all of them have
their hair plastered with white powder. My
bet is that it's to kill fleas and lice. Either
that or a really weird fashion phenomenon.
(But no less weird than leggings or platform
shoes, so who knows...)
Such a shame. Beheaded
Buddha images. After the Khmer were driven away
from the temples, looters cut off these heads
to sell them on the (black) market. Apparently
there is still looting going on and everyone
is strongly discouraged from buying any potentially
real artifacts in an attempt to stop the damage.
But I'm afraid tourists will be tourists and
the poorly guarded treasures of Ankor will keep
vanishing bit by bit. If only they would set
up a proper souvenir industry! As for now the
only sustainable souvenir trade is run by the
ridiculously expensive and completely unoriginal
Artisans d'Ankor.
Time for a turn around!
Tourism in diapers. Almost
no temples had any explanation whatsoever, often
there wasn't even a single sign with the name
- even for big temples! For trees however, this
was a whole different stories: plenty of name
plates there! Seems like there is more investment
for tourists of the trees than temples...
The jungle doesn't limit
its conquering aspirations to temples only.
People aren't safe either. This jack fruit,
really a small coconut with spikes, slammed
hard into the ground only a few meters away
from Marieke. Land mines and jack fruits - men's
true enemy in Cambodia...
Hanoi,
Vietnam
Tuesday, April 3
We flew on to Hanoi. I've never seen a country with
so many hustlers. If you can't stand my rants anymore,
just skip ahead. If you plan to visit Vietnam, read
it and be forewarned!
It started on the airport,
arranging a taxi. After waiting in vain in a
minibus for its departure, we got into a government
regulated taxi. We told him the street, showed
the map, and we weren't out of the airport or
his mobile phone rang. For us. Some guy apologizing
for his driver not speaking English and where
we were going. Basically trying to get us to
a commissioned hotel. We didn't fall for it,
stuck to our driver dropping us on a major street
from where we would find our own way. He tried
to hustle us for more money than the rate at
the airport stated, which of course we didn't
pay. The hotel we checked in to was suddenly
twice the price as advertised in the Lonely
Planet, as it was "no longer a new hotel"
and those were "promotional prices".
Etc. I'm just going to stop here but it went
on and on and on and on all the time we were
in Vietnam - everyone tries to hustle everyone
and you have to constantly be on your guard.
The old town of Hanoi where we stayed
is a great looking little city. It's a maze of little
streets and alleys, full of people hustlin' and bustlin'.
There are more mopeds than people (well almost) and
lots of ladies wearing these triangular woven hats that
I thought only still existed in movies and caricatures.
And what's more, these ladies are carrying two baskets,
each tied to the end of a stick that's flung over their
shoulders, selling everything from toilet paper to pineapples.
Simply brilliant! And very Asian. Yet the cool thing
about Hanoi is that at the same time it is soooo incredibly
French-European: baguettes are the staple breakfast
and people cycle down the streets lined with French
sycamore trees!
Selling flowers
Selling vegetables
Wednesday, April 4
Vietnam is famous in Asia for their high quality artists,
so today we browsed the art galleries, to see if we
could find something we'd like. This may sound more
casual than it was: we explicitly planned to buy some
nice art in Vietnam - it was one of our holiday's goals
you might say.
It was a lot more expensive than we had anticipated,
but we did see two paintings, each from a different
artist, we really liked. However, it soon turned out
that one of the two artists had completely devalued
his work by relentlessly copying himself hundreds of
times, I'm not exaggerating. So much for a 'unique'
work of art!
We decided to think it over a bit and
went back into town. Hanoi has great cafes with a trendy
yet laid back atmosphere. There's a big lake with a
boulevard in the center that gives it a really European
look and feel, yet has a 100% Asian temple in the middle.
Marieke bought a nice little summer dress but overall
the clothing here was less cool than we expected.
Lunch in the back alleys
Takin' a walk in the park
Thursday, April 5 We
bought the painting today, the unique one. We got up
late and the whole thing, including looking, deciding,
negotiating and closing the deal took almost the whole
day! But we were so pleased with it! And as
I write this story, more than 2 months after the fact,
I can confidently say we both love it more than ever.
Once the deal was done, we went to a little tapas place
called La Salsa run by a Frenchman, where we spent a
long time relaxing, enjoying the fact that we now officially
belong to art collectors (we now have two paintings,
the
other one a very small one by a local Filipino artists
called Jhoanna Resari), eating lots tapas accompanied
by a few carafes of sangria.
At the end of the evening we went to
see a something unique to Vietnam. a water puppet theater.
Really quite amazing, there are puppet masters standing
behind a curtain, in a basin of water. They manipulate
puppets with sticks under water in a very masterful
way. There's a band of about four musicians and singers
who sing in a typical asian high pitched voice about
what's going on. Not that we had a clue of course.
All in all it was pretty nice!
Celebrating art with wine! ;)
The water puppet show
Friday,
April 6
We went to the Women's Museum today. It's awful! OK,
it's under renovation, but if the 'open' expositions
are any indication, this museum stinks!!!
We went to Vietnam Airlines to rebook
our flights to tomorrow as really we've seen it here.
There's not enough time to go to Ho Chi Minh city (Saigon),
and by the looks of it in the guidebook and by the accounts
of the people we met that had been there, it didn't
look like a place we really wanted to go either. So
before boredom got the best of us, we rebooked and spent
the weekend in Manila, not telling anyone we're home,
just relaxing at the pool as if it were a hotel...
Some
general observations about, and funny moments in, Hanoi
Not only are they only
ladies that sell, it's also only ladies that
clean up the garbage. In fact, women seem to
be doing a lot of the heavy work in Hanoi. Meanwhile
I'm still ironing my own shirts...
How much merchandise can
you fit onto one bike?
Also Vietnam has their fare share of excellent
food. Here's a little local pho. Very
tasty, second only to Thailand's tom yum!
All
in all...
All in all it was a great vacation
and we saw many beautiful things.
However, next time, we won't do three countries in two
weeks deal again. I much prefer to spend quality time
in one country, going out of the big cities into the
country and really absorbing daily life and culture.
Honestly, I don't remember all that much anymore from
this evening... OK give me a break - it's May now and
a lot has happened in between so I am forgiven, at least
by myself!
OK we gathered at Julian's house, him,
me, Marieke, Sean and Megan. We had bought him farewell
gifts of course, placemats from Smokey Mountain where
Marieke works, and a miniature jeepney. As we handed
him the box, he said something like "oooh it's
not a jeepney right?"... OK that's one surprise
straight out the window thank you very much.
We ordered some pizza, drank some vodka-tonics
of course, played some wicked iPod tunes (I remember
Basement Jaxx) and as usual Julian played one of his
so called intellectual Spanish film noirs in the background
again, which basically means seeing half naked men and
women in the corner of your eyes pretty much the whole
night... Weirrrrrrd!!!
After Julian's, it was pretty much
standard fare: M-cafe for martinis, Embassy for tunes.
Sean quit us early on in the game, Megan towards the
end of the night. The three of us went back home to
drop by 7-eleven for some late night red bull (we had
vodka but nothing to mix it with)... As soon as Julian
saw the Batista sign with "next counter!"
written below it he just had to have it. Here's
a transcript of the approximate dialogue that followed:
[Julian] Yo dude, is this sign for sale?
[Clerk] No sirrrrrr, not for sale
[Julian] Ohhhh c'mon man, you'll sell this to me right?
[Clerk] No sirrrrrr, not for sale
[Julian] OK I give you 100 pesos for it, all right?
[Clerk] Errr... sir? Not for sale sir...
[Julian] Oh c'mon, 100 pesos is a lot of money for a
stupid picture out of a magazine on a piece of cardboard
[Clerk] ... *looks uncertain of what to say next*
[Julian] OK here is 100 pesos, you can make ten new
ones for this, OK
[Clerk] ... *laughs nervously, faced with a Mexican
madman that wants to have his way*
[Julian] *puts 100 pesos on the counter, takes the sign;
we pay and leave*
Then we went back to ours, had one
more drink or so, and then crashed. Now I'll be honest
with you. Marieke and I completely forgot about this
matter until we woke up the next day and saw this "next
counter!" sign proudly posing on top of our TV!
But we didn't have much time to think about it... we
slept about 3 hours and we had a plane to catch, on
our way to a long awaited round trip through South-East
Asia!
[Update 1] When we got back from holiday,
Violeta, our cleaning lady, smilingly told Marieke she
knew where the sign came from. Apparently she drinks
her morning coffee at the 7-eleven every time she comes
over and the staff had told her about the incident.
Didn't take her long to realize it had been us! Good
thing that they all thought it was really funny... well
at least we brought them a conversation topic I guess...
but I'm not setting foot in that store anymore unless
I ab-so-lu-te-ly have to!
[Update 2] It's the first week of May
now and we still haven't had any word from Julian...
He's changed his email address (changed companies) and
disappeared into thin air. Surely we weren't that
bad an influence on him??? Gringo, if you're out
there, get back in touch. Or else.
Monday,
April 30 , 2007
Queen's Day 2007 !!!
A meeting in Rome and an adjacent week
of business trippin' through Rotterdam, Brussels and
Paris suddenly left me in Holland on Queen's Day - the
single biggest event in the Netherlands with the center
of all things cool in Amsterdam. As soon as I knew about
this, we frantically tried to get Marieke a ticket (on
frequent flyer miles) as well, but our valiant efforts
stranded in a sea of OFW (Overseas Filipino Workers)
and rich Filipinos doing Europe round trips that had
already booked pretty much all flights out of Manila.
We did find one remote possibility, but it was a paid
flight to Korea, staying the night there, cost 500 dollars
for the Korea leg, 150% of airmiles for Korea-Amsterdam-Manila,
and that for only 5 days back home - we figured it wasn't
worth it. So I had to go it alone.
Well, not entirely alone of course.
I landed in Holland on Friday evening and spent the
evening and most of Saturday with my parents, taking
the train in the late afternoon to Losser to say hi
to Marieke's parents. On Sunday, we spent close to three
hours on Skype with Marieke - all of us around the breakfast
table with coffee, Marieke on the couch in Manila with
red wine.
It was around 3 PM that Emiel dropped by to pick me
up and we were on our way to Amsterdam...
We dropped my stuff at Emiel's
new house (with a roof terrace overlooking the Vondelpark
not 20 meters away... WHAT a location!!! )
and drove straight through to Eltjo's place where we
met up with Gerda, Tanno and Thessa.
On a side note, we parked right outside
the pay zone. It's really a very normal looking neighborhood...
but that's just appearance. Emiel had parked his car
there a few weeks ago next to a car with a sun roof
and some drunk morons had been aiming to throw Grolsch
half liter beer bottles through it. A few bottles
hit Emiel's roof top and he now has three huge dents
in it. The car with the sun roof apparently wasn't
that lucky. Emiel had filed a report with the police
online but never heard back from them. Dutch police
(and drunk morons): !!!
All right where were we. Right, we
met up with the gang and went down to the Stopera where
Loveland had its party. Unfortunately, to keep the same
location this year, they were forced to mix up the DJs
with real live bands which really isn't a great mix.
So we went on to the Weteringscircuit where there was
proper dance music and we hung out there till the early
morning.
The
next day was the real thing. Exhausted from work and
the night before, I was the last one to wake up at Emiel's
place.
Everyone had gone to Emiel's back yard already (the
Vondelpark) and I found the gang lying on a big sheet
with a bottle of rose and a few glasses... Ahhhh sweet
rose, the breakfast of champions!
Eltjo took me down to the deli in Emiel's street for
a chicken sandwich and, naturally, more bottles of rose.
By the time we arrived at the Amstelveld, where Chemistry
had their gig, we had conquered four bottles already
with the fifth in our tote bag.
We spent most of the day right there, in the blazing
sun, dancing away and meeting random people around us.
Eltjo's new flame, Eva, and her friends joined us as
well and at the end of the day we moved on again. We
didn't go anywhere particularly interesting, and by
the time we left the extremely gay club we somehow had
ended up in, it was only around 1 AM but well time to
go back home.
A rockin' chemistry stage
Sad faces 'cause Marieke wasn't there :(
Eltjo and me playin' it cool
Emiel and me well stocked! ;)
Eva, Marie-Claire and Eltjo
Eltjo with Nadia and her nameless friend
Some
more relaxation the next day in the Vondelpark and on
Emiel's balcony in the sun. The weather had been truly
extremely good for this time of year! A final terrace
hour (or two) with a couple of fresh, cold wheat beers
with a slice of lemon finised off a great few days with
great friends at a great time in a great city...
March
9-11 , 2007
The most luxurious resort ever...
It had been ages since Marieke and
I had spent any time alone away from home. Our weekends
out of Manila we always spend with friends here, while
our vacations mostly are all about going back home to
the Netherlands to visit friends and family. So it was
high time to book a weekend get-away for just the two
of us. Debbie and Dino had enough surplus Philippine
Airlines frequent flyer miles that they would never
use to present us with two return tickets to Cebu (the
flight out even in business class )
so all we had to do is book the hotel. Now you should
know that when it comes to Cebu and a romantic weekend
get-away for two, there is really only one place to
go... the Cebu
Shangri-La Mactan resort. It's a haven of pure luxury
and indulgence, complete with several huge pools, a
private beach, a private golf course, a spa village,
fitness room, the works. The cheaper rooms were all
booked, so we went for an upscale room in an already
upscale re sort... We were on the 7th floor (with only
one floor above us), in a big 5 star like hotel room,
nicely furnished with a wide view of the pool grounds,
the beach and the sea, a bar on our floor where we could
get free breakfast, drinks and evening cocktails, it
was perfect!
Helicopter view of the complete resort
(from their website)... wow!!! :)
View from our balcony at night...
...and during the day
We arrived in the evening so all we
did the first day was have dinner. Strangely enough
that turned out to be quite a challenge at around 22:00!
We ended up in the one restaurant (yes, there are several)
that still served. It wasn't the most atmospheric of
all, a bit too American-style with a large open space
in a sea of bright light, so we moved to a little table
outside, asked for a candle (another challenge!) and
made our own atmosphere. Worked out pretty well, except
that we had to light the candle a million times and
eventually gave up on it...
Breakfast at Acqua
The next two days we just relaxed,
relaxed and relaxed some more. We spent time at the
pools, at the beach, at the spa. We ate mostly at one
of the pool side restaurants called Acqua, an Italian
place with unbelievably great food. One evening we just
ordered a cheese platter with all kinds of different
cheeses and olives and so on, accompanied by a fine
glass of white wine... heaven! There was also a restaurant-cum-bar
at the sea side called the Cowrie Cove where we had
a late night drink on Saturday. We planned to go out
into the town but instead we ended up just having a
very long and good conversation, something we really
needed.
It was over before we knew it and now
(it's mid April as I write this up) we feel like we
want to go again. I never thought we'd like it that
much, we really aren't very focused on luxury, but it
was a really beautiful place... a REAL break
from Manila!
Luxury abounds on the private beach...
...at the infinity pool...
...at the spa village...
...and with vodka-tonics at the Cowrie
Cove!
Oh and I just want to share this with you. South East
Asia for Koreans is what France is for Northern Europeans
or Mexico for North Americans. They are everywhere.
And sorry to offend any Koreans which is not my intention,
but they look absolutely ridiculous. The women wear
weird oversized sun caps, while look at these pictures
I took of two of the men - they are wearing a white
plastic mask which I think is protecting them from the
sun?? Leave a note in the guestbook if you know more
about this weeeeeeiiird phenomenon!
Update: I also saw a Korean (I assume) put one of these
masks on in business class Amsterdam - Manila on May
5!!! I mean, what the hell??? You look like a damn serial
killer with that thing on!! Next thing you know their
women put in their curling pins as well!!! BIZARRE!!!
Thursday,
March 22 , 2007
An Manila afternoon like any other...
After a long call with Australia, Bel
and I walked out of the office to get our lunch. We
crossed the street to the Petron gas station, heading
for a Chinese fast food place as we noticed a big man
hole with the lid removed that spewed a cloud of steam.
It all looked a bit dodgy so we decided to turn around
and continue down the street to a Japanese place instead,
joking about the 'gas leak that nearly killed us'.
Then I red this on a Filipino news
site -
Authorities in Makati City placed
a gasoline station on Buendia Avenue "under observation"
after receiving reports of a liquefied petroleum gas
(LPG) tank leak there Thursday afternoon. Radio DZRH
reported that firefighters, city rescue workers and
Petron officials remained at the site as of 4 p.m.
to guard against any possible explosion caused by
the supposed leak.
A telephone operator of the Makati public safety
office (Mapsa) called firefighters and rescue workers
to the site after receiving a report of a "chemical
leak" at the gas station, according to the radio
station. "As of now the area is OK [but] under
observation," the operator, who identified herself
only as Ivory, told the radio station. She added that
while there were initial reports of people "panicking,"
the situation has returned to normal and that traffic
near the area was "light to moderate."
Authorities also asked motorists and people near
the area to switch off their mobile phones as a safety
precaution. - GMANews.TV
Nice one!!! It was a gas leak!!! And we were
just wandering around there, and with us many others!!!
No need for a terrorist attack to risk your life here
on the streets...
Wednesday,
March 7, 2007
First of all, this entry contains spoilers
for the movie. Don't read it if you don't know the story
and don't want to know it either!
Man, I've been waiting for six months
for this. Finally, 300 is out! And for some reason,
the Philippines is the first country in the world where
it premiers!
The movie is based on a true story of how 300 Spartans
fought a Persian army of over a million soldiers during
Battle of Thermopylae in 480 B.C. There was no illusion
of hope that they could ever win. But they did hold
their ground for three gruelling days, holding the Persians
off just long enough to win time for their fellow Greeks
to prepare for a crucial naval battle with the Persians
that would eventually determine the war's outcome. This
is without a doubt one of the most inspiring stories
about honor, duty and glory of all times.
The
movie 300 is directly based upon the comic book
by Frank Miller, the same guy that wrote Sin City, another
great cartoon-like movie. Director Zack Snyder has truly
been able to capture the atmosphere of the comics, including
the bronze-gold coloring, the short, snappy and overly
manly dialogue, the bloodiness (although I wouldn't
classify this movie as gory at all, it's way too artful
for that), everything. He also employed a technique
that I have never seen before, not in this way, and
that I think will set a new standard in cinematography,
in the same way as Terminator 2 did with morphing and
The Matrix with high speed slow motion: he alternates
high speed slowmotion with fast forwarding, and the
camera keeps moving without the frames ever stopping.
It is simply spectacular!
I also really enjoyed the fact that
the story, although of course romanticized, stays very
close the the actual true
story of the Battle of Thermopylae. For example:
If male babies born in Sparta
were too small, weak or sick, they were abandoned
on the slopes of Mt. Taygetos to die. This way
the Spartans kept up the high physical standards
in their population.
Spartans began military
training at the age of 7. After initial training,
some were sent into the countryside with nothing
and forced to survive on their skills and cunning.
This was called the Krypteia.
Spartan women enjoyed a
status, power and respect that was unknown in
the rest of the classical world. They controlled
property, received as much education as men, rarely
got married before the age of 20, wore short dresses
and went where they pleased. Even divorce laws
were the same for both men and women. (Certainly
more equal than a lot of current day societies!)
Xerxes sent messengers to
Sparta asking for "earth and water"
as a token of their submission, upon which the
Spartans threw them into a well, saying "Dig
it out for yourselves".
Xerxes told Leonidas to
surrender their arms to which he gave his noted
answer: "Come and get them". This quote
has been taken by the Greek First Army Corps as
their emblem.
A Spartan soldier was informed
that Persian arrows would be so numerous as "to
blot out the sun", upon which he remarked
"So much the better, we shall fight in the
shade". The Greek 20th Armored Division has
this as their motto.
So many Persians were killed
in the first battle that Xerxes is said to have
jumped off the seat from which he was watching
the battle three times.
A Greek traitor named Ephialtes
informed Xerxes of a path around Thermopylae.
Because of this, Ephialtes now means "nightmare"
and is synonymous with "traitor" in
Greek.
Once they surrounded the
Spartans, the Persians rained down arrows until
the last Greek was dead. Modern archaeologists
have found evidence of the final arrow shower.
Women, being more independent than in other Greek
societies, were able to negotiate with their husbands
to bring their lovers into their homes. (...) Men
both allowed and encouraged their wives to bear the
children of other men. (...) The concept of "adultery"
was alien to the Spartans. (...) Bisexual relations
were commonplace among Spartan women, and it was considered
acceptable for married women to have affairs with
unmarried girls in their prime.
Interesting people, these Spartans!
The fact that the movie stayed close
to reality only adds to it brilliance. But even without
that, this is easily the most overpowering, awe-inspiring
action movie I have ever seen. My top 5 of best films
ever, and that means a lot for an action movie!! I will
watch it again on the big screen, very soon and I strongly
advise you do the same!
You can download some awesome trailers
right
here. And below are a couple more cool movie stills.
Let's give them something to drink!
Let me guess. You must be... Xerxes...
Immortals. We'll put their names to the
test!
This is where we fight! This is where they
die!
Earth and water
The oracle
Have the gods no mercy?
Even elephants are no match for Spartans
Thursday,
March 1 , 2007
To my credit...
Two
and a half years. That's how long it took the Bank of
the Philippine Islands to honor my credit card application.
On the account that I get my monthly salary on. Which
for Filipino standards is quite a substantial amount.
Two and a half years!!! I mean, COME ON!!!
And that's not all, nooo. When they texted me two weeks
ago, they said my credit card would be sent within a
week to my branch. So two weeks later I went to my branch,
located in my previous office building. And of course
they didn't have the credit card.
- So where is it?
- We don't know sir...
[I have learned by now that asking questions like what
do you mean, why not, etc will only give you blank stares
so I've learned to be more efficient than that]
- OK, who does know?
- You have to call BPI hotline sir
- You are BPI, can't you call?
- No sir, you have to call
[Efficiency: I get my mobile out of my pocket and call
the bank from within the bank]
- Hi, this is Daniel, do you know what happened to my
credit card?
- Let me see, please hold... ... ... Sir, is it not
at your branch?
- No. I'm standing here, they say they don't have it
- OK sir, kindly hold... ... ... Sir, did you recently
move offices?
- Well, we moved about a year and a half ago. Why?
- Oh well probably sir the courier wasn't sure which
branch to bring the card to
- So what did he do with the card?
- Sir, it's still with the courier
My unsigned credit card! With
$5000 credit limit!! With a courier for two
weeks!!! And no one cares to give anyone a call!!!!
What would have happened if I had never called? The
card would probably be with the courier for decades
to come. He probably has a whole room tiled with obsolete
credit cards.
- What is the courier going to do
with it?
- I don't know sir
[Why am I no longer surprised?]
- Can he send it to this branch?
- OK sir, I'll ask
- Wait a minute, can he send it to my home?
- Yes sir. You still live in Amorsolo?
Unbelievable. But I did get it delivered
to my house. Just in the mail, didn't have to sign for
receipt or anything. Unbelievable. But then get this.
Now I want to settle my monthly bill, right. So I sent
them an email on how to do this as the card came with
zero information. Basically the options I have are:
Go to the bank and pay over the counter
Go to the bank and enroll my card in
online payment (I already have online banking but
I cannot just pay my credit card, I have to enroll
it first and I have to visit the bank to do so!)
Go to the bank and enroll in auto
debit
In other words, I have to go to the
goddamn bank again to pay for it. Can't do it online!
But they can leave a blank credit card with some courier
for weeks. Welcome to the Philippines...
Saturday,
February 24 , 2007
A farewell to friends
As most faithful readers of my blog
will know, we have two particularly close friends here
in Manila. Debbie and Dino arrived at about the same
time we did and we've known them for most of the time
we've been here. We did lots together, went on many
trips in the Philippines and even celebrated New Year's
with them last year in San Francisco, followed by a
skiing trip in Lake Tahoe (which you can read all about
here).
So when, though expected, quite suddenly, Debbie was
told she had to start her new role in London on March
1, you'll understand our hears didn't jump for joy .
On th bright side though, now we have a permanent address
in London to go to when we're back ourselves (in not
too long a time)!
Like famous footballer Johan Cruijff prophetically stated:
Elk nadeel heb z'n voordeel!"
So of course there would be a farewell
party. No friend of ours leaves Manila without ample
vodka-tonics and perhaps a glass or two of champagne.
We congregated at their place, us being about an hour
late as we made them a very special farewell gift: a
copy of our 'beady cristal curtain' hanging behind our
couch (see picture on the right). And I can tell you,
it takes hours, especially as we had to make
it movable! Good thing too that Marieke likes all the
beady stuff and did the stringing of the goods, while
I 'only' had to buy & hammer together the frame!
But I had anohter reason to be excused, and that is
the fact that I had spent hours in the preceding weeks
preparing The Ultimate Manila Mix. A brilliant mix,
even if I say so myself, of what we have begun to call
Manila Cheese. Club music that fits a specific genre,
of the "if you have to ask you'll never know"
kind, and that for some reason blasts out of speakers
all over the Philippines. You can check out the tracks,
all brilliantly mixed together by your DJ Daniel, in
the picture of the CD inlay above.
I've put it up here for download, but
if it generates too much unwanted traffic I'll take
it down again - so get it while you can!
Debbie and Dino planned to book a jeepney
for the night to drive us around but there was none
around so they settled for a school bus instead, which
turned out equally well. We brought a couple of bottles
and some plastic glasses on board and set off with about
ten people to Malate, a place where we haven't gone
to too often but still is a Manila staple. Our plan
was to head for Bedrock to see some live music in a
Flintstone setting, but for some reason a bouncer convinced
us to drop into another place. Convince = offer free
entrance.
I don't know which place it was, but it was golden.
We had the upstairs dance room pretty much to ourselves,
and we filled it up just nicely, and the moment we had
our drinks, they started to blast some proper Manila
music. Ahhh that stuff hits the spot every time!
Around midnight we rolled out of the place to cross
the street to Bedrock, but the bus driver had a curfew
at 1 AM so instead we got back into the bus and goofed
our way back to The Fort, on to Embassy. Rick, an American
friend of ours and colleague of D&D arranged for
free entrance for all of us and it was in Embassy, in
style, that we finished off the night. We'll miss you
Debbie and Dino!!! See you in Europe!!!
Missing the good old pictures? That's because I don't
have them. :( Dino gave me an empty CD so you'll have
to wait.....
Friday,
February 23, 2007
Myths and truths about the twin massage...
This I've been planning to do for ages.
This is the promise, off the website of The
Spa:
Twin Massage
Two therapists working in synchronized movements
to achieve mental and spiritual bliss. Enjoy twice
the experience in tension releasing, deeply relaxing
& rebalancing massage. A must try!
OK
so Marieke and I got our own room. I looked beautiful
(see picture, although in reality a bit less blue, thank
god!) but believe me that it feels quite crowded when
you're inside with six people! Ah who cares, a twin
massage is on its way...
Well... See... I expected a nice soothing massage where
one girl would 'mirror' the other; one working on my
left side, the other, in perfect harmony and synchrony,
on my right. But alas, no such thing. While one was
working the upper body, the other was massaging the
legs and honestly, it was all a bit too much! So much
that both Marieke and I (as I found out later) chuckled
into our pillows.
I don't know, it was just... funny! The good thing is
when you get your head and lower back massaged simultaneously,
or your hands and feet. But when you're ticklish in
your legs, as I am, and one of them is working on them
almost non stop, then all you feel is the tickling and
you're not really enjoying the other stuff going on...
Fortunately there was a nice sauna, steam bath and hot
tub to wind down in afterwards (my first time in a sauna
with a window overlooking palm trees... weird!) All
in all it was an interesting experience but next time
I'm going for a good old regular, single person massage,
probably a Hawaiian Lomi Lomi massage at Neo,
still my all time favorite!
Feb
16 - 18, 2007
Wreck diving in Coron
Our dive instructor Pong
We got our advanced deep diving certificate
a few weeks ago and this was the opportunity
to put it to use. Pong, our diving instructor, had organized
a weekend in Coron, the north of Palawan (one of the
larger islands in the south and a popular tourist destination
- we had been there once before as you can read
here). This area is famous for its World War II
wrecks - the Japanese thought they were clever by disguising
their war ships as islands, but the Americans were a
little bit smarter by realizing that islands shouldn't
move around. D'oh!
So they bombed the living daylights out of the 'island
fleet' resulting in a magnificent underwater graveyard
of massive ships.
Our partners in crime were, who else,
Debbie and Dino. Unlike Pong and his two friends, we
decided we didn't want to take the 12 hour boat ride
to Palawan but instead booked a flight. On the way back
we anyway would have to take the boat (you can't fly
for 24 hours after a dive) and we figured one way would
be enough of a novelty - no need to waste more time
than strictly necessary. We might have decided otherwise
had we seen the miniature plane before...
Just kidding of course, it was the exact same plane
I was on for my work offsite just a month ago!
The resort was nice. It was in Coron,
a place on the coast of Busuanga, the island where the
plane lands, next to the public market (and within eyesight
of the resort I was in with my work mates). It had even
a nice roof terrace with rattan hammocks! But the boat
really made the day - big, with cooks and stove on board,
with a large cooler full of ice cold soft drinks and
beer and, best of all, a roof terrace as well!!! So
after each dive the four of us sprinted upstairs to
soak up the sun with a cool one in hand!
Just the four of us - all others stayed on the lower
deck in the shade; unlike us Europeans, Filipino's generally
don't like to get dark skin...
Chillin' in the hammock
Goofin' around
Hot girls with cool beers, lower deck
Burritos in the sun, upper deck
The diving was really cool. The very
first plunge was into a volcanic lake. There wasn't
much to see in terms of animal life, but other features
easily made up for it. First, there was the Indiana
Jones mountain path we had to climb over in full gear
- well, the ladies had their stuff carried by the dive
masters, but me and Dino went hardcore. We took photos,
but with D&D's camera and I haven't got the pictures
yet, but when I do I'll post them here as hard proof.
Underwater was pretty amazing too. There were pockets
of water so warm that you couldn't see through them;
like floating blurry balls of about 30 cm across, bloody
warm - we had to unzip our already thin (3mm) wet suits!
Really cool. And at one point, the bottom soil was so
soft that as you stuck your hand in, your whole arm
would disappear! Or, if you did like I did, your head
could disappear as well!!!
The
first evening we went to a natural (volcanic) hot spring.
The boat guys dropped us off in the dark and we made
our way there over a little wooden walk way. We got
a few beers, naturally, and sat ourselves down on a
quiet side of the largest pool. It was nice, but a bit
too warm to stay in for long (don't forget we're still
near the equator) and there wasn't anything at all in
the surroundings to make it attractive; there was hardly
any lighting even! That's a theme that has struck me
consistently in the Philippines - there is very little
individual entrepreneurship. You get some in Manila
although it mostly seems to be the rich families, but
outside there is so much opportunity left unseized...
Such as shame...
But the thing we had come for really was of course
the wreck diving. We saw three wrecks in total, and
it was awesome. All are at about 20-30 meters deep so
you wouldn't see them as you first dive in, but as you
slowly descend along a rope the dark shape of a vessel
slowly appears. It's spooky, exciting and magical all
at the same time. And you really get to go into
the ships too. Most of them have big holes in them,
either where they were shot down or a result of underwater
thieves using explosives to get to their loot, and we
swam through storage rooms, engine chambers, control
rooms, etc. One ship was still upright and we would
swim over the balustrade, floating above the deck where
people used to walk, two huge masts reaching for the
surface and the sun, as far as the (underwater) eye
could see. Magical. Cool, really cool.
There is also lots of interesting marine life. At one
point we saw a sea horse. Now these are properly stupid
animals. It kinda hid in a big piece of orange coral
that really didn't hide the thing at all. Then one of
our guides moved its hand towards it. I thought it'd
quickly try to swim away, but no, this animal apparently
thinks it's a far better idea to pretend it doesn't
exist. So it didn't move a muscle.
Our guide gently pushed it forward so Dino could take
a proper picture. The sea horse responded by - you guessed
it - not moving a muscle. Up to a point where it started
to topple over! Underwater!!
The guy had to actually turn it back upright, then remove
his hands really quickly, so that Dino could take a
picture...
Such a stupid animal... it's a miracle they ever survived
evolution...
At
the end of Sunday it was time to take the boat back
to Manila. That was another adventure. First we had
to line up outside where dogs sniffed our bags and men
with big automatic rifles marched up and down the line.
Inside, we went to our dorm style floor where our bed
was taken by a sleeping gentleman. But anyway Pong didn't
like the floor and went to work his charm on the executive
floor. And sure enough, after half an hour of negotiation
and something like 150 pesos each we got the best rooms
on the boat, complete with TV, aircon and balcony!!!
The seven of us gathered in our room, opened a bottle
of wine we had brought along, put some crisps on the
table and played some cool choons off the iPod... PAR-TAY!!!
Oh and I would also like to share with you an interesting
little story I read in the Seair in flight magazine
on the flight there...
"I had a horrifying colonic
detox in LA. The therapist who looked like a porn
star with her cup D breast must have been too
tired from her triple X video shoot the day before
that she confused my other hole with my rear entry
hole. Mandala Spa in Boracay enabled me to recover
from that experience." Filipino comedian
Giselle Sanchez.
Hmmmmmmmmmm...........
January
11-12, 2007
Tropical team building
Every year, I make sure to plan an
off site team building event with my team at work. Of
course, being in the Philippines has the added advantage
of being right in the middle of more than 7,000 tropical
islands so we always end up somewhere (very) nice.
In the past we've been to Cebu, Bohol and Boracay, this
year it was time to visit Palawan. As per tradition,
the new additions to the team were charged with organizing
(I love that tradition especially because I never was
in that position )
and they managed to find a flight and accomodation within
the budget. Which really pleased me as this would be
my last offsite with my Manila team and I wanted it
to be no less than any of the other offsites! The only
challenge was convincing our Indian friend Sandeep to
overcome his fear of propellor planes - which we eventually
managed.
My flight was about 7:00 in the morning
- way too early for me of course but then again any
time before noon is too early for me so I've long ago
given up complaining about that...
Tiny and rusty. Those were my first impressions when
I saw our airplane. I had a hunch it wasn't going to
be big when they weighed us at check in "to assign
seats to spread the weight evenly throughout the plane".
Inside, there was one row of single seats and one row
of double seats. The cockpit wasn't closed off - all
there was was a narrow board that allowed us to watch
over the shoulder of each pilot. They had the window
open while they started the engine (show offs!) and
inside the plating had come half undone near one of
them. All in all not an extremely comforting sight and
I wondered if Sandeep, who would be in a later flight,
would ever make it through the gate (which apparently
he did). The landing wasn't much more reassuring, as
we flew over a plane wreck (!!!) and rode off the landing
strip onto a rocky sand path...
Yep, a tiny plane indeed!
Me and Lukasz feigning being relaxed ;)
With one arm out the window...
The rocky and sandy landing strip
The fire brigade. For real!! :D
Tin & JB and the baggage handlers...
The resort we went to was called Dive
Link - a nice place looking out over the water,
complete with cottages, a pool, an open air restaurant
and a function room. It wasn't as fancy as some of the
other places we had been to but the location made up
for that.
One of the things I did was give a
presentation on Asian leadership. I had seen the presentation
in November when I was in China, where it was given
by a successful Filipino. I felt a bit funny about it
as the premise of the session was basically to brainstorm
and discuss about how Asians behave in business and
in life and how that affects their careers. There I
am, the only non Asian (together with Lukasz) in a group
of 20, 'telling' everybody about Asian style and behavior!
But fortunately it seemed that everyone really liked
it - Jayan suggesting that this should be part of standard
new hire on-boarding... In the end I was really happy
I did it...
The team building events were cool
as always with memorable moments like Malong trying
to canoo from one side of the shore to the other, but
instead ending up going in circles as he just couldn't
handle the paddles.
And when Zandro jumped in the water to relieve him from
his ordeal he couldn't take Malong's place as he didn't
know how to swim - in the end one of the resort guys
took another canoo and pulled him ashore. We lost (not
in the last place because I, in my blind rush to beat
the blue team, canooed to the other shore alone while
the idea was to row over your team mates one by one
- I only found out when I already arrived at the other
side )
but it was so much fun that we just didn't care. We
swam and rafted in a stunningly beautiful lakes, AJ
showed off his diving skills, I threw over a boat with
Tin who couldn't swim - a fact I forgot for an instant,
Malong took a picture of Kats and Kawase-san that could
go straight into a glossy magazine, Bel was being his
gorgeous self as you can see in the pictures below.
Name: Daniel
de Rooij Location: Manila Last asked question:
45 - (By JB) Where are your MP3's to listen
to. It sounds like you have a rockin' collection!? Hey JB! Ahhh,
my...Read more