What an amazing week, i could quite possibly say its the best week out of the entire six months i have been away. After initially coming up with what we both thought a slightly hair brained idea it has turned into a stroke of genious or at least is paying massive dividends.
For the last week after leaving Hoi an with a few more kilos of clothes than planned we headed inland away from Highway 1 and the tourist trail that follows the entire of vietnams coast. The country may be long but it is also very thin and after 40km we had hit Highway 14 also known as the Ho Chi Minh trail. This road famously follows the supply routes of the vietcong from north to south (along the border with lao) and for this reason it is the most bombed area of the world. Both Josh and I have essentially gotten fed up of package tours everywhere, always being hassled by touts and the never ending supply of 'same same but different' sights. Instead what we have been after is unspoilt countryside, amazing views, mountains, forest and what i would now call the real vietnam.
Joshs bike has been so far without any problems and mine has had a few hiccups shall we say and is double the age of the other bike. I would say i set out with some tripidation of the bikes capability to do 800km of mountainous riding along roads that are one big pothole. The first day nearly killed me we did 350km in one stretch having gotten lost for about an hour earlier on. One thing about asia and i have found this everywhere if you ask for directions and they have no idea they will give you some anyway. This led us a merry dance but we eventually found our way and blitzed 40km inland towards the trail. My bike which makes numerous noises then started to vibrate really badly and forced me to pull into a garage. 10 minutes and 10,000 dong later (30p) my bike was better than new. The potholes had loosened a nut which was the problem. Sorted and for the first time when someone knew they had you over a barrel they didnt try and rip me off.
The rest of the day was shattering, roads that were beautiful but needed full concentration and then just when i was really tired we had to do the last 30km in the dark. I have lights that are pitiful at best and there are no street lights so 30kms straining to see while trucks are hammering past and people are everywhere and theres potholes and sections of the road missing was so exhausting. Nevertheless we made it to Kon tom our first staging post. I had not seen a foreigner all day and the town was no different. We dumped our stuff in our cockroach ridden room and went out for dinner. In vietnam you never eat from a resteraunt only off the street and in Kon tom we had prawn pancakes which were insanely good. I think this was probably the best food i had eaten anywhere ever!!!
The next day was a short hop 45km to Plikou as our bodies wouldnt take much more, so we treated ourselves to a lie in and the chance to eat breakfast before heading off. The towns themselves have nothing to see and are just dust bowls but its for the road that we were here so i didnt care too much. In plikou we just chilled in our nice hotel ready to do the 180km to Boum ma thot. We were treated to amazing roads again all day and the feeling is incredible. On a bus all this passes you by but on a bike you see it, smell it and have everyone waving and shouting hello from the side of the road.
Buon ma thot is the coffee capital of vietnam. Iced white coffee is something to which i am now addicted and there is nothing better than sipping this while watching the world go by. We have bought ourselves lots of the stuff in an attempt to not too succesfully recreate what we have had so far. On my trip i have tried to tick off as many new things as possible and one that had alooded me so far was Thit Cho also known as dog. The random place we were staying (im pretty sure they had just kicked there son out of his room) took us to a dog restaurant. The place was heaving so it must be good. We tried the lot, BBQ dog, dog blood sausage, dog soup, dog with ginger and generally the taste was pretty good although it doesnt smell great. The taste is unlike anything else not quite beef, not chicken or pork but you have to try it to know what i mean.
Our final day on the trail took us 200km south to Dalat a mountain resort in the south highlands. We both agreed that despite the road surface for large sections being the worst we had ever seen the scenery was incredible. People talk about great drives of the world and for me there have been some good ones in six months and this was by far the best. For large sections there were ethnic communities perched on the sides of stunning valleys, jungle, friendly people, mountain passes and exciting bends to really get stuck into.
We now plan to keep the bikes until Angkor wat in cambodia, and we are hoping we can cross the border easily (not too much money in bribes). We will see but tomorrow its back down to the coast and the amazing beaches of Mui ne. I cant wait
Sunday, 26 September 2010
Saturday, 18 September 2010
Refinding the groove
Nearly three weeks now in Vietnam and i am in Hoi an the tailoring capital of the world or so it seems. I arrived this morning with Josh who i met in Ukraine and remet randomly in Hanoi. We have been traveling together for the last week after we both decided to buy motorbikes and see the country from a different perspective.
After getting to Vietnam i headed up to the mountain country along the Chinese border for a couple of days mainly to check out how things had changed since my last visit. I probably shouldn't have as the picturesque mountain town of sapa now exists as a tourist trap. Slightly disappointed i cut down my stay to two nights although i did manage to head out of town to some of the more remote tribal villages on a rented scooter. Seriously i didn't think the bike would make it with the state of the road. At one of the villages i met a Vietnamese couple on holiday who then proceeded to show me round sapa as well as all the local food markets. Honestly black chicken (a different species not burnt) is incredible i must have had it three or more times that day. I was also introduced to Pho the staple of Vietnamese cuisine which is noodles in spicy soup although out of the town thats about all you can get so its beginning to lose it magic.
From sapa i took the train to Hanoi after being smuggled on board by a security guard as all of the tickets were sold out. After china this was a refreshing change especially as he didn't ask for money. Onboard i managed to pick up a spare ticket from a family heading back after being on holiday. They were really cool and spoke a bit of english which made the 12 hour journey pass alot faster although teaching and then playing endless games of snap was a bad idea. The ticket didn't go all the way to Hanoi so i had to grab a bus in the pitch black (no streetlights in Vietnam) and pray for forty minutes i was going the right way. Shattered from traveling and the day before i did pretty much nothing in Hanoi for 5 days. I had been before so the sights were of no interest instead a book, ipod and the lake was perfect. On the last day i bumped into josh who i had met in Ukraine. Our journeys had separated after a day and then came back together again. I kind of wanted to ride a motorbike down Vietnam but not on my own and turns out so did he so we agreed to meet in Hue a few days later buy bikes and take the trip from there.
We met in Hue and bought our bikes. They basically cost $200-250 each and all was well at the beginning. We took them out for a test drive and perfect. Next day leaving our bags we headed up to the DMZ (de militarised zone) to see the tunnels and the dividing line between the north and south before heading up to khe san where the famous siege of the US marines happened. We spent the night up there and awoke to solid mist, great this will be a steep learning curve. We had already learnt to ride a bike in Vietnam rush hour traffic probably not the best idea but you learn fast. Then riding in the rain up the coast, then the mountains and now thick fog. All fun and games. The plan was to ride down the Ho Chi Minh trail for 100kms before taking the back road over the mountains to hue to pick up our stuff then over the famous (top gear) hi van pass to Danang and china beach. It kind of went ok until we got delayed in hue sending a parcel then my bike making funny noises. Despite this we soldiered on going over the hi van pass at sunsest (seriously amazing) me at about 2mph and josh powering on ahead. We then took on Danang vietnams third largest city at night which is something that will live with me forever, just a mass of lights, horns people crossing without looking. Insanity in its purist form.
Somehow completely shattered we turned up at our small guesthouse on a deserted section of china beach. Not being a beach person i was not sure about spending too long here but it was amazing. Pristine white sand, palm trees and perfectly clear water the perfect place to relax and unwind although the sun got us both by the end of the day. The ownly downer was going swimming forgetting my solitary bike key was in my open pocket and remembering with horror later. The solution a shifty looking guy with blank keys files me a new one in 10 seconds flat by looking in the lock. Not a comforting thought considering our bikes live outside.
Today we just did the 20km to Hoi an along the coast road to where we are now a nice hotel with a pool $6 a night, happy days. An in two days time we attempt the next section of the Ho Chi Minh trail, should be amazing.
Heres hoping my bikes makes it ;-)
After getting to Vietnam i headed up to the mountain country along the Chinese border for a couple of days mainly to check out how things had changed since my last visit. I probably shouldn't have as the picturesque mountain town of sapa now exists as a tourist trap. Slightly disappointed i cut down my stay to two nights although i did manage to head out of town to some of the more remote tribal villages on a rented scooter. Seriously i didn't think the bike would make it with the state of the road. At one of the villages i met a Vietnamese couple on holiday who then proceeded to show me round sapa as well as all the local food markets. Honestly black chicken (a different species not burnt) is incredible i must have had it three or more times that day. I was also introduced to Pho the staple of Vietnamese cuisine which is noodles in spicy soup although out of the town thats about all you can get so its beginning to lose it magic.
From sapa i took the train to Hanoi after being smuggled on board by a security guard as all of the tickets were sold out. After china this was a refreshing change especially as he didn't ask for money. Onboard i managed to pick up a spare ticket from a family heading back after being on holiday. They were really cool and spoke a bit of english which made the 12 hour journey pass alot faster although teaching and then playing endless games of snap was a bad idea. The ticket didn't go all the way to Hanoi so i had to grab a bus in the pitch black (no streetlights in Vietnam) and pray for forty minutes i was going the right way. Shattered from traveling and the day before i did pretty much nothing in Hanoi for 5 days. I had been before so the sights were of no interest instead a book, ipod and the lake was perfect. On the last day i bumped into josh who i had met in Ukraine. Our journeys had separated after a day and then came back together again. I kind of wanted to ride a motorbike down Vietnam but not on my own and turns out so did he so we agreed to meet in Hue a few days later buy bikes and take the trip from there.
We met in Hue and bought our bikes. They basically cost $200-250 each and all was well at the beginning. We took them out for a test drive and perfect. Next day leaving our bags we headed up to the DMZ (de militarised zone) to see the tunnels and the dividing line between the north and south before heading up to khe san where the famous siege of the US marines happened. We spent the night up there and awoke to solid mist, great this will be a steep learning curve. We had already learnt to ride a bike in Vietnam rush hour traffic probably not the best idea but you learn fast. Then riding in the rain up the coast, then the mountains and now thick fog. All fun and games. The plan was to ride down the Ho Chi Minh trail for 100kms before taking the back road over the mountains to hue to pick up our stuff then over the famous (top gear) hi van pass to Danang and china beach. It kind of went ok until we got delayed in hue sending a parcel then my bike making funny noises. Despite this we soldiered on going over the hi van pass at sunsest (seriously amazing) me at about 2mph and josh powering on ahead. We then took on Danang vietnams third largest city at night which is something that will live with me forever, just a mass of lights, horns people crossing without looking. Insanity in its purist form.
Somehow completely shattered we turned up at our small guesthouse on a deserted section of china beach. Not being a beach person i was not sure about spending too long here but it was amazing. Pristine white sand, palm trees and perfectly clear water the perfect place to relax and unwind although the sun got us both by the end of the day. The ownly downer was going swimming forgetting my solitary bike key was in my open pocket and remembering with horror later. The solution a shifty looking guy with blank keys files me a new one in 10 seconds flat by looking in the lock. Not a comforting thought considering our bikes live outside.
Today we just did the 20km to Hoi an along the coast road to where we are now a nice hotel with a pool $6 a night, happy days. An in two days time we attempt the next section of the Ho Chi Minh trail, should be amazing.
Heres hoping my bikes makes it ;-)
Wednesday, 1 September 2010
Trials and tribulations on the roof of the world
On my last day in Chengdu i finally met violet the lady who has put up with my constant questions and change of plans to pick up my tickets and passes in order to get to Tibet. Chengdu itself was a great place to lie around and do nothing, not that there is much to do apart from try the local delicacy hotpot and look at pandas. Compared to the zoo i went to in Kunming yesterday the pandas have the greatest life ever.
The train from Chengdu to Lhasa is 1 day and 19 hours long and passes over a 5100m pass before continuing along the Tibetan plateau at 4600m and then dropping down to Lhasa which occupies the lowly altitude of 3600m. I was really nervous about this train after my experiences at the top of Fuji. This anxiety wasn't helped when i was asked to sign a disclaimer in case anything happened due to the altitude. The train ride itself was great as for the entire journey the scenery was incredible and there were two australians in the next carriage to talk to and play cards with as nobody on the train spoke a word of English and the constant eating of chickens feet is enough to make anyone nauseous. Arriving at Lhasa train station was an experience, the building itself was strangely futuristic and brand new as the train line had only been completed in 2007. Outside though i had a taste of what was to come, a city under siege from heavily armed Chinese troops. The people on the train were all Han Chinese and were moving to Lhasa under financial encouragement from the government and soon Tibetans will be the minority.
Due to the restrictions on foreigners traveling in Tibet the whole trip was already organized something i hate as so far i have been able to wing it. I was staying in a hotel for the first time on my trip and it was great to be able to leave all my stuff out and not have to go hiking in the night to find a toilet. Despite all my fears about altitude sickness the train journey went fine and when i arrived in Lhasa i could walk around freely without fighting for breath. I stupidly thought i would then be fine and that afternoon i undertook a long walk all around the Tibetan old quarter the barkhor. Lhasa is divided into the old Tibetan part of the city and the new Chinese section that threatens to overwhelm the unique charm of the city. After a few drinks with a dutch guy in a bar (which closed at 11pm) i started to walk through the pitch black streets as the old town has no lights. My experience in Lhasa so far had been great and it was to continue as i lost myself amongst the monks, the people on pilgrimage and the colourful market stalls. Many Tibetans unlike the Chinese speak a few words of english and everywhere i was greeted with smiling faces and cries of 'hello' and 'how are you'. Unfortunately by the time i reached the hotel the effects of what i later found out to be a rich oxygen environment on the train had worn off and the beginnings of a headache and various aches and pains as well as a lack of breath started.
That night i did not sleep at all and in the morning i had to get up at 6am in order to get on the bus for the eight hour ride to Shigatse to the west. The bus ride was incredible twice we went over 5000m passes and also we saw yam drok lake which was bluer than anything i had ever seen. Each time we went higher the banging in my head got worse and walking came with great difficulty. At this point i was seriously worried about going to everest base camp the next day.
The towns of Tibet are all small but thankfully outside of Lhasa there a fewer Chinese and they have a different atmosphere. Pretty much everything eaten or drunk comes from the yaks which you see everywhere wandering the high pastures. In shigatse i took some pills which helped with the sickness and i managed to sleep a little. Again we had to rise early and we headed to Tengri a small town on the edge of the everest national park. I took another bunch of tablets but as we went above 4000m they stopped being effective. When we finally reached Tengri at 5000m i again had a pounding headache worse than anything i had felt before and this time nausea and pins and needles in my limbs. I was traveling with 8 others and although they had sickness it was not anywhere near as severe as mine. The road to base camp was another 5 hours but over the worst road you have ever seen. Absolutely gutted i realised i could not make it and if it got any worse i could be in serious trouble as tengri was the last place with medical facilities. Unlike the Nepalese side there is very little infrastructure in Tibet and later i found out people have died on the same tour i was doing a comforting thought.
I spent the afternoon and the night trying not to move as well as having every local remedy they could give me as well as taking altitude pills and pure oxygen. None of this helped as i had just gone too high too fast and felt so ill. Again being sick and lying in a hotel room on your own in a place where no-one speaks english is the worst feeling. I even managed to panick my parents with an expensive phone call in order to speak to someone. The people in the hotel were so kind and were incredibly worried. I found out the next day the old lady who had given me the local remedies sat outside my door making sure i was still alive. I managed to sleep somehow and woke the next morning feeling great. I was just one day too early to go to base camp and this demoralised feeling was made worse when i saw the photos the group brought back of everest completely clear. So gutted its unbelievable and for me i have unfinished business in Tibet.
After this we again went to Shigatse to see the monastery before taking the 8 hour ride back to Lhasa via several viewing places by glaciers and mountain lakes. I was staying for an extra day on the tour and had a private guide to take me around the temples and palaces of Lhasa the next day. My guide showed me so many things i had missed the first day including the snipers on the buildings in the old town as well as the security cameras placed in every alley. To see the pothala palace is a dream come true for me and i could sit and look at that building all day as the different lighting makes it come alive. Also i went to another monastery as well as the most holy sight in the whole of Tibet the Jankhor temple. It was filled with prostrating people as well as those making the epic trip from the outer regions of Tibet to give yak butter as an offering to the budhas. The deep feeling felt by these people was really something to behold and not being religious there devotion really touched me. Tibet is amazing and im glad i saw it before the Chinese destroy it completely. Its stunning that purely due to the wests heavy reliance on china they let the tragedy continue. It left me with a bad taste in my mouth and today i left China for Vietnam and felt a great sense of relief.
The train from Chengdu to Lhasa is 1 day and 19 hours long and passes over a 5100m pass before continuing along the Tibetan plateau at 4600m and then dropping down to Lhasa which occupies the lowly altitude of 3600m. I was really nervous about this train after my experiences at the top of Fuji. This anxiety wasn't helped when i was asked to sign a disclaimer in case anything happened due to the altitude. The train ride itself was great as for the entire journey the scenery was incredible and there were two australians in the next carriage to talk to and play cards with as nobody on the train spoke a word of English and the constant eating of chickens feet is enough to make anyone nauseous. Arriving at Lhasa train station was an experience, the building itself was strangely futuristic and brand new as the train line had only been completed in 2007. Outside though i had a taste of what was to come, a city under siege from heavily armed Chinese troops. The people on the train were all Han Chinese and were moving to Lhasa under financial encouragement from the government and soon Tibetans will be the minority.
Due to the restrictions on foreigners traveling in Tibet the whole trip was already organized something i hate as so far i have been able to wing it. I was staying in a hotel for the first time on my trip and it was great to be able to leave all my stuff out and not have to go hiking in the night to find a toilet. Despite all my fears about altitude sickness the train journey went fine and when i arrived in Lhasa i could walk around freely without fighting for breath. I stupidly thought i would then be fine and that afternoon i undertook a long walk all around the Tibetan old quarter the barkhor. Lhasa is divided into the old Tibetan part of the city and the new Chinese section that threatens to overwhelm the unique charm of the city. After a few drinks with a dutch guy in a bar (which closed at 11pm) i started to walk through the pitch black streets as the old town has no lights. My experience in Lhasa so far had been great and it was to continue as i lost myself amongst the monks, the people on pilgrimage and the colourful market stalls. Many Tibetans unlike the Chinese speak a few words of english and everywhere i was greeted with smiling faces and cries of 'hello' and 'how are you'. Unfortunately by the time i reached the hotel the effects of what i later found out to be a rich oxygen environment on the train had worn off and the beginnings of a headache and various aches and pains as well as a lack of breath started.
That night i did not sleep at all and in the morning i had to get up at 6am in order to get on the bus for the eight hour ride to Shigatse to the west. The bus ride was incredible twice we went over 5000m passes and also we saw yam drok lake which was bluer than anything i had ever seen. Each time we went higher the banging in my head got worse and walking came with great difficulty. At this point i was seriously worried about going to everest base camp the next day.
The towns of Tibet are all small but thankfully outside of Lhasa there a fewer Chinese and they have a different atmosphere. Pretty much everything eaten or drunk comes from the yaks which you see everywhere wandering the high pastures. In shigatse i took some pills which helped with the sickness and i managed to sleep a little. Again we had to rise early and we headed to Tengri a small town on the edge of the everest national park. I took another bunch of tablets but as we went above 4000m they stopped being effective. When we finally reached Tengri at 5000m i again had a pounding headache worse than anything i had felt before and this time nausea and pins and needles in my limbs. I was traveling with 8 others and although they had sickness it was not anywhere near as severe as mine. The road to base camp was another 5 hours but over the worst road you have ever seen. Absolutely gutted i realised i could not make it and if it got any worse i could be in serious trouble as tengri was the last place with medical facilities. Unlike the Nepalese side there is very little infrastructure in Tibet and later i found out people have died on the same tour i was doing a comforting thought.
I spent the afternoon and the night trying not to move as well as having every local remedy they could give me as well as taking altitude pills and pure oxygen. None of this helped as i had just gone too high too fast and felt so ill. Again being sick and lying in a hotel room on your own in a place where no-one speaks english is the worst feeling. I even managed to panick my parents with an expensive phone call in order to speak to someone. The people in the hotel were so kind and were incredibly worried. I found out the next day the old lady who had given me the local remedies sat outside my door making sure i was still alive. I managed to sleep somehow and woke the next morning feeling great. I was just one day too early to go to base camp and this demoralised feeling was made worse when i saw the photos the group brought back of everest completely clear. So gutted its unbelievable and for me i have unfinished business in Tibet.
After this we again went to Shigatse to see the monastery before taking the 8 hour ride back to Lhasa via several viewing places by glaciers and mountain lakes. I was staying for an extra day on the tour and had a private guide to take me around the temples and palaces of Lhasa the next day. My guide showed me so many things i had missed the first day including the snipers on the buildings in the old town as well as the security cameras placed in every alley. To see the pothala palace is a dream come true for me and i could sit and look at that building all day as the different lighting makes it come alive. Also i went to another monastery as well as the most holy sight in the whole of Tibet the Jankhor temple. It was filled with prostrating people as well as those making the epic trip from the outer regions of Tibet to give yak butter as an offering to the budhas. The deep feeling felt by these people was really something to behold and not being religious there devotion really touched me. Tibet is amazing and im glad i saw it before the Chinese destroy it completely. Its stunning that purely due to the wests heavy reliance on china they let the tragedy continue. It left me with a bad taste in my mouth and today i left China for Vietnam and felt a great sense of relief.
Sunday, 22 August 2010
Compounding the problem
I think i will just come out with it right from the very beginning i really have not enjoyed china due to so many reasons its hard to list. I am all for new and different cultures but china really is something you have to witness to believe. Everybody knows china has 1.4 billion people but that is just a number until you are on the ground you dont realise what that feels like especially when they just see you with dollar signs in there eyes. Everything in china involves standing in a queue or waiting around for days because all of the bus and train tickets for some journeys are sold out for two weeks. In xian it took two hours to go 20km due to the traffic. This for a few days is ok but after three weeks i have been struggling, i very nearly couldnt face going to the great wall or the forbidden city. These are cool places but if there were less people it would be infinitely better. Another thing with china is the various customs such as hawking up massive gobs of spit constantly in the street, on the metro just everywhere as well as letting babies relieve themselves at will. On the metro i have seen a woman just stand up and hold the baby in the aisle and let it go. For chinese who are used to this i guess they dont mind but when it is 40 degrees 90% humidity as well its enough to drive you insane.
Anyway enough of the bad things i did spend five days cycling along a really scenic river in yangshou, going swimming, eating great food and drinking on the rooftop terrace. After nearly 5 months of constant sightseeing i was really happy just to do nothing. The train to shanghai was sold out so i had to stay an extra day but after a 24 hour train i eventually arrived and went straight to the expo. I had heard various reviews of the expo but decided to check it out for myself. Ill sum it up two hours to get in, and between 1-3 hour queue for any good pavillions. So instead i took a tour of the turkmenistan pavillion amongst a few other less well known. The highlight had to be North Koreas proudly proclaiming "a paradise for people" it made me laugh a bit anyway. There is really nothing in shanghai apart from a battle against 22 million people so i left for beijing. I stayed longer than expected in yangshou as well as hong kong so i only had two weeks before i had to be in chengdu.
Beijing is really one of the oddest cities i have ever seen. I was walking down a street lined with really expensive shops but due to the smog and the tramps going through bins as well as the decrepit bicycle carts it just doesnt gell, its two alien worlds being forced together. I took one day trip out to the great wall at Mutian yu which was spectacular although it looks like it was rebuilt very recently. The other sights in beijing like the forbidden city really are overhyped and i hate to say it you have seen one you have seen them all. The real highlight for me was the summer palace, the day i went the smog was not so bad and from the pagoda there was a really spectacular view of beijing. I also managed to see Mr Mao to get the hatrick of dead communist leaders.
I only had five days left to see Xi'an and chengdu so i took the first available train. 12 hours standing. It is the worst thing i have ever done. The first hour i could speak to this guy who spoke english then that was it 11 hours crammed into the area where you can stand as moving was impossible. It was so hot, it smelled people still continued to spit and get food and cigarettes everywhere. By the end i was nearly insane as at the same point i hadnt eaten anything for over a day being unable to keep anything down due to my first bout of food poisining. Fortunately i arrived in Xi'an checked in and fell asleep for the rest of the day. I had organised to see the terracotta warriors the next day and i joined a tour from the hostel. The warriors are really not what you think, very few have actually been excavated most of it is just mounds of earth. Its ok but again the stress getting there, the fact the tour guide was trying to rip us off, that the food in the restaurant was revolting and the painfully slow traffic just ruined it.
Anyway im now in chengdu the city that had the really bad earthquake a few years ago. This place is alot more laid back and today i went to the panda breeding reserve. It was a special place as they were really close, although they are only very slightly more active than sloths. I have so many photos but the internet here is so slow as everything is filtered by the government. I am only able to write this using a proxy website.
And tomorrow i go to Tibet. Solo travel is not alowed so with the help of many people i have arranged a tour for the next eight days. I have no idea what it will be like, maybe you dont see the real tibet i just dont know. But taking the highest railway in the world complete with oxygen masks is really cool. For the first time in a while im really too excited!!!!
Anyway enough of the bad things i did spend five days cycling along a really scenic river in yangshou, going swimming, eating great food and drinking on the rooftop terrace. After nearly 5 months of constant sightseeing i was really happy just to do nothing. The train to shanghai was sold out so i had to stay an extra day but after a 24 hour train i eventually arrived and went straight to the expo. I had heard various reviews of the expo but decided to check it out for myself. Ill sum it up two hours to get in, and between 1-3 hour queue for any good pavillions. So instead i took a tour of the turkmenistan pavillion amongst a few other less well known. The highlight had to be North Koreas proudly proclaiming "a paradise for people" it made me laugh a bit anyway. There is really nothing in shanghai apart from a battle against 22 million people so i left for beijing. I stayed longer than expected in yangshou as well as hong kong so i only had two weeks before i had to be in chengdu.
Beijing is really one of the oddest cities i have ever seen. I was walking down a street lined with really expensive shops but due to the smog and the tramps going through bins as well as the decrepit bicycle carts it just doesnt gell, its two alien worlds being forced together. I took one day trip out to the great wall at Mutian yu which was spectacular although it looks like it was rebuilt very recently. The other sights in beijing like the forbidden city really are overhyped and i hate to say it you have seen one you have seen them all. The real highlight for me was the summer palace, the day i went the smog was not so bad and from the pagoda there was a really spectacular view of beijing. I also managed to see Mr Mao to get the hatrick of dead communist leaders.
I only had five days left to see Xi'an and chengdu so i took the first available train. 12 hours standing. It is the worst thing i have ever done. The first hour i could speak to this guy who spoke english then that was it 11 hours crammed into the area where you can stand as moving was impossible. It was so hot, it smelled people still continued to spit and get food and cigarettes everywhere. By the end i was nearly insane as at the same point i hadnt eaten anything for over a day being unable to keep anything down due to my first bout of food poisining. Fortunately i arrived in Xi'an checked in and fell asleep for the rest of the day. I had organised to see the terracotta warriors the next day and i joined a tour from the hostel. The warriors are really not what you think, very few have actually been excavated most of it is just mounds of earth. Its ok but again the stress getting there, the fact the tour guide was trying to rip us off, that the food in the restaurant was revolting and the painfully slow traffic just ruined it.
Anyway im now in chengdu the city that had the really bad earthquake a few years ago. This place is alot more laid back and today i went to the panda breeding reserve. It was a special place as they were really close, although they are only very slightly more active than sloths. I have so many photos but the internet here is so slow as everything is filtered by the government. I am only able to write this using a proxy website.
And tomorrow i go to Tibet. Solo travel is not alowed so with the help of many people i have arranged a tour for the next eight days. I have no idea what it will be like, maybe you dont see the real tibet i just dont know. But taking the highest railway in the world complete with oxygen masks is really cool. For the first time in a while im really too excited!!!!
Tuesday, 3 August 2010
From Japan to China
What can you say about hong kong its nothing short of incredible. I had originally planned to be here for four days just long enough to get a Chinese visa. It is already day six in hong kong today and unfortunately i will have to leave tomorrow otherwise i would have been tempted to stay for a few weeks. Admittedly being here for longer than planned is partly due to the fact that UK visas are double the cost and take double the time of everyone elses and hopefully i should have it today.
The last three days in japan were completely mental trying to fit everything i had left to do. From Hiroshima i headed back to kyoto to use as a base in order to visit Himeji castle as well as Nara. The castle unfortunately was under restoration and so only the gardens were accessible but they were the best i saw in japan so no loss there. The next day i day tripped nara which was the ancient capital of japan and has all the temples, pagodas etc set around a big park. Nara is famed for its tame deer which wander the busy streets in big herds and add to the calm and relaxing atmosphere. I also planned to go the baseball at some point in japan and that night Hanshin tigers were playing in osaka which is an hour away from Nara. I arrived about 2 hours before the game and found much to my disapointment it was cancelled due to the weather which had been raining on and off all day. Gutted i remembered there was a game in Kobe another city close to osaka. This story shows how amazing japans transport actually is as from the Hanshin stadium i caught the train back to osaka, ran and jumped onto a train to kobe before navigating accross the city on the subway and making it to kobe just as the game started. Relieved and happy at the situation i took my seat and settled in to enjoy the game and the crazy japanese fans. The team here the Orix buffaloes are pretty rubbish and so there werent that many people there although the chants of 'home run home run in the bag' were loud and pretty comical in there accent. Unfortunately one inning later the heavens opened and this game was also called off so slightly dispondent i went back to Kyoto. The one day in two weeks where it rained was the one where i needed it desperately not too. Theres not much you can do when you have a limited schedule so that remained the only thing i didnt manage to get done in japan.
That left me with a day in osaka which everybody had said wasnt great although their aquarium is amazing. It has to be one of the best in the world and it had a huge seven story central tank with whale sharks as well as a tiger shark. It was well worth a trip to osaka just on its own. The final night i tried out a capsule hotel which is a really interesting experience. If your my height its fine but people who are over six foot must struggle. The capsule hotel is only really for business men who missed the last train but mine had a gym, tvs and was really comfortable. Thats another month gone already nearly half way :-(
As i said before hong kong is great its more like i would call proper asia but has all the trappings of home as well. For me japan was too sterile a country and suprisingly i found it not particularly interesting or exciting but as soon as i was in hong kong its more like proper travelling again. I had a couple of days exploring the various areas of the city as well as lantau island the home of a spectacular cable car ride as well as the worlds largest seated budha. Hong kong has everthing you could possibly want from beaches and mountains to the best skyline both in the day and night i have ever seen. Hong Kong has the world record for the longest running light show but honestly it is appaling and the city without the show is much better and the view from the star ferry going between the island and kowloon will stick with me for ever. It really must have been the jewel in our empire. After a couple of days i met up with Ben a friend i met in Russia and we had a couple of days just chilling before joining a pub crawl with some others from our hostel on our last night. For what it is Hong Kong is really expensive maybe like 10x china where i am now. Drinking was around 6-7 quid a beer but somewhow for a tenner we got free drinks and entry galore. My night was cut short as i have another cold due mainly to the chinese obsession with near freezing air con in any indoor area. A week of going from 40 degrees to 20 then back into 40 really messes you about.
Another long one but i have had so little access to computers recently. Im now off to take a dip in the river in yanshou in southern china (the scenery from the HSBC cormorant fishing advert) which is stunning and also a legendary backpacker retreat.
The last three days in japan were completely mental trying to fit everything i had left to do. From Hiroshima i headed back to kyoto to use as a base in order to visit Himeji castle as well as Nara. The castle unfortunately was under restoration and so only the gardens were accessible but they were the best i saw in japan so no loss there. The next day i day tripped nara which was the ancient capital of japan and has all the temples, pagodas etc set around a big park. Nara is famed for its tame deer which wander the busy streets in big herds and add to the calm and relaxing atmosphere. I also planned to go the baseball at some point in japan and that night Hanshin tigers were playing in osaka which is an hour away from Nara. I arrived about 2 hours before the game and found much to my disapointment it was cancelled due to the weather which had been raining on and off all day. Gutted i remembered there was a game in Kobe another city close to osaka. This story shows how amazing japans transport actually is as from the Hanshin stadium i caught the train back to osaka, ran and jumped onto a train to kobe before navigating accross the city on the subway and making it to kobe just as the game started. Relieved and happy at the situation i took my seat and settled in to enjoy the game and the crazy japanese fans. The team here the Orix buffaloes are pretty rubbish and so there werent that many people there although the chants of 'home run home run in the bag' were loud and pretty comical in there accent. Unfortunately one inning later the heavens opened and this game was also called off so slightly dispondent i went back to Kyoto. The one day in two weeks where it rained was the one where i needed it desperately not too. Theres not much you can do when you have a limited schedule so that remained the only thing i didnt manage to get done in japan.
That left me with a day in osaka which everybody had said wasnt great although their aquarium is amazing. It has to be one of the best in the world and it had a huge seven story central tank with whale sharks as well as a tiger shark. It was well worth a trip to osaka just on its own. The final night i tried out a capsule hotel which is a really interesting experience. If your my height its fine but people who are over six foot must struggle. The capsule hotel is only really for business men who missed the last train but mine had a gym, tvs and was really comfortable. Thats another month gone already nearly half way :-(
As i said before hong kong is great its more like i would call proper asia but has all the trappings of home as well. For me japan was too sterile a country and suprisingly i found it not particularly interesting or exciting but as soon as i was in hong kong its more like proper travelling again. I had a couple of days exploring the various areas of the city as well as lantau island the home of a spectacular cable car ride as well as the worlds largest seated budha. Hong kong has everthing you could possibly want from beaches and mountains to the best skyline both in the day and night i have ever seen. Hong Kong has the world record for the longest running light show but honestly it is appaling and the city without the show is much better and the view from the star ferry going between the island and kowloon will stick with me for ever. It really must have been the jewel in our empire. After a couple of days i met up with Ben a friend i met in Russia and we had a couple of days just chilling before joining a pub crawl with some others from our hostel on our last night. For what it is Hong Kong is really expensive maybe like 10x china where i am now. Drinking was around 6-7 quid a beer but somewhow for a tenner we got free drinks and entry galore. My night was cut short as i have another cold due mainly to the chinese obsession with near freezing air con in any indoor area. A week of going from 40 degrees to 20 then back into 40 really messes you about.
Another long one but i have had so little access to computers recently. Im now off to take a dip in the river in yanshou in southern china (the scenery from the HSBC cormorant fishing advert) which is stunning and also a legendary backpacker retreat.
Tuesday, 27 July 2010
A letter from Miyajima
Im now back on Honshu in the city of Hiroshima with only three days left in japan after a brief foray last week into Hokkaido. With mixed feelings im kind of looking forward to leaving as a few things are starting to annoy. Despite being so advanced in some respects things such as the ticket offices in railway stations belong in yesteryear. The timetable bafflingly is not on computer but instead invloves the service personel taking an age to look through a book larger than the yellow pages. Any journey involving more than one or two changes takes forever. Also with little money left in the budget for this month finding accomodation is also a pain. Two nights ago i had to travel two hours from nagano to find somewhere i could afford and when in nagano i had to sleep in an internet cafe which was certainly a new experience. But despite this the last few days have had the best sights so far.
Yesterday i visited one of the best museums/memorials i have ever seen. The a-bomb memorial park and peace museum were unbelievably moving and it was a shame that i did not have more time having arrived that afternoon from Hakuba. The last few days have been hectic and with no respite today i took a day trip to Miyajima an island jut off the coast that is home to the `famous` floating tori as well as it turns out an amazing scenic walk amongst shrines, temples, pagodas and masses of tame deer. The island was amazing and was definately the best place i have visited in japan so far although the temperature has really started to get beyond bearable.
After i wrote last time i headed a few hours north of Hakodate to the capital of Hokkaido, Sapporo for a day and then onto Daisetzusan national park. Sapporo is a pretty boring place to be honest which was a shame as the hostel Inos place was the best ive stayed in so far on the entire trip. The Sapporo beer museum was the only real saving grace and a happy hour was spent trying the various samples. There are very few people who make it up to Hokkaido and those that do all seem to be english people all teaching in japan, which seems to be becoming ever more popular as the demand exceeds the supply. As Sapporo was only worth a day i headed to Daisetsuzan national park in the hope of getting some decent hiking done as well as possibly seeing some bears. Everybody's image of japan is of densely packed buildings with everybody living on top of each other, but as soon as you leave Tokyo and the endless cities that merge with it the country becomes some of the wildest landscapes ever.
I stayed at Sounkyo which is a small hot spring resort town which provided a great base in which to carry out some hikes around the various local peaks and hopefully to the volcanically active mt. Asahi. First day i headed to some waterfalls that appear on all the photos of the area, and to be honest they were much more underwhelming in real life. But the second day i headed up on the rope way and from the top an hour or so climb to the top of mt. Kurodake. From here i was hoping to do a big loop on the mountainous plateau and across to an active caldera. As soon as i reached the top of Kurodake the weather started to go pear shaped and i made it to a glacier before strong winds and driving rain meant i had to turn around. I saw a tiny bit of the crater with the sulphur river but managed to miss the bear that everyone else saw, big time gutted. Hokkaido in the end turned into a bit of a wash out which was a shame as it was the last opportunity for hiking for a while. Despite this the relative cool made a great change to the 35 degree 80% humidity down south.
Trying to make the most of my remaining week i took the fourteen hour train to Nagano of Olympic fame. I got in at near midnight and had nowhere to stay so crashed in an internet cafe. The good thing about japan is that they have a variety of unusual cheaper ways to sleep than would be elsewhere mainly due to the fact the trains stop so early. Most parks have a spot for those with `difficulty commuting` as the trains stop so early. Nagano has few sights so i took the scenic local train to the nearby mountain city of Matsumoto which has the oldest and probably the best castle in japan. The castle and the city as a whole were great having an atmosphere unlike anything else i have seen in japan. Being a hot sunday afternoon the entire city was out in carnival atmosphere with food stalls lining the streets and people playing on the towns river beach. From Matsumoto having not found anywhere affordable i took another scenic train up into the mountains to Hakuba. The hostel here is part of the K hostel chain which provides an amazing service and if you ever visit japan this is highly recommeded although also very popular. Hakuba being off all the main routes meant another early morning in order to get to Hiroshima but it was well worth it for an afternoon in the peace park.
The last three days as you can imagine are packed starting with tomorrow with a trip to Himeji castle on the way back to Kyoto. From Kyoto i can day trip the ancient capital Nara and go the baseball before my last day in Osaka then on to Hong Kong and China on saturday.
Yesterday i visited one of the best museums/memorials i have ever seen. The a-bomb memorial park and peace museum were unbelievably moving and it was a shame that i did not have more time having arrived that afternoon from Hakuba. The last few days have been hectic and with no respite today i took a day trip to Miyajima an island jut off the coast that is home to the `famous` floating tori as well as it turns out an amazing scenic walk amongst shrines, temples, pagodas and masses of tame deer. The island was amazing and was definately the best place i have visited in japan so far although the temperature has really started to get beyond bearable.
After i wrote last time i headed a few hours north of Hakodate to the capital of Hokkaido, Sapporo for a day and then onto Daisetzusan national park. Sapporo is a pretty boring place to be honest which was a shame as the hostel Inos place was the best ive stayed in so far on the entire trip. The Sapporo beer museum was the only real saving grace and a happy hour was spent trying the various samples. There are very few people who make it up to Hokkaido and those that do all seem to be english people all teaching in japan, which seems to be becoming ever more popular as the demand exceeds the supply. As Sapporo was only worth a day i headed to Daisetsuzan national park in the hope of getting some decent hiking done as well as possibly seeing some bears. Everybody's image of japan is of densely packed buildings with everybody living on top of each other, but as soon as you leave Tokyo and the endless cities that merge with it the country becomes some of the wildest landscapes ever.
I stayed at Sounkyo which is a small hot spring resort town which provided a great base in which to carry out some hikes around the various local peaks and hopefully to the volcanically active mt. Asahi. First day i headed to some waterfalls that appear on all the photos of the area, and to be honest they were much more underwhelming in real life. But the second day i headed up on the rope way and from the top an hour or so climb to the top of mt. Kurodake. From here i was hoping to do a big loop on the mountainous plateau and across to an active caldera. As soon as i reached the top of Kurodake the weather started to go pear shaped and i made it to a glacier before strong winds and driving rain meant i had to turn around. I saw a tiny bit of the crater with the sulphur river but managed to miss the bear that everyone else saw, big time gutted. Hokkaido in the end turned into a bit of a wash out which was a shame as it was the last opportunity for hiking for a while. Despite this the relative cool made a great change to the 35 degree 80% humidity down south.
Trying to make the most of my remaining week i took the fourteen hour train to Nagano of Olympic fame. I got in at near midnight and had nowhere to stay so crashed in an internet cafe. The good thing about japan is that they have a variety of unusual cheaper ways to sleep than would be elsewhere mainly due to the fact the trains stop so early. Most parks have a spot for those with `difficulty commuting` as the trains stop so early. Nagano has few sights so i took the scenic local train to the nearby mountain city of Matsumoto which has the oldest and probably the best castle in japan. The castle and the city as a whole were great having an atmosphere unlike anything else i have seen in japan. Being a hot sunday afternoon the entire city was out in carnival atmosphere with food stalls lining the streets and people playing on the towns river beach. From Matsumoto having not found anywhere affordable i took another scenic train up into the mountains to Hakuba. The hostel here is part of the K hostel chain which provides an amazing service and if you ever visit japan this is highly recommeded although also very popular. Hakuba being off all the main routes meant another early morning in order to get to Hiroshima but it was well worth it for an afternoon in the peace park.
The last three days as you can imagine are packed starting with tomorrow with a trip to Himeji castle on the way back to Kyoto. From Kyoto i can day trip the ancient capital Nara and go the baseball before my last day in Osaka then on to Hong Kong and China on saturday.
Sunday, 18 July 2010
Culture Shock
As of today i have been in japan for 12 days and everyone has been truly amazing and impressive。Everything about japan is both new and high technology as well as preserving the culture and traditions。Normally technology spells the end of any culture but somehow it exists here in harmony.
My last day in vladivostok summed up everything i like about travelling. I met Ben a fellow english traveller who i looked around vladivostok with before going to the funniest football match of my life before missing the last bus walking forty minutes back in the dark and poring rain before being invited to a random russian 25th birthday by some people on the street. We were essentially guests of honour and were plied with vodka and food for several hours. The only trouble is these nights always occur when i have to get up early for a very important bus or train. This time after retiring at 3am i struggled manfully to pack my things and get to the bus which left at 9am and then make my flight to japan. Utter madness, when your travelling thecommon sense with regards to nights out merging with early mornings is forgotten.
I arrived in narita that night, managed to negotiate the mass of signs and information and get on the correct train to tokyo. It really isnt that bad but i had got into a comfort zone in russia being able to read signs etc and it was certainly a jolt. July is japans rainy season and this has pretty much shaped my time here. Go out in the baking hot sunshine try and get undercover for the crazy hours of rain that are about to arrive. I had three days in Tokyo seeing the sights most of which were traditional gardens, islands of of peace set among the craziness and sky scrapers all around. I also had one 4am start to get to Tsujiki the largest market in the world to see the tuna auction. As instructed i arrived at 5am to be told that i was late and it had finnished. Instead i had very fresh early morning sushi. I know sushi is pretty popular but this has completely passed me by. I had tried it once before and not enjoyed it and this was no better. Sitting in a very intimate restaurant surrounded by people saying this is the best thing they have ever eaten while i am sat there trying not to throw up. Oh well a good thing the rest of japanese quisine is immense.
In tokyo i had inishaly planned to spend four days but i managed to tick off two areas of tokyo a day as well as go to shinjuku at night. Honestly you dont know what a crowd is until you have been here, and it seems everybody is going the opposite way to you. I had heard that there was a major festival on in kyoto in three days so i rearranged my plans and somehow got the last bed in the city. With three days to kill i decided to try to climb mount fuji which is japans highest mountain and only 2 hours away. The climbing season is only for two months and in this time hundreds of thousands of people climb. The first two days the weather was so bad i couldnt even see the mountain but on the third it was my final chance so i got ready and started climbing. Most go from the 5th station about halfway but i decided to go traditional and start from the segen shrine right at the bottom. Being pretty good at walking by now i made good progress and managed to pick up two americans on the way. By the time i got to the top at 3776m (nearly three times Ben Nevis) 10 hours later i was glad i had. The weather was so bad that you couldnt see the person standing next to you and with the high winds and rain it was pretty dicy not ideal on your own. The final section was like slow motion, fuji is high enough for altitude sickness and by the end it was take ten steps and take a break just to slow your heart rate to an acceptable level. By this time it was also dark so we spent the night in a mountain hut at the 8th station (3200m) before stupidly running down in 1 hour (supposed to be 4 hours) to the 5th station. At that point i just wanted to get off the mountain as i had a splitting headache from the altitude and just wanted to be in the warm. The run down screwed my legs for days.
After Fuji i headed to Kyoto which is the culture capital of Japan. There is a shrine or temple or zen garden everywhere you look. I had two days of wandering through these before going to the Gion Matsuri festival. Kyoto was packed and so were all the places to see which kind of ruined it a bit. Having to jostle through crowds to take a photo isnt great. The festival though was great, the night before the whole city was on the streets in traditional kimonos as they decorated giant wooden floats and sold amazing street food. The day of the festival the streets were lined with decorations and for three hours the huge procession of floats were pulled through the streets. Any festival in japan would be great and Gion Matsuri is one of the biggest.
That night as i hadnt got a bed i had planned to take the night train to Hokkaido. Unfortunately this meant a 7 hour layover between trains and my plans to sleep in the station ended at 2am when they kicked me out. So i had three hours wandering the streets with all my stuff in some dodgy area by the station before i could get in and go back to sleep. Fortunately Japan is pretty much the safest place on earth, but i wouldn't have liked to have tried that in many places i have been. But happily 7 hours later after passing through the longest under sea train tunnel i was in Hokkaido and last night i was treated to the Keirin cycling and an unexpected spectacular view of the city and a huge fireworks display from my guesthouse halfway up the mountain overlooking Hakodate.
Sorry this has been a long one but its the first time i have had internet that isnt an absurd price. One thing with Japan is you have to watch the pennies as the pounds just disappear.
My last day in vladivostok summed up everything i like about travelling. I met Ben a fellow english traveller who i looked around vladivostok with before going to the funniest football match of my life before missing the last bus walking forty minutes back in the dark and poring rain before being invited to a random russian 25th birthday by some people on the street. We were essentially guests of honour and were plied with vodka and food for several hours. The only trouble is these nights always occur when i have to get up early for a very important bus or train. This time after retiring at 3am i struggled manfully to pack my things and get to the bus which left at 9am and then make my flight to japan. Utter madness, when your travelling thecommon sense with regards to nights out merging with early mornings is forgotten.
I arrived in narita that night, managed to negotiate the mass of signs and information and get on the correct train to tokyo. It really isnt that bad but i had got into a comfort zone in russia being able to read signs etc and it was certainly a jolt. July is japans rainy season and this has pretty much shaped my time here. Go out in the baking hot sunshine try and get undercover for the crazy hours of rain that are about to arrive. I had three days in Tokyo seeing the sights most of which were traditional gardens, islands of of peace set among the craziness and sky scrapers all around. I also had one 4am start to get to Tsujiki the largest market in the world to see the tuna auction. As instructed i arrived at 5am to be told that i was late and it had finnished. Instead i had very fresh early morning sushi. I know sushi is pretty popular but this has completely passed me by. I had tried it once before and not enjoyed it and this was no better. Sitting in a very intimate restaurant surrounded by people saying this is the best thing they have ever eaten while i am sat there trying not to throw up. Oh well a good thing the rest of japanese quisine is immense.
In tokyo i had inishaly planned to spend four days but i managed to tick off two areas of tokyo a day as well as go to shinjuku at night. Honestly you dont know what a crowd is until you have been here, and it seems everybody is going the opposite way to you. I had heard that there was a major festival on in kyoto in three days so i rearranged my plans and somehow got the last bed in the city. With three days to kill i decided to try to climb mount fuji which is japans highest mountain and only 2 hours away. The climbing season is only for two months and in this time hundreds of thousands of people climb. The first two days the weather was so bad i couldnt even see the mountain but on the third it was my final chance so i got ready and started climbing. Most go from the 5th station about halfway but i decided to go traditional and start from the segen shrine right at the bottom. Being pretty good at walking by now i made good progress and managed to pick up two americans on the way. By the time i got to the top at 3776m (nearly three times Ben Nevis) 10 hours later i was glad i had. The weather was so bad that you couldnt see the person standing next to you and with the high winds and rain it was pretty dicy not ideal on your own. The final section was like slow motion, fuji is high enough for altitude sickness and by the end it was take ten steps and take a break just to slow your heart rate to an acceptable level. By this time it was also dark so we spent the night in a mountain hut at the 8th station (3200m) before stupidly running down in 1 hour (supposed to be 4 hours) to the 5th station. At that point i just wanted to get off the mountain as i had a splitting headache from the altitude and just wanted to be in the warm. The run down screwed my legs for days.
After Fuji i headed to Kyoto which is the culture capital of Japan. There is a shrine or temple or zen garden everywhere you look. I had two days of wandering through these before going to the Gion Matsuri festival. Kyoto was packed and so were all the places to see which kind of ruined it a bit. Having to jostle through crowds to take a photo isnt great. The festival though was great, the night before the whole city was on the streets in traditional kimonos as they decorated giant wooden floats and sold amazing street food. The day of the festival the streets were lined with decorations and for three hours the huge procession of floats were pulled through the streets. Any festival in japan would be great and Gion Matsuri is one of the biggest.
That night as i hadnt got a bed i had planned to take the night train to Hokkaido. Unfortunately this meant a 7 hour layover between trains and my plans to sleep in the station ended at 2am when they kicked me out. So i had three hours wandering the streets with all my stuff in some dodgy area by the station before i could get in and go back to sleep. Fortunately Japan is pretty much the safest place on earth, but i wouldn't have liked to have tried that in many places i have been. But happily 7 hours later after passing through the longest under sea train tunnel i was in Hokkaido and last night i was treated to the Keirin cycling and an unexpected spectacular view of the city and a huge fireworks display from my guesthouse halfway up the mountain overlooking Hakodate.
Sorry this has been a long one but its the first time i have had internet that isnt an absurd price. One thing with Japan is you have to watch the pennies as the pounds just disappear.
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