Thursday, February 18, 2010

Tet in The Big City

20 February 2010
New Year's Eve- daytime
Tet is the Vietnamese equivalent of Chinese New Year. It happens on the new moon of the first month of the lunar new year. That happened to be 14 February this year. (Valentine's Day!) New Year's Eve was on Saturday and I had heard a lot about New Year's Eve and the Tet celebrations, so I had to find out for myself.

On Saturday morning I went into the city to check out the scene. I went to the Backpacker area and a market that is lots of fun. The market was packed and the traffic was crazy! Loads of impromptu stalls set up selling flowers, Tet charms, and fruit especially for the big celebrations were everywhere!





New Year's Eve-nighttime
At about 11:30, I decided that I was awake and curious enough to check out the BIG Tet festivities downtown. I had heard that there would be fireworks and flowers and displays. Would I be able to find them? Are you kidding? I took a taxi from the house over to District 1 and got as close as I could to the river, where the fireworks would be set off. I say "as close as" because I could only get about 6 blocks away..the roads were packed solid! I got out and walked the rest of the way towards a road that goes right up to the river.

Following the fireworks, I decided to stick around for a bit and see what the decorations and stuff were. On LeLoi street there were tons of beautiful lights and displays. Down on Nguyen Hue street there were amazing flower displays, but I stopped a little ways down once I realized I had lost my small camera case. Bummer.





New Year's Day
I woke up kind of early on Sunday and went for my usual bike ride. The traffic was thin, even for Sunday at 6 a.m. I did a couple of laps around the Industrial park, which sounds much worse than it is, and then made my way through District 4 and into District 1. I stopped at the flowers display on Nguyen Hue, and then rode through the traffic circle at Ben Thanh (woohoo!) over to Sozo for breakfast. It was a great way to spend my first morning of the Year of the Tiger! Grrr!




Tet in the Forest

20 February 2010
Food for Thought
I just got back from spending a few days in Cat Tien with Jonathan. It makes me sad to admit this, but until this week, I hadn't been back to Cat Tien since May!! I was due for a visit! I took the big orange bus to Tan Phu, where Jonathan picked me up on his motorbike. We had a great ride back to the river, where we caught the boat across to the park. With it being Tet, there were lots of tourists visiting (myself included!). I was starving so we went to the restaurant for some lunch, where we got invited to join in lunchtime Tet toasts. 3-4 shots of rice wine later and I was ready for a nap! When we awoke, we stopped by to visit the bears, and had a nice dinner at the Bamboo Cantina with Silvia and Carla.

In Ho Chi Minh City I end up eating lots of strange, non-Vietnamese foods, like salad. In preparation for almost any trip, our conversation inevitably revolves around foods that we will get to enjoy. This was no different. I was excited to eat the homemade chips, the stir-fried noodles with tofu, and the egg sandwiches. When in Cat Tien, my question to Jonathan is always: "When is our next meal?" I think it is mostly out of boredom rather than an insatiable appetite for so-so foods I never choose to fix for myself.

The oddity in this whole scenario is how our roles are reversed in the city. When Jonathan comes in for a visit, he can't go an hour without a meal. "What do you want to have for lunch?" "Are you hungry yet?" "Do you want a snack?" My answer is usually "no" or "I don't know". In the same way that I eat everything in sight (which isn't very much in the forest since pickin's are slim) Jonathan does the same- pizza, gnocchi, sandwiches, cheesecake, and the list goes on. I am so glad that he is also excited about eating salad when he comes for a visit!
The Nam Cat Tien Market..we were late and it was during Tet. It's usually pretty hopping around 6:00 a.m.


A Refreshing Hike
Aside from seeing how the new Forest Floor Lodge is coming, and catching up with friends, one of the highlights was our morning hike on Wednesday. We woke up early- about 6, so that we could hear the gibbons singing. They usually begin around 6:30. We made coffee and I was in my usual spot out at the stone table watching the sun and listening when we decided to go for a walk. Coffee in hand, we headed out the trail that Jonathan takes every morning to get to his "research site". This was the first time I had gone into the forest and wasn't covered head-to-toe with my REI Field Gear, Leech Socks, and Hat.

One thing I have discovered about myself is that I have a cautious love of the outdoors. While I enjoy going for a hike, it is the moments when I "get naked" so to speak when I have one of those earth-shattering moments of true love- not just for the outdoors, but for myself and my silliness and bravery. I wear all the gear to create a false sense of safety and separation. It's like sleeping in a tent. That thin piece of nylon is like a security blanket: bear-proof, insect-proof, sleep-inducing...but in reality it's just a thin piece of material.

Just strolling, coffee in hand, long-sleeve shirt but no bra, sequinned Fit-flops on feet...I had the best time hiking and listening to WILD gibbons sing. Yes, we could hear the gibbons at the rescue center, but we could distinguish those from the ones up on the Birdhouse/hill trails a few kilometers away. I had some realizations: of bravery, of "oh my gosh you are so silly", and of WE'RE "TRACKING WILD GIBBONS!!
Coming across the river..


Ready, Set, Shoot
As we sat at the Bamboo Cantina working on syncing our calendars for the upcoming months, a Vietnamese family came up to a table nearby. We looked over and noticed that the son had a pellet gun! He was shooting it at the squirrel eating the jackfruit in a tree not 2 meters from me! There were some macaques moving about in the bamboo just past the jackfruit tree and the family noticed them. The son got up to get a closer look/shot at them. WHAT??! Are you kidding me??! I politely told him that he needed to stop. He did. But then his dad came over and was about to start. Jonathan and I both were shaking with rage. In our shattered and stuttering Vietnamese (I am shaking now as I type this..) we told him that he was in a national park and that the animals were protected. He stopped. No one ever said anything to us. I am not sure if anyone would. We spent the next day and a half analyzing our actions. Should we have said something? Was that someone important? Did we offend someone? Any time something like this happens in Vietnam, or in other parts of the world ,but especially in Vietnam, our question is always WWBD: What would Bert do? Bert is Jonathan's advisor and the coolest cucumber in the salad. He always seems to do the right thing with a calm, level head that would only bring people together rather than alienate.

After all the brooding, I kind of decided that despite the fact that I was shaking on the inside, my voice was calm, and I don't care if he was someone important (even bigger shame on him- he should know better!). If the situation were to happen again, I would act the same way. WWBD? Hmm. Don't really know. I do know that I have to do what I deem is right and trust myself with that choice.

Teaching Kindergarten

20 February 2010
I have been teaching Kindergarten for 6 months now and every day is an adventure! I have 21 students and one assistant, along with a "unique aide" who is there to help keep one student on track. It's lots of fun, sometimes stressful, a learning experience, an exercise is patience, and just plain silly some days. Although I have taught preschool and worked with young children, most of my teaching experience has been with older students and in small group. So being THE classroom teacher was new to me. I have really learned a lot about myself and about working with kiddos. I have a few mantras that keep me going when the stress is higher than normal or something really zany happens...
(when they are off-task) What's the task?
They're only 5.
It's Kindergarten.
Breathe.
If at first you don't succeed, try, and try, and try again.
And when those don't work..a pause, a deep breath, a big-belly laugh, and the Tooty-Ta.
Here are some photos of my students. Enjoy!Making Reading Bugs for Reading Week.
Reading books to our Reading Bugs.
Holiday concert. Ms. Nhi made a great fireplace. The kids wore nice clothes and their Holiday Non La hats that they made in Art.
Singing at the Holiday Concert.
Our field trip to Dam Sen Park and the Ice Castle for our Weather unit. We had to wear these coats because it was SOOO cold! The kids are standing on an ice sculpture of the 1-Pillar Pagoda in Hanoi.

Angkor Wat 1/2 Marathon, Take 2

6 December 2009
Following the whirlwind tour to MuiNe and to Cat Tien (I could not go with the family to CTNP- had to get back to my students..but I heard it was great fun!!) we put my family on a plane and took them to Siem Reap, Cambodia for a weekend of AMAZING ruins and a fun run..one of the most fun, in fact.

The ruins were beautiful, as always. It was odd being a 2nd time visitor-lots of things had changed since our visit last year. Mostly it was at one of the ruins where things have been left in its natural state..they are having to close off certain parts of the complex, rerouting visitors down different paths, and renovating other areas due to safety.

The run was good fun! Jonathan ran as the gibbon again and my brother ran as the gaur. I might someday run in a costume, but I just have fun running support for the animals! My friends, Amina and Gianmarco, ran the half-marathon! So did my friend, Karen. I think, in all, the overwhelming opinion of Cambodia is: We love it!
Our guesthouse where we stayed:


Here's one of our tuk-tuks. My parents loved the driver..and for the life of me, I can't remember his name! Ha-Ha! His name was Sook-Ti. It was painted on the side of his Tuk-tuk!
Ta-dah!!
Peek-a-boo! It's Sher!
Here we are trying to avoid the heat at one of the ruins.
That's very thoughtful. Thank you.
Dave, this is for you.
Sunday morning. Sunrise as we get ready for the race.
J, a la Gibbon, after the race.
J getting interviewed by a radio station in Phnom Penh.
The whole family. Dave (a.k.a. the Gaur) was really as tired as he looks here.
The whole animal gang with the amazing Pisei.
Karen and the Gibbon-Gaur duo after the run. So, the gaur costume managed to rub Dave's nose raw within the first kilometer. At one point he took of the head and there was blood everywhere.

*NOTICE* FAMILY VISITING*

On Thanksgiving weekend my parents, sister, and brother flew in to Ho Chi Minh City. The first stop, after the hotel, was to the Zoom Bar in the backpacker district. We enjoyed catching up over a beer...and getting them prepared for the upcoming events: next morning: train ride to MuiNe.

In MuiNe we had a great time just resting. My family was really excited to try some local fare, so we ate a lot of Vietnamese food next to our hotel, and brought home some tasty and not-so-tasty fruits to try. We bought a durian and tried that..banana-garlic-feet is how my brother described it. No one was a fan..

Here is my sister at Joe's. Hi Sher!!
My bro, Dave, and my mom.
Jackie Mama and P-Ray! Behind them is Joe. He was dealing with a bee problem: a bunch of bees had nested inside one of the speakers so he was in the process of replacing it.
Fishing boats at sunrise. I love this scene..
An octopus we found on the beach. So I picked the blurriest photo of it. oops.