Pain, strategy, stealing and friends

On Sunday night, I was still feeling the pain resulting from Friday. This time it was a vague, but not too bad, brand of whiskey which I finished together with Tim over two games of Risk, played with the guys I go out quizzing with on Tuesdays.
We started playing at around 9pm. We finished the second game at 6 in the morning, finishing up with a final drink on the balcony, watching the sun come up amidst the avid twittering of birds.

Risk, as it turned out, has changed substantially. For a boardgame. The ‘standard’ game is now played with four assignments per player, as opposed to the one assignment I used to play with years ago. The alternative game is world domination, where consecutive sets of cards (three infantry, three cavalry, etc), obtained when conquering a country, can be traded in for more and more armies, up to an impressive 60.
These updated rules made the game surprisingly interesting as well as strategic.

The resulting headache and lack of aspirins the following afternoon impeded my enjoyment of the subsequent hash and 101 birthday party, thrown in the far south of Johannesburg.

3G

In Thailand, I paid 4 euros for a month’s worth of unlimited internet (I think it was 512Kb). In South Africa, I pay 35 euros for 2 Gigs of 256Kb. It’s a good thing I’m making some money, or I would spend my days crying.

Friends? What friends?

As you can see on the top of my homepage, I’m one of the early testers for Google friendconnect. Yet another Google product which will make a few developers, selling or promoting applications which do what, with friendconnect, is a breeze, very unhappy.
The service is only just beginning. The number of available applications is very limited. But as users can develop their own applications, this is set to grow rapidly.

I’m currently only using the member thingy, but another widget allows for inline ratings, similar to what I use on this site, but with the added bonus that users can leave reviews, also similar to what you see on this site.

It’s not too much yet, but I suspect that Google’s friendconnect will be de rigeur for smaller websites which won’t have the power and/or know-how to build their own social environments.
However, at the same time, smaller websites, like this website, are not social in nature, so they wouldn’t really need members. Or these websites are already working with WordPress, Blogger or other straightforward CMSs and would not have an interest to use these social features.

Stealing is praise

It’s funny where one’s work pops up.

Crime and food

Tonight, I had dinner at a ‘Thai’ restaurant. The food was good, though the prices made me choke. Compared to Thailand.

The owner, a young bloke, was beaten over the head with two liquor bottles on Monday when three oaks, carrying guns, robbed the place.

Irrepressible

When checking out the website of David Knopfler, indeed, the brother of Mark, I stumbled upon the Amnesty sponsored irrepressible.info.
There, you can support the anti-censorship lobby, where said website uses slightly more web-savvy ways to build awareness.

For one, you can put a widget on your website which will display a piece of text from some website, which is censored, somewhere. If not practical, it’s certainly novel.
You can also check out what websites have written about irrepressible. However that listing, obviously, with the most recent posting some 15 months old is not up to date, which can be confirmed by looking at the Technorati entry, which is supposed to display the exact same information.
Also, I find the name irrepressible a bit unfortunate. It has been shown that for understanding a piece of text, readers focus more on the start and end of individual words than on what’s inbetween. As a rselut, a setnnece lkie tihs is sitll qitue radeblae.
So, quickly glancing over the website, the first few times I read “irresponsible”, not “irrepressible”. Perhaps not such a good choice of domain name, then.

But it’s not all bad. I really like their news section, where they compare ‘good’ with ‘bad’ news, relating to censorship. However here, too, the rather old news articles show that the website is not actively maintained, which is a pity.
Surely, an organization like Amnesty International can spend one employee for a few hours per week, maintaining a straightforward website like this.

There’s one aspect which does really kick ass. They have an API, which would allow developers to mash up censored content into their own web based application.

So, for the sake of support, here’s one of their widgets.

A note for the road

I’ve been using the application Sidenote for a few months now. It’s a small little app which lives in the sidebar of my Mac desktop, from which it’s very easy to make quick notes on anything you fancy.
Problem is, now, twice, I’ve lost a note after rebooting. The first time I figured it an annoying freak occurrence. Today, the second time, I had no choice but to stop using Sidenote.
On both occasions, I lost notes which I had written a while back; early, unfinished, posts for my blog. Stuff that’s not yet fit to go online for whatever reason. But because I wrote the stuff weeks or months before, it’s not straightforward to just rewrite these texts from memory.

So, now, I’ve moved to the much heavier application Evernote.

Run forest

First setting the hash in Delta park, then picnicking for Bronwyn and Marcus‘ birthday in Emmarentia, then the hash in Delta Park, then food and drinks at the Blue Goose. A Saturday well spent.
At Emmarentia, Rat and Ismail had brought their two hypercute kittens.

Music

Stevan is quite the music freak. He’s got a ridiculously professional turntable and pumps some amazing tunes out of his large collection of vinyl. Today, he went to a vinyl fair where he picked up another box of goodies, including a 20 Rand (2 USD) pristine Jazz by Queen. It’s so good, it almost makes me cry.

And two more for the road

More sex for better relationships. And it’s now Mikaeel, not Michael, Jackson.

Semi-naked women on huge canvasses

Jodi Bieber, winner at the First International Photography Biennial in The Islamic World held in Iran, as well as a winner of several World Press Photo awards, had an opening at the Goodman tonight. The show’s called ‘Real Beauty, with a score or so larger than life prints of ‘real’ women showing off their own bodies in, mostly, semi-erotic poses.
Of course, the women are, mostly, almost completely nude.

Bieber mentions her inspiration came from a billboard she saw in London, where ‘real’ (read ‘overweight’) women were promoting underwear. Nevertheless, I couldn’t escape the feeling that I’d seen a similar show somewhere before. If not in person, then in some magazine or, perhaps, on TV.

That said, the photos are very nice, even though the quality of the prints seemed to be less than spectacular. The show was extremely well attended, while both the beer and wine flowed freely.

Housing

Meanwhile, I moved in with Stevan, an old friend from Mongolia, who I’ve bumped into semi-randomly over the years. The most surprising one being a chance encounter in Cape Town, a few years ago.

It also means that my primary method for going online is a 3G modem. At 195 Rand per gig, around 20 dollars, it’s not a very cheap solution. But the speed is reasonable and the modem, which uses a regular cellphone sim card to connect, is not sim-locked, meaning I can use it anywhere in the world.

Hash

On Saturday, I’ll be setting the hash here in Jo’burg. We’ll be running in Delta Park, on the edge of Linden and Greenside. Who’s cumming?

Afterthought

Probably the best collection of Obama pictures.

Location based services

I’ve started working on my current project, a web based contact database for SAfAIDS. They’ve got a bunch of offices around the region, and they are looking at simplifying their contact management, across all these offices.
I contemplated using an off the shelf package, but in the end decided against it. Because SAfAIDS want to also manage mailings and publications, the custom component would, I suspect, not warrant starting with a ready-made solution.

So, I’m throwing my own solution together. The project is still in hiding, but it will be made available at SAfAIDS contacts . net.

Because SAfAIDS’ contacts are scattered across the region, if not the world, some form of location based services will most likely be thrown in. For example, for HealthDev.net, I used the geonames RSS to GeoRSS converter to put articles on a map of the world.
Now, a geeky developer from San Diego, Nate Ritter, has created Tiny Geo Coder. You query it with the name of a geographic region, it returns a set of coordinates.

Obviously, Tiny Geo Coder serves a different purpose than the RSS to GeoRSS converter, but it’s also extremely convenient. Now, for example, it’s a a breeze to adapt online address listings to also show a map of the location.

Indeed, very handy for my current project.

The Renegade

No, it’s not Jean Claude van Damme’s next movie. It’s the code name the US secret service has given to everyone’s favorite president elect, Obama.

And The Girls in Their Sunday Dresses

A short play with Hlengiwe Lushaba and Lesego Motsepe, who has a role in the South African soap Isidingo. The blurb for the play has a rather confusing story on the play being set in the near future when a huge poverty gap defines most people’s lives.

In practice, the play is about two women, queuing up for days in order to buy rice at government controlled prices. One is a retiring prostitute, the other a maid, both left by their man and trying to get on in life, they find they both have responded very differently to the cards life has dealt them.

It’s two very reasonable performances, but a bit of a shaky story, seemingly not being able to decide whether the play wants to be slapstick, social commentary or plain drama.
There’s some character development, but it’s not managed very well. Specifically near the end of the play, a major change happens with both characters’ view on life, while there’s no clear indication as to why the sudden change occurs, besides the obvious realization that waiting in a food queue for days is dehumanizing.

There’s a clear hint that both women were left by the same man, him first dumping the hooker, then dumping the maid. However, the characters don’t see this and nothing is done with this information, which makes the reference pointless.

On the whole, the play, though short, does have a few scenes which drone on for too long. It seems the reason for this being the easy laughs the actors are able to get from the, at times, slapstick-like performances. This takes away from the show as a whole.

Water, charities, travel

DDR. Shows at The Bag Factory. Long distances. Fish 'n' chips at Ocean Basket. Coffee at the Wild Bean cafe. High inflation. Happy Meals with Hello Kitty toys. Pretoria hash. Bunny chow. Bad drivers. Pub quiz at the Keg & Filly. Oriental Plaza. Pool parties. Highveld.

A good cause

A different way of supporting your favorite charity is by installing a small application from A good cause. After installation, when you shop at selected shops, part of the proceeds of your purchase will go to the charity of your choice.
Their blurb, however, is questionable, claiming that 75% of the purchase price will go to your charity. That's a crapload of money. An unlikely crapload. A quick look at their list of participating shops, however, shows that for some services the percentage which goes to your charity actually does seem to be 75%. Impressive.
The Apple store also participates, but there, your favorite charity will only get 0.75%.

I suppose it's a good way to support your cause, specifically, because the seller is actually paying, not you.

Nor surprisingly, the majority of charities are relatively high profile. Obviously, this is both good and bad.

They don't have a Mac client, yet, however.

Travelhog.net is dead. Long live TravelHog.

Yes. After nearly 8 years, Travelhog.net is as dead as the dodo. The collection of travelogues has been pruned and the remaining travelogues were moved to the social bookmarking website oneview, where there's a TravelHog network. Join oneview and then the TravelHog network and submit your own travelogues.

Travel and insurance

Back in SA. Rouzeh was there to welcome me at the airport, after a very long flight, which was nice. She’s staying in Pretoria, close to her office, but I’m, at least for now, staying with Christo, in Johannesburg. Jo’burg, after all, is where it’s at.
The weather is on the warm side, but not too hot, with the gentle breeze that’s blowing most of the day. I signed a three month contract for a project with SAfAIDS, building an online contact database.

I’m, temporarily, renting a car with rent-a-wreck. It’s not too expensive and the car is not too close to being a proper wreck, though fairly close, and it does give me the freedom you need in Gauteng. Things are just too far apart, and there’s practically no public transport.

However, the brakes on the car are not all that great, which made me think of medical insurances while abroad.
I’m sort of insured, but it’s a gray area, as I’m out of my home country for such long stretches at a time. Particular my, supposedly continuous, ABNAMRO travel insurance doesn’t like that.
I’ve been very lucky over the years and never really needed any medical attention, while abroad. One minor exception is when I badly twisted an ankle in late 2006, I think it was. Also in Johannesburg. I visited a doctor and got some physiotherapy. However, because it was regular medical attention, no emergency evac or whatnot, I could submit the expenses to my regular medical insurance. Though, in the end, I didn’t as the combined expenses were less than the discount I would get when not claiming anything.

But hoping or expecting to be lucky is a very bad insurance policy. In the back of my mind, I’ve considered for a long time to get one of those international continuous travel insurances. Mighty convenient, but, so I heard, also quite pricey. Recently, one that was brought to my attention was a package from MultiNational underwriters (they can give you a free international travel insurance quote). They’ve got a host of packages. For example, I checked their international medical insurance package, which was cheaper than I expected, though not as cheap as I would hope, at around 100 dollars per month.
A quote for their travel insurance package, for one year, came in at 732 dollars, which is a reasonable deal, I think.

For my regular Dutch medical insurance, I pay around 120 euros per month, so if the coverage with MultiNational underwriters is the same or similar, just switching to them for this would already be financially attractive.
Downside, however, is that insurance companies, particularly American ones as MultiNational Underwriters is, are notorious for stalling when payouts are required. Feedback from existing users/clients would be nice.

Torture, death, money and marihuana

There's really not a lot to see in Phnom Penh, so that a lot of your time can be spent at the few nice artsy bars and cafes scattered around the city.

The two must sees are the Khmer Rouge's S-21 prison and, some 15 kilometers out of town, the Killing Fields of Choeung Ek, where the 17000 prisoners of S-21 were killed, all during the Khmer Rouge's short reign in the mid 70s.
Both sites are interesting for their historical value as both sites have little else to offer. At the Killing Fields, the only sight is a large stupa filled with skulls unearthed on site. At S-21, the few photo exhibitions are not too bad.

At one of the exhibitions at S-21, a guest book was written front to back with remarks like "Never forget" and "How can humans do this to other humans", etc.
I wondered how many of those that had left remarks in the book vote for right of center anti-immigrant parties in their home countries. Iraqis, Sudanese, Iranians, that is, political refugees, have more than a hard time to leave their country and find a safe haven elsewhere. Physical torture and genocide still clearly mean nothing on the international stage.

An often heard adage ran through my mind while visiting S-21: "A nation gets the leaders it deserves". I'm not sure whether 'deserves' is exactly the right word, but the gist of the statement is most certainly true.

The national museum is nice enough to wonder around in for an hour or so. Hundreds of artefacts taken from the temple ruins around the country fill the rooms of the museum.
The royal palace, like a poor carbon copy of the palace in Bangkok isn't all that bad, but an also ran if you've been to the one in Thailand.

A popular t-shirt on sale in Thailand, targeted to tourists, bears the text "Same same, but different". Here in Phnom Penh, I saw a shirt which read "Same same, but Dutch". Dutch, of course, was the Khmer Rouge's most notorious torturer.

Happy?

My lunch on my day of departure was a happy pizza, that is, a pizza laced with marihuana. I felt a bit groggy afterwards, so I suppose it worked, but the pizza also upset my stomach, just like smoking the stuff does.

On the whole Cambodia is expensive in the way many African countries are expensive. There's a distinct tourist economy, running in parallel with the local economy, where prices are several times the real value. 'Regular' enmities are overcharged, probably primarily because it's only tourists which by them.
On Saturday evening, I went to the FCC, a bar, restaurant and hotel in what probably is the most colonial venue in Phnom Penh. At first I was pleasantly surprised as I was expecting much more of this in the first place. Then I saw the menu, with Cambodian dishes the cheapest on the list, at 7 to 10 dollars. In Siem Reap, I paid 2 to 3 dollars for the same food.
I went to see W., Oliver Stone's latest movie, which was going to be shown as part of a night organized by Democrats abroad, but instead, due to some setbacks, they showed The Big Lebowski. I liked that, but had no desire to see it again.

Climbing the hill in Phnom Penh

Taking the bus to Phnom Penh, a six hour journey, the same as when you travel by boat, but at a seventh of the price. The road is excellent and the bus reasonably comfortable.

On the bus, I sat next to a Khmer lady, wearing cap, sunglasses, longsleeves and gloves (when outside), who spoke more than passable English. She managed the (apparently) only five star hotel in Siem Reap, frequented mostly by Japanese, Taiwanese and Koreans. The rooms go for around 250 USD per night.
A conservationist, a Khmer guy who worked on restoring one of the temples in the Roluos group, earned 40 USD per month.

My first impressions of Phnom Penh were not as good as I hoped. True, the place still has a bit of a colonial feel to it, but the whole city is rather run down, without the vibe a city like Maputo has, of which Phnom Penh reminded me on a few occasions.
My guesthouse, the Woolly Rhino, is on the waterfront of the Tonle Sap river. And that whole waterfront, lined with tourist oriented bars and restaurants, is a bit sad. Most of the actual waterfront is shielded off by a two meter high metal fence.

I visited Wat Phnom, which means ‘hill temple’, on the only hill in the city. Supposedly, the first temple in town, built by a lady called Penh (indeed) in 1373, after four buddha statues washed up in her home due to a flood.
Besides the beggars and kids selling water, an elephant called Sam Bo hangs around, as well as scores of monkeys. Some of the girls were wearing a t-shirt which read “I could be your son”.

Tomb Raider!

Most of my day was spent cycling past a series of smaller temples: Prasat Kravan, Prasat Bat Chum, Banteay Kdei, the man made lake of Sras Srang, Ta Keo, Chau Say Tevoda, Thommanon and the impressive Ta Prohm.
The latter, overrun by the jungle itself and very photogenic, made an appearance in a Tomb Raider movie.

Afterwards, I wanted to visit the Western Baray, what once seemed to have been a huge man made lake, to the west of Angkor Thom. There's a similar area to the east, but that doesn't seem to be a lake anymore.
I managed to get onto the raised dike surrounding the area, on the side where the lake had been taken over by ricefields and houses, but for several kilometers couldn't find a road into the area.
This is no small lake, at about 7 by 2 kilometers. If you switch the map below (assuming you're reading this on my website) to satelite or hybrid view, you can see the lake as it appears from space. Right in the middle, there's the Western Mebon, which I presume is a temple, but I have no idea how to get there.

Shortly after leaving in the morning, a tropical rainstorm drenched me to the bone.

As I said earlier, I'm not as impressed with the individual temples here as I expected I would be. However, the sheer expanse of the site is amazing. Granted, the temples which are part of the world heritage site were created over a period of several hundreds of years, but that's exactly what makes the area so impressive. Just imagine what it all must have looked like 800 or 900 years ago, with all the stones still nicely in place and the temples actually in use!

On another note, I've had food at the following places in Siem Reap.

The Blue Pumpkin

Very classy place, with a stylish bakery and a lounge for a restaurant with wall hugging couches. A bit pricey, at 4 – 6 USD for a meal, but good food. Though the fish ravioli I had, which was billed as a full meal, turned out to be not even worthy of a starter.

Singing Tree Cafe

Bit of a clubhouse for the slightly alternative minded, but also with a bit of a mission. Extensive menu, decent prices and reasonable coffee.

Soria Moria

A 'boutique hotel' and a classy restaurant. On Wednesdays, they've got a one dollar drinks and food night. Tapas and quite a collection of drinks for only one buck each.
Some of the tapas are a bit on the small side, but then again, they're only one buck. The food is very tasty and the G&Ts are, even on Wednesday's, normal size.

Babel

The guesthouse I'm staying at. The Khmer dish lok lak was very tasty, but a noodles dish was bland. Breakfast, particularly the baguettes, are very nice.

My cheeks they are a hurtin’

Rented a bike again today and peddled my way towards to the Roluos Group, a series of temple ruins to the east of Siem Reap. At just under 15 kilometres, in the bleedin' heat and fiery sun, this was more than trivial.

The ruins at the site, with just under a dozen temples or so, were built before Angkor Wat and Angkor Thom, having been created from the late 9th century onwards.
There's not too much left, except for the ruins of Bakong, which is supposed to be a terrestrial version of the celestial Mt Meru, the tallest peak on which Vishnu had made his home.
The other two ruins I visited were Preah Ko, with six brick towers the first to go up, and Lolei, flanked by a more modern Wat where practically all the paintings of monks and buddhas look intrigueingly feminine.

This Roluos group of ruins is not popular with tourists. I'd estimate that not even for every 1000 tourists that visit Angkor Wat, one visits a ruin in the Roluos group.

Getting off the main road to go to Lolei, I stopped and took my bearings. A motorbike passed behind me and I heard a loud sound, a mix of a belch and a bark. I looked around and saw the bike speed away, with a huge pig strapped to the back of the bike. Sideways, on it's back, making disgruntled noises as it was whisked away.

Visiting Angkor Wat

I decided to spend three days at the temple complexes surrounding Siem Reap, Angkor Wat being the most famous. Although if you do it in one day, there will be a lot you won’t see, you can do the highlights in one day. Specifically if you’ve got a tuk tuk or taxi to drive you around.

The tuk tuks, here, are actually not really tuk tuks. They’re really motorbikes with something of a cart attached to their back. They seat two comfortably and could fit three. I think they’re called remorque motos.
Interestingly, foreigners are not allowed to drive motorbikes here in Siem Reap, at least according to the guys renting out bicycles.

My first stop was Angkor Wat, of course, which I found very nice, but not as impressive as I’d expected. After Sukhotai, Ayuthaya, but also Teotihuacan, the lesser known Prasat Meuang Singh Historical Park and some of the mansions in Kashan, I couldn’t say I was structurally more than ‘pleased’ when seeing this 12th century temple.
Unfortunately, the central five towers of Angkor Wat have been closed to the public for the last nine months. A guide I asked suggested that, maybe, they might open again next year.

An important bas relief at Angkor Wat is the “Churning of the Ocean of Milk”, which relates to a Hindu epic where good and bad demons fight over the world’s destiny, with the gods chipping in their bit. The good ones eventually win, of course, helped by Vishnu, in the shape of a turtle with a pivot on his back for turning a mountain around it. Sound familiar? Probably not, eh. It didn’t to me. But that turtle did ring a bell.

The image of the turtle with the pivot on his back I’ve seen myself in several places. Amongst them Mongolia and Japan, both having very little to nothing of a connection with Hinduism. Particularly in Mongolia, where the turtle with the pivot on its back has been around since the time of Chinggis, if not longer, this is at least remarkable. Chinggis and friends were animists though Mongolia’s buddhism was introduced by Tibetan monks.
Still, I’m surprised that this purely Hindu motif somehow ended up in mainstream buddhism.

My second stop was the Angkor Thom complex. With ‘Thom’ meaning ‘Grand’, it’s much larger than Angkor Wat. The moat alone is 100 meters… wide and over two kilometers long on all sides. That’s larger than the moat in Chiang Mai. And this was just a palace!
Inside Angkor Thom, the most striking sight, but not in a good way, was the reclining buddha at the back of the Baphuon, a three-tired temple pyramid with a long horizontal entrance ramp. Angkor Thom was built shortly after Angkor Wat, but a few hundred years later, the decision was made to partially demolish the Baphuon to use the building blocks for constructing a 70 meter reclining buddha.
So far so good, except that the reclining buddha was made mostly by just stacking up the blocks removed from the temple. Needless to say, before construction was done, part of the reclining buddha had already collapsed.
A surprising degeneration of craftsmanship.

Before I made the long walk up Phnom Bakheng, a 65 meter high five tiered pyaramid and the first to be built in this area, around the year 900, allowing for decent views of the surrounding sights, if you can handle the hundreds of fellow tourists, I went up to Preah Khan, a huge but crumbling temple complex just north from Angkor Thom.

Backdrops

Cambodia has the highest HIV infection rate in Asia. This is, at least in part, due to the presence of UN stabilization forces in the 1990s and the resulting flourishing prostitution sector.

The Lonely Planet claims that Thonle Sap, a large lake in the middle of the country, is Asia’s largest freshwater lake. However, this would be Lake Baikal.

A trip to Cambodia

Having been in Cambodia for not even half a day, already the feeling has come up that every local you meet is trying to make money off of you; that you have to constantly be on the lookout for scams while the scammers know every trick in the book to make it impossible for you to find out whether you are really being scammed, or not.

Prices in Cambodia are, across the board, higher than in Thailand. Cambodia has one major tourist attraction, Angkor Wat. There, three day passes to this world heritage site go for a whopping 40 USD. So, obviously, if you come to visit Angkor Wat, you have money and are fair game.
Cambodia is also a USD based economy. I suspect that, even in the very recent past, Thai Baht was accepted almost as easily, but with the border skirmishes at the Prea Vihear temple, where Thailand really is pulling the shortest straw, the Baht is now only, seemingly, accepted at the border.

Driving from the border to Siem Reap, the rice fields stretched endlessly on both sides of the mostly rocky dirt road. In, or is it ‘on’, the water soaked fields, kids and teenagers were swimming and fishing, casting their nets for the evening’s meal, or perhaps to make an attempt at making a living.

At the end of the day, walking around Siem Reap, all the restaurant menus I checked were priced in USD. As were the goods in a convenience store just around the corner from my guesthouse. Not a 7-11, put painted in their colors to make you think so. There, I used an ATM to withdraw money. My bank card didn’t work, so I tried my credit card. A two dollar fee, no doubt on top of a fee from my credit card company, followed by the choice of how much I’d want to withdraw.
I was given a cap of 2000 dollars, and for a second I figured that the local currency, the Riel, might just be using the same sign as the dollar. But, no, according to the current exchange rate, this would have meant that the machine, if serving Riels, would allow me to withdraw less than one USD. I keyed in my desired amount, expecting the equivalent in Riel… but received actual USD.
Paying in USD, you typically get your change in USD as well, except for the small bits. At the earlier mentioned convenience store, .05 USD in change I received in two or three Riel notes.

I’m staying at Babel, a new guesthouse, fairly central, in a street with a dozen or so guesthouses. Decent, the place has many details which are just a little bit off, like the lock on the door occasionally jamming, a tiny TV (but with cable), wrapped up, but crappy, bars of soap in the bathroom, a toilet seat which fits almost perfectly and hot water which runs out after one or two minutes.
Now, I don’t mind this much. It’s a nice place, the bed is good, the room is fairly large and affordable and they have good food. What is annoying is that a major reason I chose the place was their claim of having “WIFI in the lobby” and “WIFI in the room”.
This is nominally true, but only because there’s a semi-public network blanketing the city. You need prepaid scratch cards to access the service, and no one knows who’s selling the cards! Everyone points to the actual service provider’s office, a mere two kilometers away.

For posterity: traveling from Bangkok to Siem Reap

With, seemingly, scammers around every corner, I know I would have been helped by more background information on this journey. So here goes.

Everyone, including the Lonely Planet, advises against taking the bus tours from Bangkok to Siem Reap, advertised on Kao San Road. They’re informally called ‘scam busses’: Once in Cambodia, they drive so slowly that you have no choice but to stay at the guesthouse of their choosing. Then, if you make a fuss, you get a much larger fuss thrown back at you. One person I spoke to on this even mentioned she and her companion were physically threatened when they wanted to go somewhere else.

So, I took a regular public transport bus from Bangkok’s northern bus terminal to Aranya Prathet, close to the border crossing with Cambodia. I booked two days in advance, but this didn’t turn out to be necessary. The bus wasn’t even a quarter full when it left on Sunday morning, 8:30am. However, two Canadians I met at the border had taken a bus 30 minutes earlier and ended up with a bus so crowded, some travelers had to stand in the isle.
I paid 250 Baht for this trip, around 5 euros. The bus was air conditioned. With the pouring rain during the first half of the trip, this was actually quite fresh.

Arriving in Aranya Prathet, a good four hours later, I had started chatting with an older local passenger who turned out to be working in the road from the border to Siem Reap which, as everyone can tell you, has been in notoriously bad shape ever since Cambodia opened up for tourism after the Khmer Rouge was kicked into submission.
The man had been working on the road for the last two years. Work had now stopped because of the border skirmish but he was convinced that in 8 months or so, the road would be completely finished. He told me that the first 50 kilometers or so were now in good shape, but that the last 100 still needed the hard top. He figured a drive from the border to Siem Reap would take three to three and a half hours.

When I got off the bus in Aranya Prathet, tuk tuk touts tried to get me on their vehicles, though they weren’t overly aggressive. It was still some six kilometers to the border, so walking really isn’t an option.
The gentleman I spoke to earlier showed me that, half a block away, converted pick up trucks drive passengers to the border for 15 Baht (0.30 euro).

Then, during the walk from the truck stop to the Thai border post, the hassling started. The two Canadians I bumped into a bit later as well as myself, both of us were being trailed by a, what I think was a Cambodian, constantly making remarks about what we needed to do and where we would have to do them. All bits and pieces of information completely useless; I could see where the immigration was.

The Thai border crossing was hassle free. The Cambodian crossing is a few hundred meters down, after a stretch of road with huge casinos on either side in, what I assume, is basically a lawless no man’s land.
The two Canadians had gotten their Cambodian visas at a place that might have been a consulate in Aranya Prathet. Their visa had the price on it, 20 USD, which is the same amount the Lonely Planet claims it should be. However, they paid around 1200 Baht, which is closer to 40 USD.
Back at immigration, I got my Cambodian visa from a guy in the appropriate border police uniform, in sight of the actual immigration post, where your passport is stamped but where, I assume you can not get a visa. I had to fill in a few forms, while my minder was yakking on one side of me and a new minder was trying to get me to use his bus service, yakking away on my other side. Both these minders were wearing an official-looking badge, while I was doing the paperwork with the border guard, in sight of the immigration officers.
I also had to pay 1200 Baht, though my visa doesn’t mention the fee. It is quite possible that, with the border skirmish going on, the price in Baht has gone up (twofold!) while the price in USD has stayed the same. It is equally possible both the Canadians and I were scammed out of 20 USD.

After I got my passport back and had it stamped, the second tout was back to greet me again. I had tried to get some information on onward travel from the official who stamped my passport, but with little success.
The Lonely Planet states that free transport is supposed to take you to the Poipet Tourist Lounge, some five minutes away. The free transport we got took us to an exchange booth, 90 seconds away, next to a shop which claimed to be a bus and taxi stop. The tout had already made it clear that bus trips to Siem Reap would cost 500 Baht, 10 euros. The Lonely Planet mentions 40000 Riel (which, at least at the time the Lonely Planet was printed, was 10 USD). At this bus ‘station’, I also asked for the price in Riel, which was quoted at 45000 Riel.
By then, the Canadians had exchanged money at the cambio, for 3000 to the Dollar. With the financial crisis currently going on, as well as the border issues with Thailand, it was impossible to say whether this was a scam or not. However, later on, in Siem Reap, we learned that the exchange rate is actually still 4000 Riel to the Dollar. So, although the price in Riel for the bus to Siem Reap might just have been the actual going rate, the price in Baht most certainly wasn’t. With no, or overpriced Riel at our disposal, this, however, didn’t matter, both prices being too high.
Meanwhile, this is for a 150km trip, just having driven some 250 kilometers on the Thai side of the border for half that money. And, we were told, the bus would take six hours… or more.

It was here, at this bus ‘station’, where I also chatted with three tourists who had taken the Koa San bus to Siem Reap, the infamous scam bus. What had they paid? A mere 200 Baht. For the whole frackin’ journey. I pitied them, though, because, indeed, this would mean an unpleasant six hours in the next bus, which they were waiting for, for it only departed at 3… or 4… in the afternoon and it meant they’d most likely have to deal with an unpleasant arrival in Siem Reap.

Taking a taxi was also an option. Quoted at 600 Baht per person, with four in a car, we were told this would take only 3 hours. 2400 Baht, 50 euros, for the whole vehicle, quoted by the Lonely Planet at 40 to 50 USD.
We managed to pay 1800 Baht for the three of us, with the ‘risk’ that the driver might pick up an extra passenger along the way. And, indeed, a chatty young woman took up the front seat for some 40 kilometers of our journey.

But, at least, we were on our way. We drove into Siem Reap a good three hours later, only for the taxi driver to halt right on the edge of town. A bunch of guys in carts resembling tuk tuks gave us what felt like a bogus story on the taxi not being allowed into town, because of its license plates. We had to switch to the tuk tuks which, after some back and forths, were said to be part of the deal, that is, at no extra cost.
Two local-style tuk tuks, the Canadian couple in one, myself in the other. We made it appear we were one group and going to the same guest house, though only I had actually made a booking. The head-tout was driving with me.
At first, he wanted to push a ‘happy smoke’ (hash or weed) and then he wanted to push a tuk tuk or taxi for visiting Angkor Wat. A tuk tuk (for two people) at 15 USD per day, a taxi at 30 USD per day. Indeed, not overly wild prices, but both myself and the Canadians were already strongly considering biking the temples.

Arriving at the guesthouse, Pie, for that was his name, tried his ploy on the Canucks, but with no success. He then did a spiel on not having gotten anything from us, while he had to pay for gas to drive us there. Interestingly, he seemed seriously dismayed and though I in no way felt responsible or wavered on my desire to rent a bike, on a human level, I did feel some pity for the boy: you can’t begrudge a man’s desire to make some money.

A tourist in Bangkok

After being kept awake in the train by two Brits discussing the virtues of Thai prostitutes over Thai girlfriends (many), as well as the virtues of girlfriends over prostitutes (few), we arrived at the Bangkok train station only an hour late. Not so bad, as this meant it only was 6:30am.
I still felt a bit groggy from the mix of Sangsom, 100 Pipers and Benmore from Wednesday night, but I was only getting so much respite. In the afternoon, I hooked up with Pascal, who was in Bangkok for a one day meeting and in the evening, I had dinner with Gayde, who runs a guesthouse in Chiang Mai but was off to China in the morning, followed by a good one-man-show at The Dubliner. Obviously, an Irish pub, but one which also sells Hoegaarden and Leffe.

A tonic for the soul

Last time I was in Bangkok, I checked out the Bangkok art and culture center, but then, the building was so new, it was still mostly empty.
Now, most of the floors (seven! Or was it eight?) are running exhibitions or have galleries on them. It really was a tonic of the soul to see so much modern art and quite a bit of it very decent, in one place.

It’s silk, Jim…

Back in the 1940s, an American bloke named Jim Thompson stayed in Bangkok after the end of the second world war. He liked it here, as do many expats. Perhaps not too suprisingly, after his wife did not want to move with Thompson to Thailand and divorced him, he never married again, but loved the Thai culture and, I’m sure, friendlyness.

Thompson’s claim to fame is being a major player in the revitalization of the Thai silk industry. His house, an amalgamation of a series of Thai style houses, many of them authentic, having been moved in from their original location around the country, is now a museum and a showcase for the company’s products. And also a popular tourist destination in Bangkok.
I had never been to the house as I tend not to be too impressed by famous people’s houses turned into museums, particularly if the famous person was just a capitalist. However, as the house is in the downtown area, I decided I’d give it a try today. There’s not much else worth seeing which I haven’t yet.

The place is not so bad, if a bit of a tourist trap, but worth the hour or so of entertainment you get for the 100 Baht entry fee.

Thompson disappeared without a trace, one day in 1967. Some assume he died in an accident, others think he might have been killed for mingling with the wrong people.

My next gadget

I also bumped into what probably will be my next gadget. I’ve been considering bying a new digital camera, a proper DSLR, for a few weeks now. I’m eyeing one of the midrange Canons, but the 500 – 600 euro price tag is a bit much to just go ahead and splurge. Then again, as you can see from my latest batch of photos, I would be helped by a more decent CCD and lense.
What I really would have wanted to buy was a 24″ BENQ LCD computer screen for a mere 150 euros! But, for my upcoming flight to South Africa, I’m already so overweight, I have no idea how I would also be able to lug a huge screen with me.

Then, somehow, I started wondering again about automatic geotagging of photos, which has fascinated me for a while.
As you might know, twice (1, 2) has my Garmin Etrex Legend been stolen. I’ve been thinking about replacing it with a new device, but I really only use them to keep track of my position, for example for this very blog, meaning I don’t really need all the fancy and cool functionalities these things nowadays come with.

So, I found out about data loggers. They’re like bluetooth GPS receivers which can store 10.000 or 20.000 points, waymarkers. Then, with some software, you can batch process your photos, adding geotags to each individual photo based on your location as registered by the data logger. Data loggers, not much more than a small GPS receiver, sell for some 60 euros here in Thailand.

Everyone loves a dose of the Doctor

http://www.youtube.com/v/DtG5dK_HaGg&color1=0xb1b1b1&color2=0xcfcfcf&hl=en&fs=1

Angkor Splat

Before heading down to South Africa at the end of the month, I hope to spend a good week in Cambodia. Angkor Wat, sometimes called the eighth world wonder, and Phnom Penh, capital of Cambodia, are both worth seeing and just around the corner.
However, border tensions around the Preah Vihear Temple, recently given UNESCO world heritage status and on contested grounds, escalated today with soldiers shooting each other resulting in at least one death. So I'm hoping the borders stay open.
Well, I can always head down to the beach. They say it's decent, in Thailand.

Still "No."

I've been leaving the door ajar whenever at home. Vlekje has not shown up.
I walked into the next door temple, which doubles as a bit of a cat sanctuary. A small black and white cat walked up to me, first looking at me, then mewing and demanding to be petted.

Managed to get the last available train ticket for going to Bangkok tomorrow, I drove up to Doi Suthep as well as Phuping Palace, just up the road from Doi Suthep. Doi Suthep is always worth it, but Phuping was a bit surreal.
Phuping is a royal residence but can be visited whenever the head honchos aren't around. It's primary focus is for plant farming (is that what it's called?), with some fountains and whatnot thrown in for good measure. All the while out of place music (like 1920s jazz) is playing from hidden speakers all over the top of the mountain on which the palace is located.

Poverty

Today is Blog Action Day 2008. The idea is to have thousands of blogs talk about one particular subject to facilitate the building of awareness as well as the creation of fresh viewpoints. This year's subject is "poverty".

Rouzeh pointed me to this event, which, conceptually, I really like. However, putting this in practice isn't all that straightforward. "Poverty" in essence, is a rather general subject. So general, that I, for one, don't really have much to say on the subject.
So I surfed a bit and came up with a few interesting tidbits:

+ Close to 12.8 percent of all Americans, about 31.5 million people, were classified as poor by federal standards; that is, they sustained an income of $12,675 or less for a family of four. This group included 10 percent of all whites and over 25 percent of African Americans and Hispanics.
+ Over 3 billion people live on less than $2.50 a day.
+ Nearly a billion people entered the 21st century unable to read a book or sign their names.

No.

1 / 1

No. Vlekje hasn’t resurfaced. It’s now been a week and a day. Nobody has seen her since Thursday morning, in fact, I’m probably the last one who did see her.
What I don’t get is that she disappeared in the middle of the day. I don’t think she ever left the premises of the guesthouse, she’d stay in my room, leave for half an hour or an hour, at most, and then would walk in again and crash on the floor, my bed or my lap. So, indeed, when she hadn’t come in during the afternoon last Thursday, I knew something was up.

I’ve looked all over the premises, between the double outside walls, surrounding the grounds, in the nooks and crannies in and around the place and I even climbed on to a neighbor’s building. And found a bunch of chickens living on a roof.
But no Vlekje.

What bothers me the most is the possibility that she’s hurt, somewhere, and has no way to get out, with no one to find her. And that she has no abstract concept of death. If she was indeed hurt, how can she possibly understand what is happening to her. That, what must be, total confusion, hurts the most.
Specifically over the last few months, she had really become my cat. She’d complain if I had to pick her up, with little near-meows, when I had to go out and she’d welcome me back, with a staggered meowing, when I’d return, as being worried for my absence, walking into my room with me, bumping into my legs and jumping onto my lap as soon as I’d sit down.
Her grooming me gave me the impression she considered me one of her kittens. Unruly perhaps, for going off without her permission, but always welcomed back. She’d box one of the other cats if he or she tried to get in the door when she was here.

More recently, she’d also found a place to sleep on the TV, I suppose so that she could keep an eye on me when working. If not content, say if I hadn’t given her dried fish strips for too long, she’d try to push over the knickknacks I keep on the TV. After which I’d pick her up, hugged her until squeezing and take her down from the TV, her crawling up on my lap.

Since coming back from Mexico, she didn’t miss one night staying in my room. When going to sleep, she’d walk up to my face, as if checking if I was all ok, before rolling up into a nook of one of my legs, waking up as late as me or even later, looking at me sleepily when I’d slowly get up, giving a huge yawn before curling up again.

I so miss her.

In other news

I went on a visa run to Myanmar last Monday. It was very uneventful, besides the van having no brakes, which was interesting on the hilly road to and from the border.

And also

Happy birthday, mom!

I am worried. I am very worried.

1 / 1

‘My’ cat, Vlekje, hasn’t been around since Thursday morning.

The past few weeks, she’s been in my room almost all the time I was there myself, but I haven’t seen her at all since Thursday morning. 
I’ve looked around the area, asked people in adjacent rooms, but it seems nobody has seen her, at least since Thursday morning.

I miss her a lot.

Daily updates from 2003 – 2005

When I turned 30 in 2003, I started with my blog 30yearproject.com. Of course, I had been putting stuff online for quite a few years already, not in the least my first major travelogue in 1999, My trip to Russia, which I moved from Travelhog.net to my blog over the past week (which, incidentally, included reworking close to 400 rescanned 35mm photos).
For my 30th birthday, however, I had hatched the plan to, primarily, post a photo of myself or what I was doing at 12 in the afternoon, for every day thereafter.

Not surprisingly, this rather quickly threatened to turn into a rather uneventful series of photos, even though the start was good, with a wedding in Greece.
At first, I eased up on the 12pm requirement but soon realised I had to use unusual moments which cropped up and take photos of those.

Still, after a few months, realisation set in, and I started to take photos only when something ‘special’ was on.

At first, I stored all my photos on my own servers but, from 2005 onwards, I slowly moved to the excellent Flickr, where I now have more than 15000 photos.

Now, over the past months (yes, months), I’ve been working on rebuilding my website (that is, what you’re looking at now, most likely) and moving all the photos which I still have on (one of) my websites to Flickr. For photos I took on trips, that’s not an issue, but many of these daily photos were made with very crappy cameras, including phone-cams.
In fact, many of these daily photos are so bad, I’d be ashamed to put them on Flickr.

So, not wanting to lose them altogether, which would be a shame, I threw them together in one large mosaic.

Tell me what you think

If you have a sharp eye, you’ve noticed a few changes around here. Much of it is a bit subtle and most of it is ‘under the hood’, not immediately obvious to the casual observer. But it’s been a long and arduous road. Not in the least because of Internet Explorer for Windows.

I’ve tested my new updated website on multiple versions of two hands full of browser on three platforms. So I’m quite confident that many of you will not encounter major issues. But I’m sure some of you will.
Please, please, let me know. What doesn’t work, what isn’t intuitive, what’s crap, what’s missing, etc. You get the idea.
And don’t hold back now. Come on, spill those beans.

Oh, if you like the updated website, you’re also very welcome to share that.

And, no, I’m not yet finished. There’s a series of smaller knobs and bobs which still need to be addressed. If only websites would build themselves.

Meanwhile

While working from home in Chiang Mai, with Vlekje being more often inside my room than outside, and more often on my lap than somewhere else (well, she occasionally climbs onto the TV and tries to push off my knickknacks if she thinks I don’t give her fish strips often enough), I’ve been busy with the quicky that is the frontend of the People Connector (not yet online), the not-so-quicky which is the upcoming NGOspace.net, and I’ve had a verbal offer for a project in South Africa. W00t!

Also, you might have noticed from my game reviews that I bought a Nintendo DS while in Japan, and I’m increasing the quality of my brain by playing both mind numbing games and brain enhancers.

35

And, I almost forget, I turned 35 last week. The Romans called it the start of middle age, here, we went to the German Brewery, where the beer was very good, locally brewed, and the accompanying show, with Thai dancers, lots of live music and transvestites, a bit… odd.

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