November News

Nov 1, Thursday: Connected!
Whooooeee, we have broadband – not sure yet how to set up our wireless router (pronounced rooter) that we brought from Seattle, but at least we can read email whenever we want.

Nov 2, Friday: Bedford Auction
I had heard about the Auction – a good place to buy and sell everything from
plants to refrigerators. You view the items on Friday night and can either put in a closed bid or come to the Saturday morning auction. So, I headed over to see if there would be anything that we could use in the flat. Whoa! There were rooms filled with stuff – lots of junk, some good things, and an incredible variety of just about everything! It was overwhelming, and I don’t think I could handle it. I’d rather go to thrift stores, which are everywhere here and pay a bit more, perhaps than stand around all Saturday morning for a bargain.

We decided we’d go to a pub on Friday nights to find a good local place to hang out. As it turns out, pubs don’t serve food on Friday night, just drinks. We ended up waiting in a long line for Fred’s Fish & Chips. We took our meal, wrapped in paper cones, to The Ship, a pub just off Mill Street for Stellas on tap – not quite ready for the dark pub brew!

Nov 3, Saturday: Topsy Turvey

On our way to Costco and IKEA, we drove to Carlton to go to Emmaus, a rehabilitation center for homeless men and women. There’s a great furniture thrift store, and I was hoping to find some type of desk. We found the perfect piece, it’s an oak secretary desk – just what I wanted, and bonus, Den likes it as well. We made arrangements to have it delivered.

On our way to Carlton, we drove through Turvey – now, this is what everyone imagines an English village would look like. It was absolutely perfect – mossy stone church, small cobbled lanes, houses covered with ivy, doors framed with climbing roses. We’ll come back when we have more time to explore.

Emmanuel and Annette Ochola invited us over for dinner. Emmanual is from Nigeria, where he took his medical school training, and Annette is from the Netherlands, who met Emmanual during a semester exchange in medical school. They have two delightful daughters (who were ready for bed when we arrived at 7:00pm!). We had a lovely evening – it was nice to talk have an evening of conversation and good food.

Nov 4, Sunday: Another Day Shopping
We drove to Milton Keynes to see this new city – it’s a planned community built in 1967, and as far as I can tell, it’s pretty much one big shopping center! There’s lots of glass and fancy looking buildings. We walked around this huge indoor shopping center, had a cup of coffee, and had had about enough.

One more visit to IKEA for lamps, and to Tesco to get a microwave. I think we’ve got all the basic essentials, at least I hope so – I’m tired of shopping!

Nov 5, Monday: Bicycles on Guy Fawkes Day

Den is off on Monday mornings – which means he doesn’t have to be at work until 2:30 or so. Den has been checking out bikes and had decided to get a folding bike, and so we both got the same one – it’s been a while since I’ve been on a bike, but it will be great to have a wider-ranging territory than what I can do on foot. We took our credit card and bought two bikes, helmets, locks, and some other biking paraphernalia. Den finally got to buy something he wants, instead of all this kitchen crapola!

I went to Goldings to get keys made for the side gate, s we can put the bikes in the back shed. These keys are “skeleton” keys – big old things that look like keys to a castle. (Unfortunately, I’m going to need to take them back as the copies don’t quite work!)

 

An English October

Sunday, October 14, 2007: Moving to Bedford
Has it just been three days?? It seems like we’ve been here much longer than that, we’ve done so much!

We’re staying in a rather rustic B&B, the Hertford House (pronounced Hart-ford) on de Parys (d’Paris) Avenue – it seems like the pronunciation of a word is rather different from its spelling, which means that we often have to ask someone how to spell a street name so that we can find it on the map!

Thursday was spent settling in, lugging all our duffle bags into our room, and renting a car. We found the public library, got a temporary card, and logged into their WiFi – something we’ve been able to do even when the library is closed. You can find us most evenings sitting on a bench across from the library checking our email., fortunately the weather has been mild.

On Friday we went over to the Putnoe Medical Center to meet with the staff and get a tour of the facility. Everyone seems very nice, the doctors are all rather young, energetic, and all seem very happy – I think Den is going to fit in very well, and enjoy his time there.

On Saturday, one of the docs, Ruppert Bankart (who was born in Germany, lived the first three years of his life in Pakistan, then his childhood in England) and his wife, Uli (born and raised in Germany) had us over for lunch. Then, Uli drove us around Bedford to suggest which neighborhoods would be good, and which would be bad. It’s really not all that big a city, there are parts that are quite lovely, others that are rather shabby. Most buildings are brick – and I think we’ve walked a good portion of it.

We’ve talked to a couple of estate agents – you have to go to the agent that has the place for rent, rather than find an agent who can look for places for you. Also, the person living in the property pays the “council tax” (what we would call property tax), rather than the owner, so that can add another 100  pounds a month to the cost. That meant we had to re-adjust our range lower than we had first anticipated. Uli drove us to several quaint villages, but although several are only a couple of miles out of the city, we decided that we want to be closer into the city center.

Perhaps the most challenging thing is driving on the left – whoa, am I glad Den is behind the wheel! We’ve only come to blows a couple of times, and that was today when we drove to Milton Keynes to go to IKEA and Tesco, the local mega department store. Although Milton Keynes is less than 20 miles away, it takes quite a bit of time to drive there – mostly due to the traffic, partly due to the round-abouts.

Ah, the roundabouts – these are terrifying, but are actually quite reasonable ways to turn corners without having to stop for turning across traffic. Stay left…stay left….stay left! Our mantra!

It’s true that things are expensive – I see the prices in pounds and think, oh, that’s reasonable, but then have to double them to get the US dollar amount, and then it’s: oh, that’s expensive!

Tomorrow we’ll get to see the inside of several rental units – I’m anxious to see what they look like. It’s interesting that “mixers” (which we think are faucets that combine the cold and hot water) seem to be a selling point! I’ll be glad when we find a place to live – so, more tomorrow after we’ve seen a few places.

October 15, Monday: $1000 Gets You THIS?
A rather depressing day – we saw one place that would be OK, it was on Hartington Street in the Minister’s (?), but the rooms were so tiny, I don’t think a single bed would fit into the second bedroom, and the ceilings were low, but it was clean, there were wood laminate floors, slate floor in the kitchen, which was long and very narrow, but had fairly new appliances, and there was a small back garden. It was the best of what we saw.

October 16, Tuesday: This Will Do: Flat 4 – 60 Castle Road

We saw a couple more flats today with Robert from Lenwell. One would be perfect, if we could wait two months for it to be completed – but, we decided on a one-bedroom on Castle Road, a lovely area close to everything: shopping, the embankment, Den’s work. Although it has only one bedroom, the rooms are larger than any we’ve seen and the kitchen is OK, an icebox (will we never have ice cream??), there’s a single fluorescent light bulb hanging exposed from the kitchen ceiling, and a few other funky things. But, this will do. It’s time to move out of the B&B.

October 17, Wednesday: WiFi’ing at the Library and Setting up Banking

Each day we spend time at the library checking email and researching things we need – we’re in a quandary about what to do about getting home broadband, there are so many options, schemes, and companies, and it’s difficult to compare them.

We met a very nice woman at HSBC who has helped us quite a bit in setting up a bank account with debit and credit cards. We had heard horror stories of getting this done, but I think things have improved a bit since we read about those on the expat web sites. Although, it was a lot of paperwork and took most of the morning, we walked out with an account, and checks, credit and debit cards on order.

October 18, Thursday: Drew’s Birthday and a Visit to IKEA

We made a list and headed out to IKEA, something we needed to do before giving up the car. It was a grueling day, but we got a bed, mattress, linens, a wardrobe (because there’s not a closet), dishes, glassware, silverware, and a variety of kitchen utensils. At one point, I asked Den if he liked this pot holder or that one? His eyes glazed, he could barely raise enough energy to shrug his shoulder! Poor man! It took at least half an hour to get our US credit card approved, another half hour to get delivery arranged. So, after five exhausting hours, we were on our way home!

October 19, Friday: Anne Does the Laundry 

Whoa – this has been the biggest sticker shock of all. While Den went to do some work at Putnoe, I took our laundry across the street to a Laundromat that we had checked out. What would have cost me $5.75 in Seattle cost a whopping $23!! Geez, I guess we’ll be a bit more conservative in throwing things into the laundry!

October 20, Saturday: A World Without Wheels

We returned the car (without a scratch or dent) yesterday, so today we experienced life on foot. Fortunately, Bedford is quite compact, so it’s possible to get around pretty well without a car. The buses are expensive (well, what isn’t?), so walking it will be. We checked out a bicycle shop today – Den’s interested in a spiffy folding bike, I’m more of the sturdy “Miss Marple” bike.

We found a movie theater – cinema, rather – it was a walk, but we enjoyed eating popcorn and watching Ratatouille, which was about the only non-violent movie in the multi-plex.

October 21, Sunday: The Bedford Museum

Today was a sunny, bright day so we headed out to find coffee before going to the museum. We found a sunny spot in an outdoor area across from the Corn Exchange in downtown Bedford Center. There was a large contingency of motorcycles and a few Vespas, so Den was enjoying the scenery.

The small museum has an exhibit called Gold, Coins, and Saxons in Bedfordshire. We learned a lot about Bedford history, which of course, stretches back centuries. Like most things here.

October 22, Monday: Den goes to work – Daily diagnosis: Wind

I’ll miss Claudia, who cooks and cleans at the B&B – she’s a friendly face each morning. Claudia is from Columbia and has been in England for several years, but wants to move to Rome to learn how to refinish antiques. So many people here are from other places, and are married to people from even other places.

This was my first day by myself. I met with the Lenwell Property Management folks to set up the rental agreement, and I got the keys – I had thought we wouldn’t get them until tomorrow. So began to get things arranged for moving into the flat. I had seen a sideboard in a thrift store, and after a couple of days, I just decided to go ahead and get it – I’d be disappointed if it was gone if I went back for it.

October 23, Tuesday: Moving Day and Waiting for IKEA

Last night we packed up all our stuff into the duffels and all the extra bags we had gotten from IKEA, Tesco, and Costco. I walked over to 60 Castle and opened things up, and did a bit of cleaning. Over his lunch hour, Den, with the help of Andy Cunliffe and his van, brought all our things from the Hertford House B&B.

IKEA arrived around 2:00, bringing our bed and wardrobe closet and one of their big blue bags filled with all the other stuff we got. Hallelujah – we’ve got a bed to sleep on! Of course, we had to put it together first.

October 24, Wednesday: Woe be to Wootten

Den was to meet up with Neal, the PA from Portland Oregon who is the President of the UK Association of PAs and was instrumental in getting Den the position over here. His surgery is in Wooten, a small village not far from Bedford. So, I decided to go along with Den on the bus and I’d explore the village while he spent the morning with Neal. After all, we came to England to see it!

After a blustery walk to the bus station, and about a half hour ride through the outskirts of Bedford and through the countryside to Wooten, the bus driver let us off the side of the road – I think he had forgotten to tell us to get off where we requested. So, we walked back to the main road and Den headed off for the clinic. And, I went in search of coffee and quaint shops. Well, as it turns out, the newspaper shop was the only thing open, and the proprietress explained there were no coffee shops, tea shops, just a school, church and cemetery, and a small grocery, and homes. “It’s just a little village, luv” she explained. So, I ended up at the clinic reading my book and checking out some broadband sites on a computer there.

When we got back into Bedford, I took Den over to the British Heart Association thrift store to look at a table and chairs, and we just decided to get them and have them delivered with the side board. At a ?100, it’s probably not that much less than what we’d get it at IKEA, but it’s here and it’s put together and it can be delivered tomorrow, all good things.

October 25, Thursday: Our first evening out: Jazz Night at Fresco’s Coffee Shop

Right at the stroke of noon, two nice fellows delivered the sideboard, table, and chairs – they really had to maneuver it around the narrow stairwell, but I think they must be used to such spaces. It’s great having real furniture, and what a joy to sit down on a chair at a table! The simple things in life!

There’s a small neighborhood coffee shop that has jazz once a month during the evening hours, and serve some nice entrees (the dessert left something to be desired). It’s a nice venue, but we hadn’t thought of I Left My Heart in San Francisco as a jazz tune.

October 26, Friday: A Conversation Over Toilet Bowl Brushes

Almost everyday, I get up and have some project to do. It’s all about problem solving. We need to have some way store all this paperwork, how will we store silverware and cutlery without any drawers, how can I read at night while Den is sleeping. So, I start out with a list and look for good buys, often in thrift stores or TK Max (just like TJ Max) or Tescos. Then, I carry way too much stuff home – I’m beginning to feel like a pack horse, and my shoulders are feeling it, too!

Today, I was in search of a toilet bowl brush and bathroom wastebasket. And so was a little old, rather regal looking lady (typical British?). She immediately began talking about how expensive all this was. All she wanted was a nice toilet bowl brush and it was 97p, really wasn’t that outrageous? I commiserated with her, although I thought it seemed fairly reasonable compared to some other things I’d been pricing. Soon, I was hearing all about her doctor-son, doctor-daughter, and geophysicist-son, as well as the polite little boy that lives in her flat, what with so few nice polite little boys these days. All of a sudden I realized this was the longest conversation I’ve had with anyone in days! We both bought those 97p toilet bowl brushes.

October 27, Saturday: Broadband Bruhaha or in a Cyber Dilemma 

The WHOLE day spent trying to figure out how to get broadband to our flat – what an exhausting day! We had finally made the decision to go with Talk Talk, using a BT phone line, but then found out the British Telecom wanted ?124 to activate the line, and we decided that was way too much, considering that we may not be in this flat for more than 6 months. So, we had to go back to square one, and we finally just went with Virgin, the only provider that does not need/use a BT phone line. No wonder that’s what was in this place when we moved in. That should have been a clue!

October 28, Sunday: Packing Home a Tesco Vacuum

Another day spent fitting out the flat. I needed Den to help carry home a vacuum!

October 29, Monday: I See Flat #2

Susan lives downstairs in flat #2. The day after we moved in, she slipped a card under our door to welcome us to the house. She’s been very friendly, and invited me into see her flat. Well, it is soooo much bigger than where we are. It’s on the ground floor and probably gets a bit dark as it doesn’t have windows on all sides, but it’s large, has a gas hob, new kitchen cabinets with drawers! Also, a guest bath, as well as an in-suite bathroom with a shower off her large bedroom. AND, a walk-in closet! I bet it even has a bathroom sink with a mixer!

We’ve now met all the people living in the flat, except for Peter in #1, who is here only a weekend or so each month. There’s Emily and Kirsten upstairs in #5, and Mechelle and Bernard in #3, which is also on our floor. Evidently, Susan is moving out of #2 (wonder why she didn’t tell me?), but the same person who owns our flat also owns #2. Hmm….

October 30, Tuesday: Yes, They’re Canadian Geese

I stopped at Lenwell to see if there was any chance we might be able to move into flat #2 when it is vacated in December. It would be sooo nice if we could have a bit more room, and a closet, and a shower, and a gas hob, and access to the garden. I would, however, miss our lovely views of the backyard garden and surrounding trees. I find I’m often looking out those windows to the fall colors, the squirrels that leap from tree to tree, the birds – it’s really nice.

I walked to Tescos (again today), which takes me through the park at the embankment. The days have been wonderfully sunny and crisp; people are often in the park with prams and dogs. Today, as I walked over the bridge, I stopped to admire the swans, geese, and ducks. And, once again wondered if these were Canadian geese. There was a cute grey-haired couple sitting on a sunny park bench, so I stopped to ask about the geese. And, indeed, these are Canadian geese! Who would have thought! This has now become my longest conversation.

October 31, Wednesday: Halloween, really?
Our flat is at the back of the house, so we didn’t anticipate any trick or treaters, and only one time did our door buzzer get buzzed. Den said there were quite a few costumed kids out and about, even well after dark.

England Ahoy!

September 10, 2007: The Day of the Visas

This was the culmination of several months of filling our
forms (the Bedford Medical Practice did most of the forms for the work permit),
verifying that we are who we say we are, and waiting for the processing wheels
to grind out our visas.

Next step: one-way tickets to England!

September 21, 2007: Evening with Friends

The good-byes have begun. This is the hard part – leaving
good friends. Of course, they all promise to come visit.

September 28: Den Retires!

Somehow this happened without our really realizing it – Den
had his last day at Group Health, as they no longer do leave of absences that
are longer than 3 months, so Den was “retired” the last day of September; well,
it will be sometime in November as he has vacation days. I thought I should
have a party, but realized that almost everyone we’d invite had already been to
an Aloha party for us, and some people had been to several, so it seemed a bit
silly to invite them to yet another party – how many times can you say good
bye??

So, we went to the new restaurant next to our building, The
Artemis. Lovely quiet evening.

September 29-October 9: Packing, Sorting, Storing, Donating,
Selling

What a week – it wasn’t hectic, but certainly difficult to
move everything in our storage units. We leave tomorrow. How did this happen???
Are we really leaving???

day 2 KK, Malaysia

November 3rd, 2007


  Hello, so day two in Kota Kinabalu, Malaysia. People call the city KK and Kula Lumpur KL for short reference. So I’m liking here quite a lot, the names of places like Kinabatangan and Sandakan are fun to say. So far in this city, more like a town compared to Seattle or Manila, nobody is begging for money which is nice, makes me feel as though people are taking care of themselves and society is taking care of them too around here. And I don’t feel obligated to give them money, which no doubt I will run short on towards the end of the trip.


  We just found out by reading the Indian Visa that the tourist visa is not-extendable which is a bummer because then we’ll have to go home by February 7th when our visa is up. I hope to be able to get another one or extend it against the rules by getting an exception because we won’t have used four months of our visa by the time we get there. If you have advice from your travel agent to get a visa before you leave the US or where ever, I suggest you ignore them and get the visa at one of their embassies, or maybe at the border when you get there. Unless you think you may be rejected of it and require assurance that you’ll be awarded the visa. Ah well, we’ll work that out later.


  It looks like the tickets are cheaper to Barcelona from India than Vietnam or Thailand so perhaps we’ll make our way to India by christmas and get a round trip ticket for visiting family.


  So KK is nice, there are a few dozen inexpensive hotels and hostels around town for us to stay in, the town seems to be all malls and hotels and corner restaurants.  From the airport we walked about twenty minutes to the bus stop to catch one to the city center where we were approached by two malaysian guys who were trying to help us but pretty much we knew where we were going from the map we got from the tourist info booth at the airport. Ate two plates of rice and some meat dishes with a bottle of water and a mango juice for 12 RM (ringgit, and right now it’s 3.3RM/1USD….the dollar is doing very poorly the world around and the value has been about 80% all over the place from where it was when our travel book was written a couple of years ago). So still very cheap, it was a 24 hour place and the food was mediocre. Today we had free breakfast like all the hostels offer, but it’s only coffee and toast with jam. Bought some peanut butter today and had a toasted PBJ for dinner and it was great. 


  Last night we stayed at the Borneo Adventure Lodge or something like that, and tonight we’re at Asia Adventure Lodge. There’s free internet here, but the computer is a pentium II from 1996.


  We met some girls from Borneo at Friendly’s Backpacker Hostel in Manila who’ve recommended a place called Uncle Tan’s Jungle Lodge or something like that and we may meet up with one or both of them. One, Joannie is planting fig trees so the mature ones will provide food for orangutans, and the other, Sharon works in some capacity for an orangutan wildlife rehabilitation center. We’ll head off there first, tomorrow, to be able to meet with Joannie who’s leaving the 7th, and then spend a couple of days checking out the jungle and orangutangs and then go to Mt. Kinabalu (5100m) for a trek and hot springs after at the bottom to recoup my soon to be wrecked body 🙂


  Oh, and people here drive on the left side of the road like in England, nearly got myself run over last night due to this and my inattention. There are also lots of KFC restaurants, they’re like starbucks in Seattle, one on every corner. Great sunset today…excited for tomorrow. Oh, and we walked up to a lookout place on the hill above KK, went past a HUGE banyan tree, got a pic.

long update from boracay

Tina and I are wrapping up our time here in boracay, land of beach and bars and crafts shops and not too crowded but still lots of vendors selling stuff and more pale tourists arriving all the time busy season is starting. Our stay at the hotel for 14 nights turns up to be 8880 pesos/200usd can’t beat that and they did our laundry and fed us some breakfasts too. We’ve switched to eating pbj for breakfasts to cut down on some costs, living under our 40usd/day budget. Starting to look into plane tickets to mallorca for christmas and new years, heard from a spanish guy that it’s way cheaper to fly to germany from bangkok and then to madrid, so we’ll check that out, it’ll be great to see you.

We’ve decided to cut out indonesia because of our goal to get to know places instead of just pass through, so we’ll have a month and a bit to see vietnam, thailand, cambodia, and laos before we head to spain and then we’ll fly back to india probably, or maybe go up around the mideast and then south through china to nepal and india. We heard from a nice vancouveran/canadian that her stay in tibet recently was lame because those dern imperialist chinese are making it all officious and cultural undermining and militaristic and bad and stuff. People can get fines of thousands usd if they’re caught giving a ride to a tourist without a permit that china now requires of them. So we’ve decided to stick to india, land of amazing food, and nepal, to get our buddhist fix, the lama is in some place in india that sounds like dhali lama, like darma lima or something anyway, and surrounded by a huge population of buddhists (oh, I miss my cat buddha mucho) so that’ll be great. So India after spain and then when we get bored we’ll head up to nepal and rent some winter clothes for the frigid weather, yak fur most likely :). Too bad we’re missing the camel fair in northern india right now, heard it was great.

Made a couple of canadian friends here in boracay that we’ll no doubt go and visit, except for erika who’s in seoul korea, have no current plans to go there, unless she comes back to vancouver then we’ll head on up. Her sister dawn and her are great. And Montrealan Sylvan was great too, takes a month or two off per year for travelling, can see myself being inspired to do that too. He’s saving europe for his older years because he’ll have more money then and be less physically able and europe is more expensive and easier to travel around, brilliant!

Lots of other interesting and inspiring people too to meet, probably the best part, one of them, of travelling is meeting all the other travellers. Some aren’t so good but we just don’t spend time with them.

Lots of fruit shakes here too yum. Philippine food isn’t all that great to me, lots of seafood that smells and tastes like low tide, but the rice and eggs are good, no century eggs or salted duck eggs here 🙂 Although they do eat fetusized chicken eggs, 18 days I hear is the best, not 22 like most people like, but I won’t eat one. There’s no tofu here either. Beer is cheap, fifty cents for a beer if you know where to get one, otherwise prices go as high as the states.

Some days I think, why am I travelling? I’m the same wherever I go, and sometimes I walk around and look at stuff and see things and meet people and remember why. But life’s life though and some days suck badly, told tina to remind me that someday I’m going to die and to stop wasting time being lame. I find death very motivating usually. Although when I’m depressed I don’t care about much at all seems like. Mostly I’m great though, oh, send me your mailing address and I’ll send you a postcard from someplace.

Climbed a coconut tree, fresh milk tastes way better than canned stuff, wish I had a kitchen to cook in. Buying bottled water instead of using the UV ray steripen because the water tastes better when it’s filtered, spoiling myself. Prolly use that steripen next summer when I want to walk the whole pacific crest trail, who’s with me? Inspired by zak mermel from hawaii who did it this summer cowboy camping style. Finished reading ”a problem from hell: america and the age of genocide” and want to save the world again sometimes, broke down all emotional one drunk night about all the hurt in the world in taiwan at guanziling muddy hot springs hotel place, that was fun 🙂 (in retrospect)…went sailing with guys here in boracay and the canadians and tina and did some snorkling, about on par with hawaii, maybe a little less good than that beach…five mile?…in hilo yay hilo. Great indian food restaurant here on the strip that makes me salivate for india. Got a tour of some mango trees with a 50yo prostitute named queen anita who bought me peanuts and a ride on a motor scooter and tricked me into eating a pepper that burned my mouth so I had to have a beer to put out the fire. Made a hammock out of a bed sheet and some nice rope stuff I bought from a shop that makes awesome fish-flops in the shapes of squids and spider man and geckos and stuff. Dance to live music on the beach, question life’s motivations, had a beer with an elderly hugely bearded scottish mailman and an english seaweed farmer living on cebu. frisbee with people from all over the world of various skill levels with the haight&ashbury hypercolor disk brought that I bought when david and I drove to mexico. Tina got a good massage on the dime. Pretty much healed from my crazy staff infections on my legs. Multiple sunburns that are fading into a protective layer of darker skin. Found out big cities aren’t where it’s at for my travel tastes. More and more, wish you were all here, more to come.

love,
jensen

short update from boracay

Sooooo….Tina and I were in Taiwan with her family. That was nice, going to eat, them taking us to temples, beer houses for gambei/campai/bottoms up, relearning chinese chess (thank you ten years ago alex) and playing with her uncles and cousin, it’s a lot like international chess but the pieces and board and rules are different, same kind of thinking though. Then it was down to Dulan bay to stay with tina’s uncle sam’s friend, ride around on his four wheelers, get really sunburned, the best was riding them on the beach and doing doughnuts and stuff. Eating mangos and humbaos/baotses and papaya and things. Back to Taichung with her family for another week or something, staying in their old apartment and getting cheapo delicious breakfast from the local place, always local places, try and avoid chains and names of stores I recognize, although 7-11 is everywhere like starbucks in seattle and good for water.


  Now we’re down in borocay, tropical beach land where the water is cool enough to be refreshing and warm enough to be in all day if you want. We’re at a place called Roy’s somethingorother and it’s nice 500 pesos a night exchange rate is 43/1usd and good food and stuff. Okay more later, just relaxing and making plans to make a hammock out of our bedsheets 🙂

Taipei, Taiwan

Hello from Taipei!

Tina and I just got in yesterday on sunday after our 13 hour flight of which I slept a good 8 hours. THings are well, we’re staying at a hotel that one of her uncles “General” set us up with. It’s nice and has a western toilet which is nice, and a shower. The entire bathroom is tiled and is kind of like a big shower with no doors on the shower. We’ve had some great food, dumplings and the like. Yesterday was the first day we were here and her uncle Sam (I know hahaha) took us around.   We went to a geopark which was a beach with sandstone shores that have been eroded into really cool shapes, big rocks on top of small spires of sandstone. Little fish in the water and things like that. Nice plants and birds and stuff. It was like we were in another world when we were walking amongst the rock shapes…lots of picures to come when we set that up.

Then we went to get some sea food at a restaurant where her aunt ordered some lobster sashimi along with some other stuff. The lobster arrived in a bowl of ice with it’s body sticking out of the ice and it’s shelled tail sitting next to the tail meat that we ate with wasabi. The lobster was moving a bit because (I thought) of the cooling of it’s body was causing it to contract. So I poked it and the thing started waving its arms around and its antennae too IT WAS STILL ALIVE!!! Tina poked it and it started screaming at us for like fives seconds. Its eyes were moving around looking at us too as we were devouring its body. Then they took the dish away after we ate the meat and we saw him next in a soup that they cooked the rest of him in. It was like “oh hello, I remember you, you were delicious” craziest culinary experience I’ve ever had. I can’t really get over the dried fish smell and the dishes with the little fish in them that were dried whole. Reminds me of the beach smell…you know.   So things are good. We’re going up into 101 today, second tallest building in the world next to Dubai’s tower something or other. It’s raining a bit now, like it does in Seattle, not really enough to get wet and it’s misting mostly so perhaps we’ll wait on the 101 until a clear day will give us an unobstructed view. Be well and merry and I’ll keep these coming 🙂

~Jensen