Author Archives: dinosaur
No Casinos but Bribes are OK.
A couple of days ago we made it across the border from Cambodia to Laos.
We stamped out of Cambodia and were left with a bad taste in our mouth when the customs guy asked for a $2.80 bribe per person for the stamp in the passport…
‘$2.80 for a stamp?’
‘Erh…. Do we get a receipt?’
‘No, no receipt’
‘Well no receipt, no money we responded…’
He huffed and puffed a bit then thrust back our passports… Not a nice way to leave Cambodia where the people have been nothing but lovely.
So then we enter Laos. After paying $37 for a visa another immigration official asks for $2 for ‘overtime’ pay before stamping us in.
‘Overtime?!’ (at 3:30pm on a Friday)
‘Yes yes stamp $2 per person’
‘Ok… Do we get a receipt?’
‘No, no receipt’
‘Well, no receipt no money’
This time our passports were not thrust back at us but rather put to the side while passports for a bus load of people (who had arrived after us) were processed instead.
We weren’t quite sure what to do next, but took it as a positive sign that we weren’t sent back to Cambodia. Dean made some pretend phone calls to the tourist police which didn’t seem to bother them, so then we decided to play some cards and wait it out.
5 mins later we were being yelled at by the same guy…
‘No! No casino!’ Shouted the rubber stamp guy
‘Have you finished with our passports?’
‘No casino!’
‘We’re not gambling!’ we respond.
My hands were a bit shaky at this stage but we continued to play.
We had decided to give it about an hour of waiting before we would succumb to the corruption. We played 2 rounds of Scala Quaranta (the game we often play during long waits on buses and ferries) before Dean was called over and handed the passports stamped and ready to go – small victories!
I know it sounds stupid that we are arguing about $2, but it’s the principal of the matter. Corruption is one of the main obstacles facing developing countries, and the guys working in these places make far more money than most of the rest of the country. If they get $2 from every person who crossed the border, that little office is pocketing hundreds of dollars every day, for a country with an average wage of something like $5/day it’s insane. There’s also an element of pride I guess, just because we’re tourists it doesn’t mean we’re stupid! Overtime fees… at least invent a reasoable story!!
From there we spent a couple of nights in Four Thousand Islands – a group of islands scattered along the Mekong about 25km from the border.
It was very relaxing with not much to do except hang out on a hammock (and play with the six puppies that were living where we were staying :))))))))) I was in heaven!
We’re now riding a two day loop from Pakse towards the Vietnamese border and back.
More later xoxoL
Back on the road…
Despite feeling pretty happy that the travel sickness of the buses and boats of the Philippines were behind me it was very sad to leave… Usually by the time we leave a country, there is a little part of me that feels ready to leave and excited for a new one but I didn’t feel this when it came to leaving the Philippines, this time I was planning our next visit instead.
Still, it was nice to come back to Cambodia 😊 the warmth and smiles of the Cambodian people exceed even those of the Philippines! After a couple of days in Siem Reap, Dean doing last minute bits to Betsy and me chopping my hair off 😳, we got back to reality and into our hot heavy bike gear 😁 a moment neither of us had been looking forward to! Saying goodbye to Peter and Sue, we headed north towards the Thai border. A short gentle day to start with which was lucky as we didn’t get away until 1pm – we’re clearly out of form!
Today we headed up to a temple on the Thai border. It was falling to bits but still very beautiful. Upon leaving we were asked to hurry along as there was some commotion. The locals were packing up shop and rushing away… It was quite strange but there seemed to be some military conflict with Thailand underway – I’m sure dean can add more details here…
Not much, we wanted to stop for a bit of food but all the vendors were closing up and literally running away, (and Cambodian’s NEVER run for anything!). The parking atttendants told us we’d have to eat somewhere else, and asked us to rush as there was ‘a problem with Thai military’. This temple is the subject of a dispute bewteen Thailand and Cambodia, hopefully no one was hurt this time.
Tonight we find ourselves in a town called Preah Vihear. Tomorrow, if we get our asses into gear, we will make it across to Laos.
Now it has been noted that Dean does more blog entries than me…. It has also been noted that there are a lot more photos of me on here than Dean (because he takes more photos) but I was quite disturbed that (despite hours spent laughing at tourists -predominantly Asians – taking photo upon photo of themselves), Dean had actually found the need to publish a selfie of himself sitting on a bus a few posts ago, so I’ve taken it upon myself to take and post more photos of him 😊
Goodbye Philippines, hello Cambodia.
Planes buses and boats…
Sitting on the bus back to Cebu… Minivan actually, and quite a nice one, supposed to be faster than the bus, although he’s driving erratically in only first gear so who knows.
Sal is sitting next to me, head in her lap with eyes closed trying not to feel sick. She woke up this morning covered in red spots again. I read that in the final stages of dengue you get another itchy rash and then your whole body peels… She looked horrified when I passes on that little gem.
There’s bad 80’s pop playing on the stereo, a bit too loud for me, but the Fillipino’s love it. Karaoke is huge here, and everyone sings.
‘Touching the night… It feels like heaven…’ more synthesiser
Now we’ve stopped for some reason. Sal’s getting pissed off… It’s going to be a long day.
To get this far, we’ve already caught a small boat to a big boat to cross between islands, then another small boat to shore as it’s low tide so the big boat couldn’t come close to shore.
Van now stopped at the bus station. People routinely pile out and stand around outside as though we won’t be leaving for a while, then the driver ushers everyone back on, and we wait in the bus another ten mins before everyone gets off again. This seems to be normal.
Oooh we’re moving… Nope we’re not.
Anyway last time I wrote we had just missed the last boat to Malapasqua and so had to stay in Maya, the port town. Port towns are always a bit shit and this one was no exception.
Now we’re moving, but in the wrong direction.
So in Maya we got a cheap but still disproportionately crap room, full of bugs, no fan, 2 single beds. There wasn’t much to choose from so it had to do, but Sal had a fever of 39.5 so we insisted the guy who gave us the room should find a fan…
He initially tried to steal one from his auntie (after she fell asleep) but that didn’t wash, and the only other thing he could find was the type of fan people used to screw to a car dashboard, about 10cm in diameter… Brilliant.
‘Boom boom boom lets go back to my room, so we can do it all night and you can make me feel right…’
Next morning we headed to the port bleary eyed and waited for a boat. At which point it occurred to me to ask whether there were any ATM’s on the island…
‘No bank or ATM on Malapasqua’
‘OK so where is the closest one?’
‘It’s about 40km away in Bogo city. ‘ ‘WTF?? That will take a couple of hours!’
‘You take moto taxi, very fast 45mins, 200 pesos one way.’
I smelled a rat. A moto guy telling me I needed to travel 45mins to get to the nearest bank… I politely declined and went into the nearest store to ask the shopkeeper where I could find a bank.
‘In the next town, you take jeepni, 12 pesos, only 5 mins’
The moto guy hadn’t taken no for an answer, and followed me into the shop. At this point he started arguing with the shopkeeper, who then told me that he said the ATM down the road was broken, by the look on her face it was clear she didn’t believe him.
Flashdance is now playing… What a feeling!!
We laughed and said we’d try the close one first. 5 mins later with wallets full of pesos we were leaving the bank when the same moto guy rolled around the corner hoping the ATM was broken and we’d need to go further… Asshole.
We offered him a pittance to take us back to Maya, and then took a bus back.
But nothing is simple… at the port we found a boat ready to leave but were told that it was too late to get on that boat. We needed to wait for another. The boat wasn’t full by half, and was still tied on so we couldn’t see why we needed to wait another hour.
‘One night in Bangkok makes a hard man crumble…’
If you know Sal very well you’d know she doesn’t have a very long fuse, and by this stage things were getting quite heated.
‘What’s wrong with this boat?’ She demanded
‘Too late, you take next boat’
‘No no no this boat is just fine!!’ and she scrambled down a pile of slippery boulders and across the narrow 2m long plank of wood onto the boat.
I was laughing hard but followed trying not to fall over and took a seat wondering what would happen next.
With Sal still glaring at them, there was some discourse between the captain and the guy on the pier, ending with the captain shrugging his shoulders as if to say ‘they’re on now, what am I supposed to do?’
In the end the pier guy took half the fare and the captain got the rest.
Now playing ‘Boys boys boys, hoping for a food time…’
After all that Malapasqua was really great. We found accommodation quickly, beach front for $24, and lined up some diving for the next two days.
The view from our room.
Sal’s fever came back down that night so she dived without any problems, the diving was pretty average but we had fun nonetheless. We found a nice Spanish bar on the beach and some local BBQ to eat next door and passed our time under the water and on the beach. Pretty hard going 😉
One of the dive highlights at Malapasqua is seeing Thresher Sharks, a very rare species with a really long tail fin, as long as the rest of the shark combined, which it uses to whip around and hit a fish it wants to eat. They live much deeper than we can dive, but in some rare places they come to the shallow to be cleaned by other reef fish at dawn, before the sun gets too high as their big eyes are sensitive to the sunlight. We got up at 4am for that dive…
So it’s 5am, still almost dark and I’m 30m below the surface of the sea, kneeling down on a rocky bottom hoping to see a shark. The visibility is really poor, maybe 5m so it’s easy to lose your dive group, and with another 50 people in the same area it’s chaos.
Someone kicks me in the head moving my regulator and my mask floods, I resist the urge to PANICK and control my breath, reset the mask and clear it again… ‘What the fuck am I doing down here!?’
‘Sweets for my sweet, sugar for my honey…’
Our group move away from the masses and the dive master puts us on another ledge, I’m wondering how much longer we can stay so deep, at 30m we are absorbing 4 x as much nitrogen into our blood as we should be, and more than 15mins is a risk for decompression sickness.
I’m still having a bit of a ‘WTF are we doing here moment when the guide excitedly points into the blue and one of the sharks appears, swims across us, turns and disappears again.
The guide seems pleased and we ascend to finish the dive in the shallow, where we’re treated with 3 eagle rays gracefully circling above us for ten minutes, really cool! We’re back on the shore before 7am, tired but happy.
Which brings me back to the bus trip…
‘You’re a woman I’m a man, this is more than just a game, i can make you feel so right, be my lady of the night’…
The 80’s have a lot to answer for.
Last Malapasqua Sunset
From the ferry back to Cebu
So our Philippines adventure continues, today we have left Bohol and are doing the walk+ferry+taxi+bus+tricycle+ferry+walk to get to Malapasqua, for the last 4 nights in this lovely corner of the world.
In Bohol we went to Panglao and dived at Balicasag Is for a day, and then rented a couple of motorbikes for 3 more days to explore the main island of Bohol.
It’s always fun trying to work out what we should be paying for things, for example someone tried to charge us 500 pesos for a bus ride to Panglao that we later got for 50 pesos!
So we shopped around to get a good deal on the bikes, which were eventually brought to our hotel in a strange slightly dodgy situation.
Three guys brought the bikes, with a used disclaimer/waiver, and went to great pains to point out what little damage was already on them. They also had three helmets thinking there must be another guy in our group, but we gave them one back saying one bike was for Sal… This initially confused them, but then they were super impressed that a foreign girl could ride a real motorbike. They were less impressed when I drew pictures of both the bikes on the agreement, showing all the existing damage 🙂
The impressed men was to be a bit of a theme for the next three days, with teenage boys often blowing kisses to Sal along the road, as you could imagine she hated the attention 😉
So we visited the Tarsier sanctuary, home to one of the oldest creatures on the planet, these little primates branched off from the primate evolutionary process something like 55 million years ago, and one variant has lived in isolation in Bohol ever since.
They’re tiny little things, that would fit in your palm, with huge eyes that don’t articulate, and a neck that rotates 360 deg instead. Of course they’re on the endangered list, loss of habitat and poaching… Very sad. Such little curious animals that have survived for so long, hopefully the Fillipino’s take better care of them than the orangutans in Indo.
Then we rode to the Chocolate mountains, which are a cluster of small hills that go brown in summer… Wow.
From there we rode about 300km around Bohol, stopping a night at a lovely little beach where a local band played mostly covers but with some cool Fillipino songs thrown in.
The bad news for us in this, is that Sal seems to have contracted dengue fever – red rash, a very high temperature, bad aches and pains and cold sweats. She’s soldiering on with paracetamol for the aches as there is no other treatment available, just stay hydrated and wait for it to pass.
Now we’re on the aforementioned bus going north in Cebu. It’s a strange vehicle, 3 seats each side of the aisle, fasten your seatbelt signs everywhere but no seatbelts, one driver who constantly sounds the air horns, one man who hangs out the centre door continuously shouting at people on the street to see if they need a ride, and one ticket collector who still hasn’t given me my 700 pesos change ($20).
Very slow going with all the starting and stopping, 6 hours to travel a bit more than 100km!
Hopefully we make the last ferry when we arrive!
…
We missed the ferry 🙁
Don’t let the Bedbugs bite!
Filippino food
This is the street food place across from our hotel today, 26 different dishes available!
They range from sardines in vinegar and chilli, to smoked eggplant with coconut and ginger, chicken hotpot with tomato and soy beans, stewed pork belly, it’s all delicious, and at only one dollar a plate it’s amazing value.
This is our breakfast, greens, rice, eggplant and sardines…
Loving it here!
From Bohol
Toledo to Cebu city today on the scooter, we took the road over some ‘mountains’, up to almost 1000m! Nice to feel some cool fresh air for the first time in months.
It’s always nice to find some altitude anywhere in the world, for whatever reason it’s usually cleaner, better kept and people take more pride in their houses and surroundings. Lots of flowers, bullocks lazing in water flooded terraces, dogs sleeping on the road, smiling people. Really nice ride.
Then Cebu city… Horrible. Where we went shopping for some bits and pieces in a couple of mega malls. Christmas decorations are in full swing over here, the street kids begging for food are even singing carols to try to make money!
Anyway we eventually got the bike back to the hire place, then took a mini van thingy half way to the pier, and a taxi the rest of the way, 2 hrs on the boat and a 20min walk to find somewhere to stay in the town we landed in called Tagbilaran.
So now we have a lovely clean room, walls painted pink? and green, two single beds and a shared bathroom. Sal is asleep, time I did the same.




























