Wednesday, May 18, 2011

The Hanoi of small things

I didn't really plan for this to be a photo blog, but in my rush to photograph the city as the weeks turn themselves into days I have decided to share more. The fact that it is near impossible to log onto Facebook and just create one album after the other and my lack of Flicker knowledge leaves me no choice but to flood my own space, cause after all it is 'my space'. umh.

Anyway, one of my favourite things about Hanoi is that it's so visually stimulating, always and everywhere. The small things, the corners and walls and tea pots and little chairs, I'd do a whole post on Hanoi chairs... The power lines, the fruits and hats and flowers and.. get the picture?

So here with the bits of small Hanoi:


















Sunday, May 15, 2011

walks around the block and lamentations of a sentamentalist

Well, hello there rainy season.

Fact: Driving a motorbike in the rain sucks.
Fact: Listening to the down pour on the tin roofs surrounding my room is amazing.


As I’m writing this I have CNN on in the background, they’re doing a travel segment on Hanoi, something tightens in my heart. I seem to be having a bit of a reverse emotional ride with this city and all it so colorfully offers.

In the weeks counting down I find myself being amused and amazed with uniquely Hanoian things that I have come to take for granted over the last year and half. I’m have to stop my mind and all it’s sentimentalism to get carried away at regret of not doing more.

“How did I not spend more afternoons taking a stroll around the Botanical gardens with all it’s green (trees) and white (brides) and patterns (grandma pajamas)”

“Why didn’t I try more street food”

“How did we only discover taking drives out of the city like last week!!!?!”

“I should have totally given small clothes shops more attention” (I think as I purchase a gorgeous mid length skirt with cherries on it at a cheery 6usd)

"Spa! come on Lanette"

“ I should have gone with public schools earlier, I loooove my Grade 1 and 2 classes. Love.”

“All those photo’s I never took”

The list can go on and on from the big important things to the small quirky things. I don’t get too down for long, I’m reminded of the fact that I was living a very different life here than I would have at home, I wasn’t a tourist for 19 months. (but I kind of was) Although having said that, Hanoi is so gracious when it comes to being interesting around every corner.

A few days ago I decided to go for a walk with my camera, something I don’t do often , cause a camera around your neck instantly strips you of any expat cred, and I have been working hard on my cred. I thought wearing shower slippers in my walk would balance this out. True story. I don’t have enough Vietnamese to show off otherwise, I real shame after being here for so long.

Here are just a few things from my walk around the block.

Firstly the shower slippers. Sexy stuff.


The cherry skirt shop, just down the alley from where I live.


Two very common outfits in Hanoi, the standard conical hat and in the background the sun escaping Ninja by sunlight and pretty light skinned lady by non-sunlight ( I assume).


Young (ahem) gentlemen inviting me to join them for a nice tin of red bull and good conversation I’m sure.


After being told ‘no photo’ … But I’m just that bad ass.


Ladies of leisure


Some more afternoon exercise.


Love for the Uncle.


Flowers.



One of my favorite things about Hanoi walls

random right...

Thursday, May 5, 2011

The to do, not to do and done list

Sooooo, all the tickets are booked. .. and by all the tickets I mean Hanoi/Bangkok/Dusseldorf/Zurich/Geneva/Jeddah(SAUDI ARABIA!)Johannesburg. Yes, stops in Jo’burg. Yes, leaving Vietnam in less than 2 months.

Despite living in Hanoi for the past 19 months, I still have a few things that I haven’t done that would be high on any three-day tourist’s list. Now, I have about month left in the city and then about three weeks on the road with Ben.

So, I’ve thought about a few things that I need to do before I leave:

-I’m still to visit Uncle Ho (Ho Chi Minh- National Hero), so an early morning trip to the Mausoleum should be in order. Apparently, it’s a rather interesting experience so make this official number one on the list.

-Cyclo, taking a cyclo tour around the touristy areas of Hanoi is about as popular a thing to do as a gondola ride in Venice, yet I have never taken that ride. Soon I’ll have to humble myself from my imaginary lofty expat status to become just another tourist in the city… will be time to whip out every single Vietnamese word I know to avoid a higher price.

-Buy a Good morning Vietnam T-shirt, obviously can’t wear it until I’m out of Asia. Speaking of touristy things to buy I’ll add a few propaganda posters to the cart. Not as cliché as a conical hat but not very groundbreaking either, but the pictures will work well on my ‘when I’m a grown up and have a big house’ wall one day.

-Need to take some ‘in the moment’ pictures of my school kids, I’m already getting a little teary thinking about saying good bye to those Grade one and two babies. Or am I trying too hard with this one?

-I’m yet to actually visit another pagoda, other than the one in Hoan Kiem Lake, they’re everywhere, I actually used to live with one on either side of my house a few months back and still lacked a proper visit. (I did however see the most interesting Catholic Church on drive out of the city yesterday)

-O and then there is this other minor thing I need to do; take a three week motorbike trip around Vietnam to bid my gorgeous home of almost two years good bye. I’ll be doing this trip with Ben through out the month of June, on his sexy gold and black and white and orange off road bike. Can’t wait, will surly blog my heart out about this.

-Get a picture of the goldfish man… if I get a picture of him it will be a post in itself. I always seem to spot him when I don’t have my camera.

-Pay at least two more visits to the Fantasy toys/Saigon Nails shop… Yes it’s a toy shop with princess and super hero outfits as well as a place to get a manicure and pedicure for 5USD. 7USD if you want nail art. I went with a cherry theme the last time.

Then there are a few things I feel I can skip:


-Eating: Dog or cat in any form whether it be hot pot of BBQ style, I don’t think it will deprive me in the slightest degree of my Vietnam experience. I know if I even thought about it my dog ‘Patches’ will know, even though Patches is long deaf and almost blind and hopefully still alive.

-While I’m on the eating topic, no snakes… no snake blood shots, no beating hearts. I’m good thanks.

- I think I might just make it through Vietnam without the conical hat pose.

-As elegant as the Ao Dai is I don’t think I need one to remember Hanoi by, I’m simply too tall and I think I’ll look a little odd. I do like seeing women wearing them but I’m not going to look good in another cultures clothes.


And then there is the been there done that list:

-Swan boats, on both West Lake and Truc Bac Lake. Fun.

-Walking on water in bubbles at the zoo. More fun than Swan boats.

-Museum of Ethnology, a worth while and colourful visit.

-Art Museum, a pleasant surprise.

-Ate uncountable bowls of Pho Bo

-Halong Bay and Catba Island, three times, so that’s a solid check next to that one.

-Wore the most ‘beautiful’ dress I could find.


-Celebrated something in Vietnam, like the 1000 year celebrations was a pretty big deal.


-Karaoke… although who gets tired of karaoke?

-Drives over Long Bien Bridge, built by Eiffel.