Thursday, November 30, 2023
Book: Martha Wells' "Exit Strategy"
Tuesday, November 28, 2023
Book: David J. Chalmers' "Reality+: Virtual Worlds And The Problems Of Philosophy"
Sunday, November 26, 2023
Weekly Ephemera #73
- I hope all my American friends had a filling Thanksgiving. I did not.
- Mid-week I started feeling odd. I was having achy/restless legs and food made me feel bloated. This progressed to short anxiety attacks, lightheadedness, general body fatigue, intermittent intestinal distress, and acid reflux. This led me to sleeping through most of Thanksgiving.
I'd started a new medication the week before and many of these things were listed in the side effect list so I stopped taking it. Unfortunately several other symptoms do not match with the medication's side effects but would fit with an intestinal bug.
As I write this I am feeling much better (though not 100% yet). I do not know if it was a bug or a drug side effect. I plan to restart the medication sometime after my surgery next week. If the symptoms return then I will know. - We also got letters this week saying that both our Dentist and our General Practitioner are retiring/moving on. It sucks to have to replace one doctor but two? Ugh.
- Oh, and did I mention our health insurance premium is going up a lot next year? Yes, it is.
- Before all this hit me I did manage to do a couple walks totalling 10.9 miles (17.6 km) before my body gave out. We'll see how I feel this coming week.
- This week, when I wasn't sleeping, I watched the first two seasons of "Welcome to Wrexham". This is in preparation for our trip to Great Britain sometime next year (possible in the Fall). We are hoping to see a game while we are there.
- We had our first real snow last night. Maybe an inch more or less. Everything was pretty, clean, and white when I got up this morning. It's almost gone already.
- I was originally thinking of putting up the Christmas Tree today but I think it will have to wait till later this week when I feel more 100%.
Friday, November 24, 2023
Southeast Asia 2023 - Days Twenty-Five Through Twenty-Nine - Siem Reap, Cambodia And The Way Home.
UPDATED 12-06-2023: Added photos.
Day Twenty-Five (Monday)
We arrived in Siem Reap, Cambodia landing in their brand new airport. We met our guide and driver and we went to our hotel. (Along the way I saw the transformers ... sorry, no photos.) Cambodia was going to be hot, humid, and wet.
We had the afternoon free so we took a tuk-tuk to a market for some shopping. I found the Monkey King head I'd been looking for. I almost bought one in Thailand but the price wasn't right. This one was not quite the same but I hadn't expected to see it outside of Thailand so I jumped at it.
Day Twenty-Six (Tuesday)
This was a very difficult day for me. I woke up with a sore throat and a plugged up nose. We were picked up by our guide and driver and we headed into the park.
One of the many temples of Angkor Thom. |
We climbed to the top of this temple. |
After lunch we visited the local Killing Fields museum and memorial. There are several of these museums spread around Cambodia. The one in Siem Reap is a bit underwhelming which is sad considering the millions who lost their lives to the Khmer Rouge.
A mine sniffing rat. |
In the afternoon we visited Angkor Wat. It was magnificent but I was starting to wear down. The heat and humidity (heat indexes over 100℉ ... 38℃) just sucked the energy out of me. I did my best to see everything but near the end I was fading. Near the end it started to rain and we left the park and returned to our hotel.
Angkor Wat. |
Twenty-Seven (Wednesday)
Our helium balloon. |
We returned to our hotel for breakfast before heading out to see Ta Prohm, more commonly known as the Tomb Raider temple. The temple was the backdrop for the movie "Lara Croft: Tomb Raider". I have to say, while this tomb is more modest than Angkor Thom or Angkor Wat, it is what I think of when I think of these temples. They are only partially restored. The stones are covered in moss. Tree roots wrap around the walls. It felt like the jungle had just been cleared and the temple felt wild.
Ta Prohm. |
We switched to a smaller boat and we went through a mangrove forest. It was very peaceful with just the sound of the bamboo pole used by the woman moving the boat along. Unfortunately my old body was very uncomfortable sitting on the thin cushion on the floor of the boat.
The town on stilts. In the dry season this water will be gone. |
Day Twenty-Eight (Thursday)
After a quick breakfast we went back to the airport to catch a flight back to Bangkok, Thailand. We arrived in Thailand and took the hotel shuttle to our hotel where we would be for about twelve hours. The Wife took a taxi to the knock off market one last time while I went over pictures and stuff in the hotel room.
Day Twenty-Nine (Friday)
Our flight left at 2:10am and, after a six hour flight followed by a fourteen hour flight followed by a one hour flight, we arrived home. I think I managed to sleep on some of the flights.
As I am drafting this we have mostly adjusted back to our time zone. The jet lag has been pretty brutal the past week or so. The Wife came home with a bad cold. Whatever I felt a few days earlier faded away quickly for me.
We were both happy to be home with the cool, dry Fall air.
Photos can be found in my 2023 Cambodia Google Photos album.
Monday, November 20, 2023
Southeast Asia 2023 - Days Twenty-Three, Twenty-Four, And Part Of Twenty-Five - Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
UPDATED 12-06-2023: Added photos.
Note: Sorry about the delay in posting the rest of my Southeast Asia posts. The thirteen hour time difference is resulting in some hellacious jet lag.
Day Twenty-Three (Saturday)
Today was a very full day touring Ho Chi Minh City. The original name of the city is Saigon and practically everyone calls it that. We were told by a couple people that 'Ho Chi Minh City' is just too long and Saigon is easier. The impression I got, especially in the south of Vietnam, is that the memory of Ho Chi Minh is not at the forefront of many Vietnamese minds.
The first stop of the day was a street where medicinal herbs and remedies were sold. Saigon has a large chinese influence and many of the traditional medicines are chinese.
Spiral incense taking wishes to heaven. |
We explored Chinatown on a cyclo ride through the streets that eventually took us to the wholesale market. We walked through the market where practically everything you would ever need was sold in bulk.
After a rather sweaty walk through the market we drove over to the Reunification Palace. The building was once the location of the South Vietnamese government. The convention that reunited the north with the south was held here. Now it is a museum ... a time capsule of the mid-70s chic.
Dragon fruit. Bright and exotic on the outside, a mild pear-like flavor on the inside. |
After lunch we went to the War Remnants museum. The museum covers the history of the most recent wars in indochina. The photos and displays are hard to look at and it is hard to tell what is true and what is propaganda. The museum brings out a lot of mixed feelings in people who visit it.
After the museum we visited the post office located in a French style building across the street from Notre Dame Cathedral. It was interesting to see the fancy phone booths that lined the entrance. You felt a lot of history in that building.
When we left the post office our car and driver was surrounded by six traffic cops. Apparently they thought the car was illegally parked (but not the bus and other cars parked in a similar manner in the vicinity). We got in the car and then were asked to get out. Fortunately we weren't far from our hotel so we walked back with our guide. Our car passed us on the way back ... the cops got the pocket cash they wanted and the driver got to drive away. Typical corruption.
On the walk back our guide pointed out the building where the famous helicopter evacuation picture was taken. Most people think it was off the top of the embassy but it's actually from the top of the CIA building.
We passed the opera house which was close to our hotel. Our guide suggested we could go to the show there on our free day.
At the hotel we took an hour to cool off before walking down the street to a cigar shop to buy cigars for the Wife's brother. It's become a habit when we travel that we buy him Cuban cigars. We had to order a couple so we could pick them up the next day.
That night we went out to another very nice restaurant with another multi-course meal.
Day Twenty-Four (Sunday)
This was a free day for us. We went to Mass at the Notre Dame cathedral and the Wife had some pool time. I worked on posts and relaxed in our room.
The busy Saigon streets outside the opera house. |
Day Twenty-Five (Monday)
The next day we were leaving for Cambodia but we had one stop before we went to the airport. One of the last US soldiers to die in Vietnam, Lance Corporal Darwin Judge, was from the Wife's home town and was in her brother's high school class. We bought some flowers and approached the guards at the entrance of the US consulate where there was a memorial. After waiting fifteen minutes or so we were greeted by consulate security personnel who escorted us to a small garden where the memorials to the dead soldiers were honored. We were joined by the Deputy Principal Officer, the head of the Marine contingent, and several other higher up representatives. We were both surprised by the reception. We'd expected just some bored marine taking us to the memorial and that's it. It was nice to see the memory of those soldiers being kept alive with the respect they deserve. The Wife placed her flowers and a letter of thanks at the base of the memorial.
We left out the back door of the consulate compound, met up with our guide, and we drove to the airport to catch our flight to Cambodia.
Photos can be found in my 2023 Vietnam Google Photos album.
Sunday, November 19, 2023
Weekly Ephemera #72
- It's been over a week since we got back from southeast asia and we are both still fighting jet lag. The thirteen hour time difference is really knocking us through a loop. I've spent most of this week doing not much of anything substantial. I've mostly been catching up on TV.
- On Thursday I had my pre-op check up in preparation for my prostate and kidney stone surgery early next month. Chest x-ray, EKG (my first), and blood work. I dreaded the blood results as I never can control my carb intake (and I really don't try very hard to control them) while traveling. Sure enough my A1C was back in the diabetic range. My diet is back under my control and I'll be restarting my walking this week so the numbers will come down.
- I caught up on my superhero TV/Movies. I watched "The Marvels" in the theater. I liked it. Not sure why it isn't doing better. Probably a lack of promotion due to the Actor's strike. I finished the week watching "Loki" season two. It was good too and bit thought provoking ... if you put any thought into superhero stories.
- I will be restarting my travel posts this week. I have one more Vietnam and one Cambodia post to write.
- I used to use Mint.com to keep track of our finances but, like most free cool stuff, it will be shutting down in January so I spent the first part of the week playing with alternatives. I ended up on a paid subscription to Quicken.com (I used to use Quicken on the desktop and moved away to an online only service - I feel like I'm going backwards). This was a pain in the a$$. It took me a couple days to get everything the way I like it and it still doesn't have everything that Mint.com had. Mint.com was advertising supported and that market is going through tough times. Hopefully a paid service will be more stable and long lived.
Tuesday, November 07, 2023
Southeast Asia 2023 - Days Twenty-One And Twenty-Two - Hoi An, Vietnam
UPDATED 12-06-2023: Added photos.
Day Twenty-One (Thursday)
Our weather luck ran out this morning as rain moved in. We drove outside the city to Ba Na mountain amusement park. We rode a gondola up the mountain into the rain clouds.
One of the hands holding the golden bridge in the clouds. |
On the way back down we saw there were alpine slides. We would have loved to ride those but unfortunately they are closed when it rains like it was today.
We ate lunch back in Hoi An at a riverside restaurant. The menu was a multi course extravaganza. The food was good but too much. I mean by the time you finished the amuse bouche, three starters, and the soup you were full and then they brought the three main courses. Plus. The servers kept asking how things were and they were practicing their English on us while their boss watched us eat ... Please, just serve the food and let us eat privately and in peace. Oof.
We returned to our room and cooled off. It has been very hot and humid everywhere we've been. Before dinner we had ninety minute Vietnamese massages. They felt very relaxing though my legs were still achy from the fifteen hundred steps I'd climbed the last two days.
Day Twenty-Two (Friday)
We had a walking tour around Hoi An this morning. This city had been a trading city and you could see by the market next to the canals and river. We visited a temple and an old merchant house.
French style homes in Hoi An. |
Back on land we headed for lunch in a nearby village. Due to the narrow streets we took a tuk-tuk to the restaurant. The menu was similar to the day before - too much food but all good.
In Hoi An we took a boat ride on the canal in a boat similar to this one. The 'eyes' on the boat are to scare away monsters. |
For dinner we left the hotel. A signed that said 'Boozing Boozing Bar and Food' attracted our attention and we ordered dinner. The place was on the third floor and as we waited for our food a large rat ran across the floor. This was not the sequel to Ratatouille that I expected. We ate our food which was good enough.
Tomorrow we would explore Saigon.
Photos can be found in my 2023 Vietnam Google Photos album.
Sunday, November 05, 2023
Southeast Asia 2023 - Day Nineteen And Twenty - Halong Bay
Some of the limestone islands of Halong Bay. |
More islands in the mist. |
The sun setting on Halong Bay. |
Our last view of the islands of halong Bay. |
Wednesday, November 01, 2023
Southeast Asia 2023 - Days Fifteen Through Eighteen - Hanoi, Vietnam
UPDATED 12-06-2023: Added photos.
Day Fifteen (Friday)
My phone alarm woke us up at 3:00am. We freshened up and checked out of our hotel. Our driver was a little early and we were taken to the airport. There was no one working the counters but we were able to check in, get our boarding passes, and check our bags at the self-service kiosk.
We headed for our gate looking for some place to eat along the way. We ended up eating at McDonalds. They didn't have a breakfast menu so we had burgers and fries for breakfast.
Passport control went smoothly, we picked up our bags, and met our guide who took us to our hotel. Our Hanoi hotel was the oldest hotel in Hanoi, was five star, and was surrounded by Hermes, Gucci, Louis Vuitton, and other high priced brand stores.
The Wife had some pool time while I worked on a Thailand post. We then walked down to a church to find Mass times where we heard Adoration in Vietnamese.
We ordered burgers at the poolside bar before realizing that burgers were all we'd eaten all day.
Day Sixteen (Saturday)
We'd checked laundry rates at our hotel the night before and they were astronomical so we'd contacted our guide to arrange a cheaper option. We gave our bag of laundry to a guy on a scooter before starting our tour of Hanoi.
The 'Hanoi Hilton' prison. |
Next we drove near the Ho Chi Minh Mausoleum. We had suggested we would like to see the embalmed remains of the leader but we could see the long line that would likely eat three hours of our time so we decided to skip it.
An ancient bonsai tree. |
A woman carrying fruit as we passed her on our cyclos. |
After the Cyclo we walked to a restaurant for some Vietnamese lunch. It was pretty good but, like Thai food, it's too many flavors for me.
The bridge crossing the lake to the Ngoc Son Temple. |
We returned to the Ho Chi Minh Mausoleum just in time to see the changing of the guard. We learned about the history of Ho Chi Minh. Next to the Mausoleum are the government buildings where the French (and briefly the Japanese) governed the country. When the communist forces defeated the French Ho Chi Minh refused to live in the lavish building choosing instead to live in a more modest house nearby.
The Ho Chi Minh mausoleum. |
We returned to the lake area where they were preparing for a weekend festival. We saw a 'long dress' parade with people wearing traditional clothing and women wearing the long tunics known as Áo dài.
Vietnamese water puppets. |
Day Seventeen (Sunday)
We walked to the Saint Joseph Cathedral for Mass. As we approach we heard some booming of drums. In front of the cathedral was a large drum corp with several huge drums. This was an unexpected surprise. The cathedral was celebrating the first step of the beatification of François Pallu.
The drummers outside the Saint Joseph Cathedral. |
The hotel was close to a lake. A festival was in full swing and families were walking around the lake, live music was booming from two stages, and the smell of street food was everywhere. Our guide had warned us to stay away from the street food so we avoided it despite the smells. We walked through a few shops buying some souvenirs. I got a cool Cyclo model for my den. We ended the afternoon with some high end ice cream that was really good.
Day Eighteen (Monday)
After a late breakfast we walked to one of the old gates of the old city. From this east gate we wandered through streets lined with shops selling everything under the sun. We eventually ended up on Halloween street that was wall to wall Halloween decorations. The one exception was the last store on the street which was full of ... Christmas decorations.
The east gate of the old city. |
Back at the hotel, after some pool time, we went on a hotel tour. The old wing of the hotel in one hundred and twenty-two years old. During renovations they discovered a secret bomb shelter under the pool bar. The tour was give by a man who was a child during the Vietnam War and he gave an interesting perspective on the war and the bomb shelter. The shelter was secret so that ordinary Vietnamese would not try to get in. It was used by embassy diplomats from the French, Polish, Italian, and Cuban embassies. It was sealed after the war ended and the secret was kept until they found it by accident.
Next on the itinerary: Halong Bay.
Photos can be found in my 2023 Vietnam Google Photos album.