Friday, February 02, 2007

well...
i decided to let this all slide after i got home
having nothing much to say and all.

but it looks lonley when i come and peek at it.
sitting here all sad and neglected.
so.
i think i might start adding little notes every once in awhile.
but i'm not going to tell anyone.
it's a secret.

Friday, April 07, 2006

finally!!!
after slogging away at the computer for two days, i've managed to get my pictures from the trip in order, labelled and online :)

i've tried to keep it interesting and not get carried away with too many shots of the same thing - excluding sunsets...they're like a photo addiction! you just can't stop!

so, let me know if you have any problems with the links or any questions about the pics...

les fotos

just in case you want to go in order...
chronologically the albums are
-Bangkok and Koh Samet
-Northern Thailand
-Laos
-Bangkok and Kanchanaburi
-Cambodia / Angkor
-Bangkok and Penang
-Koh Pah Ngan and Koh Tao

well...that's it i guess! enjoy!

much love
sun

(ps - i can't take credit for all of these, many are mine, but we shared between the three of us, and picked up a few others from friends along the way)

Thursday, March 30, 2006

well, i guess that's it...after 30 plus hours of travelling, i've officially landed back on Canadian soil. end of trip (sigh)
actually, it feels pretty good to be home...i landed in montreal tuesday evening, and am staying with friends here for a couple days before heading back to toronto.
despite being sick, my last week in Thailand was worth extending the trip for. Kristi and I sunned and snorkelled on Koh Tao, and then took the overnight train back up to Bangkok for last minute shopping at the Chatuchak weekend market and some PatPong nightlife fun. I'd have to say, seeing Thai Elvis at Radio City was a helluva way to wrap up the past couple months.
I said goodbye to Kris, she and our friend Anna dropped me off at the airport. She'll be heading off to India to meet James soon(hopefully. we/she spent a fair amount of time and stress trying to sort out her visa and find her passport which had gone MIA thanks to "forgetful" travel agents on the islands!)
so, i guess that's it...i'm sure there are tons of things i've forgotten to add...(like the story of me learning how to drive a manual moto...which is especially impressive for those of you who know that i neither drive, nor ride a bike) who knows, maybe i'll keep this up for a bit (i wouldn't count on it though ;) ), and pictures will be on their way soon :)

time to go taste some of that montreal spring sunshine
love to all

sun

Monday, March 20, 2006

time sure flies between these entries...
i just wrote a nice long paragraph about our latest adventures, except that bumming around on the beach doesn't really qualify as "adventure"...so upon re-reading it, i found myself bored to tears, and decided to start over again.
in short, the last couple weeks have been spent lazing about the Islands of Koh Pah Ngan and Koh Tao - Pah Ngan infamous for it's Full Moon Parties, and Koh Tao for diving. It's been a great mix of beach parties, afternoon hammock reading, wading around in the water (it's too shallow to swim), watching movies, playing games and enjoying spectacular sunsets.
Somewhere during one of my hammock sessions - or maybe it was floating around out on the water, the idea hit that i could extend my trip by a week, and trip on over to Koh Tao with folks instead of heading home to catch the tail end of winter. Kristi agreed that an extra week was a fabulous idea...and we made arangements so that i could stay on.
Unfortunately, after all that hard work ;) I managed to catch a little stomach bug that had me out for a few days, and down to eating broth, dry toast and plain rice...amazing. And now that I've finally recovered, a cold that seems to be heading around, took advantage of my weakened state and pounced (thanks for that one Glenna!). Oh well...can't say as there's much of a better place to be sick than an Island in Thailand (although it's been raining! jeez!)...But hopefully it means I'll be all healed up and in good shape to see everyone soon!
Very soon!
I can't believe how fast these couple months have passed, and as sad as I am to leave this neighbourhood...I'm pretty excited to come home to friends and family...and all the good stuff waiting :)


Until then,
Much love
sun

Wednesday, March 08, 2006

enough procrastinating, time to get down to business...

Cambodia was amazing, heartbreaking, and beautiful. I spent my last morning in Pnomh Penh at the Tuol Sleng museum, a former highschool that had been turned into a prison during the reign of the Khmer Rouge. I was glad to have gotten there right after it opened early in the morning, as i had the entire place to myself, and was able to take it all in bit by bit. I didn't understand a lot of what had happened before coming, and have done some reading about the genocide while travelling, but the pictures, artifacts, and being right there, really affected me. it is so important to remember.
i had hired a motorbike guy to take me to the museum, and then out to the killing fields, where there is a memorial set up on the site where the mass graves had been found. it was a fairly long and dusty ride out of town, but so much more fun zipping along on the back of a motorbike as opposed to a hot sweaty bus. it was on this little trip that i realised that for all intents and purposes moto drivers only use helmets to keep the dust out of their eyes...they have absolutely nothing to do with safety

i left Pnomh Penh that afternoon and headed down on the bus to meet Kris and James (who had left the previous afternoon) and other friends we'd met in Laos down on the beaches in Sihanoukville. We spent a couple days there, catching up, dancing on the beach and randomly ending up one night at a very bizarre Cambodian (not toursity) Karaoke disco (that's another story for another time) After a day of pouring rain (for being the dry season...we've managed to run into a fair amount of rain...global warming?)we caught the ferry to the border, and then mini-bus back to Bangkok.

we'd been having a lot of trouble figuring out how to get down to Malaysia to James uncles' house on Penang (flight tickets didn't go through, train was sold out...20 hour bus just didn't seem too appealing!)...so, the end result was James and Kris taking off the next day via bus, and me flying down a couple days later. They're travelling on to India after I head home, so I decided that my time was worth more than money (the flight was still very inexpensive) and decided to stick around Bangkok for a couple days before flying down to meet them.

I had a great time (mostly hanging out with the Ultimate Nate...to ease the minds of those of you who've warned me about wandering strange foreign cities alone ;))...took the river-taxi to chinatown, stumbled upon one of the pro-prime-minster rallies... (if you've been keeping up on your Thai news...there's been a lot of protest around corrupt activities that have come to light), fed some dirty ol' pigeons in the park (it was pretty fun, a little bit gross...i washed really well afterwards), hung out at a super-popular, super-little blues bar...overall it was a pretty packed couple of days, and i was happy i'd decided to stick around.

i was even MORE glad, when i finally got to Penang (Malaysia) and heard about what a horrible bus trip James and Kristi endured to get here...leaky air-conditioner, rain, rude passengers, border hassles...for almost 24 hours. I tried not to be too obviously pleased about my super smooth one and half hour flight.

so, now I'm in Penang, at James' Uncle's home on the hill, over looking the water, with the mountains in the background. pretty spectacular. Although it was initially a tough decision to replace Vietnam with Malaysia (it would have been too rushed to visit Vietnam this time around...next trip)...i'm certainly not complaining now, as these few days have provided rest to our travellers' bodies and wallets. James' cousin Michael had his 15th birthday, and it was nice to be a part of that family celebration, the Trifecta (us) provided drinks and dinner for our hosts. They're really great people, and we've been taking full advantage of all the free food, internet, and jacuzzi - that's right...jacuzzi :)

so, i think that finally catches us up. we'll be leaving here early Saturday morning...making our way back up into Thailand, and to the southern Islands of Koh Samui and Koh Pa Naan, hopefully meeting up with some folks we've met here and friends from back home, as a nice little treat before I get shipped off back home and the rest of my team heads to India.

Much love to you all!
sun

Tuesday, March 07, 2006

i know, i know... once again it has been a pathetically long time since i've written anything, and now i have loads of catching up to do :) BUT i managed to get more pictures up! that's exciting! :)
i don't mean to tease...but the sunshine is calling, and so i'll save stories for later. the whirlwind trip through Cambodia landed us back in Bangkok, where i hung out for a few days, and have now wandered south to Penang, Malaysia...just in case you're keeping track!



be back with more soon!
sun

Saturday, February 25, 2006


ok, officially Officially, there are no traffic rules in Cambodia...it is truly a free for all. We arrived in Pnomh Penh today, and wandering around near the central market is pretty much an extreme sport. There's nothing you can do aside from wait until there isn't any immediate traffic coming one direction, don't even look the other way, hold your breath, say a prayer, and move quickly, mmm...nimbly :) And as for death-defying forms of transportation, I used a rickshaw type taxi guy today...its different from a regular rickshaw in that you sit in front while the guy rides a bicycle behind you...leaving you feeling very vulnerable driving head on into insane traffic.


While we're on the topic of "death-defying" ... yesterday James and I visited the temples of Angkor. They were unbelievable, so beautiful and majestic, i can't describe the immensity of these ruins, and i'm sure the (loads of) pictures i took won't do them justice. We managed to climb the temple on the mountain for sunset the night before, and then again for sunrise yesterday. As for why a day of looking at temple ruins was death-defying?....whoever designed these things decided they would have STEEP and NARROW staircases, in the extreme. We clamboured around all day without too many problems, and left the biggest temple (Angkor Wat) until the end...going up to the highest point is a bit scary, but it isn't until you're up there, and realise that you have to figure out how to get down...that your knees start to give out a bit :) James and I joined in line with Japanese tourists and monks at the only stairway with anything resembling a railing...felt more like a thread in my sweaty palms, and manouevered our way down bit by bit. A wonderfully exhausting day. So great to be there and try to imagine what the whole kingdom of Angkor(size of New York city, with about 2 millon people i believe) must have been like in its original glorious state.

Ok, that's all for now...time to find food and get to bed for an early morning of visiting Genocide museums and Killing Fields (the fun part of the trip, i know ;) ). I'm actually really looking forward to it, and want to compare it with what I remember from being at the Holocaust Death Camps in Europe when i was little.
It'll be a big day.


Much love to everyone
sun