Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Chaing Saen to Kunming


Ok I know that you know I am already in Xi'an, but I will tell you about my trip getting here. I left the hotel in Chaing Saen at 4:00 a.m. to catch the tuk-tuk that I had previously arranged. He showed up on time thankfully. Otherwise I would have had to walk a few miles in a Southeast Asian monsoon. I met a french guy the night before at the hotel that was taking the same boat up the Mekong river to China. Since we were the only white guys we developed that superficial bond that happens so often while traveling. The trip up the river was amazing. We went past villages that were 100 miles from the nearest major road. These people really lived off the land and the river is an integral part of their existence. I tried to take a few pictures, but generally they came out blurred due to the boat shifting and rolling on the water.



The mountains rising straight from the river was a magnificent sight to behold. The Mekong starts in the foothills of the Himalayan mountains. The river carries a lot of silt, so it looks very dirty. When the river breaches the banks during floods it deposits rich soil onto the flood plain which is how many of the people living on the river make their living. The picture below was taken near the official golden triangle area. This specific picture was great because the mountains are completely covered in clouds. This was taken right after dawn. The area where this picture was taken is known for the massive amounts of opium grown. Beautiful, but also a very dangerous area to be wandering too far off the beaten path.







The boat were taking up the river is a "speedboat". The trip took about 12 hours to make it up the river. The original boat according to one of the passengers used to take 3 days to get up the Mekong river. So I was very thankful for the "speedboat". Here is a video taken from the back of the boat.

During the trip we met a bunch of Malaysian tourists. They appeared to be rather financially well off. They were very chatty and were really trying to make a friendship with me. One man began telling about how when I came to visit him in Kuala Lumpur he was going to take me all around and introduce me to people he had been doing business with before he retired so that I can get ahead. I went ahead and gave him my email address. His son had died 10 years before and he seemed excited to be able to take someone young under his wing. When we finally arrived at the Chinese border, the guards paid particularly close attention to myself and the french man. They spent a half hour in the sweltering heat going through my baggage. Most of the Malaysian tourists were waved through or quickly searched. I am not exactly sure what they were looking for, but we were eventually let through. The boat was supposed to take us all the way to Jinghong. Yet we stopped in the border town on Qinling because it was getting too dark to make the trip the rest of the way up the river. They decided that a bus would pick us up in the morning and take us to Jinghong. This didn't work for me because I had a flight at 10 p.m. on Saturday in Kunming and the bus ride from Jinghong to Kunming takes 10 hours. Luckily the Malaysians were with a tour company who called Jinghong and ordered a bus to come and pick them up and drop them off in Jinghong. My new friend understanding my situation argued with the tour director for 10 minutes until he agreed to let me on the bus to Jinghong. A few of the other ladies who were also on the trip, whom I had conversations with on the boat also came into the conversation and argued in my favor. They basically said that they would write negative reviews and never use this tour service again if they were unwilling to help me out. Thank god for my new aristocratic Malaysian friends. On the way to Jinghong we were on the shadiest roads i have ever been on in my life. I swear I saw 75 Mudslides on the road between Qinling and Jinghong. Some were just little washouts. Others caused the bus to literally drive at a 45 degree angle up and over the uncleared debris. I kept looking at the mountain waiting for the slide that was going to take out the bus.
It was very dark when this video was taken, but it was one of the bigger slides we came across. I am just glad I made it through alive. When we finally made it to Jinghong, we missed the late bus going to Kunming by 10 minutes. So I got a disgusting room near the bus station so that I could catch the early bus in the morning. when the hotel clerk showed me my room there was a cockroach about the size of a golf ball on the bed. When I pointed it out to the clerk he proceeded to whack it with his fist. Killing it dead on the pillow that I was supposed to use that night. I saw no less than 5 cockroaches while in this upscale hotel, but it was only $8 US a night so it is hard to complain too much. The next morning I boarded the bus for a drive through the Yunan province.
I was hoping to get my Chinese visa sooner so that I could spend more time in the province. It was very beautiful with very large mountains and beautiful terraced gardens. I arrived in Kunming at 6 p.m. with my French friend who was going to be a student there for the next year. He offered to let me keep my bags at his place until I had to leave for the airport at 9. When we got there I checked my email and the Ctrip company had cancelled my flight. they claimed that they had tried to contact a day earlier because I had entered the wrong bank on the online registration form. I panicked and ran downstairs to call their english hotline to straighten out the problem. The person on the phone told me that the ticket was cancelled because I had used an international credit card for a domestic flight. Even though my credit card had been charged and I had received flight confirmation and a flight issuance email letting me know I was good to go. They claimed that they had refunded my credit card and told me that I would need to buy a new ticket and that I had to pay cash and it would be about $30 US extra because it was last minute. I was tired from traveling and didn't have the energy to argue, so I just agreed. The only problem was that the refund hadn't posted to my account left and I was short about half the flight cost in cash in my bank account. In fact as of today, Wednesday the 200 US dollars I paid for the flight on my debit card still hasn't been refunded to my account yet. While I was talking on the phone at a newspaper stand on the street a little boy maybe 8 years old ran up shyly and said "hello" and then ran back to his mothers shop across the sidewalk. About a minute later he ran back over again and said "good morning" and while he was still looking at us began to shyly run back to his mothers shop. This time a motorbike was flying down the sidewalk and nailed the kid who wasn't looking where he was going. I dropped the phone and ran over. The kid was crying and will probably have a major bruise, but I don't think anything was broken. During this skirmish, I set down my passport on the newspaper stands counter. I completely forgot I had left it because of the incident with the kid. I was scrambling around trying to find an open bank on a Saturday to convert some US money and Thai money into Chinese so that I could pay for my flight. Nothing was open, but it wouldn't have mattered anyway, because I didn't have enough. Luckily the french guy I was hanging with offered to loan me 100 US so that I could catch my flight. Which I graciously took and offered to leave my computer or iPod as collateral until I paid him back. He was a great guy and said no need, he had been with me a few days and knew I was an honest person. So this was about 1 hour before my flight was to depart when we finally worked all this out. I quickly took a cab to the airport and couldn't find anyone who spoke english or could help me find my ticket counter. Finally I found it. I had about 30 minutes before my flight was to leave when we began the ticket issuing process. with about 18 minutes to go I was issued my ticket and I headed to the security checkpoint. This is the first time I realized I didn't have my passport. I opened all my bags pulled everything out on the floor. I tried to give them a photocopy of my passport to let me on the plane. The security guard called another security guard over. This person radioed for another security guard and so on until there were about 10 people standing around shaking their heads at me.They took me out of the security line and walked me to the office. I didn't yell, I was polite while I was pleading for a reprieve. Finally in desperation I told them I wasn't a tourist, i was a teacher here to help the Chinese students learn about how the west does business. This peaked the head honchos interest. I pulled out my paperwork issued by the provincial government to show the big dog and he read over it, looked at me, and waived his had toward the gate. I quickly pulled my stuff together. I had 3 minutes before the plane was to depart. The flight staff was all standing at the door to the plane waiting for me and hollered down the hall when they saw me "Sawn Meller". I hurried onto the plane barely and caught my flight to Xi'an arriving at 1 A.M. Katie always says that somehow things work out for me, and after this leg of my journey, I am starting to think that maybe she is right. So I am here in Xi'an. I will update what has happened since arriving here in the next few days.

2 comments:

Stephen Darjeeling said...

Shawn, man are you on an adventure or what? Steve Graue here, I have been reading your posts. That is a cool picture of the reclining Buddha. And that trip up the Mekong? Wow. I hope the Chinese people are friendly. If you want to get on their good side, learn T'ai Chi with them. Let me know how it goes, ok? Best of luck man, what an adventure!!

Unknown said...

very cool.. shawn, loved reading your blog keep'em coming.. miss you too i guess ;P lesley