Sikhs go to the Golden Temple in Amritsar, India. Muslims go to Mecca. If there was a similar destination you had to pick for those that make sport climbing their way of life, you would choose Karbi, Thailand. It only takes a first glimpse at the overhanging limestone stalactites jetting out of the clear aqua blue waters of the Andaman Sea to realize, this is truly a climbers paradise. Four straight days of rain didn’t break our spirits and when the sun finally peeked its head out we joined the rest of the climbing community in celebrating its arrival. The fear of not climbing for five years quickly subsided and the in the moment, meditative state while moving along these perfect rock faces was true wonderful. For some they may be so lucky to actually start here- like Edward and Elise, our Russian Couchsurfing host, who we got to take out for their first time ever climbing- what naturals. Or the real naturals, the monkeys who jump on tree limbs behind you or climb on the rocks right beside you in order to make fun that you need a rope, shoes, and harness. A climbers paradise indeed!
Thursday, September 29, 2011
Climbers' Mecca
Sikhs go to the Golden Temple in Amritsar, India. Muslims go to Mecca. If there was a similar destination you had to pick for those that make sport climbing their way of life, you would choose Karbi, Thailand. It only takes a first glimpse at the overhanging limestone stalactites jetting out of the clear aqua blue waters of the Andaman Sea to realize, this is truly a climbers paradise. Four straight days of rain didn’t break our spirits and when the sun finally peeked its head out we joined the rest of the climbing community in celebrating its arrival. The fear of not climbing for five years quickly subsided and the in the moment, meditative state while moving along these perfect rock faces was true wonderful. For some they may be so lucky to actually start here- like Edward and Elise, our Russian Couchsurfing host, who we got to take out for their first time ever climbing- what naturals. Or the real naturals, the monkeys who jump on tree limbs behind you or climb on the rocks right beside you in order to make fun that you need a rope, shoes, and harness. A climbers paradise indeed!
Saturday, September 17, 2011
Playing In The Mud
Phangan Earthworks is a beautiful and inspiring place on Koh Phangan. We were able to visit Hubert who graciously gave us a tour of the houses and buildings they have created while discussing the benefits of using alternative building methods such as earthbags (bags of packed dirt) and bamboo. Part of our focus in Asia is learning about these alternative agricultural and building methods, and we are excited we now have even more ideas and resources to build on. Check out their website www.phanganearthworks.com and let the photos speak for themselves. Now we just need to start playing in the mud, too, to create our own beautiful home!
Wednesday, September 14, 2011
Bowling For Coconuts
I think we would do very well on Survivor- it seems we have been preparing for it for years as we always look forward to getting the chance to forage for our own food. Donny has been perfecting his coconut opening skills with only his pocket leatherman and so when we found ourselves on a beautiful secluded beach of Ko Phangan with towering coconut palms everywhere we were in foraging heaven. I started on the beach, into a grove and up some kid of path, rather gutted by erosion to look for dried ones while Donny tested his monkey skills shimming up the beachside palms for the green coconuts. Finally I came upon four good ones- huge, unbroken and with the sweet sound of water sloshing inside when shaken. But I had a long and steep descent back down to the beach and was thinking there was no way I could hold all four when a quote from The Big Lebowski popped into my head; “screw it dude, lets go bowling.” Never really knew where they’d land as they bounced their way down the bush covered lanes (sadly, there was nothing to block gutter balls for me and it would sometimes end up in the tall grasses along the side, or deep in a ravine and I’d have to climb in after it and retrieve it with my feet. At one point I think I had picked up a few extra but maybe lost the originals along the way because in the end back by the water I still ended up with four.
Donny in the meanwhile had been on the beach preparing a fire to cook up the zucchini we had bought at the market. When there is no kitchen, you make your own! The Coconuts turned out perfect and meaty and when perched ourselves up on our picnic rock and Donny cracked them open we feasted on its sweet deliciousness while the waves splashed up around us. Our teeth and jaws are tired from the workout of the hard flesh, but it was so worth it! We still may not have all the survival skills of Laos, but we’re getting there.
Monday, September 12, 2011
Good To Be Back Under Water!
We got to go diving! Been in SE Asia for so long and almost all of
it far away from the coast- it is good to see the bright blue waters of
the Gulf of Thailand and the Andaman Sea! We dove Chumphon Pinnacle off
of Ko Tao where a whale shark had been seen two days before, four days
before and six days before. Unfortunately on the eighth day it rested
leaving one more thing on our list before we die. Still it was
wonderful to get back underwater and there were plenty of cool things to
see. The brilliant hues of the giant clams are now up there with
nudibranchs on my favorite animals to stare at and wonder at the amazing
diversity and beauty of life.
Just as exciting as the diving was the snorkeling, especially when it was black-tip reef sharks swimming around us in Sharks Bay, a place that lived up to its name (though would have been more accurately named “Sea Cucumber Bay”) Now we need to go buy some lotto tickets in the hopes of winning to get to do some more diving.
Just as exciting as the diving was the snorkeling, especially when it was black-tip reef sharks swimming around us in Sharks Bay, a place that lived up to its name (though would have been more accurately named “Sea Cucumber Bay”) Now we need to go buy some lotto tickets in the hopes of winning to get to do some more diving.
Friday, September 9, 2011
Running Down the Street Dragging a Wedding Dress Behind Me
Today we were supposed to have a relaxing day where we headed to the tailors, picked up Brooke’s finished wedding dress and my suit, walked to our friend, Ginger’s to put the clothes in a box that she was going to send for us, and then meet up with our old friends Kate and Maryellen (who we randomly ran into on a crowded street in Bangkok and knew from a hostel in Guatemala two years ago. Small world after all) to hang out before catching our 6:00pm bus to Southern Thailand. The heading to the tailors was about the only thing that went as planned. When we arrived the wedding dress was far from the perfect state we were hoping for which made seem very small the fact that the last little tweak on the shirt they were doing for me turned in to a new shirt from scratch. Start the time ticking in the back of my head. Try the dress on, adjust, painfully tear pieces apart, sow, try on, adjust, and repeat! To make a stressful story short, in the end I decided to accept my shirt without looking at it (too afraid of more adjustments) and Brooke, almost happy with her dress, settled for discounts and some extra boning (no idea) that I hope someone in the states will know where to stick it. I left early for Ginger’s sprinting down the crowded streets of Bangkok, backpack on, dragging my new suit behind me. After wrong busses, traffic, and bad choices of when to get off (which meant more sprinting), I finally reached Ginger’s only realizing then the daunting task I had of fitting every strange and abnormally sized object we could find in Thailand into a nicely rectangular, possibly a little too small, box (a rice steamer basket? Really?). Brooke arrived at quarter to five with even a crazier tale of travel and after some tape, a little more tape, a little extra cardboard here and there, a little more tape and done! 5:00pm. Oh crap!...We forgot to put in the boning! After a few cuts and tears and a lot more tape, it was 5:15 and our real adventure was about to begin! - Getting back to Khao Son Rd in Bangkok rush hour traffic before our 6:00pm bus left.
At 5:30 we were still on the street being turned down left and right from taxies that were saying it was impossible or they didn’t want to go that far. At 5:40 we were begging a moto driver to take us and finally for 100B a piece (expensive $3.00) he and his buddy agreed. The next 15 minutes were a blur of passing stopped cars (stuck in traffic), dodging oncoming traffic (I don’t think this is our lane!), popping the moto over curbs and medians, and evading pedestrians as we took a shortcut through a park. At 5 min to 6:00pm I pried open my ghost white knuckles and handed each driver a sweat drenched 100B note. I really hope our moms do not read this one! We were safely at our bus stop. Kate and Maryellen were also there prepared to stall the bus with whatever tactics were necessary until we arrived. They are wonderful people and I am glad that they are the last sights we saw we finally escaped the big city!
Wednesday, September 7, 2011
A Simple Life
One of the more unique places we have come across in all of our travels (and that’s really saying something, we’ve been around a lot!) is the Asoke communities in Thailand. They are Buddhist communities where we were lucky enough to spend a week and a half, part at Santi Asoke and part at Sisa Asoke. We only wish we had more time at each and to be able to visit the rest since each sounded so wonderful and different it its own way. They are so pure in their thoughts and practice- hard work and simple living, and the practice what they preach. The food here is vegetarian, both out of respect for all sentient beings and to tread more lightly on the Earth, and they grow almost all of it themselves. They pride themselves on hard, self-less work, and it is in their work that they do their meditation and grow as a community, by working together. No words can describe the wonderful hospitality they showed to the two of us during our time there- we feel we have made life-long friends in some of the people that helped us along our path for knowledge and understanding. We only wish we could thank them more adequately, but they certainly do not do it for the thanks- when we left it was with hugs and the open invitation to return, plus a bundle of food for our journey- they would not even take a donation from us if we tried. True generosity of giving without the hope of anything in return, just to be good human beings and maybe get some good karma in return.
To see our album on life at the Asokes, go to picasaweb.google.com/GROWinitiative/AsokeLife
Down on the farm
Daruma Farm might only be 2 acres, but they are 2 beautifully maintained and thought-out acres that have inspired us as we move along our path of sustainable agriculture. While we only got to spend a week there we had a wonderful time thanks to the hospitality of all- Neil, Troy, Nang, Choat and Am! We shared all of our meals together and got to try many new Thai dishes like morning glories. Am taught us how to make them and now they are our new favorite, and so easy! While work on the farm is not all glamor (like the rock hauling) we did get to get our hands dirty initiating a new composting system, watering, mulching, harvesting food, and helping with the building plans. We learned from their experiences and shared our own and filled the nights with our nose in their great library or with great conversations with Troy and Neil. We wish you guys the best!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)