19 October 2013

Vietnam, Part 4: High Water.


I slept on and off on the train until about 5am. I turned around on my bunk so that I could watch out the window as the sun came up. It was raining. I didn't think much about the rain at the time, but perhaps I should have . . . I was busy playing like I was in an old movie. (Only in my head I was not unshowered and wearing a sports bra, I was in a crisp beautiful suit lined with fur and a pillbox hat.)


The two lovely ladies sleeping on the top bunks were from Australia and the lovely gentlemen on the bottom bunk next to me was from Hanoi. So every time the train made an announcement--which wasn't very often--the lovely gentlemen would tell us what was going on.


The rain was getting heavier outside. And lightening was happening. A lot of lightening. Everything was glowing. And right around oh-maybe-7am, the train lurched forward and then came to a screeching halt. (When I say lurched forward, I mean that I almost flew off my bunk and may have said "Jesus" rather loudly.) I thought for sure with the amount of force that we came to a stop that we hit a water buffalo or something. But no, I would soon realize that's just how this train came to stops and it was completely normal.


Since we were stopped, I decided to stretch my legs a bit and walk around. I walked through 10 cars and wound up at the dining car. It was filled with men, smoking. I was the only female apart from the waitress. At that point, I did feel like I was in a movie. Everything became super quiet when I walked in and my voice cracked a bit when I asked for a coffee. After my order was placed, everything resumed to normal. I sat next to a man eating two eggs, spooning them right out of their shell. I kept thinking that he would be the perfect person to be sitting next to if a train robbery were to happen right now.


When I got back to my cabin, the train still hadn't started back up. So I decided it was time to watch a few episodes of Offspring. (Thankful to have brought my computer, unlike that time in Thailand.)


Three hours later and we still had no idea what was going on. But I noticed people were getting off the train and walking around, so I decided to do the same. Beautiful, happy kids on bikes everywhere. Following me around saying, "hello, hello, hello". The town was remote, but really wonderful visually. I stumbled onto a church and took a quick picture of it before I heard the whistle. It was time to go again! Hooray!




The train continued for another hour or so and stopped again. More lurching. This time I got off and purchased a bag of hard candies. I'm not sure why I bought them, but it seemed like the purchase to make at the time. I'm pretty sure it was the only thing I could make out at the stand where I bought them, so I knew what I would be eating.


This time the train was stopped for a good 5 hours. Hmm. Perhaps I won't be getting to Hue at 3pm this afternoon, considering it is already noon. But my phone doesn't work outside of Singapore, and I'm too stubborn to buy a SIM card. Riiiiiigggghhtt. Hmmm. It was at this point that our first train announcement was made: water is high. Water is high? What does that mean? I don't see any water. I only see farms and trees. What does that mean?



A lady came down the aisle selling things from a cart. I narrowed down what I could recognize and ended up buying four beers from her. I would ration them throughout the rest of the train ride, I thought.( Except they didn't really last that long.)

We started off again. Lurch. Stop. This time the train was stopped for at least 8 hours. Only we were surrounded completely by trees. And all signs of toilet paper were gone. 


I slept for a little while, wrote two blog entries document-style, and thought about my graduate school work. I also visualized about trains. There were 4 people in my cabin, and we were pretty tight. But up a few cars, there were 6 beds in a cabin. In the same space allotted for us. They were super-tight. My thoughts were turning rather unpleasant because there was a growing "cooked chicken" smell that kept getting stronger and stronger. And there was no ventilation. Every time we opened our hallway window, a train guy would come by and close it. Train robberies were one thing, but now my thoughts were of being trapped on a train. And snakes on a train. And what happens if I never get off of this train? 


Another announcement: high water

Maybe we should just turn around? Let's all just go back to Hanoi and call it a day, what do you think?

Nope. Right as it turned dark, we started up again. Now I couldn't see out the window, so I didn't know what was happening. But it was dark, and still raining. We stopped again. Just before midnight. OMG.


We were now about 9 hours past our arrival time and nowhere near our destination. And none of us knew what was going on aside from "high water".

We started off again around 3 or 4am. Still feeling quite disgusting, physically and internally, I started popping my hard candies. My purchase from a few stops back would be my sustenance. At one point, someone came down the hallway and offered us purple soup. But none of us ate it. It was a beautiful color, though. Lavender, really.


As the sun began to rise, it became clear to all of us what was going on. High water meant just that. But perhaps instead of high water, they should have said what seemed more appropriate: massive flooding. Due to a typhoon (which apparently only happens twice a season), two rivers had merged and taken over the entire area. I began to shoot images from the train. 







Me being trapped on a train felt like nothing compared to seeing people scooping out water from their houses. Piles of wet clothes on porches. People sitting on rooftops. Whole power sources completely under water. Apparently this happens frequently enough that the community is used to it, but still . . . 




We only stopped one more time before reaching our first official train stop. Some people got off, some people got on. 


It was only a quick 3 hours before we would reach our final destination, so I had packed everything up in heated anticipation.


We finally reached Hue at noon on Thursday, a mere 37 hours after we departed Hanoi. Eeeegads and oh gawd. I expected a parade at our arrival, but no one seemed interested. Actually the taxi drivers were interested, but no one else seemed to care. I hopped in a cab and was on my way: howdy, Hue! More soon.



Check out the rest of my trip: here, here, and here . . . Adventure-town!

Vietnam, Part 3: Boat to Bike to Train . . .



The next morning I was up early and packing. I wanted to make sure that I was able to catch the sunrise one last time. (Please bare with me geeking out over this entire experience . . . I remember taking the same pictures over and over and over again of the water in Boracay. And now I'm doing the same thing here with the limestone peaks: the water and the peaks change color based on the sun. I can't miss a moment!)


And I was super conscious of being properly hydrated with a full belly before I started back to biking. Properly hydrated: panicking because I had wine with dinner. Water, water, water!


Before breakfast, we took the small boat out to a cove that housed monkeys. While we saw a bunch of trees shaking from the monkeys jumping around--and we most definitely could hear them--we didn't see any. Not like in Singapore, where they just walk right up to you.


After breakfast, before we headed back to shore, I went to pay my drink bill and found out that my cards had been shut down on the Singapore end of things. The worst part about this? I couldn't even get a signal from the ship to call out! Ahhh to have no access to money and out to sea! Lesson learned. From here on out it's cash, cash, cash, cash, cash. 

Because we were going to be continuing our bike trip for the full day, out in the Vietnam countryside, I had no way of handling the monetary issue until I was back at the hotel in Hanoi. So I put it in the back of my mind and enjoyed our day of riding ahead.



After several botched attempts at finding trails to ride (due to construction), we found a beautiful little village to spend the day in. It was like being in Tuscany or France. Absolutely picturesque. So, so lovely! It barely does me justice to describe this town in words, and I'm not sure if even the pictures can really visually describe what we saw . . . But stunning seems to be the only word that comes to mind. The best part? It was a town rooted in clay businesses. So--as you can expect--I was in heaven.




















When we finished our ride, we were completely exhausted. Tired of riding, talking, everything. It was an amazing three days and it was time to say our goodbyes. We piled back into the van and drove back into Hanoi.


We dropped off Jeff first and then me. I had to catch a train down to Hue at 11pm. But I was still penniless. To make a long story short, my guide Tony stayed with me until my finances were settled. We had dinner together. He took me to his travel agent's office to get the train tickets and another person's hotel to finally get some cash.



But it was a super-sticky situation. At one point, one of the people we met suggested that the travel agent take my iPhone in exchange for the train tickets since I was holding them and hadn't paid for them yet (this was before I took out the cash). All while he was calling me aunty--which sent me over the edge. Seriously shady. I told him he was a cheat and that I didn't like him at all. He just smiled. Then I turned to Tony and started in on him, and asked if was he trying to get me killed. It was weird. The whole experience felt like I was in an asian gangster film. There I was--this ang mo chick--being drug all over town with all of my luggage, unshowered and exhausted, deep into Vietnamese-only speaking areas trying to figure out what was going on . . . Like I said before: if you aren't living on the edge of death in Asia, you are doing something wrong.


Thankfully everything turned out okay. Tony got me to the train station. We hugged. I got on the train and found my bunk, turned around and Tony was there again to make sure I had gotten on the right train car and found the right bunk. Yes, yes, yes. Everything is fine. It's 1030pm, I'm dirty and about to sit in my own filth for the next 12 hours. All's good. He left, I met the three people I was sharing my cabin with, and then we all fell asleep. Peacefully rockin' away as the train pulled out of the station in Hanoi. More soon . . . 

Wanna read Vietnam, parts 1 and 2? Check them out here and here. Enjoy!