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New blog post: Visual Journal: Part 2 http://tinyurl.com/7ju4e6   Jan 06, 2009 02:01 pm

@ BangTheTable was wondering when you'd get on twitter...   Jan 05, 2009 07:01 pm

Crossing border into China seems to be 2hrs ahead of schedule, but the Chinese train is a lot nicer!   Jan 02, 2009 08:01 am

Rolling inexorably toward my 2nd border crossing on the way from Hanoi to Beijing by train.   Jan 02, 2009 03:01 am

Taking a rickshaw through Hanoi to Ho Chi Minh's mausoleum.   Jan 01, 2009 07:01 pm

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Community Climate Action

I'm working on building, supporting and training Climate Action Groups in Australia. I also engage in direct action, political lobbying, policy formulation and education about climate change and ways to take action.

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Part of the 'Turn the Tide' visual petition - find out more on ClimateMovement.org.au A protester is cut out of her lock-on device with a circular saw on a coal train. Over 50 people were arrested in a protest against the expansion of the coal industry in the era of climate change. I took the photo and designed this poster for Walk Against Warming Sydney 2008.
Part of the 'Turn the Tide' visual petition - find out more on ClimateMovement.org.au

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Visual Journal: Part 2

Jan 6, 2009 02:16 pm

Friends, much has happened since I last left you with the rice paddies out the window of the Ho Chi Minh to Hanoi train. The condensed version is that I took a trip out to Ha Long Bay, stayed on Cat Ba Island, met some great fellow travellers, wandered the streets of Hanoi then took another train (53 hours again) to Beijing where I’ve now ensconced myself in a very cute little traditional courtyard guest house. Yesterday I went up to the Great Wall of China and one of the Ming Dynasty tombs and tomorrow I leave early in the morning for Mongolia - this time a 30 hour train. However, read on for the gory & pretty details of each adventure. The 34hr train ride to Hanoi concluded in the dark at 5am. At this point I was very glad to have a hotel to go to, where I found the staff asleep on mattresses in the lobby and a Norwegian & American guy discussing the price of taxis. Surreal. I had to take a rickshaw ride before leaving Vietnam, so later that day I settled down for a 5 minute ride to the lake in the centre of the city, crossing my fingers that we weren’t hit by 3 motorbikes at once… Hanoi Road Rules Right by the lake was a Buddhist shrine overhung by a beautiful old tree. Beneath it sat a man who unerringly swung a little clicking toy. Across the walkway from him was a blind man busking with a flute. Like any self-respecting lake in the evening, it had entwined lovers looking out from beneath weeping willows (or jacaranda’s, if that’s all you can spare) and a religious monument on a miniature island in the middle. Lakeside Shrine, Hanoi Continuing on down the street I passed this completely random set of (I think) installation art pieces - either that or someone picked a really bad spot to start building their house. Odd spot for a room? Anyway, that night, it turned out to be a momentous occasion in Hanoi and indeed all of Vietnam - they won the South-East Asian soccer cup for the first time in 10 years in a clincher match against Thailand (scoring in the 93rd minute or some such thing). Consequently, patriotism was (even more) rife with flags waving everywhere & there was partying until the wee hours in the streets. Vietnam wins the soccer! As dusk fell I continued wandering the streets and was rewarded with a bonsai competition (seriously, is it just me?). Pretty amazing, though I don’t go in for bonsai much myself - not sure why people have to bend all other living things to their will. Bonsai tree competition Next morning I headed out to Ha Long Bay - the mecca of Vietnamese tourism, I guess. Along the road we passed a coal-fired power station around which everything looked fairly conclusively dead and toxic with all the people in a five kilometre radius wearing face masks. There were quite a few industrial zones on the highway between Hanoi & Ha Long City and all looked more than worrying in terms of health & environmental impact. I was also baffled by the houses - in a country with so little wealth to spread around it’s 85 million people, why are they so ornate? They’re a funny shape too, but I learnt that’s (apparently) because there’s a special street frontage tax, so they build everything upward and back, even in the countryside. "Vietnamese" Architecture Well, I was on a tour in Ha Long (I would have preferred to go it alone, but the people at the hotel were extremely persuasive - it took me about 10 minutes just to actually ascertain that there was a public bus & how much it cost) so inevitably I was lumped with a whole bunch of other foreign tourists. Ha Long Bay Junk No matter how annoying the other tourists are, there’s no ignoring the incredible limestone formations of Ha Long Bay as you jostle (really, look at this) among the other “Junk” in the water. Ha Long Bay Predictably, the first stop was a couple of caves. Stunning geologically, but the coloured lights and the filing along in lines of tourists definitely dampened the experience. Not that it’s a competition, but Wombeyan tops it for me. My favourite spot in the cave we visited was a natural spring (though they’d installed a pumped water fountain, sigh) surrounded by little mounds that faintly resembled faeries - the locals had called it Faerie Spring. No photo with the one, sorry. Neon Cave, Ha Long Bay Passing by a stranded dog and some water-dwellers drying their undies, we eventually drifted off into a fantastic (drum roll for recurring theme…) sunset. Another two shots here and here. And not forgetting it was a patriotic sunset too. The guy on the right in the background of this shot was a really loud, obnoxious American (there’s always one right), a self-proclaimed sex tourist. Next morning was bright & early with kayaking, though we’d learnt by this stage that Vietnamese time was always about half an hour behind. They actually left me behind when we went kayaking - the guide said to be back by 8am but upon dutifully arriving at 7:55 where we’d picked up the kayaks, my boat had totally disappeared! At first I thought I’d come back one bay along, but it turned out they had indeed abandoned me. No matter, the boat returned somehow about 10 minutes later, but though none of the crew said anything it was blatantly only to pick me up. It was really peaceful on the water at that time and gave me the opportunity to get up close to a cave and into little coves. The boat took us back to Cat Ba Island - the largest of the Ha Long Bay archipelago - where there’s a small town with hotels, a fishing port, a few tiny villages and some decent tracts of rainforest. I’d opted to insert a day without plans into my tour package so that I didn’t feel quite so much like I was being shunted around non-stop, so I was here for two nights. The budget version of the Ha Long Bay tour included luxuriant transport - see here - and no-one ever knew what was happening next. I did meet some great people on the tour - in particular, a motley crew made up of three lawyers and a superannuation guy (seriously). The lawyers (Harshan from Sydney, John from Ireland & Jeanne from France) were doing internships with the UN in Cambodia, working in the international court on the yet-to-be-had trials of the Khmer Rough leaders. Ned (actually, Eamon), another Irish, was a friend of the first travelling through Asia. They were all really lovely and fun people. In the back is also Johanes from Switzerland, who was great too. Not that it was their job, but they really made up for the obnoxious American who otherwise might have been really depressing. New Year’s Eve was ok. I had lunch and dinner at this beautiful restaurant, the Green Mango, which Harshan & John had tracked down - definitely the best joint on the island. Really, the dinner was exqusite (no photos though). I must have looked pretty desparate sitting there by myself having the special New Year’s Eve banquet - first a middle-aged tour group then a couple of American girls invited me to join them afterward for revelry. The tour group were singing lame karaoke songs (ok, so the point of karaoke is lame, but this was 100% Abba). Moving on to the bar where the American girls were I think pretty much every tourist on the island ended up there at midnight, which was a bit of a laugh. When a girl from Perth started trying to pick me up, it was time to leave. I did squeeze in a discussion about organic certification standards sometime after midnight though, which was pretty hilarious. Just to cap the night off, there were some foul men hanging around inside the only other place open at 1am - a “hairdresser” and massage “plus anything” shop (red lights in every window) - just a few doors down from my hotel. The sun was out the next day for the last part of my tour and the ride back to the mainland. We stopped at a floating village and took an overloaded wooden dingy through a short tunnel cave to emerge in a lake created by an island that completely surrounded it, in a doughnut shape. On the way back to the main boat, I met the youngest spruiker I’d seen yet with a floating fruit stall. Not to be outdone by the nursery-bikes back on the mainland. Or the bicycles, for that matter, where, depending on your stock, balancing must be quite a challenge. On my last day in Hanoi I visited the Ho Chi Minh museum, masoleum and presidential palace, before my 6:30pm train. The border crossing with China was in the middle of the night, but no probs there and in fact the Chinese train we switched to was much nicer and cleaner than the Vietnamese one. The first stop was Nanning where we had to get off the train for a couple of hours while they addeed another ten carriages. I got out and had a quick look around the city in the immediate vacinity of the train station. The strongest feeling I had was of unpreparedness. Sure, I was only in China for 4 days, but no-one - really, no-one - spoke English and on my first wander I didn’t find one sign which even had roman characters on it. Anyway, there was a Mongolian in my cabin who I later had a great chat to who bought me some breakfast at the cafe across the road - shallot stuffed pancakes. His english was broken, but understandable - he had completed high school in Japan. He ended up offering for me to stay in his apartment in Ulaanbataar and to drive me out into the wilds of Mongolia beyond the capital, so we’ll see where that offer ends up in the next few days. In Nanning, I did manage to sniff out some organic banana chips though. Coming in to Beijing, it was -3°C, so I got my first taste of proper cold. I took a taxi to the traditional old courtyard guest house I’d randomly decided on from wiki travel. It’s really lovely (and cheap compared to what I hear other tourists are paying). Well, that’ll have to do for now or I’ll miss my train to Mongolia. You’ll have to wait till next time to find out about the Great Wall, Beijing subway and other adventures.

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  • Climate Campaigner
  • Sydney, Australia
  • Posted: Jun 18, 2008
  • Last Updated: Jan 6, 2009
  • Cause Areas: Alternative, Energy, Environment, Fossil, Global Warming, Solar, Wind
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  • http://www.nccnsw.org.au
  • The Nature Conservation Council works to conserve nature and protect the water we drink, the air we breathe and the places we love. We are a non-profit, non-government organisation representing 120 community environment groups across NSW.

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