Wow what a night with new friends. Went to dinner with some new friends at one of their places with great food from all over the world and really great good spring rolls, chicken curry from Malaysia, a few other meats that I don't know. We talked about our up coming trip to a beach in vietnam. Then all poured into taxis to go to the Hard Rock Cafe Ho Chi Minh City.
We got to the Hard Rock and the band was playing and the crowd seem to be dead. The lead singer seemed to be doing everything he could to get them to start having fun even giving away shots from the bar. A few drinks on I started to feel good and noticed a bartender cut a box for a helmet and wore it for like two seconds. My bright idea and yet a few more drinks in and asked for the box and transformed into Boxman.
Haha what a great way to act a fool and nobody new who I was. A great amenity of disguise with Boxman. I rocked the box all night long it even became so big that I could get away with almost anything. I even ran up and gave the female singer a huge hug and it was so funny. Then I danced and rocked so hard that I almost passed out in the box that I had to sit out several song then right back to dancing like a fool and the crowd loves every minute of Boxman.
Sunday, June 21, 2015
Tuesday, June 16, 2015
Finding your prescriptions in HCMC
Today, ran out of my blood pressure medicine and thought it would be as easy as going to the corner pharmacy. Well not as easy as that but could have been worse.
What happened is that I went to the corner pharmacy where I had been getting my ibuprofen. For my ibuprofen I just ask for it by name and poof they give it to me and then I pay very inexpensive price of 5,000d. Well today I knew it would be a little harder since the drug was a combination drug of two things. So what I did is that I took the old sleeve with the English wording on it and showed that to her. She then tells me "no have" and then asking her where I could find was even worse. Even placing it in the Google translate was not working for this lady. So back to the apartment empty handed.
I started to look up the drug for similar names. Found a few and made sure I wrote them down to show. Then placing a looking for help on the expat-blog site. I then had a suggestion in a little while. Also consulting my building manager she gave me some more locations for pharmacies. Going to the one she said was higher price for the first time I knew would be okay but I would at least have a local packaging for the next time. Yes they had it in stock and just like I thought different box and all but I will be able to take this box next time to a few smaller places. Just to see if they have the drug. So yes I paid a bit more than at home but I got it at least. I am relieved that I found it. All is good then today.
What happened is that I went to the corner pharmacy where I had been getting my ibuprofen. For my ibuprofen I just ask for it by name and poof they give it to me and then I pay very inexpensive price of 5,000d. Well today I knew it would be a little harder since the drug was a combination drug of two things. So what I did is that I took the old sleeve with the English wording on it and showed that to her. She then tells me "no have" and then asking her where I could find was even worse. Even placing it in the Google translate was not working for this lady. So back to the apartment empty handed.
I started to look up the drug for similar names. Found a few and made sure I wrote them down to show. Then placing a looking for help on the expat-blog site. I then had a suggestion in a little while. Also consulting my building manager she gave me some more locations for pharmacies. Going to the one she said was higher price for the first time I knew would be okay but I would at least have a local packaging for the next time. Yes they had it in stock and just like I thought different box and all but I will be able to take this box next time to a few smaller places. Just to see if they have the drug. So yes I paid a bit more than at home but I got it at least. I am relieved that I found it. All is good then today.
Monday, June 15, 2015
Computer problems
Since I have gotten to HCMC, my old computer has been running slower and slower. I finally did maintenance on it thinking that would help nope no help. Then I cleared two thirds of the files off on to external drives with no improvement what so ever. So I bit the bullet and decided to get a new computer since my current one is slowly dying and it is really too heavy to travel with on motobike. For a few days I have looked and searched for a decent light weight computer that would last me about two years.
I even had to work out the kinks in just buying a computer. The language barrier still makes it difficult even more so with technical terms. After about four shops and a few recommendations from some wonderful locals that yes, just happen to be computer person. I was able to find a lighter weight and much faster computer than my old one. Had the new computer upgraded immediately with more RAMM. Waiting for them to install the RAMM the bottom falls from the sky and yes I was on motobike.
After two ripped ponchos and a stop at my little great dinner place Beautiful Saigon 2 hotel for dinner and to wait out the rain. I got home maybe three hours later and was exhausted. I still unpacked the computer and started downloading updates. Got my Lightroom and Photoshop loaded on to the computer.
Then all of a sudden the next morning the touch pad stopped working. So instead of rolling back the driver (which I did not think the computer did an update on the touchpad) I did a system restore. Stupid me did not take a restore point after the adobe installs. It set the computer back to the original state. Now I am battling the rain with low Wi-Fi signal and reinstalling all the updates with Lightroom and Photoshop again. So as you have seen I was trying to post and did not want to go back to my old system so I am writing this on my phone. Lol. Up to come is the wild and crazy night with some new friends from the Expat-blog people and Asian Karaoke (total new experience.) this will be as soon as the new computer is finished updating.
I even had to work out the kinks in just buying a computer. The language barrier still makes it difficult even more so with technical terms. After about four shops and a few recommendations from some wonderful locals that yes, just happen to be computer person. I was able to find a lighter weight and much faster computer than my old one. Had the new computer upgraded immediately with more RAMM. Waiting for them to install the RAMM the bottom falls from the sky and yes I was on motobike.
After two ripped ponchos and a stop at my little great dinner place Beautiful Saigon 2 hotel for dinner and to wait out the rain. I got home maybe three hours later and was exhausted. I still unpacked the computer and started downloading updates. Got my Lightroom and Photoshop loaded on to the computer.
Then all of a sudden the next morning the touch pad stopped working. So instead of rolling back the driver (which I did not think the computer did an update on the touchpad) I did a system restore. Stupid me did not take a restore point after the adobe installs. It set the computer back to the original state. Now I am battling the rain with low Wi-Fi signal and reinstalling all the updates with Lightroom and Photoshop again. So as you have seen I was trying to post and did not want to go back to my old system so I am writing this on my phone. Lol. Up to come is the wild and crazy night with some new friends from the Expat-blog people and Asian Karaoke (total new experience.) this will be as soon as the new computer is finished updating.
Wednesday, June 10, 2015
Computer Withdrawls!
Today, I have decided to work on my removable hard drives
that they are so disorganized that I can’t tell which drive holds what
photographs. Lightroom does a somewhat good job of this but I have been
shooting for so long that I have really never sat down and organized these
drives. When I get a new drive I just transfer somethings and leave some and
then continue to add till it is full and then buy a new drive. I will also
needing to get a smaller and lighter computer since this laptop is very bulky
and several years old. The laptop has serviced me very well thus far in my
travels around the states and on the cruise but it is almost 9 lbs and it is
very large compared to the size of the small touch screen convertible
tablet/laptop computers of today.
One thing I do hate is reloading all the software on a new
computer and priming the hard drives of new computers. The last computer was a
desk top computer and man I do miss that computer. I had a huge tv screen for a
monitor and a great graphics card, tons of RAMM and an awesome solid state hard
drive for the main drive and then two back up SATA drives. I sure do miss that
computer but times have changed and I must down grade for the new adventures
that are to become very soon.
The one thing I do like is that I have solar powered battery
chargers for the phone that can add power to recharge my cell phone to run my
gps and to communicate. I will be looking for a solar power battery pack that will
be able to run my new laptop/tablet this way when I am camping on the road I
will still be able to work without a wall outlet. Now the question will be can
I find it in Vietnam? Or can I find it somewhere else and have it shipped here.
Tuesday, June 9, 2015
Buying a mobile transportation for the big trip North!
I am on the path of looking for a ride to play mobile
Frogger. HAHA! Can’t you see a big guy on a small little motorbike? Yes, this
is actually going to happen. What is going to be need in buying a motorbike? Well
one I will need one with a 125cc engine that can carry a big guy and all my
photographic gear, camping gear, and travel gear on the back of as well as
travel up mountains. I started looking into doing my research for the specs
that I will need and what are the extras that well needed to be added to the
motorbike. I will be looking to at least add a back rack to the motorbike and
maybe some saddlebags. Not sure how much I can add to the weight of the bike as
of yet it does not look too good since I am a big guy to start.
I looked at a used motobike today and it was a Yamaha novious
110 cc engine. It ran well and the body was in good shape for the price. When I
drove the bike had some pick up and go but I am afraid that when I add another
25kg to 35kg to the backend in gear that the little 110 cc engine may be way
under powered for the trip in the mountains. I am looking into the 125 cc
engines that may be better suited for the trip with my current weight limits
and me being a big guy.
I still have a few irons in the fire for looking at another
few bikes tomorrow. I am glad see so many backpacker motobikes for sale in
HCMC. It seems to be either Hanoi or HCMC for the backpackers to sell their
bikes to the next person. Either you are going north to Hanoi or you are going
south to HCMC. There seems to be a few in the other cities throughout Vietnam
but the main ones are sold in these two cities.
The list for the trip right now seems endless and no end in
sight for the purchasing of all the equipment that I still need for the road
trip north. I am reading blogs and looking at maps and places to visit a long
the way and it seems to never end. There are some things that I don’t want to
plan to leave up to the wind and be a butterfly on the wind but a lot of it I
do want to try and plan. I would like to see if I can book a few photogigs for
trade to stay places to help out the locals bring in more tourists to their
place. This will be a slow process but once on the road I know that it will be
very rewarding. I am thinking of doing a small road trip to the west of HCMC
before the big trip north just so that side is covered too. This may be the
prebig trip.
Monday, June 8, 2015
Weekend shoot at the Ho Chi Minh City Botanical and Zoological Park
This past weekend was the first client shoot that I have
done since getting to Vietnam. I did this shoot free of charge since a friend
had asked me and I do not have a work visa. This was for pictures of a
beautiful little girl that will be turning one in a few weeks. Her parents and
a new friend of mine went to the local zoo to take pictures for her upcoming
party.
The day started out like any other day here in Vietnam, Hot
and very humid that the sweat is dripping off every part of my body. The drive
to the zoo was yet again playing Frogger in the main streets of Ho Chi Minh
City all the way there and with the wind in my hair it actually felt pretty
good till we parked the motobikes and then the heat came swamping back around
us almost instantly. Note to self is that 1.5 Liter of water is added to camera
bag no matter the weight of the bag.
The cost of entry to the botanical and zoological gardens
was only 50,000 dong. This is why I could see it being a very popular place for
the weekend and the place was super packed with people. The first impressions
were that the botanicals here were pretty neat with the topiaries that formed
many different types of animals. They were in almost perfect conditions very
small holes in the leaves that have just yet to be filled in. you could see
that the base of the branches where there so that just in a few weeks they
would be perfect. The grasses and local plants provided plenty of shade and
places to sit and have a picnic lunch which most of the people were doing since
it was almost noon.
We started taking pictures almost right away so that the
little girl would still be fresh and awake knowing that the heat would take a
toll on everyone. An outfit here and few pictures here and yes I think I became
more of a sight taking pictures of the little girl than I of the little girl. The
sight of a grown man laying on the ground with the camera almost on the ground
was more of a sight than the precious little girl he was taking pictures of. I
did notice about 6 or 7 people taking pictures of me taking pictures. Oh well
when they saw the great pictures that I got for the clients they may not have
been so wowed but floored at the result of changing the perspective of the camera
to get the awesome shot.
The Botanical gardens is some of the nicest flower beds I have
thus seen so far. The heat started to take a toll and we did not get to see the
whole park but the botanical side of the zoo and gardens is very nice with all
the different types of plants and flowers that were in bloom the gardens were
awesome and then to have the animals around were just icing on the cake. As far
as a city zoo and botanical gardens go the city does a great use for the space
that they have and try to bring some exotic animals to Saigon for all to see.
Sunday, June 7, 2015
Greece
Thus far I have only written about my living in Ho Chi Minh
City and nothing yet about traveling abroad. My time in Greece was very short only two days
and one night but they were very memorable. As the days went during this time
we blew in at dawn and blew out blew out by dusk but this city we stayed the
night. I had an okay tour in the morning and an okay but the same tour in the
afternoon but they were named differently. This made me mad that the second
tour was more costly and was the exact same thing as the first but the only
difference was that we were able to walk up the hill to the Parthenon. Yes the
tickets were almost twice as much but the entry fee to the Parthenon area was
only 12€. Up on the top of the hill of the Parthenon was a spectacular sight of
the city. Every direction North, South, East and West the city stretched for
what seems like miles and miles. They say that Mt. Olympia was 43 Km way and I
bet you on that day you could see that far and even further. This day I only
took a few panoramic photographs. The following morning I had yet another tour
that was named something different and was about the same price as the second
and as it turned out that it too was the same exact tour as the second but this
time I was with a friend so it made it a little better time spent. This time I
did a few more panoramic pictures of the Parthenon. One panoramic is below. The
picture is a composite of 12 photographs.
Greece in general was a great country to visit and the outlying
areas have been having troubles since the collapse of the local and countries
government. The streets inside the major cities had vandalism that was done to
the buildings such as spray paintings and even set fire to a few of the local
buildings. Outside the cities you saw less spray paint vandalism but the local
trash had not been picked up in over a year and half. They said that the
children and most of the families recycled what they could like paper and tilled
it back into the homemade composting that each house had been making to further
grow vegetables and olive trees. There would be bags of trash taken to one
general area that use to be the areas trash pickup and you would see plastic
bags of garbage. Other than the trash these people lived no differently than
normal country fokes from the states. They used what they had and made the best
of the situation that they were dealt. The comment that was made if someone could
figure out how to use the massive amounts of refuge and do the collecting the
local people would even chip in and pay for the pickup of the refuge. My hunches
believe that if the plastics could be broken down to smaller pieces then they
could be recycled into cloth threads or even reused for melting down to be
remolded into new plastics chairs or even plastic cups.
Thursday, June 4, 2015
Leap of Faith
As I write this Angels & Demons the movie is on the Stars Movie Channel, what I mean by this is not for the leap of faith of God, but simply the faith to cross the road. So then why did the Chicken cross the road? Well in the game of Frogger it was just to get to the other side. The “Leap of Faith” in Ho Chi Minh City is just to cross the street and hope to get to the other side. Anybody that has ever been to Ho Chi Minh City will know exactly what I mean by this term.
The Game of Frogger is a children’s video game in America where a simple frog has to cross the street and river before he is run over by a car, bike or bus or falling off a log. As the frog gets to the other side the game starts over again with just a busier street and more traffic on the street and the crossing of the river gets even harder with turtles that want to eat the frog. This game must have seen the future of HCMC for the designing of the game almost 20 years ago. As of today it is a Leap of Faith to just cross the street in HCMC. Simply that it is so busy with bikes, cars, buses and carts that just to cross to the other side one needs to pray for faith that he or she will make it. This was one of the most nerve racking things that I had to learn thus far while living in HCMC. When crossing the in HCMC you have to step out into the street and just have to keep moving all the while the traffic is just whizzing by you on either side. The cars and bikes will swerve around you as they approach you. If you try and run across they cannot swerve and miss you and your most likely to be hit by a bike or car. This is so not the way we cross in America. We look both ways make sure the way is clear and then cross. Here in HCMC there is so much traffic that you cross at a clear and steady pace and you will get to the other side.
I never knew that just crossing the street would be so nerve racking in my life as I cross the street in HCMC I take a small leap of faith and hope that I make it to the other side.
Tuesday, June 2, 2015
Making of Phở
After washing all the green veggies and placing the water to boil and adding beef broth, sugar, salt to the pot. Bring them to a boil and then slicing the eye of round beef (this time not thin enough) and rewashing the veggies again and adding the rice noodles to the bowl and slicing onions to the bowl. Bringing everything together in the boiling broth and adding the green veggies to the bowl then letting the beef slices cook in the broth. My first attempt at making Phở was not too bad I would have to say there is some room for improvement. My Phở did not look like the pictures that I see on the Internet but when does ever look like the pictures on Intagram? Lol I would have to say that the meal was filling and not bad on the nutritious scale either.
Curency Exchange?......
Was eating at one of my favorite places to eat the other day
for lunch and saw a traveler that looked to understand English looking at the
menu that the restaurant places outside the on the so called curb. This
gentleman was very nice and I invited him to sit with me at my table to talk to
him over lunch.
He had a story that I need to tell the people just as a preventive
story so that what happened to him does not happen to other nice people. This
gentleman just flew in that morning from another place which will be unknown in
the story but that is not important. What is important is that when he got to
Vietnam he had a bad day but a great outlook on life.
Not knowing the language and the customs once in a while in
traveling we meet a bad apple in the bunch. The gentleman had gotten a cab ride
from the airport to near the hotel where he was staying at which is a sister
hotel where I like to eat. During this cab ride the gentleman was taken
advantage of and even though he was taken for about 200 USD. He still had a
good outlook on the situation.
What had happen was
that he had a rather large bill more than the cab ride. He needed change and
the cab driver did not have the correct change so the cab driver asked for
another bill and the gentleman traded out the bills for what he thought was supposed
to be the correct change that he had thought. In reality the money that was
given by the cab driver was actually fake look alike bills that were just color
photocopies of real bills.
Not knowing what the currency looks like I can see this
happening to any new person that visits a new country whether it is Vietnam or
China, or even Brazil.
Chinatown, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
It seems that every town has one just like the main city
hall they have a Chinatown. My first impressions of Chinatown here in HCMC is just
like all other Chinatowns that I have visited. You can get almost anything and
everything here in Chinatown. That actually might be true here in HCMC. This
Chinatown may have everything you would want at a discounted price here in
HCMC.
The market area is actually quiet big and spacious covering several square
blocks. The main difference here in this Chinatown seems to be that there are
groups of stores jumbled together that sell the same thing for instance the
cloth stores are all together as well as the hardware stores. Most of the shops
here are specialized and carry one main thing. If your store sells fans that is
all that it carries every conceivable type of fan and nothing else.
One of the characteristics that you know you are in the Chinatown
area is that the signs of the shops are now not in two languages but three
Chinese, Vietnamese and English. The Chinese Red lanterns are another giveaway
that you have made it to the Chinatown area.
One of the places that I like to see in Chinatown is the
flower district. There is booth after booth of flower shops that are making all
kinds of arrangements from bouquets to funeral arrangements. You can walk down
the street and also feel the mist in the air to keep the area cool for the
flowers. This actually might be the reason why I like the area LOL it is about
10 to 15 degrees cooler than the heat of the sun.
Sunday, May 31, 2015
Burning Monk Thích Quảng Đức
The Burning Monk Thích Quảng Đức The Protest for Equal Rights in Vietnam
One of the places that is a must see is the sight in which
the Buddhist monks were protesting the persecution of their religion. This was one of the first viral photographs that went around the world.
The story goes….
The current ruler of Vietnam during 1963 was Ngô Đình Diệm made a policy that allowed the
Catholics to have unequal rights over the other religions. Ngô Đình Diệm was secretly a roman catholic and
allowed them to circumvent the laws and allowed unequal rights to the
Catholics. Some of which allowed the Roman Catholics to be in more prominent
governmental positions as well with faster advancements within the military. 70%
to 90% of the population at the time were Buddhists. Ngô Đình Diệm once told a high ranking official
that was a Buddhist descendent "Put your Catholic officers in sensitive
places. They can be trusted." Ngô Đình Diệm also dedicated that the country
to the Virgin Mary in 1959. Also part of the unequal religious rights included
that no religious flags to be flown outside all the while the Roman Catholic
flag (the white and gold) was regularly flown at public events in the south of
Vietnam.
In the city of Huế
on Vesak,
the birthday of Gautama Buddha a recent band on flying the
Buddhist flag all the while the Roman Catholic church was able fly the Vatican
flag at a ceremony for the Archbishop Ngo Dinh Thuc of
Hue, Diem's elder brother. On Vesak a large group of Buddhist protestors flying
the Buddhist flag marched on the government broadcasting station. Which lead to
the death of nine peoples’ death. Ngô Đình Diệm denounced the shooting stating
that Viet Con for the deaths of the protestors. Buddhist protests increased for
religious equality.
Thích Quảng Đức was a
Vietnamese
Mahayana
Buddhist monk that pleaded with Ngô Đình Diệm for religious equality informed
his colleagues to inform the press that tomorrow morning at the corner of Phan
Đình Phùng Boulevard (now Nguyễn Đình Chiểu Street) and Lê Văn Duyệt Street
(now Cách Mạng Tháng Tám Street) something important was to happen. The press
did not take this notice with much importance that only a few of them showed up
one of which was Malcolm Browne, the Saigon bureau chief for the Associated
Press. Starting not too far away at a nearby temple 350 monks made a precession
down to the street corner, where Thích Quảng Đức got out of the car and sat on
a pillow in the middle of the street. Then one of his colleagues retrieved 5
gallons of gasoline out of the trunk of the car and proceeded to empty the can
over Thích Quảng Đức’s head. Thích Quảng Đức sat in the lotus position while
preparing for his voyage to meet Buddha. While rotating prayer beads Thích QuảngĐức recited the words Nam mô A di đà Phật ("homage to Amitābha
Buddha")
before striking a match and dropping it on himself.
Thích Quảng Đức’s robes and flesh burned for over ten
minutes till his charred body fell over. The cries and whaling of the on
lookers of monks, nuns and the local public was the only thing that could be
heard. Thích Quảng Đức did not move a muscle while the flames engulfed him his
arms and legs freezing into the same position that they were in. The monks
could not even move Thích Quảng Đức’s arms and legs to fit him into the casket
after the ordeal was finished.
The pictures that were taken made the front page around the
world and had a huge impact on the continuation of the religious equal rights
in Vietnam. I have included the pictures that Malcolm Browne took on June 11,
1963.
Today at the same corner there is a beautiful park that is
the tribute to Thích Quảng Đức. The gardens have lotus plants at the base that
arises to the spectacular statue of Thích Quảng Đức that has a circular back
drop that encircles the statue from the days of persecution.
The June 11, 1963 Photographs taken by Malcom Browne:
The June 11, 1963 Photographs taken by Malcom Browne:
Those were just some of the images during this event. Today a very nice Park emerges from one of the corners in which this happened. The park is adornded with a huge bronze statue of Thích Quảng Đức. Behind is a Bronze mural guilded with the many images that symbolize that period of time. I have included a few of the new park pictures. The park is surrounded by many lotus flowers on either side of the corners of the park that will bloom year round.
Many people come here to prey at the park in front of this beautiful satute, I have included a flat picture of the mural behind Thích Quảng Đức statue, Please keep in mind that this mural is formed in a circle around the Thích Quảng Đức satatue. I have combined multiple pictures to flatten the mural to one image that can be seen all together. The mural is just as impressive as the Thích Quảng Đức statue itself.
If your visiting Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam this is a must see place that has plenty of history of and for the people that live here.
A few days after I had taken the above pictures, I did not realize that they were having a celebration for him and added many flower arrangements for the celebration.
Living & Traveling Abroad
Living abroad can be a scary and fun time all at the same time. This blog will be some of the experiences that I have had while living overseas. I will give you both the good and the bad. There will be days that are very productive and then there are some days that it is a total learning experience. The first thing that I have come to miss is my washing machine and dryer. I have limited clothes right now and they seem to be the wrong color, black is not very effective at allowing the heat of the summer sun to go through very well. So about every other day or every day I will wash my shorts and T-shirts in the sink and then hang them up to dry in either the bathroom or the main hotel room for now. Going from South Carolina to Ho Chi Minh City is almost like just visiting the southern tip of Florida. The heat is about 80 to 88 degrees Fahrenheit with almost unbearable humidity as well. This can be very hard to get use to the heat of this each day even when you are born and raised in the south of USA. Your clothes just seem to stick to you from the sweat and does not seem to dry out till the sun goes down. The heat just seems different here than in the states but it could just be all in my head and that it is summer and I have not had a hot and humid summer in quiet some time.
The first thing that I will add to my collection of cloths is some light weight button up shirts that will allow the passage of air through. Then I will add a few shorts here and there when needed. T-shirts just seem to cling to your body and trap the heat in even more so than that of a dress like button up shirt. Since I am a larger than the native people I will have to go see a tailor to have them made for me.
Looking for an apartment has been fun too just a few places I have looked at already and can see that the living style is very different than that what I am use too. The houses here in Ho Chi Minh City (HCMC) are smaller than that of the states but they really are about what I am use to the actual living space that I used in the house that I did live. Most of the rooms that I have looked at are one bedroom studio type apartments. There is one place that is really nice but it would come with a roommate and she is very nice young professional expat as well. Her current roommate is going state side and I would take over and live in the master bedroom. I met with the girls and had a very nice time and they gave some great advice as well. That place has tons of potential to show off my photographs huge walls. There is a down stairs and that includes a living room/dining room/ kitchen combo. The main living space is very nice and has I would say 15 foot ceilings at least. Then then up stairs is the ceiling of the kitchen and dining room. The upstairs is not for a tall person but the lady that stays up there is not that tall anyways. The upstairs has a small library place that is nice for like a small get away from the down stairs. The master bedroom is at the back of the kitchen and has its own bathroom with a shower. The master bath has a large shower. The addition of AC and a modern touch is what this place has. Unfortunately this was not the place that I got which is okay.
The place that I did get is still nice; it is on the 5th floor of an expat building it seems so far. The place is mainly a room with a bathroom and a balcony as well. The room has all what I need in it a bed and closet, TV, Wi-Fi and good water. The balcony contains the kitchen as well which is outside the main room. I can see that is a positive here the smells and cooking stay outside and do not enter the apartment. The apartment seems quiet when I was there around 2 pm and the city traffic is not so close.
Different types of living are going to be a new experience. The living standards are different here and it is the minimalist type not so much on large places and such. The Americas seem to need and wants drive them to buying large expensive homes, that just seems to not happen there that I can see as of yet. I can see that there are some very nice places that are hidden behind gates and very nice well developed plants. I do not know if these are hotels or single residences yet but only time will tell.
I will move into a temp apartment tomorrow that is in the same building just on a lower floor. The temp apartment will not be as nice as the one that I have rented but for a few days it will do very nicely. It is at least cheaper than the hotels that I have been staying at for now.
There are tons of hotels here in HCMC the two that I have stayed at are the Ramana Siagon Hotel in District 3 and the Beautiful Siagon 3 Hotel in District 1. Each place has its advantages and disadvantages. The Ramana had a very nice place with a free breakfast if you had the right room which I did not so I had to pay for breakfast each morning. The breakfast there was abundant and had both Asian and Western food to eat. The price on the breakfast was a bit pricy but if you ate enough to fill up for lunch as well then it was reasonable. This is what I did since I did not know a lot about the area still. The dinners were very simple still crackers and cheese and water from the convenient store. The Wi-Fi at the Ramana was very good enough to download a few movies since the TV is limited on the English speaking stations here in HCMC.
The Beautiful Siagon 3 is in District 1 about 2 Km from the Ramana. A few of the differences in the two are that the Beautiful Saigon 3 is on an alley not on the main street like the Ramana. The Beautiful Siagon 3 hotel upgraded my room free of charge which not that bad of a room with a view of the Alleyway. The breakfast here at the Beautiful Siagon 3 is free with the room and is downstairs a little below the street level. The breakfast here is Al–A-Cart and the selection is not too bad a little bit for everybody. So far here at Beautiful Siagon 3 I have had Phở (is a Vietnamese noodle soup consisting of broth, linguine-shaped rice noodles called bánh phở, a few herbs, and meat, primarily served with either beef, chicken, or pork.) This soup is very good here and is a little bit different at each place you eat. The cost of the Phở was cheap around $2 USD with tip. Then one night I had some great chicken curry Indian style. There seems to be three styles to this Thai, Vietnamese and Indian. Both the Thai and Indian styles are spicy and the Vietnamese is not.
Eating off the main street seems to be the way to save a little money and still eat good food. Yes, some of the places that you see are not up to the USA standards of cleanliness but this is Vietnam not the USA. My suggestion is that you try and stay away from the street vendors and eat at normal sit down restaurants. If you are eating Phở then the street vendors can be okay to grab from since it is made with boiling water and the meat is sliced thin and it is cooked almost immediately when placed in the boiling water.
One of the sure things you will come across while staying in HCMC is the individual street sales people. These can be very persistent type of people. Normally they are selling nick nacks, bracelets, fans (by the way can be a good buy for the first sales person.) Then there are the guys that sell sun glasses and different type of lighters. The nick nacks tend to be on the high side of the marketable items and can be brought down if you haggle with them long enough. The haggling with them seems to make it worth the effort and it seems that some of them kind of like the haggling process. I think a few are just looking for the easy mark that pays the first suggested price that the sales person asks.
The sun glasses I don’t know if they are what they say they are ie Raybans, Oakly, and other name brands. They even then claim that the sun glasses are polarized and look to be that they have the film on the glasses but I don’t think this is so. For the price that they are selling them at I can’t see that they are even good fakes but the process of polarizing has to cost more than a single $1 USD. Yes, you read that right they are selling the glasses for a Single buck (21,000 dong.) I could be totally wrong on this but when things that seem too good that they normally are. You do need a pair of good polarized sun glasses here in Vietnam. The sun is very harsh during the middle of the day that most people hunker down in some type of shade where ever they can find some.
A down side here in HCMC is that the number of TV stations that are in English. Well I know that I am even lucky that there are at least a few stations that are even in English. The one good thing about the channels are that these are the movie channels. HBO, Cinemax, and Stars Movies are the main English channels here that I watch. There is Disney, The Cartoon Network and a few news stations and sports stations as well. Mainly I watch the movie channels.
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