Categories
Japan

Japan, the second coming.

We were here about a year ago, and came back to look at less urban places and to get a bit off the foreigner tourist track. Friend Jane came along to help me with the early evening drinks, and I met her and Kay in Sapporo after flying there from very eastern Siberia. It was quite a cultural change to go from being one of the boys in Siberia to travelling with two sensible women. I think I mostly coped, but I will admit to one slip. We went into a coffee shop for the ladies very necessary 10 a.m. coffee. When I made it clear I did not want any, the guy in charge indicated if that was the case I could not stay, and without any thought I told him he could stick it up his bum. My wife was not happy with me and Jane mentioned that her husband had done similar things occasionally, to try and make me feel better.

The Mercure Hotel in Sapporo wasn’t very busy when we arrived and Kay looked towards the bar area and wondered out loud about the availability of coffee. Which was overheard by a not too old man who could have been local if you were a fair distance away. He said he would make it for her and he had an accent that sounded familiar. It turned out he was the manager and his home town was Rotorua, where his first job was moving bags in a hotel. After coffee, the most important thing was where to watch the ABs play big brother and our new friend, Dean made a few calls then lead us to a nearby bar, where we entertained the locals by being noisy. A good start.

It is interesting revisiting a country because you pick up on things not noticed previously. Last time I don’t recall any imported workers and this time I noticed more than a couple. Mostly Indians in the wonderful convenience shops, or people with English skills from places like the Philippines who don’t look too strange. Officially the unemployment rate is 2.5% and that is with a declining and rapidly ageing population so industries like aged care are desperate to bring in workers. Politically, and very politely, locals are not keen about such racial pollution but reality means the restrictions are being quietly altered. A bit. The unemployment rate is achieved partly by a lot of make-work stuff where old guys get to do things like unnecessary traffic direction at the exits from car parking sites. While lurking outside a shop, as others were inside, I watched two guys shepherd out one car in a 16 minute period. They had batons with lights on the end and waved them a lot but none of it was necessary. When the driver nosed out into the street the two conductors stood in the middle of the road and bowed very deeply twice.

Another thing I found was that I had an appreciation of sake that wasn’t there last time. Or maybe I learnt that asking for a dry style served cold suited me. Whatever the reason I enjoyed drinking it and appreciated the subtle differences. We stayed in several rather fancy places in isolated areas where in-house eating was the only choice, and two of them were fine dining of a very high standard. One had to forget about the cost and concentrate on the delightful experience of top quality food and service in lovely surroundings. Several glasses of sake helped me do that.

Our main travel was by train and we had the full gamut from a double decker high speed monster to an old local one-carriage job reminiscent of an NZR railcar. When on that aged machine I went to the service area down the back for a bit of a stretch and came across a chap from Adelaide. He was taking a photo of each obscure station we went through plus muttering comments into his phone – like “we are now 2 minutes behind schedule”. Being a polite person I listened intently as he told me it was his third visit to the railways of Hokkaido and he had ridden nearly all of them, and then I was given a lecture on all the branch lines that had been closed and the reasons why. At that stage I escaped back to my seat. We did most of the bookings in Sapporo, and it is possible that being in the far north the young lady did not appreciate there are two stations named Takamatsu. Both are in the more southern parts of the main island, Honshu. One is a city where you can catch a ferry to the island Noashima, and the other is apparently a very small place away to the north west. On the day we set out for the first mentioned Takamatsu there were going to be three train sections, and the first one made sense. On the next train when I actually pulled out a map to see where the second stop was it took a while to find it, and it was not a good look as it was exactly 180 degrees away from where we should have been heading. After a sort of discussion with an attendant we hopped off at the next stop and caused great amusement at the station when our predicament was made clear. But because of the wonders of the Japanese rail system we arrived at the correct place only two hours later than planned. The only other travel stuff-up was my recommendation to Jane and Kay as to which end of a major stopping street in Tokyo they would find our hotel.

Our itinerary had us doing a loop around Hokkaido with a couple of nights at a lake in Akan Mashu national park. The hotel was huge but with nice views and full of locals on a day or two away from real life. These sorts of places have onsen which are hot pools where males and females have separate pools and one does not wear any gear, apart from a small towel, folded, on your head. I know that because I read about it. Despite good intentions I could not bring myself to be the only overweight and hairy, scarred and amputated, white guy in a big pool with a crowd of Japanese. The women didn’t partake either. We noticed that the locals didn’t bring much luggage to this place and the reason was quickly made clear – you are provided with a set of pyjamas and a warm jacket which you can wear at all times and everywhere. Without embarrassment apparently.

After Hokkaido went through the second longest tunnel in the world, the 53 km Seikan tunnel, and stopped in north Honshu to visit another national park, and stay in another onsen resort. This one was in steep forested country and we walked 15 km along a white water river to Lake Towado. It was a beautiful walk and we were very proud of doing it in about half the suggested time. But then, Japanese do seem to enjoy studying the minutiae of nature. Our room even provide a loup for looking very closely at natural things. Not all activities were in the outdoors and we did day trips to various places that were of interest. At Otaru the recommended highlight was a music box museum. I have never seen so much concentrated cute rubbish in my life and there were two big floors of it and I suppose the sheer quantity gave it some credibility. All of these places have the street full of shops for visitors to spend money on and Jane was walking past one such shop and reached out to touch a toy cat as she passed by. I happened to be looking her way, back a bit, and watched her simultaneously shriek and leap backwards when this toy launched into a twisting leap at the same time letting out a loud cackling laugh. We saw these things in other places and Jane’s reaction was not uncommon.

From there we headed south down the west coast and managed to avoid Typhoon Gebi and the earthquake in Hokkaido. We had our third onsen stay on Sago Ga Shima island and this was a very classy place, as were the pyjamas. We employed an English-speaking driver to show us around and similar to the more northern areas this island is suffering from depopulation, to the extent that abandoned homes and closed commercial premises are common. From there we did our most complicated day’s travel when we went: car, bus, ferry, walk, train, train, train, taxi ending up in a small traditional village where we had to sleep and eat on the floor in a small traditional inn. Kay doesn’t like beds with no legs and was happy to set off the next morning on walking a section of the Nakasendo Way. This is an ancient road that apparently goes between Kyoto and Tokyo and keen tourists can do it in nine days. One was nice. About halfway through, and nearly at the top of the saddle we were walking over, we were enthusiastically greeted by the free tea and lollies man who took us into an old shelter building, turned on the airconditioning (it was hot) by fanning us with a fan in each hand, and provided the free goodies. His English was pretty good and his smile never stopped and we left with renewed vigour.

Going further south we made it to the big Takamatsu and went on another ferry to Naoshima island. Where we stayed in a modernistic art museum with a few very acceptable hotel rooms. Being there meant we could wander around the place after closing time and see if the drinks with dinner had changed one’s artistic appreciation. I think it does. This island (and another nearby one) has received the attention of a rich person and an interesting architect, and there are several galleries and big art works scattered over the island. The most interesting part is in a little town where five old traditional buildings were each given to an artist to do what they would with. The results are stunning and if you are going to Japan you should go there. Jane was the artistic director of our group and I think she thought it was pretty good. The food at the hotel dining room certainly added to the appreciation. Food everywhere was pretty good and we didn’t bother chasing down recommended places because it is hard to get a bad meal. If people can speak English they are happy to have a chat and be helpful, although the couple that we were sitting beside one evening inadvertently closed down our communication when they revealed they were Jehovah Witnesses.

Then we shot through to Tokyo for some understanding of very big city existence and shopping. I didn’t buy anything apart from a bunch of dark chocolate to use up the credit on our suico cards, which are really for subway travel, but can be used in convenience shops. The two largest chains of these are 7-Eleven and Lawsons. The former has the best ATMs for foreign money cards and the later was loved by the recently departed Antony Bourdain. They do yummy sandwiches, have reasonable cheap wine, and everything in between and are everywhere. In Tokyo we stayed in the Mitsui Garden Hotel Premier which of course charged moonbeams for breakfast. But right out the front door was Lawsons with fresh fruit salads and yogurt on the shelves, plus pastries and a place to sit. Guess where we went.

A couple of days before our departure Jane abandoned us for the pleasures of Kyoto and Kay consoled herself with a major assault on Tokyu Hands (google it). That evening was our last, and we went for a meal with a couple we had met briefly in a restaurant last year. We had swapped emails and they were keen to take us somewhere suitably Japanese. They met us at the hotel and we walked to a restaurant in the main road of Ginza. I had broken out a new shirt to try and look respectable, which was a good thing because this was not a shorts and jandals evening. At the door to the restaurant we met their lovely daughter, wearing a kimono and looking delightful, and lead up to a private room. A six course meal followed and the husband quietly put away a fair amount of sake. His questions became quite difficult to follow and the daughter had to interpret I think he said about six times ” Mr Johns, I have one last question”. It was an enjoyable and informative evening with very nice food, and although we offered we weren’t allowed to pay anything. The husband is 70, travelling 1.5 hours each way to work and wouldn’t dream of asking for three weeks off so they could travel to NZ. I think that apart from various national holidays salaried employees get one week of annual leave. At least that is my interpretation of a couple of discussions about the subject.

The next day was one of the national holidays and we had the morning free before leaving, so we joined millions of others and did more shopping. It was a relief to have to go to the airport.

Categories
Russia

Four old guys in Siberia.

“Why are you going there?” was the general reaction to the news we were off to Siberia. For me it was for a number of reasons, none of which amount to compelling. I wanted to see Lake Baikal because it is the largest reservoir of fresh water in the world, 20-25 percent of it and more than all the Great Lakes together, and it has freshwater seals which of course hide from tourists. It’s 900kms long and skinny and extremely deep and in winter is completely frozen over, more than a metre deep with clear ice because the water is very clean. I wanted to do some of the Trans Siberian Railway, but not the whole lot because I lack the patience for that. We had one all-day trip, one of 53 hours, and one single overnighter which was plenty. I wanted to get a better perception of Russia after visiting the two big cities in the west last year. I wanted to go to Yakutsk which is the coldest city in the world, even though it was summer, and see mammoths that had been dug out of the permafrost. We actually only saw skeletons and some cool video stuff where the archeologists thought they had found liquid blood, but hadn’t. And I wanted to get an idea of how it was to live in this isolated place where winter is six months long.

My instructions to the agent in Russia was that the itinerary would include insights into the way people lived, have hardly any church visits, and museums were only allowed if small and very interesting. Inna was the agent and she did a good job. She happened to be in Vladivostok when we were there so we met briefly . We Four Old Guys met in Seoul where it was extremely hot and after a few days flew to Irkutsk, then Listvyanka by Lake Baikal, Ulan Ude, Khabarovsk, Vladivostok, all by train, flew up to Yakutsk, flew to Yusno-Sahhalinsk on Sakhalin Island, and then flew to Sapporo in a propeller driven plane where we all went our separate ways. We were supposed to get to Japan by ferry but it apparently is broken.

Going on a trip with three other guys was an interesting experience and we managed it without any arguments or invective, probably because of the juvenile behaviours that allowed insults and pointed jokes to be made and accepted, and of course the firm and decisive leadership given at all times by the “leader”. I had circulated a set of rules but apart from working out who had to choose a restaurant we didn’t need them. Colin, the Agricultural Correspondent, made a triumphant return to moderately priced travel. Justin was the youngest and the shortest so had to cope with plenty which he did without any obvious problems. Tony retired from road building a day or two before leaving NZ and this was his first taste of freedom. He had trouble referring to his engineering career in the past tense, and had to share a cabin with chatty Justin on the trains, but applied his experience of eliminating grey areas to fly through it all, even seeming to accept being occasionally referred to as Buddha. Naturally he was the Infrastructure Correspondent. Our antipodean boyish sense of humour mystified most of our guides although the one we all fell in love with seemed to get it. The older male guide, who we think had been with the KGB, probably did as well, but he wasn’t letting on. Our last guide was a very fit 46 year old blond woman, unmarried, with 4 children (youngest 4) who had an accounting background and she definitely didn’t get it, but she did have a nice way of taking the mickey out of local religions.

We had to adapt to local conditions so dealing with grumpy service providers, usually formidable females, became automatic. On our after-midnight arrival at Yakutsk airport our driver was not inside holding a sign with my name on it so I stepped outside to see if he was there. That meant passing a uniformed person, who was a large female, and when I tried to walk back in to tell my mates he wasn’t there she performed a wrestling manoeuvre which meant I sank into her body and was then thrust back outside with an accompanying “nyet”. I waited a couple of seconds and, thinking she was otherwise occupied, tried a small swerve in and away, but was semi-tackled and repelled again. I then resorted to shouting my situation so the others knew. (Eventually the driver was found in the parking area with the sign flat on the dashboard and headphones on. I think he understood my English and sign language that indicated extreme annoyance. By then it was 1a.m. and the airport was locked and dark.)

Getting a smile out of these ladies became a personal challenge for Colin, but on the long train journey he was completely usurped by Tony, who attracted a lot of attention from a very overweight lady attendant who seemed to take an unnerving shine to him. Or did she think he had lots of money? We shall never know, but she did seem to like sitting beside him in an active way. He also bestowed the honorific title of Space Cadet on the waitress in the dining car who would assiduously take orders that either never turned up, or eventually did long after most of us had given up waiting and returned to our cheese and salami in our compartments. Colin succeeded with the lady shopkeeper at Listvyanka when we bought some unknown wine. She smiled at him after scowling at me earlier when I tried to get close enough to the wine bottles so I could see the labels, and picked a bottle that she indicated as being good. It cost about $7 and the first mouthful was a challenge but things improved after that.

Part of the inter-personal fun was when one made a fundamental error. Justin started it by unknowingly dropping his new phone on Colin’s driveway when picking him up in Orini. Because Justin is comparatively young the ensuing deprivation would have been disastrous if wasn’t for Colin’s extremely generous loaning of his phone when required, which was most of the time. Colin now has lots of new and useful apps and probably a large bill waiting for him.
I came second when I left my kindle plugged in my room after leaving Irkutsk. Because Russian management assume you have lied about no mini bar usage someone had checked the room the moment I left and rushed out with the device just as we were about to drive off. Unfortunately, they hadn’t included the adaptor.
One of the hotels had quite a few steps up to it with a slope for pulling your bag up. When we left Justin put his bag on it, and not being a heavy person, the bag zipped down on it’s own and dragged him with it.
In Seoul, where Tony was temporarily the leader, he took us onto a subway train going the wrong way. He also developed a very strong aversion to the smell of Russian Orthodox Churches even though we only went into three. Something to do with the similarity to churches in his youth which lead to questions about his relationship with Catholic priests. Apparently it was just the smell and there was no fiddling. Justin went to sleep sitting in the back of a “speedy Yamaha boat” on Lake Baikal and was robustly saved from falling on to propellers by Tony. Colin left his bag in the van at least once.
Early in the tour Justin decided to have a haircut. He picked a new and upmarket place where coffee was served to the rest of us and music suitable for our age was played. These distractions were necessary because the cutting and washing (twice) took about 40 minutes, and we all observed it had not fixed the bald spot.
We also had debriefs most evenings and twice they accidentally became extended owing to inadvertently pouring too many vodkas. Each time it was really the fault of our dacha lunch hosts who had sold us, or given us, their homemade product which had to be tasted. And the last of silly behavior to be reported was caused by the lift in the building where we stayed in Yakutsk which allowed only a short exit and entry time before forcefully snapping shut. For the first couple of times the 4th in our group suffered near amputation, until we instigated the short-distance-rapidly-moving-maul technique. After our last meal in the town we successfully got on board and then set ourselves for disembarkment at speed – someone hoped nobody would be waiting to get in and someone else said it hasn’t happened yet. So we erupted out of the opening doors laughing at our expertise to see three very surprised people jump for their lives. It seemed very amusing at the time.

The request for insights into local life resulted in our having meals with locals six times. Some of these were in apartments, some were in places where locals had set up semi-commercial tourist operations, and some were at dachas. These are the local equivalent of a weekend bach which originally were land gifts from the government so people could grow vegetables in the summer to help survive the winter. The gardens were amazing and incredibly prolific. The meals were huge, with all the stuff locally grown, and vodka was not able to be avoided. The Lonely Planet says when the generosity is too much, say you are an alcoholic and the pressure will stop. I tried it at our last dacha lunch and mine host, a retired fisherman with a thirst, just laughed and refilled my glass. These occasions were the highlight of the trip in my opinion and a lot of fun. The strangest one was dinner in an apartment with a lady whose second language was French, not English, but it was clear we were not allowed to sip our vodka. The least fun for me was a visit to an Old Believers village where not only did I have to dance, but I was also dressed up as a local in winter, when it was actually a warm day, and then took the part of a son in a marriage negotiation. The negotiations obviously were successful because the next scene had me carrying two babies. The bride was not small. The rest of our party seemed to think it was most amusing.
Other touristic experiences included some blacksmithing and being lengthily cleared of bad spirits by a shamaness, whose daughter showed us how it was possible to play a Jews harp and throatsing at the same time. I was very impressed with that.

Our guides were a diverse lot and our main source of local information. Political questions were always, apart from one exception, answered very carefully, usually by saying they had no interest or opinion about politics. The exception was a young lady studying out of Russia and home for the holidays, who let slip a remark about the country descending into totalitarianism. She immediately wished she hadn’t said it and hoped no one had turned her phone into a recording device. The guy who we thought might have been a spy reckoned he was an ordinary bureaucrat but he had done more than your average town clerk. I did ask him if he had been with the KGB and that made him laugh. Who knows, although they probably get a big enough pension to avoid having to guide silly old people about. When we were on our own Google translate was very useful and if you haven’t used the camera feature give it a go. Menus and signs in incomprehensible characters become magically readable, and if the translations are not perfect you certainly get the drift.

There are not a lot of must-see exciting sights in Siberia. Every city has a Lenin Square and a Lenin Street and we saw the lot. The squares all had a statue of the man, with the biggest being a 43 tonne very large head in Khabarovsk, which doesn’t get pooped on by birds because it has lots of little spikes on top. The most useful was in Yakutsk because the extended arm pointing to a wonderful future also directed us to our restaurant in the evening. The Amur River was worth an explore, and if you know it is the tenth longest in the world have another glass of wine. There is a very long bridge over it in Kharbarovsk, and an accompanying museum which made Tony very excited, and rightly so. We had one of our local visits with an indigenous family there, who stick to their heritage as fishermen living off the bounty of the river. We all agreed that we were far from enamoured with the taste of fresh water fish, and I am convinced if I never taste any again it will be a good thing.

The indigenous people of eastern Siberia are Asian-looking, and in some areas are a significant majority and in others just hanging on. The young lady who hoped her phone wasn’t working against her was from the local people and wasn’t sure if she would permanently return and use her qualifications to help them, or stay overseas. Probably that is a common problem because although each area may be an autonomous part of the Russian Federation with a local parliament, they are actually ruled directly by mates of Putin. The real local power lies with the governor who is not voted for and some are regarded as good and some not. I made a point of asking each guide about their local governor and when I put the question to the very littoral lady in Sakhalin she very happily replied he was in jail for corruption. All the guides agreed corruption was a major issue but seem to regard it as part of the price of a stable government. They also followed the usual age divide when it came to discussions about the Soviet times. Those bought up with it remember the security of jobs, apartments, healthcare, and education. Those who didn’t experience it wonder why anyone would want to live like that. And what did they think about Putin ? When we got an answer it was a guarded positive one.

It was nice to get to Vladivostok and see the sea after all the same, same, same from the train windows, and there were also a couple of stunning big bridges. Tony lead us on a walk to a small funicular there, which may well have not gone quite as planned because we went down it rather than up. Colin really enjoyed all the hills we walked over, but the Brugge Pub Tony found for us at the end made up for it. Yakutsk is built on permafrost which is engineeringly interesting and we actually went under the surface into tunnels made in the permafrost. It was a mild minus 5 degrees, nothing compared to the minus 50 it can be in the winter. Nearby, in Siberian terms, is a very big diamond mine so as good tourists we looked at the processing of diamonds and the shops that sold finished articles. I made a purchase in short time for my wife knowing getting it right would be a fluke but that it’s the thought etc. The others stuffed around overnight wondering if they should or shouldn’t. In one case sending photos of possible items that might be suitable, and receiving a complex reply. The next day we had to go back to the shop and all walked out with a little black bag containing a suitable sparkling goodie. Hopefully. Sakhalin Island was the main prison area in Siberia so is a bit like Australia in its antecedents but now it has oil and gas and was the most prosperous-looking place we saw. The southern half was a colony of Japan for 40 years until 1945. On the last day of the tour we were driven a long way to a lonely beach where a picnic in a tent was waiting for us, including a freshly caught giant crab which tasted really good. I thought the guy who had caught and cooked it, along with everything else , was a local fisherman earning a bit of extra cash, but he was actually the manager of the local travel agency. It was a great way to finish our tour.

The Agricultural Correspondent has not made a written report but I can repeat his verbal one: “There isn’t any agriculture.”

The Infrastructure Correspondent has reported in detail as follows:
What a land of contrasts. The telecom is world class with mobile phones everywhere and coverage for the full length of our railway journey. Contrast that with the wrecked Soviet era factories, at least one in each village, stripped of everything useful and the original use unknown. The railway is substantial with dual lines and rolling stock on every siding. Goods trains were 2kms long, twice that of NZ, and the red engines are massive on the wide gauge with a really grunty look and they travel at 80 kph. We have seen trains chocka with coal, aggregate, sawn timber, logs, unknown liquids with no obvious filling points, containers, and even fifty armoured personnel carriers on flat beds.

The cities are very clean but everything needs maintenance which is clearly not a priority. The old Soviet era apartment blocks are run down and need replacing but nothing appears to be happening. There are new blocks being built that look good but they are for the new prosperous class. In the country it’s different and all the houses are old shacks, nicely kept but no more than depression era houses in NZ. Many are empty thanks to migration to the cities after the collapse of collective farming and you can tell the occupied ones by the substantial vegetable gardens, mainly potatoes, needed to get through the long winter.

Finally the roads. Rough old city roads needing repair, substantial motorways gradually replacing busy two lane local roads, and very rough unsealed roads when you leave the main ones. The bridges might lack flair but look like they will last a hundred years. Just when I thought I had seen it all we came across two massive and beautiful cable stay bridges in Vladivostok that blew me away. Infrastructure priorities seem to be impressive new construction over regular maintenance. The footpaths sum it up. Tripping hazards everywhere and no sign of repairs .

Justin was supposed to be the Health and Safety Correspondent but as of now no report has been received. It’s probably because it’s a bit like agriculture. There was little evidence of any health and safety measures.

For the Four Old Guys in Siberia this trip was a lot of fun and we all learned a lot.

Dennis

Categories
Russia

Four old guys in Siberia

“Why are you going there?” was the general reaction to the news we were off to Siberia.  For me it was for a number of reasons, none of which amount to compelling.   I wanted to see Lake Baikal because it is the largest reservoir of fresh water in the world, 20-25 percent of it and more than all the Great Lakes together, and it has freshwater seals which of course hide from tourists.  It’s 900kms long and skinny and extremely deep and in winter is completely frozen over, more than a metre deep with clear ice because the water is very clean.   I wanted to do some of the Trans Siberian Railway, but not the whole lot because I lack the patience for that.  We had one all-day trip, one of 53 hours, and one single overnighter which was plenty.  I wanted to get a better perception of Russia after visiting the two big cities in the west last year.  I wanted to go to Yakutsk which is the coldest city in the world, even though it was summer, and see mammoths that had been dug out of the permafrost.  We actually only saw skeletons and some cool video stuff where the archeologists thought they had found liquid blood, but hadn’t.  And I wanted to get an idea of how it was to live in this isolated place where winter is six months long. 

My instructions to the agent in Russia was that the itinerary would include insights into the way people lived, have hardly any church visits, and museums were only allowed if small and very interesting.   Inna was the agent and she did a good job.  She happened to be in Vladivostok when we were there so we met briefly .  We Four Old Guys met in Seoul where it was extremely hot and after a few days flew to Irkutsk, then Listvyanka by Lake Baikal, Ulan Ude, Khabarovsk, Vladivostok, all by train,  flew up to Yakutsk, flew to Yusno-Sahhalinsk on Sakhalin Island, and then flew to Sapporo in a propeller driven plane where we all went our separate ways.  We were supposed to get to Japan by ferry but it apparently is broken.

Going on a trip with three other guys was an interesting experience and we managed it without any arguments or invective, probably because of the juvenile behaviours that allowed insults and pointed jokes to be made and accepted, and of course the firm and decisive leadership given at all times by the “leader”.  I had circulated a set of rules but apart from working out who had to choose a restaurant we didn’t need them.  Colin, the Agricultural Correspondent, made a triumphant return to moderately priced travel.  Justin was the youngest and the shortest so had to cope with plenty which he did without any obvious problems. Tony retired from road building a day or two before leaving NZ and this was his first taste of freedom.  He had trouble referring to his engineering career in the past tense, and had to share a cabin with chatty Justin on the trains, but applied his experience of eliminating grey areas to fly through it all, even seeming to accept being occasionally referred to as Buddha.  Naturally he was the Infrastructure Correspondent.  Our antipodean boyish sense of humour mystified most of our guides although the one we all fell in love with seemed to get it.  The older male guide, who we think had been with the KGB, probably did as well, but he wasn’t letting on.  Our last guide was a very fit 46 year old blond woman, unmarried, with 4 children (youngest 4) who had an accounting background and she definitely didn’t get it, but she did have a nice way of taking the mickey out of local religions.

We had to adapt to local conditions so dealing with grumpy service providers, usually formidable females, became automatic.  On our after-midnight arrival at Yakutsk airport our driver was not inside holding a sign with my name on it so I stepped outside to see if he was there.  That meant passing a uniformed person, who was a large female, and when I tried to walk back in to tell my mates he wasn’t there she performed a wrestling manoeuvre which meant I sank into her body and was then thrust back outside with an accompanying “nyet”.  I waited a couple of seconds and, thinking she was otherwise occupied, tried a small swerve in and away, but was semi-tackled and repelled again.  I then resorted to shouting my situation so the others knew.  (Eventually the driver was found in the parking area with the sign flat on the dashboard and headphones on.  I think he understood my English and sign language that indicated extreme annoyance.  By then it was 1a.m. and the airport was locked and dark.) 

Getting a smile out of these ladies became a personal challenge for Colin, but on the long train journey he was completely usurped by Tony, who attracted a lot of attention from a very overweight lady attendant who seemed to take an unnerving shine to him.  Or did she think he had lots of money?  We shall never know, but she did seem to like sitting beside him in an active way.  He also bestowed the honorific title of Space Cadet on the waitress in the dining car who would assiduously take orders that either never turned up, or eventually did long after most of us had given up waiting and returned to our cheese and salami in our compartments.  Colin succeeded with the lady shopkeeper at Listvyanka when we bought some unknown wine.  She smiled at him after scowling at me earlier when I tried to get close enough to the wine bottles so I could see the labels, and picked a bottle that she indicated as being good.  It cost about $7 and the first mouthful was a challenge but things improved after that.

Part of the inter-personal fun was when one made a fundamental error.  Justin started it by unknowingly dropping his new phone on Colin’s driveway when picking him up in Orini.  Because Justin is comparatively young the ensuing deprivation would have been disastrous if wasn’t for Colin’s extremely generous loaning of his phone when required, which was most of the time.   Colin now has lots of new and useful apps and probably a large bill waiting for him. 
I came second when I left my kindle plugged in my room after leaving Irkutsk.  Because Russian management assume you have lied about no mini bar usage someone had checked the room the moment I left and rushed out with the device just as we were about to drive off.

Unfortunately, they hadn’t included the adaptor.

One of the hotels had quite a few steps up to it with a slope for pulling your bag up.  When we left Justin put his bag on it, and not being a heavy person, the bag zipped down on it’s own and dragged him with it. 
In Seoul, where Tony was temporarily the leader, he took us onto a subway train going the wrong way.  He also developed a very strong aversion to the smell of Russian Orthodox Churches even though we only went into three.  Something to do with the similarity to churches in his youth which lead to questions about his relationship with Catholic priests.  Apparently it was just the smell and there was no fiddling.    Justin went to sleep sitting in the back of a “speedy Yamaha boat” on Lake Baikal and was robustly saved from falling on to propellers by Tony.  Colin left his bag in the van at least once.

Early in the tour Justin decided to have a haircut.  He picked a new and upmarket place where coffee was served to the rest of us and music suitable for our age was played.  These distractions were necessary because the cutting and washing (twice) took about 40 minutes, and we all observed it had not fixed the bald spot.

We also had debriefs most evenings and twice they accidentally became extended owing to inadvertently pouring too many vodkas.  Each time it was really the fault of our dacha lunch hosts who had sold us, or given us, their homemade product which had to be tasted.  And the last of silly behavior to be reported was caused by the lift in the building where we stayed in Yakutsk which allowed only a short exit and entry time before forcefully snapping shut.  For the first couple of times the 4th in our group suffered near amputation, until we instigated the short-distance-rapidly-moving-maul technique.  After our last meal in the town we successfully got on board and then set ourselves for disembarkment at speed  –  someone hoped nobody would be waiting to get in and someone else said it hasn’t happened yet.  So we erupted out of the opening doors laughing at our expertise to see three very surprised people jump for their lives.  It seemed very amusing at the time.

The request for insights into local life resulted in our having meals with locals six times.  Some of these were in apartments, some were in places where locals had set up semi-commercial tourist operations, and some were at dachas. These are the local equivalent of a weekend bach which originally were land gifts from the government so people could grow vegetables in the summer to help survive the winter.  The gardens were amazing and incredibly prolific.  The meals were huge, with all the stuff locally grown, and vodka was not able to be avoided. The Lonely Planet says when the generosity is too much, say you are an alcoholic and the pressure will stop.  I tried it at our last dacha lunch and mine host, a retired fisherman with a thirst, just laughed and refilled my glass.  These occasions were the highlight of the trip in my opinion and a lot of fun.  The strangest one was dinner in an apartment with a lady whose second language was French, not English, but it was clear we were not allowed to sip our vodka. The least fun for me was a visit to an Old Believers village where not only did I have to dance, but I was also dressed up as a local in winter, when it was actually a warm day, and then took the part of a son in a marriage negotiation.  The negotiations obviously were successful because the next scene had me carrying two babies.  The bride was not small.   The rest of our party seemed to think it was most amusing.

Other touristic experiences included some blacksmithing and being lengthily cleared of bad spirits by a shamaness, whose daughter showed us how it was possible to play a Jews harp and throatsing at the same time.  I was very impressed with that.

Our guides were a diverse lot and our main source of local information.  Political questions were always, apart from one exception, answered very carefully, usually by saying they had no interest or opinion about politics.  The exception was a young lady studying out of Russia and home for the holidays, who let slip a remark about the country descending into totalitarianism. She immediately wished she hadn’t said it and hoped no one had turned her phone into a recording device. The guy who we thought might have been a spy reckoned he was an ordinary bureaucrat but he had done more than your average town clerk.   I did ask him if he had been with the KGB and that made him laugh. Who knows, although they probably get a big enough pension to avoid having to guide silly old people about.  When we were  on our own Google translate was very useful and if you haven’t used the camera feature give it a go.  Menus and signs in incomprehensible characters become magically readable, and if the translations are not perfect you certainly get the drift.

There are not a lot of must-see exciting sights in Siberia.  Every city has a Lenin Square and a Lenin Street and we saw the lot.  The squares all had a statue of the man, with the biggest being a 43 tonne very large head in Khabarovsk, which doesn’t get pooped on by birds because it has lots of little spikes on top.  The most useful was in Yakutsk  because the extended arm pointing to a wonderful future also directed us to our restaurant in the evening.  The Amur River was worth an explore, and if you know it is the tenth longest in the world have another glass of wine.  There is a very long bridge over it in Kharbarovsk, and an accompanying museum which made Tony very excited, and rightly so.  We had one of our local visits with an indigenous family there, who stick to their heritage as fishermen living off the bounty of the river.  We all agreed that we were far from enamoured with the taste of fresh water fish, and I am convinced if I never taste any again it will be a good thing.

The indigenous people of eastern Siberia are Asian-looking, and in some areas are a significant majority and in others just hanging on. The young lady who hoped her phone wasn’t working against her was from the local people and wasn’t sure if she would permanently return and use her qualifications to help them, or stay overseas. Probably that is a common problem because although each area may be an autonomous part of the Russian Federation with a local parliament, they are actually ruled directly by mates of Putin. The real local power lies with the governor who is not voted for and some are regarded as good and some not.  I made a point of asking each guide about their local governor and when I put the question to the very littoral lady in Sakhalin she very happily replied he was in jail for corruption. All the guides agreed corruption was a major issue but seem to regard it as part of the price of a stable government.  They also followed the usual age divide when it came to discussions about the Soviet times. Those bought up with it remember the security of jobs, apartments, healthcare, and education.  Those who didn’t experience it wonder why anyone would want to live like that. And what did they think about Putin? When we got an answer it was a guarded positive one.

It was nice to get to Vladivostok and see the sea after all the same, same, same from the train windows, and there were also  a couple of stunning big bridges. Tony lead us on a walk to a small funicular there, which may well have not gone quite as planned because we went down it rather than up.  Colin really enjoyed all the hills we walked over, but the Brugge Pub Tony found for us at the end made up for it.  Yakutsk is built on permafrost which is engineeringly interesting and we actually went under the surface into tunnels made in the permafrost.   It was a mild minus 5 degrees, nothing compared to the minus 50 it can be in the winter.  Nearby, in Siberian terms, is a very big diamond mine so as good tourists we looked at the processing of diamonds and the shops that sold finished articles.  I made a purchase in short time for my wife knowing getting it right would be a fluke but that it’s the thought etc.  The others stuffed around overnight wondering if they should or shouldn’t.  In one case sending photos of possible items that might be suitable, and  receiving a complex reply.  The next day we had to go back to the shop and all walked out with a little black bag containing a suitable sparkling goodie.  Hopefully.  Sakhalin Island was the main prison area in Siberia so is a bit like Australia in its antecedents but now it has oil and gas and was the most prosperous-looking place we saw.  The southern half was a  colony of Japan for 40 years until 1945.  On the last day of the tour we were driven a long way to a  lonely beach where a picnic in a tent was waiting for us, including a freshly caught giant crab which tasted really good.  I thought the guy who had caught and cooked it, along with everything else , was a local fisherman earning a bit of extra cash, but he was actually the manager of the local travel agency.  It was a great way to finish our tour.

The Agricultural Correspondent has not made a written report but I can repeat his verbal one: 

“There isn’t any agriculture.” 

The Agricultural Correspondent

The Infrastructure Correspondent has reported in detail as follows:
What a land of contrasts.  The telecom is world class with mobile phones everywhere and coverage for the full length of our railway journey.  Contrast that with the wrecked Soviet era factories,  at least one in each village, stripped of everything useful and the original use unknown.  The railway is substantial with dual lines and rolling stock on every siding.  Goods trains were 2kms long, twice that of NZ, and the red engines are massive on the wide gauge with a really grunty look and they travel at 80 kph.  We have seen trains chocka with coal, aggregate, sawn timber, logs, unknown liquids with no obvious filling points, containers, and even fifty armoured personnel carriers on flat beds.

The cities are very clean but everything needs maintenance which is clearly not a priority.  The old Soviet era apartment blocks are run down and need replacing but nothing appears to be happening.  There are new blocks being built that look good but they are for the new prosperous class.  In the country it’s different and all the houses are old shacks, nicely kept but no more than depression era houses in NZ.  Many are empty thanks to migration to the cities after the collapse of collective farming and you can tell the occupied ones by the substantial vegetable gardens, mainly potatoes, needed to get through the long winter.

Finally the roads.  Rough old city roads needing repair, substantial motorways gradually replacing busy two lane local roads, and very rough unsealed roads when you leave the main ones. The bridges might lack flair but look like they will last a hundred years.  Just when I thought I had seen it all we came across two massive and beautiful cable stay bridges in Vladivostok that blew me away.  Infrastructure priorities seem to be impressive new construction over regular maintenance.  The footpaths sum it up.  Tripping hazards everywhere and no sign of repairs .

Justin was supposed to be the Health and Safety Correspondent but as of now no report has been received.  It’s probably because it’s a bit like agriculture.  There was little evidence of any health and safety measures.

For the Four Old Guys in Siberia this trip was a lot of fun and we all learned a lot.

Categories
Timor Leste (East Timor)

Timor Leste – Kay takes one for the team

As we got on the plane in Darwin for Dili I could hear some Timorese asking each other if they were going back to vote. This was the first indication for us that an election was happening and an insight into the seriousness with which locals regarded it. Apparently the existing government is a coalition where there are so many different agendas that nothing has happened and here was a chance to sort that out. The rules are that you can only vote where you are officially registered and for most that is in their home village so there was a short but intense migration going on. Also going on when we arrived was a very loud rally for Fretilin, the party from the freedom fighters, which blocked the road we were on with what looked like thousands of red attired mostly young people, all on motorbikes and crowded into trucks waving the party flag. Everyone who had a horn was using it and yelling slogans. It looked like it could easily get out of hand. It didn’t, probably because of the large numbers of armed police and military police. And they didn’t win. On our first day’s drive we stopped at the top of a pass and met an old man who was walking for two days to be able to vote, and that was just getting there. He was carrying a broken jandal in his hand and didn’t have a spare. Other people were doing 20 hour bus trips, one way. A couple of days later when everyone was going back to Dili after voting, we counted 400 motor bikes an hour heading that way, and 2/3rds had one passenger or more. See below about roads to find out why no cars.

Why so passionate about politics ? You need to know some history to understand. From the mid 1550s to 1974 eastern Timor was a Portuguese colony, apart from during WW2 when the Japanese invaded. When the Portuguese scuttled away in 1974 they left a country with no economic base, no educated locals and a recipe for chaos. Political parties formed, civil war broke out, then Indonesia invaded. The first independent president lasted two weeks. Indonesia already owned the western half of the island and had the nod from the major powers to take over. This lead to guerrilla war because this wasn’t just a political and military situation, it was also a cultural assault given 90 percent of people in eastern Timor are Roman Catholics and the invaders were Moslem. The Indonesian army established control with the help of local traitors who were formed into a militia, and when in 1999 an independence referendum was unexpectedly held they set about terrorising the locals to try and get a result for their side. That didn’t work so the Indonesian army went on a rampage, which included attacking the UN people who promptly shot through leaving the locals on their own with considerable problems. This included four significant massacres of civilians. Eventually the Australian-lead force with a NZ contingent took control and in 2002 Timor Leste got it’s own government. So having their destiny in their political control is not taken for granted and much valued. (The militias went to Indonesia with the retreating Indonesians and are not welcome back.)

We visited quite a few massacre sights including one known as Jakarta 2 because the Indonesian army offered scholarships to go Jakarta for close to 200 of the brightest local secondary school students, and then drove them to this site where they were killed and thrown over a very steep cliff. Other ones included burning a church full of people, and shooting nuns. It seems the locals now make a differentiation between the Indonesian military and the rest of the Indonesians who are are not regarded as the enemy.

On this trip we were a party of three as Melanie came along and I organised it through a local agency. We were there for 8 days, all of which involved driving with our very careful guide and driver, Luis. We had a well-aged Mitsubishi Pajero because without 4WD you won’t get far. The roads are horrendous in general but not all are. And there is a lot of roading reconstruction going on east and west of Dili with one continuous 120ks of roadworks on the eastern side. The problem for us was that these roadworks were very similar to drive on as the completely unmaintained lesser roads. There were plenty of times you looked at the shambles ahead and thought we can’t possibly drive on that, but Luis got into the lowest gear and we would creep through. He was good and we never did unexpected bounces or hit the ceiling with our heads. A consequence of the roads is that you hardly ever see a standard car outside of Dili. All the traffic is 4WDs, small trucks and buses, and heaps of motor bikes and motor scooters. Somewhere in Timor Leste is a future motocross world champion. The buses compete with colourful and descriptive decorations including seemingly covering the windscreen. One of the most difficult roads we went on was 18ks of WW2 vintage, Japanese made, originally cobbled with irregular rocks, which looked like it had never had any maintenance and is now a rutted mess. The 18ks took an hour and a half to cover. I calculated that the 1084ks we travelled in total was at an average speed of about 20 ks.

The good part of bouncing slowly through a country is you get to see plenty, and can exchange greetings with locals, as well as spy on what their lives are like. It is definitely third world. The people are small and there are no fat ones outside of the main towns, and not many there. They mostly live in a subsistence economy based on growing their own food and selling surpluses in local markets. An exception is coffee which is grown in the hills and is a commercial crop but doesn’t seem to be really industrialised. The two coffee experts in our group raved about the quality of the product. It is probably the only useful economic thing the Portuguese left behind. The housing ranges from plenty of traditional grass-roofed dwellings, to rusting corrugated iron roofed huts with split bamboo walls, to Portuguese inspired mini mansions with as many roof angles as possible. The latter are the aspirational standard and usually are under construction over a long time and paid for by remittances from abroad. The yards are dirt and populated by skinny dogs, chooks, goats, small but well organised pigs, youths with nothing to do apart from smoke and fiddle with motor bikes, old people in plastic chairs, heaps of small children, and women working. Of course. Dogs also sleep on the road and are loath to move for traffic. They probably know no one wants to run over them because if you do that you owe the owner $30. A chook is $15, a pig is $45 and a big water buffalo $1500. Every village has a couple of stalls in someone’s front yard where there are water bottles filled with petrol for selling to bike owners. Often we saw someone filling their bike with a cigarette burning in their mouth. The same stall also sells a white liquid in a water bottle and it is palm wine. I didn’t get to try any.

We were a bit of an event in most places because tourists are not common. You can tell because there’s really no one trying to sell stuff. Only once when we were visiting a local sight did anyone show up with a little tray of trinkets for sale. There was one place by a beach were an NGO had set up a small tourist market, and we were pleased to see it. Partly because a bit of shopping is fun and partly because it had a nice cafe (a rarity), where a school of dolphins we had been watching back down the road caught up with us.

You are not dragged to see “my cousins shop” anywhere, there are no beggars, and no kids want a school pen. One cheeky boy saw us playing scrabble on our hotel balcony one evening and sheepishly tried asking for money, in English, so I told him to go away and stop spoiling things. Our guide took us to a traditional village where the ladies did back strap weaving which was for sale. He hadn’t told them we were coming and they were delighted to see us, along with the chance to make a bit of cash. We were sent up into the first floor of a circular thatched house and all sat around looking at each other. After a bit of prompting from Luis some woven things were produced along with explanations of what they were for. I think the length of cloth I felt I should buy is for formal wear by a man, and would end up in his coffin. After that there was a bit of question and answer with Luis translating, and Kay asked if they had voted which they confirmed by holding up a black-stained right forefinger. I saw the chance of a cheap laugh so showed how difficult that would be for me. I did get a laugh but also the comment that if anyone in the village chopped off fingers like I had they would have bled to death long before any help arrived.

After a few days Luis told us a bit about his life. He is 34 and his father had died from Indonesian bomb wounds when he was 7. His mother then had 6 children to look after before she died when he was 14. One sister ended up in a church orphanage and is now a nun presently in the Vatican. The family were very poor and at times ate palm wood which they barbequed. Apparently it is used as stock food. At 15 he went to Dili to stay with family friends he didn’t know and it sounds like he paid his way there by cleaning and cooking. He then went back to school but didn’t have enough money to pay for transport to get there, so he took to selling single cigarettes and boiled eggs early in the morning at the local market and at cock fighting in the evenings. Eventually he managed to learn to drive, worked in a guest house and was offered a job guiding and driving as long as he could speak English. Which he has learnt to a reasonable standard. He now has three children and I suspect enjoys spoiling them and they know nothing about the “hungry season”, which is the three months of the year when it is too dry for crops to grow.

The locals all speak multiple languages with their local dialect plus the national language Tetun, also a majority speak Indonesian and about twenty percent speak Portuguese. The official language is Portuguese which is used for education and seems a strange choice when not many use it. Apparently Tetun has a lot of variations that make it difficult to standardise. And just to add to the picture the currency is $US for notes and their own coins.

If you read about visiting Timor Leste it’s all about beaches and diving. One problem is that quite a few beaches have signs featuring crocodiles. We saw only one and it wasn’t swimming. We spent time all alone on a deserted sacred island called Jaco, where we had lovely swimming but no loungers or staff with cocktails. Apparently the local women go there once a year to perform secret rites. Luis and I reckoned they probably drink palm wine and laugh about how useless men are. We were staying at a beach camp nearby on the mainland and agreed to buying a fish for our dinner, which was one of four all about a metre long, caught in fifteen minutes while bringing the boat over to collect us. When they told me the price I asked Luis if it was a tourist price and he said it was about double the local, so these guys are good learners. Our accommodation there was a very small bure with see through spilt bamboo walls and floor, which felt very fragile. The toilet had a western variety sitter but the bathroom was a cistern with a bucket. Only I used it. Kay remained stoic.

We had a similar ablution deal in our first “guesthouse” away from Dili, except it was a sqatter only and it was a long way from the very rudimentary room we slept in. Kay continued being very stoic and didn’t complain. The rest of our accommodation was good and included two nice restored pousadas which are the fortified houses the Portuguese built at each main settlement, usually on the top of a big hill. The local cuisine doesn’t have the definition of, say, Thai or Vietnamese, and the best part is extensive use of garlic. It’s ok but nothing to get excited about. Because of the colonial past, wine is available at reasonable prices and we tried quite a few Portuguese ones. Reds are better than whites. NZ was represented by Giesens.

The best part of the country is found in the rugged interior where there are spectacular mountainous vistas, really steep valleys, and views that made me say “wow”. Melanie got up at 3 one morning to climb a mountain and see the sun rise, but it had been raining and she went back to bed. An intrepid young man called Tom was also going to do the climb with another guide, who didn’t turn up, and we heard he had set off on his own but we left before he returned so didn’t know his fate. A few days later he walked into where we were having breakfast on the other side of the country and apparently he only got temporarily lost a few times, and made it to the top. The other sights we went to included several large religious statues, war memorials, markets, animist burial sites, pousadas, a very unexciting oil well, the Indonesian border, hot springs, Japanese WW2 caves and the aforementioned massacre sites. And one museum where the English translations were close to floor. The most interesting parts for me was the getting to these places, and the most exciting was when the roads were cut into the side of nearly cliffs and one could see the edge of the road wasn’t particularly secure.

When we got back to Dili it was at the end of a ten hour drive, and the end of the tour, so we were keen to get to our room and relax. We had our first night there and knew it was a nice hotel. I got to the bathroom first and when Kay went in it was flooded, which was not my fault because a plumbing fitting had broken and I had not touched it. Truly. After a short inspection we were shifted to another room where the air conditioning remote didn’t work, so went to a third where later in the evening the bathroom lights ceased operating. Having cleaned up and got into some clean gear we went to the open-wall bar restaurant on the first floor, ordered drinks (mojitos for some and beer for another) and reviewed what we had experienced. The things that resonated were:
The relatively small disparity we saw in economic terms among the population. Like not one really expensive vehicle.
The lack of visual pollution. No big advertising signs.
The apparent lack of any aggressive behaviour.
No high fences or security guards.
The friendly people.
That it had been a very positive and enjoyable experience even with some long drives.

Dennis.

PS. To buy a bottle of wine in Darwin you need photo ID. When I suggested to the person I thought he must be joking he said I should leave.

Categories
Austria Czechia (Czech Republic) Poland

Trains, boat and soon some planes.

Usually when I go to a new country I have read the relevant Lonely Planet about the history and have an understanding of the country’s politics and economy. I have to admit that since finishing in Poland I have been wandering around in almost blissful ignorance, gleaning the odd bit of information now and then, without too much of a prepared plan. I haven’t arrived anywhere with a list for each day, apart from the first day in Vienna, and although it’s not a bad thing to do I feel a bit like the remarks that littered my youngest son’s school reports: “Could have done better”.

As an example I knew there was a train connection from Krakow to Bratislava in Slovakia and I figured if it was problematic I could catch a bus. It turned out not to be that simple and I had only one choice which was to catch a train at 7.30, with a transfer in an unknown town that included a couple of hours wait. The Polish train was very local and in no hurry and the Slovakian one was much the same. The good thing was when I got to Bratislava the temperature was nearly ten degrees warmer, but the walk to my hotel showed a city where people with spray cans had the upper hand. When checking in was completed a guy who looked a lot older than me, about the Agricultural Correspondent’s age, whipped in front of me and in an interesting, slightly antipodean accent, asked for two of his cans of beer. He then told me his room fridge was bloody useless and didn’t get the beer properly cold. So I figured he was from Australia, but he was definitely an Indian, and later on, in a bar down the road he told me was originally from Malaysia, was a retired school teacher of wood and metalwork, was in the throes of a divorce, and was in Bratislava for an old friend’s big birthday and they were paying for everything. When he went to Australia the only teaching job he could get was in a Catholic school with a horrible controlling priest in charge, who he happily told me ended up in jail. The next school was also Catholic with a nice priest in charge, but sadly he suffered the same fate. Then he decided to work for government schools. He had an itinerary that included a wine trip and generously suggested I might like to join in. My prompting was very subtle. And so I got to go to the Little Carpathian vineyards, which I had researched, and enjoyed a very old wine region that has a few goodies amongst the forty varieties of grapes they grow.

Our guide was the owner of quite a large guiding company, and a Rotarian, who knew lots about history and economics, as you would expect. Did you know that Slovakia produces more cars per head of population than any other country? I didn’t. If you like ugly cars and have a Porsche Cayenne that’s where it came from, along with plenty of other lesser brands. Apparently this industrial surprise was a result of low wages and a surplus of skilled workers who had been employed in armaments manufacturing, which was stopped after Czechoslovakia became western. I think there were also some good tax deals done as well. While at a big modern winery we were tasting with the manager who was saying how hard it was competing with the bigger European countries because they had higher subsidies. I asked why any of them had subsidies, and was met with a look of wonder at what sort of an idiot could think that any agricultural business could do without. My brief explanation as what happens when they are removed seemed incomprehensible to all of them including the Rotarian. This place has a large collection of Warhol art and apparently he had Slovakian parents. I have already won a free beer on a bet about his origins so keep it in mind. They were originally called Warhola.

Before leaving NZ I had contacted Ruediger in Vienna who had been our expert group leader in North Korea. He had suggested getting a boat down the Danube to my next stop in that city, and it was a very pleasant way of travelling. Especially when the landing was only ten minutes walk from my hotel. As mentioned I had a plan for one of my three days, which was to see all the Hundertwasser buildings and museum, and to go to another museum and see the biggest collection of Bruegel the Elder paintings. Why? Well, in 1973 when I was in a bar in the port area of Tunis I ended up squatting behind the bar while a fight took place. Next to me was another white guy who turned out to be Hundertwasser. I had never heard of him. He invited me stay on his boat and I was amazed at his paintings, and he was a complete Aoteoroa devotee, so when you visit his toilet up north you know someone who met him. The Bruegel bit goes back to 1968 when in my first uni year I met a lot of Art History students, was introduced to his paintings and bought a real size print of the Winter Hunters, and that along with ten others was what I went to see.

Being a leading NK expert Ruediger is a bit busy at present but we managed to have a nice long meal with lots of wine to go with the roasted goose and sauerkraut. He thinks the only way to make NK end its isolation is a variation of the “blue jeans and rocknroll” that helped the Soviet empire crumble, and that sanctions reinforce the position of the existing regime. The beginnings of capitalism are there and human nature will expand on them, but the more threatened the regime feels the more it will seek to step on these nasty imperialist practices. I think he’s probably right because short of a catastrophic war how else do you get rid of a regime that’s all powerful, only interested in its survival, and doesn’t care at all about the conditions for the people it rules.

The Austrian elections were on while I was there but nothing really would have told you that. I have always felt the home of Hitler was an historically sneaky place and the main mover in the election was a party that is playing down its neo-nazi roots. Apparently in the schools the history of the Nazi takeover is portrayed as Austria being the first to suffer under the onslaught of the Germans. Just a bit different from what I learnt. However Vienna certainly shows evidence of plenty of refugees, and my hotel was just off the main touristy part of town and had a fair mixture of nationalities. The nicest meal I had was in a Syrian restaurant with delicious Lebanese wines. The Prater transport centre was close by and had the biggest selection of drunks I have seen. A bit of a contrast to the fancy cafes a kilometre away.

After finishing with the glories of the Hapsburgs and all that I bravely set off for Mikulov, just over the border in Czeckia, or whatever it is they call themselves now. The land of Skodas. I went by a couple of trains that stopped at nearly every station and I helped time pass by keeping a rolling average of the time spent between each stop, which was just under 6 minutes. I had to wait a while in a town called Breclav and I tried about five ways of pronouncing it and I’m pretty sure none of them were correct. Then we got down to the real stuff with a 25 minute ride in two very old big railcar things that got pretty speedy between stops, and ended in the small and very nice town of Mikulov, where the owner of my equally nice b ‘n’ b picked me up. The first thing he asked was how did I enjoy their train? This place is one of the centres of the Moravian wine area, which I had done bit of homework on before arriving. I hadn’t organised anything in advance, thinking I could find someone to drive me around vineyards while I met delightful local winemakers and sampled their products. My host quickly explained it wasn’t like that and one sampled in vinotekas which are wine bars/shops in town, and straying into a winery would not be appreciated. So I did as told and found some of the nicest small country producer whites I have tasted. Really good stuff and my favourite variety was called Palava, which at least is easy to say and I caused no confusion when requesting it. Because it was a small place, after walking in and around the castle in the middle, up on a rocky hill, I did wander out around the autumnal vineyards, but kept out of them, just in case the gun shots I could hear were not only for scaring birds.

After two nights I found the railway station in the morning mist and waited an extra half an hour for the old train which had been delayed for “technical reasons”. Why can’t they tell you what really happened ? In this case I reckon the driver probably had had a big night because he looked a bit delicate when the train finally arrived. By the time we got back to Breclav the connection to Prague was going to be problematic so I rapidly got a ticket and jumped on to a very full intercity train with not many spare seats, but by the first stop I had one without a little yellow ticket saying it was booked. I was surrounded by women of a certain age, who I surmised were school teachers, so going to sleep was unlikely.

Apart from printing a Google map showing me how to find my hotel I knew absolutely nothing about Prague. When I got a map at my hotel reception I found it had a river, which was a surprise, and the map didn’t name it so I had to Google that. Another never heard of, but it starts with Vlt and runs into the Elbe. The map had all the sights in yellow and most I have looked at, along with about 200,000 other tourists. If this is the future of tourism in NZ let’s lock the gates now. Going over the Charles Bridge (the number one attraction, for the few of you who haven’t been there) was like being in the crowd after a big test match and far from fun. Even the Chinese seem subdued and moved aside when necessary. However, as usual there are only a few places like that and it is a nice city away from all the hassle. I guess the tourist money is an attraction for the beggars and difficult looking people, and I assumed all the badly tattooed English of both sexes were there for a soccer game. After two and a half days of sights, both sides of the river, I got some alternative walking route books from the info place and did one of those on my last day. It was a long way from the people holding up umbrellas and tour flags and I spent a pleasant five hours. I wasn’t so sure about it when getting to the start of the walk meant using a long underpass which had about 15 vagrants living in it, including one who had a little gas cooker and it smelt like bacon as I scuttled past trying not to step on any of the “beds”. One of the listed attractions was the street art around a metro station and there was one big work that deserved that description. There, and pretty much everywhere else, was a display area for miscreants whose only talent is the ability to press the top of a spray can.

Usually when I have to head for the airport and go home I feel a bit longer would have been nice, but this time I am ready to fly. I think I must have been too long on my own because today I found myself telling me out loud what direction to take next. I looked around to be sure nobody heard me, and luckily I was alone. Also I have a nearly overwhelming desire to give the next person who puffs cigarette smoke over me a sharp kick in the shins. Which would not be a good career move. I just hope Kim 3 doesn’t decide to drop the big one on Seoul tomorrow because I will be there for a while.

I am looking forward to my first glass of a certain Waipara Riesling.

Dennis.

Categories
Poland

Poland.

I think travel in Europe is a bit too easy.  You just drive straight through borders and it initially looks like what’s on one side is what’s on the other apart from different languages.  I have been two weeks in Poland and I have to think for a bit, to say what is uniquely Polish apart from the language, which is so impenetrable looking that I haven’t sorted out one word to use.  That’s partly because saying “hello” means it’s obvious I speak English and both parties can either do that, or it’s a starting pointing.  All those “czwy” sort of combinations make me too scared to try saying things as I’ll probably end up inadvertently insulting someone, and English works fine. Thank goodness. I recently was in the same compartment on a train with a nice business woman who told me she was from a place called  Woodge.  I got out my map of Poland and asked her to show me where it was, and it is spelt Lodz.  None of these complications are a problem for the tourism industry here which is about ten times bigger than I expected.   When I went on the “free” walking tour in Krakow the other day 60 people turned up, which apparently is normal for autumn. 

The history of Poland is a bit unique but not absolutely.  They had a dream run back in the 16th century but then it was split up between the big guys and ceased to exist as a political nation until 1918.  That lasted until 1939 when it got split up again between the USSR and Germany, and then in 1989 it was the first to get rid of communism and became what it is today.  Although, given the peculiarities of the present governing party and president, the future looks like there could possibly be more changes.  Religion is very important and apparently in the last census 89 percent of people admitted to being Roman Catholics, and anecdotally it’s reckoned at least half of those attend church regularly.  The Polish pope is a big hero which is due to more than just religion, it’s also because of his support for Solidarity prior to 1989.  In Krakow all tourists get taken to the pope’s house where he used to stand on the balcony and chat to disaffected communist-ruled youths.  It’s hard to miss because there is a very large photo of him above the doorway.  You regularly see proper nuns with wimples wandering about, and well-fed looking priests abound.  And you are never out of sight of a church spire or six  –  the maintenance budget for them must be huge.  So all of that is a bit different.

Polish food is certainly seen as being different and every second restaurant in tourist areas sells genuine Polish food.   My experience is that means you get very plain cooking with nothing really interesting in the taste and you don’t need another meal for 24 hours.   Pierogis are a big deal, being dumplings that can have anything in them and when they have meat they approach pie status.  Being a big pie fan I have tried a few of these and some are good and some are stodgy and boring.  The best stuff has been the sausages.  They are very good, especially when bought from a stall and accompanied by tomato sauce, mustard and onions.  It wouldn’t surprise me to be told the original hot dog was made by a Pole.  I have generally eaten at places that see themselves as not locally typical and I have had some nice meals, especially rabbit.  The ubiquitous pork chop has proved to be variable in quality and the last one I had was dry and tough so I shifted my allegiance to the bunny.  There is even Polish wine which I am told can be ok but my experience has been with it by the glass, and I’m sure it’s on the menu only because it is cheap.

​P​oles also have lots of writers, poets and composers as heroes of their country and in the Warsaw hotel our room was dedicated to Chopin.  Apart from just calling it the Chopin Room it had a deconstructed grand piano scattered about.  The outside and top was the table, the bit with all the strings was on one wall, and the keyboard part was on another wall.  There’s a poet that everyone learns about at school, as proved by the Polish people on a tour I did in central Krakow, all quoting one of this guy’s poems in unison.  In the middle of the main square there is a very big statue of and about him.  The story was that this guy had nothing to do with Krakow and when the statue was first created all the locals moaned about it being there.  Until 1939, when the Germans took it down and suddenly they missed it terribly, to the point where as a matter of silent protest anyone walking across the square would do a circle around where it used to be.  There is a series of photos taken in the winter during the war showing the tracks they made. 

One of the things that interested me about Poland before arriving was the reconstruction of the Warsaw centre after WW2.  Hitler didn’t have much time for the Poles and after they resisted a bit he ordered Warsaw to be razed to the ground.  The photos show they got pretty close to that and what was rebuilt is really amazing.  It’s not exactly what was there in every little detail but it’s very close.  The castle in the middle of Warsaw was made a couple of metres higher, to be more imposing, and some bits that were regarded as nasty add-ons were left out.  The same thing was done in Gdansk but the two other cities I’ve been to, Torun and Krakow, didn’t get bombed.  Torun was a nice small city with some of its medieval walls standing, and I reckon if Hamilton had been founded in 11-something it would be similar.  It’s on the Vistula river and in the early 1400s a bridge was built over the river which is very wide.   The present bridges are both 5 spans.  l  was pretty impressed with the picture of this original bridge and the complicated looking engineering, until I realised that most of the huge cathedrals still about came from a similar time, so a bridge wouldn’t have been anything extra special.  There is also an extremely cool medieval crane in Gdansk which could lift 2 tonnes, driven by person power applied via a big wheel with steps on the inside that the workers walked on like gerbils. 
On this trip I have walked down kilometres of galleries hung with boring portraits of people from centuries ago.  I don’t even pretend to look at them anymore.  This was happening in a gallery in Warsaw Castle when we went into yet another room and right in front were two Rembrandts.   After all the dross here was something that was immeasurably better, and I was blown away by one of an old man looking like he was sick of life. (A Scholar at His Writing Table)

 It’s all in the eyes. I have to admit that when I have seen Rembrandts before I have been a bit ho hum what’s all the fuss.  My most recent gallery visit was the modern art one in Krakow which had mostly installations and usually that means I can’t understand what they are supposed to be about. There was a rolled up Persian carpet that periodically flashed Xmas lights embedded in it and played Arabic music.  Apparently it was something to do with Moslem art not having human representation in it.  I hope it was taking the p, but who knows.
My travel has been by trains and before I even started my first one to Gdansk I caused the only real excitement of the trip so far.  There is usually a degree of angst when using transport in foreign countries for the first time, and this was no different.  I had worked out what were the carriage and seat numbers on the ticket, and I knew what platform was required.  Each platform has two lines and it wasn’t clear which one was mine but I figured I could tell from the time the train arrived.  Also I was in carriage number 1 and I didn’t know what end it would be.  Then it was apparent that two trains were arriving at platform 2 close together so I thought I would ask a man in a uniform which was which.  There was nobody like that and the train I thought was mine then pulled in, so I got aboard and asked a passenger where was it going and which carriage were we in.  Right train but wrong end.  I had just enough time to get out and walk up to the other end, but as I went down the four narrow steps to get off, my heel clipped one, I tripped, and with my bag out in front of me headed for the platform, horizontally, but with one leg stuck in the gap we are supposed to mind.  I imagine it would have looked quite funny but my leg had smacked on the edge of the platform and hurt a lot.  It did cause a man in a uniform to magically appear.  I showed him my ticket so he didn’t blow his let’s-go-now whistle and I limped rapidly to first class at the front, where I self-performed blood staunching first aid.   And just in case you’re thinking why was he waiting for carriage 1 at the back, there was a logical reason, but the next time I knew a precedent had been set, and waited at the front .  Guess where carriage 1 was on that train.

Watching out the train windows I have gathered a great deal of information about the local agriculture which I will summarise down to the following: There is a lot of it and Poland is a major agricultural producer in the EU.

When they get the average farm size up from its current 10 hectares there will be even more.

Plenty of good gear being used.

Almost all cropping so no fences.

The land continued flat until about an hour out of Krakow when with no advance warning we went up a bit of a rise, through a tunnel and out into country with hills and valleys.  Nothing too steep, but it certainty makes a change after six weeks of flatness.

My last major bit of tourism in Poland was to go on a tour to Auschwitz-Birkenau and that was yesterday.  As we drove out from Krakow I wondered how I was going to react, because there is something paradoxical about a place like this being a major tourist attraction. When I got back I sent Kay my daily email and in trying to express how it was, the best word I could come up with was “terrifying”.  Not in the sense that I was scared but how else do you describe these sorts of places where humanity turns itself upside down?  At one level it was emotional, like the stacks of little children’s shoes, and at another level it was looking at a mundane industrial system for killing a million people and turning them into dust.  German industrial efficiency applied from the logistics of collection through to the disposal.  I think it was a very worthwhile experience and if you want to know why, come around with a bottle wine one evening and I’ll go on at length.  This morning I did my last minor bit of Polish tourism by finally getting into the Schindler Factory Museum.  Twice before I had been there to find queues out the door, so this time I was in place before opening and fought my way in.  It is a very good modern museum but it was full of groups and loud guides (no Chinese ones), blocking the way and looking at me disapprovingly as I politely moved through.   It took me an hour and outside I headed for the best sausage stall, not too far away, to find it not yet open.  I am heading back there now and it better be ready to go.

Do wedzenia.
Dennis

Categories
Belarus

Back in the USSR

Well, not really, it was Belarus and while it wasn’t quite as Soviet as some articles say, it certainly has plenty of the good old days including a real dictator and an active KGB. His name is Lukashenko and he is supposedly the only European dictator but I think if you include Russia he is not alone. I went there because earlier this year I found out they had a temporary 5 day visa free deal as long as you fly in and out of Minsk, which is an hour’s flight from Warsaw. So away I went, in a short haul Brazilian jet from Fred Chopin Airport.

I always get a bit concerned when approaching immigration in authoritarian countries and this one requires you have evidence of medical insurance, which I had, but the immigration person (complete with boards on her shoulders) looked at it for a long time, then scrutinised me very carefully, then fiddled with her computer even longer, and eventually banged her stamp three times and I was in. Waiting in arrivals with the reassuring notice with one’s name was Sergey, who I had found online, and he greeted me very enthusiastically, partly because he had driven people from 59 countries and he was about to hit 60 with this NZer. By the time we got to town he had played me a very slow military version of our national anthem, told me about his two failed marriages, his children, his business, his previous jobs, what an unpleasant person Lukashenko is, what a pack of bastards the Russians are, and pointed out all the sights in the evening light. It is about a half hour ride.

The next morning I set off in SUNSHINE to explore with a very inadequate map. I just followed the people in front who were all going the same way and ended up walking under the very smart new main railway station and eventually came out from underground in front of the only building I had seen a photo of. Which meant I knew where I was and could get some use from the map. Minsk was a battleground in WW2 so was mostly rebuilt in Soviet style after the war although some buildings were recreated. There are big squares with grand monuments, lots of block-long equally grand buildings and things like the People’s Palace. I spent two days looking around and the best place was the Great Patriotic War Museum. Once again a flash new building and inside more information than you need, but also lots of big boys stuff. The biggest were about 6 Russian tanks including the legendary T34 of which I bought a fridge magnet; at least 2 German tanks one of which was also pretty big but not a Tiger; lots of planes that did look real but who knows, including an ME 109 and a couple of Yaks; and every gun used from pocket pistols to big artillery and mortar machinery. The theme of war and human misery from the Baltics continued here but the sole bad people were the Germans because Belarus had been part of Russia for a long time so only had one invasion and one liberation, in the last few hundred years, just to be accurate. Their losses were huge and there were plenty of concentration camps in Belarus, one of which was the fourth biggest. There is an astonishingly resonant monument to the lost women on a little island in Minsk which would easily be the best war memorial I have ever seen.

That evening I reasoned with myself that as my two previous evening meals had been cheap and unexciting I was due something better. Having consulted the online Oracle I went to Cafe du Lux and things got nicely evened out. The food was sort of yummy old school French and the wine was pretty good. In addition a selection of the local well off and trendy could be watched. The women were mostly young and decorative with one beside me looking very familiar, and after a lot of consideration I worked out she was a double of the one married to an English prince who is pregnant with a third child. Not sure what her name is. When one of the waiters asked where I was from he got quite excited because he had been to an educational tasting of our wines. As with every other country these days, people in Belarus know about NZ and it’s referred to in a very positive way. Everyone says they want to visit and on my flight back to Warsaw today the young nerd I sat next to said he plans to shift to NZ as soon as he can. When I asked why,
he went all ecological so I didn’t spoil his day and tell him about the dirty polluting dairy farmers.

On the third day I had organised Sergey to take me on a day trip to a couple of small towns that had castles as the tourist attraction, but my unspoken plan was to whip through them and concentrate on looking at the country in preparation for a stint as the temporary Agricultural Correspondent. Fortunately the castles were pretty interesting because once again I was in flat country, and even worse, to my surprise agriculture is still collectivised. That means it’s all the same boring cropping apart from one orchard of the smallest, most miserable apple trees I have ever seen. There was a bit of early growth from winter wheat and much of the maize has yet to be harvested, and the only other visual agricultural excitement was the existence of big round bales. I assume they were of maize for the unseen cows inside the odd big shed. Tractors were not often spied and those that did appear looked ready for the knackers yard. The only active add-on to tractors was a muck spreader. The village houses generally looked from the 1920s and there were plenty of them were abandoned and derelict. Socialism is a great way to freeze history.

People are leaving the country for the usual reason of why be a peasant when you can live in the city and work less and earn more. Agricultural workers get paid less than the average US$350 a month and couple that with all the fun of living in an old house and enduring four and a half months of winter snow with no cafe to serve you fancy coffees, so its no surprise. We had lunch in a small town where I was polite and partook of local cuisine.

First was seasonal mushroom soup which was delicious. It’s mushroom time and all along the road locals had little stalls selling them. The ones in my soup were thin and yellow and obviously not poisonous. Second course was the national favourite, potato pancakes. “Stodgy” came immediately to my mind. Closely followed by “uninspiring”. My drink was also a national favourite called kvass, pronounced “kwass”, which is not alcoholic despite looking like beer and is made from fermented bread. It’s quite refreshing and acceptable. On the way back Sergey asked if I would like to detour to the highest point in Belarus but when he added that it was only 445 m. high I demurred. While continuing to drive he got out his phone and found the video he took of an Icelandic client who travels to the highest point of the countries he visits. Then he found me more videos all while we zipped down a motorway. He also showed me a photoshopped picture of Lukashenko beside one of Hitler where they looked pretty similar although the former’s moustache is a bit wider. Sergey was a good guy and on this day I learnt lots more about him including the trials of having an alcoholic father, and how when after he showed his second ex-in-laws his new apartment his second ex-wife called him the next day to explain their divorce was a mistake and how about getting back together. After the divorce she had married her fancy younger man, had a child and got divorced again. He didn’t think reuniting was a good idea. So if you go to Belarus he comes highly recommended. I understand the videos I watched are accessible through www.autotransfer.by.

The fourth day I had to be ready to depart at 4 p.m. which left a bit of time to fill so I decided to go shopping on the off chance of finding a couple of items of warm clothing I think I am going to need. Apart from one modern smallish shopping mall and another hidden under Independence Square, shops are not obvious. All the big grand buildings were not designed with anything commercial in mind so there are very few shop windows to show you what is inside and signs generally have just initials or a few words in Cyrillic. When you sense something useful might be within you have to open several doors to get inside and find out. Sometimes you find interesting things and other times you mutter sorry and reverse out. According to Google there is a GUM department store, and either Google is lying about where it is, or it is well hidden in one of the four large buildings I investigated. Or perhaps it has retired, the Tripadvisor reviews l saw said it was a bit of the past. I found a few other places but not what I wanted so I ended up sitting in the sun outside, with my back to the chilly breeze, having my favourite Thai soup for lunch with a beer. Those people in the villages don’t know what they are missing. Most shop assistants from here would be fired on the spot at home. They take no interest in customers, never offer to help, and are usually otherwise engaged on the phone or chatting to each other. I asked one if she spoke English and she admitted to a little, so I asked if there was a bigger size in a jacket and the answer was that she didn’t know. End of story. A guide in Vilnius told us about the amazement when McDonald’s opened and the assistants smiled at you and asked if they could help. Even more amazing was that everything on the menu was available, and you got it within a few minutes. Those strange American ways have yet to conquer all.

For those of a cautious financial attitude you would like Minsk. I changed US$100 on arrival and didn’t spend it all despite four lunches and dinners including the flash one, a haircut, two fridge magnets, museum and castle entrance fees, a couple of ice creams, and a very nice bottle of Georgian red wine. For those free spirits who enjoy jaywalking, like me, it is not ideal. Although the police presence was much lower than I expected everyone waits for the lights and no one I saw crossed a road away from the official place.

In conclusion, Belarus is not a must-see but it certainly wasn’t a waste of four days.

Dennis

PS. If you’re grammatically observant you may have noticed I am trying to join the Oxford comma club.

Categories
Estonia Latvia Lithuania

The Baltic States

We’ve spent two weeks having a look in Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania and can tell you the sky has been mostly varying shades of grey with very occasional bursts of sunshine. The locals are not fazed and seem to take a pride in their lousy weather. I guess it’s better than having two hurricanes. Places stayed in have been the three capitals of Tallinn, Riga and Vilnius plus Tartu in Estonia, and we did a few day trips to various tourist places, usually with castles or in one case to a beach which wasn’t like Waihi. The longer trips have been by bus including one in their version of business class, but even in cattle you get a screen with movies, music and wifi. Along the way we met up with a Belgian couple we first found in a canoe, in the Bolivian Amazon Basin 22 years ago. We have both visited each other a few times since then and they came to Tallinn to see us. Also Bruce and Cheryl from the Volga Dream turned up unexpectedly when we did a day trip to Helsinki and then again in Tallinn and Riga. Helsinki has one sight really worth seeing which is modern church built into a rock formation and Cheryl spied Kay as she walked on the roof area, mainly because of Kay’s extremely bright striped leggings.

The locals are not casually friendly and one has to look at the recent history to explain that. Before 1918 only Lithuania had ever been an independent nation, they had an empire for a while in the 1400s, and they all were serfs and peasants with other nationalities being the bosses. However the languages and cultures stayed strong and after WW1 all three of them fought for and got their own independent states and started off democratically but drifted into authoritarian rule. Then Hitler and Uncle Joe Stalin signed the Ribbentrop Pact in 1939 and it included secret bits about who took which parts of Europe, so the USSR got the Baltic countries and quickly set about including them in its happy family. Nationalisation, commercialisation, heavy industrialisation and free long-term trips to Siberia were put in place in countries which had been doing quite well, with the inevitable results of food shortages and a lot of unhappy citizens plus economic disaster for many. Then two years later in 1941 Germany liberated them which didn’t really turn out so well with all the catastrophic events associated with such an occupation. Lithuania had over 200,000 Jewish in 1940 and when the SS had finished there were maybe 5,000 left. And it wasn’t just them who were dealt to. Then the Soviets came back and liberated them from the Germans and finished off what they had started a few years before, so all three countries became part of the USSR and were subject to plenty of attention from the KGB because the indigenous people thought too independently. But there is a happy ending with each country getting their independence again in the early 1990s. It wasn’t a simple matter to suddenly set up a new nation and each of them has had economic ups and downs, but at present they seem on the way to being part of Western Europe. One of the legacies of past times was considerable Russian immigration to Estonia and Latvia which is a problem at present as these people are seen as a disgruntled minority who could easily be manipulated by Putin’s mates.

Anyhow, caution and wariness in dealing with unknown people have become part of life, although now diminishing, and you don’t get a “hello” or even a nod when you are the only people walking on a park track. But in normal transactions they are friendly and helpful. The only surely tourist serving person we have had was a superior waiter in a restaurant with no wine by the glass listed. I asked if there was any and he said yes, I asked what there was and he said red and white, so I asked if there was more detail and he said helpful things like there was a French chardonnay. Then I got grumpy and said I didn’t want any, which meant ten minutes later I had to back down and get more specific detail. The only other time I have been actively annoyed was when I put down an open umbrella to do complicated navigation stuff and it blew into me, so I kicked it away, and the next thing that happened to it was me having to put it in a rubbish bin. But I’ve now got one with a pattern which Kay assures me is quite masculine.

The only emphatic local behaviour we have seen happened on a local train when an old lady stopped by an empty seat behind us. There was a bag on the seat belonging to an equally old guy sitting by the window who I think had started the day with a few vodkas. She stood there for quite a while waiting for the bag to be shifted because there were few empty seats, and the vodka man ignored her. A degree of concern amongst other passengers was palpable and then a young guy stood up, guided the lady to his seat, went back and picked up the offending bag, threw it at vodka man and sat in the seat. The old guy got a bit noisy as did his new companion but things settled down when Galahad’s mother told him to stop. Well it sounded like that.

These countries are not geographically exciting. They are flat or at best very gently undulating. Apparently there is a hill in Lithuania that’s 300m high. There is lots of woodland, or forests as they are called, but not many of the trees would produce a good length of 4×4. Agriculture is all cereal cropping which isn’t too exciting in late autumn. Because there are no rocks all the old big buildings are made of red bricks and somehow a brick castle doesn’t quite look rugged enough. However, there are plenty of tourists and they mainly come to see the “Old Town” in each of the three capitals. Not all come to admire the architecture as evidenced by the noise on Saturday nights, but they are visually interesting places and for me the best was Riga which has lots of amazing Art Nouveau buildings. Kay liked Riga because Latvians are particularly keen on knitting and you can buy postcards that say Knit Like a Latvian. We watched the ABs play SA there in a local bar called The Kiwi Pub and there weren’t too many Latvians in attendance. I suspect I made the most noise, but who wouldn’t when they play as well as they did.

Each of Tallinn, Riga and Vilnius have interesting museums about the occupations and the most compelling parts are the videos of these now old people talking matter of factly about the terrible things that happened to them and their families. It’s pretty hard to stay dispassionate about the events of WW2 and the Soviet occupations when you watch that sort of stuff. It certainly makes me wonder just how human beings can treat others so horribly. (And while I am on this subject I have to say it really annoys me that the description”Nazi” is substituted for “German” in institutions . I may have mentioned that a few years ago.) In Vilnius the museum is in the old KGB headquarters and the highlight is to wander through the cells, and have a look at the bullet holes in the execution chamber. Not a place for making jokes.

And less historically, we have had some very good food. Partly because sometimes when all the popular places are full we end up in more expensive restaurants where the chefs and their subordinates have the requisite tattoos and desire to be different. As always in Europe white wine by the glass is a problem for people from NZ. A couple of nights ago we unknowingly ended up in a Lithuanian restaurant jam -packed with a bus load of bemused Chinese and another of stoic English. There were accordians , dancers, traditional costumes and delightful hard pressed staff. When asked about a drink I didn’t want to hold the waiter up so I just asked for a glass of tasty white wine, and certainly nothing from Italy. I got something from Spain that had a bit of Muscat in it and went very well with my local meat and chips. The next night we went to a place that was all industrial and full of youths and very uncomfortable looking chairs, so we walked back to one seen on the way and it turned out to be Chinese. We both agreed a bit of Asian food was a good idea even though we hadn’t really thought of it.

Next stop Warsaw for a few days. Then Kay flies home if the airline has enough fuel. I fly to Belarus, supposedly the last dictatorship in Europe, if they haven’t changed their trial period of visa on arrival for nice people from democratic places.

Dennis.

Categories
Russia

Stage 1. A little bit of Russia.

Kay and I have just finished a tour with a cruise in Russia.  It was called The Volga Dream Tour.  Because we spent some time on the Volga River or because the boat was called The Volga Dream.  It wasn’t vulgar and it turned out not too bad for that sort of thing.  I was more than a little concerned when the other couple that were part of our pickup from the Moscow airport included an older male from the west side of the Tasman Sea who entertained us all the way into the city by mentioning the make of nearly every car we saw.  He was particularly excited about Toyota Camrys because according to him they were made in his country.  I said nothing but mentality resolved to keep well away over the next 12 days.  Which I did successfully.

We are nearly unexperienced in the complications of being part of a tour group and I really didn’t want to end up being “friends” with people who annoyed me.  So in the first couple of days I kept away from the group of large people from Virginia and a few others who were obviously problematic.  One of the latter was an English lady with very firm opinions about everything, but she also had a good bloke for a husband so tolerance was required there.  I am still not really sure what is wrong with an “egg-bound” omelette which was the first thing I heard her moan about.  The largest of the Virginians managed to fall over twice and ended up with his shoulder broken and a sling device similar to what one gets for a rotator cuff operation.  Luckily our English Speaking “Pink” group of 13 for the guided stuff included enough interesting and good people to make the socialising bits fun.  There were only 58 on the tour and the boat had a capacity of 102 so we weren’t crowded and getting at the excellent food was only a problem when one of the Virginians was busy spooning on one slice of each of the four cheesecakes, or something similar.  There was a delightful couple from South Carolina we sat with once at lunch and he reckoned they were a good team because he didn’t remember anything and she couldn’t hear ( possibly due to her face lifts getting a bit tight around the ears).  Another oncer for lunch was with a guy from the same state who wore only jandals no matter how formal the rest of his gear.  He had a white moustache with curly ends and when not eating sported a toothpick in the corner of his mouth.  I was a bit dubious about him, but after hearing his story about the heartache of recently having to organise the arrest of his opiate-addicted thieving daughter-in-law, I changed my mind.  Speaking of inappropriate footwear there was also a very Germanic Swiss chap who would have clicked his heels upon greeting everyone, but couldn’t because he usually wore sandals with socks.  I particularly enjoyed the company of an ex merchant banker from Oz who had less tolerance than me, and a CFO from New Jersey who had a likeable 16 years younger wife who could only have come from New York.  And there was a recently widowed lady from Vienna who had been a Cultural Attache for Austria and Portugal in Beijing, as well as other interesting things.  When she was back home she had an exhibition of her art to organise before leaving for Xmas in NZ, which was as far away from Vienna she could get.

The tour consisted of 4 days in Moscow, 6 days floating on various sorts of water and 3 days in St Petersburg.  There can’t be many sights we didn’t see and I can now say that if I never see another icon I won’t be upset.  Also, having seen the astonishing excesses of the Russian royal family’s properties and  possessions I think they probably got their just dues with the revolution.  But it was fun to have a look, although things like Faberge Eggs and 5000 piece porcelain dinner sets didn’t get me cheering from the stands.  Some of the sights had crowds of tourists that would make Florence in summer seem average and that was mainly due to big parties of Chinese, who showed their usual disregard of the niceties of queuing and an ability to push one aside that indicates they could well be a rugby force.  The Oz person and I went on quiet firm shoulder offensive at times, although after being nearly cleaned out by a large Chinese woman I did retaliate with a very firm forearm push that was also very effective.  Our guide in Moscow was particularly annoyed by the Chinese guides who she said were illegal, and twice she stopped guiding us to have a serious sounding chat to these people.  The guide in St Petersburg told us that she had heard that some Chinese guides were telling their clients they could organise them to attend the shooting of an artillery gun at midday, for an extra fee, even though it is done every day no matter what.

On the boat we went along several rivers, including the Volga, through lots of slave  labour constructed canals and locks, and across the two biggest fresh water lakes in Europe.  Each day we stopped somewhere for a look including a city called Yaroslavl where I went for a solo walk and couldn’t find my way back to the bus.  About 10 minutes before the bus was due to leave I realised there was a problem when the choice of three possible ways at an intersection all looked the same.  Mobile phones are very handy at times but I was still late which was regularly remembered by some.  Kay’s moment of fame came in St Petersburg when her shoulder bag was unzipped and a money purse (tied to the inside) was extracted by a pickpocket group.   They would not have been pleased with the loot which was 100 rubles which is about$2.50.

We did a few things on our own which included a long walk to Gorky Park, because of the book;  a visit to the Gulag Museum in  Moscow which was rather sobering; and in St Petersburg the State Museum of the Defence and Blockade which would make you extremely pleased you weren’t living there in the early 1940s.  Well, if you were there you would probably have been killed or slowly starved.

We had a lecturer on the boat who did his version of the history of Russia and I only lasted one and a half of the four sessions.  However his comments about the very high support of Putin seemed pretty much on the mark.  His approval ratings are in the 70-80% and nobody we asked was negative about him.  They seem happy to have a new Tsar, partly because when you look at their last 100 years of history the avoidance of chaos and violence is paramount, and partly because there is no real alternative.  Throw in the manipulation of nationalism by military incursions overseas and an unholy alliance with the local orthodox church, as well as an acceptance of political corruption and you have a very firmly ensconced leader.  One guide we had commented that there many unknown things about the monastery he was showing us but one thing he did know for sure was who would win the next election.

We really only saw the central areas of the two main cities of Russia so it’s not really possible to make meaningful comments about the nation based on that.  Being specific, they’re both sophisticated cities to visit and we had some very interesting meals although Kay thought the baked potato ice cream she got one night was a step too far.   Today we had a seven-hour bus ride to Tallinn in Estonia and it was my first good look at the countryside.  I suspect that in this area agriculture has diminished a lot since the end of the USSR, with lots of new scrubby growth areas and abandoned cottages as well as the usual wrecked Soviet facilities for big collective farms.  Once across the border to Estonia there were nice tidy cropping farms and even a few cows which would have pleased the Agricultural Correspondent.

The heading to this said “Stage 1” and for me there are seven more countries to come and hopefully there will be more than cobbled streets, big churches and quaintness to comment about.

And remember that vodka cures everything.

Categories
Japan

Japan – the ideal society?

It’s always nice to start with a bit of an adventure but because Japan is what it is adventures are not easy.  All I can point to is Kay and I getting mixed up in the 12 floors of the Ginza Uni Qlo which ended up with me waiting 20 minutes on floor 6 (children and babies) while Kay was outside the front door.  It appears we both checked out where the other was at exactly the same time and we must have crossed paths on the escalators.  Exciting stuff huh.

I am sure that those of you who have been to Japan will understand.  I suspect you would have to do something rather stupid to get into trouble here and that is not because it is especially tolerant.  It’s just that everything is done in its locally correct way and it’s generally obvious, so to cause trouble would require a fair degree of non-thought.  A friend of mine came on a representative rugby trip here many years ago and he succeeded by hitting a policeman, and some people I know who were involved with importing cars also have a few tales of interest.  But Kay and I have just buzzed along on various types of trains, mostly Shinkansen speedy ones, with our upper class JR Pass and done the sights in six cities and in a few small daytrip places.  The most interesting thing by far is watching how people behave and that is the really different part of being in Japan.

The moment you get on your first public transport you know Japanese are unlike any other nationalities.  There are signs saying no talking on your  mobile and no excessive noise and they are eerily quiet.  We spent many hours on trains and metros and only two people were naughty  –  one was a smart alec youth (a rare variety and it was an obscure local line) and the other was an Indian tourist doing what comes naturally until his wife saw the silent reaction and gave him a quick word. 

Everyone is polite and obeys the rules.  My biggest problem was with pedestrian crossings which usually have a light to tell you what to do even if if it is a little one way street.  People stand there waiting a long time when there isn’t a vehicle in sight.  After a couple of days I decided if no one was looking I would be bad and sneak across, and eventually we both did but not when there was a group around us. This morning on the way to breakfast we had a red light on a side road two steps wide and I looked about, only a young women by me, so I went and she followed giving me a nice smile of complicity.   All footpaths and public passageways are politically correct with tiles about a foot wide with four groves along them presumably for blind people.  If you have funny ankles or feet like my wife or high heels these are very annoying, especially when the three blind people we have seen did not use them.  However when you get to the next pedestrian crossing and it’s eventually your turn you can be soothed by the electronic warning noise emitting “Coming Through The Rye” or something equally Japanese.

Everyone is unfailingly considerate which is a very good thing for a tourist.  Stupid questions are dealt with without any problems.  Railway attendants bow on entering and leaving a carriage.  Getting out of a shop after buying something is a major exercise of thankyous and more  bowing.  Walking past a heavily manned hotel reception desk only requires several bows and thankfully nothing else.  I dropped a coin worth about a dollar on a metro one day and was chased down the concourse when I got off by a guy returning it to me, and I am pretty sure it was not his stop.  The traffic is so well behaved it is unbelievable.  We have seen two instances where a motorist has been wronged by another and the reaction has been a polite toot, in one case where a motorcyclist nearly had his water severed it was a longish polite toot.  And where is all the litter and graffiti?  Dunno, we haven’t seen any.  Apparently you take your rubbish home because there are very few rubbish tins.  I saw a Tripadvisor review by an Indian guy who had some takeaways in his room and asked reception if someone could collect the containers.  They told him to take them home with him when he left, and in his review he wondered how he was supposed to do that when he lived in Delhi.  There is no tipping and you can drink the water.  When it’s raining, as it did regularly, there are heaps of umbrellas outside commercial places and you just help yourself if necessary.  Well we think that is the deal.

What more can you want?

It’s all quite wonderful and civically marvellous, but also unnerving.  What happens when they let loose as eventually they must.  Or is that not allowed either?

We have been to Tokyo, Kyoto, Hiroshima, Fukuoka, Kagoshima, Osaka and back to Tokyo, and the following comments only relate to where we have been.  Apart from Kyoto all the cities look much the same apart from scale, and a bit like the clothes people wear there is very little  colour.  I have seen two houses that weren’t in the white to grey spectrum.  There is no countryside as we know it, as all flat land is built on or there are a few rice paddies.  Haven’t seen one agricultural animal.  If the land isn’t flat it’s forested and that’s it, no wonder Japanese tourists are besotted with sheep.

One has to view the sights and we have done our bit.  Kay liked a canal in Tokyo lined by cherry blossoms plus all the young ladies in Kyoto wearing kimonos and uncomfortable wooden sandals.  We had our only guide there and she explained  it’s a bit of a thing for tourists to do and you get discounts as well as approving comments from locals.  I particularly liked the view of a thermal beach near Kagoshima where one puts on a robe and lies in a depression dug in the hot sand and then is covered with shovels full of hot sand .  The shovellers make sure everyone is in neat rows and a small colourful umbrella is placed to shade your face. I don’t know what happens if your nose gets itchy.  Apparently it’s very good for your health and losing weight.  Presumably for the latter to work you stay a lot longer than half an hour.  The atomic bomb places in Hiroshima were a weighty experience and I was fascinated by the English translations of the information in the museum.  The wording of matters related to why the Ennola Gay dropped the object was very careful to be non judgemental but it also was a bit too careful I thought.  One would never have found out how the war started if that was the only information available.  There was a book for comments and my comment was “You reap what you sow”.

The traditional gardens are interesting.  I always thought those pine trees that have each branch carefully shaped were an individual species that just did that.  However I now know the lovely tidy look is all hard and detailed work akin to tree torturing.  And all that smooth moss is also the result of a lot of work.  Our guide said she did a little pruning herself on a tree in her courtyard, but when the expensive professional torturer was called in later she was castigated for her amateurish attempt.  One could spend all day every day visiting temples but we forced ourselves to a limit of about three a week.  There are Shinto and Buddhist ones which means people have two religions to deal with and they seem to have a bewildering amount of superstitions to navigate around.  I am always keen to see the economics of religions and the temples here are hard out to take your money off you.  Of course you get something in return, usually a promise of godly consideration of your request which is often written on a bit of purchased wood or shaped paper.  One in English said “Please can Alice have an easy birth and Mr Trump get seriously ill.”.

Travelling by rail has been a breeze and very comfortable in Green class where the only unseemly behaviour is from tourists who need lessons about child control and that happened once.  Getting money out of machines has been easy because Lonely Planet told me to use 7 Eleven ATMs.  Tripadvisor “near you” revealed a couple of excellent and different restaurants and I have never been to another place where there are so many available clean and technically fascinating toilets.  One of our daytrips was to a town where pottery has been made for centuries and we bought a couple of examples, however we passed on the small and very nice bowls that cost over $20,000.  I couldn’t see the difference between them and the ones with less digits on the tag and I find my ignorance annoying so some homework is required.  I felt better equipped when we went to a place that had twelve sake breweries and with enthusiasm I set about my homework on the spot (without guidance) and had fun finding the subtle differences.  Kay enjoyed the sparkling ones so we sometimes had a glass of that before going out to dinner.  It became quickly obvious that a full tasting at each of the twelve places would leave Kay with a problem called Dennis so I moved to tasting the best only and we retired after seven.

We haven’t had a bad meal and that includes the sort of place where you select your meal on a screen and pay through a slot before going in.  My only concern was some very slippery stuff that was unidentifiable but didn’t hurt.  I guess my liking for chillies and garlic have made me a bit insensitive to subtle flavours so sometimes I would have liked a little stronger taste.  I also had some of the best oysters ever.  And thank goodness for pictures on menus and those amazing replica food plates.  However I did discover that trying to order one thing from a set of multiple plates was a definite breaking of the rules and not at all possible.

One cannot leave commenting on Japan without mentioning the very small hotel rooms.  We had one where we saw a fellow guest take his non top opening case out into the corridor to open it.  But the really fascinating thing was how small a functioning bathroom can be and what can be achieved is impressive.
I wanted Kay to be the Shopping Correspondent but she has declined so I will briefly comment.  There’s lots of really good fashion stuff for women and men as well as some beautiful craft stuff, but you need a second mortgage.  Diligently exploring lesser streets and funny downstairs places can have positive and financially acceptable results, and we have managed to accumulate a few things.  To the extent that another bag is required so we have been looking for a stripey Chinese one but if there are any here I haven’t seen them.  So we now have another bag that locals would say is cheap, and it came from a discount shop called Don.k.  Watch out for Kay wearing some slightly oriental gear.

My first thought for a conclusion was along the lines of all this conformity and sameness needs a bomb under it to liven things up.  But that is probably historically inappropriate given what happened in 1945 and more recently with nuclear reactors and devastating tsunamis.  So let’s just say from a tourist’s perspective this is a country for people who want to see something different but not have too many travelling problems, and we will be back next year to have a look at the northern areas.

Sayonara.
Dennis.