April
13, 2008:
A
warm summer’s day, in fact it got up to 22° today. Feels good! We
finally got a little rain last Thursday; it cleaned up things but we could
use a good all-day soaker, too.
We
see a lot of recreation vehicles – motor homes and trailers – around.
We figure it is either snowbirds returning from the south or people
getting ready for this summer’s touring. Ours is still in a snowbank
down at Grimson’s but we are getting the itch. Once we line up a place
to store it here, we will bring it to
Saskatoon
and get it set up for the summer.
We
went to Lloyd’s and Louise’s for supper on Friday, and after supper,
our grandson, Scott, showed us a selection of photos he took on his Asian
tour. Unfortunately, there weren’t many from
China
, as he had his camera stolen with over three hundred photos on it. Most
of the places those photos were taken at were places he had visited on his
two year teaching stint in China a couple of years earlier, so he does
have photos of them.
On
this trip, he toured
China
,
Tibet
, including the Mount Everest Base Camp, Nepal,
India
,
Thailand
,
Laos
,
Cambodia
,
Viet Nam
, and
Myanmar
(
Burma
). He and a buddy left
Saskatoon
in March 2007 and hitchhiked to
San Francisco
.
From
there, they had booked passage on a container ship – luxury
accommodation for a total of three passengers. They embarked from
Oakland
and made stops at
Tokyo
,
Osaka
,
Taiwan
, and
Hong Kong
, where they landed. From there, they made their way by train and bus to
Yue Yang, the town where he taught English for two years. Scott renewed
acquaintances there for a while, then they set out to backpack as much of
Asia
as they could.
His
buddy returned home fairly early on, but for the rest of the year Scott
rarely travelled alone; he makes friends easily and travelled with many
different people from
Australia
,
Israel
,
Belgium
,
Ireland
, and even from
Saskatoon
. He did a little travelling by train, and a lot by bus, often riding on
top with the goats and baggage and surplus passengers.
He
bungee-jumped from one of the highest jumps in the world. He went fishing
in south-east
India
on a tiny little boat with three fishermen, none of whom had a word of
English, and none of whom caught any fish. He took SCUBA diving lessons in
a couple of different places and, I believe, is now fully qualified. He
climbed to the Mount Everest Base Camp and, unlawfully and by accident,
two or three hours beyond it.
He
got stranded in a small town in
Nepal
by a bus strike and wound up staying with a Maoist family who had a lot to
do with organizing the strike. I believe the Maoists are considered by the
United States
to be a terrorist organization, or were not too long ago. We worried about
him during this period. His host bragged about the guns he owned and about
killing people in past actions.
Most
important, he got to know the people and their ways, and took lots of
pictures of kids at play and adults at work. He ate pigs brains and goat
meat, and ate with the fingers of his right hand as the local people did.
He learned to co-exist with spiders as big as his hand.
He
learned a little about their politics and religions, and respected them.
I
believe
Nepal
and
Myanmar
were the places he liked most. He spent five weeks in
Myanmar
, completely out of touch as there are no good Internet cafes there
(desperately slow!). We really worried about him during that
period, but he was having a ball.
From
Myanmar
, he went to
Bangkok
and flew home from there. We were some glad to see him!
But
already he is talking about going back, maybe to teach in some small town
in
Nepal
. He did spend quite a bit of time as a volunteer teacher at an orphanage
in
Nepal
. First, though, he has to find a job and replenish his resources; then,
maybe take a few classes towards an education degree. If we’re lucky, we
will have him around for a year or so, but the itch to travel hasn’t
been adequately scratched yet!