Friday, March 19, 2010

First Day in Taipei

Our first full day in Taipei is drawing to a close as all of you wake up.

I can see why Barbara and John like it here. Taipei is a large city, but it's nice. Between the metro, buses, boats, trains, cabs, etc, they don't even own a car. It's also very eclectic. We tried all sorts of things today, including fried squid, lurid ice milk cones, and fish paste soup. Barbara just gave me a slice of some fruit that doesn't have an English name. It was red outside, and tasted like a cross between an apple and watermelon, with overtones of celery and lettuce. It was good!

We headed off to the hospital this morning with Barbara. She doesn't know exactly how the healthcare system works here, but she does know that after they were here for 3 months they got a health card for the national healthcare system. With it, they just have small co-pays. At her first clinic, there were long waits, but at this place she was only gone about 1/2 hour.

The picture shows the juice available at the vending machine at the hospital.

Afterward we took the metro farther on, to where the Tanshui Keng dumps into the ocean. There's a little tourist town that amused us. We found a ferry boat to take us all the way to the delta.

Now it may only be 8:30 pm, but I'm about falling over exhausted. I haven't had much jet lag (knock on wood) so I figure another good night of sleep may just set us right.

30,000 Feet

So we're on our way. Finally, after much angst and not enough planning, we're on a plane, 30,000 feet over Saga, Japan.

For such a long journey, it's been surprisingly easy. On our first flight, from Minneapolis to Los Angeles, Meg and I looked at each other and said "finally - time to talk!" But all we wanted to do was zone out, so that's what we did, aside from some very interesting conversations with our seat mate, a representative from Nabster, who was in Minneapolis meeting with their new parent company, Best Buy.

Los Angeles was lovely. We got a sunny, clear day with snow covering the nearby mountains, and enough recent rain to green things up. Mom's friend Sylvia picked us up at the airport and took us to a trendy restaurant in Santa Monica for lunch. We felt very far away from world traveling there - just locals out for lunch. Then we headed down to the Santa Monica pier for  short walk by the beach. Hanging out in the old haunts was such a treat, as was escaping the concrete and fumes of LAX for a few hours. I even got to see some filming down at the pier! No idea what, but we saw the fleet of trucks, cast, crew, lights, etc.

Our EVA 777 is  one of the most comfortable planes I've ever been on. The first class looked positively scrumptious with only 6 seats across. Our section packs us in at 9 across, but even that isn't bad. And the plane isn't full, so we've got 4 1/2 seats for the three of us. Personal video at each seat feels very civilized, where we navigate through menus to pick the movie, tv, games, or maps that each of us wants. I watched New Moon for awhile, but mostly I've been watching our flight path, able to zoom way in or out. And for the first time, I've actually slept. I hope I can still sleep when we arrive.

Our flight path surprised us all. We didn't just cross the Pacific. We've actually hugged the land all the way up the west coast, past Alaska, then down over Japan. Mom's interest in the window actually exceeds my own, so she scored that spot most of the time, but I got a turn to see the ice flows and snow covered islands of Alaska. It was very cool.


Here's a math problem for you. We left LA at 5pm. It was very light out. We headed northwest, taking 14 1/2 hours to cross 8 time zones. We arrive at 10:30 at night, which will be dark. How much of our trip was in the light? With the time changes, and the international date line, we sat here stumped for awhile, but it turns out that about 5 hours was in the light, the rest in the dark. Mom is over there watching lights as I write.

Roteang Orphanage

Why Cambodia? Well, my mother (Karin) and her partner (Echo) have been sponsoring high school students in Roteang Village, Cambodia, so we're going to go there and meet my mother's high school student. It's a neat program: http://sharingfoundation.org/programs/education-programs/high-school-students.html .

The high school, Jayavarman VII, is eight kilometers up the road from Roteang village, and runs two separate sessions per day.  Anyone who has finished 8th grade in the area can go there, but the regular school classes are immense, 75 kids in a class being not unusual. Textbooks are rare or non-existent, discussion or questions are discouraged, and the very poorly paid government teachers often do not show up for class. Available at the same school are "private classes"—this means the teachers, for a fee of about $5.00 per person per month, actually teach. The students have textbooks and discussions and the class size may be 20 students. The quality is obviously very different, but the students learn.


Sponsorship of a TSF high-schooler is $300 per year. The money covers textbooks, teacher fees, paper and writing tools, school uniforms, food at school, and transportation from Roteang village and back each day on the moto-trailer. The other important ingredient is that each child has a specific sponsor, to whom he or she writes four times a year. Sponsors in turn must write back to their students with letters of encouragement and family news. The positive effect of the letter connection is inestimable. To  have one's own foreign sponsor, who believes in you and encourages you, is vital—all previous experience led one to believe one was going to be a subsistence farmer or fisherman.

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

2010 Trip to Asia

I love to travel, and I finally have a new trip to plan! I'm headed to Southeast Asia in March. First we get 5 days in Taipei, to visit my aunt, then 6 days in Cambodia. The trip is a 70th birthday present to my mother, and it may take all of her 70 year old stamina to accomplish, but it will undoubtedly be interesting.

And I'm trying a new thing - blogging! I figure this way those of you who are interested can follow my blog, and the rest of you will be spared long emails.

Our trip is March 17th - 29th, and we're hard at work planning now. Since I think that the planning is one of the most fun parts, I'll go ahead and start posting. You too can learn about some spots on the other side of the world!

Toby