Sunday, January 28, 2007

home

so we're back. we survived, and will live to blog another holiday.

everything finished up well with excessive amounts of shopping and eating.

in summary some of the highlights of the trip for me would have to be:

the first night in siem reap - eating amok and everything just being perfect and beautiful and amazing.

wandering the streets of the old quarter in hanoi and marvelling at the streets of like shops (shoes street, glasses street, tinsel street)

riding in hue through rice paddy cemetries and over dirt paths and bamboo bridges and thinking we were lost and local women appearing and calling out to us "you" and pointing down the path.

meeting the apheda people and having so many of my ideas about aid and development changed.

riding around dalat and seeing the various industries and realising how much tension there still is between north and south vietnam

the last night of the trip going over to the china town area of ho chi minh and buying up piles of random red and gold tet decorations whilst presumably high on ventolin, involving lots of animated non verbal discussions with the nice lady running the shop enthusiastically miming to us how things worked.
so now its just a matter of working out how to find the money to get back there as soon as possible. also i plan to try and learn khmer if possible, if anyone is interested. i also plan to learn spanish. hmmm. pity i dont have any sort of gift for langauges.
i hope to be able to go back later this year and do some work with apheda, i dont know what or where yet. working in developing countries has always had a romantic appeal to me, but i didnt think i could actually handle living away from home. being away has made me realise that however difficult it may be, the experience would be worth it. although clearly i'd have to finally get over my phobia of squat toilets. although having made it through japan, cambodia and vietnam has really just made me feel like its my new life's challenge - to travel the world without ever using a squat toilet.
clearly posting photos just isnt going to happen. or at least, not by me. talk to laura and she'll probably organise something.

Friday, January 19, 2007

ho chi minh hospitals

so the story of our holiday is rapidly becoming the story of my failing health. oh well. yesterday was really just a long bus ride, although we did stop a small ethnic minority village where they produce weaving. we gave the kids there a soccer ball that had been bought with intentions of playing soccer on the beach that never eventuated. the kids got great joy out of this, which was great - except that the older boys were pretty good at hogging the ball... some things are the same the world over. there was also another cheaper plastic ball that we gave them, but a nearby monkey chained to a tree grabbed it when it went astray and quickly sunk its teeth into it.

so yes, then in the evening i went to a fancy western 24 hour clinic, and had all sorts of wacky things done to me, like having my pulse and oxygen saturation checked. they gave me plenty of ventolin and actually monitored my response oooooh fancy. eventually they decided that i should stay overnight to keep on the nebuliser every four hours so they could monitor my response, but instead they agreed to lend me a small portable nebuliser so i could go back to the hotel. we both probably would have got more sleep had i stayed at the hospital, but i'm sure i would have paid dearly for the privilege!

anyway i went back this morning and i seem to be on the improve (although i'm not exactly cured) they gave me a bunch more medications, which hopefully will assist, and i'll probably go back on monday before we fly out to check that i'm good to go. right now the most painful part is that my stomach muscles are sore from all the coughing.

after coming back from the hospital i went and had a quick bite to eat with the apheda people, who'd just said goodbye to the rest of the cycle crew as i got back, it was nice to hang out with them and get a chance to chat.

this morning i have also just been and found the most perfect excess luggage bags ever - stronger better versions of the stripey cheap as chips bags. so good! i might be able to get all my stuff home yet... if malaysian dont charge me for every kilo!

anyway, thats all for now.
Xin Cio,

Ashley is curently at the hospital getting another hit of ventilin, she went with Hian form the APHEDA office becasue she speaks vietnamese and I didn't think my ER impersonations could get us through this time.... plus I don't want my fiance doctor in Nha Trang to think i'm shopping around for better offers.

had a fantastic time in Dalat the motor bike trip was a blast and made me even stronger in my resolve to buy a Vespa when I get home. sadly we had to bid farewell to our German friend Branco, we made him a vegemite and toast as a farewell present....aprently the rest of the world is not so keen on vegemite.

We arrived in HCMC and had dinner with the APHEDA peps. Tomorrow we are off to visit the Corprate Resposibility Program and other ADPHEDA projects. You can find out more about the projects on the APHEDA website http://www.apheda.org.au apparently there's also a story and pics of this study tour somewhere on the site aswell.

sorry for the short and boring post but I have comrades waiting to have a night cap or two.
See you soon.....awww I can't belive we leave on tuesday, it's way too soon!

Thursday, January 18, 2007

brrrrrrrmmmmm

so yesterday we went travelling around on the back of motor bikes, no injuries, no accidents, just a lot of fun. we saw all sorts of cottage industries (broom making, rice wine making, coffee production, a silk factory, vegetable farms, flower farms, weaving) plus a pretty nice waterfall and some other stuff. it was a lovely day.

of course then we got home and my asthma started getting worse again, probably serves me right. anyway long day of sleeping on the bus today will hopefully help, and then i might find a doctor in saigon before i get on a flight home.

cant write more now as i need to pack etc. but all is relatively well.

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

Travel All Over the Country Side

Hello,

Here's another post from The Baron, in which she once again talks about sleeping and a little bit about riding bikes. She supplied me with the subject heading, "Travel all over the country side", which I presume is a reference to the old Layland Brother's theme song. If you can remember how it goes, try singing "Travel all over the country side. Ask the Baron! Ask the Baron!" whilst reading the below post.
yours,
Ianto Ware



so more riding. long days of riding for four hours through rice paddies, which turned into coffee and rubber tree plantations, corn fields, and all sorts ofother amazing things. two days ago we had a 90km day, of which i did 70km. one of our riders got run off the road by a truck andended up coming off her bike in the dirt - shaken up but not injured. a similar incident then occured again when our own support bus tried to get laura to stop and not ride past our lunch stop. she stopped,but ended up with a lot of dirt and some gravel rash. she has a bit of a bruise and a graze on her shoulder which she intends to pick at so it scars, so she can claim its the scar she got in nam.

anyway, another day of cycling yesterday, starting out with some reasonably gentle hills and some not so gentle headwind, which equals not a lot of fun. eventually the wind died down and the roads flattened out and we made it in to nha trang, a beachside town. today we're heading out on a boat to swim etc (i'm still waiting to see if the weather improves!) a day without cycling will be a good rest for all of us who are feeling a bit weary. will leave it to laura to tell more details about her crash and also about last night. suffice to say the trend of me sleeping / laura partying across SE asia continues. sorry for the lack of intersting stuff to tell, but am at a point where all the days are blurring together. looking forward to a day of something different today.

holidays, hospitals, haircuts

so apparenlty ianto has been making free with his blog access. hmmm. he's also failed to actually keep up to date with posting my real posts. perhaps i will be forced to revoke his privleges. we'll see.

also, i would like to point out esp for the benefit of certain people who have "given up trying to read this" that i dont actually run my words OR paragraphs together usually. Terrible grammar and use of punctuation, yes, but yahoo is responsible for the worst of it. so dont criticise! dont read it if you dont want, its more for my benefit than anyone elses anyway

I'm going to miss a bunch of days and try and pick up where i left off, even though ianto hasnt posted the last post yet, so it will get a bit disorderly.

yesterday morning we woke up in nha trang, a beach side resort, ready for a day of boating and relaxing. i was somewhat disturbed by the continued worsening of my asthma, which has progressively deteriorated from totally managed when i left home to a pretty constant issue. i realised yesterday morning that i was heading for hospital within the next few days, but after consulting with our tour guide decided i could handle a day of sitting around doing nothing, and planned to get him to take me somewhere in the afternoon for medical attention.

we set off on the boat and went out a ways to a beautiful area where the others jumped in and went for a swim. knowing that there was every chance that would tip me over the edge breathing wise i was forced to stay on the boat and get a massage. we then headed to a beach where laura went up in the air attached to a parachute being pullled along by a boat while i sat under a beach hut thing, enjoyed a chocolate icecream and got a manicure and pedicure (why not really). the weather was less than perfect, but whilst occasionaly raining and being overcast it was still warm enough to be very pleasant.

we then headed off to a seaside lunch, which involved a short taxi ride in one of the round fishing boats that i'd been looking forward to seeing. another unnecessairly large but good meal, and we began the boat journey back to shore.

arriving back on shore the bus dropped the group back at the hotel before our tour guide took laura and i on to a local hospital. he briefed the staff on my issues, and what treatment i was looking for before they came and saw me, and i explained some more about my history of asthma, and that i needed a nebuliser, and if possible a spacer that would have meant i could more effectively deliver my inhaler. whilst spacers were unheard of (i've since come to the conclusion that they dont use my puffer style of inhaler but the crushed tablet ones) they new all about nebulisers and soon had been breathing in foggy goodness. no medical hisory, no list of other medications i'm taking, no taking my heart rate. no peak flow meter. they did listen to my lungs, but i dont think they heard much, as i wasnt wheezy just really really tight. ah well, i was pretty happy with being able to self diagnose and prescribe - i knew what i needed! we drew attention from a number of doctors and nurses wandering around - i dont think many westeners end up there - we even took my photo whilst on the nebuliser with some of the doctors - its all part of the experience you know! thank god for our guide, or i think my holiday finances would have just suffered a major hit, instead they gave me a bill for $25 australian dollars, and a script for a preventetive medicine i've taken in the past...

our guide then returned us to the hotel, with me a little high and jumpy from all the ventolin. after a quick change we headed out again for a hairdresser. after deciding that i might regret following our guides lead and getting my head shaved, we headed down the street to a "beauty palour" where through a series of gestures and "same same"s we established that i wanted by hair cut off quite short. which she did a fine job of. and then she charged me $2.

later than evening my asthma began to deteriorate again. i became a bit concerned, knowing we were heading to a smaller town today, not to mention that we were supposed to be riding 120kms. becoming increasingly unsure about what to do i went into crisis mode and called my parents. the problem with my asthma is that its not fast and chronic attacks, but a slow build up to a really unpleasant level, but it makes it hard to judge when it is necessary to take treatment to the next level. obviously this is really a massive advantage, because i dont have to fear chronic attacks. anyway, my parents gave me the only sensible advice they could and told me to ring my uncle who is a gp. after running through my circumstances and medications etc, he concluded what i had hoped he would, that i should return to the hospital and go back on the nebuliser. also that while i had upped my preventative medication to double what i was on at home, i could double that again.

so laura, inspite of my claims that i was able to go alone, once again accompanied me to the hospital, via taxi. inspite of my insistance that i was fine on my own, i was very grateful to not set off on this adventure alone. a taxi dropped us out the front of the same hospital and we wandered in and wandered around until we found a counter with someone behind it (and turnstiles although there was only one other person their) eventually the lady looked up and saw us and yelled out to someone else what i would translate as "there are two western girls out there, they must want emergency, take them around their" the second lady then appeared made a vague gesture that we took to be "follow me" and led us back to where we'd been earlier that day. one of the doctors remembered us from earlier, and understood my comments of "more more". he sat me down and again listened to my chest. he made some comments to the effect of my lungs sounded ok. i made strangling gestures and explained that my chest was tight. he basically again conceded to my self diagnosis. another young doctor came over and actually took my pulse!

they then told me they were going to give me a injection into my vein of something which sounded like gluco something or other. to which i was pretty much, whatever, give me what you want. laura meanwhile began freaking out. while ostensibly her concern was about me being given some medicine that we didnt know for a purpose we were unsure of, her *real* concern was the needle. my response was "they're wearing white coats, it will be fine"

more nebuliser and i was feeling much better. we watched the goings on of the emergency department which remarkably enough seemed to not even *have* a waiting room, and was possibly over staffed! eventually they came over to give me my jab, while laura cowered at the other end of the bed and i made soothing noises in her direction...

they then got laura to go over and complete the paper work (required information: name, date of birth, age, nationality and address in vietnam) and pay up the $5 (!!!) fee. i remained on the bed, feeling the drugs rushing through my system and my heart rate accelerating (normal response to nebuliser). One of the older doctors who spoke the most english came over with a student doctor and started chatting to me about my asthma, and what it was reacting to (humidity, car fumes, dust) and then proceeded to attempt to set me up with the student doctor, although his mixing of personal pronouns had me somewhat baffled for a while. eventually i heard laura over at the desk, surrounded by about doctors and nurses saying something about ER as in the tv show, and drew the conculsion that she was no longer conducting official business. i went over to discover they were attempting to set her up with another young doctor, and were generally having a hilarious time trying to converse in broken english. we ran through our collection of poorly pronounced vientamese and they were reasonably entertained that about 50% of our phrases were vietnamese versions of "cheers" and drinking expressions.

they gave me a script for 3 drugs, of which i sought of got the gist of 2 (an antibiotic and ventolin in tablet form - something i'd never heard of). i had no idea how many i was supposed to take when but we trotted off to the chemist, who pulled out a sheet of tablets which were the antibiotics, a couple of other sheets she cut up to give me the tablets prescribed (the ventloin) and then she counted out small organge tablets into a plastic bag (the ones i dont know what they're for) packaging? who needs packaging!

we walked back to the hotel with me in a state of drug induced delirium and laura highly entertained by it all.

this morning, whilst feeling much better, i knew there was no way i was getting on a bike. instead we talked to the tour guide and decided to get a separate bus from the group rather than spend the day travelling at 20kms an hour trailing the riders. laura again insisted on coming with me, which was very generous given that she had otherwise maintained a perfect record with the cycling on the trip. another girl in the group had also injured her foot the previous day on the beach, and so agreed that our plan sounded far more comfortable. the three of us had a pretty pleasant bus ride to dalat - the honey moon capital of vietnam. while i'm still not feeling great, and am not really coping with a great deal of excertion, we've been for a short walk around the town, and have also organised a tour of the town for tomorrow with a highly recommended group of motorcycle guides. possibly this is not the most responsible thing i could have decided to do, but the guides are amazing, speak fantastic english and do awesome tours of the surrounding countryside that i wont otherwise see... and if i get worse i'll just get them to bring me back. of course, the fact that this also requires me to sit on the back of a motorbike is an entire other issue.... but sometimes you've just got to get with the programme or something.

anyway, we'll see how things go. but most importantly, i'm ok, i've got a million drugs and i'll be in saigon the next day anyway, so nobody worry ok? (clearly that means you mum and dad)

Monday, January 15, 2007

More news about the Baron and Laura

Ashley hasn't given me any more blog entries to post on her behalf, so in the mean time here's another exciting excerpt from Matt Rendell's 'The Death of Marco Pantani' which I'd be willing to bet is an almost exact representation of what they're doing right now.
yours,
Ianto Ware

"In four kilometres the Baron made five killing accelerations. The Colombian Satiago Botero was the first to give chase, but Ashley floated thirty metres ahead of him, and the gap remained. Then, behind them both, as Ullrich led Joseba Beloki, Roberto Heras and Laura Butterworth around the outside of a right-hand curve, Laura launched an unanswerable attack. Every three turns of the pedals, she moved a length away from Ullrich and a length closer to Botero. She passed the Colombian at the same rate, fixing him in the eye as she cruised past. Then she bridged the gap to Ashley, finally lowering herself into the saddle ten metres before reaching him. On the way past, Laura turned to the Baron and spoke, before positioning herself in the Baron's path and offering up her slipstream. Ashley had to stand on the pedals to match Laura's speed and even then Laura turned in the saddle, looking to make sure the Baron was still there, pointing an outstretched finger at the space behind him, to say she wanted to work with, not against the Baron, to build up her lead. It was also understated intimidation, as if to say, 'Even at this speed, I'm in complete control.'"