February 14, 2007

I’m back

It’s been a while since I worte in this blog. Not since september 06 when I came back from South East Asia with fully recharged batteries and confidence coming out of my ears. I was ready to go out and start my adult life, get a job, find an appartment and start my brilliant new carriere. Well that did not happend…I got a big hard slap in the face and rejections upon rejections. I can’t count how many job applications I have sent out both online and offline, and I have only been to under a handful interviews. So what have I been doing lately, well getting a real big reality check…and people keep telling me that this is what you get for trying to get into the media industry.

Luckily it’s not all that bad, I was lucky enough to get 2 weeks working experience at a local news station called TVRomerike. Those 2 weeks was even a bigger awakening, I just realised that even if I had learned heaps during my time at Monash and RMIT, proper work is something completely different. Specially working alone interviewing and being the cameraman is much harder then I had imagined. And my lack of journalistic experience did excatly help me. I did everything that it’s possible to do wrong, wrong! Some how I must have done an ok job towards the end of my 2 weeks, because they have kept me on as a freelancer, covering local sports on the weekends. Enjoying it at the moment and finding it very educational and a great way to learn about jounalism, plus my camera technique and framing is getting better. Also doing my own speak which is hard to get right, but I’m getting there.

My second job at the moment is with a publishing company called Aschehoug doing flash animations. It’s an ok job, but again it’s just a freelance position, so it’s not bringing in too much money. If you follow the link you can take a look at the animations I’ve done. Also been to a radio audition at a local station, which was heaps of fun. Didn’t get the job, however something might come of it at a later stage, as they are expanding over the next 6 months.

So all in all; not doing great and it’s not hopeless either..have some personal projects I’m working on too, but I reckon it’s better to leave them out incase they never get further then my notebook.

September 3, 2006

Reading Books

I am a TV/DVD-person, and it’s a while between everytime I open up a book. However, whilst travelling in South East Asia I rediscovered how good it can be to relax with a good book. With hours at the beach, travelling on buses and planes, there was heaps of time to read. Line started the whole thing by recommend that I had a look at one of Norway’s most popular books in modern time. I really enjoyed it and I couldn’t stop, and went through a little stack of books before I got back. These are the books I got through in Asia:

- Beatles (Norwegian version)
- Veron God Little (English version)
- Naive, Super (Norwegian writer, but bought the Swedish version by mistake…finished it without any major problems)
- Stupid White Men (English verison)

August 25, 2006

Stuff I have realised whilst in Asia

- Hong Kong is my least favourite Asian destination
- Cambodia is a great backpacker destination
- Malaysia is much better beach destination than Thailand
- Thai Airways sucks
- I don’t like roasted sunflower seeds with dried anchovies
- Angkor, Tiger, Chang and Singha are all good beers
- Tequila can be shot with lime instead of lemon
- People buying charter packages to Asia and Tailand is getting ripped off, accommodation is soooo cheap if you book online or get a guesthouse
- Malaysia have bottled drinking water approved according to EU standards
- Women has a strong sense of smell then men
- Elephant shit smells like cow shit….well..shit smells like shit…
- You can get templed out
- Backpacking is a great way to network with people from all over the world
- James thinks I have a German accent
- I feel safer driving a tuk-tuk or moto in Cambodia than in a Malay taxi
- Malay hospitals are very good, and the emergency is empty early on a Saturday morning….??..(No mom I wasn’t sick, just getting malaria tablets)
- Irish, Scandos, POMs and Germans are everywhere
- Irish girls aren’t as ugly as Noel claims, the ones I have meet are all awesome in every way (get your mind out of the gutter…!).

Aisling and Vicky, awesome Irish girls

Bangkok

Bangkok

After Phnom Penh, Bangkok seemed like a very civilised and organised city. And after all the stories I had been told about the place, I was surprised of how ok I found it. I had been recommended a guesthouse called My House by Helen and Susie, and went straight there from the airport. It was easy to get to with the Airport bus (100 bath) and was located only a few hundred meters from Khao San Road in a quiet side street. The rooms were simple and clean and cost 190 bath for a single bed with toilet, fan and cold water. They showed three movies a day, with one at lunch time and two at night, and the whole place had a relax feeling about it.

The first 3 days went to sightseeing, I saw the Grand Palace, National Museum, Wat Pro Wat Kreaw, Wat Arun and took the express river boat. On my second day at Wat Pro, I was just walking around, abit templed out again, so I decided to buy an ice-cream before I explored the last remains of the temple. When I then was ready to do the last of my temple watching for the day, I suddenly saw 5 familiar faces walking towards me. To my surprise it was the Irish girls. They were having a day looking around in Bangkok before they were taking the night train to Chiang Mai. A bit odd that we would walk into each other in such a big city as Bangkok, when we had trouble finding each other in tiny Siem Reap.

Statue from the Grand Palace

After 3 days in My House guesthouse, I felt a bit sick and decided to get a hotel. I booked a room online for 1000 bath and moved from the backpacker part of Bangkok to the business part and close to all the shopping malls. The hotel was a good change, and two days of shopping was good too. I didn’t buy that much, but wandering around at the malls and just looking is an experience in itself. Asian pop culture can be very entertaining just to observe. I also went to the Potpong nightmarket, which was good and lots of fake stuff to buy for almost nothing.

After 5 days in Bangkok, on my best behaviour, I was ready to get back to Europe and London.

Phnom Penh

When you get to the Jetty in Phnom Penh you are run over by 10 tuk-tuk drivers that want to carry your backpack and take you to a guesthouse. Since I already had decided where I wanted to stay, I got a tuk-tuk driver that wasn’t holding up signs or screaming out names of places. But it didn’t seem to make much difference, as I was still forced to argue with him so he would drive me where I wanted to go.

I ended up staying in the Lakeside Guesthouse on the Boenk Lake in central Phnom Penh. It is a little lake which is sheltered from the traffic noise and chaos. I paid 3 US$ for a double bed with toilet, fan and cold water. The food was cheap and the guesthouse had a boat connected to their restaurant that you could sit on at night and enjoy a meal and a drink.

The first day in Phnom Penh I met up with Helen and Susie again and we went for a walk around the city and got to see alot in the almost 4 hours it took us. Our main task was to find an ATM, and we ended up seeing almost all the sights in central Phnom Penh during our hunt.

The British Girls Susan and Helen

The second day I was by myself during the day and went to see the Killing fields, the S-21 museum and the National Museum. The Killing fields isn’t much until you have visit the S-21, just a piece of land. The S-21 however is a strong and a bit creepy monument of the horror that Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge regime forced upon the Cambodian people.

The national museum was a good thing to see after the S-21, as it is good to end the day with something bit more lighter entertainment, but if you have been to Angkor, there is nothing new there or very impressive.

The night of the second day I meet up with the Irish girls again and had a few drinks and congratulated Vicky on her birthday right after midnight, however I think the girls had a real celebration the day after.

After two days in Phnom Penh I left for Bangkok.

Compared to Siem Reap, Phnom Penh is a huge city and 10 times more chaotic. As far as I could see there are no traffic rules and people do not care about red lights or the traffic police. And you quickly learn that if you want to cross the street, there is one thing you have to remember; never stop walking.

Traffic in Phnom Penh

River Boat to Phnon Penh

On the 17t of August I took the River boat from Siem Reap (which means Siam (Thai) defeated) to Phnom Penh. It’s a 6 hours boat trip on the Mekong River, and a must if you are travelling in Cambodia and have 23 US$ to spare. The weather was nice and for the first day in a long time there was not a cloud in the sky. For this reason most people was siting on top of the boat and not inside. Don’t think it’s the safest way to travel, but it sure makes it more interesting.

Riverboat from Siem Reap to Phnom Penh

The boat departs from a part of Siem Reap that is a village of house boats floating on the river. Then runs straight into a big part of the river where you can’t see anything but water. At this point I felt that I should have taken the 4 US$ bus instead and fell asleep. But When I woke up about 2hours later, we had entered a more narrow part of the river and you could see beautiful landscapes on both sides. Once in a while we past small houses and villages on pillars, kids that was waving and blowing kisses and small fishing boats.

Village on the Mekong

It was like the river was the highway and we were just passing by all this country towns on our way to the big city. After 4 1/2 hours of sun and wind in my face I felt I was getting sunburned and when inside to get some shade. I fell asleep soon after and when I woke up we were in Phnom Penh. Even if I sleep half the time, it was worth every penny and I would do it again if I had the choice.

August 20, 2006

What I saw in Angkor

Sunset over Angkor Wat

Day 1

Angkor Wat
Bayon
Ta Phrom
Plus 4 other smaller temples

(I took the small tour with a moto driver)

Ta Phrom

Day 2

Angkor Wat (this time with guide)
South Gate of Angkor Thom
Bayon
Bauphon
Terrace of of the Elephants
Phimeanakas

(Explored Angkor Thom on foot, only took a moto there and back)

Day 3

Preah Khan
Preah Neak Pean
Banteay Kdei
Srah Srang
Prasat Kravan
Pre Rup
Phnom Bakheng (Sunset)

(Grand tour with Paul, Amy, Ally, Aisling, Emma and Vicky in two Tuk-Tuks)

Day 3 in a tuk-tuk

3 day temple pass is 40 US$.

Angkor Wat

Angkor Wat

Angkor Wat is one of the worlds biggest religious buildings and was built in the 12th century in the Jungles of Cambodia. It was built as a temple for Vishnu, the Hindu God, but was later changed into a Buddhist temple when the Angkor king changed religion. Angkor Wat (means Capital Small), and it was a part of Angkor Thom (means Capital Big) which together was the capital of the Angkor kingdom that reached from China in north to Indonesia in south, when it was at it’s most powerful. In the 17th century the whole city was evacuated when the Siam (Thai) invaded the country and it was left in the Jungle until the 1880’s when a French explorer discovered the temples on a trip through south east Asia.

The big attraction Angkor Wat is an amazing experience to visit. The whole place has a feeling of greatness and you can’t even imagine who it looked when Angkor was on it’s biggest. The art and details are fascinating and very impressing, however it is a bit confusing that all the wall art is from Hinduism and all the statues are from Buddhism.

In Angkor Thom, which is a city, I have to say that the Bayon was very impressive. From a distance it looks like just another ruin, but when you get close you can see 52 pillar with four faces each looking to the north, east, west and south. The South gate is also worth a close look as you pass through it to get into the city. I also think that the Bauphon will be very impressive when they finish the rebuilding of the puzzle.

South Gate of Angkor Thom

Other than that I think that the Ta Phrom temple that was used in the Tomb Raider movie was good. An awesome place to take photos. They haven’t been able to clear off all the trees there yet, so it’s like a jungle is growing on top of the temple. There are also a few temples a bit further out that is worth a look.

But don’t except to see fully restored temples when you go to Angkor. After many years left in the jungle the temples had been crushed by nature, and trees and bushes was growing everywhere. The French quickly started the restoring of Angkor after their discovery. However in 1975 when the Vietnamese lost Cambodia and the French was long gone, Khmer Rouge took over the power. As a communist party they did not allow any religion, and since Angkor was a Buddhist centre, they chopped up almost all the Buddhas and Buddhist symbols in the temples and undid years of geological work.

You are allowed to go almost everywhere at the temples and few areas is restricted. This might be cool for the tourists, but not for the constructions. You can see sign of too much touching and climbing already, and whilst the temple guards are sleeping in every doorway and window, some tourists goes wild.

Cambodians have had the main responsibility to restore Angkor Wat and that has been a little bit of a disaster. In some places they have just put in brand new constructions, instead of restoring the old ones. If an area is hard to access, don’t be surprised to find a steel-construction close by to make it easy to access. At the moment the Germans, Indonesians, Indians, Japanese and French have found the Cambodians work so insufficient, that they are helping to restore all the temples in co-operation with Cambodia.

The temples were an awesome experience, but after 3 days of temples, I was a bit templed out. They started to look alike, and since most of them are built in the same era and style, many of them are similar. But this is a must stop destination if travelling in south east Asia.

August 19, 2006

Siem Reap

After a night at KL airport (actually got 6 hours sleep) I was on another AirAsia flight heading for Siem Reap, Cambodia. As my holiday had been located around beaches until then I didn’t know what to expect from the next stage of my travel. Siem Reap is 9km outside the city (if you can call it that) and is basically in the middle of rice fields.

The Airport is this little wooden hut and entering the main entrance hall was like entering a library. It was so quiet and grand, and no one runs or says a word, which is a bit wired for a International Airport. You have to pay the immigration 20 US$ on arrival to get a 1 month visa to Cambodia before you can go to the passport control. We all lined up in a queue when people in military uniforms checked our passports and wanted two extra dollars if you didn’t have a passport photo. In the que I talked to 2 British girls (Helen & Susie) and a German girl (Annika), which told me that Line’s lonely planet book was wrong and that there was ATMs in Cambodia.

Helen and Me

Siem Reap city it’s self is tiny and it’s all centralised around 4 and 5 stars hotels, backpacker guesthouses and Pub Street which is the tourist’s playgrounds. I had pre-booked a guesthouse online, but it turned out that they were full even if the internet site told me they had available rooms. I quickly found another guesthouse, Villa Coconut Lodge Guesthouse (they are everywhere) and got a twinroom for 9 US$ which was a bit expensive (single rooms do not exist). After getting my baggage in my room, I went for a walk to see the city and meet the girls from the airport. We decided to meet up and have dinner later that night. Turns out that the two English girls (from Newcastle) had similar educational background as me (film and video studies). But they were travelling for a year and was in no hurry to get into the industry, as I am.

Angkor Beer

By the way; first time you walk in the streets of Siem Reap you might feel bad for all the kids that comes up to you and tells you that they are hungry or that they need money for milk, but I promise you that that will pass in an instant after spending more than a night there. The truth is that if you buy or give these kids anything you are not helping, but making thing worse. The kids are sent on the street to beg, because it’s very very beneficial for the parents. Whilst a government employed person in Cambodia earn about 20US dollar a month, can these kids get approx. 150 US$ and more by begging, so they are by no means hungry or poor, just good actors/actresses. That fact that they get so much money, keeps them away from school because they hang out outside the pubs and restaurants every night until 5 in the morning. Cambodia really needs more educated people to run the country after Pol Pot killed all academicians under the revolution in the 70’s. So do not buy anything from or give money to the kids in Cambodia. It’s not helping them.

Well back to my story. After hanging out with the airport girls the first night, the Irish girls from Perhentian (Aisling, Emma, Amy, Vicky and Ally) arrived the second night. We had some problems finding each other because I only had two of the girls Malay phone numbers, but none of them worked in Cambodia. I finally found them at the guesthouse I originally booked at, as I knew they had done the same as I and tried to book online.

The day after I moved in with Aisling, Vicky and Ally at the Golden Temple Villa Guesthouse, as this was cheaper for us all…we thought. It ended only being cheaper for me, but for the girls it was the same. The guy in the reception was more interesting in getting my money that giving good service, so I ended up paying on top of what the girls was already paying, which was 4 US$ each.

On the second day at the temples I meet Paul from Canada, he seemed like a cool guy and he joined us for dinner that night and kept hanging out with us after that. It was good having another guy there even if it was only for a while, but I didn’t get his email address, so I hope he reads this and puts it in a comment.

I left Siem Reap after 3 days of temple watching, and felt a bit templed out, but I’ll tell you more about that in my blog on Angkor Wat and the temples.

August 12, 2006

Pulau Perhentian

If Langkawi was Paradise, then words can’t describe Perhentian. With the clearest water and the most relaxed and friendly atmosphere, it is the ultimate holiday destination and perfect for backpacking. We had some small problems finding accommodation, because the places are limited on Longbeach which was the beach we decided to stay on. In the end Line and James got a chalet (small cottage) and I sleep in the dorm. For only 25RM I didn’t mind and it was clean and quiet.

Breakfast on Perhentian

After James and me had finished almost all of our 25RM tax free Smirnoff “lemonade”, James decided to invite 5 Irish girls to join us in some card games. That turned out to be a good move and we ended out hanging out the rest of our stay. Lucky for me they all had similar travel plans and we decided to meet up in Cambodia.

Ally, Amy, Me, James, Line, Aisling & Emma

The diet on Perhentian and in Malaysia is a bit different than the one I’m used to so I did get some stomach troubles, but not much. However it all went wrong the 3rd day when we went snorkelling. After swallowing too much saltwater I had to get it up again, and that was not a pretty sight. But I wasn’t the only one, 5 of the 8 in our boat had to do the same thing, so it was kind of like a spu fest. However it was a great day, where we saw seaturtles, shark, clownfish (Nemo) and a freakish looking dinosaur type fish that shat alot.

After 5 nights on Perhentian we left for KL (Kuala Lumpur). James felt sick the whole day and did not have a good trip from Kota Bestu to KL. Line and I didn’t get much sleep either and we arrived in KL very tired. Line and James very exciting about going home, and me a bit confused with the whole “I going to Cambodia” thing, felt like I was going home to.