Monthly Archives: July 2009

Tokyo wrap up

Oh! I forgot about one little bit of shopping in Tokyo. We went to Kinokuniya, the book store in Shinjuku. The Teen went off to look for a book, and I, with a little pantomiming, ended up in the knitting section. I bought this stitch dictionary.

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look inside

The pictures are beautiful. There are color swatches of all the stitch patterns, and then they’re charted out. I think I’ll be able to figure them out. And it’s so pretty! There was another stitch dictionary with more stitches, but the book wasn’t as pretty, and I’m a sucker for the pretty pictures. Even if there are a lot of patterns with bobbles…

So what else did we do in Tokyo?

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We visited Meiji-Jingu, a Shinto shrine. It’s in a beautiful forested park in Shibuya. This is the largest of the three enormous torii (gates) on the path to the shrine. It’s made of cypress and is 12 meters high; the crosspiece is 17 meters long.

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This is the place to purify yourself before entering the shrine. The Teen knew what to do there; he learned in his first year Japanese class and remembered! I’ll admit to being concerned when I saw him take water from the dipper and put it in his mouth, but that’s part of the ritual.

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I love the mix of old and new in Tokyo. These ladies were on their way to the shrine. I saw a lot of traditional as well as modern dress. Was this a function of it being Sunday afternoon? And no, it’s not raining. The umbrella is being used as a parasol.

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There was a wedding party at the shrine.

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We visited the Tsukiji Wholesale Fish Market early one morning. Many tons of seafood comes through here. The smell of it made me think of all the summers I spent working in an Alaskan salmon cannery during college!

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What do you think these guys are looking at?

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I backed into one of these while snorkeling last summer. Now I have the last laugh.

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We had sushi for breakfast here after seeing the market. But not much, because we were short on cash and it was too early for the banks to be open. My bank card didn’t work at the 7-11 ATM, and the post office (ATMs for foreign cards) wasn’t open yet, either.

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We stayed in a Japanese-style inn in Asakusa for a couple nights. Futons on tatami are pretty comfortable!

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Asakusa is an old-fashioned neighborhood. Senso-ji Temple is located there, along with several other temples and the Asakusa Shrine. The street that approaches the temple is Nakamise-dori. There are lots of shops selling souvenirs and traditional treats. We bought some ningyo-yaki here (cakes with red bean paste inside). They were made and packaged by a funky automated machine; you can kind of see it to the left.

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I wanted to try some taiyaki (waffles with sweet filling: bean paste or chocolate or?) after seeing Jessica’s blog, but by the time we got to it on our last morning, we were completely out of cash.

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We had spent the last of it on a coffee jelly frappucino at Starbucks. We just had to satisfy that curiosity! Coffee jelly is exactly what it sounds like, and this one had frappucino on top of it. It was kind of good, even though it was hard to get the coffee jelly up the straw.

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There are two large gates on Nakamise-dori on the way to Senso-ji. The first is Kaminarimon Gate, or Thunder Gate. (This time it *is* raining.)

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The second gate is Hozomon Gate.

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There’s an incense burner between Hozomon Gate and Senso-ji. You wave the incense smoke over yourself for blessing and healing.

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Senso-ji itself was shrouded by scaffolding and plastic due to exterior work, so I’m not sure what it really looks like. There are also many other temples in the area, and a five-story pagoda.

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Love those rooflines!

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And there are several Buddha statues, too. This one is my favorite of the ones I saw.

Our last dinner was here at Namiki Yabu Soba. It was a perfect dinner. No English. A symphony of slurping sounds (you’re supposed to slurp, but I couldn’t quite get my slurp on).

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I totally kinneared this couple next to us.

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You know how some people think all Asians look the same? I didn’t feel same same in Tokyo; I felt very different! I saw a lot of Japanese women using umbrellas as parasols against the sun. Most women were very pale, and I’m pretty tan. But the real giveaway that I’m not Japanese is this:

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I saw so many women in heels, and very fashionably dressed. And there I was in my hot pink Keens. Gee, do I look like a tourist? But being pegged as a tourist isn’t all bad. This dapper grandfatherly gentleman took one look at us on the train to Odaiba and ushered us to the front of the driverless train so we could have the view out the front. Sweet! (Yeah, I kinneared him, too.)

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Vietnam and Tokyo were a great trip, and I’m really glad we did it. Even if the juxtaposition was a little jarring. I’d love to go again, someday. Where in the world do *you* want to go?

Sock Summit preparations

Sock Summit is just around the corner! I need to re-learn Judy’s Magic Cast On, and review wrapping and turning before I get to Cat Bordhi’s class, Dancing with Socks. Soon. I have a few other things to do, first.

I’m re-formatting my patterns to give them a visual cohesiveness as a group. They’ll all have the same banner across the top, which is the same one you see here on the blog. I’m about halfway done with the set. Then I need to print them all again, and reload them to Ravelry, too. Don’t worry, there aren’t any substantive changes; I’m just adding the banner and some extra pictures, so they’ll be more visually appealing.

Lorajean at Knitted Wit asked me to knit some samples for her. She’s having a booth at the Summit, and I’m helping her there. Come see us in Booth 223! My patterns will be there, too, and I’ll be there on Friday afternoon. I picked up these yarns yesterday:

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The skeined blue yarn is 400 yards of sock weight yarn that I won from Lorajean in June. I think it’s going to be a shawl, eventually. I love this color; it’s gorgeous. It reminds me of a summer sky.

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These two are sport weight Falkland (as in Island) yarn; they come in a 100 gram/310 yard skein. The green one is Semi-Solid Peacock, one of Lorajean’s entries in Ravelry’s Dye for Glory contest. Have you voted yet? The colors are even more lovely than in this picture; I just can’t capture the greens the way I want to. I’m knitting a sample of my Seafoam Sock with it. And maybe starting an Entrelac Sock, too.

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sock

The pink yarn is Cotton Candy, and it’s going to be a ZigZag Lace Pedi Sock. You can see that I have a lot of knitting to do in the next couple weeks! At least it’s sport weight; it goes pretty quickly for me.

Knit on!

Knitting, finally

I really have been knitting! Still plugging away at my ruffle tank, but it’s nowhere near done. I interrupted work on it to make another baby bolero, this time in pink. I love this pattern; it’s so quick at 4.5 stitches per inch.

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This might give you a better idea of the actual size.

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Baby Bolero from One Skein by Leigh Radford
Mirasol T’ika 100% pima cotton, 2 50 gram balls
US Size 8 needles
Mods: same as the previous blue one; I used a three needle bind off at the shoulder and then picked up the sleeves and knit down on dpns, instead of knitting them separately and sewing them in. No seaming! Do you try to avoid seaming, too? I know that this little sweater would have languished, waiting for a deadline before I would have seamed it. No worries, now.

I also made this quilt square, to go into a group project for the same baby.

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I avoided sewing it for 2 months. Deadlines are my friend!

Tokyo! Culture shock…

On our way home from Vietnam, the Teen and I had a four day stay in Tokyo. He’s studying Japanese in school, and I thought it would be good to get the language in his ear. It was a little shocking to arrive in Tokyo after being in a socialist third world country for a week. Much denser, way more urban and electrified, and so much shopping! Too many choices. But we got used to it. 😉

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Shibuya Crossing

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Shibuya

Takeshita-Dori in Harajuku on a Sunday was a teen dream: crowded, lots of fun stuff. the Teen especially loved the t-shirts with fractured “English” sayings on them.

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To me, Forever 21 is a cheap shop in the local mall. In Harajuku, it’s an event. There were loads of people lined up to get in, and the were being let in a group at a time.

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Shopping is a little more upscale on Omotesando-dori. But still very crowded!

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And there are vending machines everywhere.

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I wanted to bring home a flash drive for DH, but these were a bit too spendy for a gag gift.

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Shopping is fun when the stores first open. We were in the Ginza one morning after seeing the fish market, and it was nearly 10 a.m. We saw people lined up outside Mitsukoshi, a department store, and when the clock struck 10, the crowd went in. So did we. The employees line up at their stations, and bow and say good morning as you enter. We felt like celebrities! We weren’t shopping for anything, but took a walk through several floors, just for the greetings. A bit later we found ourselves at Itoya, a paper and pen store. They opened at 10:30, so we got to have the greeting experience again. Yes, we’re rock stars. Or pen geeks. Or both.

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Architecture is interesting in Tokyo.

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Buildings in Shinjuku

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Shinjuku by night

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This building is on Odaiba, a man-made island. Things are more spread out there. We visited Miraikan, the National Museum of Emerging Science and Innovation, but should have arrived earlier in the day to use more of the interactive sites. (It was moving day for us; some things can’t be helped.)

One more Tokyo post to go (all the cultural and pretty stuff!). And then it’s back to knitting, I promise.

Same, same…but different

That’s a saying that I heard repeatedly in Vietnam. It’s mostly a good thing, I think. Sometimes it means you’re not getting what you wanted (the wrong hotel room, maybe), but more often I took it to mean, “it’s all good.” People assumed that I was Vietnamese, and would either speak to me in Vietnamese, or ask me where I was from. USA was not the answer they were looking for, so I just started saying I was Chinese. The response? “Same same!”

We wrapped up our Vietnam adventure by returning to Ho Chi Minh City for some last minute shopping and relaxation.

We were within walking distance of the Hotel de Ville, which houses the Ho Chi Minh City People’s Committee. No visitors allowed, but the outside is beautiful. A remnant of French colonial times.

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The Municipal Theater is in the same neighborhood.

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One of DH’s quirky pastimes while traveling is looking for a BIG cup of coffee. He was thwarted in Paris (2003, pre-Starbucks); the closest he got was a bigger cup but the same amount of coffee. In HCMC, we found a Starbuck’s lookalike, Trung Nguyen Coffee. Definitely not a Starbucks experience, though. We were seated, menus distributed, cool green tea served. And then we ordered. DH ordered a drip coffee, and it was definitely a drip! Same same, but different. BTW, that’s an avocado shake/smoothie the College Guy is trying; it’s very popular in Vietnam.

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The next day, we wandered into another Starbuck’s lookalike, Gloria Jean’s Coffees (turns out this is an Australian company), and it was a familiar feeling. Order at the counter, pick up at the counter. Big cup of coffee available, as well as fruit smoothies and my beloved iced latte. Same same, and same. Except the cute little chocolate croissant. Perfect size, just big enough, 18,000 VND (about one dollar, US).

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Prescription glasses are ridiculously inexpensive in Vietnam, so I took the opportunity to have some sunglasses made. This can be done in a day. I don’t wear my glasses that often during the day so I couldn’t justify the expense of having this done at home, but at 600,000 VND (about $34), it was a bargain. College Guy also got new glasses. Then we decided to get sunglasses for the Teen, but his glasses were back at the hotel. No problem. We put him on a motorbike cab with a card for the hotel, and a card for the optical shop. After he left, we wondered if we would ever see him again. While we waited, we consoled ourselves with a traditional coconut treat from a street cart. Drink the juice, and then scoop out the young coconut flesh. Delicious!

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DH bought hot coffee from a nearby shop. This is how it’s packaged for takeaway service. Same, same? Completely different!

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The Teen did return, and we all ordered our glasses, to be picked up the next day.

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We wrapped up our stay with massages. We were going to do the $11 hour massage, but after a bit of discussion, opted for 75 minute shiatsu massages for $20. Best. Massage. Ever. Perfect pre-flight relaxation.

Onward!

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And yes, this will return to being a knitting blog, soon…

Travelogue: 24 hours in Nha Trang

After two nights in Hoi An, we flew on to Nha Trang, a beach town on the south-central coast. Our plane was delayed, and the hotel lost our reservation. (Actually, I think the manager saw more profit in selling our rooms to a tour group.) Grumpy! Susan had arranged for us to have an afternoon motorbike tour, but we were getting a late start. There wasn’t much preparatory discussion.

After a quick lunch, we traveled 20 km out of town by motorbike to Ba Ho, a beautiful area with three waterfalls. We passed banana farms and rice paddies on the way. But I wasn’t expecting a hike. My Keens and some insect repellent would have been very welcome.

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Who’s wearing the wrong shoes?

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But our drivers had arranged for some guides to meet us there (love that entrepreneurial ingenuity), and these women helped (dragged) me over the rocks, pointing out the best hand and foot placements. The kids were amused by what they dubbed my “involuntary parkour.”

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We cut our hike short and skipped the other two waterfalls, but still ran into a little traffic on the way back into town.

Our next stop was the Long Son Pagoda. It’s 152 steps up to this statue of Buddha.

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College Guy became part of a game of hide and seek.

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Long Son Pagoda is home to two enormous Buddha statues. The second is this reclining Buddha.

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On the way back down from the Buddhas, we passed a monk silently descending the steps, head bowed. I thought he was in prayer. When we passed him, we saw that he was texting on a cell phone!

Night was falling, so we didn’t get to see the Cham Towers. Maybe next time. The next morning we spent an hour on the beach.

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Do you like my hat? (channeling P. D. Eastman)

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Part of the fun at the beach is the never-ending parade of vendors. I bought two silk paintings from this gentleman. We had a good time bargaining over price.

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Then it was time to head for the airport to return to Ho Chi Minh City. (Yes, we spent less than 24 hours in Nha Trang.) We bought banh mi (Vietnamese sandwiches) from the street vendor across from the hotel. This woman was sewing next to the banh mi cart.

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I hoped that the face I found in my sandwich didn’t bode ill for me eating street food!

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To market, to market…

Well, I already had a “jiggety-jig” post, so I couldn’t resist the title!

One of the tastiest and most enjoyable things we did in Vietnam was a cooking class in Hoi An. We took a half-day class at the Red Bridge Cooking School. The class began with a tour of the central market in Hoi An.

Produce is sold on the outside of the market.

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The small purple fruit is mangosteen. These have white fruit shaped like tangerine inside and are very sweet. The red spiky ones are rambutan, which are like lychee, but we didn’t try them on this trip. The big green ones are pomelo, which our guide says is good for weight loss. And the bright pink ones are dragonfruit. Inside, they’re white with small black seeds.

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This seller also had grubs (silkworm?). You can eat them raw, but our guide said these had been out too long (several hours), so you should cook them before eating them. There are also cookware and clothing stalls on the outside of the market. I bought a conical hat, because my hat from home was too HOT. (A familiar refrain.) These hats are very lightweight, and cool. And you can use them as a fan, too.

Inside the market, everything is pretty tightly packed together. Here are eggs: chicken, duck, quail, fresh, preserved…

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You know this fowl is fresh!

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And these ducks are destined to be dinner. They’re still quacking, here.

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Boats pull up at the dock with fresh fish.

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After the tour of the market, we boarded a boat for a 25 minute trip down the river to the cooking school.

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All the boats have eyes!

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We saw lots of fishing nets like these. And lots of ducks on the islands. Ping, where are you?

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The cooking school and the bridge for which it’s named.

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We toured the herb garden, and then began class. Our instructor had a Aussie accent on top of his Vietnamese one.

We made rice paper (like you wrap on salad rolls), salad rolls, Hoi An pancakes (with shrimp and scallions). And of course, we got to eat all of these things. We also made garnishes: cucumber fans, and tomato roses.

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Our final dish was eggplant in clay pot.

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We ate the eggplant with rice for lunch in the restaurant, and it was fabulous.

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My winning ways

I won a contest! Twisted’s June contest was “Flowers and Knits.” I submitted this picture of the beginning of my Malabrigo Sock yarn Ishbel in our purple irises, and it was the winner.

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The prize is this pretty embroidered bag.

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The beautiful irises from the photo don’t look so lovely any more, but that doesn’t seem to bother my little friend.

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Thanks, Twisted!

When I went to pick up my prize, I also picked up two skeins of Mirasol T’ika, 100% Pima Cotton, 83 meters/50 gm. I’m going to make another Baby Bolero from Leigh Radford’s One Skein for a little girl scheduled to debut at the beginning of September. (Two skeins for a One Skein sweater sounds funny, but if it were a 100 gm skein it would make sense.)

The WIPs just keep stacking up…

I’ve been a cookin’ fool since I got home from vacation. A lot of blueberry baked goods! And tonight’s dinner, lemony zucchini pizza. I adapted a recipe from Smitten Kitchen. Instead of goat cheese, I used ricotta. DH wasn’t sure he could wait for me to photograph the pizza.

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But I prevailed.

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It was delicious; this recipe is a winner, too!

Travelogue: Hoi An

The next day in Vietnam, we were off to Hoi An for two days. It’s a short hop on Vietnam Airlines to Danang, and then a 40 minute cab ride to Hoi An. Hoi An is HOT! And lovely. This town was Vietnam’s most important trading post from the 16th to the 18th centuries. There are a lot of interesting buildings here in the old historic quarter; you can see the Chinese and Japanese influence. The city was protected from destruction by both sides during the American War.

Here’s the entrance to the Cantonese Assembly Hall (my people!)

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The Gate at the Hall

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Cantonese Assembly Hall

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Japanese Bridge

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I’m not sure what this building is; we just stumbled upon it

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Lantern Shop in Old Quarter

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Besides the historic atmosphere, Hoi An is known for its tailor shops. You can have suits made in a day here. They can copy things you bring, or you can figure it out from samples or catalogs. DH and both boys had suits made for $55 US. DH’s suit looks just like the ones he buys here. The Teen didn’t really need a suit, but we agreed that he needed this:

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I had a cheongsam (Chinese dress) made for $28. I could never buy one off the rack because they never fit correctly. This one does, perfectly. (sorry, no picture; I was so hot and sticky that I couldn’t think to take one)

It was here in Hoi An that I had to buy flip-flops; my Keen sandals and Dansko slides were too hot.

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Heat does funny things to you. First I became a fan of the fan, then a fan of the flip-flop. The next day I’d become a fan of the conical hat, because the hat I brought with me was also too HOT.

What else does one do in Hoi An? Cooking class! But that’s another post…

Every story has a beginning…

…and our trip to Vietnam is no different. It was sparked by a post on friend Susan’s blog, inviting friends to come visit during her three month stay there. I mentioned it to DH, and he thought I was nuts. Then he reconsidered, and I thought *he* was nuts. Then there were Vietnam guide books for Mother’s Day. The rest is history. It would take some creative calendar juggling to make it work for the whole family, but that’s par for the course around here.

Since we’d be flying through Tokyo, I thought it might be fun to hang out there for a few days on the way back. The Teen is studying Japanese in school, and what better way for him to get an earful than to be immersed in it? That part of the trip would just be the two of us, as DH and College Guy had to get back to work and school.

We flew 16 hours to get to Ho Chi Minh City (formerly Saigon, airport code is still SGN). I got a lot of Ishbel knitting done on that trip! Arriving at 11 p.m., we were treated to a taxi ride where we were amazed by the way traffic works there. The motorbike is the predominant vehicle in HCMC, and there don’t appear to be many rules of the road. Usually the right side of the road, but sometimes the left side. A big vehicle can do whatever it wants. The motorbikes part around it, like schools of fish. The same is true for pedestrians: step off the curb, move slowly, keep a steady pace, and the motorbikes will flow around you. Don’t make any sudden changes!

It’s amazing what can be carried on a motorbike. Entire families. Baskets of produce or chickens. Building materials. Office supplies. Mattresses! And people. It’s easy to hire a motorbike driver to take you where you want to go.

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Sunday morning found us bright and early at the Sinh Cafe. (I love the irony of that.) Sinh Cafe is a travel agency that books tours. We went on a bus tour to the Cu Chi Tunnels, where the Viet Cong used to live under ground during the American War (that’s what it’s called there). History is definitely written by the victors, and the US was not on that side. We passed banana and rubber tree plantations on the way.

Here’s a demonstration of how small the tunnel entrances could be.

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Now you see him:

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And now,

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You don’t!

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We had the opportunity to crawl through some of the tunnels. DH and College Guy did; The Teen and I were too claustrophobic.

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Of course, there’s always a souvenir shop. The Teen bought a hat, and we looked at this snake wine.

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We spent the afternoon touring Ho Chi Minh City via chauffeured motorbike. We saw the War Remnants Museum, Reunification Palace, Notre Dame Cathedral.

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There was some music going on at the entrance to the cathedral.

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The afternoon ended with hair washes for me & the boys. A hair wash involves shampoo, scalp massage, and facial massage, for about 30 minutes. It costs about 30,000 Vietnamese Dong, which is less than $2 US. Very relaxing, and cooling too. Perfect after a hot tropical day. The guys were skeptical at first, but once the cool water started, they were fans! Me, too. Couldn’t talk DH into it, though.

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Bliss!