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 - Yapılacaklar listesine ekleYapılacaklar listesinden çıkar
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 - Gün 71
 - 23 Şubat 2018 Cuma
 - ⛅ 77 °F
 - Yükseklik: 1.001 ft
 
 EndonezyaKampungbaru8°35’6” S  119°26’28” E
Komodo Dragons
 23 Şubat 2018, Endonezya ⋅ ⛅ 77 °F
						For two hours we had a wonderful walk through a tropical rainforest in Komodo National Park, Indonesia. Hot and humid, our walk through the woods was very similar to our daily walk through the Uwharrie Mountains. It was the first time we had seen orchids growing in the wild. We also saw a bright yellow oriole, slightly larger than orioles in our neck of the woods. Of course, our main objective was to see the legendary Komodo Dragon, the world’s largest lizard, which lives only here in Indonesia. In a clearing we finally came upon four big males, one female in the woods behind us, and one 3-year-old baby. Komodo Dragons live about 50 years, and grow to about 15-18 feet long. Males are larger and heavier than females. Interestingly, when males are not available, the females can lay and hatch their eggs without male fertilization (parthenogenesis). On the whole, the girls think this is a pretty good arrangement. Komodo Dragons are very aggressive, and can run about as fast as a human. They can smell blood up to 2 miles away and will attack with no provocation. KD eggs are incubated by the sun. Both KD eggs and KD babies are regularly eaten by adult KD’s and by many other critters in the woods. The best guess is that only about 20% of their eggs hatch, and that no more than 2% of the hatchlings ever make it past KD kindergarten. As soon as they hatch, the youngsters are often eaten by the parents, so the kids will shelter up in a tree until mom and/or dad leaves. The adults’ favorite food is wild hog, but there are also many, many deer in these woods. So venison is on the KD menu when pork is not immediately available. We feel so blessed to be able to see these wonderful creatures, and for the diligence of our guides (especially for the young man Suparho, who carried the big forked stick) in showing us the Komodo Dragons and allowing us to come back to tell the tale. Thanks also to the wonderful staff onboard the Viking Sun, who can get 900 of us geriatric adventurers into a tropical rainforest and back, and make it look easy.Okumaya devam et
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 - Gün 72
 - 24 Şubat 2018 Cumartesi
 - ⛅ 82 °F
 - Yükseklik: 39 ft
 
 EndonezyaKaja8°40’55” S  115°12’54” E
Bali, Indonesia
 24 Şubat 2018, Endonezya ⋅ ⛅ 82 °F
						We spent the day in Bali, Indonesia one of the 17,000 islands that make up this beautiful country with kind and generous people. While most of the people in Indonesia are Muslim, in Bali 88% of the people are Hindu. After an hour of shopping at a market near the ship, we set off to a twilight dinner and dance in the village of Celuk. Our dinner was in the Bali Bird Park which was filled with hundreds of exotic birds. I will include photos but I have no idea of the names of most of the birds . One black bird spent about 5 minutes perched on my head. After a walk around the very humid park, we enjoyed a fabulous Indonesian meal and watched a traditional Bali dance called the Kecak. Then we were treated to the fire dance. A young man danced in the fire of coconut husks. When we got back to the ship we were treated to yet another dance show onboard just before we set sail for Java. We are now moving into the exotic Asian worlds that are very new to us.Okumaya devam et
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 - Paylaş
 - Gün 73
 - 25 Şubat 2018 Pazar 10:00
 - ⛅ 82 °F
 - Yükseklik: Deniz seviyesi
 
 Bali Sea7°34’19” S  114°48’28” E
7°34'19" S 114°48'28" E
 25 Şubat 2018, Bali Sea ⋅ ⛅ 82 °F
						On this sea day I attended one of several photography seminars by Alastair Miller, the officical photographer for Viking Ocean Cruises. At first I though Alastair was haughty and aloof, but the more I got to know him, the more I realized that he is incredibly shy. Getting to know him and his wife Chi was a delight.Okumaya devam et
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 - Paylaş
 - Gün 74
 - 26 Şubat 2018 Pazartesi
 - Yükseklik: 876 ft
 
 EndonezyaBorobudur7°36’28” S  110°12’14” E
Borobadur
 26 Şubat 2018, Endonezya
						
								We are still in Indonesia, but today on the island of Java. We pulled into the port in the city of Semarang and immediately left for our destination, the Buddhist temple of Borobudur. On the way we stopped for a coffee break. The neat thing about Java is that they make lots of—well—Java. Coffee is one of the major products here, and the java of Java is some of the best. Some computer geeks were once sitting around drinking java trying to figure out what to call their new programming language. So they called it Java and even put a little coffee cup on their trademark. The most expensive coffee in the world is made here. It is called kopi luwak. It gets its name from the luwak civet, which is related to cats, but really looks like a possum. This jungle cat has an extremely sensitive nose. It chooses only the best, ripest coffee berries to eat. It digests the husk, but then passes the undigested coffee berries, which are then collected, roasted and brewed into a very smooth, mild coffee that many connoisseurs consider the best coffee in the world. The Javans themselves lovingly refer to it as “cat poo chino.” In the movie The Bucket List Morgan Freeman played a little kopi luwak joke on Jack Nicholson that was not in the script. The movie is worth watching again just for that.
After coffee we made our way to the Temple of Borobudur. It’s really not a temple because you can’t go inside it. It’s really just an elaborate set of carvings that tell the life story of Siddhartha Gautama, who became the Buddha. This granite clad hill was commissioned by an unknown ruler, probably in the 8th century AD. As an act of piety Buddhists now come from all over the world to circle its various levels until they reach the top, symbolizing one’s achievement of Nirvana. Yesterday we were on the Indonesian island of Bali, which is predominantly Hindu. Today we spent the day on Java, which is predominantly Muslim. Even so, there were Christians, Jews, and Muslims at Borobudur today, all marveling at this monument that took two generations of Buddhists to complete back before the time of Charlemagne. It sort of felt like home today. While we have a Baptist Church on every block, Semarang has a mosque on every block. Some are big; some are small; some are beautiful; some aren’t. Somehow I felt a kinship to these good people who are doing their best to raise their kids, provide for their families and do what they sincerely believe God wants them to do. So tomorrow is a sea day, then it’s on to Brunei.Okumaya devam et
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 - Gün 75
 - 27 Şubat 2018 Salı UTC
 - Yükseklik: Deniz seviyesi
 
 Natuna Sea1°23’24” S  108°16’13” E
Indonesian Night
 27 Şubat 2018, Natuna Sea
						Tonight was Indonesian night and the food and decorations were fantastic. In a few minutes we will cross the equator again, headed north this time.
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 - Gün 77
 - 1 Mart 2018 Perşembe
 - ⛅ 90 °F
 - Yükseklik: 43 ft
 
 BruneiSungai Kedayan4°52’52” N  114°56’33” E
Brunei
 1 Mart 2018, Brunei ⋅ ⛅ 90 °F
						The Sultanate of Brunei is like a modern fairytale. As recently as WW2 this northwest corner of the island of Borneo was like a thousand other little tropical islands doing little besides fishing. Then in the 1960’s oil was discovered. Immediately the Sultan of Brunei was the wealthiest man in the world. He has remained so. His personal net worth is well over $20 billion. There are beautiful palaces, mosques, and homes all over the place, and all of them have been built since the 1960’s. All are modern, though incorporating traditional themes. Despite this modernity, however, the analogy of the fairy tale continues. Not only is there no income tax here, but quite the contrary, every subject receives a monthly allowance from the government. Elderly (over 60) and disabled persons receive additional allowances. Education and medical care are free. Well, almost free. They do charge you one dollar to go to a doctor, or to the hospital, or to the dentist. However, if the excellent hospital here cannot treat your condition, the government will fly you to another hospital anywhere in the world that can treat your illness—totally free of charge. The best college students here are chosen to go to the best universities in England, their tuition, housing and fees are all paid by the government. A paid housekeeper is provided, and, oh yes, the government provides each student $5000 per year “pocket money.” In addition to this, every other year the sultan pays to fly each Brunei student home to see the family. The average family in Brunei owns 3 cars. Automobiles and homes can be financed by an interest free government loan. There is Sharia law in this Muslim country and alcohol consumption is non-existent. Perhaps it is because of this very forceful approach to violations of law, crime here is extremely low. Drunk driving offenses do not exist, and though traffic is heavy at rush hour, it moves quickly, smoothly and with no traffic accidents that I could see. We saw no evidence of drugs, gangs, or homelessness. There are no graffiti on the streets. Our guide says that no one locks cars or houses because no one ever steals anything. We did not hear a single siren over the course of the day. We visited a water village whose homes were quite different from the modern homes being purchased by most growing families. The families living on the water have inherited their homes. Many of these families have lived in these dwellings built on mangrove pilings for over a thousand years. Bandar Seri Begawan, Brunei, the site of a modern fantasy come to life.Okumaya devam et
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 - Paylaş
 - Gün 78
 - 2 Mart 2018 Cuma
 - ⛅ 90 °F
 - Yükseklik: 36 ft
 
 MalezyaIstana5°58’49” N  116°4’24” E
Kota Kinabalu
 2 Mart 2018, Malezya ⋅ ⛅ 90 °F
						
								On day 78 of our cruise we have sailed 20,563 nautical miles and docked this morning at a city called Kota Kinabalu. It is in the state of Sabah, in the nation of Malaysia, on the island of Borneo. Before we planned this cruise I had never heard of this place. Now I’m in love.
Again. 
This city of 600,000 was occupied and burned by the Japanese in WW2, then bombed by the allies. Only three buildings from the war survived, and one of them has since burned down. The result is that the whole city is brand new and beautiful. It contains immigrants and descendants from the scores of tribes of Borneo, China, the Philippines, and all over Southeast Asia. Into the 1960's canibalism was still practiced in the jungles near here. In the streets everyone speaks the Malaysian national language or English. At home they speak in 20 different languages. The majority of people in Malaysia are Christians, though the largest group in this city are Muslims. There are also lots of Buddhists, Hindus, Taoists, and animists, yet somehow they all seem to get along. An obviously Muslim family happened to be walking toward Glenda in the market on today (Friday), the Muslim sabbath. My guess is that they were coming from the nearby mosque we had just photographed. The matriarch of the family, approximately our age, touched Glenda’s arm and asked in halting English, “Where you from?” Glenda answered, “America.” The woman stared at Glenda for just a moment, looking somewhat surprised. Then she said, “I not hate you.” Glenda took her hand and said, “I don’t hate you either.” Then they went on their way. So did we.
Kota Kinabalu's heritage museum was especially meaningful for me. This is about as close as we will come to New Guinea, an island where my father's infantry unit was assigned in World War II. The museum shows houses, clothing and buildings that would have been in this part of the world when my father arrived in 1944. 
I like this place.Okumaya devam et
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 - Paylaş
 - Gün 80
 - 4 Mart 2018 Pazar
 - ⛅ 93 °F
 - Yükseklik: 43 ft
 
 FilipinlerLa Loma14°37’9” N  120°59’43” E
Manila
 4 Mart 2018, Filipinler ⋅ ⛅ 93 °F
						Many of our room stewards are from Manila. On Sunday as we called at that port, some of our new friends began a two-month vacation at their homes. Viking graciously arranged for their families to tour the ship while we were in Manila, and even provided child care and hotel accommodations for those Philippine couples who were off just for the day. One of our new friends from Manila has a seven-year-old son who had never seen the big ship on which daddy works. Mom told the kid that they were going into town to shop. But she had a secret. As they drove past the dock the boy said, “There’s a big ship like the one daddy works on. Do you think I’ll ever be able to go on a big ship like that?” Mom said, “You never know. Maybe they would let us on that ship. Let’s go ask.” They drove into the port and parked the car. As they walked up toward the gangway, the boy saw his daddy on the ship, coming down the gangway to meet him. Screaming with joy, the kid ran and hugged his father, who then gave his family a tour of this lovely vessel we call home. Thanks to Viking not only for making us passengers feel so comfortable, but also for being so kind and supportive to its employees. We were greeted by two fantastic percussion bands and dancers when we docked this morning in Manila, Philippines. Because the traffic is so heavy here, our bus had a military escort. Most of the folks in Manila ride in Jeepneys, which were made from the Jeeps left here by the American military. They stretched the chassis and made the Jeeps into small busses. It is amazing how many folks can fit into one Jeepney and it only costs about 1 cent to catch a ride. We visited Casa Manila, a reconstructed upper class Spanish home. Across the street was the Church of St Augustine. We could not tour the church because a wedding was taking place there, but I snatched a photo of the pretty bride. We also visited Rizal Park and the site of the execution of Dr Jose Rizal, an early leader of Philippine independence. One of our biggest treats was getting to see the family of our crew members who are from the Philippines. They toured the ship to see where their sons, daughters, mothers, fathers or spouses work. Viking also rented out an entire hotel for the crew members to spend the day with family. Viking really is a class act.Okumaya devam et
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 - Paylaş
 - Gün 84
 - 8 Mart 2018 Perşembe
 - ⛅ 48 °F
 - Yükseklik: 30 ft
 
 ÇinHuangpu31°14’25” N  121°29’25” E
Shanghai
 8 Mart 2018, Çin ⋅ ⛅ 48 °F
						
								Shanghai amazed us with its clean modern skyline, its elegant new museum, and its overwhelming size. Almost all of China's 1.4 billion people live in cities. Many of them live here. There are miles and miles of high-rise apartment buildings extending out to the horizon. The banks and other commercial buildings in the city center are new, glossy, and expensive. I was especially impressed with the lovely museum, especially its thoughtful collection of calligraphy and art. However, there are also collections of clothing, ceramics, weapons--just about anything related to Chinese history. One can easily see why Shanghai has for a century been known as China's door to the outside world.
To give you an idea of how crowded Shanghai is let me put it in perspective. Los Angeles is 4 times larger geographically than Shanghai. The population of LA is 6 million. The population of Shanghai is 26 million. As far as the eye can see, there are high rise apartments for many, many miles in every direction. Imagine how a city looks from the air. One sees thousands of houses and buildings on the ground below. Now, make every building a skyscraper and you have an idea of where the 26 million residents of Shanghai live. You have a circle with a diameter of 60 miles with little but skyscraping offices and apartments. That’s Shanghai. Rush hour is quite impossible and there are hundreds of thousands of bicycles and scooters amongst all the cars. I can’t imagine what it would be like if everyone owned a car. Public transportation is abundant both with busses and high speed trains.
And yet with all those people, I never felt swept away by a sea of people. Parks were well maintained and lovely. The temperature both days hovered at about 50 when we were out but was rather cold when we began our days bundled up for the lows of 32.
Day one we visited the Shanghai Museum, the People’s Park and the Bund, a public parkway along the river. The government is omnipresent. Getting through immigration was a lengthy process but we all made it through. We saw cameras and police everywhere. Cameras were at every intersection, on vans and busses driving the streets and parked along the streets and parks. There was a policeman every 50 feet or so. Kathy and I went to an ATM to get cash and two guards and one policeman were right behind them the whole time. Once a tourist stepped on the grassy area at the Bund and within 2 seconds a policeman was blowing his whistle and ordering him off of the grass.
The people were kind and many spoke some English. I was able to assist a bit in helping shipmates to translate signs and find bathrooms. The toilets are your standard Asian ones with a hole in the floor and you must bring your own tissue.
The Shanghai Museum was wonderful and we could have spent days there but after 2 hours we were off to the People’s Park where folks gather to feed pigeons and enjoy the grass. After that we walked along the river shore walkway before we returned to the ship that afternoon for a very late lunch.
That evening we attended the christening of the Viking Sun amid a glowing skyline and a dazzling light show.Okumaya devam et
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 - Paylaş
 - Gün 85
 - 9 Mart 2018 Cuma
 - ⛅ 52 °F
 - Yükseklik: 92 ft
 
 ÇinSuzhou31°17’56” N  120°35’7” E
Su Zhou
 9 Mart 2018, Çin ⋅ ⛅ 52 °F
						Our second day docked at the port of Shanghai was spent in the ancient city of Su Zhou, a town that makes an unforgettable presentation of traditional Chinese culture. After a two-hour drive we arrived at the old canals of Su Zhou where we boarded a boat for a ride through the old waterways. Homes and markets line the canals. All of the everyday activities of laundry, bathing, cooking and cleaning were in view. After the canal ride we visited the embroidery institute where we saw master craft women creating incredibly intricate and beautiful works of art. Our favorite piece was a six-panel, five-foot tall screen that took two women three years to complete. It depicted egrets amid bamboo. For a mere $269,000, we could have brought it home with us. After a Chinese lunch at a hotel, we headed to a classical Chinese park called The Humble Administrator’s Garden about 50 miles west of Shanghai. I gave up trying to capture photos that were not crowded with a multitude of tourists. The ride back to the ship was three hours long because of Friday rush hour traffic. We ran to our rooms, changed clothes and headed out to celebrate Gil’s birthday at Manfredi’s on the ship, while our designated driver Captain Knutsen set sail for Hong Kong. This morning we were surrounded by Chinese “fishing boats.“ I counted over 70 from our balcony. It is amazing how many of these “fishing boats “ have so much electronic equipment. This afternoon Chuck and I took a Chinese cooking class and a long napOkumaya devam et
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 - Gün 88
 - 12 Mart 2018 Pazartesi
 - ☀️ 68 °F
 - Yükseklik: 30 ft
 
 Hong KongKowloon Bay22°18’31” N  114°12’39” E
Hong Kong
 12 Mart 2018, Hong Kong ⋅ ☀️ 68 °F
						
								Our first stop in Hong Kong took us to the Chi Lin Nunnery, a place of silence, peace and overwhelming beauty. This Buddhist-Daoist monastery is surrounded by an exquisite reproduction of a ninth-century Chinese garden. At first glance, this complex seems more Japanese than Chinese one until one remembers that much of Japanese culture, their written characters, and even their bonsai trees were borrowed from China in the ninth century. The gardens are an excellent example of feng-shui (wind and water), the Daoist notion of natural harmony. An oriental garden should represent the whole of nature by including water, mountains, vegetation and buildings. Each of these elements is represented symbolically with ponds, stones or dirt, plants and pavilions. The garden is a place of unbelievable peace and tranquillity. Inside the monastery are a number of enormous golden statues of the Buddha—very impressive and beautiful—however, we were not allowed to photograph them. The woodwork in the buildings was magnificent. The whole temple is built without a single nail or screw. Rather, the wooden beams and walls are constructed by mortise and tenon. Each piece is carved to exact dimensions, then fitted together like a tightly fitting jigsaw puzzle. If the builders of this temple complex intended to represent a kind of oriental heaven, then they certainly succeeded.
As different from the Nan Liang Garden as salt is from pepper is the Wong Tai Sin temple. Though it is also a Daoist temple, the crowds, the smell and the noise here are more reminiscent of a county fair than a religious sanctuary. Thousands of devotees pack its precincts to ask for favors from the deities. Some come to practice kau cim, which involves lighting incense sticks, kneeling at the altar, and shaking a bamboo cylinder until a fortune stick falls out. Others come to make an offering to the god of love to seek a mate. A red string of yarn must be held between properly folded hands before approaching his altar. After the prayer, the string is tied to the altar. Still others bring offerings of food to curry favor with the gods. We saw offerings of fruits, cooked chicken, roast beef, even a whole suckling pig brought as offerings. They remain at the altar for an hour or so until the deity enjoys the offering, then the food is taken by temple personnel to nearby nursing homes for residents to consume. The sights, sounds and smells of the Wong Tai Sin temple definitely convince one that this place certainly ain’t in North Carolina.
Finally we visited a place that has a special significance for me—the Walled City of Kowloon. When the Communist Chinese came to power in 1949, there was a misunderstanding with the British government in Hong Kong about the area lying just off the end of the runway of the Kai Tak Airport on Kowloon Island. The Chinese believed it was retained by the British, so their police would not go into this area. The British believed that it belonged to China, so they would not enter either. The result was a no-man’s land that was completely law-less. Prostitution, gambling, drugs, human trafficking, gangs and criminality of every type flourished. There were a half-dozen 15-story buildings filled with apartments, serving not only as residences, but also as the site of every imaginable type of cottage industry. One apartment housed a physician, or an opium den, another a print shop, a brothel or a tailor. The next contained a grocery or a barber shop. There was no law. There was no regulation. There was no licensing. There was no police. In Kowloon one could buy any item, any product, any service—legal or illegal. Without any humor intended we used to say that from Kowloon you could buy anything from a haircut to a hit-man. Residents built bamboo breezeways to connect the buildings at several levels, making a city within a city. My awareness of Kowloon began in 1971 when I was a Chinese Mandarin linguist in the Army during the Vietnam War. There is a large standard Chinese-English dictionary that we linguists needed. Some of my co-workers acquired a catalog from a publisher in Kowloon that sold this dictionary at an absurdly low price. It was cheaply made, and obviously pirated in violation of copyright agreements, but it was inexpensive and many of us bought one. A buddy of mine had the catalog and asked what books I would like to get. I told him that they didn’t have the book I wanted. He asked which book I was interested in. I told him I wanted the complete set of the Summa Theologica by Thomas Aquinas in English, knowing the catalog would not list it. He flipped through the pages for a second then said, “Yeah. Here it is. Seventeen bucks.” 
By the 1980’s the Hong Kong government decided to demolish the buildings and to build a lovely traditional park there. It is similar in style to the Nan Liang Gardens, though not as large nor meticulously groomed. Kowloon‘s residents were all given government apartments and they have gone elsewhere. By now many have probably died. Interestingly, our young Chinese guide said that she regretted that the old buildings of Kowloon had been torn down, though from her superficial explanation of its history, I suspect that this young lady has only received a sanitized version of what went on here. Following her explanation, many of our fellow tourists couldn’t even understand why we stopped here. Nevertheless, there was a small flag someone had hoisted at the park that had an emblem and the words, “Kowloon Independent Area.” A Hong Kong resident told me today that many people avoid the new park, beautiful though it may be. He says that there is still too much negative energy surrounding the place, too many unhappy spirits, too many sad memories. He may be right. Maybe the earth does have a memory. Maybe the very soil under this place remembers. If so, it will take a long time for the dirt here to forget what happened at Kowloon.Okumaya devam et
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 - Gün 89
 - 13 Mart 2018 Salı 06:30
 - 🌙 61 °F
 - Yükseklik: 1.762 ft
 
 Hong KongVictoria Peak22°16’33” N  114°8’44” E
Victoria Peak
 13 Mart 2018, Hong Kong ⋅ 🌙 61 °F
						
								We had a 6:30 am excursion time this morning as we headed out to explore Hong Kong. Our first stop was Victoria Peak, the highest lookout point on Hong Kong Island. From the peak the skyscrapers all blend together. Housing in the city is incredibly expensive. Financially, it is impossible for a couple to have an apartment alone. Six to ten people live in one apartment that is about 400 square feet that will have two very small bedrooms, a kitchen, one bathroom and a small living room. Laundry hangs out of windows on all the apartments, even 60 stories up.
After the visit to Victoria Peak, we rode the tram down the very steep incline and headed to the harbor to board a sampan for a tour of the water boat homes. Restaurants, repair shops and various stores are all floating in the harbor.
After a stop at a jewelry store we headed to Stanley Market for some shopping. While I saw many lovely items, nothing really grabbed my attention. By 1:00 pm we were back on the ship and now we are sailing to Haikou, China.Okumaya devam et
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 - Yapılacaklar listesine ekleYapılacaklar listesinden çıkar
 - Paylaş
 - Gün 89
 - 13 Mart 2018 Salı
 - ⛅ 77 °F
 - Yükseklik: 52 ft
 
 ÇinTianluo20°2’40” N  110°11’54” E
Haikou, China
 13 Mart 2018, Çin ⋅ ⛅ 77 °F
						
								Hai Kou (meaning "Mouth of the Sea") gives one a concentrated taste of traditional China. While Hong Kong and Shang Hai are full of gigantic, glitz and glamor, Hai Kou feels like the China we read about in storybooks as children. Once we were docked at the port, we skipped the guided tour and took a shuttle bus into the historic part of town. Haikou has the same population as Charlotte but we were in the old downtown section lined with quaint shops. The street we were on, Jung Shan Road, was cut in the early 17th century in the Qing dynasty. Most of the buildings now standing, however, were built in the mid-19th century. One exception was the lovely Tyan Hou Temple, which, though it looked very ordinary from the outside, resembled a gate of heaven within. I had a wonderful time practicing my Chinese with various groups of young people I encountered. One little girl even asked for my autograph and they all wanted their pictures made with me. I got to practice my Mandarin and they practiced English. They all hugged me as they left. Glenda said she feels as though she is married to a rock star.
The people were all so friendly and gracious! Glenda could have done more shopping if I had taken more American dollars into town. China does not allow American credit cards or ATM cards.
After five wonderful hours of wandering around this delightful city, we returned to the ship for a late lunch.Okumaya devam et
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 - Paylaş
 - Gün 93
 - 17 Mart 2018 Cumartesi
 - ⛅ 90 °F
 - Yükseklik: 33 ft
 
 VietnamSông Sai10°30’32” N  107°10’54” E
Ba Ria, Vietnam
 17 Mart 2018, Vietnam ⋅ ⛅ 90 °F
						
								Vietnam is a place of paradox. It’s a hard place to figure out. I don’t quite know how to feel. I am in Vietnam for the first time since 1973. On the one hand, the young people in the streets today in Ba Ria don’t remember the war. Most of them were not even born when it occurred. It is a different nation; a different time. On the other hand, the names are the same. I see them on the road signs. My Tho. Da Lat. Pleiku. Khe San. It’s hard to figure out.
It is a different nation now. But Chi Miller, a descendant of Vietnamese royalty, tells of her grandfather becoming Vice President of Communist Viet Nam after the Americans left in 1975. For decades he had simply favored a Vietnam ruled by Vietnamese—not the French; not the Japanese; not the Americans. Within six months he became so disillusioned with the new regime that he told his family to leave the country any way they could. Finally, on the seventh attempt they succeeded. Former Vietnamese royalty became boat people. They escaped the glorious new nation they helped to build because that victorious regime was a monster. In Vietnam it’s hard to know how to feel, even if you’re Vietnamese.
Vietnam is a different nation now. It is vibrant and growing, and very welcoming to Americans. And yet, many of the guys I grew up and played football with were equally vibrant and growing. They still are, in my mind, at least. My cousin Jackie, and Wally, Drew and Kenny. They are still alive, in my mind, at least. It’s hard to know how to feel.
We were young men who did our duty. Or at least we thought we did. We did a very good job at what was, in retrospect, an immoral enterprise. I take some moral comfort in the realization that our government gained my consent by lying to us. 
Repeatedly. 
We gave our country a blank check. America could write it for anything we had, up to and including our lives. We became soldiers, and we won every single military engagement we were in. But we lost the war. It’s hard to know how to feel.
Today we went to Ba Ria. There was a major battle there. Now there is a Ford dealership and the Boston Hotel. Saigon is now Ho Chi Min City. We lost the war. Or did we? People still call it Saigon, and there is a Hilton Hotel in the middle of the city. Maybe when the soldiers left, the businessmen, entrepreneurs, and accountants came in and succeeded where armies failed. Maybe America won in Vietnam after all. It’s really hard to figure out. Vietnam is a land of contradictions.Okumaya devam et
- Geziyi göster
 - Yapılacaklar listesine ekleYapılacaklar listesinden çıkar
 - Paylaş
 - Gün 94
 - 18 Mart 2018 Pazar
 - ☀️ 95 °F
 - Yükseklik: 26 ft
 
 Vietnamkenh Hy Vong10°49’23” N  106°37’47” E
Saigon
 18 Mart 2018, Vietnam ⋅ ☀️ 95 °F
						
								This is Glenda writing.
Yesterday as we drove into Saigon for a tour of the city, we passed rice fields and mangrove swamps. I thought about the young soldiers, so far away from home fifty years ago and so afraid and confused. Many had been drafted and while some Americans were crying, “Hell no, we won’t go!” they did their duty and came to this place so different from their home. They slept on the ground in rain and in intense heat; they watched their friends die and wondered if they would be next. They did their duty. They were alone. They were afraid. 
Back home Americans were growing increasingly hostile toward the war and as these young sons of America came home traumatized and confused, many were spit upon and cursed and called vile names. Chuck was told to not wear his uniform in Washington DC because the wearing of the uniform, even in our nation’s capital, brought insults. So they came home with no welcoming bands and cheering crowds. They came home to America and faced enemies here too because they had done their duty.
Yesterday evening as the tour busses returned from Saigon, there were many of those same soldiers on those busses. This was their first time back in Vietnam since they left battle weary and still confused 45 years ago. But when those veterans pulled into the parking lot at the port, Viking had music playing, champagne bubbling and a greeting line cheering, as they were welcomed home to this beautiful ship. They were hugged and slapped on the back and they were finally given the welcome they deserved. Many were teary and overcome by this joyous greeting.
Thank you Sujith Mohan and the Viking crew for welcoming them home. You will never know how much that greeting line and those hugs meant.Okumaya devam et
- Geziyi göster
 - Yapılacaklar listesine ekleYapılacaklar listesinden çıkar
 - Paylaş
 - Gün 94
 - 18 Mart 2018 Pazar
 - 🌙 79 °F
 - Yükseklik: 33 ft
 
 VietnamRạch Cầu Bông10°46’48” N  106°42’0” E
Saigon Post Office
 18 Mart 2018, Vietnam ⋅ 🌙 79 °F
						A young man named Raoul was attracting a crowd of admirers in front of the Saigon Post Office. Some girls recognized him (for whatever reason) and started giggling, “You’re a superstar! You’re a superstar!” He denied it and hid in a cluster of his friends, standing where I stood. She persisted and asked him to autograph her arm. I asked him, “Are you a superstar?” He said, “No, are you.” I said, “Yes, I am, in fact. I’m very special. I’m Chuck Cook from North Carolina, and there will never be another one like me.” He asked, “Can I have your autograph?” I answered “Of course.” He gave me his arm and I signed it. He said, “I’ll never wash that arm again. I winked and said, “That would probably be a good idea.” We both had a good laugh.Okumaya devam et
- Geziyi göster
 - Yapılacaklar listesine ekleYapılacaklar listesinden çıkar
 - Paylaş
 - Gün 95
 - 19 Mart 2018 Pazartesi
 - ⛅ 79 °F
 - Yükseklik: Deniz seviyesi
 
 South China Sea9°32’55” N  106°45’43” E
Skales
 19 Mart 2018, South China Sea ⋅ ⛅ 79 °F
						I found out who Raoul is. He is a Nigerian rap singer who performs under the name of Skales. I’ve never heard of him, but at any rate, he has my autograph on his right arm. I was really surprised to learn that he is a rap singer. He struck me as a very thoughtful, intelligent and articulate young man.Okumaya devam et
- Geziyi göster
 - Yapılacaklar listesine ekleYapılacaklar listesinden çıkar
 - Paylaş
 - Gün 96
 - 20 Mart 2018 Salı
 - ⛅ 79 °F
 - Yükseklik: 118 ft
 
 KamboçyaSangkat Pir10°37’31” N  103°31’24” E
Sihanoukville, Cambodia
 20 Mart 2018, Kamboçya ⋅ ⛅ 79 °F
						
								Cities are appealing for lots of different reasons. Some are interesting for their art or history, some because they are the seat of political power, others because of the nightlife or the wildlife. Today we are in Cambodia. We are docked in a town called Sihanoukville, named for the former ruler, Prince Norodam Sihanouk. Despite the absence of any glitz or glamour here, I found today’s trip ashore one of the most interesting of the whole cruise. Immediately following the Vietnam War, a branch of the Communist Party led by Pol Pot came to rule here. His bizarre construction of Marxist-Maoist-Stalinist thought held that Cambodia should be for the Cambodians only. Professors and even schoolteachers were considered as intellectuals spreading foreign, non-Cambodian ideas. They were executed. Artists and business owners were executed for the same reason. So were physicians, nurses, high school graduates, students, mechanics, and even people who wore glasses. Radically atheistic, the regime assured that priests and monks suffered the same fate. Pol Pot’s agrarian ideal emptied the cities and forced everyone, even people untrained in agriculture, to work on rural collective farms. Out of a population of 8 million people, some 2-3 million were killed by execution, starvation, overwork, or poor medical care. The horrific reign of terror lasted 3 years from 1976-1979. An account of this nightmare of Cambodian history is recounted in the motion picture, The Killing Fields. Pol Pot has taken his place in infamy, along with Hitler, Stalin, Mao Tse Tung and other genocidal psychopaths.
Today was given to an extremely interesting visit to Sihanoukville. Please forgive a comment that makes me sound more like a tourist than a traveler when I say that the part of Cambodia we saw today was very crowded and definitely dirty. The odor of the city woke us early as we sailed into port at about 5 am. I do not say these things as an insult, but merely as a report. Travelers much more seasoned than I am have suggested that when one comes to Cambodia, one should not try to avoid the stench, but should rather breathe deeply so that they quickly become “nose deaf.” There is a reason for the odor, though. The fact is that Cambodians catch, kill, cook and eat any creature that does not eat them first, even insects. And we saw no stray dogs.
Today, however, I was more interested in watching the people. There are very few old people here. Virtually everyone we saw here today was under 40 years of age. What I saw today was the remnant of a nation whose government attempted to murder it. Now less than 4% of the population is over 60 years of age. I noted many, many children in town today. Some were quite young, hardly a year old, working with mom in the market, hanging on to a motor scooter, even walking with other children with no adults to be seen. Kids in Cambodia grow up fast. They really don’t have any choice. I did not see or hear one child crying today. My guess is that babies here learn quickly that crying does no good. Cambodians learn very early that life is tough. And so are they. Still, despite the harsh realities of recent history, Cambodians have their hopes and aspirations. They smile graciously at us foreigners with our flashy clothing, loud voices and expensive cameras. They still go to the temple to pray. They work hard. They scrap like junkyard dogs to earn a living. They raise their families on meager incomes, and teach their children in temples and in schools. And some of them dream that maybe—just maybe—their children can live in a Cambodia that is better than the furnace out of which their own hard lives were forged.Okumaya devam et
- Geziyi göster
 - Yapılacaklar listesine ekleYapılacaklar listesinden çıkar
 - Paylaş
 - Gün 97
 - 21 Mart 2018 Çarşamba
 - 🌙 82 °F
 - Yükseklik: 66 ft
 
 TaylandKhlong Phatthaya12°55’25” N  100°52’57” E
Pattaya, and the Sanctuary of Truth
 21 Mart 2018, Tayland ⋅ 🌙 82 °F
						We visited the Sanctuary of Truth in Pattaya, Thailand today. This massive structure is made completely of wood. It does not have one nail or screw in it . Construction began in 1981 and will not be completed until 2050. Every inch of the building will be carved and decorated with Buddhist and Hindu motifs. It is part of the legacy of a man from Thailand who introduced the first Mercedes-Benz dealership here. Afterwards he invested in tires and petroleum. Amassing a fabulous fortune, he wished to leave behind this interfaith temple as a monument to the fundamental truths that are common to all religions. Although it obviously reflects his Hindu and Buddhist background, he intended this structure to be an inspiration to all people.Okumaya devam et
- Geziyi göster
 - Yapılacaklar listesine ekleYapılacaklar listesinden çıkar
 - Paylaş
 - Gün 98
 - 22 Mart 2018 Perşembe
 - ☀️ 88 °F
 - Yükseklik: 36 ft
 
 TaylandDemocracy Monument13°45’23” N  100°30’6” E
Bangkok, The Palace of Siam
 22 Mart 2018, Tayland ⋅ ☀️ 88 °F
						
								We went on an excursion into Bangkok to the Grand Palace. However, the real story today was the crowd. This palace-temple complex includes the former palace of the Kings of Siam. Built in the 1750’s it contains what I regard as the most beautiful building in the world. But, as I said, the real story today was the crowd.
Our guide told us that ordinarily this temple receives on average 30,000 visitors each day. This morning the palace was closed to the public for the funeral of a member of the Thai royal family. So all of today’s visitors were dammed up at the gate until the grounds opened around 1:00 pm. I would be very surprised if there were only 30,000 there today. Kids were out of school today, and there had to be at least twice that number of people, all pushing into an area of maybe four acres.
This mass of humanity was funneled into a ticket gate four lanes wide. It was at that point that we went from being a crowd and became a mob. I felt myself getting pushed harder and harder by the group of Chinese tourists behind me, so I just dug in my heels to stand my ground and to keep from pushing the folks in front of me. I took a quick glance behind me and saw that the guy who was pushing me was himself being pushed by the people behind him. I couldn’t resist the current of the stream. Had I not begun taking little baby steps, pushing into the people to my front, I would have toppled over, I would have fallen to the floor, and I would have been trampled by the mob. We were not just standing chest to back and shoulder to chest. We were PACKED shoulder to shoulder and chest to back, being carried along in a river of people, all jammed into an irresistible current. I took no photos because the pressure from the crowd against my arms prevented me from raising my camera. In the confusion a child lost his parents. Glenda, from whom I got separated in the crowd, snapped a quick picture with her iPhone. She saw an older woman near her being overcome by the heat and the force pushing us all together into a tightly packed mass. Glenda held her hand and made sure the woman did not fall. They became buddies for the afternoon. Everyone started getting a bit tense. Some folks started trying to turn around and go back to the street which we had just left, but there was no swimming against this riptide. It didn’t help when a young Chinese girl just to my right, who didn’t seem to be experiencing any distress greater than the rest of us, issued a melodramatic, blood-curdling scream. I felt the crowd tense up, it got noisy and I felt that things were getting dangerous. People started pushing, and pushing back, all around me. I kept repeating in a fairly loud but soothing voice, in the best Mandarin I could muster, “Everything is all right. Let’s just take it easy and we’ll all get through.” The folks around me looked surprised that this foreigner was speaking their language. I think they were shocked, and things did ease off just a touch. 
Just enough. 
The Chinese around me calmed down a bit, and although we were still caught in an inexorable stream, at least we were now moving more or less calmly. With the pressure of the crowd, our group from bus #2 got all stretched out in the stream. After maybe fifteen minutes we got through the ticket gate, reversed the spaghettification of our group, collected our members, our composure and our thoughts, and formed up around our guide in a place wide enough to allow us to relax for a moment.
With the danger over, we began to explore the complex. The hordes of tourists did prevent us from spending as much time as we would like in this extraordinarily beautiful place, though. The first temple we saw contained the so-called emerald Buddha, a national symbol of Thailand, clothed in his golden robes. Then we glimpsed, looking over 500 heads, the almost unbelievable glory of the middle court. The Chakri Maha Prasat, built by King Rama V in the nineteenth century, is the most successful fusion of neoclassical and oriental architectural styles ever attempted. It is glorious beyond description, and no photograph can do it justice.
Despite the difficulties of today’s excursion, however, seeing these unimaginably beautiful structures was well worth the inconvenience. We just hope to come again when things are not so crowded to enjoy at greater length the splendor of this ancient and mysterious kingdom.
Special thanks today to our guide, a Thai woman named Lucky, who kept us together and safe, and lived up to her name.Okumaya devam et
- Geziyi göster
 - Yapılacaklar listesine ekleYapılacaklar listesinden çıkar
 - Paylaş
 - Gün 99
 - 23 Mart 2018 Cuma
 - ☀️ 81 °F
 - Yükseklik: 1.490 ft
 
 TaylandBan Chaweng Noi9°30’43” N  100°0’49” E
Koh Samui
 23 Mart 2018, Tayland ⋅ ☀️ 81 °F
						After some pretty intense days emotionally or physically in Saigon and Bangkok, today was a day of pure fun, with monkeys, elephants, waterfalls and rubber trees. We tendered ashore to Koh Samui, Thailand and rode on a Jeep to a rubber tree farm. We learned how they harvest rubber and process it. Then it was on to the elephants and monkeys. We watched trained monkeys harvest coconuts, and then we rode on an elephant through the rain forest. A visit to a beautiful waterfall completed our excursion before we tendered back to the ship. Tonight we say good bye to more of our crew members who are getting off in Singapore. Tomorrow is a sea day that will be much appreciated. Day 99 of our trip is coming to a close.Okumaya devam et
- Geziyi göster
 - Yapılacaklar listesine ekleYapılacaklar listesinden çıkar
 - Paylaş
 - Gün 100
 - 24 Mart 2018 Cumartesi UTC
 - ⛅ 79 °F
 - Yükseklik: Deniz seviyesi
 
 Gulf of Thailand7°49’43” N  100°55’32” E
Saying Goodbye
 24 Mart 2018, Gulf of Thailand ⋅ ⛅ 79 °F
						Tonight is the last night we will see over 120 of our crew members who have been with us since we began this journey. While many have greeted us at the restaurant or bars or in the common areas, others have labored unseen doing our laundry or handling the maintenance on the ship. Some have worked during the night cleaning or baking or providing security while we were rocked to sleep by the Viking Sun. All of them have touched our lives in so many ways. Their smiles and waves have greeted us, and their care for each of us has been exceptional. Today I met a young man in the hallway outside our room. I introduced myself and asked him when he had gotten on the ship. He told me he has been here since September. So I met and said goodbye to a crewman at the same time. To all the crew members that we have known for months, and to all that we have just met, and to all of those we have never met, we say “thank you.” You have touched our lives and we are grateful. May you have a wonderful and much deserved vacation. Until we meet again, may God hold you in the palm of his hand .Okumaya devam et
- Geziyi göster
 - Yapılacaklar listesine ekleYapılacaklar listesinden çıkar
 - Paylaş
 - Gün 101
 - 25 Mart 2018 Pazar
 - ⛅ 84 °F
 - Yükseklik: 33 ft
 
 SingapurHaw Par Villa1°17’0” N  103°46’43” E
Singapore
 25 Mart 2018, Singapur ⋅ ⛅ 84 °F
						This morning we headed out to get an overview of Singapore and a tour of the National Orchid Garden. Singapore has basically been built since 1960. They are committed to lots of green spaces. Heavy fines are imposed for littering and chewing gum is outlawed. Smoking is only allowed in designated places and police fine you for a dropped cigarette butt. They have a fabulous subway system and all electrical, telephone and fiber-optic cables are buried. If a mall or store wishes to have a subway stop or station, the merchant or developer must pay for it. Those stations are not paid for by taxes. The result is an absolutely stunningly clean and beautiful city. In a city of 6 million people, I saw two pieces of trash on the ground and those were quickly picked up. The buildings are clean, new and beautiful. By comparison cities like Chicago, NY and LA look like slums. Eighty-five percent of the high rise housing is public housing, and it is pristine and affordable. What a beautiful city!Okumaya devam et
- Geziyi göster
 - Yapılacaklar listesine ekleYapılacaklar listesinden çıkar
 - Paylaş
 - Gün 102
 - 26 Mart 2018 Pazartesi
 - ⛅ 88 °F
 - Yükseklik: 33 ft
 
 SingapurHaw Par Villa1°17’0” N  103°46’43” E
Multi-Ethnic Singapore
 26 Mart 2018, Singapur ⋅ ⛅ 88 °F
						
								Today we explored the contrasting cultures of Singapore by venturing into Little India, Chinatown and the Arab community on Malay Street. Lord Stamford Raffles was a British Governor General here in the nineteenth century. To avoid friction between the many ethnic groups in Singapore, he separated them into distinct quarters of the city. While most Singaporeans can now trace their ancestry back to several ethnic groups, there are still Chinese, Arab, and Indian families that maintain their own distinct cultures in Chinatown, Arab Town, and Little India. The old architecture in these neighborhoods stands in stark contrast to the modern skyscrapers that tower over these ethnic communities. We visited these ethnic enclaves today.
In the last two days we learned that Singapore is a new city that is using technology as a government tool. While it has a Parliamentary system of government modeled on the British pattern, Singapore’s democracy has resulted in a very highly regulated lifestyle. Not all citizens agree about whether the tight control the government exercises over its citizens is a good thing. Some folks think it is intrusive, but, on the other hand, it yields results.
Traffic is less crowded in Singapore than in any other city its size. The government keeps the streets clear of automobiles by placing extremely high taxes on them. When the government determines that the maximum number of allowable vehicles are on the streets, a ban on automobile imports is enacted. A new, compact car can cost as much as $100,000 in US dollars once taxes are added. In addition, one must pay about $10,000 once every ten years for a certificate of permission to operate an automobile. Besides this, one must pay an annual fee for a device that mounts to the dashboard that automatically registers an auto when it enters a toll road. Some particularly busy city streets become toll roads during rush hour, and the device deducts from one’s cash account automatically. As a result, fewer motorists use these routes in peak hours than they otherwise would. Bicycles and motor scooters are limited on the streets by an excellent public transportation system that is faster, safer and less trouble than bikes and scooters. The net result is the for most people, automobiles are prohibitively expensive. But the government designs it that way.
Police and other government officials are professional and thorough. They do not cut themselves, nor those they apprehend, any slack. They are fair, but they do their job very conscientiously. For us, that proved to be an advantage as we went through immigration, customs and security every time we got on or off the ship. Officials were courteous and efficient, but they were meticulous and consistent in carrying out their duties. Every time I went through security I received the same, thorough search, with a very attentive and careful scrutiny of my passport and other documents. The result was that I have never felt safer going across any border than in Singapore. The feeling among residents, and among us tourists, is that if one commits even a misdemeanor, one is not likely to get away with it.
Some residents question whether the results are worth the loss of personal freedom. It’s a tough question. Singapore is clean, new, fantastically beautiful and safe, without doubt. However, one of our shipmates observed after his visit into town today, “Singapore is spectacular, for sure. And Mussolini got the trains all to run on time, but at what cost?”Okumaya devam et
- Geziyi göster
 - Yapılacaklar listesine ekleYapılacaklar listesinden çıkar
 - Paylaş
 - Gün 103
 - 27 Mart 2018 Salı
 - ⛅ 77 °F
 - Yükseklik: 194 ft
 
 MalezyaKuala Lumpur Bird Park3°8’20” N  101°41’13” E
Kuala Lumpur
 27 Mart 2018, Malezya ⋅ ⛅ 77 °F
						We spent a lovely, rainy day in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia today. The rain cooled things down a bit, and we delayed our visit to the KL Tower until the afternoon. Visibility was much better than it would have been this morning. This thriving new city is another pearl in that string of economic powers along the Malay peninsula.Okumaya devam et


























































































































































