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<title>conorsheedy&#x27;s TravelStream&#x2122; &#x2014; Recent TravelPod.com entries</title>
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<pubDate>Sat, 05 May 2007 06:30:17 -0400</pubDate>
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    <title>Home again &#x2014; Dublin, Ireland</title>
    <link>http://www.travelpod.com/travel-blog-entries/conorsheedy/worldspin/1162380540/tpod.html</link>
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    <pubDate>Sat, 05 May 2007 06:30:17 -0400</pubDate>
    <description>World Spin, 12 months, 13 countries on 3 continents, 1 good time.</description>
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        <b>Dublin, Ireland</b><br /><br />Home again a year to the day after leaving home, few!<br />
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    <title>London &#x2014; London, United Kingdom</title>
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    <pubDate>Sat, 05 May 2007 06:27:43 -0400</pubDate>
    <description>World Spin, 12 months, 13 countries on 3 continents, 1 good time.</description>
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        <b>London, United Kingdom</b><br /><br />Change plane<br />
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    <title>Hong Kong &#x2014; Hong Kong, Hong Kong</title>
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    <pubDate>Sat, 05 May 2007 06:26:37 -0400</pubDate>
    <description>World Spin, 12 months, 13 countries on 3 continents, 1 good time.</description>
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        <b>Hong Kong, Hong Kong</b><br /><br /></a><br>Hong Kong (3rd time) <br><br><br>After a few fun days hanging out in Bohol it was time to get the flight back to hong kong. This time I went to visit the outlying islands. Much quieter and only a short ferry ride from the center. The first day I went to Lemma island, I met a new friend and hung out on the beach, great. The next day it was meeting up with an old friend, we got the ferry out to Cheung Chau island and hung out on the beach there, great again. There was also time to go to Mong Kok, a very buisy shopping area. Yes very buisy in Hong Kong means very buisy, late night shopping every night, the streets packed. There are loads of electronic goods at really good prices.<br>My final day way action packed, trying to meet up with all my friends here before legging to the airport, for the long night flight to london.<br>At London they tried to delay me enough to me enough to miss my connecting flight but just failed, they took my potentially dangerous toothpast and the factor 8 sun screen that I brought around the world and never used. Neither Hong Kong nor London authorities seemed to mind the rasor blades. <br><br>posted by conor at 8:58 AM</a> 1 comments</a>  </a> <br></a><br>Jagna <br><br><br>So my new local friends, two sisters, invited me to visit them at their home on the other side of Bohol. After spending a night in Tagbilaran we got the bus to Jagna.<br>This town was a bit smaller, "provincial", this means no shopping mall or cinema.<br>Their extended family live in the same area so I met loads of uncles, sitting around and fixing the fishing net. Then the dad arived with the catch of fish, loads of tropical ones in all colours, I'm sure nemo was in there.<br>Their home was just back from the sea which meant i got a chance to go snorkling and join the family for a picnic on the beach.<br>The transport around town consists of motorbikes turned minibus modified to take up to ten pasengers.<br>It's striking that everone in the philepenes want to get out of the country.<br>I met bank employees retraining as nurces because a job in a bank is too risky,<br>when your boss nicks the money you go to jail too!<br>The next most popular option is to get a foreign husband, or boyfriend willing to pay for a ticket.<br />
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    <title>Bohol &#x2014; Bohol, Philippines</title>
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    <pubDate>Sat, 05 May 2007 06:22:13 -0400</pubDate>
    <description>World Spin, 12 months, 13 countries on 3 continents, 1 good time.</description>
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        <b>Bohol, Philippines</b><br /><br />Bohol <br><br><br>So after two nights in Cebu that was enough so got the ferry to the next island Bohol. That took just over 4 hours, maybe I could have got the faster one. Tagbilaran is the town that you land at and it had a crappier feel then Cebu.<br>Death trap pavements and begging children, well you can always go to the cinema. They don't even bother subtiteling the english language films, cushy.<br>and of course there's a fun disco on friday night.<br>I also went out to the surounds to check out the endangered tarsier,<br>the smallest primate, tiny and cute.<br>Next I decided to get to the beach and headed to Alona beach on the nearby Panglao island. It turned out to be a divers hang out and a bit pricy. Popular with German tourists, there are a load of buisnesses run by German guys and their Phillipena wives. I met some really cool local people and had a great time hanging out.<br />
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    <title>Cebu &#x2014; Cebu, Philippines</title>
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    <pubDate>Sat, 05 May 2007 06:19:15 -0400</pubDate>
    <description>World Spin, 12 months, 13 countries on 3 continents, 1 good time.</description>
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        <b>Cebu, Philippines</b><br /><br />Cebu (Philippines) <br><br><br>So I rearranged my magic air ticket once again and this time its off to the philippines, well I still had flights to use up before they expire and you don't need to buy a visa for the philippines so here I am.<br>Cebu was the first place that the spanish set camp when they got here in the 1500's. Magellan the leader of the first round the world trip landed here and made some friends.<br>The airport is on a small island off cebu island called Mactan,<br>this is where Magellan made some enimies and got himself killed.<br>The city on the island is named after the guy who killed him Lapu-lapu, fair enough.<br>With all this history you can still see all the old sights of Cebu in an afternoon, including the little Jesus that Magellan gave to the Cebuans.<br>The best sight is probably all the modifed vehicels making up the public transport system, puts "pimp my ride" in the shade, colours flags, millions of lights and mirrors, cool.<br>So there aren't too many backpackers here, my accomadation seems to have more creepy old dudes. Still managed to find some cool guys my own age to go for a fun night out.<br>About everyone here can speak English and all the signs are in english only, strange.<br>The American coloniser have also left their mark on the culture, shopping malls and american style comercialism are all the rage.<br>The Spanish invluance makes the place seem a bit like south america, you can see alot of people who have spanish blood in them.<br />
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    <title>Guangzhou &#x2014; Guangzhou, China</title>
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    <pubDate>Sat, 05 May 2007 06:17:54 -0400</pubDate>
    <description>World Spin, 12 months, 13 countries on 3 continents, 1 good time.</description>
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        <b>Guangzhou, China</b><br /><br /></a><br>eating in Guangzhou <br><br><br>.... then it's taxi to the hair salon.<br>I got my first hair cut in a long time,<br>a hair wash, scalp massage, shoulder arm and hand massage all included of course.<br>I didn't get a hair cut so far in China because like many massage and karioki places, many hair salons are just disguised brothels. This time I was with local friends so I could be sure the place was legit.<br><br>then taxi to get coffee,<br>coffee is terribly expensive (relative to other things) in China, so awfully posh.<br>then taxi to the snake resteraunt for dinner.<br>Yes that's snake, mmmm.<br>Conforming to the chinese idea of freshness the snakes are alive in cages untill just before you order them. You have a big boiling pot in the middle of the table where you cook the raw snake yourself, because everone of course knows the exact optimum cooking time for each part of the snake. Each part of the snake is quite different, raging from tender fillet to chewy skin, to parts just for the broth.<br>Oh and you get frogs too of course.<br><br>then lift home for a bit,<br>then lift to nightclub.<br>This is where someone orders all at the same time an indulgent quantity of overpriced cans for the table, and everone sits around and plays dice drinking games.<br>Then lift to late night barbeque joint.<br>Not your typical chicken hearts (really tasty) or pigs penis (really long and curly)<br>or even the flattened rat which was a sceciality in yangshou,<br>but the tastyist oysters, muscles and cockles I ever had, mmmm,<br>Other cullenary dellights from my time here include turtle, crab, fish, the list goes on. <br><br>posted by conor at 11:19 PM</a> 1 comments</a>  </a> <br>Wednesday, October 11, 2006<br></a><br>Guangzhou <br><br><br>So it turns out that a friend that i made in yangshou was also going to Guangzhou and invited me to stay at their families home. What a stroke of luck.<br>An overnight bus to Guangzhou then a 40 minuite bus to a suburb an we're there.<br>Guangzhou is the capital of Guangdong provence which is one of the richer in china.<br>It's built up pretty continuously for 40 minuites on the moterway.<br>The people here speak cantonese.<br>My host come from hong kong and have a holiday appartment in Guangzhou to live the good life at a lower cost I guess.<br>ahh the good life, the hospitality is unbelievable.<br>After catching up on some sleep my first day here consisted of,<br>taxi to posh resteraunt, posh in china means you eat in your own room and there are so many dishes that you don't need rice <br><br>posted by conor at 4:22 AM</a> 0 comments</a>  </a> <br></a><br>Yangshou <br><br><br>So arrived into Yangshou and everthing is crazy buisy.<br>The is "golden week" the big chinese holiday week where everthing touristy is packed and everwhere increases the prices 4 times.<br>The first people we met were unplesent accomadation touts.<br>I had been recomended an english language school which provides free accomadation and food in exchange for speaking english for 2 hours twice a week and a 1 hour speach. Well this is the sort of thing i like to do anyway, you know talking in english, so kind of a cushy deal. So with all the trains booked solid for the week this really is a great place to relax a little bit removed from the tourist mayhem but still able to enjoy the holiday nightlife and wonderfull scenery.<br>the landscape here is a bit inbelieveable, impossibly steep peaks stick up all over the place, there's even one with an imposible cave making a whole to the other side,<br>difficult to describe but beutiful.<br>The china hazy (fog or smog?) means skys are never fully clear, and some places are a bit over developed, but there are lots of nice cycles and walks.<br>The people at the school turn out to be really nice, helpfull, the food great, you get free beer while on duty speaking english. The students are really sweet and interested in the differences with "western culture".<br>It's amazing all the differences that you just take for granted, you can spend ages just trying to explain why people spend so much money on engagement rings or discussing whether those prot ests in tainmen sq ever happend (note: paranoid censor avoiding spelling).<br>Another big celibration is mid autumn day.<br>This is celebrated by eating outside and enjoying the full moon, the school had a nice bbq by the river bank.<br>So I met loads of really cool people, loads of foreign teachers and students on holidays for the week came to find other western people,<br>loads of chinese english students come as it's a good place to learn english.<br>I hung out for the week with a nice american guy, going to the bars nearly every night. Great fun.<br />
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    <title>Hong Kong &#x2014; Hong Kong, Hong Kong</title>
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    <pubDate>Sat, 05 May 2007 06:15:54 -0400</pubDate>
    <description>World Spin, 12 months, 13 countries on 3 continents, 1 good time.</description>
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        <b>Hong Kong, Hong Kong</b><br /><br />to Hong Kong <br><br><br>So I got the bus to cross the border from China to China (Hong Kong SAR).<br>Same country different world.<br>Although part of China the special administrative region feels quite different to Chinas other big cities. From developing world, or however you want to describe a country going through it's own crazy form of industrial revolution, to first world, ultra modern HK. You don't even get stared at for being a westerner, there are so many here. First world culture shock again, the pace of life here is frantic and after mainland china the prices seem crazy high.<br />
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    <title>Guilin &#x2014; Guilin, China</title>
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    <pubDate>Sat, 05 May 2007 06:10:35 -0400</pubDate>
    <description>World Spin, 12 months, 13 countries on 3 continents, 1 good time.</description>
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        <b>Guilin, China</b><br /><br /></a>  Guilin <br><br>So with the money starting to run short it's time for another bus journey back to civilisation and the big city of Guilin.<br>While waiting for the bus I looked for an internet cafe.<br>Unfortunately chinese being a tonal language, get the tones wrong and you happen to get a bad word, ah well.<br>So just one night in Guilin, atm works!!! in the money again.<br>Meet some nice people in the hostel, the streets are thronged even by chinese standards as this is the start of the big week long holiday,<br>next morning get the bus to yangshou with some others from the hostel.<br>This is probably the most known western persons hang out in china. Chengyong 28th, 29th September<br>Next another bus journey, 5 hours on a very bumpy unsurfaced road to the next town sanjiang. Then a shorter bus to another Dong village Chengyang, to spend two more nights.<br>Here their big attraction is a big traditional style bridge.<br>I did some more walking through a network of really small villages, and up the overlooking mountain. posted by conor at 9:19 PM</a> 1 comments</a>  </a> <br></a>Zhaoxing Next morning got a bus which said it was going to Zhaoxing,<br>it actually just went to Luoxiang which meant an hour and a half walk with all my bags in the mid day sun.<br>Zhauxing is the largest village of the Dong minority, still really small.<br>It is a little more tourist developed (spoilt?) than Xijiang.<br>The village is located at the bottom of a valley, again wooden buildings prevail.<br>The old Dong women spend alot of time beating dark blue die into fabric with a wooden mallet.<br>I went for a long walk up the valley and up the mountainside to another, much less visited Dong village. I found a path back down through all the rice fields, really nice, peacefull and pituresque.<br>On the second evening I was treated to a performance of traditional music and dance.<br>This was primarily for local consumption, I was the only foreign tourist attending.<br>The dacing was really good quality, quite athletic, beats the tibetans sleave waving line dancing I'm afraid.<br>Most of the performances seemed to have the theme of occasions when young guys and girls have the chance to meet each other, some had pantomime like phisical comedy.<br>One was titeled "no music no love" and featured 5 guys on the hunt for girls, when they found 4 girls, 4 of the guys got out their musical instruments to impress. The last guy just hit on each of the girls in turn and was shoved, fliped and stabbed with an imaginary sowing needle, let that be a lesson to ya.<br />
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    <title>Rongjiang &#x2014; Rongjiang, China</title>
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    <pubDate>Sat, 05 May 2007 06:05:10 -0400</pubDate>
    <description>World Spin, 12 months, 13 countries on 3 continents, 1 good time.</description>
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        <b>Rongjiang, China</b><br /><br />Rongjiang <br><br><br>After two nights in Xijiang my stomach wasn't feeling too well.<br>The toilet consisted of a shallow whole which didn't go anywhere, the contents must have been shoveled over to the pigs next door.<br>So it was time to move on, a bus to Leishan where a less than helpful bus station simply stated that they didn't have a bus to the next town. After standing in their office for a good while they got a taxi to bring me to the corner where you can get the bus. Got a bus to Rongjiang a reasonably large sized chinese town. Here I realised that the atms weren't going to work, 35 euro for a week and hundreds of kilometers of bus journeys, you wouldn't dream of trying it at home but in this part of china, well it should be ok. I tried to get a place to stay for the night but the cheap places kept on turning me away because I was a forigner, finally one of them relented, all around here you get loads of "hellooooo"s and exclamations of "lawei" or forigner.<br />
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    <title>Xijiang &#x2014; Xijiang, China</title>
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    <pubDate>Sat, 05 May 2007 06:01:05 -0400</pubDate>
    <description>World Spin, 12 months, 13 countries on 3 continents, 1 good time.</description>
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        <b>Xijiang, China</b><br /><br /></a><br>Xijiang <br><br><br>Xijiang in only 2 or 3 hours along a dirt road which clings to the mountainside, from Kaili, but it seems a world away.<br>The village pituresquely covers a hilside overlooking a valey of rice paddies.<br>The paddies climb up the side of the mountains either side.<br>The village is tiny and really quiet, and surprisingly since it is listed in the guide books it has very few tourists.<br>Xijiang is the largest village of the Miao minority.<br>China has 55 peoples or races, 92% of the population is han chinese which means that all of the others are refered to as minorities.<br>The Miao women ware an artificial flower in their hair untill their thirties after which they change to a tea towel head dress.<br>Getting off the bus I was invited to stay in a homestay and to eat dinner with them, very convenient and nice to stay with a local family.<br>I went for long walks through the rice fields and terrices up into the surrounding mountains.<br>It is rice harvesting time, which means that the feilds quite active.<br>The men carry really big wooded boxes into the feild, then cut the rice with a hand sycle. They then whack the bunch of rice grass against the box so that the grains fall out. Everyone carries the rice back to the village, ballanced on two sides of a long peice of wood carried on the sholder. It's amazing the loads that people carry. The old women and young kids get a bit of a laugh getting the foreigner to carry their load for a while, so I was roped into service. I wouldn't like to try carrying what the men had.<br>Then the rice is dried on every available flat peice of road, square or rooftop, all this with no machines. <br><br>posted by conor at 8:30 PM</a> 0 comments</a>  </a> <br></a><br>To Guizhou <br><br><br>So time to hit the road again.<br>I got an overnight train to Guiyang in Guizhou provence.<br>Sleeper trains in china are rows of bunks three high, always pick the top one.<br>It means that you wont have people staring at you all night, you're too high.<br>Arrived in the morning in Guiyang and after wandering a bit, decided what else can you do when you're exhausted from traveling all night but travel some more, so got on a bus to Kaili a few hours further west.<br>Kaili which is still a big town is quite near several pituresque minority villages.<br>There was a bus leaving straight away for a village that I wanted to visit which was in the right direction for me called Xijiang so I hopped on the bus.<br>I neglected to use an atm in Kaili which was a bit of a mistake.<br>There should have been a big sign on leaving the town reading, "you are now leaving the international banking system, no working atms for the next 4 days worth of bus journeys", but that only occured to me later.<br />
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