A small glimpse into the life and adventures of Brady and the Yukster

Thursday, July 05, 2007

Answers to a few questions


Here are some questions that my last post received on my frined Jason's website and my answer to the questions (more like my rant after a long day)

From Jason:

Hey Brady,

What kind of waves are you getting out there? How hot is it? Any good pure vegetarian food?

Yes, please post photos, especially of you know who (or e-mail them to me and I can upload them to the forum from here).

Thanks for posting and keep us updated,

Jason

From Mike:

Sounds good Brady- thanks for the update. I remember that constant haggling/pressure to buy and sell from my short residency in New Dehli. I didn`t find a way though to get out and take that pressure off- so it`s good you`ve been able to do so.
Mike


My response (rant)

Hi Guys,

Thanks for the comments. Sorry for the delay in gettting to the internet. Although there are internet terminals about, we haven't found the time to get to one since my last post. And now that we are at one, it is painfully slow!!

First to answer a few questions.....

The vegetrarian options here are fantastic compared to most places I have travelled. In the touristy places, there is always a section on the menu for vegetrarians consisting of Balanese dishes, Indonesian dishes and Western food. And then in the less touristy places, there are still lots of options. They use a lot of Tempe here and it is really fantastic. I have had it a few times in health food stores in Canada, but here you can really see how it is ment to be cooked. (Tempe is like a small thin brick of soyabeans and some other ingredents....it is denser than tofu and really absorbs flavors well. Quite filling and a great subsitute for meat in curries or fried with rice) They also us a lot of Tofu here in their dishes. Then there is the fresh fruit...papaya, pineapple, waterlmellon, pasionfruit, mangostein.....all fantastic and fresh. Fresh fruit juices, noodles, fried rice...the list goes on and on. And the best thing is the price. You can have a meal and a drink at an indoesian place for $3, or you can go to a nicer touristy place and have an excellent meal in a really nice restaurant for $5 to $10. So we have been doing well.

Then the constant hassles for sellers and touts.....yeah it is relentless actually. It is a constant hassle really and we are getting a bit worn out from it. I mean I understand the situtation here.... The main income here is tourism and now then there are less tourists here since the terrorist attacks, and people really depend on the income they can get from tourists...and quite possibly they have been out on the beach trying to sell things all day and you are the first person who they have gotten to look at their stuff....or you are the only couple in the hotel.......BUT you start to realize that all the people that are nice and friendly are really lovely to you just want to find a way to part you with your money. Not by stealing or cheating you....altough if you paid the first price they offer you it would be cheating you. It is everywhere......at your hotel they are offering you tours and transport to other places and trying to get you to book tours with them. (Except at the first 4 star resort we stayed at...they just let us be there) On the street, it is impossible to go anywhere without getting hassled. (As I type, there is a guy trying to get Yuki to buy a necklace from her in our internet cafe....) People will ask you questions and start talking to you and then the sales pitch comes. And we find that they strech the truth a lot to get you to buy from them, and that makes us suspicious. To get from place to place the best way is to hire a driver for the day to take you in his car and you always have to negotiate. In a way it is a bit fun trying to get them down to a good price, but sometimes it is a real hassle. We try to not make this the thing we talk about the most.....or write about in these type of messages to friends back home, but it is such a big part of the tourist experience here.

So I really enjoy the times when we are in a place that is not so touristy......and we can talk to local people here without knowing that they are looking to part you with your money. People here are really, really nice and friendly....even if they are trying to sell you something they are never rude and have a great sense of humour even if you don't buy anything from them, but it is so nice just to talk to people when they are not on the sell. Some places we have had luck with that is meeting people at temples, or on public transport when they are passengers, or talking to the restaurant staff. We also went to a coupld of places that are popular with Balinese tourists, but not so popular with foreign tourists and have found that people are just really curious about you and freindly and want to find out what you think of their country. So those times are really nice.


I have gone on about that far too much.

We have seen a lot of really exciting stuff and had some great experiences in here that I want to write about, but I will have to leave that to another post as I have been here to long and the beach is calling. We are in a chillout type of beach resort on Lombok, another island in Indonesia and I hope I can find time to explain what we have been up to this evening.

1 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Only found this post now- yeah, going to places that need tourist income desperately is tough. Makes you feel bad. I felt really angry and bad when I was in India. Just alone, and every time someone seemed to be friendly- and I responded by being just a little bit friendly back- I ended up getting boned and feeling like a fool for being so needy.

So I closed off and became kind of rude, even to the people I met who were NOT on the sell.

Ah well. What a hard life it is being an affluent first-world citizen jet-setting around the world...

10:32 p.m.

 

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