30 September 2005
Wednesday Night, by the numbers
- Liters drank before dinner: 3
- Percentage of Khao Lak bars visited: 75
- Number of beers knocked off a foosball table: 1
- Number of Jens knocked off a bar stool: 1
- Number of people at Fisherman Bar who confused me for a drunk idiot who ran around Khao Lak last Saturday with a giant headlamp on: 2
- Number of people at Marlin Bar who confused me for a drunk idiot who ran around Khao Lak last Saturday with a giant headlamp on: 2
- Minutes that I don't remember spent as a drunk idiot running around Khao Lak last Saturday with a giant headlamp on: 35
- Incredibly nasty pool shots I had no business making but did: 3
- Incredibly nasty pool shots I had no business making but did to win a match: 1
- Really really easy pool shots that I missed to lose a match: 1
- Approximate time evicted from Marlin Bar: 6am
- Approximate time (in minutes) of sleep before work: 7
- Approximate amount (in minutes) of breakfast that I remember: 7
College isn't over till I say it is
GORE!
28 September 2005
Are you ready for some football?
Today I went boogie boarding in the same ocean that gave us The Tsunami. It was a tad rough. My board broke in no less than three places and I'm pretty sure my experience was less riding waves and more hanging out while waves crashed on me. Good fun. And I'm pretty sure I can fix my board with just a bit of rebar. I made a golf club today, I think it is somewhere around a 3 or 4 iron (literally, it is made out all iron) but my wire ball hooks terribly.
Here are some photos that are fit for everyone's consumption:
That would be Me, Pete, Boom, Frankie, Jeremy and Seth in the front
This is what I do when I am working. Note the protective footwear.
This is what Jeremy does when he is working. Note the protective footwear.
23 September 2005
Photos!
Off to play beirut with my home made cups!
22 September 2005
Driving Mrs Daisy
Pop it and go, I survived
Gore
*: and others may consider awesome
20 September 2005
Killing the Prime Minister of Malaysia
After my freezing bus ride and subsequent confused/rambling internet session I picked my way through the passed out bums and got a few hours of much needed shut eye at a neighboring hostel. My initial impression of KL was dodgy at best. But after my rest I wandered around (read: got hopelessly lost) and really enjoyed the city. It has a really cool mix of everything: towering highrises with a million hawker stands at their base, a place selling indian food next to a KFC next to a western bar and all the people were really nice (or really bad con artists). I picked up a flight to Kathmandu (check it out below) and a pretty sweet little Konica Dimage Z5 camera. The Petronas Towers are quite tall but you can only go up to the bridge in the middle so hopped on up the KL communications tower and had quite a giggle when the chick doing the audio tour went "blah blah prime minister of malaysia blah blah".
The next day I continued my wanderings and stumbled upon the chineese latern festival / mid autumn festival. And if you don't think multicultural celebrations in a Muslim country are fun, boy have you got another thing coming. Especially when it is simultaneously MCed in English, Malay and sign language (is there only one sign language or is it different in different countries?). Traditional dancing! Traditional signing! Whopeeee! Unfortunately my enjoyment was interrupted when I ventured to the French expo next door and partook in more than my fair share of free wine and cheese then smoked a hookah at a little street cafe. KL was really cool!
Ok, so here is a list of things I brought with me for a nine day trip (compare to what I brought with me for the whole trip):
- 2 Pairs of Ex Officio Underwear
- 2 T-shirts
- 1 REI Wicking T-shirt
- 1 REI Wicking Collared shirt
- 1 Pair of shorts
- 1 Pair of swimmers
- Travel Hammock
- Sarong
- MP3 Player and Cell Phone (somebody call me damnit!)
- Toothbrush, toothpaste, deoderant, immodium, actifed, ear plugs, aloe vera
- Swiss army knife
- Flashlight with burned out batteries
And I bought a disposable razor, some sunscreen and some Norflaxin (a broad spectrum anti biotic... I hope). Think I overpacked in June? Just a little...
Cheers
Steve
PS> Today I made a spatula, a horseshoe pit and one horseshoe; they are really hard to make.
You like apples?
Yeah, thats a flight to Nepal (handwritten ticket and all). And yeah, that means I got a new camera. And yeah again, it means I spent over $750 in an eight hour period (new record for non RWC2003 spending).
How do you like them apples?
Sateeeve
15 September 2005
Frostbite! in Malaysia??
We are lucky to live at a time where many of us have both homes and automobiles. More than that, we have the ability to easily heat and, more to the point, cool them. Unforunately, I believe you are blantantly abusing this cooling power. I am not a meat popsicle, I am a human being. I do not need to be kept at a crisp 10 degrees, I will not spoil. While I appreciate the idea of a blanket, your swath of cloth would not cover one Gavin Cheung, let alone a person of normal size. I implore you, on the next eight hour bus journey, please, turn down the A/C!
Sincerely,
Steve Gore
PS> I am in Kuala Lumpor, it is 6:30am, I've been up for a really long time and am not exactly sure what to do with myself. My bus ride here was really cold. If these last couple of posts seem a bit odd, well now you know why
14 September 2005
Palua Perhenthian Kecil
Not bad,
Gore
PS> To be fair, the diving wasn't spectacular and there were a lot of couples, but I still looooooved the Perhenthains.
12 September 2005
Half the fun is getting there
Then the police checkpoints started. At first they were unmanned barricades you had to swerve around, esentially glorified speed bumps. Then police and military people, with very large machine guns, began appearing at the checkpoints. Now we were stopping but usually getting waved through with a minimum of fuss. Then the police had surprise checkpoints: no barricades, just a flashing red light wand thingy - very sneaky. Finally, just on the outskirts of the town we were stopped and everyone had to produce ID. The aftermentioned Thai woman looked at me and said "every day, bomb bomb bomb bomb bomb", I thanked her for this reassuring statement. Despite this Gaza like security (or maybe because of), we made it sucessfully into the city.
The driver dropped everybody else off then looked at me and said "you go to Malaysia now". He drove rapidly to the border, it was now 8:50pm. As I got out out of the car I tried to ask what I thought were reasonable questions: is there a place to sleep in Malaysia, should I stay the night in Kolok, is the border open, etc. I've never seen someone get back in their car and drive away so fast, it was as if his life was in danger. So in front of me I have Malaysia, a country I've never been to, can't speak the language, hold no currency and the border town doesn't even warrant an entry in my worthless lonely planet. And behind me I have Thailand's version of Quebec (only they are a bit more forceful / beheading-ish over here) with approximately a battalion worth of Thai storm troopers. This was one of those life shaping decisions. For reasons I'm sure will cost me plenty of psychotheraphy to find out (just kidding mom and dad), though I would bet it was mainly based on frugality, I decided to turn back into Kolok, passed by the guards that stop every vehicle going into downtown and locked myself in a rather shitty hotel room. Except for the fish snack and chicken pastry, I had not eaten since breakfast. The border opened at 5am. I was the first person across it.
Steve "uh uh uh uh stayin alive stayin alive" Gore
11 September 2005
Koh Phi Phi Wow
The main part of the journey to Phi Phi (to all you pikes out there, don't worry, its pronounced pee-pee, nothing getting through this wicker door) was a long tail tour of Phi Phi Ley (golden shower?), a smaller uninhabited island to the south. This is where The Beach was filmed and in one of those lovely ironies, the spot where they filmed a movie about getting away from tourists is now crawling with Germans in speedos. One of the christian kids that came with me (hey, it made the trip cheaper) also decided it was appropriate to wear a speedo which solicted a socrnful "Jesus does not approve of that, son" from me. Anyhow, whats most impressive about the islands are these beautiful beaches with turquoise water in bays closed in by 100 meter limestone walls covered in palm trees. That and the banana pancakes, those are sooo good.
Off to the Perhenthians!
Gore
09 September 2005
Whats metal, round and bright pink?
Sorry mom and dad, but I'm proud to say I have my first real bar tab. "Da", my favorite bartender at the Marlin bar (and the only one) has foolishly decided that plying me with copious amounts of alcohol and then allowing me to stumble home without paying is in her best interest. It is pretty fun though, kind of like your first credit card (but with a wicked fucking hangover). (To my folks: to make up for that one, here's a story you might enjoy more: I was talking to the Sri Lankanians about religion and more specifically that I don't believe in god and their response was "oh so your mother and father are lord". Don't let that go to your head).
Some more memorable quotes of the week:
- Jeremy: "Its really cool that these guys dug these holes, built the rebar, poured the concrete and have done everything for this house". Me: "Yeah, and we supervised"
- Me: "So I was talking to other Jeremy..." Jeremy: "Yeah, I realized it wasn't me knucklehead"
- Dean: "Couldn't have happened to a better group of people: my inlaws" (on the hurricane**)
- Stupid Christian 1: "Yeah, so I had to get all these shots in the army and they put this huge gun up to my arm and they shot them all in at once." Stupid Christian 2: "I thought they gave it to you in the butt." Stupid Me: "No, thats only in the navy." Confused silence.
- Stupid Christian 3: "Boy, theres a lot of construction out here" Yeah, there was a fucking tsunami
- Also, the great Rattan/Wicker debate which none of you will understand but one day I will find funny
Ok, thats all for now. Tomorrow I am off to Phi Phi then Krabi then Malaysia for like a week, so I'll have some fun travelling stories (I hope). Cheeeeeeeeerio
Zagorski
*: Actually, I just designed and supervised its creation, Samspot did all the bending/welling/making
**: Seriously, it sounds like what happened on the Gulf Coast is incredibly terrible and my thoughts are with everyone down there. Also, if anyone knows of groups looking for volunteers (or better, paid project managers with previous disaster recovery/drinking experience) lemme know. Finally, you crazy sons of bitches, what the fuck were you doing shooting at helicopters? Fucking hell (or in your best Welsh accent: Faaaaking Hullll).