adventures of a teacher
from central illinois
living in korea
(& traveling all over)!

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vietnam

Dec 31 2009

hostels/guesthouses: southeast asia

I had a request to list the places I stayed while on my trip.  I know that hearing about places from other people is way more helpful than trying to find one on your own, so I thought it was a good idea.  Keep in mind I was looking for places that were easy to meet other people in, so they weren’t necessarily the cheapest.  I always tried to stay in dorm rooms when possible, and I know this isn’t everyone’s style.

If you’re into booking stuff ahead of time, I recommend hostelbookers.com because they don’t charge a booking fee.  And some of these places aren’t listed online, but every single place I went to (minus Myanmar) had backpacker areas that were packed with guesthouses, so you can easily show up to any major place in SE Asia and find a cheap place to stay.

Here are the places I loved and would stay in again if I were traveling alone or wanted to be social:

Hanoi: Hanoi Backpackers’ Hostel One of the nicest dorm rooms I’ve ever stayed in, met a ton of people, and is a great place to book a Halong Bay tour.  It’s more pricey than other’s, but if you want to get drunk with fun people, it’s a good way to go.  Ha.

Hoi An: I stayed at a really nice place here, but don’t remember the name.. it was listed in the newest Rough Guides for Vietnam I believe, and if anyone wanted to know I could find out once I got back to Korea and could look through my stuff.

Ho Chi Minh City: I stayed at Luan Vu Guesthouse, and it was nice, pretty average.  There are a ton of places in the backpacker area of Pham Ngu Lao, so it’s really easy to find somewhere to stay.

Phnom Penh: Where I stayed was “meh”, but I guess the area to stay is near the lake.  I dunno.

Siem Reap: There are cheaper places, but I had a lot of fun at the Siem Reap Hostel.

Vientiane: This city is hardly worth staying in for more than a day, so it really doesn’t even matter where you stay, ha.

Vang Vieng: One of the coolest places I’ve ever stayed—Spicy Laos.  Def, def, def recommend it.  I stayed at their sister Spicy Laos in Luang Prabang, which I also recommend.  It’s not as nice, but a good place to meet people.

Chiang Mai: I tried to stay at Julie Guesthouse, but it was full.  It had been highly recommended.  I ended up staying in a $3/night very basic dorm at the Same Same Guesthouse down the street.  By that point, I was incredibly low-maintenance so anything with a bed and shower was fine.

Bagan: May Kha Lar.  The owner is so, so, so helpful and friendly.

Yangon: This is also one of the better places I stayed.  It’s called Motherland Inn 2.  It’s not in the best location, but the staff was amazing, and I met a ton of awesome people.  It was almost full when I came, so if you go in high season, it might be best to try to book ahead if possible.

Bangkok: I stayed in two places.  The first was called the River Line, and it was near Khao San Road.  It was a quieter place, though, being a few minutes’ walk away from the madness.  It was kinda “meh” because I really just wanted to go out and party, and it wasn’t the best place to meet people.  The second place, though, lub d, was awesome.  The nicest hostel I’ve ever been to in my life, and lots of cool people.

Koh Phi Phi: Golden Hill Bungalows (also known as Bungalow Dave’s).  It had pretty bad reviews online, but I had to book something ahead because everything fills up.  There are probably better places—the whole island is just restaurants, bars, and accommodation—but it was fine for me.  They have dorm rooms, and I met some good people.  It is the farthest possible place from the pier, though, so carrying all my shit back and forth in 90 degree heat was probably the worst thing ever.

Sooo, I hope that is helpful for someone! :)

Dec 17 2009

ho chi minh city (saigon)

I only spent one day here, but was very ready to leave Vietnam by that point.  Here are my posts about HCMC.

Market

Even more motorbikes than Hanoi, somehow.

There was a really nice park.

Lots of people dancing and exercising.

Brainzzz

War Remnants Museum.  Very anti-American.

Snake wine.

Nov 10 2009

ho chi minh city (aka saigon)

Since I’m only here for a day, and I’m starting to feel very ready to get out Vietnam, I didn’t see as much as I probably should have here.  Hanoi has nicer buildings, and a really cool feel in the Old and French Quarters.  HCMC might be a little bit wealthier, but it is certainly crazier.  And much, much hotter.  It was in the 90s today for sure.  I guess it’s a pretty cool city, but my bad mood kind of put a damper on my one day here.

grr

Before I recap Hoi An, which I waaaas going to do, I must vent about Vietnam.

So I’ve traveled a lot, and have been in Vietnam for 10 days now.  While I do make plenty of stupid tourist mistakes—mostly paying too much for stuff—I’m trying to get better about it.  So today when I grabbed a taxi back to my guesthouse from the War Remnants Museum (I’m in Ho Chi Minh City now), I knew before that it should only be maybe 20,000-30,000 dong (less than $3).  When I got in and saw that he had to turn on the meter first, I knew he was probably going to try to bullshit me.  Quickly the meter ran up, up, up, until it was over 200,000 dong ($12ish), which is ABSURD.  I told him to stop and I pointed at the meter and said “No.  NO way.”

He then immediately said “100, 100!” which made it obvious that he was, indeed, overcharging me.  I got out a 50,000 note, and being my last day, I was down to about 100,000 which would enough for dinner and stuff.  I gave him the 50 and he threw it at me.  Argh, I was getting so pissed.  I knew that he wouldn’t understand anything I was saying, but I was angry so went off, “I’m not stupid!  50 or zero!”  Then I opened the door and he STILL demanded 100.  There was absolutely no way I was going to pay him more than 50 so I just waited there with the door open, until he finally took it and drove away.  Grr. 

Then walking back from where I had stopped him, some stupid guy had his cellphone out, clearly taking a picture of me.  I gave him a nasty look, and walked back to my guesthouse, glad that I’m leaving Vietnam tomorrow.  >.<

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