Asia articles

Dear Globetrotter: Welcome to the 352nd issue of your monthly overseas travel magazine.
On my most recent trip to Bangkok, Jan. 8-14, ’05, I encountered a curious and frustrating situation when checking in for my return flight.
The killer tsunami of Dec. 26 devastated parts of Indonesia, Sri Lanka and India and even reached African shores. The total loss of life may never be known. Thailand’s six southern provinces along the Andaman Sea also were battered by the tidal waves.
My wife, Carol, and I wanted a custom tour of Vietnam so we could include five days on our own in the Mekong Delta city of Vinh Long where I had taught English a couple of years ago. We also wanted a tour that would emphasize contact with people rather than visits to temples and monuments.
Our 16-day trip to Iran in September-October ’04 was absolutely marvelous in all respects, and our concerns about what it might be like, based on “information” published in the States, were totally baseless.
All Hindu temples in India seem to be places where devotees and their families can congregate — take a nap on the stone floor, have a picnic, sell flowers or trinkets and visit with friends. Children’s heads are shaved on their first visit to the temple and an antiseptic paste is rubbed on.
Here are some of the novels whose images and ideas motivated my wife and me to travel.
My husband and I had made two trips to the China mainland and, since our first trip about six years ago, wished to visit the Silk Road cities.
I traveled with a group of 10 to Bhutan, Oct. 6-Nov. 3, ’04, on the “Kingdoms of Sikkim and Bhutan” tour with Valet Travel (4114 Adams Ave., San Diego, CA 92116; phone 800/506-1292 or e-mail valettravel_2000@yahoo.com).
by Larry Taylor, Fullerton, CA