Our last week or so in Asia consisted of a couple days of relaxing in Kathmandu, followed by a few more days of relaxing on the beach on Ko Samet island off the eastern Gulf coast of Thailand. The island time was a much welcomed refresher from the grand total of 38 days of trekking in the Himalaya. It also gave us a little time to unwind prior to our reintegration into the west. The year we will always remember had to finally come to an end.
We followed up Ko Samet with the 24 hour flight marathon
from Bangkok to Tokyo to Dallas and then finally touching down in Austin just
in time for the Thanksgiving Holiday with my family, as it has been for as long
as I can remember.
Our reintegration to the USA went as follows:
- Two weeks at Big Ash Ranch in Llano, Texas and
with the other side of my family in San Antonio. Lots of Mexican Food and Margaritas (the only
version of food I actually missed every once in a while in Asia).
A flight to Colorado for another week with my brothers, Eric and Brad, and Mom at their homes there. More Mexican Food and Margaritas were consumed.
A flight to Colorado for another week with my brothers, Eric and Brad, and Mom at their homes there. More Mexican Food and Margaritas were consumed.
- Got a call from my previous employer, Skanska
USA Building, asking me to come back to work in mid-December (earlier than I
was expecting) because they picked up a construction project for Boeing that needed help immediately.
- So we made the long two-day road trip from
Denver (where we had left one of our vehicles) to Seattle, with only a weekend to spare to move our stuff
into our house and start work Monday morning, December 12. Elise went back to work for Seattle Genetics
on Wednesday, December 14 to pick up where she left off wearing a white lab
coat and mixing things in test tubes to cure cancer or whatever she does there.
- We were also able to spend some time in Indiana
with Elise’s family between Christmas and New Years.
For our final blog, we decided it would be appropriate to put together some “Best of” type lists to recap the last year. So here you go:
The Annals Awards:
1) Favorite Countries:
·
Indonesia and Nepal tie for first.
·
Burma and Sri Lanka tie second (or technically
third).
2)
Best food:
·
Thailand wins first place. Most variety, best street food, everyone is a
chef so it must be engrained in the culture.
·
India runs a close 2nd.
3)
Worst food:
·
Burma. The tea-leaf and avocado salads were
spectacular and the only saving grace.
4)
Best currency name:
·
The Dong (Vietnam)
5)
Best beaches, overall:
·
Thailand (Though if Burma would open travel up
to the Andaman sea coast, we think it might win this one)
6)
Best beach:
·
Ngwe Saung Beach, Burma
7)
Best temple complexes:
·
Angkor (Cambodia)
·
Bagan (Burma)
8)
Best temples:
·
Shwedagon Pagoda, Yangon, Burma
·
Kama Sutra Temples, Khajuraho, India
9)
Best overall scenery:
·
Nepal
10)
Best overall scenery that does not involve the
Himalaya range:
·
1st - Indonesia
·
Runner Up:
Vietnam
11)
Friendliest people:
·
Indonesia, Burma, and Nepal are all running neck
and neck.
12)
Most beautiful people:
·
Nepal.
There is something about the melting pot of cultures sandwiched between
India and China. Modelling agencies
should take note.
13)
Place where people are the most pain-in-the-rear
(i.e. make you feel like a walking ATM):
·
India gets first place by far.
·
Vietnam comes in second.
14)
Best Beer
·
Myanmar Beer (Burma)
·
Beer Laos (Laos)
·
Chang (Thailand). Ok this one is not that good, but comes with
some good memories.
15)
Best Wine
·
None.
Vietnam had Dalat wine that was drinkable and dirt cheap, but other than
that everywhere we went fails in this category.
16)
Best Scuba Diving
·
Komodo
National Park, Labaunbajo, Indonesia.
·
Pulau Weh, Sumatra, Indonesia.
17)
Most livable big cities:
·
Bangkok, Thailand
·
Saigon, Vietnam
18)
Favorite Place (if we had to pick just one):
·
Lake Toba, Sumatra, Indonesia
19)
Favorite Experience (if we had to pick just
one):
·
Bukit Luwang, Sumatra, Indonesia Jungle Trekking
with the Orangutans
20)
Best Guest House Experiences
·
Sulfi’s unbelievable cooking for family-style
dinners with great company on the beach in Aurugam Bay, Sri Lanka at the
Another World Guesthouse.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Attapatu and their amazing
breakfasts at the Peace Haven Guesthouse (really just a spare room in their
house) in Kandy, Sri Lanka.
·
Chocolate Cake at the Chhomrong Cottage in Nepal
with a room overlooking the Himalaya.
·
Mas Guesthouse and Cottages on Lake Toba,
Sumatra with crazy Bob-Marley-like Roman and his guitar.
21)
There are many things we will miss about
traveling over in Asia, but there are a few things we are excited about having
now that we are back.
·
Good wine and beer
·
Consistent hot showers with decent water
pressure. These are glorious.
Needless to say we had to dive in head first back into the “real” world. It was a lot like the initial shock of diving into cold water, but after a little time we seem to be getting used to it. It has been a whirlwind of a several months already and busy putting our lives back in order here in Seattle. Also it was great spending a little more time than normal with our families.
Was it worth it?
Absolutely. It was a fascinating
and fun ride and well worth every minute and dime spent. We are both very blessed to have been able to
have the opportunity to take an entire year off of work, travel some of the
most beautiful parts of the world, and return to find jobs waiting for us. We have learned a lot about the world, about
each other, and have a renewed appreciation for the opportunities we have been
afforded throughout our life and will be afforded in our future.
What did it all mean?
We won’t bore you with details or some big philosophical discussion or
anything. To be honest there is probably
not an answer to that one. One
interesting note is that we both have been asked to explain in writing why we
were away and not employed for a year on re-employment paperwork and stuff like that. Our answer:
“For personal development and life experience.” Sounds as good as anything, doesn’t it?
On to the next great life experience…
The End.