Today we hired a couple of bikes and spent the day cycling the back roads and rice-paddies of the area - getting well out of the tourist-centre and away from the desperate "you buy, you buy" of the local shopkeepers and touts. It was some of the most magical moments of the trip so far - just cycling randomly in one direction for an hour so we got totally lost, and then spend the next couple of hours finding our way back to the town.
Busy sealed roads would become quiet gravel roads as we randomly choose to turn left or right at each intersection, then turn into dirt tracks, then into narrow walkways and sometimes end up as a ridge separating a couple of ricefields. Occasionally a wrong turn might end up at someones front doorstep, someones boat or just a remote spot on the river-shore and we would have to turn back and try another route.
Sometimes we were forced to turn back because of a nasty sounding dog - other times the track looked a little too much like someones front yard - with fences, chickens, huts, hammocks and livestock in pens - so we would back-track to the last turnoff and try another route. There were cows on leashes, men working on their boats, women working in the fields, and lots of children running out from their homes waving like mad and yelling "Hello, hello, hello" with big grins.
We stopped and gave coconut candy (from the Mekong Delta) to a couple of kids not much older than Sam - and they jumped up and down laughing madly as they excitedly chewed it, probably a treat they were not used to (the father/uncle was there with them and smiled at us - which we presumed was all the permission we needed).
We came across a school of 5-6 year olds and were invited in by the teacher. The kids were watching Tom and Jerry on TV, so we didn't feel like we were interrupting anything. They went mad when we showed them photos and video of themselves - it was so noisy! We had almost forgotten how noisy (and excitable) kids could be! Lots of fun.
The greenery is so lush here - everything is overgrown - yet at the same time, all space is in use with something, either a building or a crop. There is no boundary between when the town finishes and the fields start - the town and fields are competing for the same space - so neither really starts or ends, the buildings are just plonked down randomly in the middle of the fields and rice paddies.
In this pic you can see the rain coming in from the hills - we just put on our ponchos and kept on cycling in the rain - very cool...
Our eating habits have been completely screwed up - snacking on local food we can buy for less than a dollar all through the day, then eating snack sized meals at lunch and dinner because we aren't hungry, then getting hungry between meals because we haven't been eating properly, so have yet another snack! We had crunchy rice paper at one stall, barbequed pork skewers at another, sugar-cane juice at another - the food here is just fantastic and we are being very brave with new flavors (had dragon fruit juice at dinner last night, even tried Duran in the markets in Saigon - thats the smelly fruit that is supposed to smell awful but taste sweet - just tasted AND smelled awful really).
The main "old-town" here is just magical. They don't allow cars and motorbikes on the main streets, and we weren't even allowed to walk our bikes on the waterfront in the evenings - they are very strict about keeping the feel of the place as mellow as possible. The old french colonial architecture is just beautiful - it has to be the most beautiful little town in all of Asia.
Everything is going well - feels like a real adventure. Are having a fantastic time...