VSO meeting in Newcastle

Voluntary Service OverseasOur Man in Newcastle (formerly Our Man in Hanoi) will be speaking at a meeting of Voluntary Service Overseas (VSO) at the Civic Centre in Newcastle, on June 10th at 7:30pm. In his words:

There’ll be me and (I think) other ex volunteers all taking the stand for seven to eight minutes to tell our stories. I believe there will also be an opportunity for questions too.

Not sure what form my speech will take but there might be some brief readings from Our Man in Hanoi detailing my experiences in Vietnam.

Just to reiterate, yet again, if you have ever thought about VSO but dismissed it for whatever reason – think again. If your really want to do it then find a way. If the problem is the mortgage, or the kids, then think about doing it in your retirement. VSO just loves oldies.

Some more facts to dispel any myths:

1. It’s not all floppy haired gap-year kids

2. It is people with skills and experience doing in the developed world what they get paid for back home.

3. It used to be all two-year stints but there are some shorter options now available.

4. You might end up in a mud hut in the middle of nowhere but, then again, you probably won’t. I lived in rather a nice house.

5. While you’d be advised not to pick and choose too much, you can say what you’d be prepared to do and what you just couldn’t do without. Don’t be too picky though or they might not be able to find anything.

6. You do get a living wage and your flights are paid for. It’s enough to cover the basics. Volunteering for VSO shouldn’t cost you anything. You even get a resettlement grant when it’s all over.

VSO Flickr pool here. Facebook here.

As a final spur here’s a brief snippet of something I wrote about the experience:

“I am so proud of what we have achieved at KOTO. So proud just to be a part of it. So proud that the new KOTO is going happen. And if you’ll forgive me the indulgence, I’m proud I stuck it out. Not just the two years but the extra time to see this through.

“It is easily the single best thing I have ever done with my life.

“My future has many more adventures ahead but I will see and experience nothing like this ever again. I am the luckiest guy in the world to do this.”

For more info, or if you’d like to attend, go here.

For my own part, let me say the following. There’s not a doubt in my mind that I’d be happy as Larry living in Hanoi again for a few months, year or whatever. I’d certainly second everything on the above list. I only did 6 weeks in Hanoi on my longest stint getting Blue Dragon’s website and stuff sorted, but I was made to feel so much a part of the team by the kids that I simply did not want to leave.

OurMan mentions the pride at the end of it. Hell, yes. Sure, it’s good to feel proud of something you did in the office when you’re home and getting your monthly wage. But when that thing you’ve done, you’ve done for little or no financial reward; and when you can see how much it matters to people who have a hell of a lot less than you ever will… then you experience pride. Then you know what you’ve done is more worthwhile than anything else.

People – don’t have second thoughts. It’s a meeting. In Newcastle. It will, I assume, involve a bunch of people having a right old chat and probably a beer afterwards. What a great way to spend an evening, and you might even find yourself walking off with some life-changing ideas.

Fansipan again!

Martin and Peiling on FansipanFansipan seems to be the most popular subject on this site right now. I had another series of emails from Martin and Peiling (not sure where they’re from) asking for information before they made the trip. I’m happy to say they made it to the summit and back again to tell the tale!

As you can see from the picture, the weather wasn’t so great for them and the visibility was about as good as I got when I climbed. At least I didn’t get soaked until I was relatively close to the bottom.

In their own words:

We just got back from Hanoi on Friday and had a great trip. We stayed at the Hanoi Backpacker’s and they arranged our Fansipan and Halong Bay trips. The trek was good, we made it to the summit! (see attached picture) but as you can see the weather was not that great. As you mentioned on your blog, the 2nd day is really the tough one. After the hike to the camp at 2200m, I was thinking this will be easy but the 2nd day was really not easy at all. However, we were fortunate to make it to the top at all, ppl coming the day after us decided to not go beyond 2200m because of constant rain.

Halong Bay was very nice as well.

The Backpacker’s organization was amazing and we also enjoyed the 2 days in Hanoi very much. It’s an amazing and very busy city.

Thank you very much for all your help.

You’re both very welcome and I’m glad you had an enjoyable (and safe, though wet!) trip. Personally I just can’t wait to be back in Hanoi again in June!

In France, on a Monday, in May… must be a holiday

PentecostAnd it is. The third public holiday in as many weeks and only four days after the last one! This one’s for Pentecost (la Pentecôte), and technically it was yesterday – the Sunday. I guess as it’s a religious holiday, the date is always on a Sunday so the day off is the following day. That page at discoverfrance.net has these dates listed up till 2012 as they change slightly each year due to the fact they’re based on Easter‘s date.

Looking in town and talking to Delphine, it’s not as “strict” a holiday as the two previous ones. Super U is open all day, though I think it’s the only supermarket that is open. In Paris, the whole place will be open. In Delphine’s words:

people can take this day or not, it depends the company. It’s complicated, the government wanted to make this day working and you know French they didn’t want to so … people can be in holiday, others not.

Which makes is nice and clear… Generally, though, if you’re heading to the provinces in France and want to visit museums and go shopping, don’t come in May. A shame as the weather for the last 10 days or so (apart from a torrential downpour yesterday afternoon) has been fantastic.

A Swiss day out

MartignyWell, we hit the weekend again and once more we were forecast good weather for most of it. This time, I decided to make some plans and had originally hoped to visit Turin, or even go further afield to Berne, Zurich and Liechtenstein. However, most of my European friends were busy so I decided instead to just hop over the border to Martigny. A short visit, but a chance to pick up some decent bargain-priced chocolate.

I don’t have a company vehicle and I’d originally intended to hitch elsewhere for the weekend. However, the director told me to just borrow one of the vehicles. So I did. And I had a very nice, gently, careful drive through the hills on Saturday afternoon. Now, those who know me also know that “gently” and “careful” are not words that go together with my driving. However, when the vehicle you’re driving is a new-model Toyota Hilux HX2… in bright red… right hand drive, in a left hand drive country… and belongs to the man who owns the company you work for sometimes exceptions can be made.

So off I set around midday. Window rolled down, nice high view, surprisingly easily adapting to the gear stick being on what’s now my “wrong” side, and with Brian Johnson screaming at me that he’s a “Heatseeker” and “don’t need no life preserver”. Very loudly indeed. Nice stereos in those Hilux’s.

It’s only about an hour to Martigny from Chamonix if you drive at a moderate speed. It’s also gorgeous. I stopped at a few places to take photos, including off the windy road above Martigny as I could see the town stretching out in the distance beneath me. The mountains in the area are fantastic and still snow-capped, and there are definitely some lovely hiking trails in the area if such takes your fancy.

Fort above MartignySwapping from France to Switzerland doesn’t even involve stopping as long as you have one of the mandatory Swiss vignettes in your window. It’s the Swiss road taxation system. Even if you’re only there for 15 minutes, you have to have one. Mind, at 40 Swiss Francs a year (approximately £20), it’s a fraction of the UK road tax fee.

On I drove, meandering up and down the windy roads. No bad traffic in the way, no camper vans or ageing Sunday drivers. It’s days like that when everything just seems all right in the world (even though we all know it isn’t – the incidents in Burma / Myanmar are weighing very heavily on my mind). All I needed was a very attractive driving companion with a good taste in music and loose morals and I’d have been on cloud nine. Ah well, if we had everything then we’d strive for nothing.

As I approached Martigny, I spotted one of the large road signs telling me that part of my planned day out would have to be cancelled. The Col de Grande St-Bernard was still shut, I assume due to weather reasons, so heading that way would only take me through the tunnel into Italy. A pity as I only spent a paltry few minutes up there the last time I passed through and I’d have liked to have seen more. Another time!

Wooden bridge in MartignyInstead, I located a Migros and spent a bit of cash on some groceries and chocolate. All cheaper than back in Chamonix, and definitely better quality. Frankly, the fruit and veg in Super-U can be a bit hit and miss quality-wise. It was nice to get tomatoes and peppers that didn’t look more wrinkly than a 90 year-old who’s been sunbathing too long. As for the chocolate… even Migros’ bargain basement cheap and tatty stuff is superior to the pricier own-brand muck sold in France. And it’s cheap.

I’d already made sandwiches for the trip, so I drove around a bit to find a nice place to park up. On the edge of town is a small fort perched on a hill. Below it, an old wooden bridge (closed for refurbishment) crosses a beautiful clean river. And right next to it, under some carefully-arranged trees was a nice empty bench. Lunch break.

A view back into FranceHaving driven round a lot of it, Martigny isn’t a startlingly beautiful town as such. From above it actually looks a bit like a Spanish resort town. A lot of the buildings are fairly modern and regularly laid out. It doesn’t have much character. However, there are a couple of small parts stuck on the edges (such as the road leading to the fort) which appear older and stand out when you see them.

And then there’s the scenery. You walk out of Migros into the car park and facing you is a mountainside completely covered with bright green trees. It stretched both directions as far as you can see. Look over your shoulder and there are grey mountains topped with snow. Lower down on their foothills, grapes are being grown although it’s early in the season so they look a little bare right now.

Oh, and being Switzerland it’s very clean!

After my lunch, I packed up and drove back the way I came. At the border I was stopped by one of the French guards and told that my front numberplate was damaged. News to me – when I collected the van it had been parked nose-first towards the hotel wall. It later transpired that “we” already knew about this and a replacement plate is in the van. Somewhere. Thing is, virtually every French speed camera catches you from the front, so they’re bound to be picky about front license plates.

Rock and treeI also made a couple of pit-stops to take more pictures. The weather continued to be glorious until I returned to Chamonix in the early evening. I do wish I’d had a vehicle to hand more often over the season – and more time off to make use of it. The whole area around here is tremendous for jaunting around and taking days out or weekends away. Having to work here has been a joy, but also slightly frustrating in the knowledge that so many other wonderful places were right on my doorstep – but unreachable at the time.

Ah well. All the more encouragement to come back another time, perhaps as a full time tourist!

Another holiday

Not for me, but for France. After last week’s Labour day, we have “Victoire”, the French version of our V-E Day. The major difference being that the French have a day off whereas we just get some newspaper headlines about how few of the soldiers who fought for us in WWII are still alive.

I did a little reading about the French public holidays and came across two useful pages – this one on Wikipedia, and this at discoverfrance.net. What’s interesting to note is that, despite having around thirteen public holidays, only one is actually a guaranteed day off by law – Labour Day on May 1st. Every other one is by some kind of long-term agreement between employers, unions and so on.

One other subtle difference is that, rather than picking the nearest Monday for Labour Day, the French just take May 1st off regardless of the day of the week it falls on. For those outside the UK, the only holidays we have that are date specific fall on New Year and Christmas. Every other one, we go for the nearest Monday. Our “May Day” this year was on Monday just gone – the 5th. I’m curious to know what happens if Labour Day falls on a Sunday in France!

Regardless, we don’t get either day in the office. We have to liaise with the  UK, so couldn’t take May 1st off. And we have to liaise with the French, so couldn’t take the 5th off. Ah well, roll on the end of the month and I’ll take a few months’ break instead…