Sunday, January 6, 2013

Journey highlights - Transit!

Clearly this post comes well after that spectacular trip - almost two years to the day.  However, I need to keep the blog going.  I'm heading out again soon for another trek (European return!) and as I'm looking back to be inspired, I'm finding some great shots from my last overseas jaunt.

Here, in a raw and unorganized form, are some photo highlights from the Asian 2011 adventure.


Transit:

Everywhere around the world people will find the most convenient, cost-efficient, and accessible ways to move themselves and their things.  But not everything translates across borders - and to see things done differently than what I see in my normal, everyday default world is what Travel is all about. 



By road!

Everywhere in Asia and worldwide, bus  is most often the cheapest way to travel.  Horror stories abound of bus travel misadventures, and if you're reading this chances are you have your own tales.  But whatever ones own experience, bus travel will remain with us as long as petrol flows and distances are long.



  Fantastic bus experience in southern Vietnam.  These bus seats recline to near horizontal, and still something like 30 people fit on this bus with TONS of luggage.  While relatively expensive for regular long-distance commutes for locals, plenty of foreign and holiday travelers (Lunar New Year!) enjoyed the comfort of these buses from Saigon.  En route to Mui Ne, Vietnam from Saigon.


 This was a very different kind of bus experience.  Clearly, this is the more typical bus travel situation - and, yes, even this is quite comfortable as far as global bus travel goes.  Enroute to Dalat, Vietnam from Mui Ne.


 The perils of being in 3D.. and in an overburdened truck on windy mountain roads.  A poignant lesson in taking initiative, even as an independent budget travels, to make sure you inspect and feel confident about your travel choices.  Even if it costs a bit more or may take you longer to arrive - it pays to make sure you arrive in one piece.



Another exceedingly popular and efficient way to move around, all over the world, is motor bikes, smaller utility trucks, and human-powered vehicles of innumerable variety.  In these parts of Asia motor bikes and little trucks, tuk tuks, and bike-carts were literally everywhere, and particularly moreso along the southern sweep of the journey (weather is warmer) where the shape and variety of vehicles exploded in diversity.


Maximum utility & ingenuity, borne out of daily necessity.  Another of my favorite shots - local living in gorgeous southern Vietnam. 


Downtown Saigon - world-famous pushcart drivers, yet another remnant from the French Indochina era of Vietnam.  The city is working to phase these guys out entirely, eliminating a whole segment of the transit infrastructure.  And a great tourist trap. 


 
Sharing the road has a wider application beyond the US.  A fun respite from the high-speed bumpiness of the road outside Mui Ne, Vietnam.


 Creative, effective, & totally illegal if this were the US.  Clearly its not an issue here.  Vietnam.

By rail!

Train is by far one of my favorite ways to move around when trekking anywhere.  Handing the hassle of the journey to the pro's, I almost always enjoy a great time-saving trip from one point to the other.  Some snapshots here reflect the diversity of global train experience, with an Asian twist this time. 


Freight & people, all over the world both share the same tracks on the older, established lines.  Train delays in most places are caused by the competing priorities of commerce and human transit.  Here, waiting enroute.. to somewhere, China.


Relatively clean, comfortable, and extremely timely - the awesome train system in China. 


 Where pop-a-squat takes on a whole new meaning, particularly when passing through the hillsides!  Train in China. 

Freight and passengers, all standing by.  A short train delay in Vietnam.


Its never hard to make friends on the train anywhere in the world.  Here, a fellow traveler was heading home with her mother for the New Years holiday.  Zaijian, pengyou!


Smudgy view along the riverside tracks, somewhere in central China.





The photos laid out heretofore are taken with an Olympus Stylus 1050 SW 
 Creative Commons License
These works by Tim Paez are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License

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