Tag Archive: scooter


What? It Costs How Much?!

Scooters on the island rent for 24h periods, seeing as how people usually want to use them each day they are here. Our bungalow rented them, so we figured we would try and talk them down in price and find them cheaper somewhere else during the day… so after a bit of a chat we took our 150 baht motobikes and took off to explore the island.

One of the first things I wanted to do was check out the caves the island has to offer. Too expensive, we move on, at least it was a cool ride out on a dirt road. Then we happened across an ATV track place. There was a big “NOW OPEN” sign, but no one around, so we ventured down what we thought was the driveway on our scooters to find some one to see how much it might cost.

A few huge hill, a couple deep ruts, and some flags and coloured tires later… it was clear we were on the ATV course. Probably not really meant to be scooter territory. There was no one around to ask any questions, so we just took off.

Eventually we ended up in Ko Lanta’s “old town” which is cool little island “down town” kind of area. We had some shakes in hammocks on a pier (you walk through a kitchen and a laundry room to get to the back patio) and just chilled out there out of the sun for a while. This was on the east side of the island which isn’t really a swimming area, too many rocks, but a great view. Next door was the hammock shop. They were amazing. If you want a hammock, this is the place to get them, but it is a little steep for an impulse purchase. Check them out here if you want.

We had seen billboards advertising a monkey school, and Amy really wanted to see it. When we finally rolled up, it was too expensive, we moved on. Snake show? Too expensive, we moved on. Kayaking? Too expensive, we moved on.

Eventually after getting past two stands of people trying to sell you over priced tours, we found a free entrance to a short nature walk where you could see a bunch of fiddler crabs among the mangrove trees. They were really neat to see, and they would scurry away in waves as you walked down the elevated path. We ended up coming across a small fish farm at the end of the path. There were some really neat fish there, and we ended up having some blue crab. It was so tasty. While we were eating Amy detected a monkey sneaking by in the trees. The lady also offered us some little half day trips at the best prices we had heard, but still very expensive so we moved on.

We circled the island, and hit an internet cafe to look for a new place to stay. After picking on online, we went to check it out and it worked out great. They were called “cozy hut” bungalows, and from the description they sounded a little rough, but they were 400 baht a night, WAY cheaper than anything else we found, and we wanted to find some place cheap so we could maybe save some money to spend on a day trip or something.

After booking a room we scooted back to our bungalows for one last night stay.

Oh, and as it turns out, 150 baht/24h for scooters is a really good deal here. No one else was able to even match it.

We’ve Got The Scoots

OK, even if you usually just skim my blog… I have a feeling you started reading this entry.

We had breakfast and then got the scooters, and armed with a horrible map on a small piece of paper, we headed on in search of the ruins. We did a pretty amazing job of getting there. We asked for directions along the way, but we managed to never make a wrong turn which was really good, especially considering the map wasn’t used at all.

The ruins themselves were quite neat. It was more Mayan-esque than what we saw in Ayutthaya, surrounded by jungle, vegetation crawling over the ruins, streams running through the area. We saw a few different neat lizards around there too.

After we were done with the ruins, we headed back, this time enjoying the views a little more, stopping for pictures, and grabbing some random food from a local restaurant. Scooters are really they way to travel over here. After getting back to Hoi An, we checked out Amy’s tailored stuff and then hit the internet cafe. Food and massage are the plans for the evening. Everything closes really early here (9:00ish.) We travel by train tomorrow in hard sleepers to Saigon (Ho Chi Min City) where the goal is to spend maybe 2 days and then booking it up to Cambodia. We are feeling our beach lounging days waste away and we are really excited to get there, so we are taking it up a notch with the actual planning.

Ha Long Bay Trip – Day 2

After breakfast we boarded Cat Ba Island – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cat_Ba_Island – the weirdness started here. Half our group was on a 2 day 1 night trip, so they all left, then our group of 6 people who were going to the island were separated into a group of 4 and 2 groups of 1, all heading with different groups to do the same thing.

We first stopped at the national park and hiked the most sweaty hike of our lives to the top of a 250m hill. At the top there was a 30 meter tower which was kind of scary to climb… OK, a lot scary to climb. The view wasn’t really any better and once you were up, after a picture of proof, you just wanted back down… but after the trek up the hill you want to do it just because it is up there. We then got dropped of at the hotel where we would spend the night. We were on the 6th floor, which was actually the 7th floor and our room looked over the water. It was really nice.

The fourth guy of our group was a guy named Ishai from Israel. We found another guy named David who is from Australia and was from our boat who had a full hotel to himself, and we all headed off to rent scooters to check out the island. It cost 3 dollars for the bike, 2 dollars for gas, and we were off. The first beach we came across was just amazing. Light brown sand, clear water (which appeared a little brown because of the sand it was picking up) and the waves were huge and just crashing up on shore. We hung around and walked the beach, found a path and another beach in the distance. Figuring it was probably more fun to go back and scooter to the new beach we did just that. Eventually we found a third beach which had some little bungalow huts on it and a restaurant and we had a bite to eat and a drink.

Off again to explore the rest of the island we ended up down a lot of roads that just ended at the ocean. Eventually we found a cave with a restaurant outside it. We asked how much for the cave and they said “no dong no dong” (dong being the currency here) we checked out the cave ant it was really neat. On the way out we were so impressed with finally not being taken advantage of here (it happens a lot in Vietnam) so we all prepared tips for them. Amy was ready to give 100000 dong (5 bucks) and I was willing to pay a little too much for some drink or something. Then the “ticket ticket ticket” chant started coming out of everyone and they wanted 15k from each of us. Screwball tactic that made it so we no longer were so thrilled by their friendliness and as a result, they got only the cost of the ticket from us, no large tips as was planned.

We continued down the road and headed off on what looked more like a sidewalk/lane which took us through some country side. David had a spill at one point, but he was OK. We ended the exploration at a place called “The Hive” which is a little relaxation point for people who climb a mountain near by. There were hammocks around and chickens, dogs, cattle, everywhere. A walk through their fields and we got to go see a few people climbing. There was a really tight cave but my flashlight was not nearly bright enough for me to go too deep into it. We rode back, and short of Amy running out of gas, it was a simple trip.

We had dinner at the hotel, spent some time at the only real hangout which had absolutely horrible drinks (we couldn’t finish them) and then I had one of the best massages of my trip. Unfortunately it was only head and shoulders, not full body, but it was still very much well worth it. It is another city which sort of lives by the curfew in place, so we needed to rattle the gate to be let into the hotel to go to sleep.

The after-party

Scootering started a little later than anticipated, as most things do the way we go. We met up with Dara (the new Canadian girl) and a new Finnish guy (no idea what his name was anymore) and had some food, got the scooters, a horrible map, and then it was off to the first cave. We got there without incident after some practice driving on the roads first (the road to the cave is a dirt pseudo-road through fields.)

Once there, Amy decided to sit it out as it was crazy hot, and the impression we got was the cave was at the top of a really steep rocky hill. Turned out it wasn’t too far up and it was a lot of fun to explore. We then hiked the hill for the heck of it/the view and met another Canadian on top… we are everywhere over here.

Back down, after a really tough but short hike and it was off to the next cave. The map wasn’t clear and the Finnish guy had a bit too much confidence in his navigation skills so we ended up spending the rest of the day in fields driving over these huge berms getting just exhausted as the scooters would get stuck high-centering.

When we got back into town (after not finding any more caves) we just went for a ride to feel we got some real distance on the scooters. After that we checked out the bars across the river.. we figured if they were making so much noise and it was coming right into our room, we might as well be out there enjoying it. We spend a good while out there, some of it in hammocks, some by the bonfires, and eventually worked ourselves back to our room. The Laos curfew doesn’t seem to apply here in Vang Vieng.

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