Monday 23 June 2014

Goodbye Cam and Lisa


This is what happens when a wonderful visit from Cam and Lisa comes to an end and we're sad... double chocolate smoothies (cocoa, condensed milk and ice). So worth it.

Thanks for the awesome visit guys. We loved having you and having some familiarity around us. Love you long time.

Wednesday 18 June 2014

Excuses, excuses

We apologise for the silent treatment we have been issuing to this blog, but we have been quite busy little birdies, and blogging takes time. We don't want to put out mediocre updates on our adventures, so instead we have neglected the blog altogether.

We have been on two great trips (detailed posts with photos to follow), had cousins visit, missed home HUGELY and started working at our new school for their Summer School which started on Monday.

The hustle and bustle of HCMC, the incompetence and the blasé attitude and the general, illogical way of thinking and doing things here have all worn us down a little recently. The honeymoon period is most definitely over! Certain everyday activities have started becoming almost intolerable (e.g. driving anywhere in this traffic and going to the shops), and we have occasionally been little hermit-birdies and stayed in our apartment with series on the T.V. to pretend that we are back in our beloved Howick.

With this Summer School, we have started working Monday-Friday, from 07h30-17h00 and we are both still working weekends (and some evenings) at VUS. Mel is also doing some freelance design work - check out her website www.blacksheepcreative.co.za and share it with EVERYBODY! With this busy schedule, we are one our way to achieving one of our goals for coming here - saving some money.

Here are some bonus photos:

Eating some delicious ice-cream from Baskin Robbins

Being touristy at the post office with Cam and Lisa

On the tender at Halong Bay

Wednesday 4 June 2014

Surviving Vietnam - Part 5 (City Living)

Ho Chi Minh City is a pretty good place as a settling-in base for anybody moving to Vietnam. I say this because it is quite Westernised, and you can get many of your familiar, home comforts. Many, but not all! Because of its history, modern day Saigon is a mixing bowl of culture, best displayed in the food which is on offer here. From French influenced baguette based sandwiches (banh mi), beef/chicken noodle soup (pho - pronounced fu, or 'fun' without the 'n'), fresh or deep fried spring rolls and Vietnamese pancakes to typically Western take-out foods like pizza, burgers and fried chicken.

There are big supermarkets similar to the ones at home, and you can buy everything from sweets and chips to household cleaners. Body-care products to Amarula and imported wine. The only down side to these supermarkets is that they are way, way more expensive than the farmers' markets - naturally. That's a bit of a problem here, you get so used to paying next to nothing for so many things that when something is more expensive (but still comparatively reasonable or on a par with back at home), you get grumpy and feel like you are paying too much. There is a massive Unilever building close to where we live, so we see and use all of the familiar products that we used at home. Like Sunlight dish washing liquid, Lifebouy soaps, Colgate toothpaste and brushes, Mr. Muscle cleaner and many more.

We, like many other people, thought that electronics (like laptops, tablets, cellphones and cameras) would be cheaper here. Sadly we were wrong, and they are on a par with - or more expensive than - back in SA. Luckily a lot of people aren't image conscious here, so an old, clapped out Blackberry or Samsung is considered a good phone. Many people here have two phones - an old-style, cheap and reliable phone for everyday use and taking out to town; and a nice, new smartphone for messaging home, surfing the net, taking photos and accessing Google Maps.

It's nice to have a treat every now and then, so we have (on occasion) bought a pack of KitKats. We currently have half a packet of M&M's in the fridge, and FINALLY found somebody who can get their hands on popcorn (all of the popcorn here is already popped and seasoned - we want just the kernels to pop ourselves at home!). Mel has her peanut butter on toast most mornings, but we bought muesli the other day, so we can mix it up a little. Occasionally we buy little boxes of cold Milo for after dinner, because it's quite cheap here.

Monday 2 June 2014

Smoothies

Fresh fruit is so readily available here and you can buy fruit smoothies everywhere! With such resources at our finger tips we decided to buy a blender so that we can make our own smoothies at home rather than having to go out to get one.

Banana, paw paw, pineapple and mango. 


A nice well balanced breakfast: Rooibos tea, pizza, muesli and a fruit smoothie.