Belgadia Palace photo courtesy of Belgadia Palance
A small group of peafowls ambles about in the neatly-manicured, verdant lawn that fronts the sprawling façade of Belgadia Palace draped in thin morning mist. The stately manor that dates back to 1804 is the residence of the Bhanj Deo royal family that had ruled the princely state of Mayurbhanj in eastern India. The languid interiors of the palace, Victorian in its provenance, are ensconced in lived-in luxury with its antiquated furniture, artifacts, and crystal tableware. Mrinalika and Akshita Bhanj Deo, two sisters from the royal family of Mayurbhanj, have turned their ancestral palace into a royal homestay, where I have based myself to delve into the rich cultural heritage of Mayurbhanj, now a northern district of Odisha.
Inside belgadia palace. Photo by Sugato Mukherjee
The day starts off with a drive to Simlipal National Park, 72 kilometres away from Baripada, the district headquarters of Mayurbhanj. The drive is through a pastoral landscape dotted with small villages, until we take a sharp turn after crossing a forest checkpoint. An ancient forest of sal trees, their tall heads reaching out to the sky, close in both sides of the untarred road, forming a thick overhead canopy, and only thin streaks of sunlight filter in. The jungle, even at noon, looks dark and forbidding. The drive is uphill, negotiating serpentine bends, and we are amazed to find a handful of tribal hamlets inside this primitive forest, smoke emanating from the humble homes, an assortment of tin, wood, and straws. The driver informs that we are passing through elephant corridor but we only spot droves of monkeys and red junglefowls, and catch a dazzling glimpse of a peacock in the middle of the road, its feathers spread in gay abandon, before it fleets off with an annoyed hoot. We arrive shortly at Barehipani Falls. From the upper floor balcony of the log hut that overlooks it, the cascading waters of the third highest waterfall in India look bewitching. On the way back, we drive through Nawana valley, its green expanse looking lovely in the mellow afternoon sun, and take a pit stop at Joranda Falls, plunging over a towering cliff in a single drop, spreading out slightly as it falls into the dark valley below.
Joranda Falls photo courtesy of Belgadia Palace
A stream threads its way through Simlipal National Park. Photo courtesy of Belgadia Palace.
The next morning, we set off early to Guhaldiha. The tribal village, about 12 kilometres from Baripada, is home to a community of women weavers of sabai grass, a natural fibre, which grows abundantly in the forests of Mayurbhanj district. An untarred road leads us through the village to the cooperative-owned shed where about a dozen women artisans are deftly turning the braided bundles of the organic fibre into crafty utility and decorative pieces with their nimble fingers. This eco-friendly tribal art of Mayurbhanj is now a major cottage industry of the state and even the e-commerce behemoths have now joined the bandwagon to merchandise the sabai craftwork.
Sabai grass weavers. Photo by Sugato Mukherjee
On the way back we make a brief stopover at the temple of Haribaldev Jeu, the presiding deity of Baripada. Built in 1575, the laterite stone structure is an exact replica of the more-famous Jagannath temple at Puri and houses the same sibling trio of Lord Jagannath, Balaram and Subhadra. The antiquated charm has lost some of its appeal in the white façade and brightly-painted interiors but the temple hosts an intensely colourful festival during the annual Rath Yatra, when the chariot of Subhadra gets pulled by the town’s womenfolk. The next pitstop is Mayurbhanj Palace, the ancestral palace from which the Bhanj Deos ruled their state. The façade has a striking resemblance to Buckingham Palace, but most of the 126 rooms now remain off-limits.
The facade of Mayurbhanj Palace. Photo by Sugato Mukherjee
We are back at Belgadia Palace by 11, its leafy grounds drenched by the mid-morning winter sun. A motley band of young men are waiting for us, holding shields and swords, their sinewy frames clad in white dhotis. On a slightly raised stage hemmed in by thick groves of trees, they begin their chhau dance, stomping their bare feet rhythmically, their choreographed kinetic movements synchronised with the resounding beat of the drums.
After a sumptuous lunch of which the highlight was the tangy mutton curry spiced up in Odisha-style, we set off for Haripur, the medieval capital of Mayurbhanj. The morning sun has been replaced by scattered clouds and the last leg of the 15-kilometre drive is through dense woods and a light drizzle. We walk past a gated entrance with an Archaeological Survey of India signage that warns visitors against defacing the heritage site and wade through thick undergrowth. A magnificent brick temple stands in the distance, its chiselled architecture oozing a faint crimson glow in the pale light. This is Rasika Raya temple, and we are standing right in the middle of the ruins of a massive fort built in 1400 AD, which was so impregnable that it found mention in medieval historical texts. The brick foundations running around the temple lead to huge underground chambers, which were part of a subterranean tunnel – an escape route for the royal family in case of an invasion. “The royal palace, which was inside the fort, has not yet been excavated.” – says Mrinalika Bhanj Deo, who is leading us this evening into the storied past of her ancestors. She points to the open alcoves on the walls of the Rasika Raya temple.
Mayurbhanj Chhau. Photo by Sugato Mukherjee
Mayurbhanj Chhau. Photo by Sugato Mukherjee
Temple at Haripur. Photo by Sugato Mukherjee
“These were used to keep fire torches on special nights, when dance performances were held in the temple courtyard,” she says.
Darkness descends gently on the fort grounds of the ancient capital of Mayurbhanj, as I try to imagine how magical the night would have been, more than half a millennium ago.
Cover photo: Belgadia Palace photo courtesy of Belgadia Palace
Everything appeared as expected while boarding the train into Tokyo, from the tidy train station and orderly ticket booth cues to the clasped hands of prim passengers patiently awaiting the train. As I boarded and claimed a seat by the window, I felt suddenly overwhelmed — I had 36 hours to explore Tokyo and had arrived without a plan!
I had flown between Manila, my birthplace, and Vancouver, the home my family chose, countless times but never set foot beyond Narita Airport. Needless to say, a trip to Tokyo felt long overdue — even if it was only an extended layover. Last December, I was returning to Canada from a two-year journey spanning a dozen countries. My last stop was meant to be a four-hour layover in Tokyo but that simply wouldn’t do. I extended the layover to 36 hours, enough time to get out of the airport but still make it home for Christmas dinner.
What happens now? In the whirlwind of exploring the Philippines and catching up with family, I hadn’t done any research for my Tokyo layover.
After storing my luggage at the arrival terminal and buying a SIM card, it struck me. What happens now? In the whirlwind of exploring the Philippines and catching up with family, I hadn’t done any research for my Tokyo layover. I hadn’t even booked accommodations. I stopped at the airport information desk and sought help: “I have a 36-hour layover in Tokyo and no plan! Can you please suggest a place to start?” I must have seemed insane but the info desk attendant’s lipsticked smile boosted my confidence. She handed me a map and circled Asakusa. She must have known that even though I lacked a plan and was short on time, I would somehow find my way.
11.00 Asakusa & A Free Temple Tour
I disembarked at Asakusa and a stream of moving traffic swept me away to a teeming intersection framed by Kanji signs. My time in Tokyo was quickly dwindling. I raced in the general direction of the Sensō-ji Buddhist Temple and stumbled upon the Asakusa Culture Tourist Information Center. I walked in searching for a washroom and as luck would have it, I walked out minutes later as part of a free temple walking tour group!
We trailed our tour group leader through the streets of Asakusa, past bustling storefronts and market stalls. She imparted bits of history and culture and introduced us to O-mikuji: fortunes scrawled on strips of paper and often found at Buddhist temples and Shinto shrines. Meaning “sacred lot”, these fortunes are received in exchange for a small offering. Each of us in the tour group deposited small coins in the offering box then pulled a small stick out of a bundle. Engraved on the stick was a symbol corresponding with one of the many drawers before us. Inside, I found my fortune, “No. 13 Best Fortune: Just like flowers bloom on old branches, something happy will come,” it said. I pocketed my good fortune and learned how to cleanse myself with smoke and water before entering the temple. I was grateful for a deeper understanding of these rituals; they made me feel a more genuine part of the temple’s daily ebb and flow.
Photo: Trixie Pacis
Photo: Trixie Pacis
Photo: Trixie Pacis
12.30 Tokyo Style Ramen
By the time the tour of Senso-Ji Temple and Asakusa Shrine (Tokyo’s oldest) was over, my tummy was rumbling for ramen. As luck would have it, I was close to the popular Yoroiya Ramen joint and there was room for one more at the bar. I chose from the English menu and within just a few minutes, I was slurping up a bowl of Tokyo-style shoyu ramen — dark and salty meat-and-fish broth with slices of charshu pork and bamboo shoots on curly noodles —with a side of gyoza to boot.
It had been a while since I’d dined alone but felt at home inside the cozy bar, surrounded by other solo ramen seekers. Relishing each bite, I started to feel more relaxed. I realized how foolish I’d been to think I could hit the ground running and see it all. I accepted that I would only scratch the surface, and that was perfectly alright. I stepped out of the ramen bar and wandered at a slower pace, feeling open to whatever would or would not transpire on my already-dwindling layover.
Photo: Trixie PacisRamen. Photo: Trixie Pacis
14.00 Harajuku
I found myself wandering the alleys of Harajuku, ducking in and out of shops and craning my neck at locals dressed in everything from cosplay and Kawaii to Gothic Lolita. Of all the wild and fun clothing I browsed, I was drawn to a second-hand kimono shop and found ‘the one’ to fill the empty void in my day pack.
16.00 Meiji Jingu Shrine… Almost
Satisfied with my afternoon in Harajuku, I set off towards the Meiji Jingu Shrine, dedicated to (and named for) the first emperor of modern Japan. As I reached one of the gates leading into the serene park and shrine, I was disappointed to learn that it was closing precisely as I arrived. I turned around and made my way to the Kawaii Monster Cafe for a truly Tokyo experience, but that too was closed. Perhaps I wasn’t as lucky as my O-mikuji promised.
16.00 Shibuya Crossing
A glowing sign that read ‘Time is On’ reminded me of the minutes winding down. I hurried to Shibuya Crossing, one of Tokyo’s busiest and most well-known intersections. Surely, it wouldn’t be closed! I crossed a few times and took photographs at various angles. I paid tribute to Hachikō, the Japanese Akita dog who famously waited for his owner Hidesaburō Ueno at Ueno station for over nine years following his death. I ruminated on this display of loyalty over a cup of tea at the Starbucks overlooking the crossing, watching life ebb and flow into the crossing. I figured it was time to get moving and check in somewhere. Embracing Tokyo, I booked none other than a capsule hostel.
Photo: Trixie Pacis
Shibuya Crossing. Photo: Trixie Pacis
20.00 The Capsule Hotel
I checked into Nine Hours Shinjuku-North, a modern and minimalist capsule hotel a short walk from JR Shin-Okubo station. The front desk area opens up to a large communal space and work area equipped with ample tables and charging stations. I spent a few minutes recharging before heading to my capsule. I stored the bulk of my belongings in my designated locker, freshened up, and set out for more exploring.
21.00 Golden Gai
Tokyo comes to life at night, as neon lights flicker on and beckon further exploration. I walked from Okubo to Golden Gai, a famous bar-hopping destination. Golden Gai is comprised of six narrow alleyways interconnected by even narrower passageways. It is home to a network of over 200 narrow bars, eateries, and clubs of various themes. Though the dimly-lit area appears ramshackle and run down at first glance, it is home to some of Tokyo’s most unique establishments.
I wandered through Golden Gai’s myriad alleyways, peering into dozens of tiny bars and overwhelmed by my options. A former red light district, many of Golden Gai’s bars can trace their heritage to the 1960s. They are amongst the buildings that survived the 1980s, when many buildings were set ablaze by yakuza so the land could be snatched up by developers. Today, it is a popular meeting place for celebrities, artists, musicians, writers, and of course, tourists. Some of Golden Gai’s bars only welcome regular patrons, who must initially be introduced by an existing patron, while other bars welcome foreigners by displaying signs in English. Most seat a maximum of five to 10 patrons shoulder-to-shoulder but despite their size, each makes a distinct impression.
Photo: Trixie Pacis
I had bookmarked a few bars but couldn’t find any of them in the maze. In the end, I followed my nose to one that emitted a smoky and savoury smell. When I saw sizzling teriyaki plates on the countertop, I knew I was onto something. I slipped in and took a seat at a bar top set for six. After ordering a beer and sizzling plate from a bartender with a blonde mullet and tattooed sleeves, I heard a familiar accent — the two ladies beside me hailed from Toronto. Conversation sparked naturally in such an intimate bar and soon, it was as if the two Canadians to my left and the three Tokyo locals to my right had intentionally booked our own private bar.
After polishing off dinner and a few drinks, I joined the Canadian girls at another bar. Contrary to the other hole-in-the-wall, this cocktail bar had red wallpaper decorated with elaborate birds and cranes. We met another couple of travellers and hopped to a third spot, where we met two Stanford students and became a pack of five. Then it was onto the next one, where a stylish and friendly bartender by the name of Tsubaki drank shōchū at our table, cracked open a bag of chips, and introduced us to the various locals and regulars stopping in for a drink.
05.00 Capsule
By the time I climbed into my wee capsule, it was nearly 5:00 am. Closing the heavy curtain and setting my alarm, I couldn’t help but think of all the Tokyo bucket-list things I hadn’t ticked. Sleep quickly drowned the thoughts swirling in my head.
10.30 Meiji Jingu… Again
I did have time for one more Tokyo experience. I returned to the Meiji Jingu shrine, determined to see it before leaving. The setting was peaceful and serene, the perfect antidote to the rush of FOMO I’d been grappling with. I was not missing out, I had nothing to fear. I was capping off a two-year stint abroad with a morning stroll through one of the most enchanting temple gardens in Tokyo.
13.00 Nigiri
I couldn’t leave Tokyo without sampling nigiri. As I made my return trip to the airport, I stopped for lunch at Hinatomaru Kaminarimon. I stood at a tall bar that lacked seats and sampled three types of nigiri. According to a drawing on a chalkboard, I was having the ‘red part’, ‘fatty part’, and ‘premium part’. It was so delicious, I ordered a second round plus the amberjack nigiri, which the charming chef recommended. With a full belly and a warm heart, I was ready to go home.
Walking to the train station, I passed beneath the cherry blossom trees of Sumida Park. Even without their blooms, they reminded me of how the Japanese find beauty in impermanence, from the ever-changing seasons to the brevity of a haiku. I thought of my 36 hours in Tokyo as a flower blooming on an old branch. Though the lifespan of a blooming flower is but a tiny speck in the canvas of time, it is beautiful by existing. By simply existing.
In the end, I hardly scratched the surface of all that Tokyo has to offer but even so — and especially after all that has transpired in the world recent months — I look back fondly and treasure those 36 hours in Tokyo for simply existing.
“I hoped things had changed. [George Floyd’s murder] makes me feel like almost nothing has changed. It makes me feel like I wouldn’t mind never going back to America,” says Gene Ellis, a Black American web developer currently in Mexico.
The Black American travel market is a $63 billion industry. Yet, Black American travelers and travel influencers continue to be underrepresented, under-catered-to, and undervalued. The Black Travel Alliance recently launched a campaign, #PullUpforTravel, to hold the industry accountable — urging brands that posted black squares for #blackouttuesday to share their actual diversity scorecards and commitments to action and improvement.
As hate crimes and police violence continue, Black Americans fear for their lives. Back in 2017, one Black travel writer named the “Trump Factor” as the second reason Black Americans should get a passport: “given the current state of white supremacy, shootings of unarmed Black men, murders of Black women while in custody and sex trafficking of underage girls and women going on (all of which are perpetrated by our police) there may come a time when you need to dip.”
“Abroad, any racism I’ve faced has come from fear of the unknown. They have little information and it’s inaccurate; they’re generalizing because they don’t know.”
Gabby Beckford
Feeling unsafe in the U.S., many Black Americans are glad to be in other countries — or eager to go abroad. The concept is not new; the “Back to Africa” movement emerged in the 19th century. While the phrase “go back to Africa” has been used derogatorily, Black-owned companies like Black & Abroad have sought to reclaim it, and in 2019, Ghana led a campaign for the “Year of Return” to encourage descendants of those forcibly removed from the continent to return.
Butre – a village in the Ahanta district in western Ghana.
“Many Black people feel as though America is not made for us. We feel discriminated against in so many ways. And it’s not just the physical abuse necessarily… It’s the mental turmoil of having to prove yourself and overcome stereotypes about intelligence and ability to get the job done,” said Olumide Gbenro, a Nigerian man raised in America.
Safer Abroad?
Gabby Beckford, a full-time Black and multicultural travel entrepreneur and content creator — and founding member of the Black Travel Alliance — says she’s seen increased interest in traveling and moving abroad from Black Americans.
“For those abroad right now, they’re happy they’re not in the U.S. right now. There’s been a huge push for Black Americans to move, especially to Africa where we have roots. America is not as it used to be and there are other countries with other opportunities. Those abroad seem happy their country is containing coronavirus better, especially because Black people have been affected disproportionately,” says Beckford.
Several of the Black nomads and travelers we spoke to said they felt safer, experienced less racism, or felt less threatened by racism abroad than in the United States.
“While I am at home I feel like I constantly have to police myself in order to not be the topic of discussion in a white setting. It goes from what I am wearing to what I say and how I speak. My tone, my hair, my attitude. While I am abroad and in the countries that I’ve been to, the very things that made me super self-conscious are the things that are praised here. I’ve been told that I am beautiful and that my hair and skin is beautiful. I get stares abroad as well as I do back at home, however, I feel like the staring is out of curiosity rather than ignorance,” says Latrice Coates, a digital nomad currently in Thailand.
A temple in the Chiang Mai province of Thailand.
Both Coates and Ellis said they hadn’t personally experienced any direct racism abroad. “I do know that it exists,” said Coates, “however, I also believe that my blue passport grants me more grace than anything. Once people know that I am an American the vibe typically switches — a different tone of voice and more willingness to help out.”
Ellis acknowledges that there are many types of racism around the world, such as Asians thinking white skin is more attractive. “But in terms of systemic racism, I’ve never felt that anywhere except America.” Growing up in the U.S., Ellis was called the N-word, told to break up with certain girlfriends because he is Black, pulled over for no reason, and surrounded by cops because he “fit the description,” to name just a few examples. A few years ago, a friend begged and pleaded with him to leave America. “I don’t know what I would do if you were killed just for being you,” she told him.
“I am always conscious of where I go as a Black American,” says Coates. “I am always aware of the spaces that I enter, what I say, where I work, whom I talk to, what hours of the night I stop for gas, how I speak to the police… It is second nature to always look into where I am headed to next… It’s embedded in myself and my brothers and sisters to always seek these things while moving abroad and domestically.”
“Abroad, any racism I’ve faced has come from fear of the unknown. They have little information and it’s inaccurate; they’re generalizing because they don’t know. I have definitely faced more racism in the U.S. Outside the U.S. it’s not as expected or accepted,” says Beckford.
“…While I am abroad and in the countries that I’ve been to, the very things that made me super self-conscious are the things that are praised here…”
Latrice Coates
For Gbenro, the month he arrived in Bali, a white foreigner aggressively called him the N-word. He says the racism he’s experienced abroad has been worse than the more subtle variety he experienced in the U.S.: for example, being followed around department stores and jokes about interracial dating.
Gbenro says the nomad community has a responsibility to speak out against discrimination. Just being a nomad doesn’t mean someone is not racist. “I think there’s a danger in thinking because you’ve traveled to 60 countries you get a pass. I believe travel is the ultimate equalizer because you really see the human condition and how it surpasses what you look like and what skin color you have. I urge the remote entrepreneurs who have the influence and impact to use their voice to shine light on this. Even if it’s not affecting you directly we need your voice.”
Representation in the Travel Industry
“It feels like something supernatural is happening and we’re being forced to reckon with the decisions we’ve made as a society,” says Beckford, speaking about both the coronavirus pandemic and the movement for racial justice. “We are reckoning with ourselves as an individualistic and selfish society. That same selfishness and individualism is what lets racism be perpetuated. That’s why there’s a Black travel movement/exodus.”
Gbenro organized a Digital Nomad Summit with several hundred attendees that was held the first week of June — just after Floyd’s murder. After his death, Gbenro thought, “‘Not again’ — they keep killing us like animals on television screens. I felt disrespected by the nation that I spent much of my life in. But after I calmed down emotionally I also realized the tremendous responsibility I had as a successful Black entrepreneur to still execute the task at hand. I’m sure a few people wondered why I didn’t bring [Floyd’s death] up, but I saw it as a chance to use my success and influence to contribute to inspiring people that look like me.”
Coates helps businesses grow their brands, and says that since Floyd’s murder, several white-owned brands have reached out to her on Instagram for collaborations to diversify their feed. She turned most of them down, because they didn’t seem genuine and weren’t even offering her payment. She did accept an opportunity to do an Instagram takeover — where she could control the narrative.
For Beckford, a big reason she co-founded the Black Travel Alliance was to advocate for representation and share the narratives of Black travelers. Beckford often gets questions about why representation in travel — a leisure activity — matters. “It affects systemic racism and mindset in the travel industry and beyond,” she says. “It’s really important to see Black people not just in the context of war, poverty, and civil rights actions. We enjoy and deserve luxury. Seeing Black people as humans is just as important as seeing Black people in trauma porn. Black people deserve to relax and enjoy our lives.”
Help stop animal cruelty in Southeast Asia by avoiding inhumane experiences with captive animals—we’ve got the details on ethical animal tourism in Southeast Asia.
Southeast Asia is home to some of the world’s most incredible wildlife, including endangered species such as Asian elephants, sea turtles, and tigers. Travelers can witness and learn about the Southeast Asian animal kingdom in Cambodia, Laos, and Thailand. Humane wildlife encounters are key to ending widespread animal abuse and conserving at-risk species.
Seeking out cruelty-free experiences that prioritize animal welfare is crucial for preserving these remarkable species. Engaging in irresponsible animal interactions for human amusement such as petting tigers, riding elephants, or drinking snake wine further encourages the exploitation of precious wildlife.
Be Aware of Red Flags
As there are minimal regulations governing animal tourism in Cambodia, Laos, and Thailand, it’s important to keep an eye out for red flags. Avoid venues that promote animal shows including water buffalo riding, performing dolphins, crocodile wrestling, snake charming, dancing bears, primate tricks, and other unnatural behavior such as elephants painting canvases. It isn’t just circuses and zoos that are misusing animals for entertainment—many mindful travelers unwittingly fall prey after getting tricked by phony safe havens.
Some places confine captive animals and camouflage themselves as sanctuaries, rescue centers, and conservatories. If they showcase photos of tourists holding animals, your answer is simple: don’t go. It’s never ethical to hold a sea turtle, starfish, gibbon, slow loris, or any other animal. No hugs, kisses, or animal selfies.
Interactions with humans are a sign of an unethical tourist trap. It isn’t natural for animals to initiate contact with humans. Animals are sacred beings—not Instagram props. If a center is making a profit, it’s a tourism business, not an animal sanctuary.
Identifying True Sanctuaries
Animal-friendly experiences contribute to preservation. Real conservation centers will have large spaces that mimic natural habitats so animals can roam freely. Legitimate organizations work tirelessly towards conservation and prioritize the well-being of animals while allowing tourists to observe rescued animals in a responsible way that doesn’t inflict suffering or interrupt their normal way of living.
Book tours exclusively with registered nonprofits that rescue and rehabilitate captive animals with the goal of re-releasing them into the wild whenever possible. Sadly, many rescued animals can no longer take care of themselves without human aid.
Seek out wildlife viewing opportunities at protected nature reserves that prioritize the safety of the animals. Groups should be small, heavily regulated, and with a licensed guide.
Be a Compassionate Consumer
Avoid buying or consuming food that’s made from endangered wild animals such as shark fin or turtle soup. Never purchase souvenirs made from rhino horn, turtle shell, ivory, or shark teeth. Don’t drink any animal-infused wine—snake, scorpion, centipede, tiger penis—or civet coffee. Purchasing animal products encourages vendors to continue to make and sell them, which puts already endangered animals at further risk.
Visit Sun Bear Sanctuaries
Free the Bears is an Australian organization with outposts in Luang Prabang, Laos, and Phnom Penh, Cambodia. The organization rehabilitates Asiatic Black Bears, commonly known as sun and moon bears, for their unique markings. These bears are at risk of extinction as they’re commonly kept captive for entertainment and at farms that slaughter them for their bile.
Snorkel Smartly
PADI-certified scuba divers and recreational snorkelers will be thrilled at the chance to swim with wild sea turtles, reef sharks, and, if they’re lucky, whale sharks off the coasts of Koh Phangan and Koh Tao in Thailand. Never disturb the aquatic habitat by touching or feeding anything, and be sure to protect your skin with mineral sunblock that won’t harm coral reefs. Research to find tour operators that won’t chase or swarm marine life, and take underwater pictures at a respectful distance and without flash.
Don’t Ride, Touch, Bathe, or Feed Asian Elephants
The easiest tourist trap to fall into in Southeast Asian countries including Cambodia, Laos, and Thailand is visiting illegitimate elephant sanctuaries. Elephants are the largest mammal on earth and should never be ridden—not even bareback. Sadly, elephant rides are commonplace in Southeast Asia, despite the brutish training which involves beating, torturing, and starving adolescent elephants.
Many attractions that promote elephant bathing as an ethical alternative to riding actually over-bathe the animals to appease tourists. Elephant baths are a performance. Elephants can bathe themselves and naturally do this as a herd; when necessary, a trained mahout can bathe the elephant in their care. It’s entirely ethical to watch an elephant bathe, from a distance, as long as they’re not being forced to do so.
There’s no better place to see a wild animal than where it belongs—in the wild. Wild elephants can be seen in Khao Yai National Park and Kui Buri National Park in Thailand. In Laos, elephants are sometimes spotted at the Nam Et-Phou Louey National Biodiversity Conservation—a rarity as there are only 400 wild Asian elephants left in Laos. In Cambodia, they can be seen in the wild at the Cambodia Wildlife Sanctuary.
WAP found that there are at least 3,000 captive elephants in Asia—many of which are treated unethically. Here are some highly vetted sanctuaries where you can view Asian elephants from a respectful distance.
Retired and rescued elephants live freely on a forest of 600 acres enclosed with a solar-powered fence. Rescued cats and dogs also live at Blom Lott, which means ‘survivor’ in Thai. BLES is supported by WAP and has strict capacity regulations for visitors.
Guests are allowed to walk from a safe distance with rescued elephants as they roam freely in a protected forest habitat. The UK-registered charity was awarded the ECOA grant in 2017.
The non-profit reforests captive elephants in a sanctuary where they can naturally wander. Only overnight visits are allowed and guests may go for hikes in the forest where they may see the semi-wild elephants.
BEES is a forever home for elephants retired from the logging and tourism industries. They promote minimal human interaction with their hands-off approach and recently discontinued allowing travelers to feed elephants by hand.
The ECC is a permanent home to over 30 rescued elephants. The conservatory is a member of the Asian Captive Elephant Working Group and is dedicated to providing top-notch welfare.
Elephant encounter in Thailand. Photo: Bianca Caruana
In the last century, Thailand has lost roughly 92 percent of its elephant population. Factors such as illegal wildlife trade, deforestation, and human-animal conflict have led the Asian elephant to the pages of Thailand’s endangered species list. The future of the surviving eight percent remains uncertain — but we know that humans have as much a role to play in their survival as they have had in their decline.
Elephants in Thai culture
For centuries, the Asian elephant has played a domestic role in Thai culture. From weapons of war in the 17th century to tools of strength in agriculture and logging throughout the late 19th century, elephants were — and still are — deemed as property. When commercial logging was banned in 1989 elephants took on a new role, one centred in Thailand’s booming tourism industry.
The high demand for animal entertainment created roles in tourism for thousands of elephants in Thailand and throughout South East Asia, but it was backed by little knowledge of animal welfare. Today, World Animal Protection estimates there are roughly 3,500 elephants currently kept captive for tourism in Thailand.
Domestic elephants are often owned by a family or community and passed down from generation to generation. In many cases, these communities and families come from low-income situations and rely heavily on income generated by the elephants.
“Many families rely on this income as a sole means to put food on the table,” shared Kerri McCrea, co-founder of Kindred Spirit Elephant Sanctuary, which is an animal conservation and community-based tourism non-profit based in Northern Thailand.
Photo: Bianca Caruana
The current situation for elephants in Thailand
With recent awareness about the lack of animal welfare in tourist camps throughout Asia, public opinion began to turn against the use of elephants in tourism. However, the proposed solution to close tourist camps and release elephants back into the wild proved to not be a viable one. This was because, firstly, communities rely on income generated by the elephants, and secondly, because from 2001 to 2018, Thailand lost 1.93 million hectare meters of forests — the natural habitat for wild elephants.
There is also a concern regarding the risk of human-animal conflict. The average weight of an elephant is 3,500 kilograms (3.5 tons), and a creature of this stature needs to sustain a diet of roughly 200 kilograms of foliage per day. This requires a lot of roaming and a high risk of roaming into areas inhabited by humans.
“Elephants risk walking into cornfields and ingesting harmful pesticides that could put their lives at risk,” Kerri explains. “What needs to be focused on is the animal welfare standards of elephants in captivity and alternative solutions to tourist camps.”
Elephant camps vs. elephant sanctuaries
The question of elephant camps vs. elephant sanctuaries is a complex one and perhaps not the right question to ask. Companies can change their wording according to what they believe tourists want to hear — the term for this is “greenwashing”. For example, after TripAdvisor banned the advertisement of any tourist entertainment deemed cruel to animals, companies throughout Thailand plastered posters with phrases like “no elephant riding” and “elephant sanctuary”. This did not necessarily correlate to the company’s standards of animal welfare.
Characteristics of an ethical elephant sanctuary include adequate access to food, water, space, and care, as well as little interaction with tourists — especially not performing tricks or giving frequent rides. World Animal Protection advises that “elephants are much safer and happier when they’re not in direct contact with tourists.”
Photo: Bianca Caruana
Photo: Bianca Caruana
Why elephants still need tourists
When asked about the ideal scenario for the Asian elephant, Kerri answered: “Ideally elephants belong in the wild, but since that option is not a reality in current times the next best option is for them to live as natural lives as possible in ethical sanctuaries.”
The main mission of Kindred Spirit Elephant Sanctuary, and similar organisations such as BEES – Burm and Emily’s Elephant Sanctuary, is to bring elephants home to the forests to live a semi-wild existence that closely imitates life in the wild. This means they have thousands of acres of forests to roam, tons of food to forage, but can also be kept safe by the companionship of their mahout.
But sanctuaries like these also need funding, which is why tourism remains important. The cost to care for an elephant can reach thousands of dollars per month. This cost is accrued by the need for sufficient food particularly in the dry season, funding to pay the mahout’s salary, funding to care for the elephant, and funding to pay the elephant’s owner. Tourism acts as a sustainable way to provide these dollars.
Photo: Bianca Caruana
Photo: Bianca Caruana
Choosing an ethical elephant encounter
The future of the Asian elephant remains much in the hands of the inquisitive tourist. Our choices will paint the picture of industry standards when it comes to elephant welfare. If we choose encounters that put animal welfare at the forefront, companies will follow suit.
Such ethical encounters can include assisting in scientific research of the Asian elephant in Northern Thailand with Biosphere Expeditions, observing elephants and planting trees at Burm and Emily’s Elephant Sanctuary, or participating in the homestay program that Kindred Spirit Elephant Sanctuary provides. All these organisations exist for the positive future of the Asian elephant, and you can too.
The South East Asian region, еsресіаllу the countries of Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos – has bесоmе increasingly popular with travelers seeking adventure. But travelers to that region are often faced with a travel dilemma—which route to take.
If a traveler wants to experience each of the aforementioned countries for a few days at a time, they would need at least three months to make a journey. The suggested route below is made for those long-term travelers.
In addition to walking, other transportation options that are readily available include public buses, trains, and boats. These modes of transportation are often full of their own adventures because where else can you travel with a busload of chicken or box of frogs? Of course, a traveler can find other more comfortable travel options too.
Vendor on the floating market in Bangkok, Thailand.
Start in Bangkok
Many people thаt intend оn dоіng а circuit thоugh South East Asia will fly іntо Bangkok sіnсе іt іs а major hub. Bangkok іs аlsо rich wіth markets, temples, аnd plenty оf fabulous food. Аrоund Bangkok, thеrе аrе sеvеrаl options fоr sоmе side trips whісh allow уоu tо gеt уоur feet wet. Kanchanaburi іs а fеw hours аwау аnd іs thе location оf thе infamous bridge оvеr thе River Kwai аnd thе Death Railway, thе Erewan National Park, аnd thе Three Pagodas Pass nеаr thе Myanmar border. Іf уоu аrе nоt going tо thе southern islands, but wouldn’t mind checking оut thе beach scene, уоu соuld аlsо tаkе а fеw days аnd visit Ko Samet оr Ko Chang (lеss expensive) tо gеt а taste оf island life. Воth аrе оnlу а fеw hours frоm Bangkok bу bus.
Chiang Mai Temple
Once you’ve explored Bangkok you can make уоur wау north tо Chiang Mai. Travel by train is a favorite and you can travel overnight or by day in order to see the beautiful countryside.
Chiang Mai іs a bit lеss hectic thаn Bangkok and it offers some beautiful scenery. There’s also a great cooking school! Chiang Mai offers a convenient way to explore some of Thailand’s smaller towns. The public bus travels in a loop to the wonderful village Pai whісh іs set іn misty valleys thаt аrе laden wіth lush rice paddies. From there you can continue by bus or a boat to Mae Hong Son and then return back to Chiang Mai by bus.
Into Laos
Frоm Chiang Mai, continue уоur journey north tо Chiang Rai аnd then tо Chiang Khong. This is where you’ll cross thе Mekong River by boat аnd enter your second country, Laos, оn thе opposite bank аt Huay Xai. You can continue оn tо Luang Prabang bу slow boat оr fast boat (lаttеr nоt recommended, unlеss уоu have а crash helmet), making аn optional overnight stay іn thе rustic village оf Pacbeng.
After spending а fеw days іn Luang Prabang уоu соuld dо а side trip to the small northern villages оf Laos fоr а fеw days, оr journey south tо thе chilled-out town оf Vang Vieng bу bus оr air. Note: Тhе road tо Vang Vieng іs sоmеtіmеs thе target оf bandits, sо bе surе tо monitor recent news in the region. Air travel is also available but there’s been questions raised about the air safety records.
Vang Vieng offers kayaking, biking аnd caving opportunities, sо you’ll wаnt tо plan fоr а fеw days thеrе bеfоrе moving оn tо thе capital city оf Vientiane. Іt doesn’t sееm tоо exciting fоr а capital city, sо it isn’t recommended that you spend tоо muсh time thеrе, оthеr thаn tо visit thе strange, but interesting Buddha Park.
Explore Vietnam
Take thе bus frоm Vientiane tо Hanoi vіа thе mountains аnd thе Cau Treo border crossing іntо Vietnam. Hanoi іs а vеrу interesting place wіth lots tо dо аnd аlsо offers а fеw interesting side trips: Sapa іs а beautiful village set іn thе mountains, аnd Halong Bay, а UNESCO Wоrld Heritage site, offers amazing views оf thousands оf mountainous karsts jutting uр frоm thе ocean waters.
Halong Bay, Vietnam
In Hanoi, you can buy аn “Open Tour” bus ticket that will take you south tо Ho Chi Minh (Saigon). The route has regular stops along the way but you can purchase an add-on for $2 that will allow you to hop on-hop off. Two towns worth stopping in are Ninh Binh аnd Dalat. In fact, Ninh Binh is a gateway to thе Cuc Phuong National Park.
From Ninh Binh you can move tо Hue fоr а day оr twо and then on to Hoi Аn tо seeing thе amazing tailors аnd beaches. If you’re seeking a party then move to the beach town of Nha Trang for a day before stopping in the mountain town of Dalat. Frоm Dalat, уоu саn dо аnоthеr add-on stор іn Mui Ne for some quiet relaxation or a shop in the local market.
Once you leave Dalat or Mui Ne you can make your way to Ho Chi Minh. There are a diverse offering of activities and you can even get а massage аt thе Vietnamese Traditional Medicine Institute fоr а few dollars.
Crossing into Cambodia
From Ho Chi Minh you’ll be able to cross іntо Cambodia а couple of different ways. Т hе fіrst іs а bus ride thrоugh sоmе beautiful country tо Phnom Penh, аnd thе second іs а boat tour thrоugh thе Mekong Delta whісh аlsо lands уоu іn Phnom Penh. Note: thе roads іn Cambodia аrе dirty, bumpy аnd vеrу slow going, but thе scenery іs incredible іf уоur backside саn tаkе it.
Phnom Penh gеts mixed reviews but dоеs hаvе а couple оf must visits bеfоrе уоu continue: thе Killing Fields аnd S-21. Whеn уоu dо move оn, уоu аgаіn hаvе thе choice оf bus оr boat uр tо Siem Riep to enjoy Angkor Wat – the largest religious monument in the world. The bus is preferred bесаusе оf thе fantastic views аnd thе insight іntо thе lives оf thе country folk.
Angkor Wat
Return to Bangkok
After spending time enjoying thе awesome ruins оf Angkor Wat, you can fly or board a bus back to your staring point of Bangkok. If you take the bus you’ll be able to see Poipet. You’ll notice a dramatic change as you cross frоm thе poverty оf Cambodia іntо developing Thailand.
Gathering Darjeeling tea leaves. Photo: David Edwards
India is one of the most culturally and geographically diverse nations in the world. To cover each region would require a 100 page book so we’ll just offer a snapshot into the country with special attention for one particular region.
The most attractive places one should visit in India to get a taste of the cultural diverseness and the true beauty of the nation include Agra, Udaipur, Goa, Kashmir, Kanyakumari, Kerala, Old Delhi, Darjeeling, Mysore and Ajanta Ellora. Each of these places has their own beauty, transforming it into the most heavenly place on earth. But Darjeeling, located in West Bengal, is a very special area.
Darjeeling is is known as ‘the queen of hills’ for its incredible beauty and wonderful tea. The region offers a diverse culture because of its Tibetans, Nepalese, and Bengalis citizens. Thus, it is not just the most attractive hilly region of the nation, but also an ethno-linguistically diverse place.
Batasia Loop. Photo: Abhishek Kumar
Some of the must-visit places of Darjeeling include the Tiger Hill, Rock Garden, Batasia Loop, Bengal Natural and History Museum. There are also some very artistically enhanced monasteries, churches as well as temples. Additionally, the eye catching site of the beautiful Kanchenjunga range, will leave you mesmerised. The gorgeous sun rise enlightens the whole mountain range, imparting the most attractive site, which one must experience at least once in their life time. Another speciality of this region is, ‘Darjeeling Tea’––the best quality tea, which is produced in abundance.
Although somewhat remote, Darjeeling offers numerous types of accommodations for every visitor. Some very well known luxurious hotels where you can plan your stay are, Windamere, Cedar-Inn, Viceroy, Fortune Nirvana.
It is fascinating to travel to Hong Kong. The city feels reborn, new, exciting, intriguing and is spectacular. Hong Kong and I have this love/hate relationship. You know that feeling when something makes you uncomfortable but yet you cannot stay away? That is the relationship I have with Hong Kong.
After visiting many countries in Asia, I have always overlooked Hong Kong even while growing up in China. Not intentionally but just because it was not ever on any of my travel itineraries. One day my friend decided to show me her country of origin and before I knew it we were flying to Hong Kong. I won’t forget my first impression when I saw the huge glass buildings and lights and I remembered asking myself if I had accidentally landed in the wrong country because I was surprised how modern the city was and I could not wait to see the rest. After we landed, we checked into our apartment and decided to go to bed and start our adventure the next morning. I remember how excited I was and ready to discover Hong Kong the next morning and since we were staying in Tai Po that afforded me an ideal opportunity to mingle with the locals and experience the culture first hand. At least I thought so……….
I won’t forget my first morning when we left our apartment and we showed our faces in the streets. The expression on the locals’ faces was priceless. The entire street was looking at us like we were aliens, seriously! Then my friend said “I’m guessing here that I’m not the center of attention since I’ve come here every year and have never been looked at this way. So I guess they are curious about you.” I remembered saying “Whatever” and just kept walking. But she was right, the attention was directed at me and this was confirmed when, at the market, I noticed people were staring at me, whispering and actually trying to touch me. My first day was overwhelming and almost scary but I survived. Going to bed I remembered hoping to have a better day since the news of my presence had been spread around the community and would probably be ‘old news’ by the morning.
However, that was definitely not the case. The next morning greeted me with the same ‘welcome’ of stares and whispers; especially when I entered the metro station to travel to Kowloon. Travelers who have been to Hong Kong know how busy the metro station can be so imagine how I felt with the countless stares I encountered. I felt odd and to top everything off, the compartments in the metro in Hong Kong are open space with seats left and right facing each other, the middle is open and so I was in the clear view of everyone. No one knew how to react to someone with my skin color and I encountered the same reaction wherever I went—the local market, the metro, the shopping mall, a temple.
I spent a month in Hong Kong and the reactions to me never changed. I can’t say that I became accustomed to the constant stares, touches or requests by locals to take a photograph with me, but I did begin to see the interactions as my personal entertainment. I began to wonder how many people had ever been around a black person. I was the mysterious black girl and people were curious. Although the experience made me uncomfortable, I began greeting everyone that looked at me with a smile and welcomed their curious approaches.
As you can read, my first experience in Hong Kong was not quite positive but the city had something that intrigued me and showed me the innocence of the locals. I saw something good in the people and I’m glad I decided to visit the city again. My second time was the best, the third time was spectacular and the fourth was just AMAZING. I seriously fell in love with the city after my fourth try. I guess it just grew on me. I loved the underground club scenes, the food, shopping, islands and interactions with the locals. Somehow, I learned to love Hong Kong as a girl learns to love a bad boy.
One of the most important and inciting tourist destinations of Southeast Asia lies about 150 kilometers south of the Malaysian capital of Kuala Lumpur. The historical city of Malacca or Melaka, as it is known locally, represents a magical and charming destination, with a cultural heritage that goes back for more than half a millennia. Once the capital of a powerful empire, this rather small city boasts impressive sights and a diversity that is hard to find anywhere else. The historical centre of Malacca has been declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site and there are plenty of interesting things to discover in this charming city.
Malacca Straits Mosque. Photo: Sham Hardy
According to local legends of the beginning of Malacca, it was founded by a Hindu price named Parameswara, who was resting under a Melaka tree and witnessed something that made him decide to build the kingdom. One of his hunting dogs was pushed into the river by a mouse deer that it was chasing and the prince saw this as a sign that the weak can also overpower the strong. The location of Malacca was always one of its strong assets, becoming a powerful port along the years. This also attracted the attention of European naval powers and Malacca was either conquered or attacked by the Portuguese, the Dutch, the French or the British.
From its rich and boasting past, the city now offers an incredibly diverse cultural heritage, with a delightful mix of traditional Malay and Chinese, as well as Portuguese, Dutch or British influences. A visit to this wonderful and exotic treasure is worth everything. There are an impressive amount of things to see and do in Malacca, starting with the historical center, packing a great number of landmarks, including the traditional old houses, the European style palaces and buildings, as well as the old Chinese shops. Malacca is also a great place for cultural discovery, featuring a long list of long list of festivals and events that provide a deeper insight into the Malaysian and colonial descent.
Among the most important landmarks of Malacca, the list of interesting visits includes the Baba and Nyonya Peranakan Museum, the Sultanate Palace, the Malaysian Navy Museum, the Christ Church, the Chong Hoon Teng Temple, Masjid Kampung Hulu, A Formosa old Portuguese port, King’s Well, the Portuguese settlement, Bukit China, Poh San Teng Temple, Melaka Zoo, Geok Hu Keng Temple, Malay and Islamic World Museum, Dutch Square, Stadhuys and many others. Apart from these, the actual charm of the traditional city with the Jonker, Heeren and other pleasant streets, as well as the surrounding jungle forest or the Melaka River, are extremely inviting.
As for the tourist services of Malacca, there are plenty of hotels, from the budget choices to several luxury destinations. As for other countries in Southeast Asia, the conditions and features of low-cost hotels can prove to be questionable, but there are also perfect options. If there is one thing that tourists visiting Malacca have to try is the traditional Malay food and there are a lot of culinary delights and restaurants where to find them.
One of the most beautiful countries on the planet is Nepal.
With exquisite landscapes, wondrous flora and fauna, and picturesque backdrops that make any photo look amazing, many travel there annually to experience it firsthand.
In recent years, Nepal’s river tourism has seen considerable growth, especially as it is one of the best ways to observe and learn about local life and culture. With a number of amazing rivers to choose from, whitewater rafting has taken the number three spot for sports that tourists want to try while there.
Mother Nature has been kind to Nepal, and this extends to their mountain peaks which are some of the highest in the world, and the climate which is influenced in part by monsoons. At certain times of year the rivers can be a greater challenge to take on and those aiming for this kind of adventurous vacation, should do so from September to December, and from March to early-June.
What’s great about many of these water-based activities, is that often they’re not only about watersports. Nepal’s largest and longest river is the Karnali River, with some rapids ranked at class 4 and 5. This can be quite a challenge for first-timers, but veteran whitewater enthusiasts should get a real kick out of navigating the currents. The river flows through a dense forest that’s near to Bardia National Park. Along with the nearby Banke National Park, the protected area is representative of the Tiger Conservation Unit. Other animals found there are one-horned rhinos, wild boars, and Asiatic elephants.
For those who want to trek as much as raft, then the Arun River is great for this. For three days travelers trek through the Arun valley’s remote villages, and for another six, raft their way down the river. Shorter trips can be had on the class 2 or 3 ranked Seti River, which is also great for family trips, and novice rafters and kayakers.
There are approximately 61 companies that offer river activities, and if rafting isn’t your bag, catamarans and kayaks are also exciting options. Guides and providers are trained professionals and will be with you every step of the way on your incredible Nepalese river journey.
The idea of a floating market may seem strange to Westerners, but is an Asian wonder that you won’t want to miss.
Waterways are already a major part of Asian infrastructure and floating markets are considered rather prestigious, featuring merchants that hail from far and wide hawking their wares. These markets utilize intricate canal systems and often go unnoticed by travelers who miss the early opening hours of many. You’ll want to get up at least once in your travels though, as you’re not likely to witness anything like it anywhere else.
If you travel to Thailand, you’ll kick yourself if you don’t get to see Ratchaburi’s Damnoen Saduak Floating Market. While the canals were constructed in 1866, the market was established much later in 1967 and is one of Asia’s most famous. Hundreds of boats laden with spices, meat, fish, vegetables, and much more, line the canals in a spectacular explosion of color and Asian culture.
Over in Indonesia, be sure to be up at 5 am if you want to see the ins-and-outs of a day at the Banjarmasin Floating Market. With close times as early as midday for some markets, the early wake-up call isn’t just for the sights and sounds, but to make any purchases you may want to in order to really get caught up in the floating market feel.
Never fear if your travels don’t take you to these two countries, as markets like this are found all over Asia. The Cai Rang Floating Market in Vietnam is the Mekong Delta’s largest market, and is located just three miles from Can Tho City. It’s another early start with a midday close, but another highlight is the chance to see a breathtaking sunrise over the Delta.
Some floating markets are setup a little differently like Hong Kong’s Aberdeen Floating Village. Six thousand Tanka people live and work on approximately six hundred boats, and have done so for centuries. They are known for their fishing expertise and for an amazing fish dinner, check out their floating fish restaurants.
Floating markets, an Asian experience that will knock your socks off!
“Under the sea” are three words that were made even more famous by a singing Jamaican crab.
Disney’s “The Little Mermaid” aside, this is one of the tunes that will probably come to you when you travel to Raja Ampat. With numerous dive sites, underwater terrain that has not yet been fully explored, and an incredible sense of eco-diversity, Raja Ampat is a magical place.
Divers hit the jackpot when they go to Raja Ampat. Located at the tip of the Bird’s Head Peninsula, New Guinea, it comprises of 1,500 islands and islets, cays and shoals, which surround four of the largest islands—Misool, Salawati, Batanta, and Waigeo. This makes the name Raja Ampat even cooler, as it means “the Four Kings” which refer to the big islands.
Annually approximately 8,000 divers, photographers, scientists, and excited tourists make the trip there, enthralled by the natural phenomenon that makes it unlike any other destination offering similar experiences. Smack dab in a coral triangle, this is a place that nature blessed, and is the most bio-diverse marine region in the world.
While you’re getting diving gear ready to go, there’s so much more to learn about this incredible destination. Hundreds of coral and fish species, including dozens that are endemic, make this bio-jackpot home. It is a marine paradise in its truest form, with flora and fauna that leaves even the most experienced divers in awe.
Those that want to fill up their days with other activities, have a range of water-based options to choose from too. Kayaking, snorkeling, and more are available for tourists. With beaches that are not only clean but empty most of the time, it’s like having your personal marine getaway in a beautiful location.
While this is great for those who don’t like crowds, for Raja Ampat’s citizens it’s not so heartening. Easily accessible by plane from Bali or Jakarta, tourists still haven’t been taking advantage. The local community does not see much profit from fishing, timber, or minerals and a thriving marine tourism product could turn that around completely.
In the travel world, news spreads fast, so there’s no doubt that eventually The Four Kings—Raja Ampat, will see an influx of visitors who can’t wait to embrace it.
Ecotourism has become a buzzword that’s here to stay and Tokyo’s ensuring they aren’t left behind.
Yoyogi Village is an eco-friendly park that’s making waves on the ecotourism circuit. The brain-child of music producer Takeshi Kobayashi, Yoyogi Village is any eco-traveler’s dream. Kobayashi’s innovative design leaves something for everyone, with two zones that cover every eco-fan’s needs and desires.
Photo: Mr. Hayata
Yoyogi literally means “generations of trees” and Kobayashi wanted to build a place in the heart of the city that would not only allow individuals to slow down from the hustle and bustle, but that inspired visitors to be more mindful of the environment. From lighting to landscaping, Kobayashi and his team make every little detail stand out with carefully chosen flora from a wide range of species.
This dedication to design excellence makes it a necessity to see Yoyogi Village by both day and night, just so you witness the incredible differences for yourself. During the day it is a bright haven, with lush greenery at every turn, while at night, walkways become another world, and scattered “stars” trickle down from within buildings.
As for the diverting activity zones, for the sweet sounds and thumping beats of Kobayashi’s music bar, head on over to The Village Zone to get the party started. Later, relax in the holistic mind and body center—a great way to unwind after a long day of being kind to the environment. When you’re rested, find a bite to eat at one of the upscale eateries, where delicious—organic of course—morsels grace the palate. If you can’t decide on a place to eat, try Italian restaurant Code Kurkku, as already it’s making a good name for itself.
If you’d rather steer clear of the music scene, try The Container Zone instead, where a shop-till-you-drop experience awaits. Here book shops, clothing stores, an art gallery, and travel agent are just a few steps away.
This balance between ecology and fun, with all activity and buildings structured around a central landscaped garden, makes Yoyogi a prime eco-tourism destination. Don’t miss out, visit Yoyogi Village for a quality eco-tourism experience.
The world is truly a magical and infinite place, with no human being able to discover all its wonders during a lifetime. All we can do is try to see and do as much as we can with the time given to us. Among the places that people travel, some of them bear a greater significance than other, being more than just a regular tourist destination. These places also hold deeply spiritual significance, offering unique experiences that are both unforgettable and insightful. One of these places is the capital of Tibet, the autonomous region in southern China. Although one of the most difficult places to reach for tourists, especially with all the political troubles in the area, this is city is truly amazing, offering much more than your usual travel experience.
The Potala Palace in Lhasa.
Located at an altitude of almost 3,500 meters, tourists will surely struggle to deal with this characteristic, but the journey is more than worth the effort. The city has a history that spans a millennia, much of this time being the center of the Tibetan religion, with its most prominent figure being the Dalai Lama. The roots of the city come from the 7th century, when Songtsan Gampo became the leader of the Tibetan Empire, moving its capital to what is today Lhasa. The first important structure of the city was the Potala Palace on Mount Marpori. After being converted to Buddhism, the leaders of the Tibetan Empire built many more temples and palaces in their capital, making it one of the most magnificent cities of medieval Asia. Along the years, the site also became the most important for the Tibetan Buddhist religion, one of the most mystical aspects of Lhasa.
Today, the city of Lhasa is a perfect blend of modern and traditional, with both ancient temples and monasteries, as well as hotels, shops and restaurants. There are plenty of things to see in the city, the most important ones being the old palaces and temples. The Jokhang Temple was build in the 7th century and houses some of the most important and praised statues in all of Tibet. The Potala Palace is a sacred place for all Tibetans, being both the living and the resting place of Dalai Lama along the centuries. The palace also houses the most valuable and interesting artifacts of Tibet. The Norbulingka Summer Palace is a more recent addition to the city, from the 18th century, being the summer residence of the Dalai Lama. Other important attractions of Lhasa include the Drepung and Sera monasteries, the Tibet Museum and many others.
(Note: this piece does not explore or comment upon any political or ideological aspects of North Korea, nor does it pass any judgments or make critiques…there are many books and articles that do that…but rather this is merely an account of travel through a remarkable and little-known land as a guest of the state.)
It’s been almost 60 years since the end of the Korean War, and for most of that time Americans had been prohibited from visiting North Korea by its government. For many years I canvassed any contact I could ferret about securing visitation, but for naught. Until this year. I rendezvous with 23 friends in Beijing, and the first indication that we are entering a Twilight Zone is when a plastic bag is circulated at the airport before boarding the Air Koryo flight…in it we deposit our cell phones, and any books about our destination, as they are not allowed in the DPRK. We are, however, permitted to bring cameras (with lenses less than 200 mms), laptops, Kindles and iPads, as long as they don’t have activated GPS. There is, of course, no public internet access in-country.
North Korea’s Arch of Triumph is larger than the one in Paris. Photo: Stephan X (cc)
On board the Russian-built Tupolev Tu-204 instead of Muzak we are soothed by the national anthem, the newspaper distributed is the Pyongyang Times (in English), and on the video monitors are dramatic recreations of World War II, as well as a tourist video that evokes Disney documentaries from the 1950s. Immigration and customs are easy, faster than most first-world airports, and they do not stamp our passports, so you just have to take my word that we were there. We’re greeted by guides Mr. Lee and Miss Lee (no relation), who usher us onto a Chinese made luxury bus called King Long, where we roll down spotless extra-wide streets by willow trees and tall apartment buildings, past heroic posters and photos of Kim Il-sung, the country’s founding leader, and his son Kim Jong-il, who died in December 2011, leaving his third son, 29-year-old Kim Jong-un in charge. We drive through the Arch of Triumph (larger than the Paris version), and into downtown Pyongyang, the capital. Along the way Mr. Lee, shares, in enunciation occasionally untidy, some information…the country has 24 million people; 3 million in the capital. It is 80% covered by mountains. From 1905-1945 it was brutally occupied by the Japanese. The Korean War (known as the Fatherland Liberation War by the DPRK) lasted from 1950-53, and during that time there were 400,000 people in Pyongyang, and the Americans dropped 400,000 bombs on the city. We cross a bridge to an island in the Taedong River, and pull up to the 47-story Yanggakdo International Hotel, with 1000 rooms, a revolving restaurant on top, a lobby bar with Taedonggang, a very good beer, and room television with five channels of North Korean programming, and one featuring the BBC.
As the day bleeds to night we head to the Rŭngrado May First Stadium, largest in the world by capacity. We park by a Niagara-sized dancing colored fountain to which Steve Wynn could only aspire, walk past a line of Mercedes, BMWs, and Hummers, up the steps to prime seats (where Madeleine Albright once sat) at the Arirang Mass Games. The Games (there is no competition, just spectacle) are a jaw-dropping 90-minute gymnastic extravaganza, with meticulously choreographed dancers, acrobats, trapeze artists, giant puppets, and huge mosaic pictures created by more than 30,000 sharply disciplined school children holding up colored cards, as though in bleachers at the world’s biggest football game. The London Guardian calls the Mass Games “the greatest, strangest, most awe-inspiring political spectacle on earth.” The Guinness Book says there is nothing like it on earth. One hundred thousand performers in every candy color of the spectrum cavort, whirl, leap and caper in perfectly choreographed unison. A thousand Cirque du Soleils. Ten thousand Busby Berkeleys. It all makes the opening ceremonies of the Beijing Olympics look like the opening of the London Olympics.
Mt. Paektu
Finally, we pour from the stadium, past the vendors selling posters, DVDs and memorabilia, exhausted and in overstimulated wonderment. Early the morning next we head back to the airport, during the world’s quietest rush hour. One estimate is there are fewer than 30,000 vehicles in the whole of the country. We pass seven cars, several hundred single-gear bicycles, and perhaps a thousand pedestrians walking the edges of the streets. There are no fat people in this parade…all look fit, clean and healthy. There is no commercial air service to where we are headed (and no Lonely Planet Guide), so we have chartered an Antonov 24, during which the hostess wants to practice her English with us. Good thing, too, as I notice the sign at the Emergency Exit: “In case of stepped out of cabin, attract handle.” Ninety minutes later we land at Samjiyon, near the “sacred mountain of the revolution,” Mt. Paektu. At 8898 feet, it is Korea’s highest peak, and legend has it is where Korea’s first founder, the mythical Tangun, is said to have descended 5,000 years ago. The drive from the airstrip to the base of the mountain is an ecologist’s dream, pre-industrial, rice fields cultivated by hand, lush, green landscapes, clear streams, and unlogged forests of white birches. As we rise in elevation, the trees shrink into the soil, until we are in a moonscape, the flanks of the stirring volcano, Paektu (white topped mountain). This is the sublime hill, the most celebrated in North Korea, and we chevron to the summit in our Chinese bus. From the caldera rim we can look down to a beautiful blue crater lake, and across the lip…to Manchuria. There we see Chinese tourists waving back at us. This is also the spot where Kim Il-sung (Dear Leader) and his son Kim Jong-il (Great Leader) stood, with backs to the caldera, looking commandingly at the camera, offering up enlightenment and guidance. The image is recreated in vivid posters all over the country, so it is a delight to be here, like visiting the setting of an epic film.
There is a gondola that carries visitors down to Lake Chonji, Heaven Lake, alongside a steep stairway. It’s 5 Euro each for the ride, but I’m tempted by the exercise, and 40 minutes later meet the group by the frigid water. When Kim Jong-il died, it is said the ice on the lake cracked “so loud, it seemed to shake the Heavens and the Earth.” We take some photos, walk the verge of the lake, and then ready for the gondola ride back the rim. But the cables aren’t moving. The power has gone off, and nothing moves, even us. The prospect of climbing up is too grim for many in our group, including one woman who has shrapnel in her leg from a recent visit to Syria. So, as tempers and temperatures rise, and I consider what it would take to carry someone on my back, the power lurches back on, and the gondolas open their doors for the ride to heaven. The afternoon presents a personal surprise…we drive to The Secret Camp, where Kim Jong-il, our guides tell us, was born in Japanese-occupied Korea on February 16, 1942. His birth was foretold by a swallow, and heralded by the appearance of a double rainbow across the sky over the mountain, and a new star in the heavens. The simple log cabin (with roebuck deer hooves as door handles) of this auspicious birth stands near a stream called Sobek, spilling from its eponymous mountain. It turns out Sobek means “small mountain” (compared to Paektu). Sobek is the name of the adventure travel company I founded quite a few years ago, but it was christened after the crocodile god of the Nile, not a waterway named for a mini-me mountain. Nonetheless, our hosts are excited with the coincidence; I am honored just the same. We take the night at the cavernous Baegaebong Hotel, which could be the set for The Shinning, though we are the only guests. Nearby are the wide and scenic Rimyongsu Falls, spouting gemlike from a basaltic cliff, and there is a ski slope next door. But this is fall, so the assumption is we are off season, or tourism hasn’t lived up to expectations yet. The next day we visit the Revolutionary Regional Museum, fronted by ectype Siberian tigers, which still roam these mountains, and are traditional symbols of a unified Korea. Inside, the displays celebrate the North Korean victories over Japan and America, including a video of such shown on Toshiba monitor using Windows XP.
Windows XP and Toshiba set at the Revolutionary Regional Museum, photo by Richard Bangs
Then off to the Samjiyon Grand Monument, featuring a giant bronze statue of a young, stiff-backed Kim Il-sung in military regimentals, flanked by squads of oversized soldiers, back-dropped by Samji Lake, dotted like snowflakes with egrets. Revolutionary music plays from discreetly placed speakers. I am urged to buy a bouquet of flowers to lay at the base, and then we all line up, sans hats, and make a respectful bow. Photos are allowed, but only of the entire statue from the front, not parts or backsides. After lunch (the food is always hearty, plentiful, and includes meat of some sort, always kimchi, soup, rice, potatoes and beer, but never dog, which is a summer dish), we make a 40-minute charter flight to the Orang airport, not far from the border with Russia, landing next to a line of MiG-21s.
From there we drive three hours to Mount Chilbo, “Seven Treasures,” a national park, and applicant for UNESCO World Heritage status. Along the way we pass tobacco and corn fields, cabbage patches, trips of goats, and lines of oxcarts carrying goods somewhere. We first stop beneath a 200-year-old chestnut tree at the Kaesimsa Buddhist temple (“America bombed the churches and Buddhist temples,” Mr. Lee tells us, “but they missed this one.”). It was built in 826, and serves today as a repository for important Buddhist sculptures, paintings, and scriptures. The monk has us gather in the temple, below images of flying apsaras, where he taps a gourd and chants. He says he prays for our good health and happiness, and that we will contribute to the peace of the world. Then he suggests we contribute to the donation jar. It’s a short hike to Inner Chilbo, an astonishing vista of wind and water sculpted turrets, buttes, mesas, masts, cathedrals and temples, a stunning combination of Yosemite, Bryce and Zion National Parks. Mr. Lee, in a North Face jacket and Prospect running shoes, plucks some pine mushrooms off the path, and shares them with the group, saying these are delicacies in Japan, sometimes selling for $100 a stem. After a few short hikes, we bus into a box canyon, and check into the closest thing North Korea has to an eco-lodge, the Outer Chilbo Hotel.
Sea of Chilbo. Photo: Uri Tours
The accommodations are spartan (plastic buckets filled with washing water outside the doors), but the setting–high cliffs on three sides, wooded grounds, a clear singing creek– is something apropos to an Aman Resort, and may yet someday be. The day next we hike to the Sungson Pavilion, a high platform that affords 360 degree views of Outer Chilbo, grand vistas of the serrated mountains and sheer cliffs that encase the park. And then we unwind the mountain, and trundle to the Sea of Chilbo, a last sigh of igneous rock that pours into the East Sea of Korea (Sea of Japan on most Western maps). The coastal village through which we pass is dripping with squid, hanging like ornaments form rooftops, clothes lines, and every exposed surface. The permeating parfum is eau de cephalopod. Past the electronic fences (to keep potential invaders out), on a wide beach, a long white table cloth is spread, and we settle down to a picnic feast of fresh calamari, crab, yellow corvina, anchovies, seaweed, and beer, just before the rain sets in.
The dirt road to Chongjin is lined with magnolias (in the north of North Korea we experience almost no pavement), and a richness of no billboards or advertising of any sort. We pass hundreds of soldiers, part of a million man army, in olive drab striding the highway, tractors that look like Mater from the Cars movies, and smoke-billowing trucks, which have furnaces on the flatbeds where wood is fed for fuel. It’s evening as we wheel into the steel and shipbuilding town, generously lit with streaks of neon (Hong Kong without the brands). We stop at the Fisherman’s Club, which is playing a video of launching rockets and enthusiastically clapping crowds as we order up Lithuanian vodka and something called “Eternal Youth Liquor, “which has a viper curled up inside the bottle, like a great tequila worm. We stagger into the Chongjin Hotel, past a pair of Kenwood speakers playing a stringed version of “Age of Aquarius,” stumble up the stairs beneath a poster of “The Immortal Flower, Kimjongilia,” a hybrid red begonia designed to bloom every year on Kim Jong-il’s birthday, and into rooms where the bathtubs are considerately pre-filled with water to use to flush the non-flushing Toto toilets. Motivational marshal music cracks the day. We can’t leave the hotel compound (some power-walk the driveway for exercise, looking like guests at the Hanoi Hilton), but several of us gather at the gate and watch the beginnings of the day. The street is being swept, folks are walking and biking to work in their shiny synthetic suits, children are being hustled to school, and a woman in a balcony across the way is videotaping us as we photograph her. North Korea’s got talent. The highlight of the day is a visit to a primary school, where a troupe of red lip-sticked, costumed children between ages 4 and 6 sing, dance and play instruments as though maestros. They play guitars, drums, a Casio organ, and a gayageum, the traditional Korean zither-like string instrument, with one outstanding student plucking as though Ravi Shankar.
By late afternoon we are back in Pyongyang, and on the way to the hotel pass the first billboard we’ve seen, featuring The Peace Car, a handsome SUV the result of a joint-venture between Pyonghwa Motors of Seoul, a company owned by the late Sun Myung Moon’s Unification Church, and a North Korean government-owned corporation that also works on nuclear procurement. Several of the slick vehicles are lined up in the hotel parking lot, alongside Mercedes, BMWs and the occasional Volga.
Statues of Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il. Photo: Mario Micklisch
The next day, after a breakfast of scrambled eggs, toast, potato chips and instant coffee, noshed to the tune of “Those Were the Days, My Friend,” (it is originally a Russian song, called “Dorogoi dlinnoyu”) we set out to tour Pyongyang, a city that could be called Edifice Rex, for its complex of outsized compensation monuments. We take the lift (5 Euros each) up the 560-foot tall Juche Tower, named for Kim Il-sung’s blended philosophy of self-reliance, nationalism, and Marxism-Leninism. We wander the base of a 98-foot-high statue of the holy trinity– a man with a hammer, one with a sickle, and one with a writing brush (a “working intellectual”). We parade through the city’s largest public space, Kim Il-sung Square, akin to Red Square or Tiananmen, featuring giant portraits of President Kim Il-sung, as well as Marx and Lenin. We bow again and place flowers at another giant bronze statue of the Great Leader, president for life even in death. We pay homage to the Tower to Eternal Life, with its stone inscription: “The Great Leader, Comrade Kim Il-sung, Will Always Be With Us.” We admire huge statues in front of the Art Museum of Kim Il-sung and Kim Jong-il blazing some battlefield on horseback, and two weddings taking place near the hooves. And we pass scores of impressive, oversized buildings, from the library to museums to the notorious 105-story, pyramid-shaped Ryugyong Hotel, the dominant skyline feature, unfinished more than 20 years after construction began (it seems, from some angles, to list a bit, like the Tower of Pisa).
The metro, deepest in the world, seems designed to withstand a nuclear attack. If it were much deeper it would come out in the South Atlantic Ocean near Argentina, its antipode. The stations are named after themes and characteristics from the revolution, and we take a five stop run from Glory Station (festooned with chandelier lights that look like celebratory fireworks) to Triumph Station, lined with socialist-realist mosaics and murals. And we finish the day with a step down to the Taedong River and onto the USS Pueblo, or as the North Korean’s say without variation, “the armed American spy ship, Pueblo.” It’s a rusty bucket at this point, 43 years after the incident, and the guides, in navy togs, show us the crypto room packed with teletypes and ancient communications gear, the .50-caliber machine gun on the bow, the bullet holes from the North Korean sub chaser, and the spot where a US sailor was hit and died. We watch a short video featuring Lyndon Johnson alternatively threatening and claiming the ship a fishing vessel (not true), and then his apology, which allowed the release of the 82 crew members exactly 11 months after they were captured.
The final day of the trip we head south, to the DMZ, the 2.5-mile-wide swath near the 38th parallel that separates North and South Korea, perhaps the tensest border in the world. The paved road is wide and flat, big enough to land an aircraft in an emergency. And scattered every few miles are ‘tank traps,” concrete pillars that can be pushed over to ensnare an armored vehicle heading north. We pass through several military checkpoints along the way, but never with incident. Once at the DMZ we are ushered into Panmunjom, the Joint Security Area where the armistice was signed July 27, 1953, ending a war in which almost 900,000 soldiers died (including 37,000 Americans)—and more than two million civilians were killed or wounded. “We were victorious,” the guide, who wears three stars on his shoulder, shares, and adds, “We have very powerful weapons. Though you in America are very far away, you are not safe…..but don’t be nervous.” Then he points out a display case with an ax and photos of an incident in 1976 when two American soldiers tried to cut down an obstructing tree on the wrong side of the line, and were dispatched by the North Koreans. We step single file through several gates, and our guide points out a flagpole 52 stories high, heaving a 600-pound red, white, and blue North Korean flag; beyond is the South Korean version, not nearly as high. Birds and clouds and cigarette smoke cross between the two, and little else. At the white dividing line, cutting through the center of three blue negotiation huts, we can look across the barbed wire to our doppelgangers, tourists snapping pictures of us snapping shots of them. We’re not allowed to shout, but I make a small wave, and my mirror image waves back.
On the way back we stop at the Royal Tomb of King Kongmin, a 14th-century mausoleum with twin burial mounds, looking like giant stone gumdrops, surrounded by statues of grinning animals from the Chinese zodiac. Inside are the remains of Kongmin, 31st king of the Koryo Dynasty (918-1392), and his wife, the Mongolian princess Queen Noguk. Miss Lee, exquisite in high heels and frilly blouse, points to a mountain across from the tomb, and says it is called “Oh My God.” She then tells the story about the place. When Kongmin’s wife died, he hired geomancers to find the perfect spot for her tomb. Upset when everyone failed, he ordered that the next to try would be given anything desired with success; with failure, he would be killed immediately. When one young geomancer told him to review a spot in the mountains, Kongmin told advisors that if he waved his handkerchief they should execute the geomancer. Kongmin climbed up to review the site. Upon reaching the top, exhausted and sweaty, he dabbed his brow with his handkerchief, while pronouncing the place perfect. When he found that the geomancer had been executed because of his mistaken handkerchief wave, he exclaimed “Oh, my God!”
Photo: Uri Tours
Before heading back to Pyongyang our guides take us shopping at a souvenir stop in Kaesong, North Korea’s southernmost city, and the ancient capital of Koryo, the first unified state on the Korean Peninsula. Outside we’re greeted by young women in bright traditional tent-shaped dresses. The glass door sports a “DHL Service Available” sign, and inside is a cornucopia of temptations, from statuary to stamps, oil paintings to jade to silks to pottery, to stacks of books by The Great Leader and Dear Leader, to ginseng to cold Coca Cola. I can’t resist a series of dinner placemats of North Koreans bayonetting Americans with the saying “Let’s kill the U.S. Imperialists.” Our guides throughout have been warm, welcoming, gracious, informative, funny and friendly. On the last night, sharing a beer at the lobby bar, when asked, they insist there is no prostitution in North Korea, no use of illegal drugs, no homosexuality, no homeless, no illiteracy, and no litter. Everything is clean. There is universal health care and education. It’s a perfect society. And it’s the same messaging I received when visiting the People’s Republic of China under Mao Tse-tung in 1976.