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ngày bình thường ordinary day

May 3, 2018 by Beth 1 Comment

Yay for travel posts to help us remember the details. Most days, though, we usually stick around Hanoi.

A typical day is not quite as exciting as a travel day. We take tiếng Việt lessons for 3 hours, twice a week at the college of Vietnam Language and Studies, a branch of the National University. This tonal language is difficult yet remarkably enjoyable to us. Beats sudoku for the brain any day.

I can procrastinate from studying in any language, in any country, at any age. (Yes, right now…)

 

Our view from the 4th floor classroom is the men’s dorm.

The hallway to our classroom.

Doug’s violin shop is 15 minutes by motorbike away from our apartment. He works everyday, if he can. His shop, aka small studio apartment, is in the same alley as our favorite grocery store, Naturally Vietnam, which sells responsibly produced food.

 

Happy worker. He posts occasionally on his Violinisto website.

 

We also read a lot. Most online news sites are available, although sometimes they get blocked. Like the BBC. When we’re not depressing ourselves with US and world politics, we each have our current favorite topics. I have been reading everything I can get my hands on about systemic racism. This book by Seattle author Ijeoma Oluo, So You Want to Talk About Race, is my current favorite. Here’s a comic review of it, too. Doug’s favorite is Jeriah Bowser’s Elements of Resistance. Just in case you wanted some reading ideas.

Recently we attended a mesmerizing show called Lang Toi – My Village at the historic Opera House. This acrobatic presentation of rural life using traditional music knocked our socks off. The short video link is worth watching.

 

Hanoi Opera House, built in 1910.

 

Sometimes my tutoring takes me to the edge of Hanoi. High rises are being constructed constantly. The haze is from the burn preparation of nearby rice fields.

 

All big buildings have underground parking garages that look something like this. This cost 3000 vnd to park. 13cents.

 

Most of our days include this late afternoon ritual of seeds and coffee. And sometimes an orange. Which is green.

 

Sitting on our balcony, looking west over hồ Trúc Bạch.

 

We will be on Lopez Island for the summer. Come visit and we promise to make one of our favorite meals, bun cha.

 

Posted in: day trip, Hanoi, music, school, Vietnam, violin Tagged: Ijeoma Oluo, Jeriah Bowser, Lang Toi, nâu dá, opera house, seeds, Vietnamese

…summertime and the livin’ is (was) easy…

October 13, 2016 by Beth 4 Comments

We are back in our lovely little apartment in Hanoi.

True Bach apartment

Autumn is racing in, dragging the temperatures down to 85-90 degrees F.  We’ve adjusted our days so that we rise early, return home by 1:00 pm, siesta (play music, study Vietnamese, obsess about climate change, try not to succumb to the US political mania), then back out after 6:00pm to scour the city for food and drink, soaking it all in as we go.

We want to share a little about our summer on Lopez Island.  This count-down is as close to an annual Christmas letter as we’ll ever get.

 

#5  Upon returning to the US, Beth visited Whistler Mountain in the Canadian Rockies for a week with Kathi.  This beautiful distraction was the ideal immersion back into western civilization.  Fresh air, blue skies and endless people-watching.  A remarkable contrast to Hanoi.

Whistler gondola

Whistler Rendezvous

Whistler Peak to Peak

 

#4  The future is bright in our single-wide because we

  • can now wash laundry  (dug a dry-well and carted up a billion rocks from the beach to fill it)
  • repaired the washing machine by taming the agitator dogs and motor coupling (thanks, youtube)
  • re-caulked, re-hinged, repaired, painted, planted and toiled
  • finally moved mini-moby (after 30+ years)

pull mini moby  passing  push it      mini moby

  • continued the repairs (thanks, Alex) after a march windstorm deposited a tree on Moby
  • now have free firewood (thanks, windstorm)

timberrr     tree

 

#3  We started building something.  It’s going to be a 16′ x 20′ shared studio.

Had gigantic stumps removed, hand-dug trenches for underground utility lines and holes for 12 pier blocks.  Materials arrived.  Hard to imagine this orderly load of lumber can become our shop.

img_6510              wood

 

Dug.  Swore.  Leveled.  Tamped.  Leveled.  Untamped.  Shoveled.  Leveled.

img_6554       img_6556 img_6570

 

Lured friends over to help when possible.  Labor day.  Heh heh.

floor   floor

 

Later there will be two windows in the east side and two windows in the west side.

img_6606

 

South facing front will also have two windows.  Scored two fire-proof dutch doors from a neighboring job site for free.

img_6619

 

It’s starting to look like a saloon.  Slanted shed roof.  Ideal for collecting water.

front rafters

 

Battened down for the winter, awaiting plywood sheathing and a new metal roof.

almost a shop

 

#2  Family and friends came to visit.

lopez-island-campfiretrio

grand

Doug Cary seestor-and-fam

We ate from the local bounty, and played music as often as possible.  Lopez has a lively music scene.

oyster dinner

come back crabby lady

img_6378     3 crabbies

 

#1  Annie, the reason we came back early.

She died August 8, the day before her 11th birthday.  She taught us a lot over the summer.  Slow down, take long walks, don’t hurry.  Do what you want.  Don’t do what you don’t want to do.  Listen to the birds.  Relax when the opportunity appears.  Play music.  Sing.  Stretch out on the couch.

annie couch

low tide annie

doug-annie

 

Thank you all so much for the visits and help over the summer.

thanks

Now think about a visit to Vietnam!

tile-and-door

Posted in: day trip, food, Hanoi, Lopez Island, music, Whistler Mountain Tagged: Annie, beach, campfire, cocktails, crab, crabby lady, firewood, foundation, oysters, skiing, trailer life, tree fall on trailer

what if the post is only a photo of something? (draft)

November 17, 2015 by Beth

testing…adding photo only.

beth studio recording

Recording backup vocals for Patricia Boiko’s latest film about Minority women dealing with Tribal and Religious law.

Pankisi Women’s Stories Project

Homepage and screening information: http://pankisistories.weebly.com/

Posted in: music Tagged: Pankisi Stories

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