Having covered some considerable distance in two days prior we set out today knowing we were going to be going a bit slower due to the roads.
Today was a day of intensity. We had some amazing highs and some almost disastrous lows.
We left our loverly village (I will post a map of our travels at some stage) and proceeded through some very dubious roads towards the valley we knew was coming. We had of course like every other time a mingled conspiracy of a theory about what we were getting ourselves into but like usual we had no idea.
Our valley ride today consisted of the most remote looking villages we’ve yet seen. Again the view were spectacular and the road snaked its way through the valley to create a riding paradise.
I nearly hit a chicken that ran towards me and fell against my front wheel and then Blake nearly hit another 10 minutes later. The road was hard, loose and rubbish.
We finally made it to a proper town and broke our fast on sweet bread rolls with hand cut cooked wedges and a bowl of what I believe was an attempt at beef stew. Wasn’t too bad not sure what meat we had though, we enjoy the mystery meat dishes best.
Sidenote: yesterday we drove past a stand selling cooked puppy. There were whole boiled puppy heads with chopped up boiled puppy appendages and coke bottles of puppy blood – it was very hard to witness.
We left the town and about 5 minutes out had the most tragic and difficult experience yet, a do I, don’t I tell – tale. I feel it needs to be told to explain that it’s not just your own life you gamble with when you adventure abroad.
As I was coming around a corner (sweeping to my right) with the road separated from the mountains on my left by a small drainage gully, I saw dangerous mud on the inside and had to take the corner wide to avoid being scrambled across the road. As I reached the apex of the turn I was dead in like with an infinity 4wd roaring towards me. I pulled in hard right and they slammed on the breaks and locked up. They swerved away from me, lost control and swerved back the other way and hit the drain side on, nearly rolled and slammed heavily into the gutter two wheels in and two wheels out.
I ripped Henry to a stop and ran back to the jeep, there were four men inside (none wearing seat belts) they were all out by the time I reached them and they were a little battered but otherwise ok. The jeep on the other hand had lost a back bumper and was firmly wedged and bottomed across the drain gully.
The driver was angry, the passengers were ok. No one made any issue with us, they didn’t yell at us, or gesture at us and seemed to be ok, we are of the opinion that they realised they were going way too fast for such a corner. The situation was all about timing and I feel damn lucky that I am writing this, if it had been 2-3 seconds later, I may not have been, but if it had been 3-5 either way, the incident would never have occurred, and such is the horrific truth of the situation on Vietnamese roads. There have been countless time over the past month where timing is all that has made the difference, and when I figure out how to upload my videos you will understand and think we are mad!
We checked with men and they smiled at us and could tell we were panicked and worried, we wanted to stay to help, to do something, but we had no choice, we had to abandon them there and leg it quickly.
Both of us have bikes that we own, but we don’t have Vietnamese driving licences and we have expired visas, a potential run in with the police had to be avoided at all costs, being foreigners we would have most likely been is some serious serious shit. No one called the police that we know of, but they could have arrived and we’d have been involved.
We rode on for about 40 minutes through valleys and mountains but for me it was all sullied. I found it very hard to reconcile leaving the scene even though my own safety was at risk.
The road got hard and eventually we had to pull over for repairs. My luggage rack had ripped itself to pieces and nearly thrown my bag and poor Pigly to the ground. A mechanic fixed me up with some rio bars and we were off again. We pulled over into the next town for some cafe, I shall explain cafe.
Sidenote: Cafe is hot Vietnamese coffee usually (when the waiter understands what garbled nonsense is being spoken to him/her) poured through a dripolater into a cup of condensed milk. Once this is complete you mix the two together and then pour into another cup filled with ice. It is a sweet bitter taste explosion that revs you up with sugar and caffeine.
We sat in our cafe drinking a milkshake version cafe (it was amazing) with two little girls imitating us and giggling at us. Which cheered us up. We left the cafe two cafés later and head onto the Ho Chi Minh Highway. A fantastic bit of road that cuts through the inside of the country and is less busy for some bizarre reason. We roared along this road dodging in and out until I spied a steeple piercing out above the tree line on our right. A great gothic looking church spire that looked from a distance ancient. We turned around and left the highway for back alley track and darted through a little town on a tiny road until we reached the church in all it’s glory.
We got off and walked around and found some kids playing with a soccer ball, it was game on!
I gestured for the ball and they reluctantly kicked it to me and I kicked it back.
Sidenote: To understand the reluctance, young kids in remote areas find westerners frightening, I don’t know why, but Blake and I have gigantic beards with Mohawks which I don’t suspect helps the situation. Adults will carry crying screaming children up to us so they are exposed but this process is quite dramatic and confronting as most times this happened the child will scream and scream and cry. Older children will still run away and find it scary to come close. The two girls I mentioned before were extremely brave but a barrier had to be broached before they would even come near us. There were other kids standing around watching these two girls and looking horrified that they were so close to us.
Back to the church.
The kids at first wouldn’t come near us. And some even ran away. We managed to get a kick to kick going before I setup a set of goals and assumed the goalie position. It took a lot of gesturing to make them understand the were kicking for goal and even more in patience for them to act on it. Once they felt comfortable we had a game and some fun going. At first only two kids would kick for goal and I would try to keep the bal out of the goals. As this went on a crowd quickly formed on both sides and continued to grow as we played. We soon had a whole village out watching and spectating. Some of the kids got braver and soon we had more goal kickers. But there were plenty of kids who just would have a bar of us and it took alot of pleading and gesturing to get more kids involved. Parents and adults watched and laughed and cheered from the sidelines and we played in the church courtyard. The kids got braver.
A couple of older kids had a few kicks before a seasoned veteran adult tried to show me his skill at kicking for goal. After a dozen attempts I swapped with him and after my few kicks we decided to call it and move on. Before we did I grabbed the iPad and played some of our videos of us at the beach in the ocean and riding and the kids nearly tore each other apart to get near us and lean on us to see the videos, clearly not so afraid anymore.
We left this tiny community as the sun went down behind the church to a thunder of goodbyes and waves as the kids and adults said goodbye, one elderly gentlemen came up to us and shook our hands before trundling off somewhere. Certainly a better end to the day.
We have made it to wherever we are and again tomorrow we set out for this fabled border crossing. Blake reckons we are still 250ks away and might make it there tomorrow evening if were lucky.