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Archive for the ‘travel’ Category

Yeasayer – Ambling Alp / Vice Guide to Liberia

January 25th, 2010 by flinz

Good morning Susie Soho! It’s monday (again) and the office for filing me thesis application is closed today. So I had to revert to post this little gem of a song, “Ambling Alp” by the Brooklyn based (yes, in Brooklyn nearly everybody is a 22 y/o American Apparel dressed musical innovator/designer/artist. everybody else provides the former with drugs.) Yeasayer together with its stunning video.


After this, if you want to spoil a perfectly fine start into your week with a severe case of global bad conscience, watch the newly released Vice Guide to Travel’s “Vice Guide to Liberia

Tags:

brooklyn, liberia, nyc, violence

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Oh it’s so cuuuute.

August 21st, 2009 by flinz

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Michael and I were exploring Spain in 2004 via Interrail, when we stopped for a timed picture of the two of us. We had our camera set up on some park bench and were getting ready to take the picture when this curious little ground squirrel appeared, became intrigued with the sound of the focusing camera and popped right into our shot! A once in a lifetime moment! We were laughing about this little guy for days!

Set us up teh squirrel you sick fucking internet.

Tags:

animals, internet, stupid

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…und dann nüscht wie raus zum Wannsee…

May 5th, 2009 by joda

Den vergangenen Sonntag verbrachten Nicki und ich am Wannsee.

Wir waren ziemlich beeindruckt, dass es in Berlin auch so aussehen kann:

oder so:

Wir sehen: Dieses Berlin hält jede Menge Überraschungen bereit. Es war auf jeden Fall ein sehr besinnlicher Sonntag. Mit viel Grün und ein wenig Ruhe. Ein wenig deshalb, weil es in der S-Bahn dann auf der Fahrt nach Hause eine tolle Schlägerei gab. Mit schreienden Frauen, weinenden Kindern und vielen bösen Schimpfwörtern. Aber das ist eine andere Geschichte…

Tags:

berlin, violence

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Equally goes it loose…

March 22nd, 2009 by flinz

Zur Hölle, es ist früh. 5:30 zum Flughafen, 7:50 nach Madrid, 15 Uhr in Marrakesch.

Let’s go.

Tags:

morocco

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Diese scheiss Natur… le lac Salanfe

September 28th, 2008 by flinz

Gallery zu diesem Post bei animalbeach: Diese scheiss Natur.. lac Salanfe

Wieder mal ein Wochenende gut rum, mit meiner ersten Wandertour über die Dauer eines Tages hinaus – nämlich 2 Tage lang. Dieses mal hats mich auf den Rat meiner Bekannten hier zum lac Salanfe verschlagen, ein wahnsinnig schön und wahnsinnig abgelegen.. äh.. gelegener Bergsee zusammen mit einer Übernachtungsmöglichkeit in der Auberge de Salanfe.

Nach der Ankunft teilt einem die Tourist Info erst mal mit, dass man 3 Stunden mehr als geplant aufsteigen darf, da der betreffende Lift seit letzter Woche nicht mehr fährt, und dass man doch schon viel zu spät sei und sich um himmelswillen beeilen soll. Was ich tat. Mit dem Resultat, dass ich nach einem Gewaltaufstieg schon um ca. 4 an der Auberge war – mit einer eher gemütlichen letzten Stunde Abstieg. Wir lernen: die denken man ist langsamer als man ist. Dennoch, die Umgebung ist unglaublich, Mont-Blanc immer im Augenwinkel, und der Aufstieg über Col de las Golettas/la Golette auch eine nicht unaufregende Wahl = sausteil.

In der Auberge versuchte ich dann auf Hinweis einer netten 60jährigen, die auch alleine unterwegs (ausser son chien) viel starken Rotwein zum schnellen “se endormir” zu konsumieren – leider ohne Erfolg. War meine erste alpine Übernachtungserfahrung, und so hatte ich weder einen Schlafsack noch Ohrenstöpsel mit, und durfte ergo unter einer kratzigen Wolldecke die ganze Nacht kein Auge zutun, da sich rechts wie links neben mir erfahrene Schnarcher postiert hatten, mir die Ruhe zu stehlen.

Um 7.30 des nächsten Morgens gings über die Col de Jorat nach Mex wieder runter, von Mex nach Verossaz und von da nach St. Maurice (ja, fast ein dicker Skiort, aber nur fast). Ankunft im Tal ca. 4 Uhr mit kleinem Abstecher in die Grotte aux fées, einem kleinen Tunnel-Höhlensystem das am Ende sogar nen Indoor-Wasserfall bietet.

Was man nicht erwartet ist eine Weide voller Lamas.

Unterwegs rastete ich in Mex in der Auberge de l’Armailli, die mir den kulinarischen Höhepunkt meines bisherigen Schweiz-Aufenthaltes beschert hat. Meine Damen und Herren, ich präsentiere Eggs, Bacon and Hashbrowns 2.0, das perfekte Katerfrühstück und wahrscheinlich das 4fache des empfohlenen Tagesbedarfs an Kalorien: Röschti Valiser Art. Jegliche Beschreibung wird dem ganzen nicht gerecht, aber: Kartoffeln, viel viel Käse, Speck, ein Spiegelei, Gurken, Minizwiebeln – und das in einer größe.. Incroyable!

Zum Abschluss noch ein kurzer Einblick in meine derzeitige Tätigkeit unter der Woche:

It’s bursting AND adapting! Atemberaubende Neuronenschönheit die sich wahrscheinlich auch grad in deinem Gehirn abspielt.

Abschliessend noch zur Erklärung:

Tags:

lausanne

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(little) Lausanne Séjour Dispenser

August 26th, 2008 by flinz

So as you might have noticed, I’m not around in Munich anymore. Made my way down to Lausanne, moved into my apartment, finally even got internet at home (which proved harder than it seemed to me in the beginning) and I am now in my second week of the Erasmus french language-course.
Still it is quite crazy to suddenly find yourself in such a situation, so many new things to discover, so many things I really am missing like hell. But life goes on in a new and fresh direction and that’s a good feeling.

Managed to make my way up a glacier last weekend (Les Diablerets, near Aigle) with Davyd, Mikel, Amparo and Irati (from Portugal and 3 x Spain resp.) and took some pics for you to enjoy, which are now at the gallery at animalbeach.net, so go check em out.

So now, 1,5 weeks to go in the language course, and then its back home for a week – wohoo!
Take care everybody, and drop me a line if you get to it!

Tags:

lausanne

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Do I love or hate Phnom Penh?

July 28th, 2008 by naabster

Hai guys,

After Siem Reap, I went to Phnom Penh. I heard much about this city and was really eager to see it. After spending a few days here, I am not sure if I love ( + ) or if I hate ( – ) this city.

( – ) TukTuk Drivers: hundreds, no thousands, the most annoying ones I ever met.

( + ) The guy from my guesthouse. He just opend a few months ago and is currently building his restaurant. He was a blast. Took us (3 US guys and me) around in his car, to karaoke and beer, cooked an ate dinner with us… Props, Ruti!

( – ) Hookers. At least as many as TukTuk Drivers. And in low season not enough (male) tourists around.

( — ) Western expats. Mostly in close connection to the hookers. It is just disgusting.

( + ) Nightlife (except hookers). Great bars, clubs and restaurants.

( + ) History and Culture. With the Killing Fields and the former S-21 Prison (now a genocide museum) Phnom Penh is a must, if you want to know more about the Khmer Rouge and their brutality. The S-21 Prison is comparable to a visit to the Nazi Concentration Camps Dachau or Auschwitz. It is really a sad and disturbing place. A place, where a primary school was turned into a prison, where the inmates were tortured and raped before they were driven to the nearby Killing Fields and beaten to death to safe ammunition..

( + ) The city itself. Not as smelly and dirty as expected, great french houses in some parts, little alleys, wooden houses on the lake, lots of construction going on.

( – ) Various tourist attractions like Shooting a M-60 machine gun. I have to admit that I also went to one of those shooting ranges. I didnt shoot, but the guys I chartered the TukTuk that day wanted to.. You can pick a weapon (submachine guns up to an M60) and shout some rounds. I never heared gunfire before. It is really really loud. You can even pick a chicken from a cage and shoot that. I also heard that you can shoot a cow with a rocket launcher for a 1000 bucks. And I believe it.

Well, I could go on… in the end I was happy, in a way, to get out. And still there were some great moments.

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Right now, I am back in Thailand. I flew from Phnom Penh to Bangkok, took a bus to Chiang Mai and continued directly to Pai… More about that soon!

xoxo,
leMikeh

Tags:

asia, cambodia

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Two words about Siem Reap

July 28th, 2008 by naabster

Ok, there are the temples of course. But what else is there in Siem Reap?

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Well, it is mainly the temples, to be honest. The city of Siem Reap is very touristy and I wouldnt say it is a very cambodian town. Lots of hotels, guesthouses, (western) restaurants and bars. But I spend a day walking and driving through this small town and I there are some places here that are really worth a visit: the market, the “ghettos” around the river, the Wats with their attached schools, the Artisans Workshop and side-alleys..

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xoxo,
MikeTheReaper

Tags:

asia, cambodia

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Cambodia – more than just Angkor Wat

July 28th, 2008 by naabster

Hey folks.

Its been a long time, I sat down and wrote a few lines.. and much has happend for sure!
The ruins of Angkor Wat are really a must see if you are in this area, but Cambodia is much more.

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I was at the ruins for four days. two sunrises and two sunsets – really stunning, special moments. I was driving trough the temple area every day, passing rice paddies and people working there.. So I developed more interest for the daily life of the poor, common people in the villages of Cambodia.

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There is a place in Siem Reap which offers responsible tourism: their guided tours help Cambodian people directly. Their culture and way of life is not exploited for money like it is happening with many trekking tours to hill tribes in nothern Thailand. The money earned with these tours helps building wells, bying food and securing education. After seeing most of my dollars I spent in Cambodia wandering in the pockets of some rich westerner, I decided to go on one of these tours – despite the fact that I normally dont like guided, pre-arranged tourist tours.

I did a tour where we (2 girls from London and me) lived for a day with a local family and helped them do their daily work. I must say, that was really an experience.
We had a really good Khmer guide who told us a lot of stuff about life in the villages in Cambodia: hard work, strict social and family rules, poverty and hunger, the constant threat of land mines in remoter areas..

The family we worked with on this day (a women and her four childs, the father is a construction worker and gone all day) was building a little kitchen hut besides their one-room-living hut. The framework already stood, so we helped weaving the banana-leaf roof. At first we didnt really well, I think. But nevertheless we were the great attraction for the kids around. They couldnt stop laughing at us – we who are to stupid to even make some simple banana leaf roofs :)

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After a couple of hours of “hard” work (I think if we were on a rice field this day, it would have been much worse), we began to prepare lunch. We bought the food from this family: rice, a chicken, vegetables and started to cook under the instructions of our guide. The chicken had to be killed and chopped into pices for the chicken soup, vegetables had be cut.. in the meantime the kids were sent out to collect a handfull of red ants. We cooked a Khmer delicacy this day: fermented fish with chillies and red ants.you just chopp everything up really small – I did the ants and felt like a mass-murderer :) – put it in a banana leaf and over the fire for some time..

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The best thing about this cooking experience: we bought the food of the family and cooked it for them. Of course we tried a little bit ourself, but it was way more rewarding to see the family sitting in silent and enjoying a propper meal. The ants were pretty tasty by the way. Sour and salty. We had some prepared sandwiches andfruits and brownies, but none of us eat much, instead we gave it to the kids, too.

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After lunch we spent some time sitting in the hut and our guide told us a bit more about Cambodia and its recent history. Of course I read about the Pol Pot regime and the brutality of the Khmer Rouge, but hearing it first hand from a person being involved in this shit is something different. His father was killed, bludgeoned to death with a stick when he was four, but even after the brutality of the 3 years, 8 month and 21 days, the Khmer Rouge ruled Cambodia and killed nearly 2 million of their own people, there was no end. Civil war continued until 1993, since then corruption has replaced the killing. And in the west, nobody cares. Cambodia is just another poor country, no oil, no valuable resources..

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All in all, I was really glad I did this day. And I think that everybody visiting Cambodia should take the time to reflect on the recent history and not only go there because of the ancient ruins of Angkor Wat, the booze (and sadly very often the women, too).

more pics here.

xoxo,
MikeFarmer

Tags:

asia, cambodia, food, poverty

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Cambodia: incredible Angkor Wat

July 15th, 2008 by naabster

Wow. Just wow!

I left Koh Tao because I had some trouble with my ears and couldnt dive for a few days.. Got back to Bangkok and then by Bus to the border to Cambodia, crossed it by foot (what a chaos) and by taxi to Siem Reap – Angkor Wat.
Cambodia is really nice so far. Well, everybody wants money from you and/or tries to scam you, even the smallest kids, but you get used to it.

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Angkor Wat is probably with Machu Picchu the greatest man-made thing I’ve ever seen. It is just incredible.

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I already spent two days there, including a sunset and a sunrise today – and took already about 400 pics.. I picked just a few to show you here..

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It is really hot. I mean really. And soo humid. During the day you are sweating every single minute. But it is worth the effort. I also gave up my plan to get a bike and cycle around. Instead I have my own TukTuk driver who drives me everywhere I want the whole day. And only for 15$ a day. Cambodia is not really cheap. It is so poor, but so expensive. While everything at the temples usually costs one dollar (postcards, statues, flutes and other crap), food and water, transportation and accommodation is really expensive (Dont forget the 60$ seven-day-entrance fee for Angkor Wat).

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I’ll spend the next few days walking around this area for sure! It is the biggest religious monument/area on the world. Every few meters, you basically stumble over a new temple – and other tourists. Man it is fu**** crowded here.

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So, I’ll get a beer, you’ll get some pics. Have a look and tell me you are jealous :)

xoxo,
Khmike

Tags:

asia, cambodia, religion

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