Travel Tales
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Young Chang
A group of Newport Beach residents took a three week trip to Vietnam,
Cambodia and Laos early last month, but they’re hesitant to call it a
“vacation.”
“It was an educational trip from every standpoint,” said Lido Island
resident Lois Tingler. “I certainly did enjoy it, but ‘enjoy’ is not in
the way you would enjoy a trip to Europe.”
With tour stops including sad historical lessons at the Killing Fields
and a quick but consistent look at general life in Cambodia, which is
still suffering from the repercussions of recent wars, the trip abroad
was more eye-opening than it was fun.
Travelers included Sam and Gigi Spragins, Dave and Lois Tingler, Karen
Carlson, her son Rand and his friend John Skinner. The two boys met with
the group in Angkor Wat, Cambodia as they’re in the middle of traveling
the world for a year.
The group, which included some Stanford graduates, traveled through
the Stanford University Travel Study Program.
“The university-sponsored trips offer opportunities that ordinary
tours don’t,” said Karen Carlson, of Balboa Island. “For example, we met
the ambassadors of Vietnam and Laos, and the ambassadors of Cambodia all
came and spoke to us.”
In Vietnam, one striking sight was Ha Long Bay -- a waterfront spot
considered the most beautiful find in a land used mostly for coal mining.
The Vietnamese were warm toward their American visitors, Tingler said,
but called what we call the Vietnam War, the American War. Saigon was
large and spread out while Hanoi was smaller and almost entirely
walk-able.
“I compare it almost to going to San Francisco and going to Los
Angeles,” Tingler said.
In Angkor Wat, Cambodia, the group marveled at the more than 30 miles
of elaborate stone temples that were built between 900 and 1100 A.D.,
eventually abandoned and later rediscovered in the early 1900s, Carlson
said.
Some of them are Buddhist temples, others house small chapels and most
are used for tourism.
“Of course I had wanted to see Angkor Wat for many years,” said
Tingler, a retired teacher. “You see pictures of it and it’s so massive,
but the entire complex was so much larger than I had expected.”
The travelers also noticed a large number of children everywhere, as
43% of the population there is under 14.
In Laos, the group visited a village in the highlands called Luang
Prabang, set near the Mekong River. The area was scattered with low,
two-story homes, lots of temples and beautiful flowers.
“Both in Cambodia and Laos, it’s very sobering because the people are
very poor,” Tingler said. “You read about it and it’s not quite the
same.”
* Have you, or someone you know, gone on an interesting vacation
recently? Tell us your adventures. Drop us a line to Travel Tales, 330 W.
Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627; e-mail [email protected]; or fax to
(949) 646-4170.
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