It’s crazy to think that Kevin and I will be home in Seattle just two weeks from tomorrow! What does that mean for us? It’s job application season. *SIGH*. What does this mean for the blog? It means I’m devoting so much time to writing answers to the question “Why would you be a good fit for our company” that I need to go back down to writing just one blog post per week. It also means that chocolate consumption in our household has seen a recent uptick. I have a hunch that these things are all related…
In lieu of a “real” post today, I thought I’d just throw some information at you. Here goes!
Where in the World Are We?
Kevin and I are currently based in Budapest, where we’ll be based for just 1 more week! Here’s where we’ll be for the next couple of weeks:
Now – April 28: Budapest
April 28 – May 1: Vienna
May 1 – 5: Prague
May 5 – 6: Frankfurt
May 6: Fly home to Seattle!
May 6-7: Olympia, WA with Kevin’s folks
May 7 or 8: Back in our wonderful home in Wallingford. YAY!
Do you have any tips for our upcoming time in Vienna, Prague, or Frankfurt? Leave us a comment and let us know!
Curious where we’ve been? Here’s an interactive map showing our travels over the last year:
That’s right, this is the year that Kevin and I both turn 30. I’ll save my gripes for later this year since my birthday is in December, but I will say, 30 sure looks good on my wonderful husband.
Be sure you send some birthday love Kevin’s way!
Calling All Beer and Cider Drinkers
You should see the list of beers Kevin plans to brew once we get back home. It has everything from a Watermelon Wheat to a Chai Hard Cider to an Experimental IPA made from an experimental hop variety.
Clearly, we cannot drink all this beer and cider ourselves. Consider this our public service announcement that we need your help, family and friends. If you live in Seattle, you better plan to stop by often. If you don’t live in Seattle, be advised that our basement has a “rustic” guest room.
Let’s start this post with a beautiful Chiang Mai photo. This is taken at Wat Suan Dok, the temple 50 yards from our apartment.
We’ve been living abroad for over three months now, and spent some time this week reflecting on what we miss most about the good ol’ US of A. The thing we miss the most is definitely seeing our friends and family; it was so sad to spend 4th of July this year without our annual gathering of friends in our backyard. It’s also tough to be over here so far from home when so many of our loved ones have babies who are growing up so quickly! When we left, the newest baby in the group was the size of a small chicken. We just skyped with those friends a couple weeks ago, and now he’s the size of a butterball turkey. HOW IS THAT EVEN POSSIBLE?! Aside from our friends and family, we came up with a list of the top 5 things we miss from the USA.
The Top 5 Things We Miss:
#1: Good Public Bathrooms
My general frustration with the toilet situation in Southeast Asia has undoubtedly been apparent in some of my previous blog posts. To get an idea of the despair I feel when I walk into a bathroom that is completely devoid of toilet paper and hand soap, please follow this link and press the blue button. We’ve lived here long enough that we have a short list of public bathrooms which stock what we call the “Triple Crown”: hand soap, toilet paper and paper towels.
We’ve racked up quite a list of weird bathroom experiences since we got here. To name a few: I nearly tipped over a toilet that was not bolted to the ground which caused all the water to flood out onto the bathroom floor, Kevin accidentally used a broken urinal that essentially just drains everything right out onto the floor, and I almost wiped out when my foot slipped on a wet “squat toilet” at a sketchy rest stop on the way to Pai (also, a cat was watching me in that bathroom, which I find to be extra weird).
#2: Regular Business Hours
In Thailand, there’s no such a thing as regular business hours. If business isn’t hoppin’, it’s fairly common that a restaurant or shop will just close up for the day. Most businesses here are family run, which means that staff are pretty single-threaded. So if someone is sick, or if the family has other things going on, they just post a sign in the window saying they’re closed for 1 day. This has bitten us a lot here since our favorite coffee shop only has one barista! Even in the finance world, hours are really short – the bank we use regularly is open from just 10am-3pm. We’ve tried to get used to this and roll with it, but it’s hard to be patient when you walk to your favorite coffee shop in 90+ degree weather, looking forward to their awesome aircon and iced drinks, only to find that they’re closed. HULK SO MAD.
#3: Cleanliness
While cleanliness isn’t a huge issue here in Thailand, it’s enough of a problem that it might be slowly driving me crazy. In Seattle, your neighbors will shun you if you leave put out your garbage bins when it’s not trash day. In Chiang Mai, it’s pretty normal to walk past a big bin or pile of trash every hundred hards or so. I have also become an absolute nut job about watching out for dog poop. There are tons of stray dogs in Chiang Mai, so there is poop everywhere. It reminds me of this video clip:
There are also just a lot more smells associated with a tropical climate – hot weather enhances the smell of everything, from the smell of durian fruit to the smell of the squid vendor. And let’s be honest here, we don’t exactly smell awesome all the time in 90+ degree weather, either. One thing is for sure, your cleanliness standards definitely adjust quickly when they have to – I am 100% ok with using bar soap in a public restroom now. This is happening.
#4: Reliable Infrastructure
I miss strict electrical regulations. We’ve become fairly accustomed to power outages, and we are unfazed at this point when we hear the familiar crackling and see electrical arcing in Chiang Mai’s electrical wire connections. The electrical system here is a mess – in the old city I could reach up and grab electrical wires with hardly any effort. Traffic was stopped outside a cafe one day because a live wire had fallen into the road. And then there was the day we saw the electrical workers in the photo below run out into moving traffic with their bamboo ladder to work on a wire:
Don’t mind me, just climbing on my ladder in the road…
I’m also getting tired of blocked or nonexistent sidewalks. Pedestrians don’t get any respect here. If you were in a wheel chair or on crutches, don’t even bother visiting Chiang Mai. When did sidewalks become appropriate places to park motorbikes, anyway?! It’s so tricky to walk around here – even if you’re in a crosswalk and the light is red, cars still won’t voluntarily stop for you to cross! You have to force them to stop by bravely walking out into the road!
#5: Beer
Budweiser. So sad.
The main beer brands in Thailand are Leo, Chang and Singha, and they are woefully inferior to the fantastic craft beer selection we took for granted in Seattle. Nowadays we drink our beers on ice to take out some of the “slap-you-in-the-face-bad-taste”. The situation is so dire that we picked up a can of Budweiser for the 4th of July and it tasted GOOD. What is this madness?!
We want to hear from you!
Are you surprised at some of the things that made our list? Are you shocked at something we left off? What do you think you’d miss if you moved abroad? Cheese? Peanut butter? Bounty paper towels and Charmin toilet paper? I thought I’d miss cheese more than I do (good cheese here is outrageously expensive and reasonably priced cheese is outrageously gross) but I’m fine without it.
Hello, friends, family, coworkers, and strangers! Welcome to our blog, which will chronicle our travels over the next year or two. We’ve decided to run away from our lives in Seattle in order to spend some quality time traveling and experiencing other cultures. Visit our About Us page for more info on what spurred this adventure.