I was in Cambodia touring
the temples of Angkor. My guide Ree,
was staring at me with a look of utter horror on his face. I was smiling broadly before the penny
dropped, and realised I had made one of life’s awful tourist gaffes.
It was a hot morning, and I
had been at the temples since 5.30 to capture the magical moment when the sun
rose over one of the ancient world’s most amazing complexes – Angkor Wat.
By 11.30 am, Ry could see I
was struggling with the heat and humidity.
“Sir,” he inquired, “Would
you like to walk back to the air-conditioned car and go to a restaurant for a
late breakfast? You are looking very
hot.”
It sounded an excellent
idea, so I willingly agreed. We
returned to the car and, as we began driving towards the restaurant, I decided
to invite Ry and the driver to join me because I was travelling solo and
disliked eating alone.
After some 10 minutes, the
driver pulled into a small car park and we got out. Ry pointed to a cute little bridge over a small stream and a
winding path that led through the trees to a vague sort of stone building. He nodded enthusiastically and gestured for
me to cross the bridge.
I beamed, and said: “Ree, I’d like you and the driver to come
with me. It will be so much more fun if
we go together. I really don’t like
going by myself.”
It was at this point Ree blushes profusely, looked grief stricken, and stammered "no Sir!"
But I was not to be so
easily put off. I jocularly grabbed Ree
and the driver by the arms and began theatrically pulling them over the bridge,
chuckling, “Come on guys, let’s all go together! It will be so much more fun!”
It was at that point Ree
explained the car had stopped at the Angkor public toilets so I could have a
comfort stop. Apparently the restaurant
was still several kilometres away. I
wished the bridge would collapse and the stream would carry me away.
I am good at creating
embarrassing moments for myself. But,
in a strange country, many of us are prone to the tourist foot-in-mouth
statement.
As I wandered through Indo
China, my embarrassing moments continued.
In Hoi An, on Vietnam’s
central coast, I made enemies with a female solo traveller. Hoi An is the tailoring capital of Vietnam,
and has about 400 tailor shops. Take
tear-sheets from fashion magazines, and the tailors will copy anything for you
– at dirt cheap prices.
My initial thoughts, as I
wandered through streets filled with tailor shops was that the clothing looked
very 1970s-ish. The styles and colors
were, in the main, diabolically awful.
While sitting at a coffee
shop, a female solo traveller asked to join me. As we chatted about our Vietnam experiences, she commented about
how cheap the Hoi An clothing was. I
nodded, and looked diagonally cross the road to one of the tailor shops. I thought most of the clothing on show
looked utterly hideous.
“I agree, it is very cheap,”
I said to my coffee companion, “but most of it looks like rubbish.”
I pointed to the shop
opposite.
“Look at that shop,” I said
with a chuckle, “who would be seen dead in most of the outfits it has on
display, especially that dreadful looking furry jacket!”
My companion looked startled
and replied more than a tad angrily, “I have just spent almost $1,500 in that
shop, and at the top of the list is the furry jacket.”
As I tried to regain my
composure, she stared icily at me, stood, turned on her heel and left.
While I make numerous
gaffes, it is also wonderful to see others do the same thing.
While cruising the Mekong
aboard a magnificent and luxurious vessel called the RV Mekong, an American
woman opposite me at the dining table looked at her evening meal and deftly
pushed to one side of her plate some delicious and very innocent looking
grilled aubergine.
“I have no idea what it is,”
she said haughtily, “but it looks foreign and I am not going to eat it.”
The next morning we did an
on-shore excursion to a snake wine factory.
It was hot and steamy, and by the time we tied up at a wharf, stepped
ashore and walked several hundred metres along the riverbank to the snake wine
establishment, my American friend looked frightening overheated.
As we entered the place, a
young factory employee handed everyone a glass of snake wine. The American grabbed hers and quickly tossed
it down. “God,” she said, “I really
needed that.”
I stared at her in
amazement.
“I can’t believe what you
just did!” I said in astonishment. “You
won’t eat aubergine, but you have no hesitation in drinking snake wine!”
The woman visibly
paled. “Snake wine?” she gasped in
horror. “I thought it was rice wine!”
I watched as she scooted
past scores of full wine bottles, each containing one or two pickled reptiles,
and regurgitated her breakfast into the Mekong.
Just as interesting is
watching people about to blunder into embarrassing moments - and being helpless
to stop them.
While waiting for a flight
from Kuala Lumpur to Ho Chi Minh City, I met some very posh women from Sydney
and chatted with them briefly, discovering they were also heading for Ho Chi
Minh City to join a tour operated by Peregrine, one of the more up-market
adventure travel companies.
“We always travel with
Peregrine,” they chorused. “They have such a nice class clientele.”
About 15 minutes later, a
short rotund woman wearing a mini skirt that looked at least one size too small
plonked beside me and introduced herself.
“I shouldn’t have worn this
bloody mini skirt,” she said. “All the
bloody men have been perving on me.”
She told me she was also
headed for Ho Chi Minh City - to join a Peregrine tour – presumably the same
one as the posh Sydney-siders.
She was the total opposite
to what the posh Sydney-siders, and I noted she was clutching a well-worn
paperback called “Naughty Housewives”.
I smiled pleasantly at her and said: “I think those two women (I
nodded in the direction of the Double Bay duo) are on the same tour as you.”
“Bonzer,” she said, “I’ll
bloody well go and make myself known to them.”
I sighed and watched
helplessly as she bustled over and was given extremely short shrift.
“That didn’t work,” she said
dolefully as she returned. “They really
aren’t my type at all. In fact, I don’t
think they have anything in common with me.”
I wondered how the trip
would go, but kept my mouth shut.
Sometimes fellow tourists
can deliberately go out of their way to actually cause embarrassment to others.
The last night of my Mekong
cruise, one of the Australians on the trip - and who had a delightful sense of
humour - deliberately sat at a table with four Mormon couples who – until that
moment – had never shared their table with anyone during the 8-day voyage. The Mormons looked startled and
uncomfortable as he pulled up a chair and beamed at them.
“I suppose you are wondering
why I am sitting with you,” he said wickedly. “But as Mormons, you must
understand that in Australia your disciples always knock on my door at the most
inopportune times. This is payback time
and I am exacting my revenge.”
The Mormons continued to
look non-plussed and sank deeper and deeper into embarrassment as throughout
the meal he regaled them with extremely bawdy and steamy stories, which
included telling them he was gay, and beyond saving.
Amen.