Friday, September 30, 2005

VIDEO-Chiang Mai-Doi Suthep Buddhist Temple


CLICK HERE or on the image to stream video

There are over 300 temples in the city of Chiang Mai and Wat Doi Suthep may be the most important and beautiful of them all. Sitting high on a mountain top overlooking the city. The temple was built there after one of the kings gave a rare albino elephant a holy object and told it to go find the spot where the temple to house it would be built. The elephant climbed the mountain, stopped at the top and died, thus the temple found its home. There are many large gongs and bells there as well and we took a trip up there in the rain at dawn to record them. Check out the Kaura blog to see that video at www.kauratravels.blogspot.com
Hope all of you are doing well, I miss you.

Wednesday, September 28, 2005

VIDEO-Making Some Money

CLICK HERE or on the image to stream video.

Want to know how you to can travel the world while making money at the same time??? Just watch this instructional video, follow the easy to follow steps and soon you too will be wondering why you hadn't thought of this earlier!

Saturday, September 24, 2005

VIDEO-Laos "Are you Free?"

CLICK HERE or on the image to stream the video


Its hard to believe, but this is the last of the Laos videos and slideshows. I can't express enough how much I fell in love with this country and its people. I truly did feel free while there and hope that someday all of you will get to experience a place like Laos.

***Also a reminder that all the videos and slideshows and posts are archived monthly. Just go to the right side of the page and click on the month and all the posts will come up. Only the last 15 posts are displayed on this page.***

Friday, September 23, 2005

VIDEO Laos-Nam Ou River Trip

CLICK HERE or on the image to stream video. Right Click to save for later. (16.2 mb)

River travel is a dwindeling but still important part of Laos, and we were fortunate enough to spend 4 days on slow boats traversing the Nam Ou and Mekong rivers. The trip between Luang Prabang and Mnong Ngau Noi is considered one of the most beautiful river trips in all of South East Asia and this video gives you just a taste of what it was like.
The trip was inspiring to say the least and I hope that our music will be able to stand up to such beauty if you were listening to it on headphones because that is what we are aiming for.

Wednesday, September 21, 2005

Laos-Feel Free

While in Northern Laos, Malcolm and I took a slow boat from Luang Prabang 7 hours north to a small village called Muang Ngoi Neau. It is cut off from the outside world by a steep mountain rage that prohibits any access by road. The only way to get there is by boat. Few travellers have ventured up there due to its isolation and because of that, it has retained its charm and soul.
From there, we chartered another boat to take a kayak and ourselves and hour north to an even more remote part of Laos where there several traditional Hmong and Lao villages. This experience was by far the most impacting and fruitful day of our trip so far. Nesteled among huge limestone peaks and dense monsoon forest on a beachy river bank lies the village of Ban Phoichon, a traditional Lao village that has probably only started to see the occasional foreigner in the past 2 years. When we disembarked on the sany beach, we gazed around us like children in awe of a huge playground. We walked in 360's laughing to ourselves as we realized we had just landed in paradise. At that moment I closed my eyes and tried to take that moment in as much as I could...to save it for a day when I am stuck in traffic or at work. Each ray of sun that was beaming though the trees and every purple butterfly that was dancing arouund me was a gift telling me in its own way "you are alive, you are ALIVE".
All I could do was give praise and thanks and shake my head in bewilderment at the sheer beauty that was almost too much to take. I recalled the line in 'American Beauty', where the teenage boy says that sometimes the beauty in this world is to much to take and Kevin Spacey's realization at the end that you have to take it and let it flow in and out of you like air.
I wished at that moment that I could have shared that place with all of you and transported you there to enjoy it with me but realized that then and there was for my eyes only. As we sat on the sand, vibrating with that place, I looked down at the kayak paddle and saw that it had "Feel Free" printed on it and did just that.

Tuesday, September 20, 2005

SLIDESHOW-Laos-Make You Feel That Way


CLICK HERE or on the image to download slideshow (6.7 mb)









LOVE LETTER TO LAOS
Love Letter to Laos
Laos, you are the lover who has seduced me
Not through flirty word play or aggressive come-ons like your sister Siam
but through your quiet confidant beauty and relaxed smile

You massage my spirit
With your coconut palms
While your rivers sing me to sleep

Sipping Lao coffee on the majestic Mekong
Ghosts of Chinese fishermen and trading boats
Roll by with a quiet lull
Reminding me that your rivers are the lifeblood
Of Asia and its past

Superhighways, interstates, and trains
Are an unknown reality
Seen only in Hollywood films
Instead your wooden boats lay at rest
Waiting to ferry me to my future

I came here seeking solace
And you gave it to me
Without asking anything in return
If Asia is the lotus
Then you certainly are the jewel within it.

Thank you


Monday, September 19, 2005

Downloading and Streaming

Hello Friends
Just a little reminder for all of you who are taking a look at the videos and photos I am uploading. You need to have Apple Quicktime installed on your computer to view them and you can download that for free with the link on the right hand side under LINKS. Also, the videos should stream, meaning that you can start watching them once a little but has downloaded, your computer should start playing it automatically. The slideshows you need to download completely before you can watch them. If you don't have time, just right click and you can "Save As" and save it to your desktop or onto your harddrive, that way you can watch it later. You can also do that with the videos. Anyway, thanks for all your e-mails, it is good to hear from so many of you. Life is beautiful and I am reminded of that everyday. Much Love
Ben

Sunday, September 18, 2005

VIDEO-Professors Jones and Guess

CLICK HERE or on the image to stream video.
While we were in Luang Prabang, Laos visiting a Wat (temple), we were invited to return later that night to teach an english class to the monks there. We had been wanting to teach a class so were excited when the oppurtunity came to us. It was such an incredible experience to stand at the front of a room full of orange-robed novice monks and have them recite "music, drums, kaura". It's moments like these that you are reminded how amazing travelling really is...one of the greatest teachers there is. Hope you enjoy.

Thursday, September 15, 2005

VIDEO-Tubing on the Nam Sou-Laos

CLICK HERE or on the image to stream video.
Well, here is one of the many reasons why I fell in love with Laos...because it made me feel like a kid again...something a lot of us need right now! Enjoy

Monday, September 05, 2005

SLIDESHOW-Laos-Where Heaven and Earth Switched Places


CLICK HERE or on the image to watch slideshow (6.2 mb download).

It finally feels like we have arrived…
I sit here and and find it hard to descibe this place and the people. It has taken me in, with arms wide open. I can only hope that the photos and video will do her justice.
The pace of life is decidedly slower and more relaxed than the rest of Asia. People say here “Bangkok, fast fast, Laos, slow, slow.” The people have a certain recognizable manner, quiet voices and gentle rapt expressions. They are a conglomeration of tribes and languages of Thai, Hmong, Khemer, Tibetan, and Chinese.
Our days have been filled with writing music with some of the most awe-inspiring, “oh my god”, stop you in your tracks scenery that one only encounters rarely in their lives, some never. We have been exploring caves, both dry and wet, rafting and traveling on the extensive rivers here, teaching English to Monks, hiking to remote hill tribes, and meeting travelers from all over the globe. The country has been virtually isolated for 20 years and has only been open to tourists since 1989, meaning that it many parts of the country are untouched by western influence and tourism, which is very special to behold.
Orange and saffron robed monks seem to fill the streets with umbrellas resting on their shoulders protecting them from the penetration Laotion sun. 85% of the country is unmanaged vegetation, most of which is monsoon forest, and 25% of which is primary forest filled with one of the healthiest but still threatened population of fauna. This includes elephants, tigers, the Asiatic black bear, water buffalo, king cobras, and the lesser known raccoon dog, pygmy slow loris, leaf monkey, and panda. This is hard to believe as Laos has the distinction of being the most bombed country in the world. From 1964 to 1973, the United States bombed the country endlessly to prevent the Vietnamese from gaining a foothold there. They dropped an average of one plane load of bombs every eight minutes, 24 hours a day for nine years! This cost US tax payers $2.2 million a day and cost many Laotions their lives and livelihoods. There are still unexploded bombs all over the country that usually kill small children and have made farming and agriculture very difficult. Like George Bush says “We love Freedom.!”
Like Cambodia, Laos is governed by one of the last remaining Communist parties, the Lao Peoples Revolutionary Party(LPRP). Opium is one of the countries biggest exports, highly valued by the hill tribes of Burma and China for its medicinal qualities who brought the poppy with them to Laos and Thailand. The CIA infamously used air forces planes during the Vietnam war to run heroin from Laos to Vietnam to help fund various covert operations throughout Indochina.
So far, we have spent most our time in Vang Vieng, where mammoth limestone mountains hover over the town, and the Nam Song river hugs the town like a mother. We spent many hours floating down the river on intertubes, stopping every ten minutes to fly on zip lines or to jump off rope swings that line the river. There are many hikes and caves to explore so we set up home base to soak up the culture and see what came out of us. We are about to embark on a 5 day river trip on the Nam Sou and majestic Mekong river, which has provided Laos with her trade route with China for centuries. We have heard that this trip contains some of the most spectacular scenery in South East Asia, so we are really looking forward to it.
I am taking a lot of photos and video and will hopefully be able to upload them for you soon. Be Well.

Friday, September 02, 2005

Cambodia-VIDEO


Here is a video I put together with various video images from our trip to Cambodia from the disenfranchised children of Siam Reap to Angkor Wat. CLICK HERE or on the image to watch.

**FOR PC USERS**
Theoretically, the video should start playing after your computer has downloaded 1/4 of it. If it doesn't and is taking too long, just right click and "Save As Target" and save it to your desktop or harddrive. That way you can continue reading the blog or surfing the net while your computer downloads it and you can watch it later. If you have any problems e-mail me.