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            Web Exclusives: Letter 
              from Hong Kong 
              a PAW web exclusive column by Ed Finn 02 edfinn@alumni.princeton.edu 
             
            October 23, 2002 
               
            Delectations of the Far East 
              When fabulous food and Princeton-in-Asia come together
             They say the way to a mans heart is through 
              his stomach, and if thats true Thailand certainly had me by 
              the epicurean cockles of my food-loving core. The very night that 
              I flew into Bangkok from Hong Kong, I wandered into a Cantonese 
              restaurant (so the culture shock wouldnt be too severe, you 
              understand), where for about $20 I had a sumptuous meal for four 
              all to myself. The soup and dessert were one serving each, but the 
              massive fish I mistakenly ordered, much to the consternation of 
              the staff, was clearly intended to feed more than one. Fortunately, 
              it was so unconscionably tasty that I picked its leviathan carcass 
              clean of flesh (and many bones) using only chopsticks and an uninterrupted 
              supply of clean plates. 
               
              The great thing about Thailand is that it makes the most hapless, 
              naïve traveler feel like a skilled restaurant diviner because 
              pretty much all the food there is delicious. You can walk into the 
              dingiest roadside café  and believe me, I did  
              and wind up with a delicious noodle meal. Of course, this cornucopia 
              doesnt come without its risks: I spent one excruciating day 
              trying to convince my innards not to secede. But everything looks 
              so good, tastes so great and costs so little that its hard 
              to resist gorging yourself, bacteria be damned. 
               
              I did manage to see some of the countryside in between meals, wandering 
              the ubiquitous wats and touring the city of Bangkok. I took advantage 
              of my Princeton-in-Asia connections to visit some of the local crowd, 
              and had another excellent meal at Bangkoks very own German 
              brewery with Dwight Crabtree 02, Dave Whitelaw 01, Bryan 
              Walsh 01, and Laura Vanderkam 01. During the day we 
              trammeled the well-trod paths of the intensively manicured temple 
              areas and took a boat tour of Bangkoks maze-like network of 
              canals. The highlight of our boating adventure was a visit to the 
              Holy Carp, a school of fish tended by Buddhist monks which appeared 
              to survive solely upon over-priced loaves of bread we were required 
              to purchase and then hurl into the water. Alas, there was to be 
              no talk of catching and eating the sanctified creatures. 
               
              The rest of my trip was spent taking the train up to Chiang Mai, 
              a smaller hill city long known as a hub for hikers and hippies. 
              I arrived there on an over-night train from Bangkoks Hualamphong 
              Station, which is as chaotic as it is fun to say. The sleeper car 
              to Chiang Mai was a surreal, colonial experience, complete with 
              an attendant whose sole responsibility was to arrange our bedding 
              at night and remove it in the morning. As I watched lush paddies 
              and palm trees stream past the window in a chlorophyll blur, I felt 
              like a gallery viewer of an Asian pastel done up in teak soil and 
              jade leaf. 
               
              After such a soothing journey, my arrival in Chiang Mai was a bit 
              of a shock. Verdant panoramas were replaced by a red brick square 
              radiating heat off old walls bracketing the old city gate. This 
              is where I met two local PiA interns, Peter Dowling 02 and 
              Nick Ordway 02, who put me up, took me out, and ferried me 
              everywhere on their Honda Dream motorcycles. The sight of one foreigner 
              tootling along was funny enough; seeing my 64 frame 
              clinging desperately to the back of a bike as one of my guides steered 
              us confidently through diesel-obscured lanes of death was, it seems, 
              incredibly amusing. 
               
              The train back to Bangkok was less exciting, since I took it during 
              the daytime and hence there was no official to carry out the ceremony 
              of bed-making. Instead, I spent my time looking out the window, 
              seeing Thailands rolling plains one more time. As I stepped 
              off the train back in the hullabaloo of Hualamphong Station, I took 
              off my glasses to clean them, and they fell apart in my hands. Stumbling 
              through the madding crowds of con artists and pickpockets the guidebooks 
              warn you about, I made my way to the microbe-laden restroom and 
              put in my contacts with a level of sanitary neglect so profound 
              it is a miracle I can see today. 
               
              But see I can, and I spent my flight back to Hong Kong with my nose 
              pressed to the porthole. Now every patch of green in this Chinese 
              steel jungle brings back visions of that trip up the leafy tributaries 
              of Asias overflowing foliage. During the week I spent there, 
              every moment spent gazing out at soft late-summer rain was like 
              a month of relaxation. Seeing my two friends in Chiang Mai really 
              gave me a sense of what Im missing from the much-touted Asian 
              Experience. Pete and Nick live in rural splendor in a small town 
              with lots of visitors, apartments with nice views and jobs with 
              easy working hours. A lot of times I enjoy the hustle of Hong Kong, 
              but every once in a while I day-dream about sitting there in the 
              kingdom of a thousand rice paddies, spending my days eating, gazing, 
              reading, writing. And the beers pretty good too. But then 
              the next New Thing comes whizzing by me on the sidewalk, and I snap 
              back into my busybody world.  
             Ed Finn 02 works for Time in Hong Kong and 
              can be reached at edfinn@alumni.princeton.edu 
               
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