May 29, 2013

Moroccan Adventures - Part 1


After ten amazing days in Morocco, we returned back to bustling Hanoi during the Monday morning rush hour. I don’t even know where to begin to recount our trip – the colorful souks, the stunning countryside, a magical Moroccan-Indian wedding... Our travel itinerary was an ambitious one but it worked out well and our friends’ wedding in Marrakech was truly the icing on the cake. More on the wedding in another post, but boy did we have a good time celebrating.

After three days of wedding festivities, the four of us (we traveled with two of Pem’s old high school friends, Adrien and Marie) drove up and away to the High Atlas Mountains in search of the Valley of Roses. Two days later, we took in the countryside by train as we traveled northward to Fes. After another two days, we entered the Berber capital of Meknes. And then all too soon it seemed we were back at the Casablanca Mohamed V airport, spending our last dirhams on coffee and trinkets and saying our goodbyes.  

On our 13 hour return flight from Paris to Hanoi, Pem and I pored over the free newspapers since the in-flight entertainment program wasn’t operating (c’mon Vietnam Airlines! **shakes fist**). Reading the news always seems to break the spell of a great vacation. I also realized that at least for me, browsing for souvenirs in the souks had a similar effect. This was partially because I knew I’d have to lug whatever I purchased back to Asia, but mostly because the browsing, the bargaining and the haggling seemed so out of tune with what I was seeing and feeling. A leather backpack, Berber jewelry, a lantern, brightly colored poterie - all things I thought I wanted to buy for myself and others. But I kept putting it off, not wanting to carry anything unnecessary until our last stop in Meknes, where we arrived on a Friday and found most shops were closed.

At the Casa airport, I had just ten minutes to find some small trinkets to bring back. I expressed my frustration with Pem, who concluded that nothing had stopped me from doing it earlier in our trip. Though I didn’t take his remark particularly well at the time, he was right. I just didn’t want to bring myself into those situations of being quoted a ridiculous tourist price and sensing that familiar pressure to buy, buy, buy. It’s fun for some, an obligation for others, but I think it’s become unappealing to me because it’s a reminder that any souvenirs I buy will soon turn into exactly what they’re meant to be. Small, inadequate mementos of a particular place at a particular moment, never to be seen again as it was for that very first time.

“Travel is not about finding something: it’s about getting lost - 
that is, it is about losing yourself in a place and a moment... It’s nice to see the significant centers of civilization, the important buildings, the monumental landscapes, but what seems most extraordinary is feeling yourself lifted out of your ordinary life into something new.” 
 - quote from Susan Orlean, Best of Travel Writing 2007 


May 10, 2013

Promotion - Free Int'l Shipping on Dolma Prints until May 12!


Great news! My Society6 photography prints are available to purchase with free shipping worldwide through May 12th. Check my shop out here and be sure to use this promo code upon check-out (unfortunately framed prints, stretched canvases and throw pillows are not included in the deal). Thank you for supporting Dolma Photography!



May 5, 2013

Vacation Countdown - 10 days until Morocco!


The poetic side of me likes to think that I can embrace spontaneity. That taking the unbeaten path my whims lead me on, over the well-worn ones, will yield situations for self-discovery and insight into the spirit of a place. That it is truly about the journey and not the destination. 

The reality is that I really like to plan vacations. I am all about the journey before the journey. I start planning months in advance for a long trip, and a few weeks in advance for short three-day stints in closer destinations (like Philly, Baltimore or Brooklyn). Preferably, if I have enough time, I will max out my Excel skills to create complex spreadsheets for my vacations - listing accommodation options, compiling contact information, devising a travel budget and researching must-see (or more importantly, must-eat) spots. I am a Planner, with a capital P. 

So, when Pem and I received invites to attend our friends' wedding in Marrakech, I started brainstorming itineraries the moment we booked our Hanoi-Casablanca plane tickets. That was four months ago. Morocco has so many options to offer travelers, it was tough to pare down the stops for our 10-day itinerary. I tried to make my planning mantra "see more by doing less", but in the end, we pinned four places - Marrakech, Skoura, Fes and Meknes.

Now 10 days away from our departure date, we are officially in the vacation countdown mode. I can't wait to explore Morocco with my own two feet. In the end, whether you're strolling a well-trodden path or bushwhacking yourself a new one, it's your very own eyes that will lead you and your very own feet that will take you - and that makes all the difference.

Any travel tips or recommendations for the four cities I mentioned above, or others that are close-by? I can always use more! :-) In the meantime, you can find me starting my packing list...

P.S. -  A 2010 NYT article profiled a study on the relationship between vacations and happiness, which found that "the largest boost in happiness comes from the simple act of planning a vacation" and that these happiness levels can last up to 8 weeks. However, "after the vacation, happiness quickly dropped back to baseline levels for most people." Well, that's rather obvious, no? (article found via Cup of Jo)

(Photo credit: Jodi Ettenberg, lawyer turned world traveler turned blogger, who has been touring the globe for the last five years and writing a blog about it. Be still, my heart. Her blog, Legal Nomads, has some great fodder for global foodies, with plenty of nice pictures to boot.)

May 3, 2013

NYT Spends 36 Hours in My Favorite City


If you felt pangs of wanderlust while reading my last two posts, check out the latest NYT's 36 Hours in Bangkok. The intro is spot on - "To travel across Bangkok is to see several worlds at once."

The recommended itinerary is pretty good and does indeed seem to promise the traveler glimpses into many of Bangkok's different worlds. I would say an absolute must which the article omits is sunset happy hour at Arun Residence's The Deck Restaurant. Get there early. From your seat, you can watch the blazing sun melt behind the Temple of Dawn in a fury of pinks, oranges and reds while sipping on a well-deserved cocktail.


(photo credit - Pem, with some minor editing)