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Monday, June 18, 2012

Mosquito Holocaust


10 days to departure
One of the jabs we got was for influenza, and as a result, I can honestly say that I have felt better. Now something of an old hand at India, I am preparing a shopping list of essential items required before our departure. 
The first order of the day is sanitation. Hand gel, surface wipes, and bars of soap in mini zip-locks are indispensable. Topping the list for basic first aid is Imodium, followed by rubbing alcohol and aspirin.  
Entertainment is also a major consideration and for this trip we are going fully loaded: iPad, Mac Book and smart phones. I have a veritable library of books in German. A number by Austrian authors (who shall include, for simplicity, Franz Kafka, a new favorite). I'm currently on Brennendes Geheimnis, by Stefan Zweig, a member of the Tribe, and Siddhartha, by another all-time favorite, Hermann Hesse (OK, he was Swiss). The latter I actually read years ago in high school, in English translation, of course. Now I'm tackling it in German, with the cumulative wisdom of my experience and years, all of which brings very special resonance to the book. To be sure, I'll also pick up Bollywood DVDs in situ
 And of course, then their is the anti-mosquito kit. This consists of incense coils, room spray, a plug-in device that dissolves a liquid, iPhone mosquito defense app (emits low-level noise to irritate them), and Boots anti-mosquito spray that is 95% DEET, requiring a shower with ample scrubbing before going to bed in a fully fumigated room.  Although there may be some risk to my liver functions later in life, I am chemically impenetrable. 
I developed this admittedly anal multi-pronged approach during my Great Journey in India five years ago. And it really works. I never get bitten, and therefore am at extremely low risk for contracting mosquito-borne illnesses. 
During my four years in Thailand, I visited Myanmar a full seven times, staying with my dear friend Yaron at the Israeli Embassy in Yangon for nearly every Rosh Hashana and Pessach, as well as traveling upcountry. Amazingly, I got a biannual snapshot of Myanmar from the period just after Cyclone Nargis all the way through the political transition. Indeed, on our last trip, Aung San Suu Kyi was elected to parliament the day after we arrived in Yangon. 
Myanmar is the least developed country I have ever visited. What with being tropical, you can imagine that mosquitoes are an issue in every locality, as is dengue fever. Notwithstanding this fact, Yaron invariably expressed opposition to the use of chemical defenses in rooms that we shared while traveling upcountry. I ended up sleeping either under mosquito nets or with repellent on my skin. 
On one of my later trips, Yaron's wife Neichu (from India, fittingly) said that they found my Mosquito Holocaust kit rather amusing. I am not impervious to this observation. But when Yaron asked the whys and wherefores, I explained the following, in somewhat abridged form. 
Dengue
Dengue fever also known as breakbone fever, is an infectious tropical disease caused by the dengue virus. Symptoms include fever, headache, muscle and joint pains, and a characteristic skin rash that is similar to measles. In a small proportion of cases the disease develops into the life-threatening dengue hemorrhagic fever, resulting in bleeding, low levels of blood platelets and blood plasma leakage, or into dengue shock syndrome, where dangerously low blood pressure occurs.
Source: Wikipedia
Malaria
Malaria is a mosquito-borne infectious disease of humans and other animals caused by eukaryotic protists (a type of microorganism) of the genus Plasmodium. The protists first infect the liver, then act as parasites within red blood cells, causing symptoms that typically include fever and headache, in severe cases progressing to coma or death. The disease is widespread in tropical and subtropical regions in a broad band around the equator, including much of Sub-Saharan Africa, Asia, and the Americas.
Source: Wikipedia
My trips to Myanmar actually warrant narration in their own right. But my Great Asian Sojourn began five years ago in India. It is only fitting that on the eve of immigrating to Europe, I should have one last hurrah in India. 
Mosquitoes beware!

Friday, June 15, 2012

Four Amazing Years

I must say, in add honesty, that because I followed my dream five years ago, and went to India to be a background dancer in Bollywood, I ended up perpetuating the Asian Adventure for this long. Long hiatus notwithstanding, whether you previously followed Skye Frontier, or if you are a new adherent, I have been in Bangkok for four years, during which I worked at quite a great company, lived the fantastic and glamourous expat lifestyle, literally traveled the globe, and, most importantly, at long last found my soulmate. Yes, I am now a married man, to the dear Adam. We tied the knot this past March in Johannesburg.

Previously, I had believed that marriage was only necessary if there was a visa in play, Indeed, the original purpose of our marriage was so that we could emigrate together to Austria (more about which later). Of course I supported the notion of “marriage equality”. But I never thought that I would get married myself. 
Alas, I did, and for pragmatic reasons. But I did to the right person. The One I had been searching for the world over. And I’m very glad for it.
I never ever thought I would have a partner that would actually ask to go on a trip to India. I thought that my love for the Desh was something entirely subjective and mostly incomprehensible to anyone else (save perhaps Josh-bhai). But it has happened. Some background.
In February I received an offer to work for a new company in Vienna. This was the catalyst for the wedding in March. And after two months of gathering documents, we submitted our application for immigration to Austria at the beginning of May. Conventional wisdom had it that we would be processed within 6-8 weeks. Not so. Apparently it takes quite a bit more time than that. Fortunately (for now) the offer of employment still stands.
We moved out of our beloved condo in Riverine Place, where I had been for four years, downtown to a nice little place. But even though we have travelled quite extensively this year (South Africa, Myanmar, Gulf of Thailand), there is nothing more to do in Bangkok.
And so, for $150, we can fly to Calcutta. Adam applied for his Indian visa. I had the presence of mind to always keep a one year visa valid for India in my passport at all times, so I’m good till the end of November. And, I’ve never been to Calcutta, Puri or Darjeeling. No better time than the present.
Adam will need inoculations, just as I did five years ago. I’ll take a few jabs myself, to be sure. We will need a new backpack. But other than that, and truly under rather ideal circumstances, Skye Frontier will ride again.
Stay tuned for more adventures on the Subcontinent.