If I had the gumption, I’d recruit a couple of fellow
travelers to take video shots of me on my 110 cc mongrel motorbike. I’d put on
a pair of bad shades and let the wind
blow through my few remaining hairs, though you wouldn’t be able to tell
without an extreme closeup. Then I’d download a version of Steppenwolf’s “Born
to Be Wild,” from the original soundtrack for Easy Rider, and put it in the background.
But I don’t have the gumption, so you’ll just have to use your
imagination. Here it is:
It’s a piece of junk, with parts taken from at least three
different brands of motorbikes over its lifetime. But it has one great quality:
it doesn’t go very fast. I suppose if I wanted I could crank it up to 60-70 kph
or more, but I want to nurse its little engine all over northern Vietnam and
down to Ho Chi Minh City, maybe 2,000 kilometers, so I cruise at 30 kph. That’s
about 20 mph.
$230, I knew you were wondering. I’ve spent another $100 on
various repairs: re-welding the luggage rack, new chain and sprockets, new rear
brake assembly. A mechanic in Cat Ba ripped me off big time doing those repairs—a
foreigner tax—but I got some entertainment out of it, watching the neighborhood
and the goings on at his shop during the three hours it took to do the work.
Things evened out a few days later with a major act of
kindness.
When I left Cat Ba there was a thunderstorm of Biblical
dimensions that broke just as the ferry was pulling into the dock, so even with
rain gear the bike and I got drenched in the 200 feet from the boat to the
covered waiting area. Something electrical got wet, so when I finally did hit
the road, it ran like shit.
I spent an unplanned night in Bai Chay/Ha Long drying everything
out. The next day on the way to Quan Lan Island the bike ran tip-top for a half
hour before it started coughing and choking again. In Vietnam you are never
more than five minutes away from a repair shop. A mechanic, his wife, and his
toddler son lived in this one. Not in the back of the shop, not in an adjacent
room, but in the shop itself. Their only pieces of furniture—a bed and two
chairs—were surrounded by greasy motorcycle parts. Their kitchen was outside,
under the roof that covered the main work area. The kid and I hit it off big
time right away.
According to the mechanic, the reason the bike was running
like hell was that I had run out of gas, a thought that at first embarrassed me
to no end, but after contemplating it for a while, I didn’t think that was the reason.
I heard plenty of sloshing at the bottom of the tank.
It didn’t matter. He proceeded to take apart, clean, and
reassemble my carburetor (sounds more complex than it really is), adjust the
throttle, clean a filter, and do a bunch of other minor tweaks that made the
machine run almost the way it’s supposed to. And he charged me 50,000 dong,
plus another 20,000 for a liter of gas in a plastic water bottle from the mom-and-pop
store next door. About US$3.20.
I said, “Fuhgeddaboudit, buster, you’re taking at least
100,000 dong for being so kind, here, you have a wife and a kid and you live in
a garage and I’m actually going to give you 200,000 dong because my sayadaw
tells me that generosity is a big factor in achieving enlightenment.”
He wouldn’t take it. “Come on,” I acted out in my best body
English, “You have a child, take the money.”
Nope. He said something that my imagination translated as,
“It wouldn’t be right to charge you for just running out of gas.”
“But you spent 15 minutes making all of these adjustments.”
“Nope, wouldn’t be right.”
I tried giving his son the 200,000 dong bill. He gave me a
beautiful toddler smile, but ultimately refused the offer. He didn’t even
bother putting it in his mouth to see how it tasted. His mama shook her head
and said something that I imagined as “Nope, that’s not the way we do things
here.”
I tried for several more minutes before giving up, and felt the
rush of energy that comes from being on the receiving end of a kind act.
Note to self: Take every possible opportunity to make others
feel that same rush.
The other time I tried to give a tip and was refused was in
Hanoi. I took six 90-minute lessons in spoken Vietnamese from a 21-year-old
college student named My (“mee”) and another teacher who substituted on the day
My couldn’t make it. Here she is:
In addition to teaching me Vietnamese pronunciation, she
made recordings of all the drills we worked on, a list of about 50 phrases I
wanted to learn, and a list of words for practicing the six Vietnamese tones.
All during her final exams week.
Lessons were $12 each, most of which went to her employer. I
tried to tip her $10, but she absolutely refused. (She also said, “Another guy
your age tried to do the same thing.” Harumph.)
Back to the motorcycle. Yesterday I relearned a truth about
this part of the world: if a highway project runs out of money or otherwise has
to be suspended, the construction company is in no way, shape or form
responsible for making the unfinished section drivable on a temporary basis.
So I had a great day until 1 pm, taking an early morning
ferry from Quan Lan past limestone islands that are part of the Ha Long chain, then
eating a bowl of pho bo in an outdoor
waterfront restaurant while watching the action on the main pier of a fishing
village. I bought a couple of still-warm baguettes and hit the road for Lang
Son. I had good highway for a change, so I let myself cruise at the wild speed
of 40 kph for a while, still slow enough to let me gawk at über-green
terraced farm fields and surrounding jungle, getting occasional waves from
women doing the back-bending labor of rice planting.
Then wham, I hit somewhere between 1 and 2 kilometers of
this:
Goopy soupy. No signs, no detours, no way to get around this
mess, no choice but to slip and slide and cuss and spit and slip and slide my
way through it. It was on this stretch of Highway 4B that I discovered another
great quality of my motorbike: it’s small enough that a 60-year-old geezer with
strong legs but very little upper body strength can pick it up after it’s
fallen over in a lake of mud. If I had anything larger than 110 cc, I don’t
think I could have done it.
It only took me about 20 minutes of manhandling the bike to
go this short distance, but I was one whupped puppy when I pulled up to the
hotel in Lang Son three hours later.
The Born To Be Wild 110 cc Vietnam Motorcycle Tour moves to
the northwest for the next couple of weeks, skirting the Chinese border under
grey skies that only break for an hour or two every afternoon. I cannot read
Vietnamese, so there actually may be enormous signs on the highway saying,
Construction in 5 km
Extremely Muddy
Conditions
Foreign Tourists on
Small Motorcycles Discouraged
I will blissfully forge ahead.



What a great description of the Born to Be Wild Tour! I'm looking forward to the next installment.
ReplyDeleteSusan