TRAVEL TALES
Young Chang
What do you get when you throw together 53 members of the Newport
Harbor Yacht Club, some Far East islands and 814 ocean miles of a clear,
deep blue?
A vacation fit for sailors.
Roger and Marilyn Riley of Newport Beach and fellow members from the
local yacht club embarked on an 8-day trip last month. They flew to
Singapore and from there to Hong Kong, but then sailed to different
cities in Malaysia and Thailand. They even spent a day and night out at
sea.
The Newport Beach group boarded the Star Flyer, a clipper ship that
holds 170, and traveled along clear and calm waters, sailing past islands
of beauties foreign to Newport Beach.
“I went [on the trip] specifically for the sailboat,” Roger Riley, 68,
said of the Flyer, which was launched in 1991. “The sailboat was a true
sailboat. It doesn’t have to have a motor.”
The mast was raised several times a day to the dramatic and classical
tune of Vangeli’s “Hoist the Anchor” -- a cinematic song fit for movies
set at sea.
Passengers climbed the mast, played rounds of deck-golf, water-skiied
and took scuba lessons. On land, they got to know the bartering economy,
a bit of the history behind Thailand and Malaysia, and rode elephants.
In Thailand, Roger Riley experienced what he recalls now as a pleasant
bartering experience.
The Newport Beach dentist was at a bazaar where vendors sold
everything from live chickens and dead pigs to imitations of brand name
purses and clothes. He bought a set of worry balls -- the silver ones you
roll around in your hand to relax -- and some toy frogs for the
grandchildren. He bargained the price down to what would be six American
dollars and walked away, content.
Then his friend bought a set of worry balls from the same woman
vendor. He bargained lower -- for $5. The vendor wouldn’t budge. The
friend insisted on his price and threatened to walk. The vendor asked him
to wait. She turned to Riley and asked, “Is it OK with you?”
“She was worried about me saving face,” Riley said.
His wife, Marilyn, agreed that not only were the Thai people
“absolutely radiant,” but so was everything they did.
Fruits were carved like artistic ornaments and placed alongside food
as decorations. Gardens were fresh and alive, the cities were clean.
For Marilyn Riley, the trip to Thailand taught her that the country is
more than it’s stereotyped to be through foreign eyes. She didn’t see any
children begging nor poverty-ridden streets.
“Everything is intended to be beautiful and pretty,” she said.
* Have you, or someone you know, gone on an interesting vacation
recently? Tell us your adventures. Drop us a line to Travel Tales, 330 W.
Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627; e-mail [email protected]; or fax to
(949) 646-4170.
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