Tuesday 25 June 2013

Palau: War & Peace



Hello from the land of Palau. I had previously planned to update this blog a little more frequently but since moving from the hotel to our unit we’ve had very limited internet access. Yesterday we requested a land line & homenet (DSL internet service) package. Homenet is a 256k connection @ $1.25 per hour at night or 128k @ $2.50 per hour during the day (+ a $20 a month access fee). I understand that the service is still very slow due to the country relying on satellite comms.
So what has been going on you ask?
 
all but the bottom few notes are 20's
Well we’ve picked up, paid for and registered our car. The car cost us $3700 and we paid for at least half of it in $20 notes. The local ATM’s refused to give me anything else and some of them would only give me $200 at a time. It was a long and slow process to get all the cash out. We also bought the car through one of the larger hardware stores. This kind of thing happens a bit here. Example B: The place that rents our unit (and others) out is located in a flower shop. The flower shop appears to sell golf balls and moisturiser as well. There is no golf course here. 

Ok, let me tell you how you go about registering a car in Palau. First you have to visit the equivalent of the transport department (hopefully you know where this is as there are no signs). You wait in line, tell them what you are after, then head back outside for someone to inspect your car. (Which mostly seemed to consist of writing down the engine number). Now head back inside, wait again, get the details written up. Then head 3 buildings over to the Treasury department to pay for the rego ($75). You’d think this was about it right? But no, in Palau you then need to drive a few minutes away up to the state office and pay another $25. You then head back to where you started from and wait again, they write a few more things up and give you your number plate (singular, like in the USA you have one plate on the back of your car). Then for $1 you can get someone to provide the bolts and put the plate on for you (which I’m assuming is easier than buying the right bolts and a shifting spanner). You then wait briefly again for your registration card. Congratulations, you now have a registered car in Palau :)
View from the lunch with the ambassador
 
Thankfully one of the Aussie Navy boys gave us the heads up on this one so it wasn’t as confusing as it could have been. Stay tuned for how to get your local driver’s license.
After spending our morning sorting the car out we were treated to lunch by the Aussie Ambassador to the Micronesia region (one of the perks of being in a small country). We had a good chat with him about various things like issues affecting nutrition in the area and his own various roles and duties. Someone tell me how I get one of these jobs?

The following day we moved into our new unit. It’s a newly renovated 2 bedroom unit about a 5 minute drive from “downtown” (when it’s not peak hour traffic… yes seriously there is peak hour traffic). Compared to the quality of the units we saw when looking last week, this place is a palace. We don’t have any nice views of the water unfortunately but we should be quite happy here. There are another 3 units in the block which are currently empty while the renos are being completed. 

our neighbours to the south
In Palau there are no street names nor addresses, which can make it extremely challenging to find a place. Particularly if you are new to the country like us. While catching a cab last week to view a prospective unit we had to tell the driver to take us to Momo’s house. Luckily he did know where this was. When telling people where we live we have to use landmarks like ‘next to the building xyz’ or ‘turn right where the compact road ends’. It hasn’t been too difficult so far and it just adds to the quirkiness that is Palau. 

What has been quite difficult with moving in to our apartment is the definition of what fully furnished is. Back home you’d expect to find pretty much everything to live off without having to buy anything right..? Well here it’s essentially just the basic furniture; bed, side tables, dresser, fridge, table & chairs, couches, tv unit, coffee table, that sort of stuff. This has had some fair implications on us as we’ve had to spend quite a bit of money already just to be able to do basic living and cooking. We’ve had to buy all sorts of stuff like, linen, towels, toaster, a wok, a pot, cutlery, broom, pegs & line, chopping board, can opener, you get the idea. It’s been a little challenging at times to try and make do without all the stuff we have become so reliant on. I might touch on this further in another post though. 

not cheap but a bit of a status symbol for the locals
Right now we have no tv, microwave, stereo, kettle, phone, internet etc etc. I think we’ll see how long we can go without some of this stuff and hope to pick some off other expats when they leave.  So far it’s been unexpectedly expensive to eat here. Pretty much everything in the grocery stores are similar prices to Australia. (Restaurants are mostly slightly cheaper though, except for the Indian place and one of Japanese ones). After buying the car and having to setup a house we are well behind, and with the cost of groceries I’m already rather concerned about how we will make ends meet on the volunteer wage. But we’ll see what comes once we’ve settled in properly. The locals manage to do it somehow but I think they have a lot of spam on rice.
Oh and no one really seems to have their own laundry here. We are probably lucky to have a shared one between the four units. Of course it costs $1 for each load too.

yep, seems necessary
The first night in the new unit was interesting to say the least. We had planned to cook as it had been around 12 days since our last home cooked meal and the cost was adding up. However the whole island(s) had a power blackout that lasted near 2 hours. We’ve been told this is extremely rare these days but while in the hotel we saw quite a few power fluctuations. We eventually gave up waiting for the power to come back on and had to go out and eat at a local restaurant yet again. 

I don’t think either of us slept well that first night. There was a lot of noise around (which generally hasn’t continued on successive nights thankfully). The bed seems to amplify any movement into a crescendo of tidal wave proportions. And as I expected we were woken very early by all the roosters I’d seen wandering our neighbourhood. The first rooster started around 3:30am but it was on like donkey kong from around 4:30am and it didn’t let up. At some point I started having sleep deprived delirious fantasies about buying one of the air rifles sold in one of the local shops and taking the roosters out one by one. What I find funny about this is while I was joking about shooting the roosters I’ve since found out that one of our fellow Australians here does just that. He bagged three on Sunday morning alone. Maybe I’ll get him come around one morning :)

Generally we’ve been sleeping better since and the roosters don’t seem to be as bad as they did on the first night. However it is very hot & humid at night here, just like Brisbane in summer. We put the aircon on one night but with the high price of electricity here ($200 per month roughly) we’ve been trying to go without. It’s a fine line between trying to open the place up for some air vs closing it up so the roosters aren’t as loud early the next morning.

Another issue we’ve come across is that 3 of our neighbours decided to burn off their various garden waste over the weekend, one neighbour each on Friday, Saturday & Sunday. The smoke has been so bad that we’ve had to almost complete shut the house up for hours while the fires were burning. Two of those neighbours seem to have their fire pit much closer to our place than their own as well. I just hope it’s not a weekly occurrence. 

not a bad arty photo considering it was taken on my phone
One of the perks of living here is that about 1 minute drive away the boat ramp/jetty/BBQ spot/outdoor basketball court for Nikko Bay. I think in our 5-6 days of being here we’ve been swimming every day but one. It’s a huge bay and we’ve only seen a very small portion of it. But that portion is incredible. It has some great corral which is teaming with various aquatic life. My highlight was spotting an Eagle Ray a couple of days ago and swimming around with it for about 30 minutes. Yesterday afternoon Amanda spotted a turtle but I was a little too far away to see it.  
Another perk to living in Palau is the quality of seafood. For last night’s dinner we bought a whole Red Snapper caught that day, 1.4kg for $6.75. We only had half so there is enough for tonight as well.  

Ok I’ll leave it at that before I write a blog article the length of War & Peace. Stay tuned for more Pieces of Eights coming at you soon.

Monday 17 June 2013

Palau: Sorting out our new life!



Since my last post we’ve had a very busy and successful few days getting our new life sorted in Palau. The best news is that the morning following my last post we found a great unit to rent. Amanda found that the phone book (of all places) listed a bunch of places you could call for accommodation. Most had nothing going however the first place she called had a block of 4 near new units where re-modelling was just finishing up. Compared to the other 4 places we looked at this place is a palace! It’s nice and clean with new furniture to boot. Unfortunately we don’t have one of the stunning views that some other people have here but we must have close to the newest & cleanest place on the island (at least in a reasonable price range anyway). We are also a walk or very short drive away from a great swimming spot in Nikko Bay. The little area there also houses the local outdoor basketball court which had a family of local chickens training for their next league game (unfortunately we weren’t quick enough for photos). 
After sorting out our accommodation we had our first swim at our new local swimming hole which was absolutely beautiful but the water was almost too warm for my liking. I also reminded myself why I don’t play basketball!    

I’ve heard mixed a few mixed reports about the reputation of the neighbourhood we’ll be living in, with everything from it’s a great area to it’s a bit dodgy. We will have a guard onsite between 9pm and 5am which seems like serious overkill! A fellow Aussie couple live just down the road (the guy works with mine clearing) and we’ve also been introduced to another lady who lives just up the road. On a side note we are already running into people we know in the street. If you think Brisbane is small try living in Palau.  

Some observations for anyone who may potentially end up living here or is just interested in what things are like here: A fully furnished unit here is a very different concept to what it is in Australia. What is included here is typically: a bed, side tables, a couch, a fridge, stove, aircon (maybe an oven and an entertainment unit). What they don’t include are: TV, microwave, all kitchen appliances, all kitchenware, bed linen, towels and pretty much everything else. So we’ll now have to spend a bit just to buy the minimum amount of stuff we need. Oh and the laundry is generally shared between units or you have to use a local Laundromat, both you need to pay for.  

Amanda & I are much happier now we have sorted our new digs, we move in on Thursday. After securing the lodging and knowing we need a bit of kit for the place we thought we’d attend a ‘Garage Sale’ at the fancy resort here. We arrived to see that they had hardly anything and when we asked about the linen that appeared to be in bags behind a desk we were told they didn’t have any. We aren’t sure but we suspect the lady didn’t want to sell to us. Frustratingly we were $10 poorer for having to catch a taxi all the way out to the resort and back with nothing to show for it. It also apparently started at 9am despite the flyer saying 11am…

On Saturday night the local Aussie volunteers were treated to a dinner at the local Indian restaurant ‘The Taj’. It was a very good meal easily at Brisbane quality however it was quite expensive for local standards, especially on a volunteer wage. We will be back but only on special occasions or for their Friday lunchtime buffet which is more affordable.

Sunday we headed off for a trip up on the largest island called Babeldoab to see the capital building and for a jungle cruise down the river. The capital building is pretty much in the middle of nowhere, it is ridiculously big and looks completely out of place. It reminds me of the large old US buildings in the European style. The pillars are hilariously fake and apparently no one is happy about travelling from Koror up to the new capital everyday so I understand more work is being down out of Koror. The jungle trip was nice, great to see the area and a few animals like crocs, fruit bats (which they eat here), king pigeon, kingfisher and some cute kittens.

Rodger the local Croc

a 2002 FunCargo (not our Fungo though)
We’ve noticed that our grand plan of trying to not own a car here is rather unrealistic. Even if you live in the middle of town you’ll frequently be going places well out of walking distance. Everything seems to be mostly clustered around the main street that runs across the 4 attached islands. It’s not overly hilly but with everything so stretched out and our with new accommodation a good distance from downtown and the hospital we knew we’d need to buy a car. Most of the Aussie’s seem to drive a Mazda Demio which are like a little van crossed with a hatchback. Today we were very kindly taken around by another Aussie volunteer, in his two months in the country he’s made a lot of connections. We looked at a number of car yards and decided to buy a 2002 Toyota FunCargo which is very similar to a Demio. We should pick it up tomorrow and have a lot more freedom. I've nicknamed the car Fungo after the baseball training/bat.
We’ve also both got local sim cards for our mobile phones. The network seems pretty good but there is no data network. However what is interesting is that you have to pay to call AND receive calls on the mobile network here. So most people just text each other. Local land line calls are free unless you call mobiles where the person receiving the call pays.  


Tomorrow we have a lunch with the Aussie ambassador to the region which should be interesting! I’m going to wear my best (and only) polo shirt and best shorts.

 
PS As we’d say in Australia It’s absolutely pissing down right now.