Keep that drawbridge drawn.                                                                                                    [Travelfish #397: Barbarians at the gates](
Keep that drawbridge drawn
[Stuart McDonald](
Aug 11
Hi everyone,
Sorry Iâm a day lateâmy virtual dog did not eat my homework, rather I scalded my hand while blending pumpkin soup. No Chris, not on purpose.
A huge thanks once again, to all our supporters who have made a contribution to our crowdfunding campaign. Weâre now at [over US$9,600 donated from 149 people](âand the commissioning of stories is ongoingâstories you are making possible. Thank you!
Pick your chariot at the Perfume Pagoda. Photo: Samantha Brown.
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If youâve not heard about what we are trying to do, [you can find out more here](.
Last week on pay to read Couchfish, I started off with a trip to the [Perfume Pagoda](, then a tale of [a fire in my guesthouse](, a [visa mixâup](, the [Hanoi Hilton]( and heading south [on the train](.
On free to read Couchfish, I [revisited two Cambodian islands](, then took a look at [what Ko Tao was like in the mid 1990s](.
This week Couchfish is being written by [Cindy Fan](âI hope youâre enjoying her work as much as I am.
As always, the photos in this newsletter are from last week on Couchfish.
It is hard to go wrong on Koh Rong. Photo: Stuart McDonald.
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Elsewhere, last week David had [a cracking piece on Thailand and Covid](. If diving is more your thing, [Chris is on Ko Lanta](.
Donât forget, if you are a Travelfish member, the full Couchfish newsletter is freeâjust email me your member name and Iâll add you to the list.
Cheers and again thank you for all your support
Stuart
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More newsletters!
Yeah, I get a lot. These are not all travelârelated, but who doesnât need interesting stuff to read on the road?
The Profile
Polina Marinova profiles companies and people. Not travelârelated (that Iâve seen anyways)â but [often super interesting](.
Heated
Emily Atkinâs take on all things climate changeârelated. As travellers, [a worthy and very informative](, read.
Ask Molly
Every time I get this one, I read it, read it again, then go get a coffee and read it again. Sometimes I get it, sometimes I never quite get there. [I always try](.
We, the citizens
If Singapore is your thingâand Iâm not talking âwhere to find the best laksaâ, this, by Singaporean journalist Kirsten Han, [belongs on your reading list](.
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Barbarians at the gate
The other day I read a quote from David Kevan of Chic Locations, in [a Skift story on travel in Southeast Asia]( ($). He said:
âthey need to make decisions within the next four to five weeks and then make plans on how best health precautions can be applied. If not clients will just ask for options that have more clarity, usually in the Caribbean, and they will shelve Asia for a yearâ.
Our way or the high way. Lower your drawbridge, let us in, with health provisions to protect our guests, or weâll steer them elsewhere.
Tour companies preferred style of drawbridge. On Koh Rong. Photo: Stuart McDonald.
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Earlier this year, travel conglomerate TUI, [got into a drama with Thai hoteliers](. It was refusing to pay its dues due to Covid19 cancellations. Hotels were not demanding payment for future bookings cancelled, but rather past stays. TUI demanded onerous repayment conditions, for services they had already used. These were stays its customers had already paid TUI for.
Talk about about a double blowâfrom a supposed partner.
So when I read the Kevan quote above, if felt tone deaf. Yeah, I get their commercial obligations, and their customers want to go somewhere. But come on man, do you read the news?
Vietnam, long the Golden Covid19 Child of Southeast Asia is in the throes of a possible second wave. It has [almost 200,000 people in Covid19 quarantine]( as of a few days ago.
Practising separation on Ko Tao. Photo: Stuart McDonald.
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Indonesia and the Philippines [are up towards that figure in positive cases alone](. Media reports suggest, that at least in the case of Indonesia, [an accurate figure might be tenâfold that](. With the deaths to match. Hospitals in some countries are at at capacity, others overwhelmed. Doctors are nursing staff [are dying at world record rates](. It is an unmitigated disaster.
Simultaneously, regional economies are doing the hard yards. Unemployment especially in tourism, is at an all time high. In mid July [hotel occupancy in Bali was at 1%](. No, that is not a typo. One percent.
In a recent Zoom call, Chattan Kunjara Na Ayudhya, Deputy Governor of the Tourism Authority of Thailand [spoke with impressive candour](. He didnât expect Thailand to open its borders to recreational tourism until the end of the year. Perhaps not until into 2021âpost Lunar New Year even. To my mind, bearing in mind Iâm a travel writer, not an epidemiologist, that sounds sensible.
Channat slices through the double speakâeven if it does look like he is doing the session in a McDonalds. My mate Nick Ray, of Lonely Planet and Hanuman, also has some super smart things to say about domestic travel in Cambodia.
According to Ray, Cambodia has a campaign running at the moment called âThe road homeâ. The Khmer middle and upper classâat least not Hun Senâs matesâcan no longer hit Hong Kong or Singapore for shopping and travel. Full of rich imagery, it pushes people to travel back homeâto the provinces.
More offerings might help. Photo: Stuart McDonald.
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Megaâtravel companies talk this stuff down. Why? They donât profit off of it near as much. Their cash cows are international inbounds. Talking head panels, with not one voice for public health (nor a womanâalmost always these are blokeâzooms)â make me rage. Where are the voices for local concerns? Where are the talking points about the threat to the capacity of local health systemsâand citizensâif the drawbridge is lowered to foreign tourists?
Paying passengers get sick? They get taken home to their first world health care and hospitals. Yet again, developing world locals get left holding the can.
Yes, tourism is a huge employer and wealth generator. The risks of opening to international tourism though are being swept under the carpet by the industry. Tourism has always had mixed effects on destinationsâeconomic, environment, education and so on.
Now, more than ever before though, the primary issue is healthâparticularly, local health. What are the risks, and how well equiped are countries in Southeast Asia to deal with an imported second, or third wave? These questions must be asked and answered before anything else.
Quarantine comes in many flavours. Hoa Lo, Hanoi. Photo: Stuart McDonald.
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Tour companies need to do a far better job of explaining what steps they are taking to guarantee their passengers will not be a risk. Iâve seen almost nothing along these lines. Instead a reliance on destinations sorting it out. Followed by whining when the steps taken to protect local people are not relaxed enough.
Weâre over six months into this. Inbound companies are still stuck in the mindset that they need to protect their passengers rather than those in the destination. This must change. Theyâre responsible for both. Until then, keep the drawbridge up.
It isnât all bad news though! There are smart companies doing local stuff well. Off the top of my head, [Smiling Albino](, [Sampan Travel](, and [Hanuman]( are all doing interesting things. None are budget operators mind you, but the region needs to start somewhere. Iâm sure there are plenty of others.
Is the sun setting on freeârange travel? Photo: Stuart McDonald.
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As Iâve said before, plan your travel down the track independentâstyle. Contact places youâve stayed at in the past and make a bookingâbook direct! Pick a date in the far future. These deposits will make an immense difference to small, family owned businesses. Your money could well make the difference between their kids staying in (or getting to) school or not. What Travelfish reader has not sat in a family owned guesthouse lobby as the kids get off to school?
I know many Travelfish readers already know this region well. Youâve been here before, I know that. You keep emailing me anecdotes from 1968 (when I wasnât born) or 1972 (when I was born, but couldnât travel; because I was in a cot). Youâve caught the crappy bus and/or the half sinking ferry. Youâve not only stayed at places, youâve made friends with owners and staff, right across the region. Youâve met the people. You know what Iâm talking about.
This is what travel is all about.
Even if the doors were open, how many could/would/should come? Koh Rong, Cambodia. Photo: Stuart McDonald.
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If you were thinking of making a donation to our crowdfunding this week, please donât.
Instead contact your favourite place in the region and send them $5 or $20 or hell, just a nice note. Tell them when sanity returns, youâll be there for opening night.
Because thatâs where we all want to be.
Travel local
Stuart
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Ten things worth reading
Lack of tourists actually harming environment in many cases
âIt's not as simple as saying [fewer tourists is good for the environment.](â
Conservation activists urge post-pandemic tourism reset in Thailand $
[More on the same topic here](.
Vietnam approves $9 billion development within mangrove reserve
âOne environmentalist said [they had been repeatedly harassed by the police]( for their outspoken criticism of the project on Facebook.â
Molyvannâs house is up for sale â but should it be a heritage site? $
âBut with all this talk of price per square metre and investment potential, there seems to be [virtually no public discussion]( regarding preserving, and even celebrating, this landmark of immense Cambodian heritage. â
Ten dishes in Kelantan
Old list, [but as yummy as ever](.
2 Price Thailand
Does double pricing in Thailand drive you mad? [This site was designed for you](.
Spotting guidebooks in the wild
I enjoyed this piece by a guidebook author [spotting people using books he has worked on](.
Decline of Singaporeâs famed shopping strip shows cityâs pain
Everywhere, even Singaporeâs famed [Orchard Road](, are hurting.
A neurological battle ground
â âPlease hang on,â I told, begged and urged him: âWhen it gets difficult, help the others around youâ. [I had nothing better to say](.â
Covid19 and a possible political reckoning in Thailand
A long in depth read on the situation in Thailand. [Excellent work by ICG here](.
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What to read
Free Thailand guidebooks
Smart. [And useful](.
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Photo of the week
Travel seemed simpler in the 1990s. Ko Tao back bay. Photo: Stuart McDonald.
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Thank you!
Thanks from reading the Travelfish newsletter. Please feel free to forward it to all and sundry and your feedback, as always, is much appreciated.
Travel light!
Stuart & the Travelfish team
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