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Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon

a travel blog by The Happy Couple


Michael's view on the trip. This blog is really mostly for me, so that I'll have a clearer memory of the trip when it's done, like a journal, so please forgive me my obsessions like sampling and photographing all the local food and the booze. It's just my thing!

Also please forgive all typos, spelling mistakes and grammar mistakes. I'm usually doing this in a rush, and most of the time it's on such a slow PC that it would take even longer to check for mistakes and correct them.

The blog is usually 2 to 3 weeks behind, but I try to keep next few locations on the map up-to-date. You can see the schedule dates associated with the map if you go to http://blogabond.com/TripView.aspx?TripID=4517 and click "Show Newest First" or, if the maps are causing problems try http://blogabond.com/TripView.aspx?tripID=4517&slow=1
view all 2953 photos for this trip


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Chiang Mai: Songkran at its craziest!

Chiang Mai, Thailand



(S)he only really belongs at the end of the blog, but I think the photo deserves prominence.

Waiting for the bus from Chang Rai to Chang Mai, we bought some drinks and snacks for the journey from the 7-11 in the bus station. 7-11 is absolutely everywhere in Thailand, although they've been surprisingly ubiquitous throughout Asia. The Thais seem to really care about drinking straws, but I had to laugh when I opened the bag. We'd bought two big bottles of drinking water (Thailand may be more developed that the rest of South East Asia, but you still can't drink the tap water), two cans of Coke, and two little bottles of Yakult. The bag also contained six straws in three different sizes: long, thick ones presumably for the bottled water; medium-sized ones for the Cokes; and two tiny little narrow straws for the Yakult. I wonder how many different types of straw they have easy access to at the counter, and for how many different products!

Last time I was in Thailand I stayed at a little backpackers' called Eagle House and as they had been so friendly and incredibly cheap we had taken the unusual step of booking ahead so that we could be sure of somewhere to stay over Songkran, during which we had heard Chang Mai books up very fast. The Irish owner, Annette, who run the place with her Thai husband, Pon, did not have very good email communication skills. In fact she had almost completely failed to confirm that we had a booking at all: “I think the staff have booked the room for you” was the best we got from her. When we arrived it was pouring with rain so I did not relish the thought of looking for another place to stay. The guy at the desk told us it was the first time there had been rain in Chang Mai since last year. Either people were lying to us about the weather, or the apparent early monsoon was just for us, and was following us around Asia. There was a bit of confusion and delay but, yes, they did have a room for us, although I soon realised it was not what we'd asked for: this room had a hot water shower, a totally unnecessary luxury we had not been bothering with. The “cold” water comes out pretty warm when the ambient temperature is 35C and over, and you don't want anything warmer when the weather is that hot anyway. Also, hot water showers are usually electric “power” showers, which means that the water tends to trickle out much more slowly than water straight from the mains. I went back to the desk and explained to the young guy that I had booked a small cold water double room at 150 Baht, but he said they don't have any, just hot water rooms at 180 Baht. The price was about £3.60, a considerable increase on the 75p per night I paid before, but I suppose five years is a long time! The difference between cold and hot didn't seem too bad, so I agreed to stay where we were. There was apparently a trek leaving the next day, but we wanted to see Songkran in Chang Mai. Unfortunately he could not confirm when the next trek would be leaving, nor could he confirm whether we'd be able to stay a couple of days longer than the three days we'd booked. “Ask again on your last day” he told me.


We ventured out onto the street and it was quickly clear we would need to be armed, so we got Joanne a lady's-sized super-soaker type of water gun, but the water activity seemed to die down in the early evening, so we left the gun in the room and investigated the Chang Mai nightlife. We found quite a nice club called THC, which was playing a good mix of psychedelic trance, hard trance, and drum'n'bass in lovely soft-cushion fluorescent decorations surroundings. It seems to be a little slice of Thai beach culture migrated to the northern end of the country. We were starting to notice that loads of people were smoking in Thailand compared to anywhere we'd been so far. There are no real smoking restrictions anywhere we'd been in Asia, but it hadn't bothered us much because there were never many people smoking at once. I suppose other than Thailand the locals are too poor, and as for the travellers, it is more the backpacker end of the tourist industry outside Thailand, so maybe the tourists there can't afford to smoke as much either. But now we were in Thailand it was stinging eyes and the smelly clothes and hair again we used to suffer from before the excellent smoking ban was brought in for bars and restaurants in Scotland.

One of the things I'd liked about the Eagle House was their “honesty system”: you help yourself to soft drinks, beer, or whatever from the fridge then write it down in your room book, and if you order food, you write that down too. This was still in place, but there was no longer beer available, which was a bit of a disappointment. In the morning, when writing down our breakfast order, I noticed that the room rate had been written in for me: 240 Baht, not the 180 I was expecting, so I took it up with them at the desk. It turned out we were in a large hot water room, not the small hot water room I thought we were in, and certainly not the small cold water room I'd booked. I complained about this and suggested that they should let me have the room for the rate I was expecting, but they were having none of that and closed ranks, claiming (falsely) that everyone working in reception had heard him telling me yesterday that the rate was 240 Baht. They were able to move us to one of the cheap rooms we thought we were already in. I think it was right next door to the room I'd had five years previously, but the nostalgia was somewhat ruined by “improvements” they had carried out in the room. The ceiling fan had been replaced by a light and a small fan mounted on the wall instead. Ceiling fans are really nice, effective, and quiet at night, but they seem to have been replaced by noisy little ineffective wall-mounted ones in many places. I suppose they must be cheaper to replace when something goes wrong, but they really are useless. The gushing cold-water shower was now a trickling hot water electric shower, and the clean-but-basic flush-with-bucket squat toilet had been replaced by a western-style flushing toilet, but as is the case all over Asia, the cheaper western-style toilets are worse than the Asian-style ones: they leak, the seat is never properly attached, they don't flush properly and so on. All in all I was becoming pretty disillusioned with Eagle House, and Joanne wasn't at all impressed with my choice of dwellings.


We had to go looking for a camera shop, to see if we could get my grit-damaged one repaired, but before we looked for it we had some preparations to carry out: Joanne transferred all of her stuff from her small rucksack into the dry bag we had bought for Tubing in Vang Vieng; I also had a smaller dry bag designed to go inside a rucksack, so I transferred everything into that; we filled Joanne's gun up from the tap; and the first place we went out on the street was a stall selling a huge range of water weapons. I settled on 1.5 litre super-soaker, which I paid about £8 for, although I was tempted to get one of their top-of-the-range twin barrel guns, or a weapon with a back-mounted water supply for about £15, but it seemed like a rather silly expense when our daily budget is only £35 between us, including accommodation. The only camera place we could get information about on a Chang Mai tourist map we had, was a fair walk away. We were a keen to do it that day because Songkran officially started the following day and we were fairly sure they would close for the holiday, however an extra twist had been added by the government declaring a state of emergency and three extra days of holiday, which meant it had actually already started. Our walk took us through some less central parts of the town, but there were still plenty of people ready to soak us from street corners, outside shops, or from the back of moving vehicles. We were able to retaliate most of the time with our newly purchased weapons, and I noted that many people actually want you to wet them. A couple of people had pointed at me and said things like “wet me, farang, for good luck!” so how could I refuse? We soon came up against the limitation of our guns which is water supply, but we discovered that everyone is very friendly and happy to share their water supply with you, which is usually a huge plastic bin full of water. Of course they usually give you an extra soaking while you're filling up, but it's a price worth paying. When we couldn't find the camera place, it occurred to us to call the number on the leaflet: no answer.


On the way back from our largely futile shop search, we came to a busy bar with rock music belting out, where the clientele were almost exclusively Thai. Outside there were several farangs, though, and a few Thais waging a very intense water war with the passing traffic and people stationed across the road, at the corner of the moat. The centre of Chang Mai is surrounded by a square moat, and standing next to it clearly gave those people the massive advantage of a limitless water supply, however I worried about the cleanliness of moat water being chucked all over people. I think the moat may be the reason that Chang Mai celebrates Songkran more vigorously than anywhere else in Thailand. The bar seemed like an interesting place, so we confirmed it was OK to go inside dripping wet and sat down at the bar for a wee drink. We got chatting to a friendly girl at the bar called Aey, who told us that her sister, behind the bar, was the manager. She told us that all the farangs outside water-fighting had Thai wives or girlfriends and children to them. While we were in the bar it started to pour with rain again, so I asked how unusual it was to get rain at this time of year. She claimed that this is the first time that it has ever rained in Chang Mai during Songkran. She went on to tell us how Songkran was a gift from Buddha, when during his life there was a very hot year (40 or 50 degrees she said) and he wondered how to ease the suffering of all the people, and he apparently came up with the idea of a water fight. She was really quite drunk so I'm not sure she knew what she was talking about; I had thought that Songkran was all about washing away bad luck rather than cooling down, hence some people's desire to be wet. Also some, usually older, people tend to sprinkle a little water over you with their fingers as if anointing you. There is also a tradition of washing your Buddha figures during Songkran, and I had seen someone pouring water over the large Buddha at the Sunday Market, so I think it is more about luck, although it was a nice story Aey told us. We sat and chatted to her for most of the afternoon, getting drunker and drunker. At one point she produced some very tasty Tom Yum Crisps and told us she works as quality control for the company. Tom Yum is usually a hot and sour soup, so these were quite an unusual take on it: most of the same ingredients, dried i.e. shrimps, chillies, lime leaves, nuts, squid, etc. I thought they were very nice and I told her I thought they would sell well in Scotland; I was thinking of posh shops like Pekhams. She assured me that they do export and kept trying to give us free packets. We only took one because it didn't really sound like the business had properly taken off yet and I've not been able to find any sign online of them in the UK, but I'm sure they would sell because they're delicious. The water fight had started to spread indoors as people got more and more drunk. As far as I can gather everyone in Thailand gets drunk continuously for about five days over this festival. Since we had Aey on our side, she helped by filling our guns with iced water which makes for an excellent secret weapon. When you fire iced water at people you can really see the difference: the shock on their face, the sharp intake of breath, and the stiffening of their back. Great stuff!


Eventually we staggered back outside into the battle zone, where I started to notice that the iced water idea was neither original nor very unusual: we were frequently hit by streams of water that made us gasp, or worse, whole buckets of water over our heads. When I spotted huge icebergs floating in some of the large bins people were using as water supplies it all made sense. The iced water is just one element in the huge range of weaponry on the streets for Songkran: there are the ubiquitous super-soakers like we had, but many people had those guns with water supplies on their backs like rucksacks, which allowed them to go longer without a water source, while others had gone in the other direction and were using long, thin water canons which expend their aqueous ammunition in one powerful jet, or had gone for the cheap and simple option of using a bucket; both these groups of people would often be found gathered around the large water bins, never able to stray to far from a water supply, but able to deliver the most devastating assault when next to one, especially when the bin was full of ice too. Quite a few people had complimented their weapon with a comedy or horror rubber full-face mask. Let me tell you, it's quite scary to see George Bush coming towards you fully armed. Many of the bucket-packers had stationed themselves along the moat, and were re-arming their weapon by lowering it on a string they had attached. In fact, so many people were using the moat as a water supply that by the end of the day, the road next to it was flooded several inches deep and even before then a little river ran down the road all day. Another two weapons at opposite ends of the spectrum are those who carry around a little cup of water for dipping fingers into and sprinkling over people, and those who have a hose, though the hose is usually used to refill the big bins it is occasionally turned on some unlucky or deserving opponent. This raises the question: who is your opponent? Mostly it seems almost as if there are two teams: the people standing by the bins against the people driving round in vehicles. But then the people standing on opposite sides of the street also have a rivalry, even if it comes second to the war against vehicles, and of course there are plenty of peripatetic warriors like us, who are happy to take a shot at anyone and definitely get it back in at least equal measure. But even with these loosely defined enemies, you still see plenty of in-fighting: you can often witness short bouts where a few people round the same bin, or on the back of the same pick-up, start going for each other, but this is usually brought to an end by a passer-by refocusing the team effort. Some people seem to pile as many of their friends as they can onto the back of a pick-up, along with plenty of beer and huge bins full of iced water, which is also good for keeping the beer cool, and drive round and round the square of the moat all day. You can even charter tuktuks with buckets of water, by the hour, to drive you round and round. Plenty of people even opt to drive round and round on mopeds or bicycles. The result of all of this, of course, is that there is a constant traffic jam all the way around the moat, but nobody seems to mind much: it just gives them enough time to have a mini-war with one group of bin-dwellers before the traffic frees up enough for them to move onto the next campaign. Many of the vehicles and lots of people faces have white pasty stuff all over them. We had asked Aey what this is and it is apparently talc, used to protect against the sun. I had thought it was maybe a symbol for the bad luck which would then be visibly washed away. One of the fantastic things about the fighting is that it is very mixed: young and old, Thais and farangs, men and women, monks and police, they are all equal targets and everyone is having fun together, without resorting to grouping along racial or gender lines or suchlike. It's just a great big happy party, with music thumping out of various stages set up around the city.

Passing a Mexican restaurant advertising free wifi, we spotted Lambert from Chang Rai, so went in to chat to him and use the wifi. He was heading back to his guesthouse for a bit of a party with the other guests there, so we agreed to join him. On the way to his place we passed a stall selling durian. I had to buy some: all this time in Asia I'd been buying durian products, trying to understand what it tastes like, but I had not thus far seen actual durian. I didn't try it immediately but the smell was rather powerful; I had to keep moving it around the bar of Lambert's guesthouse so as not to offend people. Lambert seemed less worried about offending people and ranted for some time about how he hated Phuket, where we were going soon, mostly because he had objected to all the ladyboys there. I don't think he was the sort of person who would object to ladyboys in principle, but he had apparently found that those in Phuket were very forward, to the point of extreme harassment. He posed the question why there were so many ladyboys in Thailand and quickly presented his theory that it is all because of the Thai language. His theory centred on the fact that Thai is unusual in that the first person personal pronoun (“I” in English) is different depending on whether you are male of female: “dichan” for females and “phom” for males. There is also a very frequently used “politening particle” (don't know what the correct linguistic term is), at the end of most sentences unless a conversation goes on for a while, and this too is different depending on your gender: “kap” for males and “kAAaa” (falling tone) for females. Thai is the only language, he said, which does this, and consequently allows people to choose their own gender simply by changing what they say. I thought his theory was interesting, but I was only half-convinced, and I could not believe there were not more similar languages. He assured me that he had been all over the world and learned enough of every major language to be sure. Joanne later reminded me that the word for “Yes” differs in Khmer according to the speaker gender, and I think we found something in Vietnamese too, however the fact it is “I” that changes in Thai is maybe significant and the high frequency of the changing words in Thai may be too. We were probably already a bit too worse for wear to be joining another party and after a couple of Thai whiskies from Lambert, Joanne was a bit worse for wear, so we said our goodbyes to the concerned-looking people at Lambert's guesthouse and went home to ours.

When we arrived back we realised that Joanne no longer had her camera, so I put her to bed and ventured back out to see if she had left it in Lambert's guesthouse, however I was too drunk myself to remember where on earth we had just been and after about an hour roaming the streets looking for it I had to give up. I returned home and ate one of the two pieces of durian: very odd tasting. The next morning I ate the rest if the durian as a hangover cure and Joanne was very unwell. Eagle House confirmed that they would be unable to extend our booking for two days, which meant that they had allowed other people to check in after I let them know we wanted to stay on. By now I was so annoyed with them I decided to write to the Lonely Planet and Rough guide to give them a very negative review. It wasn't a good day: we still couldn't remember where Lambert was staying and Aey's sister confirmed nobody had found Joanne's camera there. We had no idea where the Mexican restaurant we met Lambert was, but it was now our best bet for Joanne's camera. Luckily my phone had stored the name of the wifi point, “Miguels”, when I'd connected to check my email, and we spotted a place with the same name when retracing our steps. They were closed for the holiday, but we found an employee hanging around. They had found nothing either and he told us that stuff often gets lifted from there because they are right on the main street. Increasingly depressed we went looking for new accommodation, but instead we found an open camera repair shop, where the owner said he could repair mine and I could collect it later that day. Maybe our luck was changing. We continued the hostel hunt, but most just said that they couldn't tell us until tomorrow, by which time we'd be walking around with our huge packs getting soaked. Finally we found a place who told us that we couldn't book but, if we came back tomorrow, they would definitely have something. It was a much bigger place aimed at younger people, where you had to pay for each day up-front, and which the LP described as noisy, but we were desperate. We collected the camera which was working again, but unfortunately still had the sticky beer problem it had been suffering from since Laos. I went to try and blog, but I was too hungover even for that, however we did receive an email from Sia and Willemijn inviting us to lunch the following day. The water fight continued unabated and we got so wet that we both had chafed thighs.


The next morning we were up early so that we could move to our new guesthouse without everything in our big rucksacks getting soaked. I had put everything in plastic bags inside the rucksack, but I didn't trust them to the amount of water we had endured the previous day. In fact we had left early enough, but people were already starting to get set up along the moat. At lunch time we met the Dutch girls who didn't seem to be all that impressed at the constant soakings, but I think it was just because they wanted to go shopping instead. Meanwhile I tried to put my newly revitalised camera to good use by putting it in a clear plastic bag and taking some photos. My camera stayed dry despite the serious efforts of strangers, but the photos didn't come out all that well: most of them seemed a bit "steamed up". It started to rain heavily again, so that we asked each other if there really was any point in Songkran this year. We met Sia and Willemijn again for dinner then we all went to see what was happening on the stage in the main square, which had seemed to be hosting variety performances earlier in the day. Now it appeared to be a beauty contest in full swing. We couldn't catch much of what they were saying, but one thing we were sure of was that one of the facts they gave about the girls as they were introducing them was their weight in kilograms. Surely that shouldn't be allowed! We ended the day by taking the two Dutch girls to the THC club we had enjoyed so much a couple of nights before. It seemed to be full of Dutch people surprised that you can find “this kind of music” outside Holland. This time the youngsters weren't such a bad influence on us because Willemijn thought she had eaten something dodgy so wasn't drinking, even after I had recommended that a large Sangsom would kill any infection.

Last day of Songkran: rinse and repeat. I finally managed to find some spicy food in Thailand in the shape of som tam, which is a fantastic green papaya salad, incorporating lime juice, fish sauce, tiny shrimps (krill maybe), chillies, garlic, and peanuts all bashed together a bit. We'd had it in Laos a few times, but it's much nicer in Thailand because the Lao one is a bit simpler. Walking around looking for photo opportunities, out attention was attracted by Sia and Willemijn shouting from the back of a pick-up, apparently getting much more into the swing of things today.

They dismounted briefly to explain. Someone had been throwing buckets of iced water from the back of a vehicle and had accidentally scooped up a full can of beer and thrown it at them. They saw their opportunity and told him he could only have it back if he and his friends allowed them to join their party. So they had been driving round in circles for the couple of hours since and seemed to have no intention to quit. They asked me to take a photo, which didn't come out very well so after they left I decided to chance taking the camera out of the bag for brief instants to take photos and little snippets of video before quickly sealing it all back up again. I was very careful with my timing, but there were still some near misses. This time we finished the day off with a tower of Chang beer, which I had been eyeing up ever since we first spotted one.

We were going to leave the next day. We had seen no tourist attractions in Chiang Mai, but we had partied with the locals for a few days and, judging by the number of other farangs doing the same, Songkran itself is now a major tourist attraction in Chiang Mai. Only now it was over did we think we would be able to get transport to move on, but I had wanted to stay to the end anyway.



permalink written by  The Happy Couple on April 15, 2009 from Chiang Mai, Thailand
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
tagged Drinking, Thailand, Chaos and Songkran

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Sukhothai, Thailand




permalink written by  The Happy Couple on April 16, 2009 from Sukhothai, Thailand
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Suki Yaki in Sukhothai

Sukhothai, Thailand



The day after Songkran was over, Chiang Mai was a completely different city. All of the temporary stages had been removed, the permanent traffic jam round the moat was gone, and so were all the people intent on soaking everyone. I had been sure there would be a few stragglers who kept a little fighting going, after all they had started at least a week early, so why wouldn't they finish late? However it really did seem to be the end, although I kept my water gun with me just in case we were ambushed. Joanne just left hers behind in the hotel room when we went for the bus to Sukhothai. On the bus we discussed the relative merits of staying in Old versus New Sukhothai: the old town was very small with very little choice of accommodation or food, but it was where the ruins were to be found, which was the only reason we were going there. The new town didn't sound like it had much to offer tourists, except that the bus was going to drop us there and then leave from there to Bangkok, which would have required more effort that evening on our part, and then again two mornings later if we were going to stay in Old Sukhothai. Just as I was thinking that we must be approaching town, the bus stopped and some people got off. In an completely unexpected stroke of luck, the driver had decided to stop in the old town, removing any need at all to go to the new town, and we managed to work out what was happening just in time to pile off with the others. Accidentally on purpose I left my water gun in the boot of the bus. It didn't seem like I would have much more use for it, although I was a bit sad to see it go.

There were only two choices of accommodation, so we opted for the Old City Guesthouse as it was recommended by the Rough Guide and, having blown our budget since arrival in Thailand by indulging in a little too much revelry, we decided to save a bit of money and go for the “shared” bathroom option. In practice I think we were the only people staying in that part, so we actually had two bathrooms to ourselves. Next door was a cafe-restaurant called the Coffee Cup, selling excellent coffee, which we had been missing since arriving in Thailand. We ordered food there and I opted for the beef red curry, which should be loaded with chilli anyway, but to make sure I requested it “phet phet” (very hot) which I had learned hoping to counter the expectation that I like flavourless food because I am a farang. My new Thai had no effect and the food arrived extremely insipid although tasty, with sticky rice on a plate which just seemed wrong after a few weeks in Laos, where the sticky rice is always served in a beautiful woven basket. I was beginning to believe that Thai food really had changed dramatically in little over five years, and I would have to wait for Mexico to get hot food, after all three towns in, and one papaya salad was the only really fiery food I'd had. After dinner, we took a short walk up the road to find out if we could hire bikes for our cycle around the ruins the next day, but the bike hire shop (in the other guesthouse) had already shut up. When we returned to our room, I discovered to my horror that the pocket in my rucksack, where I store valuable things was unzipped, and my wallet was missing. I was fairly convinced that I had not left it open, so was almost certain that someone had dipped my bag in the restaurant, where Joanne had paid for the food. I was imagining what a horrible next few days at least, I was going to have, cancelling cards and living without money. We returned to the restaurant, but I hadn't left it and nobody had handed it in. Gutted, we decided our only remaining hope was to retrace our steps to the bike hire shop. Incredibly my wallet was still lying there on the pavement, half open, but untouched. “Very Lucky!” said the waitress when I returned to the restaurant. Too right! How many places could I have left my wallet on the pavement for twenty minutes and returned to find it still there?


That night we had a terrible night's sleep. The room was very hot and it was so dusty that the wind kept sprinkling a covering of dust over us, blown from the mosquito mesh over the windows. This made us itchy and sneeze. We cursed the Rough Guide which described the place as “spotlessly clean”. Ha! Clearly the researchers did not opt for the budget rooms. Just when I didn't think the night could get any worse, the dull aching in my right ear, possibly present since an onslaught of moat water in Chiang Mai, started to intensify until it was unbearable. I had forgotten how painful having an ear infection used to be as a child, but now I was reliving it. In the morning we found a chemist, but weren't completely sure the drops we got were the correct thing, as the chemist had no English and I'm not sure the Thai I produced by flicking through the phrase book was up to much. The pain had subsided back to bearable levels anyway, since the intense burst which kept my awake for hours. I couldn't really be bothered with sight-seeing as my mood was so terrible because of the night I'd had.

We briefly discussed staying an extra day, and just trying to get some sleep for now, but ruled it out, deciding it would be better if I just bucked up my ideas and mustered some enthusiasm. So we hired bicycles and set off. I'm not certain how much of what I felt was still because of a persisting huff, but Sukhothai was a huge disappointment after the temples at Angkor. I would certainly recommended going to Sukhothai before Angkor to anyone who was planning to visit both. It seemed like they had done too much restoration work, so some of the sites had almost completely lost their ancient feel, and all of their romance. After all if I wanted to look at reinforced concrete, I could just have stayed at home in Glasgow! And that's what they seem to have done in many of the sites: completely removed piles of ancient rubble to a museum, I assume, then replaced them with reinforced concrete replicas of what they imagine it used to look like when it was new. I fell out with my bicycle as well, which I decided was a complete waste of time for the centrally located sites, which were all within easy walking distance. I cursed the Rough Guide again for more poor advice. It was a very hot day, and the one silver lining was that the huge crowds of tourists arriving from the new town did not appear as expected around 10am. Maybe everyone was staying away because of the ongoing trouble with the red-shirts in Bangkok. After a lacklustre morning, we stopped for lunch in a restaurant called Kacha, where I had my least spicy papaya salad yet, but the coffee and beer I had with it seemed to lift my spirits a little, and I managed to continue with the sight-seeing with hardly a single moan. That evening we got chatting to a woman running a restaurant which had no English sign, and no farang customers. I complained that I'd been disappointed with the lack of chillies in Thai food so far, especially next door, although it had tasted very nice. She assured me that next door is too used to serving farangs, and she would make me some food the way it was meant to be. Result! She brought me a pork red curry, which was delicious and it hurt, just like Thai food is supposed to. The place is apparently called Noodle Sukhothai, although it's not written anywhere in English. After we had eaten she took us inside and showed us grateful letters from and photographs of other farangs, who had also been in search of the chilli. So now I had the explanation: nearly six years of continued tourism had caused Thai food to become blander and blander in order to cater for some imagined western palette. I blame the French, Dutch, and Germans! There's a lot of them in the region and they always seem to be complaining that food is too spicy, or looking for food like they get back home. Scots and the English have enough of a taste for Indian food and kebabs to handle the heat, and Americans have Mexico on their doorstep, so they appreciate a good chilli pepper.

The next morning we made sure we sampled the local specialities, Sukhothai Noodles and Suki Yaki for breakfast, before catching a local bus to the New City bus station. At the bus station they told us that there was only one bus, a “VIP” bus, leaving at 5pm and costing 380 Baht, which was a lot more than we expected to pay and a lot later than we wanted to leave. It was fairly obvious we were being hustled, but the problem was where to get independent information. Bus stations in Thailand seem to contain dozens of competing companies running the same routes, who each have their own people trying to herd tourists to their own desk. In the Old city, we had been told there was a bus every hour, but these touts all told us the buses were full. Other farangs were having the same trouble. We walked outside to look at the buses, many of which said “Bangkok” on the front, some apparently leaving soon, and none full. We spotted a kiosk marked “Information” and thought we'd cracked it, but the woman in the kiosk just told us to ask inside, where there are only the self-interested touts. Finally we located an information computer, which gave us prices, departure times, and bus numbers. We were still looking through the cheaper and earlier buses when a bus driver came up and told us he was leaving for Bangkok now and ushered us to a counter we had not yet tried. At first I thought it was more hustling, but the ticket was only 255 Baht for 2nd class aircon. While we were buying the ticket, the farangs opposite told us they had discovered there's an earlier bus and Joanne replied “we're leaving now!”. I don't know how much they paid, but I bet it wasn't as good a deal as ours. The bus was quite nice, confirming once again my general theory that the more you pay the worse things tend to be: VIP buses have incredibly uncomfortable seats, arctic aircon, and smelly toilets. The lunch break was also a real pleasure: when the buses made a service stop in Cambodia or Vietnam, the prices were several times what you would normally pay, whether for hot food, cold drinks, crisps or whatever, and they usually had rows of statues, bags, paintings, and other tourist trappings. Here, our lunch stop was in a roadside canteen: basic, but the food was delicious and as cheap as food from a street vendor. Not a statue, vase, or silk dress in sight. During the journey Joanne decided that she had an eye infection from the the dirty Songkran moat water, to keep my ear infection company. We arrived in Bangkok that afternoon. It was raining.



permalink written by  The Happy Couple on April 17, 2009 from Sukhothai, Thailand
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Bangkok, Thailand




permalink written by  The Happy Couple on April 18, 2009 from Bangkok, Thailand
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Bangkok and Khaosan Orientation

Bangkok, Thailand


When we arrived from Sukhothai at Bangkok Northern Bus Station, our guidebook told us which local buses would take us to Khaosan Road, which we had decided to stay near, but no on. However, where we alighted, there was no sign of any local buses and no obvious way of getting information: tuktuk and taxi drivers were happy to tell us that the local bus station was two kilometres away or that we had missed the last bus, and when we eventually spotted the information kiosk, the girl working there did not seem to stop chatting on the phone long enough to serve anyone. After I failed to get anything useful from her, Joanne had a go and we found out that the local buses and just through a walkway at one end of the bus station, not two kilometres away! On the local bus they were very helpful and let us know when we were passing Khaosan Road. It wasn't quite the way I remembered it: it seems to have got shorter and much more busy since I was last there. Actually I didn't really recognise it at all. I looked for my hotel from last time, and then a bar I might recognise, but I think they have both gone. Apparently it has been developing upmarket, so the cheapest places have probably all gone. I sat in a bar an ordered a surprisingly expensive beer while Joanne looked for places to stay. Usually I go looking because you are pestered by touts constantly if you walk around with your big bag, and it's much more effort anyway. I was feeling a bit lazy, so I persuaded Joanne it was her turn! After a while she came back. She had found somewhere back from Khaosan Road, where we hoped to find somewhere fairly quiet but would be close enough to the nightlife. Joanne led me one street back from Khaosan where the place seemed nice enough and it was quite reasonably priced, although not in the bargain range that used to be available there. When we left again to explore, I pointed out that the front entrance to the hotel was in fact on Khaosan Road. Joanne didn't see the funny side I did, and told me that I should go looking in future.

Outside, Khaosan was more closely beginning to resemble what I hazily remembered. Stalls selling food and clothes everywhere, music blasting out, and people throwing “poi” or long fluorescent sticks around to the music. Several places on the street were putting in dreadlocks or giving people dreadlock extensions. Mine had been becoming progressively unravelled and Joanne thought I should get them tightened up again while we were somewhere with that service on offer. Everywhere there were people with dreadlocks and tattoos, but at least I now realised the people I'd envied with too-good-to-be-true perfect dreadlocks we'd seen in Chiang Mai were almost certainly sporting falsies. Another new feature on Khaosan Road, as far as I'm concerned, is the prevalence of places selling “buckets”. I didn't see them anywhere in Thailand last time, but everyone I knew who had been to Thailand since said they were ubiquitous. Yes, you could buy a 300ml bottle of Sangsom with a bucket of ice and a bottle of Coke, but these premixed drinks in the bucket, with Coke and Redbull were not here last time. I'm sure of it! The custom had since spread across South East Asia apparently, but the buckets we'd had in Cambodia and Laos had not taught us to avoid them, although Joanne always said “never again” the next day. So we celebrated our arrival in Khaosan by ordering a bucket.

The next morning, we were woken early by a child wandering around the guesthouse screeching, and the other members of the family, who ran the guesthouse, shouting back at the child and to each other. We eventually gave up trying to sleep and crawled out of our beds. We were in Bangkok to get things done, and one of the things we were here to do was buy some books. We thought that there are enough English-speaking tourists and ex-pats that there should be a decent selection. Well, we were right about the selection being good, but the secondhand bookshops seemed to be selling their stock for almost as much as they cost new, in some cases more, and they did not seem amenable to much bartering. One of the other tasks for Bangkok was to catch up a bit on the blogging, so Joanne treated herself to a massage while I slaved away over a hot keyboard, before picking up some nice coconut pudding street snacks. A bit later we wandered down to the bottom of Khaosan where you were met with the rather unnerving sight of a very thoroughly shot up car just outside the police station. At first I thought it was maybe the car belonging to the leader of the yellow-shirts, whose car had recently been opened fire on, but I can't understand what it was doing there several days later. After a couple of hours we walked past again and the car had been covered up, suggesting to me that this had maybe happened there last night. We looked in the online news and could see no suggestion of anything like that happening the night before, and Joanne found the story about the assassination attempt, confirming that we had seen the same car as featured in the photos accompanying that story (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/8003531.stm). So that was a relief. That night we found a cheap food stall at the top of Rumbuttri, one street along from Khaosan, where the food was delicious and I was pleased that they had some genuinely spicy options. While we were sitting there eating, a guy drove past on his moped, sharing his bike with a golden retriever wearing sunglasses and a big floppy hat, looking very happy. Unfortunately I was too slow with my camera. Stupidly, that evening, we ended up drinking a bucket again. It's just so much cheaper than drinking anything else, it's very hard to resist. On the way home I bought some durian from a street vendor, but Joanne insisted that I sit outside our room and eat it all before she would let me in. I still can't make my mind up about it. It is so unusual tasting: partly sweet, partly rancid, partly savoury.



permalink written by  The Happy Couple on April 19, 2009 from Bangkok, Thailand
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Vegetarianism and Violence in Bangkok

Bangkok, Thailand


The next morning we were woken again early by the family who run our guesthouse. I don't understand why you would run a business like that. We tried to sleep through the noise which eventually quietened down about 9am. The result of this is that we were too late to apply for our Indian visas, which had been our intention that day. When we got up, we decided to check out a vegetarian restaurant, Ethos, which had been leafletting up and down Khaosan. I opted for the Krapow, which is a standard Thai dish, featuring chillies, Thai basil, and usually minced chicken. It is usually the hottest dish on the menu. This one was made with tofu, which I thought would do no harm to the dish. Again we were let down by a vegetarian establishment: my Krapow tasted of nothing but soy sauce and was almost certainly the worst food I'd had in Thailand. Of course there was no chilli either, but I had given up expecting it. Luckily the meal was saved by pudding and the interesting drinks they offered: the mango and sticky rice with coconut cream was delicious, as were the carrot juice and the hibiscus tea.


After lunch we decided that we had better make a bit more of an effort or else we would just keep drinking buckets and achieve nothing, so we did a bit of research and discovered that the cheapest way to see muay thai (Thai kick-boxing) was to go to the stadium an hour before the start. This was something I wanted to do last time but never got around to so we were determined to go, even though it was quite costly. You can buy tickets on Khaosan Road, but they only sell ringside “VIP” tickets, which we didn't want to shell out 2000 Baht each for. We're not suckers! We walked to the stadium (saving even more money) and there was a nice lady who was quite happy to sell us whatever tickets we wanted. But, she warned, there are no seats where the cheaper tickets are, so you have to stand, and there are often fights over betting. She showed us a photo of really squashed together people standing in the stadium. Joanne was slightly perturbed. I can give you a discount of 250 Baht on each ticket she told us. We conferred. Joanne did think £35 per ticket was a lot of money, but she didn't want to have to stand for the whole time, and the cheaper ones were only £5 less. She didn't want to go down to the cheapest ones at 1000 Baht in case there was fighting. OK, we agreed, VIP seats it is. She gave us tickets and put a sticker on each of us. Nobody else was wearing a sticker. We had nearly an hour to kill, so we sat outside and had bought a beer from a vendor then, after lots of getting laughed at, popped into the outdoor food court next door which was selling more of the excellent cheap canteen-style Thai food. When we returned, our ticket vendor spotted us, and ushered us into the arena. All around there were people in the cheap areas and only a couple of dozen plastic seats right next to the ring. I think everyone else there was press or family of the fighters. The 1000 Baht ticket-holders were separated from the 1500 Baht ticket-holder by a fence and it was quite busy standing-room-only back there, however there were no fights. The 1500 Baht area, though, was hardly full at all, and everybody there was sitting down on the concrete steps. We are suckers after all! We chastised ourselves for believing anything a Thai person with something to sell says, and swore we wouldn't be tricked again. The ringside seats didn't even offer better photo opportunities as the ropes got in the way. It would have been much better to have a bit of elevation and use the zoom.

Now I'm not really a fan of violence, in fact I'd probably describe myself as a pacifist. I don't enjoy wrestling, boxing, rugby, or any of these violent sports, but I do like martial arts and most things Eastern, so I thought muay thai was worth seeing once, and the guide books all recommend it. This was certainly violent and at times Joanne didn't want to watch and felt a little upset, but it was also very elegant as well. There is a band in the stadium, consisting of cymbals, oboe, and drums, and they play throughout the proceedings, the tempo and volume constantly changing to match the action. At the beginning of each match, the two fighters come into the ring with strings of flowers around their necks, sporting headdresses, and some wearing gowns, while the band plays music that could easily be something from a snake-charmer's repertoire. This is apparently quite a solemn few minutes, as the fighters slowly circle the ring, practising some moves, kissing the corners, kneeling down, standing up again, the whole time looking very serious. It looks much more like ritual than a warm-up, but I suppose there may be some psychological warfare going on as well. There doesn't seem to be any time limit on this phase and some of them carry on for quite a while before finally finishing. Then they go over to their respective corners where their trainer blesses them, sprinkles a little water on them, and removes the flowers, the headdress, and any other items not essential to the fight. Then the drums come in and the two fighters start to weave their fists, head, and shoulders in time to the music. It looks much more like dancing than fighting at this stage. The fights are five rounds of three minutes, or only two minutes for the lightest fighters, and they can be quite intense at times. There were ten fights throughout the evening. Less interesting fights seem to slide towards grappling, where the two fighters keep taking turns at swiping each other's backs using their heels. Most of the fighters were quite young and one of these younger fights, the fourth fight of the evening, was ended very abruptly when blue landed a direct kick to red's head and he was knocked out cold. It was less than 90 seconds into the first round, so I suppose blue must have been quite pleased with himself. Red was quickly whisked off the ring by medical staff, who might have been worried by the few small convulsions he had just as he hit the deck. Or maybe that just what happens when people are knocked out, we wouldn't know, but nobody else looked particularly worried so we tried not to feel to queasy about the whole thing. The seventh fight had been billed as the Big One and just before it started, an official came into the ring with the young chap who had achieved the knock-out, raised his hand in the hair, and then presented him with a biggish metal cup and an envelope. So I suppose knock-outs are not all that common. After the seventh fight lots of people left, and then more after every remaining fight, but I was determined to sit it out until the end since we'd paid so much money! The last fight of the night was the heaviest weight and when the fighters came to ring Joanne said “oh no, it's a farang!” and so it was. “This is going to be bad”. Joanne suggested that he might have paid for one of the courses in muay thai, which culminates in a real fight. The Thai's friends were behind us, cheering him on. It was quite obvious from the start that the farang did not have the panache of the previous fighters: he looked bored rather than solemn during the rituals at the start and, by comparison, he lumbered towards the Thai, more bulldozer than dancer: where the Thais were on their toes, he shuffled along, flat-footed. I don't know much about boxing but, watching him, it was pretty obvious that the farang had been a boxer before. His reach was incredible, and he kept his guard up in a way the Thais did not. When it came to the kicking side of things it was ugly. Whereas the Thais were engaged in a martial art, he simply booted his opponent from time to time. As the match wore on it started to look like he had the upper hand. His reach was so long that the poor Thai could hardly even get a kick in, and none of them really deliver decent blows with the hands. In the end, the Thai was looking weaker and weaker until the farang went for it, kicking him repeatedly in the shins (ow!), in between strong punches to the head. At this point the Thai looked like he was going to cry, and almost seemed to be trying to run away, but the referee stepped in and stopped the match before he could jump out the ring. We had assumed the farang would lose, but this result was even worse. All his mates were there to see him beaten by a farang! Talk about losing face.



permalink written by  The Happy Couple on April 20, 2009 from Bangkok, Thailand
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
tagged MuayThai

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Indian visa and electronics shopping in Bangkok

Bangkok, Thailand


That evening we gave the buckets a miss because we had to get to the Indian Embassy next day, so we decided to have an early night and then the family waking us early would be no problem. We hadn't counted on the band playing heavy metal covers until nearly 2am. The next morning we were woken as usual, and were becoming seriously sleep deprived. We headed out to where the guesthouse had told us we could catch a number two bus to the Embassy, glad to find some strong Thai iced coffee on the way, served in true Thai style, in a bag. The buses didn't stop where we expected, so after the second passed us, we followed it along the route and eventually found a bus stop. The bus only cost 7 Baht and it was quick, which was just as well after all the messing around we had done trying to find the bus stop. We made it to the Embassy in enough time to get brunch at another one of these outdoor cafeteria places. As always it was really nice and cheap: only 30 Baht for a plate of rice with two “toppings” of your choice e.g. Curry and Krapow. The Indian visa takes five working days if you are not resident in Thailand, so we started making plans to avoid having to hang around Bangkok for all that time. We had agreed to pay the extra to have our passports delivered by courier to Phuket, where we planned to go soon to meet Joanne's friend James, but the helpful woman behind the desk suggested that, if we were returning to Bangkok, we could keep our passports for now and then drop them off one morning when we return, picking them up in the afternoon. Perfect. Apart from the 7 day delay in getting the visa they seemed very well organised. I noticed on the price-list on the wall that it is possible to get a five-year tourist visa to India for only a bit more than double the cost of our six-month visa.

The Indian Embassy is in a part of town with lots of shopping centres and, as my mum had kindly suggested buying us each a new camera as a wedding present to replace Joanne's lost one and my sticky one, we decided to have a look at what was available. I got a Panasonic Lumix DMC-TZ5, which Fabrice had recommended. It seemed to fit the bill, although the price was not a good as I was expecting. I haggled hard to get it down from 12200 to 11000 Baht for the camera and a 16GB memory card, but I suspect it might have been possible to get it for less in Britain, whereas I'd been expecting low prices like I believe Singapore has. It was cheaper than rerouting our trip via Singapore and buying it there, anywhere. We couldn't draw anymore cash that day, so Joanne's camera had to wait. In fact we barely had enough money for dinner after the bus crawled back through the rush hour traffic. That night the same band were on again, and we wondered if we'd just missed them the first two nights because we were out. We needed to move because we were both exhausted, and we still had things to do in Bangkok.



permalink written by  The Happy Couple on April 21, 2009 from Bangkok, Thailand
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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The pretty bits of Bangkok

Bangkok, Thailand


The next day we were determined to knuckle down, so we got up early (as if we had a choice) to find new lodgings, and located a cheaper place back from Khaosan (really this time). We headed out again to see the Grand Palace, Wat Pho and the Reclining Buddha, and Wat Phra Kaew and the Emerald Buddha. They're all a short walk from Khaosan Road, but it meant running the gauntlet of “helpful strangers” kindly letting us know that these sights were closed today and old women trying to force bird food on us. We didn't speak to any of the helpful ones so we didn't get to hear what their suggested alternative activities were going to be. An old woman hung three bags of nuts over my arm as we walked past her and was pointing at me, about to claim I owed her money, when I simply chucked them back at her and kept on walking. Everything we saw that day was lovely, although the Emerald Buddha is a little it of a letdown. It's not even made of Emerald, but Jade, it's tiny and you're not even allowed to take photos inside the wat, so they're all a bit blurry, because they're taken from outside except one that is sneakily taken inside.
In the Grand Palace there were quite a few people working on maintenance, touching up frescos or working on a stupa. It seems to me that this kind of continual maintenance is a good idea because then you never need extensive renovations like the reinforced concrete of Sukhothai. The Reclining Buddha is an impressive object, taking up the entirety of the temple. After Wat Pho we picked up a portion of som tam (papaya salad) for lunch, making sure to ask for it “phet phet”. This one was a scorcher! While we were eating it, a 50 year old Thai guy (he told us) came over and said he was amazed we like that. “It makes us laugh when we see farangs eating that food, because we are not used to you eating spicy food”, he said. He said he had been working in a rock cover-band in Pattaya for over 30 years and started to list the songs they played.
I told him that this was the same play-list that had kept us awake for two night running. Apparently he knew the band responsible. People keep telling us that Thai people are only interested in your money when they talk to you, but here was a clear case against that line of thought. This guy was definitely just being friendly. Actually during Songkran we spoke to plenty of people who wanted nothing more than to soak us, but there may have been alcohol involved in their bon-homie. When we returned to our guesthouse we realised there was no electrical point in the room. This was a problem since the place we planned to go next, Ko Chang on the Andaman coast, is an island with very basic facilities: the electricity only runs for a few hours a day so we needed to charge up all of our new electricals before we left Bangkok. Downstairs the guesthouse ran a small internet cafe, so we asked if we could plug things in to charge. Ten Baht per hour we were told. They charged phones for us for free even on Don Det where the electricity only came on for the evening, and was generated from diesel, which is relatively extremely expensive. Annoyed by their greed we decided we would probably be able to charge them during our stay overnight in Ranong, where we would catch the ferry.

After a successful day's tourism we finally gave in and splashed out for some books: Tom Sharpe, Blott on the Landscape; Jack Kerouac, Visions of Gerald; Friedrich Nietzsche, On the Genealogy of Morals / Ecce Homo; jg ballard, the drought; and Ian McEwan, Saturday. Following the advice of my sister, Lorraine, who lived in Bangkok for nearly a year, we planned to go to a Blues Bar she used to visit on occasion, but I thought I'd buy a beer from 7-11 on the way. They had a brand of beer I hadn't noticed before and it was cheap and strong so, always interested in economising, I bought it. Not beer, in fact it was rice wine, which was not what I was in the mood for, but I drank it anyway. The bar turned out to be quite nice, but more expensive a place than I had expected my poor English-teaching sister to have gone. So we were forced to buy Sangsom (300ml) and Coke instead of beer. That on top of the rice wine, and I was already on my way. On the way home from there, we were persuaded to come upstairs to a new bar, lured by a cheap bucket. Once inside they persuaded us that a shisha of grape tobacco would go very well with our cheap bucket. The shisha was very expensive. Suckered again! We got chatting to couple who were “just friends”, but the guy had come all the way to Thailand to see this girl he had met online. As the night wore on, she revealed to Joanne her secret that she was in fact a ladyboy, but her friend did not know. In fact she had been through loads of surgery and had a complete sex change, but still did not feel like a real woman. How strange that in a country where trans-gender individuals are so accepted in the mainstream, that men who have a full sex-change are still considered ladyboys at the end of it, rather than becoming a “real” woman, which is I think how it's treated in the West. Here anybody from a guy who acts a bit camp, through cross-dressers, all the way to post-operative “gender reassignment” are known as ladyboys: third gender. That night we were horribly late home, but at least we were able to sleep our hangovers off the next morning and some of the afternoon. When we did get up, we found a cheaper bookshop, so ended up by more books: Umberto Eco, The Island of the Day Before; JM Coetzee, Disgrace; and Barbara Kingsolver, The Poisonwood Bible. We now have far too many books again, and I'm not getting through them very fast because blogging is eating into my reading time.




permalink written by  The Happy Couple on April 22, 2009 from Bangkok, Thailand
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Beasties in Bangkok

Bangkok, Thailand


Our last full day in Bangkok meant shopping again, but this time for Joanne's camera and a laptop for me. We hoped to get a mini-laptop (or webbook, I think they are also called), which we had seen lots of people with, so that some of my blogging time could be in nicer locations than internet cafes. Joanne copied me and got a Panasonic DMC, but she went for the previous model, the TZ4, just to save a wee bit of money. Some serious haggling secured the camera, the 16GB memory card, a spare battery (we can share), and a case for 10200 Baht. I got an Asus Eee PC from a shop where they would not haggle at all, but told me that I could reclaim the VAT when I left the country. I'm not sure why this does not apply to the cameras. One of the shops told me it's because it's a special VAT-free shopping centre, but I worry it might be because the shops in that centre simply haven't registered for VAT. We were getting a bit sick of Bangkok, so decided to leave the following day and do whatever touristy things we still wanted to do here when we returned to get our Indian visa and flight. On the way home that night, we passed a stall selling insects and other beasties to eat. I remembered the stall from last time and had regretted not having tried any before so, although I really didn't feel like it when I saw them, I did what needed done and ordered a small bag of wormy things and just one grasshopper. I couldn't face the cicadas. I was quite disappointed. I thought they would be served with chilli and made into some interesting dish, but they were just deep fried and salted. Soy sauce was optional. They just tasted like ready salted crisps. Nothing special at all, just grease and salt. The worst bit about it was that a piece of the grasshopper's body got stuck between two teeth and caused me quite a lot of pain before I found a toothpick to remove it. While we were standing there I discovered that Thais don't eat them for the taste or nutrition at all: they eat them for “power”, which is a (South East?) Asian euphemism for potency or virility. I'd be surprised if there is any medical evidence to support this belief, but why would anyone bother now that they could get Viagra instead now?

Last touristy feat accomplished, we were ready to leave the next day. All we had to do was get to “Sai Tai Mai” or the Southern Bus Station. The only problem was almost all the information we could find about it goes on at length about the “new” Southern Bus Station and warns about accidentally going to the “old” Southern bus Station. Wikitravel, however, includes the extra bit of information that the bus station has moved twice in quick succession, so make sure you are taken to the new new bus station, rather than the old new bus station. The second move was in November last year, and all the other information does indeed date from before that. Our second problem was that we wanted to take the bus, but Wikitravel did not say which bus to take from Khaosan Road. Bus information isn't easy to get, but I did eventually find a bus map for sale, which allowed me to devise a route taking two buses, to where I thought the bus station was. It wasn't marked on the map, and neither was the street it was located on, so there was a degree of guesswork involved I wasn't particularly happy about. However we did have all day. We just knew that we did not want to get a bus from Khaosan, which is what any “tourist information” shop told us we should do (their own bus tickets of course). These South-travelling buses from Khaosan Road are absolutely notorious for theft. We had read news stories about people being left at the side of the road after all their money and valuables had been taken, and we had met several people how had been stolen from on these buses, always leaving from Khaosan heading South. Apparently they employ professional lock-pickers who stow themselves in with the luggage, and go through everyone's bags, locked or not. We were standing waiting on the main road just down from Democracy Monument, near Khaosan, for the first bus of two that I hoped would take us to Sai Tai Mai, and a bus went past us, a 556, with “Southern Bus Station” written on the side. Amazing luck! We crossed the road, so that we were heading in that direction instead of the airport and were quickly taken to the enormous air-conditioned mall that is the Southern Bus Station, where we bought nice cheap tickets for an overnight bus and waited for it to leave. I noticed that one of the two internet cafes in the bus station had plenty of spare electrical points, so we paid for a couple of hours online and sat at the back where we were able to plug in and fully charge everything that needed it. Just as well because getting the overnight bus meant we were definitely not staying overnight in Ranong and this might be the last electricity we would see for a few days.



permalink written by  The Happy Couple on April 25, 2009 from Bangkok, Thailand
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Ko Chang, Thailand




permalink written by  The Happy Couple on April 26, 2009 from Ko Chang, Thailand
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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