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katieandmichael
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Trips:
Katie and Michael's Travel Blog
A few pictures from the past few months in the states
Shorthand link:
http://blogabond.com/katieandmichael
Happy Songkran!
Chiang Mai
,
Thailand
(Katie)
Or, in English, Happy New Year!
Happy Thais in a jeep who wanted us to take their picture
Yes, that's right, it's here again already!
A second after I took this picture, she re-thought her attack plan and squirted straight into my face
If you've ever had trouble keeping your resolutions and wished for another, mid-year chance to scrap them and start over, the Thais have you covered. They like New Years festivities so much, they celebrate it three times a year. They've adopted partying on Jan. 1 from the western calendar, Lunar New Year from China, and, most importantly for Thais, Songkran from India. Basically, they've never heard of a holiday they didn't like. That makes them my kind of people.
Michael and friends
Songkran means "passing into", and it's celebrated in Laos, Myanmar and Cambodia under different names. Here, it occurs at the end of the dry season, and it's a massive water party in the hopes that all that good-spirited water warfare will bring blessings of lots of rain during the rainy season. It's also a religious holiday, when the monks bless the statues of Buddha. Mostly, though, it's an all-out sopping wet party in the streets throughout the country, and nowhere is the party more rockin' than in Chiang Mai.
Surprise attack!
Officially, Songkran occurs on April 13, 14 and 15, although in Chiang Mai it starts and ends a day earlier and later. People grab water guns, buckets, hoses, or whatever else they can think of to drench their fellow revelors.
Killer instinct
They shut down all the major roads in the city center and people line the streets, while others jump into open-topped vehicles of all sorts. Then, they basically splash the be-jeebus out of each other from mid-morning until sundown. There's never any animosity to it, and (usually) if you've had enough water in the face and let them know, they'll refrain from throwing more at you.
I can't remember when I've had more silly, ridiculous fun. My favorite part was watching the children get so excited about chasing people down with buckets that were almost too heavy for them to carry.
like a crispy, thin pancake made from lots of strings of batter. It was yummy.
Well, that, and all of the amazing fair food.
Coconut ice cream in a coconut
Everyone dresses in brightly colored Hawaiian-style shirts and wears chains of flowers, and wherever you look, everyone is smiling their widest smiles, waiting to hurl massive volumes of water at you. Michael and I played like kids in it for four days, taking a one-day break in the middle to zip through the top of the rainforest at The Gibbon Experience; see his entry for more about that. Great, great fun.
Shooting on the run
Oh, and the best part: you get to make resolutions again! So, it doesn't even matter that mine (staying better in touch) never really got off the ground in January. World, get ready for a whole new, e-mail-whipping-out Katie! But, world, please don't set your expectations too high. I'm still drying off.
Drenched
written by
katieandmichael
on April 13, 2009
from
Chiang Mai
,
Thailand
from the travel blog:
Katie and Michael's Travel Blog
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A few more Bangkok photos, just cause we have them
Bangkok
,
Thailand
Eating some pad thai for a little less than a dollar from a street vendor
A hilarious woman who sold me a skirt. I think she is deaf, but she was better at communicating than any other Thai person I've met
a tuk-tuk zooming down the street
written by
katieandmichael
on April 11, 2009
from
Bangkok
,
Thailand
from the travel blog:
Katie and Michael's Travel Blog
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Elephant Island
Trat
,
Thailand
(by Katie)
We're back in Bangkok again, after an amazing week on an island paradise spent fine-tuning our travel plans and unwinding from the craziness that is huge Asian cities. Ko Chang is a relatively large island off the south coast of Thailand, and its name means (as you may have guessed from the blog title) Elephant Island. Michael and I arrived the Tuesday before last, and stayed on the west coast at a place recommended by some friends and the Lonely Planet for the first night.
Michael, soaking up the beach vibe
Our view during dinner, our first night on the island
The first place we stayed
Me and the water buffalo that liked to graze near the bungalows
reading in the hammock we bought in town
Michael, in true "Survivor" style, managed to open a coconut using two rocks he found. It was yummy.
Well, I should say, we stayed next door. We realized shortly after our taxi driver dropped us at our requested location that it no longer offered any accomodation. Actually, it didn't seem it ever had. This would have been less confusing if we hadn't been referred to this place by multiple friends and our guidebook. Turns out, the owners decided about 6 months ago to pluck up all the bungalows and move them to Long Beach, on the opposite coast. Anyway, it all worked out for the best because, in our quest to solve this little mystery, we rented a motorbike and drove almost the whole 45 mile circumference of the island looking for the Treehouse's new location.
a picture we took when we took a little break from driving around the island
It's a beautiful place, with dense rainforest in the middle, and, yes, elephants. There's even an elephant training center that aims to (and I love this) give the elephants skills to help them contribute to society.
So, once we found the new Treehouse and made our way back with our backpacks, we weren't in any hurry to leave.
View from the other restaurant at Long Beach
The place is breathtaking: a deserted, huge white sand beach, bathtub-warm water, absolutely no pollution of any kind (light, noise, air), and individual little thatched-roof bungalows on stilts up in the trees.
The dining/hanging out area ( Treehouse)
Even better, it was only $7 a night for both of us. We met some interesting travelers who gave us some tips about places they'd been, and other than that, we just ate yummy food and soaked up the sun and the bliss.
Thai coke, in appropriate surroundings
Another view of our bungalow (Treehouse)
front view of our bungalow at Treehouse
doing a little hiking
We're back in the chaotic, past-meets-urban-progress juxtaposition that is Bangkok now, but we haven't done much in terms of touristy stuff here. Mostly, we've been taking care of things like making future travel arrangements. Next week is one of the biggest holidays of the year in Thailand: Songkran, or Thai New Year. It involves spraying people with water guns, so I'm really excited. Apparently the place to be for the celebration is a city in the north called Chiang Mai, so we booked what could very likely be some of the last tickets to get there. It's going to be a (gulp) 10+ hour sleeper bus ride that we had planned to break up a bit by stopping in some different cities. However, due to all the holiday traffic we were lucky to get any space on a bus (all the trains are booked) out of town at all.
Anyway, my time is about to expire and I'm all out of the correct coins to feed the machine to keep the internet going, so I'd better run. Michael is here too, having a great time also, and sends his best.
written by
katieandmichael
on April 9, 2009
from
Trat
,
Thailand
from the travel blog:
Katie and Michael's Travel Blog
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2 comments...
Bangkok
Bangkok
,
Thailand
Hello Family and Friends,
a Banyan tree - they grow horizontally by sending shoots down from the branches that connect with the ground and make a new mini-trunk. I guess they don't want this one to get any bigger
Well this is Michael, coming to you from the sunny, really hot, and amazing capitol city of Thailand. Peace can be found, even in the most hectic city i've ever been. People are always talking and quite often they're talking to us. The "Backpackers Mecca" as it's been
A shrine and a huge highrise building - an appropriate summary of Bangkok
so aptly named has something for everyone. People from all over the world are coming and going. Many, I imagine, are here for the same reason we are. It's been the perfect jumping off point for our trip. We have found everything we (or anyone else in the world) might need here and we're ready for battle in just about any place we go. While doing
Our new Thai food discovery: Tom Ka Gai. Yum Yum Yum.
that, we've managed to eat some crazy amazing food and venture away from our buzzing home for the moment, Khoa San Road.
This afternoon, we took a series of public ferries that taxi people of all ages down the river that cuts through Bangkok.
A little stop along the river, when we were in the river taxi
Down the river we saw some of real Bangkok and some of really rich Bangkok. We saw The Oriental Hotel, wich looked amazing, but we were not allowed to enter, because we didn't comply with the dresscode.
A street near the Mandarin Oriental Hotel
Ready to move on down through the niehgborhoods in search of the ferry pier, we walked right through a movie set. Yes, a full on movie set. We thought, "hey, let's walk through this little market". Not even when i bumped into a changing curtain, with a lady having make up applied to her in a really fancy dress, did i realize that this market was a set and everyone around was either an actor or a crew member. There was even a director who as we were walking away yelled a lot before exclaiming, "Action!".
Tonight we're going to take it easy, because in the morning we leave for the island of Ko Chang. On Ko Chang we will stay in a place called the tree house, on lonely beach. It sounds like a great place to be, but not a good place to use the internet. So, you may not here from us for a while. Each of you are in our thoughts and we hope that all is well. As for us, we couldn't possibly be better. Katie sends lots of love and we hope to post more really soon, including some pictures.
written by
katieandmichael
on March 30, 2009
from
Bangkok
,
Thailand
from the travel blog:
Katie and Michael's Travel Blog
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3 comments...
Hong Kong
Hong Kong
,
Hong Kong
Our tiny (but clean, with SUPER friendly staff) room at our hostel
We made it to Hong Kong! Yay! And now we're about to leave for
Bangkok
! Double yay!!
Sorry I haven't written sooner, but the last couple of days have kind-of been a bit of a blur. Our flight was a bit of a mess, but then I've come to accept that they usually are, really, and that's just a part of the whole traveling experience. Anyway, if I may offer a tip, don't book a flight with a one-hour international layover against your better judgment just because Orbitz says it's okay.
A pagoda in a little park sanctuary in the middle of the city
But, we made it here! Hong Kong has been good, and we stayed at a wonderful guesthouse run by a sweet Indian family in a 17-story block of hostels, shops and cheap
An Irish pub, complete with token red-haired guy
food stalls ironically named Chungking Mansions. We arrived very late Wednesday night and slept most of the day Thursday, then set out yesterday (Friday) to see the city.
Lots of crazy fruit
I have to run right now as I'm borrowing the guesthouse's computer to write this, but I promise I (or Michael) will write again as soon as possible after we get to
Bangkok
to post pictures and write more about Hong Kong.
written by
katieandmichael
on March 28, 2009
from
Hong Kong
,
Hong Kong
from the travel blog:
Katie and Michael's Travel Blog
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1 comment...
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