Monday, December 15, 2008

One night in Bangkok



Caught a nice fancy bus to Bangkok (53 baht) today after seeing many sites. I will upload photos soon. Really cool bhuddist wats (temples). Lots of history. Good photos. :)
Turns out rooms are farely expensive here (400 baht with shared bathroom)... or I am just getting cheaper by the moment. We got a room though and its nice enough.
Tonight we are out on the town having drinks. I found a glass of Jamesons and now we have some Singha beers while at an internet cafe. SOOOOO many white foreigners here its crazy.



Hard to tell if I would like this town long term or not. Its sorta crazy.
Also of note, the Thai parliament voted in their new prime minister today. Some demonstrations concentrated near government buildings but overall city is calm. Doubt there will be any trouble but if there is, I have my camera. :)
Tomorrow we will travel around and see some sights and then I will head to the airport tomorrow evening. My trip is coming to an end. :(
Also of note, it snowed in portland today (which is rare).

Sunday, December 14, 2008

Ayutthaya



Yesterday (Sunday) we checked out of our comfy room, called our friend Amy in Portland (Happy birthday Amy!) and caught a motorcycle taxi to the local bus station.
There are many forms one can travel in Thailand besides airplane and train. The top of the tier (and most expensive) are the VIP buses, which are the double decker buses. They come with almost fully reclining seats, air, curtains, tv's and even little personal rooms. I haven't (and probably wont) tried one of these yet but I wanted to. After that you have the minivans, which include very tight seats and insanely fast driving. After that you have the local bus, which is dirt cheap but slow. Usually there are fans mounted on the ceiling and the bus sounds like it could fall apart any second. Also there are many stops along the way and you get to get comfy with the locals. Even cheaper then that are the open air trucks, which is basically a truck with seats and cover in the back. Taxis, motorcycle taxis and rickshaws.
We took the local bus and started off towards Ayutthaya. Unfortunately a bus doesn't run direct so we had to take a bus to another town first, then catch the bus to Ayutthaya from there. Mileage wise, this shouldn't have taken too long. But it did. It took about 5 hours. In all it cost us about 100 baht each.
When we finally arrived Ayutthaya we were both grumpy and tired from our loud bouncy smoky (from exhaust) ride. We hiked over to a guest house that was recommended in my Thai book, ate, had a couple beers and crashed hard. The guest house (Toni's) is decently comfy in the common areas, but the room leaves much to be desired and is relatively not cheap (500 baht).
Ayutthaya was the capitol of Thailand (Siam) for roughly 400 years with almost 60 kings ruling from here. There are temples and wats here that are over 500 years old. So lots of history to see. So today we plan to do a hike through the city and check out some of the sights. Then we are thinking of heading into Bangkok to check out the city for the last couple nights.
One thing to consider... Thailand's parliament is voting for a new prime minister right this minute. The Thai's here all watching. I was speaking with an Indian born Thai who says this could lead to more troubles. Hopefully there wont be many issues.

Saturday, December 13, 2008

Born to Ride


Rented the motor bike Saturday morning from an Irish bar. We had stopped by the bar Friday night because I was in a frantic search for some Jameson's whiskey and that was my last resort. No luck. But the Irish expat owner gave us his best bottle of whiskey and we sat and had a few drinks. He married a Thai women and can now retire here and has started a bar. He rented us the motor bike for 200 baht. Needless to say, I looked cool on it. An easy rider for sure! :)
So Saturday morning we got up, moved to a nicer guesthouse (the room and view from room below) down the road a bit (450 baht with TV and a real nice bathroom with HOT WATER!) and picked up our motorbike.




So to be honest, I am of the age where I definitely do NOT feel immortal. As a matter of fact I am quite aware of my mortality! In my 2.5 weeks here in Thailand I have seen some crazy driving, been in a bus that ran over a motorcycle and seen the general chaos of the roads. So I realized that this might be a bit crazy. But it sounded like fun... but it doesn't mean that I wasn't a bit nervous about the idea. Not to mention I have not driven a motor bike in say 20 years. So, upon picking up this sporty bike I sat on it and drove off, the whole time saying to myself 'stay on the left side... stay on the left side'... I was a bit shaky in my driving.





We got some gas and off we went. We were driving to Erawan waterfall, some 65 kilometers north of us. Immediately we hit a big road with lots of traffic. I just stayed 'on the left side' and tried to find another person on a motorbike and follow them and their speed.
Eventually we got out of the city and the beautiful country where cows graze openly along side the road, stray dogs run randomly into the road and elephant crossing signs are common (though we saw none). We stopped about 40 km into the ride and rested for a bit. Once back on the road we were passed by a series of three double-decker (two story) buses. This was the scariest part of the trip. I could see them coming up behind us and would have pulled over if I had the chance. They were moving fast and each one passed by us quickly (about what seemed at arms length away) and the wind from it sort of blew us all over the place. This was scary enough in itself except that I knew another bus was right behind us coming up quick. Luckily, my awesome 'hells angel' like driving skills got us through this brush with death! But no doubt, it scared the shit out of me! :)

I breathed a HUGE sigh of relief when we arrived at Erawan. We had heard about it in town. A series of waterfalls and pools. We were told there were large fish in each pool that would eat from your hand and nibble at your legs. It was stunning. Unlike anything I had seen before. The water was a clear whitish blue.










We climbed up to the 5th pool (which we had heard was the best) and swam there. The fish would peck and bite at your legs if you stayed still ... which would always make you jump in surprise. After swimming for an hour we slowly made our way down and back to the motor bike... always conscious that we did NOT want to be driving in the dark.

We jumped on our bike and started heading back. About 30km into the drive we stopped for a break. While there we witnessed another aggressive dog fight. Seems they are common here. Soon enough we started off again. After a few minutes of speedy travel, we ran out of gas!

One would think a motor bike would easily make 65km and back. Not the case with this motor bike. We were literally in the middle of nowhere. Sad thing is, there was gas at the last stop, now some 4 kms back. By chance there was a large truck with several men just waiting on the side of the road some 50 yards in front of us. We walked up to them and told them 'no petrol'... they laughed and spoke to us in Thai. They knew no English. A few of them walked up and looked at our bike and seemed amused. They tried to tell us things and eventually we figured they had made a call on their mobile and wanted us to push the motor bike up to their truck. One of them came up to us and showed us two VERY LARGE tarantulas in his hand. I think they were dead. He motioned for us to try and eat one of the legs. We declined. They all got a good laugh as we both shuttered. But they did get us to touch their harry bodies. These things were HUGE... the body made of two large round parts about the size of a large marble. Another showed us how they were catching them. Apparently they live in holes in the ground and they take sticks and push them down the holes and twist them around...eventually bringing up one. I guess they eat them!

After a few minutes another guy showed up on a motorbike and drove Avery off for petrol. 10 minutes later she was back and we filled put some in our tank. Before we could get away a truck pulled up with lots of petrol... not for us, but for the truck. Seems the guys in the truck had also run out of petrol. We all got a good laugh out of this one. The whole experience once again proved my like for the thai people. Everyone was very friendly.

We drove the rest of the way without incident. Last night we got a couple beers and went to a night market. Both of us were too beat to stay out too late though.

Today we plan to take a local bus to ... hmm, i forgot the name of the city. Its about an hour north of Bangkok. Its the historical capitol of Thailand and is full of ruins inside the city. From what I read, Elephants are a common means of travel inside the city. Sounds interesting. We plan to stay two night there, then I plan to take a bus to the Bangkok airport for my flight. My trip is almost done!

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Kanchanaburi and the River Kwai


Caught the train last night in Surat Thani at about 7pm.
We had a top and bottom bunk that fold up into seats. People immediately around us started crashing in their bunks but me and Avery were up chatting till about 10pm. We broke down the beds and I crashed on the top bunk. It was comfy but the train was loud and jarring and often stopping. Avery woke me up at about 6:30am as we crawled into Bangkok. It was hard for me to wake up. We grabbed our stuff and exited the train. We checked for tickets north to Kanchanaburi but none left from that station. So we decided to take a city bus to the main bus station and catch a bus to Kanchanaburi.
We walked a bit and waited at a bus stop for 30 minutes before the 807 bus picked us up (15 baht). Got to the bus station and bought two tickets for 83 baht each. CHEAP!
Our bus head out almost immediately. It was a large old bus that bounced and banged with each bump. Avery and I both fell asleep... only to be awakened by screams. The bus was jarring back and forth and was traveling over the raised median of the road. It almost seemed the bus could tip over and I could feel things going under the bus. I was just grabbing hold of my seat as everyone looked to the sides as something went past. Clearly our bus had hit something and ran over it. We came to a stop and everyone was in shock.
I could see a motorcycle torn up on the ground underneath the bus.
Avery said she saw a guy rolling on her side of the bus.
Turns out a guy on a motorbike lost control and crashed right in front of our giant speeding bus. The driver swerved onto the center median (elevated with grass and plants) to avoid running over the tumbling man. His bike was not so lucky and went under our bus.



The man was very lucky. Though he had to be taken away in an ambulance (or something like it) he was ok and could walk.
We had to wait around for 30 minutes until a new bus could take us. That was our excitement for the day.

OMG, I just now witnessed the worst dog fight I have ever seen. One dog was attacking the other outside the internet cafe here and was biting and tearing at the others face as it screamed. Nobody was doing anything. I considered trying to break them apart but i am in sandals. Finally two people came up and after several very hard kicks and hits with a board, the attacking dog finally broke off screaming for minutes. Being a dog lover, I found the whole thing EXTREMELY unsettling. I miss Kutya. Dogs and cats in Thailand suffer.

ANYHOW... we arrived in Kanchanaburi and are taking it easy today. We have rented a motor bike (200 baht for 24 hours) for tomorrow and plan to head to an amazing waterfall swimming area in the morning. We will be driving over the Bridge over river Kwai. Might also head to a hot springs. Should be fun. We booked a nice room over the water for 450 baht (shown below). Its comfy and has a great shower with hot water but the walls are paper thin and people are loud. Things are cheaper here.



Im going to take a shower and I think me and Avery are going to go get a massage. My first on the trip. 150 baht for one hour. Not bad.

Saturday UPDATE: Got the massage. It was great. Think I will get another before we leave this town. Also had a big reminder last night that you need to always pay attention while walking in Thailand. Sidewalks will have random holes or steps or whatever. I was getting up from my chair last night after a tasty fire cooked pizza (my 2nd on the trip) and did not see a random 1ft tall concrete wall that has no reason to exist except to trip people like me. I tripped and cut my elbow and ankle. Smooth. Avery found it rather amusing. :) It is pretty clear that Thailand does not waste much time worrying about liability lawsuits and such. Best not to get injured here I guess. There are more Americans here then any other place I have been. Ive met probably 10 in the past 24 hours. Before that, I had met none (besides on my plane).

Saturday Night UPDATE: Back from long ride to the waterfall. Made it safely but internet is shutting down. Will post tomorrow.

Surat Thani

Yesterday I was shocked/electrocuted 3 times! Twice on the computer that I posted yesterdays blog post on and then in the bungalow during the night (while I was trying to turn on the light). So, today I have avoided all powerlines and such. :)
Up early this morning. Monkeys came to our bungalow this morning and welcomed us into the day by stealing a bag of goodies from our room (crackers and pineapple juice). Avery booked us a mini-van ride from the Park to Surat Thani, a city 2 hours east of the Park. We were picked up at our resort and all of a sudden it was stage 3 of DeathRace 2008... but this guy was a bit more subdued in his crazy driving.
We arrived Surat Thani and had them drop us off at the train station, where we dropped off our bags and booked a train ticket to Bangkok for this evening... we got sleeper cars for about 700 baht each (all they had left were air conditioned sleepers, which we dont need). Fan sleepers were sold out. :(
We then took a bus to downtown Surat Thani to look for some food and see some sights. Turns out there are very little western restaurants and we seriously walked for 4 hours before we found a place that we felt would be OK to eat at. We had some beers and ate 4 main dishes between the two of us. It was a fun walk though. We got lost in various neighborhoods and kept running into very nice Thai people who tried to help get us back on track.
We just caught the bus back to the train station (15 baht) and our train leaves in 1 hour. Checking internet, plan to buy some snacks and whiskey and then off to our train.
Everything is VERY cheap in this town. Avery bought a shirt for 60 baht. We only saw 3 other foreigners in the 5 hours we were walking. It was nice to be away from the touristy stuff... and the tourists.
But, on the other hand, we could have used some 'western' restaurants. We saw plenty of places to eat, but they all had precooked dishes sitting in bowl and plates with flies around them and whatnot. Neither of us want a serious case of food poisoning and were too paranoid to dig in at those places.
Our plan now is to take the overnight train to Bangkok. We will arrive there around 7am. Then we will book another train to Kanchanaburi in western-central Thailand. Its on the River Kwai and is where 'Bridge over the River Kwai' is based. I have seen the movie. 18000 POWs and 90,000 asians apparently died building the bridge under japanese occupation during WW2. Its supposed to be a charming town and both Avery and I are excited to get there. So I will see Bangkok tomorrow morning from the train station only.
Excited to be on the train. Hope it lives up to my expectations. If not, i have whiskey! :)
Only 5 more days of my trip left!!!!!!
We better go if we want to catch our train.

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Khao Sok

Yesterday I woke up in Krabi, packed my stuff and bought two tickets to Khao Sok, a National Park in southern Thailand.
Avery met me at my hotel at about 10:30, we grabbed some eggs for breakfast and jumped on our minivan to the park. Cost 350 baht per person. About 2 hour drive.
And so the great Death Race 2008 started once again. Man, the Thai people drive crazy. Everyone in the van was fearing for their lives. Its not uncommon for a motor bike to be on the side of the road driving slowly, while a slow car passes it, while our minivan (traveling about 85) passes the car that is passing the motorbike. At the same moment a large fuel tanker might be heading towards us in a game of chicken. Luckily the fuel tanker would move off the side of the road to save all our lives.
I think if I held a gun to the head of the driver and said get us there in 5 minutes or die... he would drive no different.



Luckily we made it alive. Khao Suk is a jungle with waterfalls and rainforest and rivers and lakes. Ive seen only a little so far.
Our bungalow is on the river and is very charming and clean. The shower is a waterfall.



There are families of monkeys all over the place. At first I thought they were soo cute but my mind quickly changed. As I was photographing them they started coming towards me... like 12 of them circled me and started moving in for the kill. Like children of the corn! All these small hairy people coming to kill me.
I was able to escape to the bungalow. They followed. They solidified my anger by grabbing my All is Quiet on the Western Front book and carrying it off to the trees and proceeding to rip it into shreds!!! Little bastard!
I finally was able to get them away from the bungalow with a bag of peanuts.
Avery was napping in the bungalow at the time and later awoke to one in the room, on the rafters stairing down at her.
Last night, I awoke with a large thumb sized beetle in my bug net. No surprises there!
This morning we slept a bit late (might have something to do with the thai whiskey) and I got up and got some eggs and coffee. Found a decent little internet shop (the the computer shocked me!) and plan to rent a motor bike and drive us around all day to the sights. This is of course, only if the roads here are less busy. I dont have a deathwish.
Tomorrow I think we head further north.

Monday, December 8, 2008

Thailand

People here work LONG shifts. Like everyday, all day. At the places where i have rented rooms/bungalows. I wake up early and the same person that was working the desk the night before is still there. Seems like they put in 80 hours a week... easy. Also, its not uncommon to be served a drink by a kid. One of the bars on Phi Phi had a teenager mixing the drinks who also served as a fire baton twirler! Yesterday for lunch a child was my waiter. I tipped him well.
Overall I am finding the Thai people very happy and friendly.
Copyright laws do not apply here. It is not uncommon to see a shop that has nothing but pirated movies for sale.
Knock-off wrist watches and sunglasses are common here too. I saw a Rolex for 350 baht the other day in Phuket. It was advertised as a 'quality fake'. I might get one cause I am such a sophisticated chap!
As for the other tourists/farangs. I have yet to meet another American on my trip since arriving in Thailand. I have met many Canadians, Aussies and Brits. I hear many Europeans speaking French, German, etc. But not one American. Seems strange to me. I have heard that the United States has issued less passports to it's citizens on average then almost any other modern country. Possibly because the US is so large, there is so much to see in our own country. I think people from other countries tend to be more 'worldly' though. Like they are part of a world community.
I am not sure Americans feel that way. Just watch any of our national news channels. Most of the news focuses on US news only. But when I watch BBC news, its amazing how much of it is international. Would be interesting to see this broken down into percentages.
Many of the western restaurants play current or recently released movies on their tv's. Last night I went to one of these places. Ordered my nightly curry and watched 'You Don't Mess with the Zohan' which was actually much more enjoyable then I had thought it was going to be. The place was full of farangs. I shared my table with one - a french guy named Jon Paul - who works several months out of the year on a yacht sailing he world. He has been sailing and traveling for 10 years and has explored almost every corner of the planet except North America. I told him to make sure he goes to Portland when he does! :)
I haven't had any western food (besides breakfast) since I arrived but am tempted to get a European pizza tonight for dinner. Only so much Curry you can have.
I got my laundry done today as well. It was way overdue. Got a 'hot and spicy' chicken soup for lunch. It was easily one of the spiciest meals I have eaten. It made me cough a couple times and my nose was running by the time I was finished. I made the mistake of asking the guy to make it just chicken with NO PRAWNS... when i got it, of course there were lots of prawns. I cant escape them. I do manage to get them down if I eat them in small pieces with other stuff.
Tomorrow Avery is meeting me here in Krabi early. We will then catch an 11:30am bus to Khao Suk. A park north of hear 100 miles or so. Some of the pictures made it look amazing. Need to remember to recharge my camera battery tonight.

Saturday, December 6, 2008

Krabi



Early this morning I woke up to complete darkness... i mean I couldnt see a speck of light. It startled me and the thought that I might be blind crossed my mind! Once I realized that the electricity was probably just off on my beach I started to relax. Just as I was falling asleep again I felt something on my chest. I grabbed something crunchy about the size of my thumb and threw it. I think it made a sound. Problem with throwing it is I was sleeping in a bug net on a bed, in my bungalow.
I considered getting up and getting my phone and using that light to look for this 'bug'... but the more I thought about it, the more I thought that it probably wasnt a bug. The net did a pretty good job of keeping them out. Not to mention that I never see large bugs in the bungalow. So i tried to fall back to sleep but the thought of a large crunchy bug in my net filled my thoughts. Eventually I fell back to sleep.
I woke up a bit after sunrise and decided to start out early. My plan was to pack up my stuff, take a BADLY needed shower and climb with my bag over the hill to the main beach, then to the pier and then catch a 9am ferry to Krabi. So I jumped out of bed, climbed out the back to my toilet and shower (which is mostly exposed to the outside except for a stone wall that goes up about 4-5 feet).
Shower doesnt work... no water... I REALLY needed to wash my hair.
By the toilet was a bucket of water that is used to 'flush' your toilet. You would cup up some water and pour it in and that would help flush it out. I moved the bucket and turned on the water that would go in the bucket and started rinsing my hair. After thoroughly soaking my head i stand up and look that the water coming out of the pipe is mud red. I worry that its sewage, but upon smelling it, it wasnt. Turns out i was just emptying this pipe too...no water. So i grab my water bottle and rinse my head and shampoo with that. Bottled water to rinse.
Pack up my stuff and manage to hit my head hard twice on the doorway. Good start to the day!
Eventually I pack up my stuff and say goodbye to my remote beach and head up the hill. This little hike gets tougher every time I do it! Course now i had a heavy backpack on.
I make it to the pier and pay 450 baht for a ferry ticket to Krabi. Jump on the ferry and enjoy a 2 hour sunny, windy, comfy ride to Krabi. The pier was not close to town so I grabbed a taxi for 200 baht into the town center.
I am definitely starting to adjust to my travels again as it feels good to be in a real city that isnt fully defined by tourism. First off I see much less farangs. Rooms are MUCH cheaper and food and markets look greatly authentic.
I checked into the City Hotel - which at first I thought looked to modern to afford. 450 baht for a nice sized room, western bathroom and shower and a fan to cool me off. Not to mention a color tv!
At this point I plan to keep exploring the city, get some food and have fun. I might even buy some things!
I should be meeting Avery tomorrow or Tuesday. She told me I need to see more then beaches while I am here and after arriving at Krabi, I agree. I think im all beached out for now (did i just say that)... or not...
I am feeling healthy and good, but about as attractive as a frog! Every day adds new bumps and spots to my body... who knows where they come from (bed bugs, mosquitoes, etc). My face tends to get pink cheeks and nose by the end of every day that makes me look sorta clownish. And I still have a fever blister. Im the elephant man!!! :)
Also, after the ferry ride my hair is sticking straight up in about all directions. I think I look a bit scary to the locals... the crazy farang!
Oh well... I keep a smile on my face and speak as much thai as I can.
Some interesting mosques and temples in this town. I think i will go explore!

UPDATE: Found the 'touristy' area of Krabi. Its actually charming. Also, I need to stop hitting my head in the doorways here... i guess I am taller then the average thai. Bought some lunch at a family owned restaurant. Was a bit hard for me to eat as it had some processed fish in it. Also there is a great street market across from my room with all sorts of fruit and things. I bought a small cup of peanuts that are cooked in their shell in a way that makes them moist and soft. I think I like them the way I am used to them better.

UPDATE 2: Really smacked my head again in my room. My head is getting sore!

Friday, December 5, 2008

Rantee Beach

I arrived Rantee Beach yesterday by long boat. 300 baht for the trip.
Bungalows were still set at 300 baht per night. I booked for 2 nights.
Once in my bungalow, I found it to be much superior to the bungalows on Long Beach that I had rented for 800 baht per night. Much cleaner and brighter. Not to mentioned, much closer to the beach. I unpacked and settled in. Started reading Alls Quiet on the Western Front. About halfway through it. Enjoying it, but the area I am staying has a stash of books to read, I found one in English called Skeleton Coast (at least i think) and started reading that to save my other for later. Its a good read.
Was all ready to hike up over the hill to the main beach to check internet but found that a small resort on a nearby beach has internet. A 10 minute walk on the beach and through rocks to the closest beach south of Rantee. I was glad, as I did not look forward to the intense 30 minute hike straight up then straight down just to get to the other side and then have to repeat it to get back before the heat comes. So here I am. Unfortunately the connection is VERY slow... 5 minutes for one page, if then.
Enjoying my stay here. Might even stay another night.
Avery sent me a note and said she is in bangkok and heading south. I think flying. So she could be in Phuket today. She has friends there and so she said she might stay there till Tuesday. I am sure I will be ready to leave Phi Phi by then. Possibly we will meet in Krabi (where I might be by then already).
Other then that, my trip is very uneventful. Sitting on the beach, reading. Misquitoes are intense and I have a new series of probably 50 bites on my body. Though I am convinced most come from bed bugs from my last stay in Long Beach. The bed there was questionable. There are bug nets on the beds though and found they work well and are fairly comfy. I slept well last night.
Might brave the sun a bit today finally and snorkel on Rantee. Reef can be seen just yards off the beach.

Thursday, December 4, 2008

To Rantee Beach

Up this morning to find i have a major fever blister on my lip. Feels like an apple on my face! :)
Oh well. Im not lookin to spiffy these days anyhow. My clothes are constantly moist, wrinkled and a bit smelly, im burned and discolored, skin flaking off in all places and bites and bumps everywhere! My health is good so i guess i have no complaints.
Catching a water taxi (long boat) to Rantee beach where I plan to stay for a couple days at least.
Heard from my friend Avery. She is heading this way so I might have a travel buddy again by end of this weekend. Would be good as my only companions the past few days are books. I have done nothing but sit and read on the beach... in the shade. But I still manage to get LOTS of sun in the shade.
I plan to continue this routine while on Rantee. But for the first time, I am feeling ready to head towards Krabi. I think a couple days or so after Rantee.
Also, I think I am officially half way through my trip. I feel fine with this too... seeing how the first half lasted months it seems.
Finished The Good Earth this morning. Probably the fastest I have ever read a book before in my life. Wang Lung was an interesting guy, but he should have been nicer to O-lan. :)
Today I start my second book, Alls Quiet on the Western Front. I guess i am officially hitting up some of the classics.
Time to go, im paying HUGE for this... 3 baht a minute! Much more then the 2 baht on the rest of the island and the 1 baht back on Phuket.
More lazy reading for me!

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

What day is today?




Serously, I have no idea what day it is. I would guess Thursday.
Long beach is nice. I am staying at a rough little bungalow for 800 baht. Its nice enough and I slept well last night... especially after a few Singha's.
My sunburn is fading but I still have some sore spots on my upper back.
Yesterday, once I got moved and situated in my new spot. I rented a chair on the beach (50 baht) and sat there and read all day. I got through more then half of my book! Thats alot for me, considering I am a slow reader. I am really enjoying it!
Even though I was in the shade, I still got a pink belly... crazy sun here!
So I have realized that Thailand has made me a tight wad!
Yesterday I was fretting about how much this bungalow was. I was thinking "If only I can talk him down to 700 baht"!!! Like that extra $2.50 is going to break my budget. Money on the island is strange. Room and board and food is relatively cheap, but things like sun block and towels are farely expensive... even for US standards.
I am eating very healthy while I am here. I usually get a 'western' style breakfast of eggs and toast with some bacon and ham (I know, that doesnt sound too healthy).. and I skip lunch for a thai chicken curry. Sometimes Green curry, sometimes red and sometimes yellow. I love it!
With all my hiking around and sweating, no doubt I am burning off any caleries I take in. And I drink TONS of water. I constantly have a bottle and probably go through 5-6 a day.
Not sure exactly what my plans are in the next few days. Considering buying another book because I will be done with my current one probably later today. Still want to head to Kantee Beach and head to Krabi afterwards.
OK, well running out of time. Have to buy a book and get back to my beach (i am on the main beach right now cause internet is cheaper) before check out!
If I end up taking a long boat to Kantee tomorrow, I might not post again for a couple days so dont stress out if i dont (-mom!-) ;)

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

On the move

Today I woke up with a cloudy/aching head. Not sure if it is feverish or not in this heat. Also a nice little line of blisters on my back. I feel like a vampire, avoiding the sun at all costs for now. :)
Getting ready to leave my current bungalow.
Due to the not feeling 100%, i think i will hold off on the remote Rantee beach bungalow for a day or two and take a 800 baht bungalow on Long Beach. Its a bit more remote and quieter crowd then here. The bungalows are 50 yards at most from the beach but look a bit stuffy and dark compared to those on Rantee. But I will be closer to more accommodations, pharmacies, etc. in case my health goes south.
Bought a book today, "the Good Earth" for 180 baht. Plan to sit in shade and read today... be lazy.
My roommate Kate has told me that my car damage is very minimal, limited possibly to just one of the headlights. Also that our 'landlord' is being very cooperative in trying to rescue our apartment situation.
OK, i am off to pack my stuff... which REALLY needs to be washed. Check out time is in 30 minutes.

Last night at current bungalow

Lots of hiking today (in the shade).
Burn is starting to not hurt as bad. Think I will avoid blisters, but i kept out of the sun today. I hiked to Rantee beach again this morning to meet my Canadian friends. They crashed there last night. Turns out they were planning on just sleeping on the beach but the family that runs the bungalows over there (the ones I had posted earlier about for 500 baht) ended up giving them a bungalow for free. My friends said they gave them food and candles and helped them build a big fire. THey had a great time. The family also said that because of the riots they have lost about 80% of their business. None of their bungalows are rented as far as I can see. I guess people want to be close to the party of the main beach. The Canadians said that the bungalows are VERY comfy.
As we were talking, they lowered the price of the bungalows on the chalk board to 300 baht per night! So, I am almost certain that tomorrow I will be staying there. It will be a very tough hike with my backpack though. Might take a long boat there for 100 baht.
Also thinking of buying a book, beach towel and some fruit to take with me. POssibly some incense.
Just found out the riots in Bangkok are over. The thais here seem very happy about this. Looks like i will be going out of Bangkok afterall on the 17th.
This evening I hike out to Long Beach today as well. So lots of hiking.
Internet is giving me major problems tonight so i think i will wrap this up. I have tried sending emails and facebook messages, but everythign at every internet shop seems to be having issues.

Monday, December 1, 2008

Terrible sunburn and bad news from home

So last night my sun burn continued to get worse by the minute.
By the time I got comfy back at my place i had some legit concerns that I had a severe burn. It was painful.
I have applied aloe probably 20 times over the night and today it is feeling better.
Strange, it hasn't been really sunny here yet on my whole trip. Always overcast but nice. I have been in the sun all day many days and only got minor sun. Yesterday, though it had short moments of sun, I got FRIED.
I thought I would be ok.
Anyhow its not severe but i might have some blisters on my back in a day or two but none yet. I have SPF50 lotion and plan to use it ALOT.
Today, as luck would have it, is the first VERY sunny day of my trip. :)
I got up and got some breakfast and checked the internet to find out 3 bad things going on back home in Portland. Kutya has worms (Kates dog has them too). Not too big of a deal. Someone hit my parked truck and left a note. SUCKS! And we have been evicted from our apartment!!! REALLY REALLY REALLY SUCKS
There is a chance they will want us out by dec 15th. I will still be here in Thailand!
Apparently there is a new tenant in an apartment next to us. He complained about kutya barking. Management called Kate's number and left a message. Story here is we are just subleasing from the current tenant Mide. Technically he is not supposed to sublease. Mide had changed the contact number to Kate's phone and it would appear he never paid the dog deposits. The eviction notice mentions unapproved dogs or something like that, even though we paid $500 to Mide to have them there. Realistically we will probably have to move out 1-1-09. This just raises a bunch of concerns. Obviously if they kick us out on the 15th, that will be a big problem, seeing how i will be here. And we are unsure how Mide will react to this. He has a farely large deposit from us.
Eitherway, that means I will be looking for a new home when i get back and will have at best 13 days to find one. :(
So this is just a bad day. Not much i can do about it here anyhow.
Think I will put no 4 layers of sunblock and start hiking in the hills and see if i can find some of those remote beaches I saw yesterday on the long boat.

One Week



Today marks the finish of my first week of traveling. Its been a long week! Two more to go.
This morning I got up and met my Canadian friends for breakfast and then we went to the pier to be picked up for snorkeling. We found our guide and his long boat and headed out towards the island Phi Phi Lay, the island where they filmed scenes from the move The Beach.
It was an overcast day once again so I wasn't too worried about sunburn. The cost for renting our own long boat totaled 450 baht per person, including water and equipment.





Its hard to explain this island. It just juts out of the ocean with spidery cliffs (above). The island itself has two areas in its interior that open up. The first one we stopped and swam for 20 minutes. It was just a little bay surrounded by large sheer cliffs.














We then head to the other side of the island to 'The Beach' (in photo below) and snorkeled for a couple hours. We did not go to 'The Beach' as they charge you 200 baht. And there were plenty of other amazing little beaches on this island. Small little havens among the cliffs.



After snorkeling we started back towards the main island to Ratee Beach. My friends plan to sleep on the beach over there tonight. Could be a rough night for them. I lounged around lazily for a while, started reading a book and started to feel my sunburn for the first time. Turns out I am BURNED!
So I gathered my things and started up the trail back past View Point and down to my side of the island. I quickly realized I was exhausted! It was much harder then yesterday. By the time I reached my bungalow I was beat.
A quick shower, lots of water and I started out for dinner. Great curry meal again.
Just bought some cooling aloe.
Now I am heading back to my room and will rest and probably fall asleep.
Too tired to post more. :)
Also, obviously you see I can post photos. I found faster internet connections at different internet cafes.
Tomorrow, I will meet my friends at Ratee for remote beach relaxation! :)