Monday, December 15, 2008

Kanchanburi, Thailand

You may have heard of the Bridge over River Kwai. This is it. Its famous because the Japs built the railway (to Myanmar) during WW2 to cut the Wests supply chain to China, and to access Myanmars oil, and because they wanted to control all of Indochina and rail was the first step. 100,000 POW's perished building it.

This, apart from Bangkok, is our last stop! Bye SE Asia, hello Tokyo!

Ayuthaya, Thailand

Ayuthaya is an old capital, built in a island made by the convergence of 3 rivers. it was sacked by the Burmese a couple hundred years ago. Really lovely temples, and different to ones we'd seen before so that was refreshing!
If Buddha ever rode a bike this is how he did it. Featuring giant clothed reclining Buddha in the background.

You can use the old bricks to make your own personal tower for Buddha.


This was the overnight train journey to get there from Pai. Whiskey - check. Pepsi - check. 7-11 cups - check. Cards - Check.

Elephant Riding - Pai, Thailand

We are up high. Riding bare back, Megan on the neck. It gives you a bit of a thigh rash.
This is the part where they made the 3.5 ton elephant shake violently until it threw you off into the water. Please don't step on me!
This is the part where our renegade elephant wanted to eat bark all the time and squash megan against the tree.
Megans smile goes so wide you can see the inside of her mouth on each side of her teeth!

Getting nosy

Pai, Thailand

Pai. One of the loveliest places on our trip. We needed to tick off a few essential experiences here as we wind down, for example we couldnt leave SE Asia without riding an elephant, learning how to cook a red curry, and boil an egg in a hot spring (well ok maybe not the last one). Above is me facing the cruel irony of a full day cooking class on a crook stomach. Below is our last bungalow (sniff).
This was our last motorbike day (another sniff). Saw a waterfall, a canyon, this place below that was up a dirt road too steep for the bikes, and some other stuff. Below shows Pai valley, a big flat plain with a river running through, surrounded by difficult mountains.

I like this picture because I accidently made it look like there was a lovely red umbrella built into the balaclava
Reintroducing Jay and Mika. First met them in Nha Trang, Vietnam, and spent the week at Pai with them too. We actually did boil an egg in a natural hot spring. We arent swimming in that part though.

Chiang Mai, Thailand

We got up at 430am or something ridiculous to watch a procession of 11500 monks in celebration of the Kings birthday. Pretty spectacular, they hold their urns out and people drop in food stuffs, the public have sacks full of food all to dontate to these hungry orange men. Kinda like monk trick or treating. It gets put back into sacks at the end and I assume distributed evenly.

Also for the Kings birthday (its a big time) we found out about a fireworks extravaganza in the most beautiful public gardens we have ever seen (maybe). At both these events we were somehow among the only tourists. It was a nice way to spend time in a place that was a little underwhelming overall, maybe cos of all the hype you hear about it. When you ring the bell Megans about to hit somehow the gold bit on top ejaculates a spurt of water!

Chiang Rai, Thailand


Country change: check.
Chiang Rai, nice easy reacquaintance with an old pal. Definitly noticing the Bangkok airport thing - its so quiet, and its great! Hardly another tourist around. Just mooched about, started contacting Uk recruitment agencies and stuff online. Ate a mega icecream sundae.


Night Market

Crazy town clock.

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

The Gibbon Experience - Bokeo, Laos


We bused to Houay Xai and met up with Skinalicious (skinny and alice), who had been in Thailand. We had jacked up this Gibbon Experience trip, heard good things about it but really had no idea what we'd be doing. See for yourself. Above - Long drop toilet out of a tree house 30m in the air.

Breaking dawn from our bed in treehouse 2

Launching into the unknown - thick mist filling the valleys on the first morning. I think this zip line was 300m long, and about 75m high in the middle...


Good old friends, it was just like the good old times. Nobody changes.

Our group with the guides. We all looked out for each other. The guiding was minimal - they showed us the ropes (literally) then allowed us to do as much zipping as we wanted before dark each day, responsible for our own harnesses, attaching our own equipment, and each other! The responsibilty made it more real, more scary and more exciting.

Swimming in a freezing cold lagoon. Can you feel the hesitation?


Here is a vid of me coming in on a zip line. First vid on the blog, go me!



Then it was bye skinalicious, we went back to the border town Huoay Xai, and now we are back in Thailand! To be continued. 17 days til Tokyo.

Luang Nam Tha, Laos


Luang Nam Tha and 60ks to the north Muang Sing(10k's from China) are tourist spots for treks into authentic hill tribe villages. We stayed here, not for the trekking but to do a motorcycle ride to Muang Sing, check the chinese border (below), and mountain bike around the area. You can see the villages on your own anyway. It'd definitly be a less busy spot for 'ethno treks' than North Thailand where its super popular.



Muong Ngoi, Laos


An hour further north on the river and you get to this place accessible only by boat. One main street. Gorgeous.




We did an amazing walk through valleys so perfect they seemed artificial. The next day we went fishing with locals, throwing nets, checking permanent lines, and drifting through river rapids with, uh.. drift nets, I guess. We then made a shelter out of bamboo on a sand bar and cooked them up on, once again, bamboo.


We observed a woman get off a boat and give birth in a squat position halfway up the stairs in the bottom left of the pic above, while we ate our noodle soup breakfast. Insane.


Crystal clear stream, full of fish, coming out of a cave.



Nong Kiaw, Laos


We took supposedly the most scenic river cruise in Laos (as an alternative to the popular river trip from Luang Prabang to the border with Thailand - Huoay Xai) to a more isolated part of the country. FINALY the Laos I had imagined.



This was a toilet stop in the 7.5 hr journey.

Nong Kiaw is accessible more quickly (and cheaply) by road, but we wanted river time. We ate great Indian food here somehow, and I talked to a blind tourist for an hour over dinner before I realised he was blind at all. Incredible guy. He wasnt even wearing sunglasses.




Luang Prabang, Laos


Here is me being honest about the scenery. A lot of my pics make out that we are the only tourists in the area. Thats a horrible lie. SO you can see above and below here and you realise what a circus even Laos can be. Luang Prabang is a stunning place with a boutique vibe that appeals to older tourists. It has a superb craft market.



These photos are taken in more remote areas where we were the only tourists though. We were such a novelty that they waved us in to help with the rice harvest!


Ladies and Gentlemen, once again I give you the Mekong.



Being dry season the river subsides and the muddy bank become fertile vege gardens.