Thailand
Khlong Luang

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    • Day 72

      Ao Nang, 3rd day, Part 1. 27/01/2023

      January 28, 2023 in Thailand ⋅ 🌙 24 °C

      Part 1:
      Another lovely morning, and mixed afternoon/evening.
      This morning was taken up with another boat tour; this time around Phang Nga Bay within the Bay of Thailand. The tour took in a few things; the highlight being to visit the island of Khao Ping Kan (the 'James Bond island' featured in the film The Man With The Golden Gun.
      It was a long journey there and back, but well worth it. A cracking day out, which also included a longtail boat ride through the mangrove swamps, a cave for canoeing, lunch at the floating village at Koh Panyee, another temple complex within a cave (plus obligatory monkeys) called Suwankhuha, and a visit to a waterfall (dried up, so not much to see).
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    • Day 72

      Ao Nang, 4th Day. 28th January 2023

      January 28, 2023 in Thailand ⋅ ⛅ 30 °C

      It's simply amazing how lazy I can be when I really put my mind to it.
      Apart from getting a few pounds changed for Thai Baht, and a spot of sunbathing, I had nothing much planned for today. Plan accomplished!
      Although it's been overcast most of this morning, I went to the Ao Nang beach for a while until the fine spots of rain began earlier than usual.
      The hot news folks is that I've booked my flight home.
      I'll be checking out on Thursday morning 2nd February, getting a minibus from Ao Nang to Phuket Airport for the last few flights to round off this trip.
      I fly from Phuket to Doha, then Doha to Rome, then Rome to Manchester.
      More details to follow as things possibly change/fall completely apart.
      The two shots attached will have to suffice to illustrate this morning. Hope nobody feels cheated.
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    • Day 73

      Ao Nang, Part 1. 29th January 2023

      January 29, 2023 in Thailand ⋅ ⛅ 28 °C

      Hopefully, my WhatsApp message yesterday will have reached most people, but then again, it might not have. I'm setting off home soon.
      If all goes as expected, I'll arrive back at Manchester Airport on 3 February, 2023, at 15:30. If I can get a train back to Northallerton in good time, I could be home for supper this Friday evening.
      Anyways...
      Today was another 'steady away' day. Y'know - eat, beach, eat, a gentle stroll.
      For the photos, I've concentrated on recording some of the people. Y'know, you can't take 'em with you.
      In two halves again, because the site restricts my uploads to 10 pics.
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    • Day 73

      Ao Nang, Part 2. 29th January 2023

      January 29, 2023 in Thailand ⋅ ⛅ 28 °C

      Here's part 2 from Sunday's shots around Ao Nang, and some of the people and scenes I'd particularly like to record.
      (I've shot literally thousands of photos, so what gets onto this site is just a small selection.)Read more

    • Day 75

      Ao Nang, 7th day. 31st January 2023

      January 31, 2023 in Thailand ⋅ 🌙 23 °C

      It's getting around to the time I should be looking back at this trip and offering some observations, reflections and so on. I'll begin here with a few words about Thailand where I am at the present, and try in subsequent posts to work backwards and remember places and incidents in other countries earlier on in the trip.
      Ao Nang, where I've spent the last week, is an odd place. It's a good base from which to do the (much vaunted) island-hopping tours. It's well placed on the Andaman Sea coast of Thailand, so that the stunning rock formations, gorgeous beaches and idyllic islands are nearby or within a boat ride away in Prang Nga Bay.
      Maybe I've been here just a tad too long. It's getting increasingly easy to see a spectacular view, another lovely beach, and almost ignore it as 'just more of the same'. It's not paradise of course, but it's pretty okay thanks.
      In quite a few places in Thailand, some things have disappointed, and frankly annoyed the hell out of me. The concept of customer service seems to be foreign to far too many Thais working in areas like Ao Nang, Krabi, Chumphon, Bangkok. Often I've sensed that I should feel grateful that I'm allowed to be 'sold to' and hand over hard-earned money for whatever service or Chinese made trinket was on offer. But a 'please', 'thank you', or a kind word would have been welcome more than occasionally. There's obvious a cultural mis-match between my expectations and the day to day reality here. Perhaps, as often it is in American exchanges, politeness is 'inferred' rather than overtly stated, but Thais can still come across as rude and unhelpful sometimes.
      However, however...
      Some isolated events can re-kindle my enthusiasm for Thailand and South East Asia generally. Just yesterday I nearly lost the small digital camera I'm using on this trip. I left it in a cafe and had to retrace my steps to find it. It had been noticed and was held safely by the very nice staff in Cafe Amazon (reference to the river and Brazilian coffee rather than parcel delivery I think).
      Y'see. Their lovely people at heart.
      Which I hope today's section of shots illustrates.
      I spent most of the morning sunbathing-swimming-sunbathing, and the afternoon walking down to the posh end of Ao Nang, past the Monkey Trail, up and over the walkway that led to the very nice 'private/public' beach for Centara Grand Beach Resort and Villas. Very nice indeed.
      More positives/negatives and reflections tomorrow.
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    • Day 76

      Ao Nang, Last Full Day 1st February 2023

      February 1, 2023 in Thailand ⋅ ☁️ 23 °C

      Right
      I only have today to get some thoughts down - tomorrow and the day after will be travel days, and experienced has told me that I probably won't have much opportunity to post anything meaningful whilst 'in transit', on buses, in airports, scrambling for trains during another strike etc.
      It's time to reflect on a few things:
      Hopefully, this will be a balanced account in hindsight of the trip. Yes, it's not quite over until I set foot inside my door in Brompton, but you know what I mean.
      Dislikes/things could have gone better:
      The flagrant scamming/ripping off that seemed to be acceptable in a few places (especially Vietnam and at Angkor Wat).
      The dual pricing of lots of things - eg. entrance charges to some temples - that hugely hike up the cost for travellers and non-natives of a country.
      Constant beeping car horns from taxi drivers, trying to either signal they're available for hire, or just to annoy pedestrians.
      No! I don't want a massage, or whatever it is you're offering. I can't afford it, I'm a pensioner and it might hurt.
      Airports, bloody airports.
      Getting dumped at random places in strange towns at godforsaken hours by rude and unhelpful bus drivers.
      Places and things I've been thrilled, delighted, amazed by:
      The Grand Mosque in Abu Dhabi; Lalitpur in Nepal; Langkawi Island and Malacca in Malaysia; Yogyakarta in Indonesia; Gili Island off Lombok Indonesia; El Nido in the Philippines; Hoi An and Halong Bay in Vietnam; Chiang Mai, Koh Tao and several things whilst in Ao Nang in Thailand.
      Which single place would I go back to in a heartbeat? Gili Island.
      Favourite food?
      Probably Thailand, but Khin Wee's and Jen's cooking in Kuwait takes some beating.
      What have I missed doing/seeing/ experiencing?
      Honestly, not much. I avoided scuba diving - I've realised that the PADI system has some features of network marketing: they want to get you in and climbing up the qualifications ladder within their organisation. Therefore, a steady stream of either fresh blood or ambitious, well-healed amateurs who like the paraphernalia of it all keeps the PADI organisation thriving.
      Am I bored of Southeast Asia? No. not really, but I am a bit tired and jaded by so much travelling on a budget in a relatively short period of time.
      Will I do something similar again? Perhaps. South America could be on the cards.
      On balance, has it been enjoyable, or a thrill, or culturally enriching, or fascinating? Yes, definitely yes.
      Did I glimpse a few instances of paradise? It felt like that a few times.
      Yes, I 'ticked off' a few bucket-list places.
      Just as importantly though; I escaped winter and the crippling electricity bills back in Northern England. ("Oh England, where my heart lies." ) As Paul Simon sang many years ago, and perhaps still does. I know I do.
      And yes, I set off for home tomorrow :)
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    • Day 11

      Wat Phra Dhammakaya

      July 18, 2018 in Thailand ⋅ 🌧 30 °C

      Nach einer sehr langen Anreise haben wir uns heute zu einem der größten Tempel für die buddhistische Ausbildung der Mönche gewagt. Es war ein sehr interessanter Aufenthalt. Wir wurden freundlich begrüßt, bekamen eine kostenlose Führung durch die Anlagen und sogar einen privaten Meditationskurs mit einem Mönch, der in den USA studiert hat und daher den Touristen gern Fragen beantwortet und Tipps gibt, wie man Meditiert.
      Ich werde auch mal ein paar Fotos aus der Brochüre abfotografieren, damit ihr einen Eindruck bekommt, wie riesig dieser Tempel ist und wie viele Buddhisten aus aller Welt sich hier treffen z. B. am Tag der Erde (soll an das Ziel erinnern, das Innere Licht (Dhammakaya) zu erreichen)
      Zum Fest des Lichts werden Kerzen angezündet als Zeichen der Ehrerweisung für Buddha. Dieser Tag heißt Magha Puja Tag und findet immer am Vollmondtag des dritten Mondmonats (Februar/März) statt.
      https://youtu.be/xlUqduS3cQg

      Ansonsten finden hier Meditationskurse statt und der Tempel dient natürlich auch als normale Stätte zum Beten und Ehren Buddhas.
      Die goldene Kuppel besteht aus 300.000 kleinen Buddha Statuen!!!!!! Unglaublich
      und weitere 700.000 befinden sich im inneren, aber dort dürfen nur Mönche rein.

      Allerdings scheint es ein sehr kontroverser Tempel zu sein.. Damals war er Zentrum einer buddhistischen Sekte, dann wurden die Gründer der Kommerzialisierung der Religion beschuldigt und es folgten weitere Skandale..
      Naja dennoch ein sehr spannender Tag.
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