Thailand day 3 – Chiang Mai

The weather here has been glorious ever since we arrived;  blue skies and sun, but not too hot, just perfect for sightseeing.  We are thinking of doing some trekking whilst we are here, but first we need to arrange our flights to New Zealand.  We are trying to organise things so that Matt and Dan  can come to join us for 9 days at the end of the month, so that is taking a bit of juggling of dates, flights and visas!  Our first stop is a travel agents to get some prices for flights to NZ which are around £475 each from Bangkok which, based on our internet research, is a good price.  Let’s hope they are still available when we come to book!  Next stop the immigration office to confirm we can get an extension on our visa without leaving the country and returning.  It turns out that the maximum visa extension we can get from immigration in Chiang Mai is 7 days, alternatively we could do a day trip to Myanmar and get a new visa for 15 days for free!  Only the latter would over-ride our current visa which expires on 25th January (not so good).  After lunch we visit three more temples and discover in the process that the temple we visited yesterday was not in fact Chiang Mai Man but another which we have been unable, as yet, to identify.  Today we visit Chiang Mai Man (wonderfully ornate) and Wat Chedi Luang (less ornate but beautifully built of teak).  We round off our day with a visit to the local computer plaza – we’re thinking of upgrading the Asus, prompted mainly by the fact that we somehow managed to crack the screen

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Thailand day 2 – Chiang Mai

Chiang Mai is a rather pleasant, well-heeled town by south-east Asian standards.  At it’s centre is the old city, a neat square bounded by a moat and the remains of a wall built some 700 years ago.  Traffic streams around the perimeter of the old city – there are far more cars here – but once within its confines there are quiet leafy streets and several ornate temples to stroll around.   We decide to move hostels today as Panda House doesn’t have a room available for us on 30th December.   We have found an alternative at Gap’s House where we can stay for as long as we like because they don’t take advance bookings.  After moving our gear and having some lunch we make for the start of the temple walk, but we only manage to do one temple, Chiang Mai Man, before we get side-tracked by the street market that seems to engulf the old town on Sunday afternoons.

Gap’s House is just off the main street in the old town which is a much better location being in the heart of things and it doesn’t involve negotiating the heavy traffic that chokes the perimeter road just beyond the moat.  The hostel itself is set in a lush tropical garden with a jungly feel.  The rooms are in wooden bungalows with lovely polished floors and antique furnishings;  much more homely and characterful – and there are no unpleasant smells.   Not that the Panda House was bad, in fact the staff were very helpful and when we complained that we didn’t get the room we’d booked and  were moving because they were fully booked, they did our laundry for free and provided a car at no charge to bring us over to  Gap’s House!

After lunch we visited what is reputedly the oldest temple in  Chiang Mai, Chiang Mai Man.  Unfortunately most of the buildings are closed and we are only able to view this magnificently ornate building from the outside.  All the way around the grounds aphorisms have been written on signposts in Thai and English, some of them very familiar like ‘More haste, less speed’ and ‘The pot called the kettle black’ (sic), ‘It’s no use shutting the stable door after the horse has been stolen’ (sic) as well as many of a more spiritual/philosophical nature.

On Sundays from 4pm until midnight the central streets of the old town are shut to traffic and given over to the ‘Walking Street Market’.  This huge, sprawling market must occupy at least six streets with hundreds of stalls selling a huge selection of handicrafts, food, clothes, scarves, jewellery, handbags and more.  Unlike the market in Luang Prabang this has a much more diverse selection of goods and come evening is absolutely heaving, for the most part with Thais;  this is definitely not put on for the tourists.  We spend about three hours shuffling round and we still don’t manage to cover it all and almost everything is so ridiculously cheap that it is not worth the effort to engage in haggling.

A few interesting observations:  firstly the Thais drive on the left, which came as a bit of a surprise.     Secondly, there are lots of sawngthaew plying the street offering a sort of private, unscheduled bus service.  The sawngthaew look like pick-up trucks with a roof and open back with benches down either side.  Flag one down, state your destination and if it going your way you can take a ride  for a small fare.  We haven’t yet put this service to the test and it sounds quite random, but it obviously works.  The alternatives are either metered taxis, tuk-tuk or saamlaw (pedicabs) although we are yet to see any of the latter and are wondering if they still exist.  Thirdly, Thailand is incredibly cheap despite it clearly being a much more wealthy and westernised than Laos, Cambodia or Vietnam.  And in many ways it is reassuringly familiar – the shops have more western interiors with products that are recognisable;  there is a Boots, a Carrefour and even a Tescos!

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Thailand day 1 – Chiang Mai

We fly to Chiang Mai in Thailand today.  The flight was delayed by 45 minutes for some unexplained reason.  But the announcement system in Luang Prabang airport is so distorted that even if an explanation had been forthcoming we would have been none the wiser!  We sail through immigration and customs, pick up our luggage without having to hang around in the baggage hall and despite being late in our pick up is waiting.   Luxury of luxuries, we are  taken to the guest house in a proper car rather than an uncomfortable tut-tut.  Many guest houses in south-east Asia offer free pick-ups from airports, bus and train stations.  A real boon, not just for the cost-saving, but it avoids all the hassle of  finding your own way, which even in a taxi can be fraught in a foreign country as we’ve discovered before.  The reason hostels offer this service free  is to ensure that guest actually reach them.  Apparently competition can be so fierce that some hostels will pay commission to tut-tut and taxi drivers to bring them customers, with the result that people with bookings may find themselves deposited at a different hostel on the pretext that the hostel they booked has closed or is full.

We are staying at Panda House Chiang Mai (not to be confused with a similar named Panda guest house elsewhere in town).  Situated just outside the old town, it is in a large functional building offering good size rooms with TV and a  range of furniture.  Apart from the smell that emanates from a channel of water just below our bedroom window, the accommodation isn’t bad although a bit pricey at £10 a night (I’m being serious!).  We’ve found that joss sticks are very good as dispelling unpleasant odours, so the room now smells pleasantly of sandalwood.  We’ve debated whether the ‘woman’ on the reception is male or female and come to the conclusion that ‘she’ is definitely a ‘he’;  the voice is too deep and the feet too large plus I’m sure there is growth on the upper lip.  A difficult call though.

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Laos day 14 – Luang Prabang

It’s raining!  This is the first rain we have had since we left Vietnam about a month ago and it’s making for a very miserable last day in Luang Prabang.  We successfully manage to change some Kip to Baht and as I’ve already finished the book I exchanged yesterday (The Reluctant Fundamentalist) we visit another book exchange and I swap it for something a little more substantial – ‘A Thousand Splendid Suns’ by Khaled Hosseini, which, if it is anything like as good as ‘The Kite Runner’, should be an enjoyable read.  We stop to get some cash at one of only two ATMs in town.  It’s just being refilled and we are the first to use it.  It goes through the motions, issues confirmation that the transaction has gone through but doesn’t dispense any cash!  (This is the second time we have had problems at the cash machine in Luang Prabang).  But despite the engineer witnessing the transaction, re-opening the machine and confirming an error – inputting the  safe combination in full public view in the process (there was a man toting a gun at his side, mind you) – we still have to come away empty-handed with only the promise, after filling in a form, that our cash will be re-imbursed in the next two days!  We get some cash using another card from the second cash machine, but whether we’re out of pocket remains to be seen.  …and that, is about as exciting as our day gets!

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Laos day 13 – Luang Prabang

So this is Christmas;  just another day in Laos.  Apart from a few token Christmas decorations in the bars and restaurants there is little to suggest that Christmas has arrived.  There have been some sightings of westerners, and some Lao, sporting Santa hats and even a fully suited-and-booted Father Christmas complete with beard… but the atmosphere is missing.  And to cap it all the sun’s gone in! The day starts rather mundanely as we attempt to complete a number of chores in preparation for leaving on Saturday – confirm the flights, get some Thai Baht and check that we don’t  need an onward ticket  in order to enter Thailand.  The possibility of the latter requirement only having surfaced today when I was checking the cost of a Thai visa (which apparently is £0 for British nationals).  This also prompts us to visit a couple of travel agents to try to get some prices for flights from Thailand to New Zealand.  A completely fruitless exercise which we abandon after visiting two offices and hanging around for half-an-hour in each without either being able to provide any information whatsoever.  But at the Laos Airlines office they seem confident that we won’t be denied entry.  The Thai Baht are also proving elusive at the money exchange counters.  Apparently the only place they can be bought is the main bank which closed at 3.30pm.  Having done as much as we can, including swapping some books at one of the handy book exchanges that raise money for local orphanages, we make our way to Dyen Sabai for our ‘Christmas’ dinner.  It is about as far from a traditional Christmas dinner as is possible, but delicious nonetheless and as the light begins to fade we are lounging on the terrace, sipping our cocktails and soaking up a different sort of Christmas atmosphere.

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Laos day 12 – Luang Prabang

Imagine numerous gently cascading limestone pools each over-flowing with crystal clear, pale azure waters and surrounded by dense jungle and you  are at Tad Se waterfall.  We have taken a mini bus to this picturesque beauty spot 15 km south of Luang Prabang near the village of  Ban Aen.  Once at Ban Aen it is five minute ride upstream in a long boat to the point at which the falls of the Huay Sae river meet Nam Khan.  We linger here for about an hour-and-an-half taking advantage of the bamboo walkways to explore around the pools.  There are a few other people here and it is possible to swim in the pools if you fancy braving the chilly waters.  This is also a point from which it is possible to take an elephant ride and by late afternoon there are several elephants chained in a compound.  It is fascinating to watch as the mahouts manage their charges.  With a combination of feet movements behind the ears and a sharp pick-axe type tool to prod the elephants’ thick hides, they are able to get them to turn this way and that, pick up their chains and so on.

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Laos day 11 – Luang Prabang

Today turns out to be a ‘do nothing’ day.  We walk down to the Nam Khan river in glorious sunshine and cross the newly opened bamboo bridge to take root in one of my favourite spots – Dyen Sabai – the little terraced restaurant in the village across the  way.  It’s busier today than when we were last here;  now that the bridge is open it is attracting a lot off interested tourists.  We debate again the attractions of staying over here in their bungalow for a few days, but the Lao atmosphere must have got into our bones and we just can’t be bothered to go through the upheaval.

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Laos day 10 – Luang Prabang

Still not feeling great but improving slowly.  We spend the morning talking to a Swiss fellow-guest who is one of those people who seems never to draw breath and likes to regale people with his pet hates and hobby horses.  This keeps us distracted for most of the morning, although Andy manages to escape for a while to go to the cash machine.  But any hope of having a quiet period to catch up on the blog proves futile. We have a map of a wetland walk through the centre of town, which takes in some of the many ponds that are dotted around the area south of the peninsular.   Its hard to believe that there is a wetland area here; we have seen no signs of anything remotely resembling wetland in our wanderings thus far.  The reason, we quickly discover, is that they are hidden away from prying eyes off little lanes down which tourists rarely tread.  In fact, we encounter few people as we explore these picturesque oases covered with lilies and pond weed and sheltered by towering palm trees.  Secret little tracts of undisturbed nature tucked away in the heart of town.

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Laos day 9 – Luang Prabang

I’m feeling better but my stomach is still not back to normal and my appetite hasn’t fully returned.    In the afternoon we visit the Royal Palace Museum which, as it’s name suggests, is housed in what used to be the royal residence of the Lao monarchy.  Situated in the heart of the peninsular between the Mekong and Sisavangvong Road, it is surrounded by lush tropical gardens.  The Palace is a colonial period building  dating from 1904 and houses various royal and religious artefacts as well as preserving the content and internal decoration of the royal quarters as they were in 1975 when the monarchy was sent into exile by the Pathet Lao.  The throne hall is the highlight with its unusual and beautiful floor-to-ceiling, coloured glass mosaic figures placed on a deep red background.  Apparently they took eight craftsmen three-and-an-half years to complete.  In contrast,  the private quarters of the last king and queen are surprisingly plain and unostentatious.  The museum also houses the Pha Bang, a Buddha cast of gold, silver and bronze alloy which legend has it dates from the first century AD, but is more likely to have been cast in early 16th century,  and was given as a gift from the Khmers.  Whatever it’s provenance it gives its name to the town – Luang (meaning great or royal) Phabang (Prabang).

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Laos day 8 – Luang Prabang

As I’m starting to feel better today,  we venture out for a light lunch followed by a gentle walk.  The eating turns out to be not such a good idea as my digestive system is protesting.  Our walk takes us along Sakarine Road towards the end of the peninsular.  It is late afternoon and the monks are beginning to  sound the call to prayers,  a ceremony which involves beating the enormous drum which hangs in the drum tower of each Wat and is accompanied by the crashing of cymbals.  There are four temples in close proximity along this stretch of road and the street is soon throbbing with a powerful, mesmerising and affecting rhythm.   As we pass each one we stop to watch the half dozen or so monks in their orange robes take it in turns to perform the strenuous drum beats.

Monks and novices in their characteristic saffron robes and in many cases with matching umbrellas and shoulder bags are a common site in Luang Prabang.  They seem to have a particular gait as they go about their business; walking to and from school, visiting friends and relatives or carrying out  some unknown task.  Often sauntering down the street in groups of two or three, they are never far from view, adding a splash of colour to the landscape.  There are 66 temples in the town of which around half support communities of monks.  It is apparently quite common, even expected,  that young Lao men and even  boys spend some time as a monk/novice at a temple where in addition to studying the teachings of the Buddha,  they receive a general education and can learn English and French.  It is no doubt partly due to the existence of so many Wats and monks  that this compact town has such a feeling of calm serenity.

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