Browsed by
Category: Thailand

Island in the sun

Island in the sun

We’d been in Thailand a month (Sep ’05) – all of that time in the steaming metropolis which is Bangkok. Although the wet season hadn’t been as bad as expected, our soi was still calf deep in water when we paddled off to our first holiday. We’d picked Ko Samet because it was fairly quiet, accessible and it promised to be one of the driest spots in Thailand in October. We were very pleasantly surprised – it wasn’t as developed…

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Loi Krathong

Loi Krathong

The feast “LOI KRATHONG” is an event that happens every year in Thailand on the full moon of the 12th lunar month (first full moon day of November). On the night of the festival in 2005 we headed to the river in Bangkok (the Chao Praya ) to see what the fuss was all about and to enjoy a riverside meal. NB – We also went in 2006 and I’ve added some more pictures. Throughout the evening we saw many…

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Nan and the remote north

Nan and the remote north

It was mid October in Bangkok. As per normal it was hot, busy and congested. In addition, the wet season was kicking in with a vengeance. We had a week’s holiday. We wanted to stay in Thailand but wanted to get away from it all and be as dry as possible. Generally the driest place in Thailand is Ko Samet, but we went there last weekend. We decided on Nan, an obscure province up north which had been a hideout…

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Lost paradise

Lost paradise

Overall our trip to Ko Samui was a little disappointing. It certainly wasn’t paradise island. Maybe at one time, but rampant overdevelopment have meant those days were long gone. As you will see from the photos the sand is still wonderful, but the backdrops of swaying palms have become construction sites and the green lush hillsides become bare red scars soon be covered with tourist developments. First the good news – the beaches are still lovely, some more crowded than…

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On the road to Angkor

On the road to Angkor

Cambodia is home to everything Khmer, right? Well actually when the Khmers were at their peak, building Angkor Wat etc, they also ruled plenty of Thailand and in May 2006, I went to see some of the lesser known, but really impressive Khmer ruins, close to the Cambodian border in Buriram province.  (There is another interesting Khmer ruin – Prasat Meuang Singh in Kanchanaburi province – which is covered on that page of my website) The best of these are…

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Seadragon divetrip

Seadragon divetrip

The Similan and Surin Islands are supposed to be one of the top dive spots in South East Asia if not the world, and we weren’t disappointed. We had decided to visit them on a 5 day liveaboard with Seadragons, a dive company operating out of Khao Lac. Jackie had dived with them before. They are highly recommended as they are very professional, reasonably priced and as they operate out of Khao Lac rather than Phuket and so closer to the…

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Kanchanaburi

Kanchanaburi

Kanchanaburi is best known as the location of the original Bridge over the River Kwai (the real one – not the film location – which was shot in Sri Lanka). It is therefore firmly on the tourist trail. The bridge itself is right in the middle of town – which like many modern Thai towns is ugly, unplanned and a riot of concrete. The main drag (pictured below) could be worse – at least it’s not on the main road…

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Weekend in Ayuthaya

Weekend in Ayuthaya

Ayuthaya was the Siamese royal capital from 1350 to 1767, when it was destryoed by the Bumese. In its prime it was home to over a million people and international commerce flourished. In fact most of the evidence of its splendour come from accounts of European travellers who described it as the most splendid city on Earth. Those days are now well gone and Ayuthaya, the ruined city, is a pleasant excursion from the traffic clogged streets of Bangkok which…

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Chinese New Year

Chinese New Year

What better time to explore Bangkok’s chinatown than Chinese New Year? Here are a few snaps and a bit of info covering our wanderings in January 2006. Chinatown is a densely packed area of ‘downtown’ Bangkok which hugs one of the main thoroughfares and therefore also often takes its name – Yaowarat. All year long red is the defining colour of the area most notably in the gold shops lining this main road. But during Chinese New Year, it goes…

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New Year with the Karen

New Year with the Karen

This is the photojournal of an exciting trip me and Jackie did around New Year 2005/06. We hired motorbikes in Chiang Mai and headed off to the Myanmar border at Mae Sariang. Here we found a guide and he took us up to a Karen hilltribe village where we stayed for New Year’s Eve. It also describes our hazardous trek back to civilisation. A six lane highway is not quite what I expected from a trip to the Thai-Myanmar border,…

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