Friday, April 29, 2011

Golf in Thailand.

 

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Thailand hosts some superb golf courses and this is a picture of the Bangpra course located about 1 hour from Bangkok going towards Pattaya. This is the view from the club house.

I am playing at a the Emerald course today in Bang Chang on the Eastern seaboard, which is a very nice links course with undulating fairways and tidy greens. I will post some pic’s later today.

Thursday, April 28, 2011

Classic Thai style house, Bangkok, Thailand.

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I took this picture at the Bangkok ancient city site, which is about one hour from central Bangkok.
This is a typical stilted Thai style house, which is designed to keep it cool, free from flooding and also to keep the ‘nasties’ out.

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Thai Cambodia Border conflict festers

Border conflict festers

This is becoming a never ending story which is frankly quite worrying for the people that live near the disputed temple. My wife's family live around 40 minutes from the disputed site.



My picture of the Preah Vihear temple.
What are your views?

Travelling Day

I have had quite a busy day today with loads of travel involved. I flew from Shanghai to Shenzen at 7.30AM and then back to Shanghai at 12 noon. It seems crazy but China Eastern airlines would not let me change the route of the ticket, so I will have to leave via the same route as I entered China.
So now I sit in Shanghai, Pudong airport until my flight is leaving at 9.40PM. 6 hours waiting in the airport is not funny, but could be worse, it could have been 7, better to look on the bright side of things even though I am knackered..
So all being well I will arrive in Bangkok at 1.30AM and then travel another 1.50 hours home. I think time for a good rest tomorrow, but I think it will be hard to sleep during the day time, so maybe we will head for the beach.
What do you think?

Monday, April 25, 2011

White Reclining Buddha, Chinese temple near Silverlake, Pattaya.

 

White Buddha

This is my wife’s Buddha as she was born on a Tuesday. in Thailand there is a different Buddha for every day of the week. This is a great temple to visit and contains many Thai and Chinese Buddha figures.

Chinese Buddhist and other temples, Yuncheng, China



1300 years old 'iron bull'
There are 4 iron bull's at this historic site that represent the 4 ancient nations of China and they are estimated to be around 1300 years old. The bulls secured a huge river bridge spanning the mighty Yellow river. The river has since changed it's course and left this now dry land with this wonderful sight. It's amazing how they could forge iron to this standard 1300 years ago..

The gardens at the iron bull site.



Iron bull site entrance

Model of temple



Ill fated lovers at the love temple. She was rich and he was poor so the marriage was forbidden by Ying Ying's mother. Ying Ying's the woman by the way.

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Big drum housing. Bang he huge drum and get good luck.


The big bell. Ring the bell and get good luck.


Lovers temple entrance


Lovers temple


Elephants at the entrance


'Gaunli' temple main building. Guanli was a hero in China and was a giant of a man wielding an axe that weighed 1500 Kgs


'Guanli' temple



Entrance to 'Guanli' temple

Beach at Ban Amphur, Jomtien.

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I enjoy taking my dog for a walk on this beach because there are not many beach dogs in this area, so fairly safe for my pet.
There are some very good casual Thai style restaurants dotted along the beach that serve good food at a reasonable price. The bay is shallow and safe for swimming which usually attracts many Thai families in the early evening. As you can see this day was an exception.

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Long tailed boat, Phi Phi island, Krabi Thailand.

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We travelled by ship from Phuket towards Phi Phi Island and then boarded a long tail boat in the shallow water to to get into the shore of Phi Phi.
This is a picture of another tail boat that I took along the way doing the cave trips.
Phi Phi is one of the best Islands that I have ever seen with it’s crystal clear blue water and beautiful sandy beaches. We spent some time snorkeling with the wonderfully coloured tropical fish and finished off the day with a sea food dinner. A great day out!

Thursday, April 21, 2011

Floating Chinese Restaurant, Wuhan, China

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We had a great Chinese meal here following a visit to the botanical gardens. The menu was full of delicious local dishes, most of them spicy, which is in tradition for the food in this area.
On the way back we crossed the ‘longest bridge’ over the Yangtze river to see the famous Wuhan temple.
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This is the best picture that I could take from the bus window, but I would have liked to have stopped to take a closer look.

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

White Buddha Koh Samet island, Thailand

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Here is a picture of the white Buddha on Koh Samet island.

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Loud and louder!

This is the kind of truck that you really don’t need to be following on a quiet sunny day.
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Jomtien, Sunset Village 2009

We sometimes call at this place for ‘happy hour’ and to watch the sun going down. One of the best sunset locations on the Eastern seaboard in my opinion.
A pool and palm trees what more can you ask for. Does anyone have information on any other good places in the area?
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Monday, April 18, 2011

Mongolian Village

I went here on a day trip organised by my work colleagues about 2 years ago. We had a great time, riding horses, listening to traditional music and eating the local food.
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Chinese Garden

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I took this picture at the Chinese botanical center in Wuhan. Very calming and tranquil atmosphere.

Sunday, April 17, 2011

The next 5 useful Thai phrases

6. Sorry (khor toat)
7. One-ten (neung-sib)
8. Can you make it cheaper? (lot noi dai mai)
9. Delicious (a-roi)
10. Never mind (mai ben rai)

Chinese Buddhist temple

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I passed this temple in Wuhan today and did not realise that many Chinese people are Buddhist. They apparently get around 500,000 visitors per year. There are 500 (Arhats) within, so you can choose from anyone of them to be your Buddha. Just count your age from the first one and voila he is your Buddha.

Saturday, April 16, 2011

Chinese farmers selling their goods outside the factory.

Here is a picture of an old Chinese farmer selling his produce outside the factory that I m working at. I guess that he has been here most of his life.
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By the way he sold most of what he had, so good luck to a nice old man.

Friday, April 15, 2011

5 useful Thai phrases

1. Hello (sa-wat dee)
2. Thank you (khorb koon)
3. How much? (gee baht)
4. Where is ...? (... yoo tee nai)
5. I don't want (mai ow)
I will publish another 5 useful phrases tomorrow

Fishing boats, Rawai, Phuket.

I took this picture on my last visit to Phuket. We hired a car for the day and travelled around the Island, stopped at Rawai for lunch and this was the view. Very peaceful.
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Great seafood (ahan talay) at a reasonable price.

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Hat Sai Kaew beach Koh Samet

Another nice beach picture. Wish I was there, white sand blue sea and hot sun. Memories of good music at the beach bars in the evening watching the sun go down.
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Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Wuhan

Today I will travel by air from Yuncheng to Wuhan in Hubei province. If there is anything of interest I will post pictures later.

Disputed Preah Vihear temple

My wife was born around 45 Min's from this temple which is located on the Thai, Cambodian border. We visited there 3 years ago on a trip to see the outlaws.
Over the past few years there has been a dispute as to who this temple belong to and last year it came to a peak when both Countries sent military to claim ownership and lives were lost.
History to the dispute:
In 1904, Siam and the French colonial authorities ruling Cambodia formed a joint commission to demarcate their mutual border. In the vicinity of the temple, the group was tasked by the two governments to work under the principle that the border would follow the watershed line of the Dângrêk mountain range, which places nearly all of Preah Vihear temple on Thailand's side. In 1907, after survey work, French officers drew up a map to show the border’s location. However, the resulting topographic map, which was sent to Siamese authorities and used in the 1962 ICJ ruling, showed the line deviating from the watershed without explanation in the Preah Vihear area, placing all of the temple on the Cambodian side.
As far as I can see this is a Khmer temple which now stands on what used to be Thai land and the Thais have claimed it as there own. 
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Koh Samet

I have travelled to many beaches and islands in Thailand, but in my opinion this is the best beach in Thailand. Hat Sai Kaew beach on the Island of Koh Samet is beautiful. The beach is shallow so you can walk a long way out into the crystal clear sea before the water is up to your knees.
How to get there:
Travel to and from Ko Samet is typically via the small local port at Ban Phe on the coast. Travelers from Bangkok frequently travel by bus, with departures to Ban Phe from Bangkok's Eastern Bus terminal, the Ekkamai bus station, and travel time from Bangkok to Ban Phe of approximately 3½ hours. Owing to the island's close proximity to the coast, just 7 kilometres (4.3 mi) offshore, boats travel casually from Ban Phe to Ko Samet in approximately 30 minutes.
To get there quickly you can hire the services of a speed boat that 
will get you there in half the time.
Be aware that there is an entrance fee of 400 THB for entrance to this National Park area.Which is a small price to pay for an amazing beach experience.




Monday, April 11, 2011

Bottle Temple, Khun Khan, Si Sa Ket.

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This is an amazing temple made up entirely of bottles of various colours and sizes. It must have taken ages to build, but it was well worth the time, as it is a wonderful sight.
Well worth a visit if you are in the NE of Thailand.

Sunday, April 10, 2011

Elephants of Ayutthaya

Ayutthaya is situated around 80 Kilometers North of Bangkok and is the old capitol city of Thailand. Thailand's capitol in the mid-14th century and remained the capitol until the late 18th century until the Burmese attacked and sacked Ayutthaya. They cut off all the heads of the Buddha statues and stole the gold from the wats (temples).
The Ayutthaya period is looked on by many as the time when much of what is now thought of as "Thai style" was developed. Regarding temples, this is when you see a marked transition from the Khmer style "prangs" to the bell shaped "chedi." While Sukothai further north is seen as the birth of the Thai kingdom, Ayutthaya is seen today as its high point.
The came Khrung Tep (Bangkok) which is of course the present capitol. This is a great historical day out and there is always the option of seeing parts of the old city from an elephants point of view.



Floating Markets


Thailand's floating markets are among the most-photographed destinations in the country. The river and 'klong' markets give a realistic glance of how daily life must have been in earlier times. The floating markets are where the sellers, their boats laden with a wide variety of tropical fruits, flowers, vegetables and fresh produce, come to meet and barter their products with other traders.
It s very common to be approached by small boats carrying goods to sell on the 'klongs' of Bangkok so don't miss the great photo opportunity.
A great way to fully appreciate a floating market is to hire a long-tailed boat for the day. A tour along the 'klongs' also gives you an appreciation of Thai houses along the canal banks. Don't forget to get up real early for a trip to see the markets. Usually they start at dawn, and most traders have already gone back home by late morning.

Saturday, April 9, 2011

Songkran. Thai New Year

Happy New Year or Sawadee Pi Mai!
The Thai New Year is just about to start, so there will be a lot of excitement in Thailand right now. The celebrations include what must be the biggest water fight in the world and it lasts for 4 days, so get your water guns out.
If you are in Thailand during the festivities make sure that your money, mobile phone and camera a safely tucked away in plastic bags because everyone is a target.
You can be attacked any time, any place anywhere during the 4 days of water madness, by anything from a friendly Thai, a drunken farang (foreigner) or in this case a elephant!


The local ladies like to have a bit of fun too and who's complaining.

Staying in Yuncheng, Northern China

Hi this is the hotel that I am saying in in Yuncheng, Northen China.
It ain't much but it's home for a while. They have dog on the menu. Yukky!

Friday, April 8, 2011

Friendly Chinese people

I just finished work at the factory at the usual time and got transport to the hotel with the rest of the guys from work. we went for dinner in the hotel restaurant and enjoyed some top notch Chinese food. people drifted away and I was left alone at the table finishing my last cigarette before retiring to my room when two Chinese waitresses appeared and said something to me which I obviously did not understand. I stood up to leave because I thought that they wanted to clear the table, at which point one of the girls produced a mobile phone and beckoned me to have a picture taken with her friend. I of course obliged and then it was the first girls turn. She stood close made the usual victory sign, the camera clicked and they both ran off in a fit of giggles. I guess they don't get many foreigners in this area of China. Damned friendly these Chinese people!

Doi Satep Chiang Mai

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Thailand’s hill tribe people

A couple of years ago my wife and I went Chiang Mai and visited a hill tribe village, among other things. I took these pictures of of the Karen tribe and as you can see they wear amazing neck bands to extend their necks, hence the term the ‘long necked’ hill tribe.
We spent a good few hours in the village looking at the hand made goods that they had made to sell to the passing tourists. It was a fascinating day and we thoroughly our time there.
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Chiang Mai 039 Stitch
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CIA hitman Bill Young found dead in Chiang Mai

William Young CIA agent Laos

Killing was part of the job' said former agent described as 'a retired James Bond
BY EDWARD LOXTON

An American missionary's son who became a top CIA Vietnam War-era hit-man in the jungles of Burma, Laos and Thailand has been found dead in his Chiang Mai home, a bullet in his head, a revolver in one hand and a crucifix in the other.

"Bill Young died as he once lived - violently," said a friend.

William Young was 76, a tall, lean, modest and quietly spoken man who belied the image of a CIA killer. He was likened by his British friends to a retired James Bond.

"He was an extraordinary individual who led an extraordinary life," said the US Consulate General in Chiang Mai, the main city of northern Thailand, in a death notice.

Despite his action-packed CIA career, Young drifted into quiet retirement in his rambling home on the outskirts of Chiang Mai. Disowned by the CIA after challenging US policy in Vietnam and Laos, Young worked at home for the US Drug Enforcement Administration, using the contacts he had built up over the years among the hill-tribes of Laos and northern Thailand.

I visited him over a period of several weeks, working on the script of a film about his extraordinary life. Our long recording sessions were broken regularly by phone calls from his contacts, conducted in at least four different hill tribe languages.

Bill was most at home among the Lahu, who inhabit the mountains of Laos and northern Thailand. Lahu mourners packed a Chiang Mai church, together with other hill tribe representatives, for a traditional ethnic funeral service today.

Hundreds of hill tribe people in traditional dress, including members of the warlike Wa, are expected to attend the burial on Wednesday in Chiang Mai's Foreign Cemetery, a leafy corner of the city watched over by a bronze 19th century statue of Queen Victoria.

Bill's grandfather was a Baptist missionary who converted thousands of Lahu tribespeople in British-controlled Burma in the late 19th century. His father, Harold, also a missionary, pioneered the CIA connection by joining the American intelligence service and conducting spy missions in southern China after Mao Ze Dong's Communists ousted the Kuomintang.

Bill was born at a mission station in Burma and grew up in hill tribe villages, learning at least five local languages and forging friendships that were later to help him in his dangerous espionage work.

Harold Young's Washington connections secured Bill a CIA post, and soon the young operative had gathered an army of several thousand Lahu warriors to help disrupt communist supply lines running through Laos during the Vietnam war. "Killing was part of the job," he told me, detailing several scenes where he had shot his way out of tight corners in remote hill tribe villages.

Although Laos was officially neutral, US special forces penetrated deep into the landlocked country as the Vietnam war raged, while US aircraft bombed border sections of the Ho Chi Minh trail which carried North Vietnamese supplies southwards. The US did all it could to cover up its Laotian operations, which came to be described as the 'Secret War'.

At the height of the fighting, Bill was air-dropped into the mountains of central Laos to find a suitable site for an airfield base. He scoured the mountainous, forested terrain on foot and finally found an ideal valley near the Plain of Jars. (The photograph at the top of the page, which was on display in Young's living room in Chiang Mai, was taken during this period.)

The CIA operation known as Air America based itself there and within months the

Read more: http://www.thefirstpost.co.uk/77251,people,news,cia-hitman-bill-william-young-found-dead-at-his-chiang-mai-home-air-america#ixzz1IjTFlEgb

Taxis blockade Phuket cruise passengers

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The luxury cruise liner Silver Spirit at Phuket Deep Sea Port this morning.
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Phuket Marine Police chief Phuripat Theerakulpisut makes a point
during today's emergency meeting at the Deep Sea Port.
PHUKET: -- The latest tuk-tuk and taxi blockade at the Phuket Deep Sea Port led to a victory for the drivers, who from today will be given a “50-50 share” of access to disembarking cruise ship passengers.
Vice Governor Nivit Aroonrat, Phuket City Police chief Chote Chitchai and local Marine Police brokered the agreement at about noon today, four hours after the blockade was set up.
Many of the 472 passengers aboard the Silver Spirit cruise liner had planned to take half-day minivan tours of Phuket, returning to the vessel before its scheduled departure at 1pm.
Their Phuket experience will not be a fond one, however, as they were not allowed past the blockade of some 200 angry taxi and tuk-tuk drivers.
The drivers were protesting the fact that local tour agents pick up most of the passengers who disembark from cruise ships at the port, leaving them with no work and no income.
“We have discussed this with the tour agencies and local authorities 10 times already over the past year, but still nothing has been done,” Taweesak Jumpada, a local taxi driver at Ao Makham for the past 12 years, told the Phuket Gazette.
Japanese tour operator Osaki Takumi said, “We had four Japanese guests who have booked a half-day round-trip tour, but now they cannot enjoy that as the ship is scheduled to leave at 1pm.”
The passengers are on a cruise from the Malaysian island of Penang to Columbo in Sri Lanka.
One of the tourists, 50-year-old Brazilian Marlove Araujs, said she and her husband were disappointed that their half-day tour had to be canceled.
“I have been to Phuket once before and I was very much looking forward to having another look around,” she said.
Another tourist, 66-year-old Schettle Roland, of Luxembourg, said, “This is bad. I came here 10 years ago. I didn’t plan to go inland myself, but I am not sure tourists will want to come to Phuket if they are greeted like this.”
One of the taxi drivers who helped reach the agreement, 50-year-old Narin Kebsup, said he was part of a 160-member collective of local taxi and tuk-tuk drivers.
Drivers wait all day for fares at the port, only to find that their time has been wasted when tour operators send their own vehicles to collect passengers, said the 20-year veteran driver.
As part of the agreement worked out today, tour operators will now have to inform the taxi and tuk-tuk co-op when they plan to use their own vehicles, he said.
The latest blockade was aimed at the management of the Sea Tour travel agency, but the Ao Panwa taxi co-op has shown in the past they are ready to take on all comers when they feel their interests are at stake.
In June last year a similar blockade was staged to stop US Navy seamen from taking buses paid for by the US military to points in Patong.
It was later reported that US military personnel had been the subject of at least three similar blockades, yet US Embassy staff downplayed the incidents and continued to insist Phuket was a preferred port-of-call for off-duty servicemen.

-- Phuket Gazette 2011-04-06

This is what you can expect when you arrive at by sea or at the airport. It really is time that the Government did something to protect the rights of the tourists.

Rick