Tag Archives: Thailand

The Boat Museum Ayutthaya Thailand

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Most people visit Ayutthaya Thailand because it was an ancient capital of the Kingdom of Siam. It’s extremely pretty and historically significant enough to credit the UNESCO World Heritage Site honor it earned in 1991.

We went there to kill three days while waiting for our Chinese visas to be processed at the embassy in Bangkok.

By the time we got to Ayutthaya my kids were wat-ed out. In fairness, we were at the end of an eight week tour of South East Asia and they had had their fill of temples and ruins and then some. That said, as any respectable parent knows, expecting two children to sit quietly in a hotel room for three days is asking the impossible so I proposed a walk.
I believe I said: “C’mon, let’s go explore the ruins, it’ll be fun”.
Judging by their reaction, you’d have thought I said: “C’mon, let’s go replace all your fillings”.

I won’t paint a picture of what happened next, you’ve been there, it’s not fun.

An hour later we were inspecting crumbling 16th-century wats, my boys both exercising their rights to practice their world-champion scowling skills. So I took a different tack. Earlier, we’d passed this street sign:

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“Let’s go check out that Boat Museum”.
The brothers Murphy, possibly figuring that boats had to be at least marginally better than wats, agreed.

I haven’t found a mention of this Boat Museum in any guide book. Finding and visiting it was the very definition of being sidetracked by kids while traveling. The museum takes up most of the floor space of this master carver’s home. The boats themselves are works of art, the dioramas help describe more clearly the different boat types and their uses.

Some examples of the different styles of boats on display at the museum:

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As I said, the owner and his wife welcomed us into their home and proudly showed us the boats and boat models in their collection – and then posed for a photo :)

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Cooking Class Chiang Mai

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Brotherly love – while learning how to make a red curry paste from scratch at a cooking class in Chiang Mai :)
We took our classes at the Siam Rice Cooking School in Chiang Mai, Thailand.

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Thailand Itinerary Part I

When Visited: January 2011
Duration: 12 days

Thailand Itinerary Bangkok Train Station

Thailand Itinerary Day 1: Train from Penang to Bangkok
Our arrival in Bangkok is always going to be a bittersweet memory for me. My husband had managed to get me a used, unlocked iPhone for Christmas. As we gathered our things after our two-day train journey from Kuala Lumpur to Bangkok I realized that the phone was missing. I’d only had it a couple of hours earlier. He was mad. I was mad. I felt stupid. Like I said, bittersweet.
Thankfully we were able to get to our awesome Lub.d hostel pretty easily (i.e. without killing each other). He went for a nap. I took our kids out for our first wander in Bangkok. Given that we were based in the Siam Square area of Bangkok they were in teen kid heaven: there were malls, food courts, and familiar brands. Undeterred, I directed us to the nearest Buddhist shrine. For a day that started so badly, it was a fun afternoon.

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Thailand Itinerary Day 2-4: Bangkok
So we got ripped off in Bangkok. Since this seems to be a tourist rite-of-passage in South East Asia it was good to get it out of the way on our first full day in the city. After that the next two days passed in a blur of temples and tuk-tuks with a side of tourist shopping on Khao Sanh Road. Murph and the boys also found time to visit the Center for Venomous Snake Toxicology and Research (top of everyone’s list of attractions in Bangkok, I know) while I got to spend a morning at a spa – and we got visas for Vietnam and Cambodia from a little shop next to our hostel. Like any city, Bangkok has it’s lovers and it’s detractors, we’re all in the former camp.

Thailand-Itinerary-Elephant-Riding

Thailand Itinerary Day 5: Travel day to Chiang Mai
We thought we’d booked train tickets from Bangkok to Chiang Mai but when we turned up at the train station we got shuttled onto a bus to a dingy side street. South-East Asia, it appears, has entirely different rules for independent travel than South America. You really DO need keep your wits about you at all times. My temper was flaring about this cluster when the hostess came to shoo us on to the bus. I did a double-take: the hostess was a host with an ill-fitting wig but a convincing chest. OK so. Distracted, I climbed on and helped my kids find their seats.

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Thailand Itinerary Day 6-10: Chiang Mai
I detail our time in Chiang Mai in Five Days in Chiang Mai for $600 but as a quick summary: we rode elephants, took a cooking class, chatted to monks, did a cycling tour of the area around Chiang Mai and generally had an incredible time. Murph and I even got to have a date night where we had dinner at the very swish Rachamanka.

Thailand Itinerary Day 11-12: Golden Triangle
It took almost a full day to travel by bus and minibus from Chiang Mai to Chiang Saen but it was worth it. We didn’t have enough time to go into Burma but we were able to have dinner at a street side cafe at a bend in the Mekong where you can eat in Thailand but see Burma just across the river to your left and Laos across the river to your right. We spent a day exploring the Hall of Opium Museum and the next day continued on into Laos.

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Gentleman Kid

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This is what a crowded backpacker bus in Thailand looks like. Every seat filled with people standing and sitting all down the aisle. If you think that’s not safe, consider also that the backpacks belonging to the extra passengers were piled up behind the driver, blocking the entrance and there was no air-conditioning. Altogether not ideal but certainly not unusual for backpacker travel in South East Asia. Surprisingly even with a few grumbles about over-crowding the mood on this bus was cheerful and friendly. I guess everyone was focusing on the destination: beautiful beaches on the islands in the Gulf of Thailand.

Everyone, that is, except one American girl. She and her three friends were among the unfortunates who boarded the bus last and ended up sitting in the aisle. As the bus pulled away from the stop, when all of the aisle-seaters were arranging themselves as comfortably as they could, she started to panic. She became agitated: “I can’t do this. I can’t do this. This is claustrophobic” . Honestly I was afraid she would become hysterical which would have been unfortunate for her but also possibly dangerous to the people around her – including my two children who, at this time, were calmly sitting (on seats) reading their books.

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As this girl became more upset no-one moved to help her. To me this was an interesting sociological scenario. Ideally, I’d support the Good Samaritan principle: help others when you’re not obligated to do so. However, in this case all the budget travelers on this bus had been equally swindled. This journey wasn’t going to be comfortable for anyone.

Then BigB stood up and offered her his seat. She grabbed it as if it were the last place on a Titanic lifeboat, thanking him profusely while I fumed (inwardly) at her selfishness. BigB beamed at the praise heaped on him by the kids seated around us. Murph and I piled on “Well done Buddy”‘s too. All the while I was thinking: “What a princess! She shouldn’t have come on a backpacker trip if she can’t handle the stresses budget travel sometimes throws your way.”

So, here’s my question to you: What do you think? Am I being too harsh on this girl? Was BigB’s charity appropriate? What would you have done?

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Crossing The Mekong From Thailand To Laos

In Chiang Khong, Thailand, open boats ply the broad, muddy, mighty Mekong all day ferrying people from Thailand to Laos and back again. When we arrived we were winging it with respect to knowing anything about the border crossing, passport control and even how much the boat across would cost. BigB got a little frustrated waiting for us to find out this latter and went off to find out for himself. It’s good to be 10 and independent – even if you don’t speak the language :)

For more on this area of Thailand, check out Golden Triangle Asia and Drugs.

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We miss you Bangkok

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We’ve been snowbound in Seattle this week. There’s been snow, sleet, rain, a very unusual ice-storm and general weather mayhem. All of which led me to think about where we were a year ago: in a warmer, gentler Bangkok. Here’s BigB and I taking a moment out of a busy day sightseeing exploring the many temples in Bangkok.

Please check out my Thailand with kids: Essential Information short guide.

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Thai Motorway Toilet Sign

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Spotted at a motorway gas station on the way into Bangkok. There were regular male/female toilet signs posted but some humorist had put this up on the wall just by the entrance to the men’s restroom.

This collection of whacky toilet signs is building quite nicely. You can check out the set at WanderMom Toilet Humor.

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Golden Triangle Asia And Drugs

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We arrived at Golden Triangle, Thailand late in the afternoon. It had taken almost the whole day on a minibus and then a public bus to get from Chiang Mai to Chiang Rai to Chiang Saen and then on to Sop Ruak, a hamlet outside of Chiang Saen. At this stage even I was begining to wonder whether it had been worth the effort to get ourselves to this point on the map, where the borders of Thailand, Laos and Burma meet. Distracted by the glinting edificies and elephants, we snapped some photos and trudged along looking for our hotel, which turned out to be about 2km outside of the village. When they didn’t have any record of our reservation things careened on a downhill trend pretty quickly – until we realized that not having a reservation didn’t equate to there not being any rooms available and the bunglow that was being offered had two bedrooms and was cheaper than the rate we’d found online anyway. Done deal. We stretched out in comfort, pretty sure that we were the only guests at the Greater Mekong Lodge that night.

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This is Reason Number One for being in an empty hotel in a remote corner of Northern Thailand: the view. The trees at the front of this photo are in Thailand. The triangular shape jutting into the river on the left of the photo is Burma and the land with the golden-roofed building on the upper right of the picture is Laos. I admit, it’s a little extreme to go so far off the well-worn tourist path to take a photo but geeky that we are, there was general agreement among the Murphy/Duffy family that this is a pretty cool snap to have in our trip collection.

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The Hall Of Opium museum was Reason Number Two (and actually, the primary reason) we were here. I’d read a short write-up about this museum in our guidebook and decided that it warranted a visit. I think I thought it would be fun and interesting but I didn’t expect us to spend four hours at the museum – without a single prompt or re-direct from parent to child – and I certainly didn’t expect the hours of discussion about drugs use which followed. In terms of a travel-educational experience, I think we hit the jackpot on this one.

Unfortunately, the museum does not allow photographs to be taken of the exhibits so I’ll try to describe briefly what we saw and the impact it had, particularly on our boys. (This write up of the drug trade in Asia is a narrative version of most of the material covered in the museum).

As the museum’s website says, the target audience of the Hall of Opium is teens and young adults, those most susceptible to the lure of illegal drugs, to show them how opium addiction became a world-wide problem, and how drug abuse affects individuals, their families, neighborhoods, and even their country. The edutainment factor is high, with plenty of multimedia displays and buttons to push for recorded explanations. All the information was available in Thai and English with some Chinese in the section on the Opium Wars.

There is a small display showing all types of the poppy (Papaver) plant and another showing how opium is made from the sap of just one type of poppy, Papaver Somniferum, outside the museum’s introductory movie. At this stage my boys were about as interested as they would be if I were telling them about how I choose and grow different plants in our garden in Seattle – as in bored to death. Joking about the airline-like “here are the emergency exits” sections in the movie helped lighten the mood.

I tried to encourage interest as we moved from the floor-to-ceiling multimedia displays telling about poppy usage from ancient times through the middle ages to it’s widespread usage in the late 18th century to the next room, a mock-up of a London wharf and the hull of a clipper. I wasn’t having much success. Then, as the history lesson unfolded, when the story of England’s obsession with tea and trade between Great Britain and her colonies extended to include the Boston Tea Party and the American Revolution, both my boys were riveted. We had to go back a room to examine the illustrations showing trade triangles and the trade deficit with China.

You’ll be bored if I list everything we saw through the rest of the 5,600 sq meters of exhibition space in this excellent museum. Briefly, we learned about opium manufacturing industry in India, the Opium Wars, the effects of opium addiction on China in terms of population, industry and society. There were mock-ups of opium dens and display cases showing opium-smoking paraphernalia including some beautiful pipes and headrests. At this point Murph was interested mostly in parent-play-along mode. It was when we entered the sections on opium growing in the Golden Triangle and the options which are available to governments to manage and prevent widespread drug use where the museum came into it’s own for him. Information about drug law enforcement and crop eradication was presented beside options to manage drugs through legalization – with equal weight given to all methods.

The museum display ends with two short movies: one telling the story of an English girl who died from a narcotics overdose in 2001 and one telling the story of a Thai local, a young father, who survived his addiction.

I wish that the Mae Fah Luang Foundation, who runs the Hall of Opium had a traveling version of this museum which they could exhibit to middle-schoolers and high-schoolers all over the world.

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Che In Bangkok

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BigB, wearing the Homer Simpson-Che Guevara t-shirt we picked up for him in Buenos Aires.
A Che image on a Bangkok tuk-tuk on Khao San Road.
A photo that begged to be taken :)

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Five Days In Chiang Mai For $600

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Our five days in Chiang Mai were some of the most enjoyable on our trip so far. We rode elephants, went bamboo rafting, did a bicycle tour of Chiang Mai and spent a day learning to cook Thai food. On our bus out of Chiang Mai I was daydreaming, thinking about how much fun we’d had while updating my notebook where I keep track of our spending. When I totted up what we’d spent in Chiang Mai I checked and re-checked my numbers and verified the amounts with my husband because the low total was such a surprise.

In Chiang Mai $600 Will Buy

The breakdown of our spending over those five days is pretty simple. Our 4-bed dorm room at the Green Tulip hostel was 800 baht (~$28) per night. We ate breakfast daily at the hostel for 400 baht (~$14) each morning. Typically we ate lunch at a local cafe – cheap, tasty Thai food for about 500 baht (~$16) for a simple meal each. However, we only bought lunch on two days since lunch was included as part of the days’ activities on the other days so the average daily lunch cost was 200 baht (~$6). Dinner was “street food” from vendors along the street outside our hostel or at the night-time food market near the center of Chiang Mai for the super-economic price of about 450 baht (~$15). All meals included at least one drink (soda, water or beer) each.

If you total all that up, the resulting daily costs for food and accommodation for a family of four (including one continually hungry teenage boy) for five days in Chiang Mai comes in at 1850 baht (~$61).

Chiang Mai Activities

The menu of available trips, tours, lessons and activities in Chiang Mai is enormous. We bought a package of activities for 2,300 baht (~$77) each. Our package was:
– A one-day “trek” including elephant riding, a 2-hour hike, a visit to Hmong and Karen villages – with explanations about these communities from a Karen guide – and a leisurely couple of hours bamboo rafting.
– A half-day cycle tour of Chiang Mai with Bangkok Biking.
– A full day at the Siam Rice Cooking School learning how to cook some yummy Thai dishes.

The final tally of food, accommodation and activities for a family of four for an excellent five days in Chiang Mai was: 18,450 baht or approximately $600.

As I said, we had a truly enjoyable few days in Chiang Mai. Nine and Stella, the managers of the Green Tulip were excellent hosts. Their hostel is spotlessly clean with spacious rooms and a friendly, welcoming atmosphere. Meeting the GotPassport (and TeamCM) folks in person at the Sunday Night Market was a special treat for me. We were impressed by the professionalism and quality of service of all of the activity vendors that we interacted with and their guides, it really did feel as if Nine had introduced us to a bunch of locals who she trusted to show us around. If Thailand is on your family’s bucket list, it’s absolutely worth the effort to include Chiang Mai on your itinerary.

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