Koh Tao to Bangkok

Written on 11:06 PM by John

Koh Tao is one of those glorious little beach island where you can lounge and do nothing, hike through the hills, read a book on the beach, join a dive trip, or watch the latest American film while chomping down on a $5 Australian steak. It’s a place with backpacker huts and high end hideaway 5 star resorts. All in all, you can circle the island, more or less, in about an hour by motor bike. We did our fair share of snorkeling, kayaking, beach bumming, and just plain exploring the various nooks and crannies of everyday life on Koh Tao. We will miss this little island oasis.




Spider
The night before our departure from Koh Tao, we headed back to our tiny little beach bungalow for a much needed shower (cold water only, of course). On this day, I (John) plopped down on the porch to read a little, while Meredith took the first shower. Suddenly, a scream erupted from the bungalow, and I thought “hmm, I guess the water is cold!” But then, another scream, followed by “John!” I jumped up and ran into the hut, only to be face to face with a spider as big as my hand and as hairy as my face (bearded). I was scared. I looked for a good smashing device, grabbing the closest and heaviest book. As I approached, the spider began to bolt toward Meredith, who was hunkered down in the bathroom. I acted quickly, throwing the book down on top of the spider. With a grunt, the spider caught the book, and threw it against the far side of the hut. The spider then took course for Meredith once more. Why, I don’t know, it was I who had just tried to smash it, but this spider had a keen sense for the sector of mankind intent on abolishing the species in a great arachnid genocide (Meredith is heading this effort I believe).

As the spider approached, Meredith’s face changed from fear to anger. Her space was invaded and she wasn’t going down without a fight. She then leapt onto the spiders back, grabbed a pony tail of spider fur, kicked in her heals, and said “giddy up spider!” (some of you may not know that Meredith had a small stint as a barrel racer as a child) Out of the door they went, the spider now with fearful eyes and Meredith with the determination of a matador looking for the first effective strike. And that was the last I saw of both Meredith and the Spider. Others in the town mentioned seeing them in a flash of fierce battle as the spider galloped on four legs while attempting a deadly strike with the remaining four. Others report Meredith having quickly defeated the spider and using the separation as moment to escape from her frumpy traveling companion. Who knows what the truth is…. After the spider incident, I went to the front desk, turned in the key to the hut, obtained a key for a new air conditioned room with hot shower and settled in for a good clean comfortable sleep away from spiders, mosquitos, lizards, and the like. Meredith would have liked the new room, it was clean and cool with a refreshing shower!

Back in Bangkok
Back in Bangkok I ran into Meredith who talked of some fantastic story that really seemed like nonsense, but I grabbed her, hugged her, and was so happy to see her still alive and unscathed. We checked in to a GREAT hostel in downtown Bangkok called Lub D. This place was extremely modern, clean, friendly, and in a great location. Here, we booked our flight to Cambodia and set out to see all of the temples we missed on our fist time around Bangkok. From our hostel, we could walk, or take a short Tuk Tuk ride, to a water taxi (boat) that headed straight downtown to the major sites. Traveling by boat was really quite nice. The boat service is much like a bus service, accept without the traffic. The boats have dedicated stops that are clearly marked and easily accessible to many major roads within the city. This option could work nicely in many parts of D.C.

Our first stop was Wat Pho, Temple of the Reclining (sleeping) Buddha. This Buddha is huge! The gold plated reclining Buddha is 46 meters long and 15 meters high, and is designed to illustrate the passing of the Buddha into nirvana. This is the largest reclining Buddha in Thailand. However, the Buddha is only part of the experience as the surrounding temples bring a sparkle to the city with colored glass mosaics, brightly colored ceramic roofing tiles, extravagantly painted carvings, and magnificent frescos.

Our next stop was the Grand Palace, or Phra Borom Maha Ratcha Wang. The palace served as the official residence of the king of Thailand from the 18th century to the mid-20th century. One of the main attractions within the Grand Palace is the Emerald Buddha (actually made of jade). While the Buddha is impressive, it looks aesthetically plain next to the reclining Buddha. However, in Thailand, this is reported to be the most revered figure of the Buddha, and for good reason. The Emerald Buddha was reportedly created in India 43 BC, but its origin is really unknown. Here is an excerpt of its discovery:

“The image was discovered in 1434 when lightening cracked open a chedi in a Chiang Rai temple. When discovered, it was covered in plaster and the abbot of the temple kept it in his quarters until the plaster started to flake off, revealing the jade underneath. Hearing of the discovery, the King of Lanna dispatched some soldiers to bring the image back to Chiang Mai. However, the elephant sent to carry the image refused to take the road back to Chiang Mai (Buddha images are often thought to have such powers over their movement). Seeing this, the escort took it as a sign and re-routed to Lampang.”

Interesting, huh??

Our next and final stop was the Temple of the Dawn, Wat Arun. This place is spectacular. While not large by acreage, the architecture and setting is breathtaking. Wat Arun has huge pagoda like structures reaching 80 meters tall. Steep steps lead to two terraces on the tower, and can be a bit rough for those that fear heights (Meredith and I, though I thinking we are getting better by the day).

Kitty Cat
Our second day in Thailand took us on a long tour to Tiger Temple. Luckily, we met a great Taxi driver (see memorable quotes section below) the previous day after finally taking the very valid advice to avoid Tuk Tuks and only use taxis. Safety is a concern, yes, but really there is not price difference, so why not take the air conditioning and remove the constant haggling? Anyway, Mr. Koon proved to be quite reliable.

The days tour started with a history lesson as we visited the River Kwai. The bridge at river Kwai begun in October 1942, using prisoner of war (POW) labor as well as local (slave) labor. The bridge was apparently memorialized in the 1957 movie The Bridge on River Kwai, though we had never heard of the bridge or the movie. The bridge was built under Japanese occupation to help supply Japanese troops and move supplies between Bangkok and Rangoon. With poor living and working conditions, thousands of POWs lost their lives in the process of building and reconstructing this bridge. I guess we will need to see the movie.

Our next stop was Tiger Temple! Now, we expected this to be a Buddhist temple where we might be able to get a picture with a Tiger. But, as it turns out, we did not see a temple, but did get to see a whole lot of tigers! Meredith and I were overwhelmed by these animals. Being so close, and getting to pet them, was quite a rush. I don’t think Meredith stopped smiling the whole time we were there. We first visited with the cubs. There we were able to pet them, but “Don’t touch the head!” We met a young English volunteer who had fully bruised arms and legs with scabbed over scratch wounds covering most of her body. She informed us that when the tigers play, they play rough. She also informed us that further down the trail we could see the parents of these little cubs.

Oh my gosh! We were greeted by about 13 lazy tigers (some say sedated, but they got pretty rowdy from now and then). The volunteers grabbed us one at a time by the wrist and directed us from tiger to tiger telling us where it was safe to sit and where to pet the tiger without risking a “playful” bite. I really was like being behind the scenes at a zoo. To our surprise, we were only 2 of about 20 people, so there was plenty of time to interact with the tigers and observe them up close. It was one of those offshoot highlights that come now and again when traveling. A great experience that neither of us will be sure to forget.

Next stop, Angkor Wat, Cambodia! We will post again soon!

For more pictures, see:
http://picasaweb.google.com/picajohn/TheLifeSpreadsheet

Interesting Conversations

Guidance from the Cab Driver (Mr. Koon):
“Mr. John, you call your father?”
“Yes, I call my father.”
“How often? How often to you call your father, how often do you call your parents?”
“When I am at home, sometimes every day, but at least a couple of times a week”
“That is good, you are a good son. It is important to call your parents so they don’t worry.”
(I think Mr. Koon was upset that his children do not call more)

More guidance from Mr. Koon:
“Many people work, work for big money, but ignore their family…they ignore their children. These people are not happy. I do not have a lot of money, but I have a good family, good children. I am very happy. This is how to be happy. Mr. John, you have good travel companion, this makes you happy. You go home, you have good children and this will make you happy. It is not happy to be alone…to be lonely when you are old with no one to help take care of you.”
(Mr. Koon previously had a much better job, but the economy has been very bad for a while. He worked as salesman and was trained by a western company in both the U.S. (Cleveland) and Japan (Osaka). He also has to take care of his wife who has diabetes and needs dialysis three times a week. The dialysis is expensive and consumes most of Mr. Koon’s salary)

Young girl in Angkor Wat temple complex (approx. 6 years old):
“One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten… Uno, dos, tres, quarto, cinco, seis, siete, ocho, nueve, dies…zero, un, deux, trios, quatre, cinq, six, sept, huit, neuf, dix…Do you want to buy a photo? Only one for $1. Do you want to buy a photo? Only 2 for $1. Do you want to buy a photo? Only 10 for $1”
(She was so cute. This girl had a choreography all worked out that she ran through like a DJ looping mad dance beat mixes of old school rap)

Everywhere in Bangkok:
“Do you want Ping Pong show?”
(this is not ping pong, don’t ever go...and no, we didn’t go)

Bangkok to Koh Samui to Koh Tao

Written on 7:13 AM by John





Oh, how it is to be travelin...


As many of you know, this is John's second backpacking trip. As many of you also know, this is Meredith's first backpacking trip. To be honest, thus far, things have been somewhat inbetween backpacking and hoteling when compared to John's fist 7 month stint. (Don't let John fool you...we've been staying in hostels and sharing showers with see through doors) Oh, but things may very well be changing....

Let's look at the trip to Koh Samui. How does one travel from Bangkok to Koh Samui, you ask? Good question. Well, one has a choice. Option 1 is to fly straight to Koh Samui. Option 2 is to...well, let's look at option 2, the option we and all good backpackers take.

Option 2 requires 11 simple steps:

  1. Step 1 - Book the ticket through a travel agent (similar to option 1).
  2. Step 2 - Hire a tuk tuk and arrive at said agent's office at the agreed upon travel time (still similar to option 1).
  3. Step 3 - Pile into truck at agent's office to be transported to random street corner (whoa, option 1 doesn't require this).
  4. Step 4 - Confirm that other backpackers at the random street corner are going to the same, or a similar (on a similar path) place
  5. Step 5 - After waiting for about an hour, run through the monsoon to the bus across the busy highway, and pile, soaking wet, into a 50 degree freezebox.
  6. Step 6 - Sit in freeze box for 12 hours, ignoring the putrid smell of the bathroom directly behind your seat.
  7. Step 7 - Get dropped off at a random restaurant (more like roadside food stand)- all other travelers stay on bus....bus leaves (can we go back to option 1?)
  8. Step 8 - Get in random truck and get transported to another random restaurant.
  9. Step 9 - Get on another bus for a 1 hour ride to the dock.
  10. Step 10 - Get on boat for a 3 hour ride to the beutiful island of Koh Samui!
  11. Step 11 - Hire taxi, after fierce negotiation, to take you to the hotel (or location of choice upon which time you go from hotel to hotel in an attempt to negotiate the best price after a 24 hour journey full of sweat, stink, and very near tears)

So, obviously, it makes sense to save the $200 and go with option 2, as we did, loving every minute of it!

Even better, the hotel. Upon arriving in Bangkok, we were greeted in our first outing by a fine young man wearing a Pantara T-Shirt and speaking wonderful English. This young man was nice enough to cirlce the best things to see on our tourest map and send us to the T.A.T office (government travel office) to get any advice and future reservations we need. Even better, the young man informed us that on this day, all museums and temples were free as this day was a national holiday. Even better, this young man informed us, that this day was a day for travelers and we therefore would only be charged 20 baht (about 80 cents) for a full days use of a Tuk Tuk. He then proceeded to grab a Tuk Tuk driver, gave him instructions, and sent us along our way.

How lucky we were to be give a cheap transport and free museums for the entire day (this actually all turned out to be true). First stop, however, was the T.A.T office. Our intent here was to use the T.A.T office to book travel through Thailand and possibly on to Cambodia and Vietnam. However, after a very detailed and well thought out plan proved to expensive, we chose only to book the transportation to Koh Samui, and a Koh Samui Hotel for 3 nights. Happy with our conservative bookings, we hopped into our Tuk Tuk and had a whirlwind tour of Buhdist Temples and custom tailors.

Certainly John and Meredith weren't clothes shopping? No...No sir, we were simply acting! We go into the clothes store, act like we want clothes, and then leave! Oh what fun we had. Trying on suit jackets, drapping fabric across our breast, dancing and prancing about like the new emporer and emporess of Thailand! It was a day to beat all days. Or, maybe just a real hassel put on by our ever so thrifty tuk tuk driver looking to make some extra cash by bringing in possible customers. Anyway, all things aside we had a wonderful time seeing the sites of Bangkok and will need another day or two for more sightseeing upon returning from our island retreat.

Now, back to the hotel in Koh Samui... We reserved 3 days at the T.A.T office in Bangkok, but, after checking in, it was immediately apparent that this would be a one night stay at most. The room was filthy, the bed was horrible, and the bathroom was quite stinky. "So, are these the types of places you and Gray stayed," asks Meredith. "Well, yes, sometimes, but for a much cheaper price," replies John. It is at that moment that we set our sites on finding a new hotel. We walked into dozens of hotels before finding one that offered rooms at half price due to renovation work being performed on a new pool and restaurant. The room was perfect, and the place was in a great location. Here we stayed, lavishly, for around $30 a night. Not a budget bargin, but a nice room for the price.

After a week of sunbathing, Meredith and I realized it was time to move on. So, we booked a boat to Koh Tao for some more sunbathing with the additional of snorkeling adventures. The trip to Koh Tao was uneventful, however in the pickup truck style taxi on Koh Tao, we met two nice English women who had been to Koh Tao several times. They highly recommended a small bungalow resort called Blue Wind at the north end of Sairee beach. We thanked them, but decided to head on to another resort that had good recommendations online, Koh Tao Cabana Resort.

After being laughed at with our low ball price range, we headed down to the previously recommended Blue Wind. Again, this proved to be a short stay. While the hotel is beach front with beautiful views of the gulf, the rooms were far from clean. Again, we marched on in a blinding hunt for better accomidation. At last! We find a small clean bungalow for 350 Baht a night (about $10). While John is pleased as punch, Meredith is still a little on edge with the accomidation. Happy with price, the room is still far from western clean and the large lizards popping out of all nooks and crannies can cause a bit of a fright when caught off guard.

Oh, but this is budget travel at it's best. The island is amazing, the food is amazing, the bars show free movies twice nightly, and the roosters let us sleep till almost 6am before cackooooing us awake. Lizard! AHHHHH!












See this picture.....

Well, on our first day in Koh Tao, Meredith finally decided to allow John to rent a motorbike. After taking off alone for a quick refresher in the skills of motorbike driving, Meredith hopped on for a ride further up the beach. The roads have few cars, but the steep hills and poor road condidtions can prove difficult for the novice driver. So, as you can see in the picture.... No sorry, you are wrong. We parked the motorbike at the top of a long steep drive way that appeared to lead to a hotel. We began walking down the graveling sloped when Meredith lost her footing, skinning her knee and toe in the process. After only 10 minutes with the motorbike, we were left with an unrelated, yet very motorbike like injury. Walking into the pharmacy to grab the necessary first aid materials, I received the look of shame from the local Thai. "Here, another stupid farang that no drive motorbike...hurt wife...stupid farang."

Yes, we are living a tough life. Not all fun and games. Well, I guess it is a lot of fun, and we do play a lot of games....



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