Saturday, January 31, 2009

Tales from Lao-Lao Land

Lao-Lao is the local rice whiskey, its similar to the Thai whiskey - Mekong, or Saamsong, but with more of a Turpintine flavour, but more on that later...

So we've moved south from Luang Phabang. Michelle and I both came to really enjoy that city. It has a lot of charm, and the Kueng Xi waterfalls were completely amazing (and brilliant for swimming...as per the video which has hopefully attached)



We spent our last night in a beautiful hotel, to celebrate our Wedding Anniversary... fantastic!

Then it was on to Vangvieng - a 5 hour minivan ride along a windy, potholed road. I don't know what we were expecting from Vangvieng, but the reality was something completely out of the ordinary. Packed with bars that pump untill curfew (yep, theres an 11pm curfew here) - it seems that every falang (forigner) in the country comes here to party - and party they do! The main attraction in the town seems to be tubing - sitting on the Nam Song River on a tractor tyre innertube, and floating from bar to bar getting very wasted on Lao-Lao Buckets and various "special" items! When you sit at the bar they slip a little menu in front of you with "additional" things to try...

We were put off this on the first day we arrived, as very intoxicated (and sopping wet) people filled the town up, stumbling around. Not pretty. We decided to do some caving, and kayaking instead, which was a brilliant experience.

The town is also filled with bars playing "Friends" re-runs. Probably more than half a dozen bars, where you sit on pillows and cushions and relax in front of some TV - something which Michelle and I did on our last day there, as we were both feeling a bit under the weather.

Currently we're in the capital, Vientaine (pronounced Vienchang) for one night before heading south to Pakxe on the 14 hour overnight bus. Exciting.

Hmmm... I can't seem to link to images, Firefox is in Thai on this computer! You'll just have to check back again soon, or have a look on our facebook pages.

Moving South

Hi all, and thanks for the comments! :)
Laos for me has had highlights and low lights, pleased to be moving on tomorrow to Pakse in an overnight bus! Viengtaine isn't my favourite place nor is Vangvieng...

Lowlights:
got a slight cold (probably from the cave tubing)
bus rides to each next destination - sorry mum, but sometimes i dont think i'll make it out alive!
the down right rude, egocentric, noisey boys on the slow boat (for 2 days!!!!) keeping us up till 3am... then hearing them vomiting for hours after... NOT PLESANT!
Vomiting for a few hours due to over heating & a headache

Laos Highlights:
cheap tasty market food & fruit shakes
delightful little wine bars
Wedding Anniversary in Luang Prabang - the hotel made such a fuss!!!
Seeing silk weaving across the river in a village
Watching saa paper being made (similar to tapa making process)
Sunsets on the Mekong
1 hr Laos Massage
Cave tubing
kayaking down the river in Vangvieng
hearing buddha mythology at temples
meeting Viv & Rob from Holland who are travelling for about a year including NZ, sorry we won't be there to put you up for a few nights, talk about bad timing!

Arina & Jared - i LOVE the snowman pic, you 2 must be freezing!!! Meanwhile i'm sitting in 30+ degree heat! Sorry to hear J is under the weather :( see you in a few months and stay safe! p.s. thanks for the lovely warm anniversary wishes! xox
Adam & Fi - How is the job hunting going? And come to think of it house hunting too???
Tash - Thanks to you both for the warm wishes!
Mum & Dad - no need to worry (accept when ever i'm in a minivan with a crazy Laos driver and animals are walking across roads so we have to swerve to miss them!) We are both doing well! Hope you had such a blast in ChCh with the whanau. p.s. You know Shaunie would never let anything happen to me mum!
Jeannette & Peter - Thanks for putting up with mum and dad, hope they weren't too much trouble... he he he
Ma & Pa - thanks for all your emails, for checking in on mum, and for your anniversary wishes! xox
Justine, Sabine & Rohan - if you ever go to Thailand, you are going to need to get a container to ship everything back you'd want to buy for your house! Every market place has something that i think would be perfect for your home. Hope the new year has started well and Sabine likes her new class.
Kahn - thanks for your email! Let me know when you've organised and confirmed dates for Europe, can't wait to see you, love to your mum too - Eldene, hopefully you're reading that yourself and managed to get on to my blog xox
Big hugs and kisses to everyone who is taking the time to read our travels! xox

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Loving Laos

Well a long 2 days down the Mekong. Thankfully there was some breath taking scenery to view. More expensive than we'd anticipated, but hopefully it will get cheaper when we head futher South. Tummy troubles has resolved itself, for now... Enjoying the food, eating A LOT of vegetarian, the food markets are enough to put you off for life! BLOOD, GUTS, HOOVES, HEADS, RODENTS and we haven't even got to Cambodia yet... yikes! Nicole, you would not cope at all, you think its bad enough when Andrew goes hunting and brings home a carcass! Warmer in Laos which is nice. Will miss the train travel in Thailand, you can't read a book on the bus! Read a few books and enjoying the time to be able too!
Tracey - The Book Thief was beautifully written, loved the creative way the author put the story together, and an appropriate time when i read it at Kanchanaburi too, going to war museums etc. Thanks heaps xox
Nicole - Hows the Egypt plans coming?? Read 'Gathering Light' by Jennifer Donnelly, must be her first book, worth the read.
Ginny & Scott - looks like the house is coming along, you 2 working 24-7?
Mum & Dad - booked a really nice place to stay for our wedding anniversary, thanks heaps! Will be total luxury!
Tasha - Yes, you were right, SE ASIA is the best! I look forward to hearing your travels in South America.
Kelly & John - thanks soooo much for getting our luggage to London. You're the best! How was Tiri?
Dave & Christine - Christine, how is your leg healing? Let us know if you 2 will make it to Vietnam in April.
Anwar (travel clinic Dr) - thank you sooo much for the G-whizz recommedation. I think i pee standing up more than i do sitting down... lol
CS19 - have a great start back with Terry. I hope you kept up that reading in the holidays!
My soon to be year 7's - Best of luck on your first day at Intermediate. Its the best! Get involved in heaps of extra-curricular stuff and you'll make heaps of friends.
Michele - good to see you are showing Adrien the country side and getting lots of use out of the tent with the kids.
Ok, must go, water falls and bears to see now.
xox

Capitilism is Alive and Well in Laos

So we're finally in Laos, land of a million elephants (or something). The slow boat was very scenic, but no as pleasant as it could have been thanks to some extreemly drunk aussies and some fairly drunk poms (who proceeded to become extreemly drunk outside our guesthouse bedroom untill 2am). It was definately a worthwhile trip though, Pakbeng (where you stop for the night, to break up the 2 day journey) was a cute little town, and there is something romantic about floating down the river. Let me quickly dispell any notions of comfort though. The seats are little, narrow wooden bench seats that more suited to being some sadist ministers church pews. You have very little space (much of which is taken up by aforementioned drunk Englishmen). Luang Phabang came as a relief... Many Many thanks to B for suggesting we buy the cushions. Amen for those.

So thats where we are now, Luang Phabang - a beautiful city with lots of French Colonial charm, on the convergance of the Mekong, and the Nam Ou rivers.

Luang Phabang is a bit of an anomoly though. Prces here are fairly high, thanks to a huge influx of package tourists paying top dollar for everything. There are also some pretty well off Loatians - we've seen someone driving around in a Hummer H2! It doesn't help that the currency here is ridiculous, the smallest note is 500kip, but I haven't seen any of those, mostly everything is in multiples of 1000. Its terrifying to consider that our fairly basic guesthouse costs us 80000kip per night! They use 3 currencies actively here, just to confust things more! USD, Thai Baht and Kip are all accepted... Michelle and I spend half our time trying to work out what everything costs!

At the moment we're waiting untill 1.30 when we head off to Kueng Xi waterfalls for a dip to cool off in the heat of the afternoon. Tomorrow we're planning on going to the Pak Ou Caves where there are apparently several thousand buddha statues, then to the Whiskey Village. Alright. Although I've heard that Lao Lao (Laos Whiskey) tastes kinda like paint thinners.

After that, who knows... we've booked into a FLASH hotel to celebrate our wedding anniversary, then we'll head off to Vang Vieng for some tubing.

Jared, beer in Laos is amazingly, cheaper than Thailand. Even though it sounds expensive 8000kip is about 30baht, for a big bottle. Where are you man, I need a drinking buddy!

Thats it from me for now, will post again after we've had some more adventures.

Love to all.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Far North Thailand Pics

Thanks to everyone who has commented, we really appreciate hearing for you!

So, into some photos!

Michelle and I by the Mae Ping River in Chiang Mai.Yunnan Village near Pai
Michelle fending off the morning cold, overlooking Pai


Watching life go by, riverside in Pai

Mmmmm, frog on a stick, just like mummy makes. At the local produce market, Lampang.

The next image isn't for the sensitive of stomach, so you might want to hit page-down...

Alright... todays game is GUESS THE MYSTERY MEAT.


I'm pleased to say its not dog (the head was there, and it looked fairly rodentish, but its pretty big). Thats all I can really say about it.

Elephant Conservation Centre, between Lampang and Chiang Mai.


Monks in Lampang, buying cloth. What colour should we get?


Ok thats all for now (from me at least). In Chiang Rai at the moment, quite a lovely town, very friendly... heading to Chang Khong tomorrow to cross the border into Laos.

Sunday, January 18, 2009

Busy Bee's in the North

Well, its been a pretty busy little week really... well, comparatively anyway.

On Monday we left for Pai (pronounced kinda like "bye") via Mini-van, except we got picked up from our guest-house in a Saawngthaew - a covered ute with 2 rows of bench seats on either side. Michelle and I quickly, although slightly worriedly, accepted this as our fate for the next 3 hours. They crammed 10 of us in and away we went - that is until we reached the ACTUAL mini van, which carried us in comfort through the 762 corner's on the road to Pai. Pai is a cute wee town (thanks Annie for the tip) on the banks of a river in the far north west of Thailand. It seems to be a bit of a haven for musicians and artists and that sort - kinda like a Thai version of Matakana perhaps. Being way up in the mountains, and with a cold snap heading in from China, Pai turns pretty darned chilly at night. I know its winter and all, but aren't we supposed to be in the tropics??? With night-time temperatures around 10 (or colder) and a morning fog that keeps things brisk well into the morning it doesn't really heat up until about 11.30. Fine by me (although I was feeling a bit blue-knee'd in shorts) but Michelle was freezing.

Anyway, after 11ish it was great, getting up into the high 20's as we've come to expect. We hired a Chinese made (JCB for any that care) scooter which I nick-named "squeeky" and proceeded to explore the local attractions - a Great Barrier style "hot-springs", a muddy creak which you sat in, and some local villages - very cute. I also had an "altercation" with the local traffic law enforcement. Fairly intimidating, but I paid the small fine and everything was great. With that done there is only one thing to do in Pai - sit by the river and drink fruit shakes, which we proceeded to do with great delight, watching the local fishermen and bamboo rafts float by. Rather pleasant.

Then we mini-van'd back to Chiang Mai for a night before catching the local train to Lampang - 3 hours south. The train cost an unbelievable 23baht each - about $1.

Lampang was... interesting. Also a cute (in its own way) riverside town. Though in this town we spent the entire first afternoon wandering around, without seeing one single tourist! We were getting the occasional odd look from the locals too, and those that could speak some English could only manage one or two words. So it turns out that we'd wandered well off the usual tourist trail! No problem, it gave me a good opportunity to practice my thai (Phom passat thai neit noy!!!) and Michelle and I got to try out our skills at charades. We stumbled (there were no english signs, so we were relying on the out-of-date Lonely Planet to see us right) into a local food market - cue more odd looks - where they were selling every every kind of food imaginable, and some that are beyond imagination - when I post photos next we can all play "guess the mystery meat" - Hint, you can see a paw.

Yeah...

Our culinary adventures were only just beginning, as that night I ordered a Larb Moo (Pork Salad). My salad came with a whole range of pig parts, so the salad resembled something from Fear Factor. In fact we're pretty sure that there was indeed, pig's anus in there.

The next morning we ate some nice safe muffins, before taking a Horse and Carriage ride through the city, before heading out to the National Elephant Sanctuary and worlds first Elephant Hospital. What an amazing experience! There were dozens of Chang (Elephants) from huge Males with tusks that were so long they crossed in front of their trunks, through to wee baby elephants. So we fed them (just for you Arina), had a ride, watched them bathe, and saw an elephant show. Incredible!

When we got back to our guest house a night market was setting up outside, so we spent the evening strolling the local market, again only seeing one or two non-local faces amongst the crowd. We did happen to meet a couple of Mormon missionaries, which I found entirely amusing. They were both very nice, but good luck trying to convert 60 million devout Buddhists!

The people of Lampang were brilliant, even though most only knew one or 2 words of English, they invited us to sit with them and tried to converse as best they could. They offered us samples of their food (which Michelle was dodgy on after the previous nights debacle) and were very kind. Well thats what I hope was happening anyway!

Now were back in Chiang Mai for a 3rd time, heading to Chaing Rai tomorrow, then on to Laos...

Thursday, January 15, 2009

11.1.09 - A night of culinary delights

The first day we're up on our finances. It;s been a day of a lot of walking and sight seeing. From taking a stroll down to the river to a walk through into the old city. We've taken in the vibes of Chiang Mai and loving every minute of it. Tonight however was a favourite, starting out with a walk through the Sunday markets by the "Gate". I was into trying locally6 made wine. I started with a lychee wine - semi dry, not so pleasant on the nose but a delicious drop none the less. 11% alcohol, 50% fruit (lychee I suspect) and 40% herbs. In fact it was such a nice drop that i had to try another. The only thing missing was Ginny & Scott our wine tasting pals! Second drop was a strawberry wine, it was sweet, soft pink and easy to drink. Shaun i and tried some Chiang Mai sausage, chicken kebab (which we ate one bite of and decided to throw the rest out - neither of us wanted a repeat of the previous weeks Thai belly, and well i don't think our chances would've been high with the gai (chicken) being barely luke warm. As we began to walk past the other food vendors heading for the Roof Top bar (RTB) our eyes sighted steamed spring rolls, had to try those, along with chicken balls. All that for 20 baht ($1) seemed a steal. Lychee wine was 30 baht and strawberry wine 20 baht a glass. We climbed the stairs of the RTB after kindly being escorted across the frantic road by traffic police. They'd come on duty in preparation for the madness of the night markets that were still to come. Shaun and I watched an amazing sunset and a birds eye view of the night market below. We finished our drinks ready to peruse the markets once more. We were so spoiled for choice we'd already had wine, entrees and next was the main course. There were savoury treats for miles and in every block to tantalise our taste buds. We settled on BBQ moo (pork) possibly the BEST pork I've ever eaten, had the smokey flavours of the best Matapouri BBQ's. Next on the list was prawn steamed dumplings, more spring rolls and finally to finish mango and sticky rice and banana and chocolate roti - Aroy Mark Mark (delicious). I arrived back at the guest house feeling particularly spoiled by the culinary delights I can't wait to see waits in store for tomorrow as we move on to our next destination - Pai.

Sunday, January 11, 2009

Photos - Heading North

For some reason Facebook photos don't seem to work so well on blogger - but you can click on the pics to see the "uncropped" versions, or check out our albums on Facebook...

New Years Eve 2008/2009 waterfront Hua Hin
Hua Hin - random bar where thai women allowed Arina to sing... after much peer pressure!
Kanchanaburi sunset

Erawan National Park
before entering the forbidden catfish infested waters.Death Railway and the monkey that likes to steel peoples bags and cameras... thankfully not ours!

Bridge over the River Kwai

Hellfire Pass

War Cemeterytrain ride in Central Thailand

Doi Suthep 300 steps to go...Wat Prathat Doi Suthep - 2 of the MANY Buddha statues there

Hmong women

Chiang Mai Wall
THC Roof top bar

Saturday, January 10, 2009

Heading North

Well its been a while since my last entry, although Shaun is keeping you all well informed. I'm over my thai belly bug and finally regaining an appetite. Had many thai soups, pad thai, curries and local fruit - YUM! Left Hua Hin which to be completely honest, was glad to see the back of. Too commercial, seedy, and expensive. Arrived in Kanchanburi which i'd been really looking forward to from the reading i'd done on the area. Poor Shaun got Thai belly, but recovered after 24 hours which was impressive. The place lived up to expectation for me. Beautiful country side, spectacular sights to be seen and ultimately just a charming place to be. Erawan National Park was stunning. The walk up the 7 tier water fall was well WORTH IT! The cat fish were interesting however, I went to go in and they were magnets to humans. Shaun basically had to fight them off us to get in the water. They suck at your legs, rather weird sensation. Once i got past the ickyness of it all, i went for a quick swim and out again - refreshing but cold! The photos don't do justice to just how special this place is. Went to Hellfire Pass which was haunting and as Shaun said, sombre, but an important place to visit, as was the War Museum (impressive, loved the audio, film, hellfire pass model) and cemetry. Went to the Bridge over the River Kwai too, walked across to be met with a distressed chained up elephant :( I'm sure there's more of that to be seen. Chiang Mai was calling, so we left Kanchanaburi, surprisingly got to Bangkok safely - even though the mini van driver was a lunatic! I thought the best thing to do was sleep for the entirity of the journey. Made it to our destination in 90 minutes instead of the usual 2 1/2 hours... that might give you some idea of his driving.
Next stop was Bangkok train station, not as manic as i thought it would be. The toilets there are another story altogether - EWWWWWWWWWWWWW GROSSSSSSSS YUKKKKKKKKKKK. Most of you will know about my purchase of the Gwhizz (an aparatus that allows women to pee standing up). It took me many months to psych myself up to purchasing one of these contraptions, and now I consider it one of the BEST inventions of all time!. I thought the train station toilets were bad, well i had a thing of two to learn... the train toilets were something else altogether. The 14 hour train ride over night up to Chiang Mai meant it was time to give this thing a go. Boys have it so easy! I used it 3 times with success, and now carry it with me every where. I also have to mention when i went the first time on the train i realised i was quite literally peeing on train tracks, and for some reason everytime i went to go, the train stopped at a station, rather hilarious, especially when there is a window and everyone could see a women standing up peeing. There was lots of laughing out side.:)
The over night train was awesome - second class perfect. Quite the adventure. I thought i'd sleep easy on a train, much like lulling myself off to sleep from all those holidays on Mr Walker and Scarlet Fever - NOT A CHANCE. swishing of water and gentle rocking doesn't come close to comparing clunking and severe side to side motions of a train. None the less, fun and most memorable.
Chiang Mai is great. Loving this city. Cheap, cheerful and charasmatic. First night's accommodation was dire. Staying at Thapae Gardens Guest House now which is gorgeous and only 50 baht more ($2.50NZ). Went to Doi Suthep this morning - great view of Chiang Mai, Buddhas and Stupa (300 stairs later). Many thai people there and it was clearly a very sacred special place. We're spending roughly $25 (500 baht) a day each which includes sights, accommodation, delicious food ... but we want to get it down to $20 a day - more than achievable.
Ginny & Scott - hope the house reno's are going well???
Mel, B & Wendy - roof top bar very cool.
Marlon - enjoying Pass the Pigs.
Nicole - bargains are even BETTER in Chiang Mai, i want to buy everything but there is no where to put it!!!
Mum & Dad - hope you're looking after each other and poker is up and running soon! And Shaun says get a microphone and camera for skype - Xiao can hook you up i'm sure.
Ma & Pa - great talking to you on skype today.
Arina & jared - you're off tomorrow on the rest of your adventure, keep safe, we'll miss the toilet stops, yummy food you keep buying and making us eat too, and ofcourse your great company! The last couple of weeks have been truly special.

Friday, January 9, 2009

Survival in a Strange Land

Phew... The last few days have been rather full on!

As we left Hua Hin 5 days ago I felt a discontented rumbling in my stomach... the dreaded thai-belly had come for me! I managed to hold out for the almost 3 hour taxi ride into Kanchanaburi, but as soon as we arrived and got ourselves a guest house (more on these later) I had to spend the next few hours developing a rather personal relationship with the porcelain god. Thankfully I must have looked after Michelle well because she repaid me in kind - making sure I had enough water and wasn't in too much distress - then finally after 12 or so hours of it, by "encouraging" me to take a stomach anti-biotic. Well it worked because the next day I was much better thankfully.

Just in time to do a tour of Erwan National Park including the beautiful Erwan 7 teir waterfalls (Photos to follow - I left my camera cable back in the guest-house). A hike up the hill lead to successive cascades, some good for swimming, and some just plain beautiful. It was a stunning park, topped off with a dip in the fresh water, and some beautiful thai food, although at that stage I was only just back on to solids, and a nice noodle soup was on the cards for me.

After that we headed off to Hellfire Pass - A very well presented museum put together by the Aussies, and the Thai Governments to commemorate one of the most horrible parts of the death railway. For those who don't know - Death Railway is the rail line that the Japanese Army forced British, Dutch and Australian and other POW's, as well as a huge asian labour force, to build during WWII. We walked down through the pass, which was dug out by hand - think Hammer and Chisel - from solid rock. The museum gave us these audio books to listen to while we walked through, recounting soilder's tales and memories usually voiced by the soilder's themselves. Deeply moving. The place had a very solemn feel.

From there it was off to the Death Railway itself (a lot of it was dismantled or bombed after the war - so only parts remained), this place was crammed with tourists many of whom were more interested in shopping off the local vendors, so sadly it didn't have the same feel, but still an impressive place. We caught the train along a section of the track, then headed off to the famous Bridge over the River Kwai.

A huge day, but well worth it. In the morning, Michelle and I got up and went to the War Cemetery and Museum. Again a deeply moving experience, and recalling it now still brings a lump to my throat. During the construction of the railway 90000 POW's and Romshu (Asian Labourers) lost their lives in terrible conditions. The Japanese worked them extremely hard, gave little thought to health or wellbeing of their prisoners and fed them next to nothing. Combined with the heat, tropical diseases and lack of any proper medical equipment, these men suffered the worst range of torture and back breaking work imaginable.

Kanchanaburi was a beautiful riverside town that we could have easily spent several more days in, but we'd already booked our train tickets to Chiang Mai so it was time to press on.

Little did we know at that stage that a simple mini-bus ride into Bangkok would become such an adventure... The ride from Kan'buri to Bangkok is supposed to take 2 and a half hours. We managed it in 1 and a half. Our driver must have been practicing for Bathurst the way he drove (or he must have though he was currently competing!!!). I never thought slip-streaming actually worked in real life, but it turns out that it does. And I also thought that the shoulder IN THE CENTRE wasn't for passing, but again - I was mistaken.

After a drink to steady the nerves we headed to Bangkok's Hualamphong station to catch the overnight train to Chiang Mai, where we are now. A great way to get up here for sure, we really enjoyed the experience, though I think Jared and Arina were shattered after a fairly sleepless night (for them). So now we're checked in to a truely horrible Guest House called Travellers Inn. Consider this a warning to anyone thinking of coming to Chiang Mai - AVOID. Its filthy, (though not as bad as the first place we looked at) smells dank and musty, and pretty much fits the criteria of being "Most Terrible Place in Thailand" though obviously I can't say that with any real certainty. If you're ever standing in front of this hell-hole thinking it looks alright, please turn around, walk up one of the soi's opposite, or walk 20m towards the river to the Green Garden Guesthouse, or SLEEP ON THE STREET.

That aside, we're loving Chiang Mai, moving into a beautiful Guest House (ThaPhae Inn) tomorrow and looking forward to a couple of days here. Tomorrow we're going to try and go up Doi Suthep, then after that we don't really have a plan. We have to leave Thailand on the 24th - Jared and Arina head over to the cold part of the world in a few days, so we're going to kind of wing it from here. We're planning on going to a wee town called Pai, but thats about it...

Oh yeah, Scott - you always said that you never realised how cheap Thailand was until you got out of Bangkok - too true mate, pretty much everything up here is a bargain. The Bangkok vendors must have wised up because bargaining isn't really the go down there anymore, but up here it's all on. Jared and I shared a 300baht tower (3 Litres) of Chang Beer at lunch today. Had to have a nap after that... hehe.

Alright, much love to all - Michelle is going to upload pics asap!

Sunday, January 4, 2009

Crazy Hua Hin

So now its our last day in Hua Hin. Its been a bit chilly and dull for the last 2 days, only getting up to 27 or 28 (hey - it IS winter), but today is already looking like its going to be a stonker! Michelle unfortunately succumbed to "Bangkok Belly" and was out of action for most of yesterday and the night before. Poor thing! Especially after we'd just had a fairly overpriced meal at an Itallian restaurant.

So as Michelle said, we went to Chopstick Mountain, Khao Takiap. Its the site of a Buddhist Temple, as well as a 19m tall Buddha in Thai Style (Phra Pang Haan Yad), a sitting buddha in Chinese style, a hindu statue of Vishnu, some chinese temples and carvings.... or castings since they're made out of concrete and painted.

Choppstick Mountain is also called Monkey Mountain, and its not just a clever name...

Yep - HEAPS of monkeys - several large families of them, and the industrious people of Thailand have set up wee stalls where you buy buckets of peanuts, bananas and corn to feed them...




... or more accurately, they mob you for food

I'm figuring that they're pretty well fed, cos they got a bit fussy with us...


Hehe.

So that was really cool, I think Arina wants to take a monkey home with her.

Other than that Hua Hin has just been about relaxing, eating, drinking, swimming... the usual New Years stuff. I mentioned that the beach is crazy. Its crammed with little makeshift restaurants selling food, beer and massages. Hawkers rock up and down the beach selling the usual wares, Loads of old European men and their Thai wives getting sun baked (or wind-baked for the last 2 days!). Its not seedy per-se, but its definately geared up towards locals and ex-pats and Europeans.

So with all this going on, theres barely enough room for anyone to do something simple, like walk along the beach.





Halarious!

Hmmm.... hopefully Michelle doesn't mind that I posted her photos.

Also, the tuk-tuk drivers here must make a killing. They charge a flat fee everywhere so getting around costs a fortune, but we're making the most if it and splitting it 4 ways with Arina and Jared does help.

Anyway I'm off to enjoy a few more western comforts, tomorrow we go to Kanchanaburi, and its bye-bye to our beautiful resort and hello budget guest houses...

Happy New Years to all, much love