Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Photos! Angkor: Day 3 (Sunrise)

Sunrise at Angkor Wat!!
Sarah and some Rishis
Window view
Such a big lead up to every temple! Pillars lining the pathway
Elephant on the corner of a 'mountain temple' SORRY it only lets me upload 5 at a time... that's why there are some many posts! Check our Sarah's blog : toastsandwiches.tumblr.com for more!!!

Photos! Angkor Thom

LUNCH delicious.
Looming!! BAYON
Rishi!
Stairs to the sky
View from the top of Baphuon!

Photos! Angkor Wat

The 'approach'
Buddha meditating under protection of Naga (the snake)
GIANT!
Churning of the Ocean of Milk
Dancing Shiva!

Photos! Angkor: Sunset and Day 1

Sunset evening!!
Sarah at our first temple!
Inscription on the inside of a doorway
Tree in a temple. Blended. Lara Croft.

Monday, January 30, 2012

Siem Reap and Angkor

OK TAKE A SIT, GRAB A BEVERAGE AND GET READY cause this is a long one... Last I left you we hadn't quite gotten to Angkor to check it out yet. 3 days later that is a different story. Making use of our 3 day Angkor Archeological Park pass, we have TORCHED some temples over the past few days. That first day, we headed up to check out the sunset (which is 'free' included in a 3 day pass) with 9 million other tourists (Chinese New Year = tour groups EVERYWHERE). We arrived at around 5, with the park closing at 530, and hoofed it up a dirt path to check out the sunset at Phnom Bakheng - one of the two popular spots for sunset (the other being Angkor Wat). Unfortunately we didn't get up there in time to actually climb the temple, but we saw the sunset from the base and took some photos of our first Angkor temple!! We also people-watched for a while. GREAT place for it. Sarah has so many creepy shots of hilarious people. We ourselves actually got our photo taken by a few... foreigners are a THING here. Descending to the parking lot, we almost got run over by an elephant - I was admiring how dirty my feet were when Sarah jumped backward - I glanced up and saw an elephant RUNNING toward me, no warning from the rider whatsoever, just givin er through the most crowded parking lot ever. I thought it was hilarious. Heading back down to our chariot (tuktuk) we went back into town and ended up meeting up with a couple people we met on our marathon bus ride here, two brothers from Britain, and their American friend who is living in Siem Reap. She knows the secrets! Staying out one of our latest nights in a while (usually its laying star-shaped on the bed doing crosswords and bed at 10pm = we're getting OLD) we tucked in around midnight (!!) to prepare for the next day. Our first 'real' day at the temples we took a tuk-tuk at around 830 am. We explored about half of the 'Grand Circuit' tour (excluding Angkor Wat and Angkor Thom) and saw about 5 or 6 temples, which happened to be some of the smaller ones, but were still giant! We for some reason got pretty tired around noon and decided to call it a day at the park... can't handle those late nights. Coming back into town we had a delicious lunch (MILKSHAKES?) and decided to hit up the Angkor National Museum to learn some things! I am SO glad that we did! We learnt about the symbolism and the stories that we'd be seeing the next day; The Hindu gods Bhrama, Vishnu and Shiva and their reincarnations, tokens, animals and stories... The Buddhist symbols and what some of the different Buddha positions mean (don't quiz me...). Afternoon spent absorbing information was great! We walked back to our hotel and headed out for dinner and to meet up with our friends one more time, as they were headed out of town. Not quite as late of a night though because we had a BIG day ahead of us!! Day number 2 we got up nice and early, found and rented some $1 bikes (with gears!!) and began our journey back to the park. Day 2 was solely dedicated to Angkor Wat and Angkor Thom!! We began with Angkor Wat and it was AMAZING. Over a kilometre per side, its probably about 3-4 square kilometres in size.... everything enclosed within the moat I mean. The temple itself is GIANT - we were there for over 2 hours!! We checked out the outer walls a bit before heading to a lineup to actually go UP the main tower. Once we reached the front of the line and ascended in our rented t-shirts (scarves weren't good enough), we realized how GIANT it actaully is! In photos it looks like 3 towers - one big one in the middle and 2 smaller ones on either side. The truth is there is one big one in the middle surrounded by 4 smaller ones creating a square around the big one! There was a seriously good sized level up there - hallways and courtyards, all intricately carved and decorated! Took a million photos (to come!). Exploring upstairs amidst tons of tour groups was enough... we headed back down to check out the main wall around the temple (not the big wall that goes all the way around, the midway wall!) which we had learned were almost 600m long and showed 'stories' from left to right all along the way. One in particular we wanted to see was 'The Churning of the Ocean of Milk' which is essentially a fight between the demons and the gods that lasted 1000 years, each side trying to attain the Amita (sp?) or elixir of immortality. They used a snake to churn the ocean and there are a bunch of things that came from it... a white elephant, the elixir, a horse, one of the gods etc. The mural is SO LONG. It shows either side pulling on a snake, like a tug of war, with a dancing god in the middle, standing ontop of a turtle (a reincarnation of Vishnu). I KNOW ALL ABOUT IT OF COURSE. Haha but really that's the one in particular we wanted to see! Continuing around the walls we saw murals of heaven, earth and hell, of wars, and of everyday life. So much detail. And its so straight and particular. Don't even know how! Alright sorry for that rant.... moving onto Angkor Thom after a delicious lunch of veggie and meat filled egg pancakes (that you make into lettuce wraps) for only $3.50 (can't you tell I love the food?), we checked out Bayon, the main temple inside Angkor Thom city and the one known for the giant faces!! It was really cool and so different from Angkor Wat!! It was much rounder and had so many different routes rather than so square. At the museum we actually learned that those two - Angkor Wat and Bayon - are classified as two different buildig and decoration styles. Next was a mountain temple (perfect - SWEATING) called Baphuon - it was beside what used to be the little enclosed royal residence back in the day. Hardest thing I've had to climb. World's tiniest and steepest stairs in the heat of the day AND they made us put scarves on. NO. The view from the top was great though!! We appreciated it while melting into pillars. The mountain temples usually have elephant statues at the 4 bottom corners though so that was cool to see too! The back of this particular temple was a giant laying own Buddha... made from the bricks! At first glance it just looks like the wall is gonna collapse but then NO its shaped like a Buddha! Very cool. Moving on to the royal palace and Phimeanakas, another mountain temple. We discovered the royal palace actually isn't there anymore... but its on the map. Wild goose chase. We saw a few more small temples (looked like we were in Temple of Doom) and started our bike journey back!!! Arriving back, we wrote some postcards / journal entries and headed for DINNER! Went for a change and indulged in some MEXICAN! There is EVERY type of food here in Siem Reap... Indian, Western, Thai, French, Sushi, also local of course. Tucked in SUPER EARLY. BECAUSE... we were up at 445 this morning! We dragged our butts out of bed nice and early to go check out sunrise at Angkor Wat! GOTTA do it. Weather turned out perfect - cloudy and cool(er) for our exploration days, and sunny for sunrise day!! So great! Arriving at the park at 530am, we walked into the outside wall of Angkor Wat to see the sunrise. Finding a spot on some stairs to a smaller temple, we watched the sun come up for about an hour, wandering around for some different views! It was so nice!! Very busy though. Indulging in some expensive $3 pancakes, we fueled up at a stand beside Angkor Wat for some more temple viewing! We saw about 4 more major temples, completing our 3-day 'Grand Circuit' of the park. Compared to yesterday, the temples we saw today were so nice and quiet, tourist wise! This morning we saw Preah Kan, Neak Prean, Ta Som and East Mebon, all North of the main Angkor centres. Finishing our tour at around 1030am, we headed back to town for some lunch with the girl from Denver (who is living here) and some housekeeping before we head back to Bangkok (and then South) tomorrow!! BRAVO if you got through this essay... I felt I had to make up for the shorties I wrote quickly before :) Photos are next!!

Friday, January 27, 2012

Photos! Treetops

Lunch day 1!! Free for all
View from the treehouse.. kind of
So ready. Serious harnesses
Secretly I am on the side of a cliff!
Waterfall - view from the main eating area in the trees!

How are we in Cambodia?

Just gonna keep things going here - racking up the internet cafe bill but I gotta catch up. Bussing down on a maybe-sketchy half local minivan (only because we slept in and missed the 8am regular bus...) got us to Don Det, 4000 Islands, still in Laos!! We arrived on the roadless-carless-tuktukless island at around 5pm... apparently bad timing because EVERYWHERE was full. People vacation during Chinese New Year, who knew?? Walking around for about an hour and a half with our giant backpacks, failing to find somewhere to stay, led us to the end of the guesthouses and the beginning of farms... not good. We paused for a minute to get out the trusty lonely planet when someone working at the Veggie Patch (an organic farm we had stopped in front of) came over and asked if we needed help. NICEST people. He lent me his bike to jet around to see if we could find anything... after a while, with good news, I returned back to collect my bags and Sarah to begin the 45-minute walk (in the dark) to our place. NOPE! I came back with news of a place but no need! While I was gone, the Veggie Patch's neighbour, John from Australia who was starting a guesthouse-teepee business, had offered for us to stay on his property, in his tent, for basically free. Um YES. walking 30 seconds instead of 45 minutes with giant bags? AND get a delicious dinner? YUP. So, we camped for 2 nights on Don Det! Hello farm animals. But this is why we had no power / internet access. There IS internet on the Island but its the WORST. Our one day there we rented bikes and scooted around Don Det and Don Khon, the neighbouring island, checking out waterfalls and dolphins... ok we didn't see any but we tried!!! Anyways - cheap + great camping in Laos!! Short stay though - very chill and relaxed - lonely planet says 'near flatline of calm' on the islands - I can see why!! Really it helped break up our journey to Siem Reap, where we are now!! Yesterday we left the Island at 8am and bussed about 1 hour to the Cambodian border... Sarah and I avoided the hassles and 'helpers' and just did our Visas oursleves.. ended up paying a little less than those who got someone to do it for them, but had the peace of mind of having our passports in our own hands. The border crossing went way better than we though - we were expecting the worst. So that was good! Done - in the country - relax for the 12 hour bus ride!!! Delayed at every stop, however, we arrived in Siem Reap at about midnight... with no place booked. We followed 2 British brothers we met on the bus to their hostel to see if there were rooms... no dice. The nicest tuk-tuk driver drove us around until about 1 in the morning until we found somewhere - for $17!!! NO. But we had to. First thing this morning we checked out and got a way better priced place, closer to town!! Housekeeping day. Tonight at 430 we are headed to ANGKOR WAT for sunset!! Free, apparently! and to buy our 3 day passes so secretly not free. DEFINITELY will update you after a look around here - hope all is well!!!

It's been a while...

But ONLY BECAUSE we haven't had access to (decent) internet for the last few days! But we'll get to that... Last I left you we were in Pakse sitting out a rainstorm in the internet cafe... well not much happened that day! Basically a giant nap after our night bus during a rainy afternoon, then a delicious Indian dinner. Oh but WAIT. We also booked a tour for 2 days in Pakse that involved ziplining, hiking, climbing, and staying in treehouses!! Amazing! On a whim, we booked it for the day following our arrival, figuring it would be much more exciting than the town! We started our journey at 8 in the morning, leaving Pakse for the Bolaven Plateau with 6 other people in our tour. The first day, we hiked (nice and easy) for a few hours, stopping for lunch at a waterfall! We had a Lao lunch of sticky rice formed into balls and dipped in various dishes... pretty tasty! After lunch we traveled the rest of the way to the treehouses over 8 ziplines! After 1 or 2 ziplines down, it began to DOWNpour. Fashioning a makeshift bag cover out of my giant emergency poncho I managed to keep my things mostly dry - myself, not so much. I'd say my raincoat is more water resistant than waterproof. Regardless of the rain, ziplining was awesome! We arrived at our treetop camp around 4pm - time to change into semi-dry clothes, hang everything else on a drying line, and snatch a spot by the fire. Strategically placed shoes and clothes were the decorations for the night. Dinner, served at the main platform, was fresh veggie rolls (amazing), chicken, steamed rice and veggies. Devoured. Everyone tucked in pretty early to their zipline-only accessible treehouses (outfitted with running water?) in preparation for the next day! Keeping warm, we slept in ALL our clothes, raincoats included. Slept GREAT in the outdoors! Next day we hopped over to the main building for some delicious breakfast in front of the waterfall in the SUN!! Yay! Our morning activity was a little but of a walk down into the canyon from where we were staying for a couple ziplines, then a visit to a waterfall. However, after everyone experienced the 450m long (endless!) zipline, we all opted to do it again; you can swim in a waterfall ANY day!! Morning was sweet. A quick trek back up to the main house (sweating) brought us to lunchtime after a quick rinse in the (closeby) waterfall! So good! Wanted to permanently keep my face in it.. After fuelling up we had an afternoon of serious vertical ahead of us... trekking up (like 60 degrees - using your hands) for about an hour (by then we were convinced it was raining again but NOPE that is sweat dripping off my nose), we reached the u-bolt climbing wall that would get us up to the top of the waterfall!! Some serious vertical here too - coolest views! Just don't look straight down!! Short pit stop at the top of the waterfall and we had some more hiking to do - a little more hands and feet hiking, then some more chill normal walking back to the village where we were picked up. A ride back to Pakse left us seriously stoked for a shower (and need to do laundry again asap) - we were not that adventurous and hit up the delicious Indian food place again, sharing dinner and stories with an Irish couple we met on the trip!! So, our view of Pakse was very limited but activities around it were AWESOME! We didn't stick around for more - gotta get moving! Next stop - 4000 Islands!

Saturday, January 21, 2012

Moving South means getting WARMER

I now that's just what you guys at home want to hear - but I don't mean nice warm, I mean permanently SWEATING warm. Leaving Luang Prabang, we took a 6 hour bus ride south to the town of Vang Vieng; the two could NOT be more different! Vang Vieng is a tourist TIME. Saw way more tourists than locals for sure - so different from Luang Prabang! Only stayed a few nights there, we stayed at the Fairmont Vang Vieng - not actually but pretty much. Amazing sleeps. And so much room for activities. Cartwheels. Anyways, the first night we just hung out and saw the town, booked a tour for the next day, and got organized for later in the trip. In the morning we woke up nice and early, grabbed a sandwich from the road stand (because the restaurant people were moving at serious Laos pace and we had places to BE) and headed out for our half day of caving! Very cool. We saw 4 caves; Elephant Cave (named after an elephant shaped stalagmite), cave #2 (I forget and also it was in Lao), Snail Cave (you know why) and last but not least the water cave! The Elephant Cave was essentially a temple built into a cave - one such that you had to remove your shoes before entering. Cave #2 and Snail Cave were giant - Snail Cave, 4KM LONG, we barely scratched the surface. We walked in, armed with headlamps, for about 600m, (ENDLESS) then had to turn around to save time for the water cave. So spooky when you know it is giant but can't really see.... Chamber of Secrets style. Our last cave was the water cave, which we explored in inner tubes, pulling ourselves along ropes attachedto the cave walls! Quite creepy (I thought) because of mystery creatures that definitely saw us... but we didn't see them. Just after noon, our caving experience over, we headed back to town on the lovely Laos roads - paved intermittently and sprinkled with serious potholes - no eating snacks / reading while bussing! After a quiet lunch of noodle soup and reader's digest asia (we are old) we checked out the famed 'tubing' of Vang Vieng (you are an outsider in town if not decked out in 'in the tubing' gear) however because it was already 330 and we didn't feel like paying to rent a tube, we just got a ride up the river and discovered why the town was so empty - because EVERYONE is on the river. Back in town, we had a dinner of pad thai (which I never order) which was delicious - so full I couldn't move. We met up with Sara Haberlin (!!) and her friend Laura at dinner and discovered we will be seeing them along the way, as they are seemingly on the same schedule as us but one day behind! With intent to bus all the way to Hue in Vietnam, we got up nice and early the next day to book a ticket for the painful 25 hour bus ride - only to discover that Vietnam has the same new year as China and is JUST beginning the intensive celebration - which means we can't land border cross into Vietnam until the 31 of Jan. Which doesn't work. So, going with the flow, we booked a bus down south in Laos and arrived in Pakse this morning! Just going with it. Good thing we don't book things much ahead or we'd be hoopied.... Gonna maybe check out some waterfalls and a serious coffee plantation close to here tomorrow (Bolaven Plateau) and then head even further South to 4000 Islands, right on the Cambodian border! Plans are working out - so far so good with the decision to come to Pakse (just waited out a serious rainstorm in this internet cafe - perfect timing) More photos soon when I am organized and bring my camera cord :)

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Photos: Luang Prabang Kayaking!

MAY as well capitalize on the fast internet when you've got it right.... here's some pictures from today's kayak trip - awesome :)
Sarah at the top of the main Wat in LP - listening to the monks do their thing
View of Luang Prabang!
Kayaking! See elephants in the distance...
40 person racing boat in the Hmong village
Waterfalls! Chilly but GREAT

Laos so far!

Hello night #3 in Luang Prabang! So great here - so many activities! We pre-ordered our Vietnam visas and got them back today - our entry date to Vietnam is not until Jan 22 so we decided to stay one more night here! Longest we've stayed anywhere so far at a whopping 4 nights. Our first day (after we slept like BABIES on arrival from the slow boat), we rented some bikes, found a map, and hit up some temples and monuments. First, we visited two monuments dedication to 2 different kings / presidents - monuments are located in the middle of the city and are PRISTINE compared to surrounding areas. Afterward we moved onto two of the main (suggested sites) Wat Phone Phao (excuse my spelling guesses) aaand Wat I-Don't-Know that is at the edge of the old town on a GIANT hill - it is essentially a network of shrines and biddhas built into the rock, with an actual Wat at the top. You can see the whole town from there! We just happened to be at the top when the monks began their daily 4pm drumming/ritual. We could hear drums and percussion going on all around the city from the top of the hill - soo cool!! Speaking of monks, we are going to get up at 530am tomorrow to watch the monks as they collect their daily alms - offerings, I guess you could call them, from the people of Luang Prabang. Then probably back to bed! Haha :) Today we did a different kind of sightseeing - more of the NATURAL wonders. We did an all-day kayak tour down the Nam Khan river that runs past Luang Prabang! We began our journey downstream at about 930 this morning, and after stopping at a traditional Hmong / Khmer / Lao village, the Tadse waterfall, and somebody's memorial (the Frenchman who discovered Angkor Wat - Henri Mouhot...at least I think his name is Henri), we pulled in to our landing spot at around 4pm! So many water activites lately. The kayaking was great - some so calm it seemed we were on a lake, and a few rapids that soaked the boat! Cloudless skies to boot. Tomorrow the possibilites are endless.... might check out the Royal Palace, national museum, smoe more sights, or do a half day tour! We shall see! To
River cruising - slow boat to Laos on the Mekong!
Caves right close to Luang Prabang - we are in Lord of the Rings
Delicious food always. Pho Wednesday every day
Second level of Wat Phone Phao!
Giant Buddha - Wat I-Don't-Know aahah. This is the Tuesday Buddha

The Rest of Chiang Mai / Pai!

Sorry once again for the delay.. finally found a good internet cafe!! Here are some photos from the rest of our Chiang Mai trek and from Pai!
Lunch on our trek - Pad Thai in a banana leaf!
Waterfall we hiked to
Sarah chilling on our little patio in Pai, complete with a few hammocks
View of the valley around Pai from the Chinese Village viewpoint
Rented motorbikes! Woohoo! Biggest challenge was driving on the left side of the road

Monday, January 16, 2012

Overdue Photos! SOME of Chiang Mai

Tour of the market before cooking class - different rice!
Sarah making curry! (Delicious) We all took turns at the mortar and pestel (sp?) teamwork!
Delicious food. Khao Soi Curry and Tom Yum soup!
Sarah and I an the elephant.
Our guy afterward having a snack. My apologies for the lack of photos.. we chose the world's slowest internet cafe.... I will upload more as this is only a taste of Chiang Mai! Perhaps more tonight. Check Sarah's too!

Sunday, January 15, 2012

Wherever you go, there you are

Writing to you THIS time not from Thailand, but from Laos! Border crossing #1 was a success. It only took 4 hours! Well, ok maybe 2 and a half. but from one country, to 'in transit' in the other it was about 4 hours :) No matter! We had a lovely couple of days floating down the Mekong to Luang Prabang in Laos, yesterday a little chilly but today SUNNY and warm! Taking a step back, our last day in Pai, we got up the courage to rent some motorbikes and jet around to see some waterfalls, a bizarre Chinese village (more like a theme park) and some 'Wats". Soo fun to scoot around but a little challenging on the other side of the road! Handing back our bikes, we (reluctantly) waved goodbye to Pai and caught an evening bus to Chiang Khong, the Thai town on the Thai-Laos border. Arriving at 33am, we were taken to our 'complimentary' room for the remainder of the evening. Plans to shower were quickly dismissed as we discovered our sink full of creatures and an ant farm in the bathroom. Slept like no tomorrow, and woke up to find Sarah not there. All her things (shoes, money, sleeping stuff) was there, so I thought she might have just stepped out. 20 minutes later, still no sign, so I got my shoes on and went to look for her. Didn't have to look very far; she was sleeping on a bench with a quilt right outside the room, because it smelt too much like sewer. Not even kidding (this place was a winner but hey it was 'free'). The morning consisted of bussing to breakfast, booking our 'slow boat', bussing to leave the Thai border, taking a ferry across a river, waiting around 1 hour to get Laos VISAs (gong show), getting a tuk-tuk to a convenience store to buy snacks for the trip, then finally borading our boat! We left Huay Xai (may be wrong) at around 1230 and sailed the day away, arriving at our halfway point, Pak Beng, at around 6pm. Sarah and I jumped to the back, grabbed our bags, ran off the boat, scaled a small mud mountain, and booked it to a hostel to get a room, as we hadn't booked ahead. Luckily we got a cheap (300 baht) room... some of the slower ones were stuck with 700 baht. Noo thanks! After a dinner and early bedtime, we headed to bed. Wake up call this morning at 7am for breakfast, take away lunch (baguette sandwiches) and we were off again! Today was so nice, sunny all day, got quite toasty! Arrived here in Luang Prabang at around 6pm, same routine as yesterday (booking it off the boat), and we wandered a bit, finding a great place! Water, coffee , tea, free wifi, BALCONY. Jackpot. Off to bed after this post - booking activities tomorrow!!! Until next time...

Thursday, January 12, 2012

I go' i' fo free

Sa wat dii ka (no idea if that's how it is spelt) from Pai!! Northern Thailand is where we are, in this little town of about 3900 people (according to lonely planet) and it is SO nice. Almost all the guest houses are little bungalows with their own sitting areas out front, there are countless shops and restaurants, and there are waterfalls and caves all around the town - endless exploration! If you ever come to Thailand you MUST come here. As a side note, about 80% of the people do have dreadlocks, Just that kinda place haha. Our hostel is about a five minute walk from the main part of town and is lovely and quiet, complete with hammocks on the porch! Definitely the nicest place we have stayed, we both have our OWN queen size beds (by accident) and we are paying roughly $8 per night. I'll update photos soon, I am in town at an internet cafe but did not bring my camera cord so it will have to be next time! But let's UPDATE. It has been too long since my last pos and I have so much to fill you in on! Let's take a ew steps back to where we left off - Sukothai. We took a 6 hour bus to Chiang Mai on the 8 of January - bus was comfy enough but they packed it full so people were standing in the aisles (luckily we got seats). We arrived in sunny Chiang Mai at about 3pm and got a 'taxi/bus' thing that is essentially seates mounted in the back of a pickup truck. Our hostel, called Dive Guest House, was FANTASTIC. The woman who worked at the front was sooo helpful and great - we booked everything we did through her, by simply mentioning we were interested in doing something. Next thing you know, boom, here are your tickets, they are picking you up out front at this time, the BEST. Made it so easy. Our first day happened to be a day where the town shuts off a seet for a market, called the 'walking street'. It ran till 11pm, so we put down our bags, and hit it up!! Amazing stuff, got some thai flappy pants, they are the best: nice and cool in the day, wam at night and protect against mosquitos! After 4 hours, chocolate banana belgian waffles, cheap delicious dinner, one foot massage (sarah) and a few purchases later, we headed back for an early night. The next morning, we walked around the town and checked out he 3 main temples (recommended by the hostel lady), grabbed some fruit shakes (mandarin orange - BEST) and grabbed some lunch. At 430 we were collected from our place for a COOKING COURSE!!!! So exciting!!! We got a tour of the local market and learnt about different rice, noodles, and curries; after which we had a tour of the cooking school's little garden filled with ingredients! So many herbs and mushrooms! We chose 3 dishes to cook each - one curry, one sitr-fry, and one soup. I made khao soi curry (teh local narthern curry made of red curry, yellow curry powder and coconut milk DELICIOUS) cashew chicken (of course) amd a tom yum soup! Which was so spicy my mouh was on FIRE. Haha. Sarah made a panang curry (peanut curry - SO GOOD. favourite), pad thai - classic, and a coconut cream soup. Everything was SO good. the food here is amazing. Nothing too bizare yet, have seen some crispy bugs on sticks at the market buuut probably will stay away from those :) The day after our cooking course was our TREKKING DAY!!! It all began at 830 am with a pick-up from our guide in a pickup truck bus - first stop was an orchid farm! So many cool flowers, took tons of photos, they definitely look different from home! Activity number 2 was ELEPHANT riding!! The elephants were so cute. I saw a baby and thought to myself 'aah that's not so big it'll be fine', then the adult one appeared and they are GIANT. As in climb up a platform to get onto their backs. They are so cute though. Felt bad for the guy the whole time, he just wanted some bananas. At the end of our elephant stint we got to chill with them for about 3 minues before they were off again. After elephants, we drove a little ways to the start of the path that would lead us up to a waterfall!! We walked about 30 minutes up beside the river to a little village where we were served lunch - delicious pad thai eaten out of banana leaves with pineapple for dessert. So much pineapple. Love it. Moving along the river again we arrived at the waterfall after abother half hour. Very cool - had bathing suits but decided to hold out till white water rafting! The raft we had was a patchwork of repaired holes... there was definitely a bubble happening under on of my feet but hey it survived. I can tell you why there were so many holes - never gone OVER so many rocks ahahah. Like hey there's a small boulder up ahead - let's hit it/get stuck on it/slide over it. Hilarious. Went over a few few pretty good rapids, got pretty soaked. After the white water area of the river, we transfered to a bamboo raft. So cool and peaceful. At our landing spot, we piled back into the pickup truck to head back to Chiang Mai. Great day!! BUT THE BEST PART (and what the title of this post is referring to) is the FREE MASSAGE we got for booking 2 things through our hostel! We opted for the Thai massage (1 hour) and it was sooo good. The best thing. Need to get another ASAP - or foot massage. And it was FREE. We were so pumped on that!! Afterward we went for dinner, probably delicious because it always is, and headed back to the guest house, out front of which a 'cocktail car' was parked - and so our night began. We met a few people from our gues house and went over for a bit, then decided to HIT THE TOWN. Ended up going to a place called THC, perfect, which was very cool - essentailly a rooftop bar where everyone was sitting on straw mats amongst low tables and hanging out - popular spot for dreadlocks too. After we'd had enough of the rooftop, we sought out a pool table and played a few games, then called it a night. The next day we slept in, got some photos for our Laos visa, paid our hostel dues, put some more credit on my phone, wrote some journal entries etc - had a housekeeping day. The intention was for a blog post to happen but the computer at our place wasn't working sooo that was postponed. Caught a bus at 530 up to Pai (last night) and here we are! The bus ride was preeety windy and at times definitely thought we might tip over but we made it! One girl read the entire way - kinda made me want to throw up just watching her (sorry about that) because it was SOOO windy - I could NEVER read!! Arrived in Pai around 91 and after wandering around for a while we were picked up on motorbike from the woman that runs the guest house we are now in. Veeerry nice place! Met some co-guest housers and ended up coming into town to check out some nightlife. Ended up staying pretty late and therefore slept late today. Walked around town, bought our tickets for the slow boat to Laos, got some snacks, and are gonna rent some motorbikes (NOT - scooters) tomorrow to see the sights! Time now for some dinner I think - might go for the panang :) Kudos to you if you made it through his post in one sitting - sorry for the delay!! Will be on it next time so you don't have to read such an essay :) Miss you all and hope everyone is doing well!!! SEE YOU ON THE OTHER SIDE (Laos)!!! If you're up for some more rading, check out Sarah's blog too!: www.toastsandwiches.tumblr.com

Saturday, January 7, 2012

Some photos!!! Sukothai

Sarah on the bike!!
Giant Buddha
Giant standing Buddha
From one the the island-ish ruins
Elephants 'holding up' a chedi