We landed in
Bangkok at 2.30pm local time on Monday 19th August. That evening we all went out to the hundreds
of restaurants & street food stalls all on offer. I had a whole red snapper fish = lovely fresh
food. Then found a great street bar.
Tuesday 20th
Yvonne & I did our own tour of Bangkok using public transport. 1st a river taxi & then the Sky
train. Had a wonder around the very
expensive & large shopping centres.
Found ourselves in a lovely food court. Then a tuk-tuk ride back to the hotel.
Wed 21st
I wandered around the Khaosan Road tourist area. Dinner was Phad Thai at a street stall. At 7.30pm we all met back at the hotel to
head to the train station in taxis for the 10pm overnight sleeper train north
to Chiang Mai.
Julie & Andy looking after the bags in the train station
It was a fab
train journey. I was about the only one
who was pleased the air-con & lights packed in. (Air-con makes me thirsty as the air becomes
too dry, I hate the draught units make & they are too noisy. Total darkness without the lights = at last
sleep). It was very hot though! In the morning I sat in the buffet & non
sleeper carriages with the windows open.
Nice breeze & great jungle views.
We arrived in Chiang Mai about 3.30pm.
Mary sitting at the open door enjoying the view
Friday 23rd
I wandered around the city area surrounded by the moat.
Getting in the local taxi for a few cocktails
Saturday 24th
some of us did a 2 hour jungle trek & then a one & a half hour mountain
bike trail finishing up with a float in Lake Huay Tung Thao.
Coffee beans
Sunday 25th
was a 6 hour coach drive to Chiang Khong.
On the way I got very close to a hot spring (I’ve been trying to swim in
at least one since Istanbul-I thought they’d be loads along this mountainous 6
month journey)! We had a toilet break in
the car park area of a hot spring complex.
The fountain & pool were hot.
Another stop
off at a weird place called Wat Rong Khun aka The White Wat.
Huge bags of crisps
Our hotel in
Chiang Khong was lovely. It was on the
bank of The Mekong River. The other side
of the river was Laos.
6 of the
group were not happy to pay the local agent money for our Lao visa forms to be
completed & passports to receive exit stamps the day before we actually
left – so we could bypass all this & get a quick/more efficient border
crossing. Mainly because it was illegal,
$15 more expensive & low season suggesting minimal border queues. Considering many of our previous border
crossings had taken forever I was surprized some of the group were not taking
local help. The vote resulted in the
group getting the exit stamp correctly on the morning we actually left &
then filling out our visa forms on arrival in Laos. Let’s see how the border crossing goes
tomorrow…
Great to see you've now arrived in Bangkok and are enjoying all that the city has to offer. Best wishes for the rest of your iconic trip. Bill (skiing).
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