Hello from Thailand! We know you're jealous, but hey we've been living in mud
huts/crazy cities in Nepal for 4 months. Welcome to this special edition of
Arielle and
Sophie's blog. We
figured since we're living the same life at the moment we might as well just
write one post :)
Over the past couple of weeks, we have seen a lot, learned a lot, sweat a
lot, and eaten a lot. But most importantly, we have ridden on ever single mode
of transportation Thailand has to offer.
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The beach |
Sophie arrived in Thailand right after TbT ended in Nepal. After a cancelled
flight, and an interesting
bus ride out of Bangkok, she quickly learned that
Thailand really is the "Land of Smiles" as a good 5 people offered to help her
find her way via iphone, ipad, cell phone. Her journey finally ended in a ride
in a
family van to her friend's
motorcycle to her house. Soph spent a week
exploring Bangkok, making new friends (friends=tuk tuk drivers,
random travelers, a security guard or 2...), and chilled out on the beach with
her friends from high school.
|
The Himalayas |
Arielle decided to spend another week in Nepal in the tourist town called
Pokhara. What was supposed to be a 6 day trek turned into a week of doing
absolutely nothing on the lake (this was due to ankle injuries and sickness,
none of which happened to Arielle surprisingly). After arriving back in
Kathmandu, Arielle took an insane
taxi ride
through the city to the airport (there was a nepali festival and it was
basically impossible to drive through the streets), almost missed her flight,
and then sat in the airport for 3 hours cuz of a delay. Might as well leave
Nepal in style!
Upon arriving in the Bangkok International Airport, both Arielle and Sophie
totally forgot that Thailand is a developed country. We kind of expected
something more like Nepal not like NYC. We have basically spent the whole week
comparing everything to Nepal (prices, transportation, language, people). There
are real roads here with real cars and road rules- its a shocker and makes
America seem a little too developed for us...
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Scary real street! |
|
Sadly this made us feel a little more at home |
On our first day together in Thailand, we took a
train into Bangkok to see the sights. We rode in
style in the 3rd class compartment on the train- basically the only genuine Thai
experience we have had in this country. The best way to see a foreign country is
to ride with the locals! We had planned on visiting the Grand Palace so we took
a
local bus over to the area only to discover it had
closed an hour before. SO we got amazing bubble tea instead and hopped on the
famous Bangkok
Ferry and rode around for a bit. We
explored the Chinatown market and went back over to the train station for a
14-hour
overnight train to the north.
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The ferry
|
|
Chinatown |
|
Arielle on the train! |
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"Air conditioning" in 90 degree weather |
|
Sophie on the train! |
|
the open bus/truck thing |
We arrived in Chiang Mai in the afternoon. Sophie got lost in the city
looking for a hostel while Arielle sat patiently in a cafe knowing Sophie would
eventually make her way back (she always does). We found a nice place (by our
standards as in it had a toilet and running water) and spent the night exploring
a really cool market in town. Its going to be weird shopping in supermarkets
again. The next day we rode even more exotic forms of transportation. We became
best friends with a travel agent at the hostel who got us a good deal (we hope)
for a day trek. There were 10 of us- 2 americans, 1 canadian (2 if you count
arielle), and 7 Frenchmen. We started out on a weird open bus/truck thing that took us to a random trail that we hiked up to a beaufitul
waterfall where we swam and relaxed for awhile.
|
the crew |
Then we went to a river where we went "white water rafting" (it was really just
floating down the river) and bamboo
rafting. THEN- we rode elephants!!! We both rode 1 elephant with the
other Canadian girl which explains why there is a random girl in all of
pictures. The whole day was epic and we got in everything we wanted to do in
Chiang Mai. That night we went to a bar and met some Spanish-speaking Frenchmen
so we spent the night practicing the 4 words of Spanish we learned in high
school. The point of that story is that we have met some really amazing and
interesting people on this trip- we love introducing ourselves to people on the
bus/train and hearing their own stories.
|
feeding the elephant!! |
|
tobacco farm- thats what we get for asking what they grow
The next day, we went to Tiger Kingdom to play with
tigers!!! This place stresses that its purpose is to protect the endangered
species and they don't harm the animals. We had worked out a deal with our best
friend travel agent for a ride to get there. We expected Thailand's version of a
Tuk Tuk but then one of the guys who worked there drove up in his huge
white SUV just
for us! It was our first ride in a real car since the ride to the airport in
America. Anyway, at TK you can choose to go in a cage for 15 minutes with
baby tigers medium, or large. We decided to play with the large ones cuz it
seemed really hardcore (go big or go home). And cuz it was cheaper...hey we just
graduated ;)
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|
the mush face!!!! |
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little baby tiger!!!! we just want to take it home
:( |
|
our pimpin ride |
|
The Pai Night Market |
After our adventure in Chiang Mai, we headed up to a town called Pai. We had
heard from a lot of people that the drive there in the
minivan was insane and windy. We thought
"we rode in the worst buses in Nepal on unpaved roads- this is a real van with
airconditioning on real roads- we can handle it". We were waaaay wrong. Everyone
on the bus wanted to die and one of us may have gotten sick on the way back....
(not telling who! rhymes with shmarielle) Pai is pretty much a toursity, hippy
town where people walk around barefoot all the time. There was a great night
market that we hit up both nights- awesome food (not daal baat!!) and some very
cool people.
During the
day we rented a motorbike that we
had planned on driving to a waterfall. Almost everyone living in Asia drives a motorbike and its a
big thing for toursits to rent them for the day to get around. Sophie was pretty
good at driving it, but then one of us (cough shmarielle) crashed. Don't worry,
just a little scratch on her toe but after that we decided to rent regular bikes :)
We
had heard that the ride to the waterfall was uphill but again we waaay
overestimated our abilities. About halfway there on these dinky little bikes
with picnic baskets we had to leave them at a hostel and we got a ride in a
pickup truck down the road. Along
the way everyone kept telling us 2km, 1km (we really have no idea how much a
kilometer is) but suddenly we saw a sign that said 4km... About 2 hours later we
FINlALLY got to the waterfall. Luckily it was worth it. We swam for awhile,
walked around, and then began the journey back.
We got a ride on the back of a motorbike with some random
Thai guy. He was quite the character- showed us that he could drive while
standing, go really fast and make people on the street stop to talk to him. We
finally got back to our bikes and it only took 15 mins to bike back as opposed
to the 2 hours it had on the way! Craziness.
|
The bamboo hut we stayed in for a night |
We went back to Chiang Mai (super fun ride! not) and got on a
tourist bus to Bangkok. This was a much
better choice then the train. We got into a
tuk tuk
who took us to Wat Pro- a beautiful temple
with a ton of Buddahs. We explored a bit more and then got onto our final train
back to Saraburi. Again- rode 3rd class, made some crazy friends, almost died
from the heat, but had a lot of fun.
|
reclining buddah |
When we got to the train station we tried to explain to
the motorbike-taxi driver where we needed to go but we were usuing the wrong
accent so no one understood us. we spent the next 15 minutes going around the
station asking everyone "English? English?" Finally we got that we had used the
wrong intonation, they all laughed at us, and we made it back to the house
:)
Long story short, if you ever need any advice on how to travel around
Thailand using the public transportation system- we are experts.
In 8 hours we are off to Vietnam!!!!
|
Our best friend (don't worry, we made sure to go off the beaten path all the
time!) |
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