Worrall Travel R's

Worrall Travel R's
Roz and Russ

Worrall Travel R's - Kicking the Bucket List

Sunday, February 10, 2013

Grand Palace and Goodbye Bangkok


Grand Palace
Saturday, February 9, 2013

Day 1: Bangkok
Arrive in Bangkok where you are transferred to the comfortable and centrally located Hotel. 

A pre-trip briefing is held in the evening, to meet the other members of your group and discuss the trip itinerary. Please check for a Welcome Notice on the Peregrine noticeboard located near the hotel lifts which will provide your tour leader's name and the exact time and location of your Welcome Meeting. Until this meeting we encourage you to get out and discover the delights that Bangkok has to offer, including trying some of Thailand's famous cuisine. After the group meeting in the evening we may adjourn to a nearby restaurant and enjoy a meal together (this is optional and at your own expense). The rest of the evening is free - perhaps a quiet drink or a visit to the bustling night markets of Bangkok.

Yesterday was Day 1 of our Peregrine Tour.  We met up in the hotel with our guide, Moh, and the 8 other travelers at 6:00 pm.  There are two single women, Joyce from the UK, and Jan from Melbourne, Australia, two partnered men Aaron and Dennis from just north of Brisbane, and a Polish-Canadian couple from Vancouver, Mark and Eva.  After our meeting, we went out for dinner and then to bed.


Sunday, February 10, 2012 - Happy Chinese New Year


Day 2: Bangkok - Chiang Rai
Meals included: 1 breakfast
Activities

We enjoy a city tour of Bangkok. This morning we board the public ferry and visit the Grand Palace and Wat Phra Kaew (Temple of the Emerald Buddha), a must for first-time travellers to Bangkok. We also visit Wat Po, home of the famous Reclining Buddha. (When visiting temples and palaces in Thailand, please dress conservatively in order to respect the local culture). We then transfer to the airport and fly up to the northern city of Chiang Rai.

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Today, Bangkok and Temples were crowded because of Chinese New Year Holidays.  Our group took a Ferry to Wat Po where we had visited ourselves earlier in the week.  Moh told us more about the temple.  The four spired monuments that are decorated with pottery are called stupas and are trbutes to dead kings, holding some of their prized possessions.  Their ashes may or may not be in the stupas.

The beautiful floral designs on the stupas and temples originated when Chinese pottery was sent to Siam and when it got to the destination, it had broken into pieces.  The people reclaimed the broken pottery by recutting and then using the pottery to decorate the stupas..  They were so pleased with the outcome, that they continued to use the high grade pottery recut for decorative tiles.


The main Temple of Wat Pho was crowded with Buddhist, tourists, and Monks.  It was quite beautiful and filled with people.

We also visited the Emerald Buddha which is only emerald color......carved from a single piece of Jade.  It is small in comparison to other Buddhas, about 18 inches tall, but is very revered and valuable.

 This Buddha is a part of the Grand Palace Grounds.  The grounds and architecture are stunning.  Teams of Thai artists work continuously to repair and refurbish statues, paintings, and sculptures, not only in the Grand Palace but throughout Thailand's 30,000 temples.  This is good job security for artisans.






After visiting the Grand Palace we took our first Tuktuk ride back to the hotel several blocks away.  Moh negotiated a price of 80 Baht for three of us in a Tuktuk, direct, no stops.   That's less than three dollars per person. The driver wove through traffic at crazy speeds. People would step off the curb and he didn't even brake. Yipes!  It was like Mr. Toad's wild ride at Disneyland.



The day was hot and steamy after a morning rain.
After cooling off at our hotel and having lunch, we made our way in a taxi van to the air port anf boarded a plan for Chiang Rai. We were on Nok (bird) Air.

 Our flight was just a little over an hour.  We checked into our hotel, regathering for a walk to the clock tower to catch the 8:00 pm light show and to the night market for some shopping and a late supper.  The market area and food court hundreds of tables and chairs in a large open air patio with food vendors on the two long sides of the rectangle, a stage with musicians and dancers on one of the short end with the opposite end being the entrance through an open air market.  For five dollars, we got three large platters of deep fried prawns, chicken. spring rolls , and vegetables.  We could have had crickets, water beetles, worms, or grass hoppers.

Every table was packed.  Moh said the market was open seven nights a week and was always busy.  The quality of the products in the market was better and the prices cheaper than Bangkok.

We leave early tomorrow morning to head into Laos and then float on a slow boat on the Mekong River for two days, spending the night in a guest house along the way.


All is well with the Worrall Travel R's


Saturday, February 09, 2013

Jim Thompson House and National Museum

Thai Head Piece, National Museum

Friday and Saturday, February 8-9, 2013


We checked out of the Pathuman Princess Hotel today and checked into the Nouvo City Hotel where we will be meeting up with our Peregrine Tour group this evening. We have enjoyed being on our own, doing our own things at our own speed, so it is with just a bit of trepidation that we join a tour group where it will be go, go, go for the next 20 days while we tour northern Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, and Viet Nam.




















Yesterday, Friday February 8, we spent a relaxing day with an afternoon walk,to the ajim Thompson House only a few blocks from the Princess Hotel. Jim Thompson was an American who settled in Bangkok after WWII and help to establish the silk industry in Thailand. In 1967, he went on a Holiday in Malaysia and mysteriously disappeared. His home and garden are now a monument here in Thailand.







Today, Saturday, February 9, we checked into our new hotel around 10:30, but our room wouldn't be ready until 2:00.
Our Hotel is the Building on Right with Awning




We are right in the heart of old Bangkok, so we decided to visit some of the markets and the National Museum which is filled with artifacts and historical detail of Thailand and the many battles that were fought to maintain the kingdom that was once much larger and included Malaysia, Burma and other small countries. Thailand today is about the size of the state of Oregon.



Textile Collection




We meet up tonight with our tour and leave tomorrow for Northern Thailand.

All is well with the Worrall Travel R's

Thursday, February 07, 2013

Catch a Tiger by His Tail

Good Thing These Two Tigers are Sleeping

Thursday, February 7, 2013


We arose again early for another tour with Destination Asia. Today we are driving three hours out of Bangkok to the Bridge over the River Kwai, war museum and The Tiger Temple where we will have an opportunity to get up close and personal with with big tigers. After seeing the Life of Pi, we aren't quite sure whether getting close to Tigers is a wise idea. We are cautioned rhe night before our tiger visit, not to wear oranges, pinks, yellows or reds. Apparently, these colors make the tigers irritable. Well, ok we certainly don't want to be with an irritable tiger.

There are more people on the tour with us today and we have a small sized coach. The coach has a small toilet aboard. Our tour guide Sita, advises us that we should use it only in an emergency, and please no dynamite. Shooting the rapids(men)and picking flowers (lady squat) terms for urinating are ok. You can guess what dynamite means.We will be stopping at proper "Happy" Rooms along the way.

The war museum called the Railroad of Death museum, adjacent POW cematary, and the bridge over the river Kwai was a moving experience. The prisoners of war here were treated abominably. We walked across the bridge thinking about all of the men who lost their lives here.


The Tiger Temple started several years ago when a wounded tiger was brought to the rural monks compound for protection. Soon the monks were receiving deer, pigs, water buffalo, and all sorts of animals that needed care and protection. The tigers breed easily in this environment and their population at the temple is now in the hundreds. Every day they are well fed, bathed, and exercised. Visitors to the temple can assist with these activities.
Monks and Tigers at Tiger Temple


Roz, Walking the Tiger

Nice Kitty.  Please Stay Asleep


Kitty Toys - Watch Out!

Looks Sweet!  Ha! Sleeping Tigers!

Good Catch Russ!

It was quite exciting being close to these large and powerful animals.

The Worrall Travel R's Survived the Tiger Temple

Elephant Ride and Floating Market

Our New Sailing Vessel - But Does She Float?

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Today we are on a small group tour (5 of us)  with Destination Asia.  Our itinerary includes driving 2 hours in a Toyota van out of Bangkok to a coconut sugar factory, an elephant trip along the river,  long tail boat ride through the waterways in a farm land to a floating market, lunch at the Thai Village Rose Garden, elephant demonstration, and cultural traditional performing arts show.  It's a full day, full of interesting  interesting experiences.  We are excited.

We were picked up from our hotel at 7:00 am and didn't return until 7:00 pm in the evening.  Rather than write a lot about our tour, I will post some of the best photos of the day
.

Coconut Sugar Factory

Sugar made from the coconut flowers
Boiled Down Sweetness


My Friend, Rocky

Our Elephant Driver

No Thank on the Ivory!


Floating Market







Russ getting a Thai Dance Lesson

Russ and Tour Guide Sita from Destination Asia


It's been a great day.  All is well with the Worrall Travel R"s.