Thursday, September 29, 2011

Getaway near BKK-Hat Bang Saen

Beaches - Hat Bang Saen / Bang Saen Beach



Hat Bang Saen / Bang Saen Beach

Hat Bang SaenBang Saen Beach, 100 km southeast of Bangkok and about 10 km from the provincial capital of Chonburi, is a day trip for residents of Bangkok, and is visited mostly on weekends by Thai tourists looking for a relaxing day on the sand. Eclipsed in recent decades by Pattaya, it was once the favorite getaway for Bangkok's elite. Now it attracts mostly Thai families and teenagers looking for a brief, low budget holiday weekendmpus of Srinakharinwirot University, on the road between the highway and the beach, has exhibits on the marine environment and the aquatic species native to the waters of the Gulf of Thailand.

Tall coconut palms shade the promenade which borders the long curving sweep of beach. Ocean World amusement park is located on the road which runs behind the beach and features several swimming pools, slides and a small roller coaster. Local vendors sell fruit, seafood and snacks, such as squid, mussels and spicy steamed fish cakes, and rent chairs, multicolored umbrellas and other beach paraphernalia. Shower facilities are available. Inexpensive guesthouses, bungalows and a small resort cater to those who choose to stay more than one day.

A marine aquarium and museum on the campus of Srinakharinwirot University, on the road between the highway and the beach, has exhibits on the marine environment and the aquatic species native to the waters of the Gulf of Thailand

Friday, August 12, 2011

ANCIENT SIAM

Ancient Siam in Samut Prakan
A great place to spend the day is Ancient Siam in Samut Prakan. Admission price is 400 Baht which includes a bicycle. You need that as the park is massive. If you don’t have time to visit all of Thailand then this place is the next best thing.Richard Barrow.





A Temple Visit - BKK

A favourite temple visit is to Wat Thammamongkhon located in On Nut (Sukhumvit Soi 101). It is famous for not only having the highest pagoda in Bangkok, but for also housing a real hair relic of Lord Buddha. The pagoda is 94.78 metres high and has 14 storeys. There is a wealth of ancient relics to view and an elevator to take you to the top floor where the sacred hair is kept. The hair was presented to Thailand by the Supreme Patriach of Bangladesh and is held in an urn at the top of the building. The views across Bangkok are incredible and I highly recommend this is on your trip list if you visit the capital.
Within the temple grounds are a number of buildings including a Chinese Buddhist shrine with a beautiful gold ceiling. The temple is a place of study for many young monks and lessons are conducted on a regular basis. Wat Thammamongkhon is a very popular place of meditation and merit making for Thais, yet being set well back from the main road is little known and unspoilt by foreign tourists



Saturday, July 23, 2011

Floating Markets BKK-Taling Chan & Wat Nimmaronadi,Amphawa riverside markets

THE TALING CHAN FLOATING MARKET
A boat selling rice n noodles
Recently Richard B. posted his trip to a floating market around BKK. This is the Taling Floating Market which is just a riverine area with a few boats cooking food and others selling fruits and vegetables.These are some of his pictures.
Visitors may sit beside the river to enjoy their  food

The SomTam Hawker?
Yummy hot curry!
There are about 15 floating markets around Bangkok and each has its own uniqueness.Some have many boats moving around with an asorment of vendors others have the vendors moored at the side of the river.Some have small shops built at the side of the waterway and have been around for perhaps hundreds of years,evolving as time went on. It is such a facinating site where one could spend some time soaking up the atmosphere around these floating markets,lazing around watching life go by. When in Bangkok do take time off your schedule and spend some time there.

Below Wat Nimmaronadi Riverside Market
Cool Transportation!

Amphawa Floating Market is an afternoon floating market by the canal near Wat Amphawan Chetiyaram. On Friday, Saturday and Sunday, during 12.00 p.m. – 8.00 p.m., the Amphawa Canal is occupied by vendors who pack their boats with food and drinks, such as fried sea mussel, noodles, coffee, O-liang (iced black coffee), sweets, etc. Visitors can enjoy a cosy atmosphere and music broadcast by the community members, explore the market, have food, and hire a boat to see fireflies at night.

There are also a few hundred 'home-stays' skirting the canal offering daily or long term accomodation.
Getting to Amphawa Floating Market - As of now, there don't seem to be any tour groups that go to Amphawa and taking a bus would take a long time and would probably involve several changes. The best way to get there, therefore, if you don't have a Thai friend who will drive, is to hire a taxi. A taxi driver will not only take you to Amphawa Floating Market, but he'll wait for you until you want to go back to Bangok too, and at a cost of around B900 for 3-4 people.
Once You Arrrive At Amphawa Floating Market - Amphawa Floating Market starts around 1pm, with most of the stalls being open by 4pm. The best time to arrive is between 1 and 2pm as there are less people there. By 4pm, it is absolutely crowded and, as the walkways are very narrow, it's difficult to see anything and difficult to walk around.
Places to Eat and Drink at Amphawa Floating Market - The food and drink is amazing at Amphawa Floating Market. When we got there, we started out getting coffee at a small coffee shop just before you walk over the bridge across the river. There are also other cool coffee shops, restaurants and pubs. We had coffee later in a little traditional Thai house, renovated for homestay, which had opened for the first time. Later on, we went to a huge wooden pub right by the water and had beer and snacks.
What to Buy at Amphawa Floating Market - Thai price, not tourist price, so everything is very cheap. Look for Thai snacks (all beautifully packaged and for less than B10 a bag), t shirts, jewelled silk flip flops, framed photos and prints, old-fashioned wind-up tin toys, clothing, garden ornaments (I bought an adorable hand-crafted clay rabbit for only B60), toys, hats, silk scarves and shawls, rings and bracelets, photograph frames, and thousands more items
Best Time of Year to Visit Amphawa Floating Market -
The best time of year to visit Amphawa is probably between the end of September and end of February, before the weather starts to get very hot. But, if you go during the hot season, just make sure you wear lose clothing and drink a lot of liquids

Thursday, July 14, 2011

PEARL OF THE ORIENT

Crepes Cottage along Gurney
A week ago on a working visit to the island i rediscovered some gems in and around the city. From a stroll along Gurney Drive to a long morning walk at the Penang Botanical Gardens revealed some beautiful natural as well as man-made jewels.
A section of Gurney Drive in the evening
Parallel and adjacent to Gurney are the two famous Thai,Wat Chaiyanangalaram and Burmese ,DhammlkaramaTemples.The temples have additional structures built throughout the years and are still very popular attractions and worship places.
Chee Cheong Fun
Orange salute

Breakfast stalls in Pulau Tikus


In and around Pulau Tikus market there are many breakfast goodies from chee cheong fun to apom in its different styles.Be early or else most ready made cakes will be sold out!

The wonderfully landscaped Botanical Gardens is a must visit.Go early in the morning and stroll amongst the moss-covered pathways taking in the flower fragrances and the whisps of fresh pure air.
A Spiritual reminder

Giant Amazon Lilies
Nature's Cannonballs
A picture of a clan's jetty
A new generation inherits the heritage of Penang!

 

Ready for the next generation






Monday, June 20, 2011

ISLAND PHU QUOC - VIETNAM

Phu Quoc: Vietnam's attempt to become king of Asia's beaches
How Vietnam hopes to boost tourist numbers to 2 million with the help of a rustic, no-frills island.

By Christopher Johnson

If you ever wondered what Thailand was like in the late 1980s, check out Phu Quoc Island off the southwest coast of Vietnam, the new hop on the Gulf of Siam's circuit that embraces Koh Samui, Koh Chang and Koh Kong.

Phu Quoc is fast becoming Vietnam's hottest new island destination. But it also maintains -- at least for now -- a character unlike anything in Thailand.

Market traders in conical hats hawk baguettes, ducks, flying lizards and other items rarely seen on the Thai side of the Gulf, while motorcycles ply red dirt roads to pearl farms and old-style fishing ports.

Villagers, who water the roads and erect thatch fences to protect their homes from dust, gather up seaweed and haul in squid nets by pedaling homemade winches.

Protected forest reserves on Phu Quoc are splashed with waterfalls where brave Vietnamese youths enjoy cooling off alongside foreign travelers.

The industriousness of the islanders has boosted the local economy -- and prices -- by around 10 percent per year.
Phu Quoc has protected forest reserves with many waterfalls

Two million tourists by 2020

Amid government plans to expand Duong Dong airport to handle international flights, Phu Quoc -- the largest of Vietnam's islands at 574 square kilometers -- is taking off fast.

The government plans to boost annual tourist arrivals from 77,000 in 2010 to 2 million by 2020, and many investors from Europe, Thailand, Malaysia and mainland Vietnam are buying up land and opening restaurants and dive shops.
Arial view of the town
A stream in PQ

Many veterans of Thailand are already comparing it to Koh Samui in the 1980s, or Koh Chang in the 1990s.

"The island has a very nice preserved forest and the size is also nice," says Jean-Marie Helleputte, a judge from Belgium who bought land a few years ago near Phu Quoc's Long Beach with his wife Thanh, a Vietnamese exile who has returned to her native country.

"You have a great variety of plants and trees and the beaches are very nice. The colors of nature here are splendid, all different greens because it rains a lot."

He says new roads are making travel easier, especially in the muddy rainy season, and new taxi companies, whose drivers wear shirts and ties, are driving down transport costs to more reasonable levels.

But like others on the island, Mr Helleputte worries that a growing influx of tourists and construction will disturb the island's tranquility. "The Vietnamese government will make this a little Singapore," he says. "The inhabitants of Phu Quoc are making a lot of money by selling their land to foreigners for construction of hotels."

Sanne Rasmussen, an instructor with Rainbow Divers, which has been operating dive trips off Phu Quoc for 10 years, says increasing numbers of tourists, big hotels and asphalt roads will take away "the charm of unspoilt Vietnam" and turn the island into "any other city around the world."

Dive spots and delicacies

"My point of view is that the island is not ready at all for this -- there are still power cuts every second day in high season and some places don't have hot water."

The water in the ocean, at least, is always a nice temperature for diving and snorkeling.

Rasmussen says that shallow waters around smaller islands are great for entry-level divers, and expert divers also can look for nudibranchs, cowrie shells, bamboo sharks and turtles.
A simple life of islanders is preserved in Phu Quoc island


She says that Rainbow Divers have just recently discovered a sea grass site with sea dragons and spotted dugongs, some of the rarest creatures in southeast Asia.

While the colorful fish resemble their neighbors in the Gulf of Siam, Phu Quoc's cuisine is more influenced by French touches, and the island also produces delicious pepper and nuoc mam fish sauce.

Among the myriad stalls of the bustling night market, Rasmussen says her favorites include breakfast or tapas at Mondo, owned by a Swedish couple; German food at German B; Peppers Pizza; a restaurant in front of the Viet Thanh hotel; and coffee at the wonderfully-named Mister Dung.

For upmarket resorts, she recommends Eden, Mango Bay and especially Chen La for honeymooners, while many divers stay at the Viet Thanh hotel.

Half-way down the long beach from Duong Dong town, the family-run Thai Tan Tien resort offers spacious new bungalows for US$20 per night in a quiet abode with a boardwalk leading over a marsh to a seaside restaurant where enterprising local ladies give traditional massages on the beach.

For now, Phu Quoc is fun in a raw form, still dominated by local families who rent motorcycles for US$5 a day and bungalows for US$20 per night.

Though lacking Thailand's abundance of "Coffee-Mate" white sand, Phu Quoc's golden beaches are deep, soft, and attracting more and more travelers

Getting there

Travelers from Saigon used to swear by the cheap flights (around US$50-100) on Vietnam Airlines, Mekong Air or others to avoid long, tiring bus journeys through the Mekong delta's matrix of swamps.

But new bridges and smoother roads mean quicker, cheaper bus trips -- mine took 5 hours -- to Rach Gia port, and then the fast hydrofoils, about two hours, to Phu Quoc.

Ha Tien, only one hour ferry from Phu Quoc, is a jumping off point for Cambodia