Thursday 28 February 2013

The visa run (25 - 26 February 2013)








As it's Monday it's admin day so I am up early to get to the Vietnamese consulate and beat any queues to get my visa. I wasn't sure exactly how far it was so hail a $2 tuk tuk and am dropped off at the door. It's all very low key and easy, takes five minutes and they are all exceedingly polite. Mind you, I think I would be too with a parade of people coming in and handing over $60.... But the main thing is I have it. I decide to walk the two miles or so back to the hotel. I'm sure this place is dirtier than it was last time I was here, there is rubbish everywhere. It looks all rather Indian.


But I stop half way at the Aussie guest house, G'day Mate for a quick breakfast. What an odd place, quite small, dark and jammed full of things, flags, kangaroos, a picture of Bob Marley with the Aussie owner, with his long greasy ponytail sitting up at the bar watching the Oscars on his big flat screen. It just proves how quick the Cambodians are when they want to make a quick buck. The best picture hadn't been announced when I left G'Day Mate, but twenty minutes later as I get near the hotel and pass Rogue, the place where they download music and movies, a laminated colour poster was already there with pictures of the front of the DVD's for the winner's of each category - quick work!



But as mad as the place is, it's still a good place to wander around and to sit and watch the world go by. The beach, whilst crowded has some odd sights, including this one of a surfing dog! OK Dyl, I want to see you doing that next time at Ferryside...




But all along the beach you are invited to buy things, manicures, pedicures, massage, bracelets and all manner of food balanced in baskets on the womens' (and it is always women, the men are sitting playing cards further down the beach) heads. My favourite is the girl who calls "Madaaam, you won crabs?" - I feel something here may be confused in translation... My language skills are coming along too, although I have only two words of Khmer. I employ the same Thainglish tactics and by missing the ends off the English words I can make myself understood. But an additional twist in Khmer grammar means I have to reverse the order of the words. So for example at breakfast I ask for "milk hot" or "toast more" or "egg scramble". Or a passing comment as everyone fans themselves to get cool in the heat and humidity here, "today hot f*****g".... But of course the good news is that however you reverse "why why" it always comes out the same, so no problem!

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Location:Serendipity Rd,Sihanoukville,Cambodia

Monday 25 February 2013

Over the Cardamom Mountains (23 February 2013)


Time to move even further towards Vietnam and I head for Sihanoukville.
The Oasis Resort proved such a bargain, it worked out at £38 a night, all inclusive of bed, breakfast, dinner, the odd lunch, laundry and the odd (for that read two or three as I sat chatting the evening away with the other people staying...) why why each night that I decide to treat myself to a taxi to go the 220 kms over the mountains to Sihanoukville. A bit of an extravagence I know, probably cost me 35US $ more than the tuk tuk - bus - tuk tuk combination for the same journey, but saved a couple of hours in time and it was in a lot more comfort in a walnut (plastic) and leather (plastic) decorated Camry. Not sure whether it was a good thing the driver spoke some English - a nice guy but struggling to understand his heavily accented English was a challenge! He tells me he bought the car in 2002 with money borrowed from the bank and still, ten years on, he is still paying it back. Cars are really expensive here as there is huge duty on them, they are much more expensive than even in the UK, it must be like taking out a mortgage. But that does make you wonder exactly what those locals driving a Lexus do to make such a lot of money in this economy.... It's very scenic journey as we climbed up and over the Cardamom mountains, crossing various rivers with their shanty town fishing villages tottering on the edge. Not a bad road, although parts have obviously been washed away during the last rainy season, and apart from the odd car or rusty bus, the road was quiet. Well, quiet until we joined the main Phnom Penh to Sihanoukville road where the Cambodian road madness returned, cars, lorries, motorbikes and buses doing their own thing on whatever side of the road they chose...



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Location:14 Mithona St,Sihanoukville,Cambodia

Sleazy Snooky (24 February 2013)

The main reason for coming here to Sihanoukville is to get a Vietnamese visa. It was too early before I left and Visa on Arrival only works if you come in by air, not by land. But I quite enjoyed it the last couple of times I was here so was quite happy to return. It is a mad place, a mix of young backpackers of all nationalities, cheap beer, cheap dorms and guesthouses, as well as all ages here to enjoy the seaside. And some decent places to stay at a reasonable price.



But the sleaze factor has gone up significantly. It was always the case that locals wandered up and down the beach peering at Europeans in bikini's, but I always assumed that was just locals from out of town unused to Western ways. But as I write this, I am sitting in the the Coolabah Hotel Restaurant having a coffee as some young Aussie girls strip down to their not overly revealing swimwear to get in the hotel pool. The waiters all start leering at them and obviously making, even though I don't speak Khmer, some, to put it politely, non PC comments. And this is one of the more expensive places here, owned and run by Aussies. Unpleasant. And the quotient of older men with young Khmer girls also seems to have gone up, the last couple of times I was here, whilst everyone knows it goes on, it was not that evident. But it's all a bit more obvious now. Apparently as Thailand gets more expensive, Cambodia looks even more attractive for sex tourists and the great exodus of the more seedy people from places like Pattaya is now headed here. Day to day and "other" expenses are relatively cheap. It's a shame as it is a fun place. The beach I am near, Serendipity Beach is crowded with sunbeds attached to the bars and restaurants and lots of people wandering by and playing in the water. Boats in and out going out to the little islands, but if the sleaze factor goes up too much, many people will be driven away. And in the hotel info, it clearly states that "prostitution is illegal in Cambodia". The next sentence advises that "all overnight guests must be registered". It says that drugs are not "condoned" by the hotel but firearms and explosives are "forbidden". Interesting use of language...
But on a more positive note, it's still a good place to wander around. The walk along the beach is now a bit easier as they have built a paved path. The first part of the beach is all Westerner's but as you go along that changes to local Cambodian's here for a day out. The restaurants change from cheap beer, cocktails and beach beds to low wooden benches covered in grubby oilcloth and tiny plastic chairs crammed together with people eating a a variety of rice, noodles and seafood at nine in the morning, the whole family is there including granny. Girls wander around selling squid on a stick that they cook over small buckets of charcoal carried over their shoulders. And they have moved with the times. No longer can you buy the pirate DVD's and CD's, now it's all direct download! Interesting, in Thailand they're still behind the times, it's still just the pirate DVD's and CD's with the photocopied cover, I didn't see anywhere offering direct downloads. If you want to buy ebooks, movies or music, you sit in a comfy chair, browse the catalogue, fill in the form, hand over your device and collect it fully loaded a couple of hours later... Not that I would dream of doing that of course... And if you are that tech backward, you have to pay an extra charge for them to burn to a DVD or CD - how times change. As I was sitting there just looking (not to buy you understand) some young Brit's came by to see if they could mend their iPhone which they had dropped in the sea. When told there was no way, they asked if they could sell it for parts! That proved an expensive swim...
But the place is busy. I booked into the Reef Resort again, at least I know what I am getting for my money. But the downside is that I am back to the all in one bathroom where the shower is not enclosed so water everywhere... I did want to stay somewhere different but they were booked. It is Full Moon (they come around so quickly...) perhaps that has something to do with it.


But I was glad to see they put on a parade for me as I arrived. A huge snake of noisy floats drove by, it seemed they were mainly local NGO's, in particular children's charities. Very colourful with lots of kids smiling and waving at people as they went by. But I couldn't help thinking with all the issues here surrounding child abuse and many of the perpertrators in the crowds watching that perhaps it wasn't that appropriate!



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Location:Serendipity Rd,Sihanoukville,Cambodia

Sunday 24 February 2013

Still the Wild West - Koh Kong (20 February 2013)

Today I decide to brave the red, dusty, bumpy road in a tuk tuk to pop into town for a bit of wiffy. But of course to get free wiffy you need to pay for a why why.... and good on the French, their legacy here is a half decent glass of it for a change! I settle into the Cafe Laurent in the late afternoon, with tables set on a series of interconnected decks over the river, in the shadow of a huge rusting tanker, gradually sinking - the tanker that is, not the cafe!



I guess it hasn't been that long since my visa run here last year, but nothing has really changed. Still the old dusty streets, the rubbish along the riverfront. The big signs promising the riverfront development have so far come to nought, and the Cafe Laurent is the only speck of civilisation amongst a few hundred metres of riverside dirt, food stalls, mangy dogs, rubbish and tuk tuk drivers desperate for a dollar fare. My tuk tuk driver didn't have enough cash to give me $18 change from a $20 bill, we had to go via the money changer to break down the note into smaller, extremely grubby ones. And like all of Cambodia anything over a dollar is paid for in US currency, any less and as part of your change, it's in Cambodian riels, at least it keeps the brain active as you mentally calculate pounds to dollars to riels, oh and here in Koh Kong, as it's so close to Thailand, bahts are also part of the local economy. The town is the administrative centre for Koh Kong province and as such has a number of run down looking Government Departments dotted about. I particularly liked the "Department for Cult and Religion", and the "Department of Finance" which was falling down and empty, reflecting the state of their budget I guess...
And after my wiffy fix, another bone jarring journey back. There's no way you could go into town to eat, the journey back would see most of your food back up!



The hotel, the Oasis Resort, is really pretty, set on a spacious lot with the bungalows tucked behind all sorts of tropical plants with orchids everywhere. The pool is huge for a place of this size and the infinity edge looks over to the mountains in the distance. What is especially nice is that there are lots of little nooks and crannies with hammocks and seating areas around, all with palm roofs. And they even provide a bbq if you decide to go into town and buy your own fish.







It's owned by Jason, a Brit who has a great no nonsense, no compromise approach to sex tourism, he just won't put up with it. Even if a guy is adamant that a Khmer girl is a real girlfriend, he won't let them stay. He's quite a maverick in a town where most of the hotels are the proverbial knockin' shop! He has quite a jaded view of Cambodian society after eight years here. He speaks Khmer and understands the derogatory comments often made through the Cambodian smiles about foreigners as they walk through the market. He talks of the number of children sold even here, the child and female abuse in Cambodian society and about the general lawlessness of the place, the police and judicial bribery, the scams by the tour people around the town. And how Westerners' can buy their way out of trouble if money changes into the right hands and how locals can get away with heinous crimes. He also says they have become so lazy as a result of the huge number of NGO's throwing rice at them. An interesting view of real life behind the smiles. I think it's a face of Cambodia no one really wants to see, it's easier to believe the smiles. But it's not just his view. This summing up of their society is by a Cambodian woman called Somaly Mam who wrote a book "The Road Of Lost Innocence" (really worth a read) about her experience of child prostitution here and the setting up of her charity to try and improve things.

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"During the Khmer Rouge regime people detached themselves from any kind of human feeling, because feeling meant pain. They learnt not to trust their neighbours, their family, their own children. To avoid going mad they shrank to the smallest part of a human, which is "me". After the regime fell they were silent, either because they had helped cause the suffering or because this is what they had learnt to do in order to survive.
The Khmer Rouge eliminated everything that mattered to Cambodians. And after they fell people no longer cared for anything except money. I suppose they want to give themselves some insurance in case of another catastrophe, even though the lesson of Pol Pot, if there is one, is that there can be no insurance against catastrophe.
More than half the people of Cambodia today were born after the fall of the Khmer Rouge. Things should be improving. But the country is in a state of chaos where the only rule is every man for himself. The people in power don't always work for the common good. When I was young we were poorer, but school was free in those days. Today school has to be paid for and you can buy a diploma - or get one for free if you show your teacher a gun. The justice system is for sale and mafias are close to power: the prostitution business is worth $500 million a year, almost as much as the annual budget of the Government.
Cambodian people have always been trained to be obedient, and they have always been poor. In Cambodia one child in eight dies before the age of five. The streets are full of rubbish and flies and shit, and the rain churns it into muck. More than a third of the population live on less than one dollar a day, and you have to pay the hospital if you get sick.
Men have the power. Not all the time: in front of their parents they keep quiet. With the powerful, they too must stay silent and perhaps prostrate themselves. But once those encounters are over they go home to assume the upper hand and give orders. If their wife resists, they hit her.
There is one law for women: silence before rape and silence after. We're taught when we're little to be like the silk cotton tree: dam kor. Deaf and dumb. Blind too, if possible. It's normal to beat girls. To many people, they're a kind of cattle. Your daughters will look after you because that's their duty. Other than that, they're not worth much.
One third of the prostitutes in Phnom Penh are young children. These girls are sold, and beaten and abused for some kind of pleasure. In the end I don't think there is any way you can explain or justify that, or the homeless children scrounging through rubbish, inhaling glue from little cans you can buy for 500 riel from every hardware stall, or the stolen children who are trucked into Thailand for the modern slave trade."
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Perhaps a jaded view, but poverty is obviously not as picturesque as it may sometimes seem....


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Saturday 23 February 2013

An Oasis in a Commune (19 - 20 February 2013)


It was odd leaving the Mairood this morning, I've been there a week but it feels much longer - in a good way. But time to move on towards Vietnam and Ant and David (hooray!) via Cambodia. We trundle my bag back through the fishing village the 300 metres to the road, luckily this time on foot with a three wheeled trolley and not a mad motorbike.



Chin is driving me down to the Cambodian border, not a long trip but rather than go via the main road we take the back route next the coast. It's funny, I always thought there was nothing else between Trat and the border apart from the one flash hotel a few miles north, the Centara, but in fact it's bustling with quite a few small bungalow and hut resorts next to small white sand beaches. These never come up when you Google the area but Chin tells me they very rarely have "farangs" staying as they speak no English at all and have few Western comforts. But from the outside they look quite nice. We also pass some more small, really rough fishing villages and the rubbish dump which is just a huge landfill and an enormous blot on the landscape.
But finally time to say goodbye as I approach the Cambodian border. Having been through this a couple of times I know the terrible scams, this time I arm myself with the e visa I had done a couple of days before online. Apart from the mandatory 50p to go through the "medical check" where they wave a digital thermometer about a foot in front of your nose and pronounce you OK, I was able to wave my evisa like some Indian memshaib and the disappointed crowds parted. This must really annoy the immigration guys as apparently they charge whatever inflated price they can for visas, but not me this time. But transport from the border into Koh Kong is still extortionate compared to normal local prices, but that is because the local immigration police take a kick back from every fare. But thinking about it it's not a lot different to the huge airport taxes border scam we and foreigners have to pay at British Airports... OK that's more "official" but still a rip off!
Going for the cheaper option of a tuk tuk instead of a car I brace myself for the 12km journey to the Oasis Resort. Quite bumpy as I expected as tuk tuks here are basically a motorbike with a little unsprung cart attached to the back. But all was well until we leave the town of Koh Kong to get here. We turn off down a red dusty path and negotiate the most enormous potholes and ridges. How these things keep going I will never know, I'm surprised they don't just fall apart. But 1.6kms of bouncing later I am dropped off here. What a great place. Just five bungalows surrounding a large infinity edge pool overlooking the scrubby jungle and the Cardamom mountains in the distance for $25 US a night. Ok there's no wifi which is annoying, but still, not bad value. Run by a Brit, Jason, it's been here a few years now and it is run well. It was his dream and he built it from scratch.



But the local commune in which it's set is shocking. Apart from the unmade road which must be a nightmare in the rainy season, it's a motley collection of really ramshackle Cambodian stilt house, lots of rubbish, dust, mangy dogs and tiny children playing about in the red dirt. The water is still collected from a well at the edge. After that, this place really did seem an Oasis.


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Missin' Mairood's Magic Water... (16 - 18 February 2013)

These smaller of the beaten track places are always good to meet great people. Steve from the US is doing a bit of travelling whilst his daughter completes a college project in the North. He was one of the original US draft dodgers from the Vietnam War and spent four months in jail as a result. And Julie from the UK who is amongst other things a fringe performing artist and writer, known also as "The Tranny With A Fanny" - a female impersonating an outrageous drag artist who had been up in Phnom Penh doing a gig. I must say I felt less than colourful besides those two...
Today we go on medical missions (not for me I hasten to add) to Trat 60 km north. The German couple here with the "mystery wife" are in need of some strong controlled drugs and need to go to the hospital. And Steve is heading northwards to meet up with his daughter and needs to be dropped off at the bus station. So along with Julie, we pile into Chin's rather luxurious minibus. After the hospital drop off we repair to the pharmacy for simpler drugs. I take the opporunity to stock up on Cipro's as all the ones I keep buying "just in case" case go out of date as luckily I haven't needed the "just in case".



I then spend a happy hour exploring Trat. Last time I was here it was just overnight so I didn't really get a feel for the place. Having said that, whilst there are more people about in the day, there still wasn't much to see. I still love seeing the orange monk offering gift sets on sale full of toothpaste and Tide. But good to spend some time in a workaday Thai town with no tourist infrastructure. And I loved the car park in the temple grounds - very spiritual!


But I will really miss the Mairood - we were joking last night that Chin puts something in the water! It's hard to define. On the surface it's a collection of little hut bungalows like many others surrounding a little pool. The rooms are above basic, ok and clean but not 5* luxury, the beds Asian hard. It's on a lagoon not a beach (that is about a five minute walk away along the coast). And when you get to it there is nothing else there, just a narrow beach of white powder sand with odd bits of rubbish washed up on the shore. It's on the edge of a fascinating but rough old fishing village so nowhere to go to get a drink or eat out. The food is amazing but the restaurant is brightly lit and the chairs are the white plastic garden variety. There's no "set piece" sights around to go to. But the place has an atmosphere of calm and relaxation which is hard to describe. When you first arrive, it looks like any other, but very quickly it draws you in. Almost everyone who checks in, unless they have a strict timetable, extend their stay as I have done. And many people return, as I plan. So what is it about the place? Chin and his two sisters (they are both US residents) are kind, generous and caring hosts and it's a quiet and relaxing setting with no road noise. The only noises are birds, the roosters and the occasional chugging of a boat. But that still doesn't explain it - I think there's magic in that water after all...


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Location:Khlong Yai,Thailand

Friday 15 February 2013

Mellow Mairood (14 - 15 February 2013)

I'm really settling in to this place, it's really laid back and a great place to just chill. It's basically miles from anywhere. The food is fab, so the diet will have to wait till Cambodia...
The garden and the swinging sofa hammocks on the lawns leading down the water are shaded by trees with the odd hen scrabbling about. I originally booked in for four nights but have decided to stay at least another two. There are also some great people staying here, and some odd ones. One German couple have been here since November and the man makes an appearance but the woman is a mystery, only occasionally seen. Another guy has been here for a while, an Austrian who is editing his book. On the first night I met a couple of English girls who work at the International school in Bangkok who were here with their lovely black labradoodle, Leo (this is a pet friendly place, perhaps I'll bring the Dyl next year...). And a great couple from Kentucky. Went for an early walk with them up the road outside the fishing village this morning and took a look at the sprawling monastery and temple.



On the way we looked at one of the wooden fishing boats unloading it's catch of small white slimy looking fish. No idea what they were but they didn't look at all appetising as they were shovelled out of the hold into their plastic boxes, perhaps they are destined for fish sauce...


And we went past a swish looking school, the sound of the kids playing before the school day began sounding the same as everywhere else in the world. And the local clinic was there too. But as you walk back to the Mairood through the fishing village with its ramshackle buildings hanging over the water where the women were sorting prawns and cracking and cleaning crabs, life looked as if it has been the same for ever. I wonder just how many of those children, now receiving their education will be satisfied to follow in their parents' footsteps and stay and run the family fishing boats. From what I can see as an outsider it's a life of very hard work with little reward. But I guess it's a no win situation, use their education and move on and the village dies, or stay on here with so many fewer opportunities. Difficult.



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Location:Khlong Yai,Thailand

Wednesday 13 February 2013

Mad Mairood (13 February 2013)

Having got over my hair raising arrival, and if you look at the pics of the walkway I was careering along with huge bag on the back of a motorbike, I think you will understand my concerns, I wake up to the full mad glory that is the Mairood Resort. It's built over a mangrove swamp on the edge of a small lagoon that goes out to the sea, basically in the back of beyond, almost on the Cambodian border, right at the narrowest part of Thailand.



The rooms are actually ok, the damp smell disappeared after the aircon has been on a while and joy of joys for a hotel in these parts, there is a separate shower area, so often the shower is just there soaking everything in its path. But I was back to that decision, water pressure or heat - the small electic shower unit incapable of providing both at the same time. Am not sure I would want one of the "fan cooled" mangrove rooms though...


It's on a largish plot with the "bungalows" around a small pool. The garden down to the water is dotted with hammocks and swinging sofas. There are also a number of large cages harbouring a variety of different birdlife as well as a range of hens and roosters wandering about to say nothing of the cats and dogs. Bit like London Zoo...











But the hens come into their own at breakfast by providing the fresh eggs, and more joy, given his restaurant background, Chin serves decent wholemeal bread! But whatever my concerns might be, this place must be a combination of the Nam Hai and the Dorchester to the people of the fishing village that is just outside the gate.
I'm not sure I've ever stayed quite so close to anything like it. The sprawling village is built over the lagoon. The walkways of concrete look a bit like a more recent Government investment, but the houses in the main are still just wooden huts over the water, topped off with corrugated iron.



All seem to be completely open on one side and as you walk by trying not to be too obviously nosy, all human life is there. People asleep on the floor in the heat of the day, kids half dressed running around, men mending their fishing nets, and old women picking over prawns and sorting out crab by cracking the claws with the few teeth they have left. Remind me not to order crab tonight... A few of the houses have some dusty goods for sale in their dark interiors, no chance of picking up a diet coke or a bottle of why why here.... Even my Thainglish is of no use outside the hotel, this is definitely not on the tourist trail, not one word of English seems to be understood out in the village. And no friendly little bars for a why why before dinner, which on reflection is probably no bad thing. Those walkways feel quite high above the water and would feel even narrower after a glass or two. But thankfully the Mairood is fully stocked with why why. And during the afternoon Chin or his sister come along to see what you fancy for dinner. No formal menus here, they just tell you what's around, you decide, tell them what level of spiciness you want and in my case, clarify the "no packchi". And at whatever time you have specified, out comes an amazing meal,



But last night's concerns about my hippy wardrobe are obviously unfounded, the owner asked me tonight if I was an artist or something back in the UK.... But it is really peaceful and I can see how people stay here for a while. Perhaps I will write that book after all...

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Location:Khlong Yai,Thailand

Tuesday 12 February 2013

Leaving flashpacking behind...(12 February 2013)

Today, after 2 months I leave my island home of Koh Samui and embark on an overland trip to get to meet Ant in Ho Chi Minh city in a month's time. I have a vague route, but timing is dependant on visa's, I can't arrive in Vietnam until 4 March as the visa is only for four weeks. I have to travel via Sihanoukville in Cambodia as that's where I need to get my Vietnamese visa. But I realised last night that my time in Cambodia is limited by the number of Malarone (anti malarials) I have... All very complicated! But if I ask Ant to bring me out some more Malarone which we will need for Sapa, then I am less tied to dates.
So the journey began from my favourite airport, Koh Samui, on less than my favourite plane, a jet prop. Memories of Myanmar, but I had a little bit more confidence in the Bangkok Airways pilots than those Burmese ones... I am making my way today to the south of Trat, still in Thailand, but fairly close to the Cambodian border.
It's an odd route. The sensible, but more expensive way would be to fly to Bangkok and then take another flight to Trat. The less sensible, but a bit cheaper is to take a flight across the Gulf of Thailand from Koh Samui to U Tapao, the combined civilian airport and airforce base (near the shi***le that is Pattaya) and then another flight (well it's got a flight number and a separate boarding pass) in a Bangkok Airways luxury minibus..... Only 31/2 hours....
So that is what I am doing now. Sitting in my minibus about to partake of my in flight food - yes, I get in minibus food. Now where's that trolley?



But Bangkok Airways strapline "Fly Boutique, Feel Unique" is living up to it's name - I am the only passenger....




But now the backpacking has returned with a vengeance. My flash limo minibus drops me at Trat Airport, where I wait to be picked up by Nit, I know, my head itches just saying the name.... I wait for a while and Nit arrives with his pickup, throws the bags in the back bit and off we go to drive the 85 kilometres or so towards the Cambodian border. I knew the Mairood "resort" was 300 metres from the road, but what I hadn't bargained for was what exactly that 300 metres was. I was about to find out. In my mind it was a slow amble through coconut palms. In reality it was a hair raising ride as a pillion passenger on the back of a small motorbike... On the front goes my by now 23kg bag, then the driver, then me with a smaller backpack and a Coach handbag... well you can picture it, I'm sure. Hanging on for dear life we scoot along smelly concrete walkways not more than a metre wide, me not knowing which bit of the driver to hang on to and saying in my best Thainglish "Honestly, I happee to war..." - all I got back from him was a giggle... What I haven't mentioned is that said very narrow walkways span a series of mucky looking rivery things which make up the local fishing village and he seemed so close to the edge as we scattered pedestrians, dogs and children in our wake. Never was I so pleased to see a destination!
A bit like the wedding, on first glance, I feel that my clothes are not quite hippyish enough for the Mairood Resort. Some bungalows (and I use that term loosely) are set around a small pool, the accomodation puts me in mind of some of the places Ant and I stayed in in deepest Mexico. Slight damp smell in the rooms but all looks clean. The owner is a really interesting guy called Chin who lived in the States for 30 years but has been back developing and running this place for the last seven. It's No 1 on Tripadvisor but having said that, there's not much else around here. It's billed as a place to chill out, hang out in the the hammocks, write a book.... But it is also pet friendly so there are lots of (hopefully) healthy doggies about.
But the good news is, as Chin was in restaurants all his working life the food is said to be amazing and they do have both why why and wifi, Peace Man....

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Monday 11 February 2013

Celebrations all round (8 - 10 February 2013)

A good couple of days for celebrations. On Friday, Colin and Naomi, who I first met at the Florist Resort when Carole was here, got married here at the hotel on the beach. They are such a nice family and invited me to join the evening celebrations on the beach which was really nice, they all made me feel very welcome. It did produce a bit of a sartorial conundrum though, my packing, which I thought had covered all eventualities didn't run to a wedding outfit...



But no matter, I donned my hippy long frock and a beaded necklace and as it was dark by then, I think I fitted in rather well! And Naomi looked fabulous, her Dad giving her away, just right for the setting. I particularly liked the groom and ushers in their snazzy suits but with matching sunnies and white Haviana's. Cool!


And then Saturday was the start of Chinese New Year and the hotel is full. I decided to eat in the hotel restaurant for a change and it was heaving, but on New Year's Eve it is traditional for Chinese families to eat out together and they were doing that big time! Bit of an altercation with the F & B manager who, as I wasn't partaking of the "Round Asia Buffet", tried to make me sit inside. Apparently the outside beach tables are for "buffet customers only" who get a front row seat of the fire show. Suffice to say I had my steak and chips (I know, but for once I wanted a Western carb...) under the stars.



On Sunday, I walked up to Mae Nam to see the preparations for the big New Year night at the Chinese temple there. Loads of preparation going on, sound stages, tables, chairs, it looks like it is going to be a huge party. And they were delivering and putting together the dragon, it looks like a big one! I think the evening will be a cross between a Full Moon Party and Walking Street times ten, so may give it a miss! As I sit here on Sunday evening all I can hear are fireworks and firecrackers going off in the distance.


I walk back partly along the road but then follow a sign to the Buddha Beach Bar, which Carole and I have walked past many times. A trifle unnerving walking down a small track through the coconut grove but in the end the beach bar appeared. It was the relief of a safe arrival that prompted me to order a lunchtime cube.... The waves today are big and quite dramatic and made a lovely backdrop to a relaxing hour.







But again language problems, in spite of my huge vocabulary of six Thai words, still persist. A nice touch here at turndown is the filling of the ice bucket, but tonight it was left empty. A call to guest services was a frustration of misunderstanding until I again called on my Thainglish and said "no eye". Suddenly you could hear the smile of understanding in the Guest Services Manager's voice. "Ah, no eye, we sen soo". Works every time...

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Location:Ko Samui,Thailand

Thursday 7 February 2013

A blog desert (30 January - 7 February 2013)

It's been a bit of a blog desert recently but all is quiet here as I flashpack away before going back on the road and back to something more like backpacking in a few days.



The days here are fairly predictable, in a good way! Lazing by the pool, wandering along the beach, watching the ever changing mix of people staying here. All nationalities are represented and recently more Chinese have arrived in the run up to Chinese New Year. A few trips into Chaweng and Nathon for a change of scene or back down to near the Florist for Walking Street. Also an increased complement of Brits as the family of the couple I first met up with at the Florist arrive for their wedding here on Friday. It's certainly a big one with over 40 guests from the UK here for the event. But they are a lovely group of people from Whitby who I joined for cocktails a couple of nights ago.


So my big decision most days is where and what to eat, nice.
Also on my evening walks through the local village area I take in the local wildlife. Only seen one snake so far and luckily that was squashed on the road along with a few unfortunate frogs.



The family of puppies that were so tiny when Carole was here are really getting big. Other dogs from healthy lookers to sad cases are everywhere, I wander past chickens and chicks scrabbling about in the dirt, there is the odd horse tethered to a coconut palm and my favourite is checking the progress of the water buffalo and her new calf. And I also walk past a shop with a great name. It's touted as the best wedding photographer on the island and is called "Donudes"... Not sure it's that appropriate!


But Thailand's big on festivals and all is gearing up for Chinese New Year. The hotel is having a big gala evening (may give that one a miss...), Chinese lanterns adorn the streets and hang dotted around the hotel. But the local temple shop, normally full of yellow Thai temple stuff and Monks' offerings is now a cornucopia of festival objects. Christmas baubles are still in stock and Chinese New Year lanterns fight for space with that other great Western festival, Valentine's Day.


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