Friday, January 10, 2014

Sleepy and Cold

First thing one notices is that its damn cold here.  I know other folks have it worse, but even the "mild" Northwest winter weather is more than I can bear.  Add the unpredictable jet lag nods into the equation and its enough to make a bitch coyote eat her pups.

Just a few days ago I was hanging out in the jungle doing nothing.  Yeah.  The Jungle Way. 

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

Not Dead Yet...

Taiwanese pudding in theory

Taiwanese pudding in fact.  Pretty good for $2 US (which is 50 Taiwan dollars)


Taipei and new food to try. How about "Traditional Taiwanese Pudding"? It's a warm mix of tapioca, tofu and peanuts. Very strange but probably great hiking food.

I'm in Tai-fucking-Wan and going the wrong-fucking-way. But, OK, the goofy pudding was a sop from the travel gods.

Monday, January 6, 2014

Last supper

And now I go. Undone. Again.

Dessert

The walk back from Chinatown is not without rewards.

And for the final course?  Banana and Chocolate Roti!!  No really, who doesn't love a pancake from a street cart?  

Second Entrée

After noodles, after Durian fruit, its time for Hoy Torte!!!

Yes, my favorite second course, its a crispy egg and rice omelet with oysters or mussels.  Tonight I went with oysters and the sweet chili sauce.

The Food

Its the Food stall of all food stalls, my go to noodle shop in Bangkok.  I have blogged about it before and I will again.  It is simply the best.

Pad Kee Mao on a sizzling iron plate.  All of the seafood is fresh.  It is amazing!!

Can you see that special browned bottom to the wide noodles?  Thats where the noodles scald on the iron plate.  It gives the bottom noodles a different texture than the top and middle.  And these  noodles pack a punch.  You want to be careful what you add from the spice tray.


It is my tradition. The last night on Bangkok is always dedicated to street food in Chinatown. I thought about going uptown to Silom or Sukumvit, the posh shopping and hotel area, but the lure of the real food won out.

Several courses later I am full as a tick and even managed a durian fruit mid-course.

D-Day

The Durian Day that is.   I swore I wouldn't leave SE Asia without a tasting of the notorious Durian.  Not this time.   So here it is, in video, the Durian challenge.   


You have to try it to believe it.  


Mango Secrets

At the Oriental Mandarin Hotel, they have a great selection of Cuban cigars and a lovely shaded smoking area.  The secret is that the room shere cost at least twenty five times as much as what I am paying for a single fan room.

My secret hideaway in Bangkok.  Ten dollars US per night and a dandy littlle shaded veranda, no extrra charge.

Sunday, January 5, 2014

Big Mango

A market soi in Chinatown

A quiet soi in the Muslim quarter

Sure, easy to navigate.  Who could get lost here?


Bangkok. Labyrinthine, amazing, confusing and wonderful Bangkok. There is no pause in the city's heartbeat, which is loud and bright and sharp. No map will tame this tangle of tiny Sois and huge streets. It is a city to be memorized, where addresses are useless and intuition is daunted.

And it feels, always, like home. I fall into Bangkok as if on a screaming roller-coaster, devoid of transition.

The cacophony always welcomes me, comforts me, befuddles me and leaves me wanting more. Es mi barrio.

Travel Days

First catch a So g Theuw to the ferry. 

Next, some waiting.   Strangely, it's always "10minutes" even if it's an hour. 

Ride the ferry 

Walk back into the jungle until you are sure you are never coming out. 
And then you're there. 

No and Yes

Even with the funky magic of the Jungle Way guesthouse, I like seeing the shore of Ko Chang receding.  Ko Chang, Ko Samet. Phuket, you can have them.  

Ko WI, on the other hand. Happy to see it getting closer. 

Yes, that's the beach you've read about. 

And when you find it......

Circumnavigation

First step towards circumnavigating an island: chose a dinky one.  Ko Wai is, indeed. Dinky. 

Pick a pretty island if you have a choice. 

An island with deserted little beaches is a nice touch. 

And if you're pigmentally challanged, well, dress accordingly 

Paradise left

A hidden beach on Ko Wai early this morning

The jungle tunnel to the beach. 

Alas, the speedboat departure, the start of a very long travel day. 


By speedboat, by Song Theuw (twice) by ferry, by Song Theuw (again) by bus, on foot and by Bangkok's MRT, I left Ko Wai.

Tiny Ko Wai to busy Ko Chang to the mainland (no minivans!!) to the main highway and a bus to Bangkok.

And then , miracle!!! Night time in the Big Mango, walking from the Eastern Bus Station to the subway and..... I pegged it! Yes. For those if you who have not wandered the streets of Bangkok, you have no idea how much of a triumph this is.

Showered and knackered, I am in my hood near Hua Kamphong. Done done.

Saturday, January 4, 2014

Ashes


Today, along a beautiful rock point in the Gulf of Thailand, I scattered the last portion of Karen's ashes. My kayak rode up and down in the swells as I watched Karen's ashes blend and swirl in the crystal water.

I kayaked the circumference of the island of Ko Wai, a small and rocky beauty south of Ko Chang. This place spoke to me and I know in my heart that Karen would have loved it here.

I am no longer a courier of my small portion of my dear friend's mortal remains. Now she is mixed with the Mekong River, the Temples of Angkor, and the Gulf of Thailand.

Not goodbye my beloved friend, but Au Revoir.

Friday, January 3, 2014

Ko Chang

Yes, it is indeed an island paradise.   Huh, how about that?

Always keep a Minion around, just in case.  One never knows, does one? 



It's the fourth biggest island in Thailand. And it's a huge draw for package tours from Europe. And I missed it all. Missed the beaches anyway, missed them altogether and ended up deep in the jungle of the foothills of this mountainous island.

Jungle Way Guesthouse. This place was the real deal, a ramshackle group of creaky bungalows on stilts along a jungle stream. No wifi, no computer, no road. Really, it was 300 meyers up a dirt path from an elephant camp.

Bob Marley and Che' are still alive here at The Way. No one makes it back here who needs to be entertained or who cares about ants.

It's four kilometers from the main road at Ban Khlong Son, the closest thing to a real village on the North end. From there it's eight klick to the ferry and an hour to the mainland and forty minutes to Trat.

So I did nothing in the jungle. Made friends with the local mutts. Read my book. Tried to coax the ants to go somewhere else. Did you know that ants are highly untrainable? Well it's true. Hard-headed little bastards.

This morning it was a scooter ride to a Song Theuw, to another ST, confusion, then clarity, then a speedboat and, voila! I am in the tiny island of Ko Wai.

Wifi is almost none-existent, and mostly imaginary when it does exist. So the blog posting is going to be very spotty.

Anyway, it's an island paradise and I'm living large. All is well and better.

Wednesday, January 1, 2014

Trat Evening

For dinner, I strolled a total of fifty meters to Pier 112, the guesthouse and cafe across the lane.  There I had perhaps the best panang curry I have ever had.  Truly a wonderful meal.  

Après dining included loading around the outdoor Bocce ball courts.  I don't know the Thai name for the game, but the locals play with a vengeance.  Here is a link to the video


A few twists and turns and I caught the Night Market as it was winding down.  Time enough for one roti pancake for dessert as I headed home.  

Goodnight Trat.  



Trat

My version of myself as a radiation impregnated mutant superhero.  This is how I pass the time whilst doing nothing in my lovely town of Trat.


Time passes slowly here, as sedately as the sluggish flow of the river inn front of my guesthouse. I am lulled into the barely moving tempo, my day set to no faster than an adagio, paced and stately. There is nothing to do and nothing that requires doing. I read my book down by the river, sheltering from the late afternoon sun, sitting under the bridge like a troll. I wander the amulet stalls by the city Wat, chatting with the vendors and comparing the virtues of the luck that is on sale for anyone who needs it. With my small purchase of a beaded cord which hangs my new amulet safely from my neck, I stroll to the market for a coffee or a bowl of noodles. Sitting amongst the Thai locals, sharing my simple meal at the common table, market life moves on apace, vegetables, meats and fishes all laid out in their appointed place.

Today, the first day of the year, the town of Trat is even more somnambulant than usual. Many of the shops are shuttered, their roll up doors firmly down. The Thai folks are cooking, eating, sitting around in laughing groups.

I play at idle thoughts, watching them hover about and float away. Setting aside my book, I smoke and let the flow of the river pace my heart. A man armed with a long section of pipe walks along the river promenade, pushing at palm fronds in the water to set them slowly adrift on their way to the Gulf of Thailand. We exchange greetings and big smiles. He is working, barely, as if in a slow motion dance. No energy wasted and all the time in the world.

Playing with the iPad, I make up a new version of myself from a self portrait, my vision of myself as a mutant superhero, blasted by radiation. This keeps me amused for an entire evening.

There is the constant call of swifts, always in the background of my hearing, but it is the recording of bird calls, played on a loop over speakers. The song is to call in the real swifts to nest in an abandoned building so that their nests can be harvested for the consumers of that flavourless soup, an expensive delicacy. I sit on my balcony and watch the tiny swifts flash by in the evening light, feeding on mosquitos. As I do nothing, my own personal gecko pounces on an insect near my feet, keeping me safe. What will I do without the sound of the gecko's call, that joking question that is a constant here?

Tonight, my last in Trat, I will walk over to the open air bocce ball courts and watch the Thais play under the lights clouded with insects. Tomorrow I leave for the islands, my last stops before heading on to the Big Mango. First Ko Chang, busy with tourists and beach bars, but only in transit. The destination if Ko Wai, a tiny, quiet island that only has electricity a few hours a day, and not much else.

Now the day has set and the evenings music is drifting over the tops of the buildings. I will wander out into the warmth of the evening and drift through the last hours remaining here.
All is well.