Friday, November 24, 2006

Monkeys and Giant Fish


So I talked with my family for hours about the things to do in Thailand. I even asked about going into other countries such as Burma and China or Vietnam and Cambodia. It seems that going to Vietnam and Cambodia will be very dangerous since we don't know anyone there, nor do we speak the language. China and Burma shouldn't be too bad, however.

In Chiang Rai, northern of Chiang Mai, my uncle owns a house he says we can utilize for our stay in the north country. Apparently near by is a temple where you can feed monkeys that come down to see you in the 100s. The same temple has a huge fish pond with giant fish. Close by is the opium museum created by the queen's mother which catalogs the history of the drug trade.

In Chiang Mai we'll see the long-neck villiage--a villiage of people with rings on their necks. That should be cool.

Perhaps my itinerary is going to be loosely based on:

December 19. fly into Bangkok
20-21. adjust to jet lag and pick Morgan and Brad up from the airport.
22-23. leave for Chiang Rai by plane or train.
24-26. spend time traveling across borders and lookig for monkeys and elephants
27-28. river raft down to Chiang Mai
29-30. spend time in Chiang Mai
31-2. travel to Pattaya beach
January 2-3. spend time in Bangkok.
4. fly home.

That's my tentative itinerary without consulting Morgan or Brad. I'll have to see what they'd like to do as well. I'm just stoked about seeing monkeys that travel on busses.

Side story: My mom told me about monkey's last night. She talked about how she was 7 years old and living in a small villiage in Thailand. The monkeys would ride a train or bus from the countryside and travel to her house. Apparently this is a common occurance and the monkeys are pretty smart. There are quite a number of monkeys that have learned to ride the busses and trains--and I guess it's all kosher. So hopefully, when we're in Thailand, there will be monkeys riding trains with us.

I'm pretty excited about this trip.

Wednesday, November 15, 2006

Dangers in Thailand

There are no known indigenous terrorist or rebel groups directly hostile to the U.S. in Thailand. Visitors should exercise caution if traveling near border areas with Burma, Malaysia and Cambodia, due to banditry, drug smuggling and separatist violence. Persons with known transnational terrorist associations transit through and visit Thailand with relative ease through legal and illegal means. These travel routes include not only the Burmese and Cambodian borders, but also the Malaysian border. Soft target vulnerabilities exist throughout the country; a situation that could easily be exploited by transnational terrorist elements if they begin operations here.

The far south of Thailand continues to experience daily incidents of criminally and politically motivated violence directed against Thai authorities by armed local separatist/ extremist groups. These groups have targeted Thai government interests, including government schools, courts and local security forces. Although there is no information indicating that these groups have targeted westerners, American citizens have been victims of this indiscriminate violence, as was the case in April 2005, when two Americans were injured by an Improvised Explosive Device (IED) that detonated at the Hat Yai International Airport in southern Thailand. For this reason, the State Department urges all American citizens to defer non-emergency travel to Thailand's southernmost four provinces including Songkhla, Yala, Pattani, and Narathiwat.

Itinerary confirmed.

Itinerary:

1 Air
CX - Cathay Pacific
Flight 885
Booking Code: K
Date: Tuesday, December 19, 2006
From: Los Angeles Intl, Los Angeles CA - U.S.
To: Hong Kong Intl, Hong Kong Hong Kong
Departs: 11:25 AM Arrives: 6:55 PM Next Day
Status: confirmed


2 Air
CX - Cathay Pacific
Flight 709
Booking Code: K
Date: Wednesday, December 20, 2006
From: Hong Kong Intl, Hong Kong Hong Kong
To: Bangkok Intl Arpt, Bangkok Thailand
Departs: 10:00 PM Arrives: 11:50 PM
Status: confirmed


3 Air
CX - Cathay Pacific
Flight 2700
Booking Code: H
Date: Thursday, January 04, 2007
From: Bangkok Intl Arpt, Bangkok Thailand
To: Hong Kong Intl, Hong Kong Hong Kong
Departs: 8:25 AM Arrives: 12:15 PM
Status: confirmed


4 Air
CX - Cathay Pacific
Flight 882
Booking Code: H
Date: Thursday, January 04, 2007
From: Hong Kong Intl, Hong Kong Hong Kong
To: Los Angeles Intl, Los Angeles CA - U.S.
Departs: 4:25 PM Arrives: 12:50 PM
Status: confirmed

My Ticket

I placed an order for a ticket for $1750 including taxes. I just have to fax a credit card authorization form now.

The dates of my travel have changed to December 19 or 20, 2006 to January 4th. This gives me a few extra days in Thailand, for which I will just spend immersing myself in the language beforee Lindsay Morgan and Brad arrive. Nima hasn't purchased his ticket yet. He is still hunting the best fare down.

I wish I purchased my ticket in September like I previously planned. I knew it would be near impossible to book at a good rate after November.

What the deuce?

I can't find any fares for under $2200!

I will continue my search. Looks like I can't get a PS3... maybe I should just sell my Porsche? Yes. Yes I will.

Monday, November 13, 2006

Another letter from Dad...

13.11.2006
Eddie
OK, I will pick yoy guys up since our house is not too far from the airport.
HERE are some suggestions for your trip;
1 night with us
1-2 night at Thanon Kao Sarn (street name ) in a guest house, this is the place most backpackers stay over when they are in Bangkok . It is very cheap $5 - $10/night . You will meet a lot of friends from many countries just like in the movie "The Beach".
If you find a group that's going your way, North to Cheingmai (mountains/forest ) or South to Samui (Fun Fun Girls and Beachs) or Phuket (expensive there) or East to Pattaya (girls/beach ) or Kor Charng (Beach), you spend 2-3 nights there .
Do some reseach on these places and decid or if you have any questions just ask me.
love
Dad

Friday, November 10, 2006

TWOTD (Thai Word Of The Day)

Jing jing, phrase: It's true! When someone says "no way, man," in English, we often say, "for realz yo," or "it's true." In Thai, mai ben rai means true that. Literally, I think it means real real, but I'm not 100% sure.

There's your word of the day.

The 4th


My friend Nima may be coming with us to Thailand. He's an experienced car designer looking for work anywhere and in seek of inspiration through his travels. He also hit my Porsche a few months back and never paid me back. He's going to the LA Auto Show in a few weeks to show off his new designs and I fully support him. He's going to help me find a cheap fare to Thailand.

Tuesday, November 07, 2006

Talk Abroad

I was worried about talking on a cell phone abroad, but I guess you can rent cell phones while in other countries...

http://www.cellularabroad.com