Blog: Tourists

Thai cooking

Day six of our Asia trip was the only one not scheduled in advance. On a recommendation from a friend, we signed up for a half day cooking class at Chiang Mai Thai Cookery School which was one of the highlights of the whole trip.

Read more...

Inspecting herbs Lots of chilis Bags
Slicing Big wok Mixing

posted on Jan 24, 2008 11:19 am (comment)

Elephants!

For our second day in Chiang Mai, we went to the Chiang Dao elephant camp. This was definitely on the touristy side, but also a lot of fun. Each elephant has a mahout, or trainer, who works with the same elephant starting when the mahout and the elephant are both very young.

The day begins with an elephant show, where the mahouts demonstrate how elephents can push, pull, roll, and lift huge logs, which was how construction materials were transported and manipulated before trucks and forklifts. They also show off various tricks, such as starting the show with one elephant raising the flag on the flagpole, having the elephants pick up the mahout's hats off the ground and place them on their heads, and doing "elephant paintings" where the mahout holds a paintbrush in the elephant's trunk and the elephant waves it up and down or makes dots.

Read more...

Feeding the elephants Washing Raising the flag
Elephant ride! Parade of tourists Hats
Vendors are everywhere Among the flowers Bricklayer siesta
Butterflies I Butterflies II Butterflies III

posted on Dec 9, 2007 11:38 am (comment)

Ayutthaya Summer Palace

Ayutthaya, about an hour's drive north of Bangkok, was Thailand's capital from 1350 to 1787, when Burmese invaders conquered it and killed the king. The Bang Pa In Summer Palace is a royal residence, originally used during the Ayutthaya Kingdom but then rebuilt in the 19th Century. Now it is mostly a tourist attraction, though occasional state dinners and similar events still take place there.

King Rama IV, who revived the Summer Palace, appreciated architecture from around the world, and so rather than following a single traditional style, the buildings reflect an eclectic variety of global styles, primarily European and Chinese (Thailand is about 30% Chinese, with good relations between the Chinese and Thai populations), as well as some small Thai buildings. The grounds are laid out with manicured gardens around an artificial lake.

Unlike many of the other tourist attractions we visited on our trip, most of the tourists at Bang Pa In were Thai students from nearby colleges. The most interesting part of the palace visit was the opportunity to anthropologically observe the Thai young people - their Hello Kitty umbrellas and Playboy tote bags which American women would never carry, or the way two female friends would hold hands while taking a picture.

More images...

Playboy Hello Kitty Thai palace or American courthouse?
Petting the elephant Bunnies on the shore From the tower
In bloom Aisawan Thipphaya-at Pavilion Car park?

posted on Oct 18, 2007 8:48 am (comment)

All text and images on this site are licensed under a Creative Commons license.

Creative Commons License