So Wat = Buddhist temple in Thailand, Laos & Cambodia and they are as ubiquitous as cathedrals in Europe or Walgreens in America. We use the word now as a verb on our trip as in “lets go watting today” or “I am so watted out”. When we arrived in Chiang Mai, I admit I was a bit Wat-shy after viewing the Bangkok Wats, due to all of the production involved (lines for tickets, lines for audio guides, lines for dress code review, lines to borrow a cheesy starched white button down shirt bc they won’t allow wraps to cover your shoulders despite the fact they’re fully accepted in all mosques throughout the Middle East, lines to return awful button down shirt, massive crowds and massive time commitment). I powered through and thankfully so bc since, Watting has been much more accessible and enjoyable… You simply buy a ticket at the entrance, flip your shoes off and head in to visit for as long (or as little) as you like and crowds are minimal. Some of them are simply breathtaking they are so ornate. So onward we Wat.
The farm on which the cooking class was held was a gorgeous setting with beautiful facilities including covered outdoor cooking stations, allowing for a lovely breeze to blow through. Gun first gave us a tour of the farm from which many of the day’s ingredients were sourced from. We then selected the dishes we’d be making that day. I selected the following:
1 – pad see uw
2 – papaya salad
3 – spring roll
4 – coconut soup w chicken
5 – green curry paste
6 – green curry w chicken
7 – mango w sweet sticky rice
We cooked 1 first and promptly ate it (& everyone commented on my great knife skills as I had the best sliced carrots in our group of 6… I apparently brought my A game). We then cooked 2 & 3 and ate those together as course 2 and after, took a 1 hour break on the lovely grounds. Amy & I played cards and chatted while the cooking school staff prepped for the afternoon’s meals.
Amy & I made the green curry paste – she diced the veggie/flavor additions & I crushed peppers and then her ingredients in a massive mortar & pestle. I hadn’t realized I’d get a good arm workout in cooking class as this was hard work to crush everything into a fine paste… Prob took 20+ minutes, all the while Gun continually demanding “stronger, faster, not ready yet” w a devious smile. We each made our own soups and then I volunteered (yes! In a cooking class!) to cook the coconut sticky rice for everyone and knocked it out like a pro. Haha
Everything tasted incredible (compliments to the chef) but there was far too much to eat. Our instructor Gun was amazing… great chef (he learned from his grandma and said that all Thai people are good cooks), great teacher (amazing how he keeps track of all different dishes for each person in group and where everyone is in cooking process, what to add/when, when to increase/reduce heat, etc) and great sense of humor. Returned to Chiang Mai with a full belly by 5:30.
Ingredients for Thai welcome snack, meang kum (sweet syrup, roasted peanuts, toasted coconut, ginger, shallots, chili peppers, sliced lime w skin, lettuce)
Eat by wrapping a pinch of everything in lettuce. Delicious!
We signed up for a full day Thai cooking class at Asia Scenic out on their farm. After an 8:30am pickup, we stopped by a local Thai food market. Our instructor for the day, Gun, led us through the market to familiarize us with the main ingredients we’d be using that day… Very helpful for future shopping in a Chicago Asian market. Then had 15 minutes to explore. That’s when we stumbled upon the “back room”… Essentially the meat/protein room where they sell the typical stuff plus pigs heads/feet as well as fresh live eels, fish & frogs (yes, jumping around). Pretty amazing (if you’re into eating animals, sorry Sar). Pics and video links follow.
Chicken blood… the secret ingredient to their pad thai
Many tourists visit Thailand with a hope to ride an elephant. It’s pretty typical and the Thai government and local cities promote it due to its popularity within the tourism industry. After some pre-trip research, we found this is actually quite cruel to the elephants. Despite their enormous size, their spines aren’t meant to carry such weight (between the mahout, a couple tourists & the seating apparatus… the weight can easily exceed half a ton). Additionally, baby elephants are captured in the wild, separated from their parents, and go through a brutal tortuous domestication process that can take up to two weeks in which they’re tied in place by ropes, starved & severely beaten and must be watched at all times so they don’t purposefully step on the trunks to suffocate themselves and end their misery. This breaks their spirit to make them docile and amenable to learning stupid circus tricks. So it’s a rotten industry, one that we refused to support and one that Americans can’t act as if they’re above given all of the stories of atrocities about the circus industry’s treatment of animals. So instead, Amy and I found this awesome Elephant Nature Park, a couple hours outside Chiang Mai, that’s a charitable sanctuary for elephants rescued from not only the tourism industry, but also the logging industry (Thailand has outlawed use of elephants in logging but it’s still done deep in the jungle by local villages) and those injured by accidents (including land mines still very prevalent in Laos thanks to the secret American war). The large parcel of land containing river access was donated to the reserve, which happens to be right down the road from one of these elephant riding parks (we jokingly imagined bar fights erupting between the locals at night), and further donations go towards buying elephants out of the tourism industry and upkeep of course. It’s a lovely place and you can pay to visit, tour the facility and interact with the elephants. It was remarkable to be so close to and touching, feeding and washing these very gentle, sweet, intelligent giant beasts. It was remarkably life changing and I urge anyone who’s visiting the area to schedule a visit.
I’m off my soapbox now. Thanks for listening.
Each elephant has a mahout, a personal caretaker, & the bond between elephant & mahout seems undeniable
This little guy in front is the youngest baby at the farm (2yo). Mama is very protective so we had to keep a bit of distance. Obviously the park is not breeding elephants but sometimes a rescued female will later reveal a pregnancy. In order to prevent pregnancies at the park, the young, virile, aggressive and large males are kept isolated in their own habitat. We saw them from quite a distance as they’re known to throw rocks at people. Perhaps unhappy about something?
Below are a bunch of links to YouTube videos, primarily for my niece & nephews but also for any elephant loving adult. They’re pretty sweet. (Fam – I have a few more vids of elephants eating; lemme know if you want those too).
While we really enjoyed Bangkok, Chiang Mai, a lovely city in the mountains of Northern Thailand, was a really nice break from the craziness. The city is surrounded by hills, seems much more accessible, has an adorable old town surrounded by a moat with remnants of the brick walls still visible, and is famous for its food. Chiang Mai also introduced a new form of transportation – the songtheaw – red trucks that serve as shared taxis so you just hail them down, tell/show the driver where you’re headed and it’s a flat 20 TB. They still have the tuk tuks but the songtheaws are our fave as they’re everywhere & super cheap.
Standard tuk tuk
Songtheaw
Our lovely pool area at CM hotel
G – total coincidence Amy snapped this pic but it certainly reminded me of yours. Miss ya!
It cooled to 70 degrees F tonight and I find myself freezing. Bundled up in pants & LS shirt. I sure got used to those 90 degree temps pretty darn fast.
As Amy and I have thoroughly loved our time in Bangkok, we decided to forego the requisite late night visit to a ping pong show (look it up mom, I’m not explaining here), as we knew it would most likely diminish our view of the city. Instead, we hopped around to various rooftop bars (Bangkok has more rooftop bars than any other city). We do, however, have a beef with the current rankings by reputable publishers and may in fact write our own article listing our faves… Just may require some additional research. Number one: the Park Society atop the Sofitel.
The Sofitel is dope, as are its views
Yes, we’re still there at dark. the DJ was dope. On this old school Will Smith kick (yes, prince of Bel Air) mixed with local beats.
Prior to the trip, I received two very enthusiastic recommendations from two former co-workers for the same 5-hr bike tour ending with a 30 min long boat tour of the river/canals running through Bangkok. Perhaps I was reminiscing back to my Mike’s Bike Tour days while backpacking across Europe as I thought this sounded like a fabulous way to see “the Bangkok locals’ experience”, although I admittedly didn’t really know what that meant and didn’t really bother thinking about it. Amy was fully onboard and we were both excited so we met our tour guide and other 8 fellow bikers promptly at 7am. At no point in time did Amy or I question our decision making or pause to consider the fact that a bike tour in a frenetic city of 9 million people, in which it’s difficult to cross a street given the insane traffic, is perhaps a crazy idea. We were up for it. Or so we thought.
With very little guidance from our guide “Andy/Andi” (we consistently debated on whether it was a he/she and whether he/she was 13/30), we were off and Amy and I found ourselves at the rear of the pack as the rest of the group consisted of Dutch from Amsterdam. We shortly discovered what “seeing the city as locals do” means as we were not biking on streets (see frenetic city comment above). I don’t think you can even call them side streets or alleyways. We were biking on tiny (TINY!!!) sidewalks bordered on both sides by walls of buildings housing shops & homes with their associated contents spilling out onto the path. It seemed like the underground secret version of Bangkok one never gets to see. It was very interesting for the first 30 minutes. And incredibly exciting. Primarily bc I felt as if I was risking my life and the lives of the locals who use these tiny sidewalks as their main thoroughfare. We passed women cooking (I first realized this as I felt significant heat on my left leg from a pot of boiling oil & was thankful I didn’t burn myself), men working on their motorcycles, locals preparing food and wares in advance of the day’s business and simply sitting on their stoop pleasantly enjoying their tea until a group of 12 bikes come careening past. We maneuvered through ruts, 90 degree corners with unknown obstacles awaiting on the other side, and periodic instances in which these paths burst out onto main streets requiring additional dodging of buses/cars/taxis/tuk tuks/motorbikes until we could race to the next secret path. Locals didn’t flinch even when we were forced to ride within inches of them or their property.
The interest fell off after 30 minutes when we came upon a sidewalk that wasn’t wide enough to ride our bike (so we had to hop it through) & a cat jumped out across my path and nearly sent me careening into a parked scooter (while dogs would just lie in the middle of the path, refusing to move & daring you to hit them). I started to feel as if we were intruding upon their way of life instead of “experiencing it” and I realized I had no idea what we were actually seeing and in fact, I really wasn’t seeing much of anything bc I was so intently focused on not crashing my bike that I was staring intently at the path in front of me with a death grip on my handles. We finally got a break after 45 minutes of this when the two-year-old son of a Dutch couple erupted into hysterics after he threw up all over himself (evidence of a rough ride perhaps?). The gang pulled aside on a path while the parents attended to him. Amy and I briefly interacted and realized we shared similar concerns so once the baby drama was properly dealt with, we approached Andy/Andi. I asked if the rest of the tour (we still had 4.5 hours left) would be much of the same (this was confirmed) and Amy assumed the role of “bad cop” by simply stating “we’re not enjoying it”. They handled it wonderfully as they “only want everyone to be happy” so we biked another 5 mins to a pier and someone from the bike shop met us there so we could follow them back (no chance in hell we could’ve found our way back on our own). It’s a massive city with a ton of things to do and the last thing we were going to do was spend another 4.5 hours on a bike tour NOT seeing the city with our heads focused on the path. Frankly, the only thing that shocked me was the fact that nobody joined us in our early exit… Even the parents of the puker stuck it out. So at the end of it all, we got a very memorable hour bike tour of “local Bangkok” for free so maybe that makes us the best negotiators?
We ended up making it to the “can’t miss Bangkok sites” of the Royal Palace and Wat Phra Kaew by its 8:30am opening time and happily toured those until 11am. While hunting down a tuk tuk to take to another site, we then experienced another Bangkok “can’t miss”… Getting scammed by, as Amy put it “the really nice man who told us we should say we’re teachers in Thailand instead of visitors from the USA”. Before we knew it, we ended up on a tuk tuk destined for a long boat tour of the river/canals. No real other options upon arrival but for a long walk the other way to catch another tuk tuk. Seeing the river was on our list of to-dos, we chalked it up to experience and plunked down the TB to take the cruise that promised views of famous wats from the river, another behind-the-scenes look at Bangkok, and a fabulous floating market. The long boat itself was a nice experience and seeing the variety of local homes along the canals was truly unique. The scam became overtly obvious upon discovering the “floating market” consisted of 3 guys in their canoes who rowed up next to us to hawk their wares… Buddha trinkets, pop-up hats and finally beer (had they started with the beer, they probably would’ve had takers).
At the end of the long boat tour, we were in the lock awaiting passage from the canal to the river when a long boat full of dorks wearing life preservers pulled alongside us. A girl said “hello”. I said “hello” back and then an “OHHH, HELLO” as Amy whispered in my ear that our bike tour group had just pulled up alongside us. Oh wait. The dorks in the life preservers were our bike tour group. In all of Bangkok, we part ways at 8am, have 3 hours of great touring, somehow end up scammed to do a long boat tour and then end up in the boat next to our tour group’s in the lock. Where we waited for an awkward 5 minutes as the water level slowly gained a foot. The day came full circle, wrapped neatly in a perfect big bow, and it was only 12:30. I don’t think we had ever laughed so hard.
Wat Phra Kaew, Bangkok – pics wont do it justice, just gorgeous