Monday, 26 July 2010

Bamboo train through rice fields, and these are some of the things we see...


Baby monkey!


This afternoon we went to visit a Cambodian-volunteer-run NGO non-profit orphan school. Teacher Annick is doing her job here... our tuk-tuk driver for the day happened to be the director of this place, 89 orphans or poor children left behind, several teachers teaching on a voluntary basis. We have the details about the place if someone feels like donating to it.


Another temple... I think we lost count of them by now. 11th century, this one, older than Angkor Wat. 358 stairs to go up - quite an accomplishment in this heat of the midday...


Some human skulls and bones, found inside one of the "killing caves", where the Khmer rouge killed many people by throwing them into a deep cave... sad place.


The bamboo train! (Cambodia currently has no working real trains anymore... but these little wooden/bamboo racks with a motor can drive up to 40-50 km/h. The fun part is, when there is another train coming from the other side - one of the two has to then stop and dismantle his train, but that only takes about 30 seconds, so that is really cool...

Friday, 23 July 2010

Angkor Wat temples


The inner part of Angkor Wat, the mother of all temples, and the world's largest religious building. Cambodia's number one attraction, too, obviously. Actually a really good place to learn Japanese...


Stone faces of the Bayon temple, part of the Angkor Thom complex. Part of the UNESCO World heritage sites. Just one of the many photos, of the many temples, that we spent many hours visiting... (starting the day at 4am in the night to catch a (not really happening) sunrise!)


Lara Croft, played by Annick, in the Ta Phrom temple, the mightiest of the jungle temples, where the roots of truly impressive trees are devouring the stones of this ancient temple. The Tomb Raider movie was cast in this stunning scenery.


Indiana Jones, climbing Ta Keo in the scorching sunlight, to find some hidden treasure... (no, sorry, the Indiana Jones movie was not filmed here...)


Annick made friends! This cute little Boa wanted to lick Annick to show her affection, but Annick was not too pleased, because the snake was apparently poisonous (as we were told only later on). Don't worry, Annick's still alive :)

Wednesday, 21 July 2010

Arrives au Cambodge, la corruption reigne!

Apres des longues heures de voyage et quelques problemes (entre autres de pas prendre le bon train a Bangkok et de devoir passer 10h dans un train SANS lits) on est finalement arrive au Cambodge. Pour passer la frontiere et obtenir un visa il faut, dans le cas normal, payer 20$ mais ici il faut encore rajouter 100Baht aux policiers, qui y insistent et qu'on voit apres se partager l'argent. C'est partout ici comme ca. Chaque personne qui te rends un service (deja paye) on redemande une partie de cet argent mais nous sommes assez vifs et on ne se laisse pas faire.
Demain on se leve tres tot pour voir le coucher de soleil a Angkor Wat, vous aurez des photos, je le promets :)
(Annick)

There is another impression here, however, when you look beyond the let's-rip-tourists-off. On the way here (a taxi ride over a new tarmacced road), we could see mostly poverty. Small miserable huts along the road, rice fields, people plowing their land with buffaloes, improvised constructions and fences, and no other roads other than this main one, only dust/mud paths.
This evening, I went for a walk to the centre of Siem Reap, a hub for many westerners. Among the idiot-tourists drinking and smoking, the tuk-tuk and motorbike drivers offering their services, and the many street shops trying to get you to buy something, I found a little man at a side street, selling books. The man had no hands. He was patiently waiting for me to inspect his selection, and when I bought a guide book about Cambodia, his agility of his arm stumps to get his wallet out of his pocket, take out 4 dollars change, rip the plastic cover of the book away so I could read it, was actually impressive. And very touching. A man, living with the consequences of the country's history (many landmines still remaining here), remaining honest, polite, and keeping up hope to make enough money selling his books (at a lower price than a book store! [as I afterwards checked]) to care for his family - with no hands.
After a touristy temple day tomorrow, I hope to see more of this sad, but touching country, drenched in history. Good night. Joé

Tuesday, 20 July 2010

Enough shark bites - time to move on!

(Edit, for Mike: Yes, we're leaving the island today, and will head eastwards by train to Cambodia. Have safe travels home!)

Meio - de Mike ass geschter fort gang (a misst am Moment (theoretisch) lo zu Bangkok sen, wou heen den Owend en Fliiger zreck hellt). D'Annick an ech waerten dann lo a Richtung Cambodge reesen! Siem Reap (+Wat Angkor) ass eisen eischten Stopp. (Ko Tao -> Chumphon -> Bangkok -> Arayaprathet/Rongklua/Poipet -> Siem Reap - missten do muer den Owend oder Iwwermuer den Mettig ukommen, de Mettig geet et hei vun der Insel fort). JOE


Fini l'ile des requins!! Joe et moi, nous sommes seuls maintenant. Mike est reparti en Angleterre rejoindre sa femme et c'est pourquoi on a decide de quitter Ko Tao (Koh Tao). Vu que le sud de la Thailande est une infinite de plages blanches et d'eau turquoise et que la seule chose qu'on fasse c'est manger, dormir et observer des poissons/requins (ce qui est vraiment genial et on ne se plaint pas) nous nous sommes dit qu'il est largement temps de vivre quelques autres aventures. On va partir au Cambodge et on arrivera mercredi. Pays pauvre, marque fortement par la guerre et les 2 millions de morts du au regime des Khmers Rougers et Pol Pot, cette nation a quand meme beaucoup de choses a nous offrir. Angkor Wat a Siam Reap en est une, et ca vaut toute la peine de traverser une route (assez desastreuse) de 160 km pendant 5h. Vous aurez certainement des nouvelles de notre aventure :) ANNICK

Sunday, 18 July 2010

Mouth-watering (literally!) snorkeling on Ko Tao


This was yesterday, as we went for a swim in the rain and the stormy weather - where Annick just barely avoided getting devoured by a big hungry blood seeking shark after she was bleeding slightly, as she cut her toe on a sharp rock.


Hi Mike! How are the fish?


Braving the depths of the waters rewards Annick with beautiful underwater-scenery.


Even Buddhism has its place in the water - (I tried my hardest!)


This evening, a very "interesting" dinner at this place near the beach.

A snorkeling video on its way, hopefully, if this internet works...

Blubb...


If this works, then here is a little video of what snorkeling on Ko Tao looks like. Now add the salty taste of seawater (water getting into the mask sometimes), the threat of razorsharp corals (which host all sorts of stinging camouflaged fish, some with visible spikes, some without), which sometimes get a little close, as well as some small fish that bite you / nibble a little painfully, and some bigger fish (our neighbour saw a shark!), which better not bite...
Oh and of course, the hellishly burning lobsterisation afterwards, despite applying waterproof suncream beforehand...

Blubb!

Saturday, 17 July 2010

Ohh que oui, j'adore la mer (Voyage a Koh Tao)

J'ai toujous aime la mer, pour toutes ces sensations qu'elle me donne. Le sel sur le visage et les levres, l'horizon touchant l'infinite, les jolis jeux de couleurs de bleu azur jusqu'a bleu turquoise, la bruit des vagues qui se terminent sur la plage et evidemment le sentiment de liberte et des vacances. Ici en Thailande la mer n'est pas differente. L'eau est a beaucoup d'endroits beaucoup plus clair et surtout chaud comme dans une baignoire. Lorsqu'on est arrive sur cette petite ile, apres 2h dans la ferry, on etait bien etonne. Tout l'ile est couverte de vert sauf les plages y ont bien droit a leur place. Ce midi une grosse averse c'est annonce au-dessu de nos tetes (bien sur la temperature ne baisse jamais en dessous de 26 degrees) et donc on a decide d'aller nous baigner dans la mer. C'etait genial :) dehors il faisait un peu froid car il y avait quand meme du vent, mais dans la mer il fait bien chaud qu'on n'a plus envie de sortir. Deja en conditions normales c'est assez difficile de me faire sortir de l'eau (peut etre c'est le fait que je sois un "aquarius) mais ici "no way". Joe, Mike et moi on s'est bien amuse de faire pleins de photos betes dans l'eau (avec la camera resistante a l'eau de Joe) et puis on a joue un peu pirates et on est monte sur des petits bateaux pour en avoir une planche a sauter.
Bon vous en aurez surement des photos :)

End of the road..

Well, tomorrow will be my last full day on this wacky adventure so I should probably update this blog business.
Firstly, let me say that my 3 days in the jungle were unbelievably good! As I said to Joe and Annick, this holiday has been the adventure I always daydreamed about back in my school days.

Trekking through perilous jungles, evading blood sucking leeches while listening to the screeching of some alien like bugs nearby. Witnessing, close up, sulphurous boiling water exploding through the earths crust and gushing up infront of me. Swimming underneath beautiful waterfalls and up and down rivers after helping build the bamboo raft we would later crash and bash our way downstream the following day. Travelling for hours from one closed off village in the mountain to another on elephants across the deep rivers.
I should also mention the evening we sat around a small fire in the local tribes village by the river, listening to the chorus of Crickets and seeing the dance of hundreds of fireflies around us. The sky lighting up every few minutes with the fading promise of heavy rain to come.

I could continue to talk of our jungle adventures but that's a story best told in person! =)

Since then, we've travelled over long distances on hot, sweaty night trains, bobbed across the ocean on a ferry to a strange island where we swam in the warm waters during a rain storm and where I currently sit, getting eaten alive by mosquitos.

Tomorrow we set sail around the island to discover the exciting, undiscovered secrets of the coral reef... or in other words, we're snorkling and looking at fish!

Signing off! =)

Friday, 16 July 2010


This was today, in Ayutthaya, where we learned to respect old ruins and learned about buddhism... ;)


In the jungle, we rode some elephants... here is Annick (and Anna, dutch student, part of our group), which brought us from one village to the next, with a few stops whenever there was some tasty grass or tree spotted by our elephant...


I was trying to impress the tiger, by looking strong, and roaring... in a fairly cool waterfall we visited. Well, the tiger was not anywhere near probably, but still... we were not attacked by any tigers, so I take credit for that ;)


This was the nice candlelight dinner on our first night in the jungle - a "Karen" tribe village. Part of our dinner was colleted on the way as we were trekking through the forest - organic and fresh!

In an hour: train to Bangkok, then overnight train to Chumphon, then ferry to Ko Tao.

Thursday, 15 July 2010

Overnight train to ayuttaya/bangkok


Mer sen lo grad aus dem djungel zreck, dat war ganz flott: grousse wasserfall, geyseren, iwwer Bambus léieren, a klengen Räisbauer-'hilltribe' Däerfer schloofen, mat Elefanten regden, a mat Bambusbooter duerch de Floss - a während all deem natirlich probéieren den Mustiken an den Tigeren aus dem Wee ze goen...

Monday, 12 July 2010

Four seasons and a scooter

After feeling rough this morning, the day got much better. Annick and I hired a scooter each and (after getting briefly lost and having to replace a battery) we headed out of Chiang Mai and up the windy road to Don Suphet (?) where the air was cooler and we were no longer breathing in so many fumes. The temple is apparently the most sacred in all of Thailand because a white elephant once took a 'sacred idol' to that spot and died. It was a nice temple. The scaffolding and building work around everything slightly took away the mystical feel I was hoping for, still, they made some effort by painting it all gold to blend in.. The monks didn't look impressed.

After meeting back with Joe, who'd been learning the tricks of Thai cooking, we headed back out onto the open road! I let Annick drive ahead, with Joe clutching to the back of her scooter for dear life as she flew through all the traffic. We took another brief trip up the mountain road and then realised our petrol was nearing 'Empty' so pretty much rolled our way back down the hill to conserved the precious fuel.

The afternoon ended with a tasty 'four seasons pizza' and a banana milkshake. Good times!

Sunday, 11 July 2010

Foot massage, chiang mai sunday market



Les massages aux pieds sont excellentes en Thailande. Une demi-heure de bonheur pour moins de 2Euro, ca fait du bien les vacances :)
J'ai l'air un peu fatigue sur cette image mais ce sont encore les restes du voyage d'enfer pour arriver a Chiang Mai. 12h dans un vieux bus demoli, puant (l'urine des toilettes) et apparamment illegale car la semaine derniere 20 pauvres touristes etaient sujet de vols nombreux pendant leur voyage. On a bien eu de la chance et j'avoue c'etait quand meme un peu l'aventure :)

Saturday, 10 July 2010

On the road...

Today we woke up at noon (I think we deserved some rest after these two/three long days) and will take a bus(!!) in a few hours, overnight up to Chiang Mai, 12 hours... it was cheap (400 Baht), though we will tell you afterwards of how comfortable it was... :)
We digested the grasshoppers fine, no problem :)

Friday, 9 July 2010

Mmmmh, grasshopper!



Dear squirrel, you'd even feel at home here... :)



First impressions

Bangkok --> hot sticky air, loads of smells, interesting food (coconuts taste disgusting in reality, I swear, you prefer the artificial taste, but bananas and watermelons are a dreeeeam, so much sweeter ) and a rather bumpy tuk-tuk-ride :) tomorrow we're heading to Ayutthaya.

Bangkok en resumee pour mes parents et mes amis du cote Belge (il n'y a pas de possibilite de mettre les bonnes accentuations avec tous ces signes bizarres ici, desolee) : alors il fait super beau, mais vraiment trop chaud, et on transpire tout le temps, pas moyen de se rafrichir sauf les salles climatisees qui sont quand-meme assez rares et les douches n'ont pas vraiment d'eau froid mais bon on s'habitue apres 2 jours :) les sensations au niveau du nez sont diverses (ca pue les voitures , ca sent bien avec tous les epices dans l'air, ca pue la canalisation, ca sent bien le thai-massage et toutes ses huiles etc.) La nourriture bein... c'est tres particulier, mais la plupart du temps tres interessant et bon sauf les noix de coco et leur lait. Franchement on pense que c'est tellement bien avec toutes les pubs chez nous, mais les vrais sont un peu degoutants... interessant de l'essayer mais degoutant, restez bien avec le gout artificiel il est beaucoup mieux :) on avait des jeunes coco (il faut le dire) mais c'est comme ca qu'on les mange ici. Les pasteques et les bananes par contre, c'est un vrai reve!! Leur gout est tellement mieux et beaucoup plus sucre qu' a la maison, yumeee :)
Le chose la plus aventureuse: le Tuk-Tuk-Taxi , il etait vraiment cool :)
Decken Kuss Mamm an Papp an Ste an Denis :)

See y'all soon

My time in Thailand

Finally arrived in Bangkok after a very long day and night travelling. Despite the fact it was grey and raining slightly, felt like walking into a hot oven.
Thank God for air conditioning! Very helpful, happy and smiley people here.
Had a look around the Grand Palace, was ok. Loving the food here! Had a coconut, which was interesting.. Not how I thought it would be though.
Looking forward to getting out of the city and heading North (or South!)
...

10/07/10

3 Hours until our 12 hour bus journey to Chiang Mai! I'm hoping I get a window seat..
Had an 'authentic Thai massage' last night. Not quite the relaxing massage I had in mind. Me being the only one of us that had the male masseur (if that's the right word..?). He gave me quite a beating. Cracking and stretching me in as many painful ways as he could. All good fun though! Might just go for the foot massage next time.
My sleeping pattern is all over the place. Find myself sleeping for a few hours then waking up at 2am unable to sleep again for about an hour. Then sleeping for 8 or 9 hours.
I'm in great company and loving every minute of it here!

The grand palace


Mike - eating interesting green, square jelly-like blobs... (and some other, really nice food, cooked in a fondue-like pot with burning coals underneath)


Annick's baby dragon....


The grand palace.

So... we found an internet cafe! The previous photos were sent from my phone, which currently for some reason doesn't work to upload photos anymore...anyhow :)
First things first: it's hot. Very hot. Our room has air conditioning, which is nice, but each time you leave an air-con room, the heat strikes again and leaves you breathless for a second. We're following the shade and buying water, or coconuts (refrigerated and freshly cut open, for 20 Baht - which don't seem to taste very nice after all... they seemed a bit unripe?), and resting often. This morning, we managed to avoid most of the "hello my friend, ...." people (unlike yesterday, where we only barely escaped some promotion deal, only valid today, book tonight, quickly before it's gone, we want to help you, it's a non-touristy area, you get snake-whisky too which makes you strong, ...), and went straight to the big temple. It's a very overcrowded place, a very large complex, yet fairly impressive.
An overnight train to Chiang Mai is already full, so we might take a flight up there tomorrow or the day after.
We shall keep you updated...

Wednesday, 7 July 2010

Monday, 5 July 2010

Time is running out

This is correctly a song of Muse, but at the moment a very accurate status for my situation. My time is not only literally running out. So many things left to do, pack my bag, make a checklist that I REALLY got everything in my bag (I'm kinda chaotic, sometimes...) , buy medications (Malarone foremost), etc. etc. But actually it's really exciting thinking that in less than 3 days I'm going to be in Bangkok WOHOOO :)

Translation for my parents: Ech sen am Moment ganz opgereegt, ech muss nach vill paacken an hei man an do man, mee stellt iech viir an manner wei 3 Deeg setzen ech zu Bangkok Heesprengeren ziessen :) haha deck witzeg... ass net schlemm Mamm, ech hun vill Immodium matgeholl ;)