Curly wrote:Not the tourist spots, out in the sticks, getting blitzed on rice whiskey everyday with the "sticky rice" farmers
Curly wrote:Mae Tah,
San Kham Pang district
100-200Km out of Chiang Mai
Wifes family from there, have a bit of land for retirement too.
Clean air, national parks, very rural Thailand, even speaking Thai there has communication
problems as the area has its own dialect and language differences, still I get by.
Great people and always some good laughs
Curly wrote:Mae Tah,
San Kham Pang district
100-200Km out of Chiang Mai
Wifes family from there, have a bit of land for retirement too.
Clean air, national parks, very rural Thailand, even speaking Thai there has communication
problems as the area has its own dialect and language differences, still I get by.
Great people and always some good laughs
Peter wrote:Curly wrote:Mae Tah,
San Kham Pang district
100-200Km out of Chiang Mai
Wifes family from there, have a bit of land for retirement too.
Clean air, national parks, very rural Thailand, even speaking Thai there has communication
problems as the area has its own dialect and language differences, still I get by.
Great people and always some good laughs
Awesome.
My favourite spot is Sanghklaburi, about 150 miles west of Kanchanaburi.
It's on the Thai/Burma border.
Not many tourists get that far off the beaten track, so it's unspoilt and stunningly beautiful.
Many of the folk there are Karen people who've been driven out of Burma by the repressive government.
Nonk Khai comes a close second, lovely countryside, and the mighty Meekong.
Peter wrote:Curly wrote:Mae Tah,
San Kham Pang district
100-200Km out of Chiang Mai
Wifes family from there, have a bit of land for retirement too.
Clean air, national parks, very rural Thailand, even speaking Thai there has communication
problems as the area has its own dialect and language differences, still I get by.
Great people and always some good laughs
Awesome.
My favourite spot is Sanghklaburi, about 150 miles west of Kanchanaburi.
It's on the Thai/Burma border.
Not many tourists get that far off the beaten track, so it's unspoilt and stunningly beautiful.
Many of the folk there are Karen people who've been driven out of Burma by the repressive government.
Nonk Khai comes a close second, lovely countryside, and the mighty Meekong.
Peter wrote:Internal flights, quick but you miss all the action.
Trains: Overnight sleeper from BKK to places like Chiang Mai or Nong Khai. http://www.seat61.com is the place to look.
Train: 3rd Class only (mix it with the locals and their livestock) from Thonburi Station in BKK to Kanchanaburi.
Local buses. They go everywhere for next to nowt.
Death Railway from Kanchanaburi. Imagine them poor souls who had to construct the Burma-Siam railway in WWII.
River transport.
Pushbikes.
Motorcycle. I'm a bit too sensible these days, but they are plentiful and cheap. You just need to wear an helmet (few do!), keep your wits about you, and make sure you are covered by your travel insurance. They drive on the left (when they feel like it!).
Don't do tour groups, too restrictive.
Loads of websites to plan your journey.
Curly wrote:Sounds like we've looked at a lot of the same places, Lived there for three years so waslucky enough to have the time to travel around there a bit.
Loved Laos,fantastic place to travel around by boat.
Curly wrote:As you said,a lot of the best places aren't on tourist maps, but you have to stay a while andget to know the people if you want the most from your trip.
Peter wrote:Curly wrote:Sounds like we've looked at a lot of the same places, Lived there for three years so waslucky enough to have the time to travel around there a bit.
Loved Laos,fantastic place to travel around by boat.
We only had a couple of weeks in Laos.
Got a tuk-tuk the 20km from Friendship Bridge into Vientienne - wicked. Covered in dust when we got there.
Bit dodgy at night there with big smelly holes on the pavements.
Did the standard route from VT to Vang Vieng (VV), and then a few days in Luang Prabang.
Despite it's reputation we thought VV was a great place to enjoy.
Wish we'd stayed there a few days longer. No 'magic pizza' for me and Doris though. Plenty of BeerLao though.
Bottled out of the two day boat ride up to Huay Xai, and flew to Chiang Mai instead.
Curly wrote:As you said,a lot of the best places aren't on tourist maps, but you have to stay a while andget to know the people if you want the most from your trip.
Curly wrote:
How long did it take you to find a Bacon Butty?
Curly wrote:
Typical Northern B'stard, I went on the brewery tour in Vientiane! what a day out!
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