Saturday, March 08, 2008

Day 1004 – Bangkok – River Kwai, Thailand

Day 1004 – 7th March 2008 +7:00 GMT

Had to get up at 4:45am and check out of hotel. Got picked up by coach just before 6am and the coach then picked up other people from hotels around Bangkok and then headed out to Kanchanaburi. We arrived just before 9:30am we dropped off at the pier where we got the “James Bond” speed boat (the same boat used in Man With A Golden Gun) along the River Kwai to get our first view of the bridge made famous from the post war movie Bridge Over The River Kwai. The Boast went far to fast and was very very uncomfortable to sit in. We stopped just after the bridge and then had 30 minutes to walk around the town of Kanchanaburi and walk over bridge.



The River Kwai

Me in Kanchanaburi On River Kwai

The Bridge Over The River Kwai

Me On The Bridge Over The River Kwai
Jill And I By River Kwai

Train On Bridge Over River Kwai

We then headed to the war cemetery and museum which tells the story of the Thailand-Burma Railway and how the Japanese used hundreds of thousands of Prisoners Of War to build the railway under horrific conditions. The 430 Km of railway track was laid in just 20 months with the deaths of over 90,000 people.

Kanchanaburi War Cemetary

Kanchanaburi War Cemetary

Death Railway Museum

Death Railway Museum

After the museum we got back on the coach and travelled North-West for another hour until we reached Pakseng which is where we left the coach and boarded a long boat we took us up the Kwai Noi River for about 45 minutes until we reached our hotel The Kwai Jungle Rafts. The River is famous for it’s floating houses and has more houses on it than any other river in the world.

Foating Houses On River Kwai

Water Buffalo

The hotel is a number of buildings on rafts all linked together. We had a nice double room with an on-suite bathroom, but the hotel has no hot water or electricity so is only lit at night by kerosene lamps.


Our Room On The Jungle Rafts

Our Porch On Jungle Rafts

We arrived at the hotel and had lunch and then got checked in. At 2pm we got whisked away by long boat down the river and then by truck to the Hellfire Pass Memorial Museum. This is a large cutting out of the rock that the POW's dug out for the Thai-Burma railway.
Me At Hellfire Pass

Hellfire Pass Memorial

Jill and I In Hellfire Pass

Hellfire Pass

The workers worked 18 hours a day with little food and water. We looked around the museum and then took a walk to the cutting through the hillside.

A longboat On The Kwai Noi

Jill and I Outside Our Room On Jungle Rafts Hotel
Afterwards we headed back to the hotel and had a few hours to relax before having dinner and then went to watch the local tribe called the Mon people perform their local dance.
The Mon Tribal Dance
After the dance we had a few drinks at the bar then had an early night. I got the scare of my life that night I was sitting on the bed in the dark and suddenly something leapt onto my chest. I ran out the room and grabbed a kerosene lamp only to find it was a large frog. So I spent the next 15 minutes trying to catch this frog and throw it back into the river. Eventually i got to sleep.
Frog In My Room


Jill In Room With Kerosene Lamp

Friday, March 07, 2008

Day 1003 – Bangkok, Thailand

Day 1003 – 6th March 2008 +7:00 GMT

Had a long lie in and headed out just before lunch. We first headed to the Paragon Siam shopping mall and got some lunch then went to the snake farm.
Snake Farm
This is actually a hospital for Venom and toxicology. They create all the snake anti-venoms for Thailand and also send them all over the world. We first had a look around the exhibition and then there was a live show on.
World Health Organistion Snake Research Centre
Python Skeleton
We sat on the tiered seats and the staff told us what they did here and then brought out a 10ft long king cobra. Which is deadly and they just let it go, then spent the next 10 minutes trying to catch it with their hands without getting bitten.
King Cobra

A King Cobra

Spitting Cobra

Cobra
They brought out 5 or 6 different types of snakes all which were deadly and then finally a Burmese python which they let us hang around our necks. We then went and looked at the rest of the snakes in the centre.
At The Snake Farm

Me With A Burmese Python

Water Snakes

At The Snake Farm

At The Snake Farm
We then did some shopping for mosquito repellent and we needed some more Larium (anti-malaria tablets) which our doctor in Australia said we could buy over the counter here. Unfortunately this was wrong and after several trips to different Pharmacies we found out we could only buy it from a hospital. We went to the hospital but we needed a prescription so had to register and have a check up (which I passed with flying colours) and then see a doctor. The doctor prescribed me 16 more weeks of malaria tablets (half for Jill) and we paid which was a quarter of the price we paid in Australia including he cost fo the check-up. We now did a bit of shopping and maybe got a little carried away, with new trainers each and 3 pairs of trousers etc.
A Typical Bangkok Street
Jill At The Night Market
The Night Market
Me At The Night Market
We had some dinner at the night market and then headed back to the hotel for an early night.

Thursday, March 06, 2008

Day 1002 – Bangkok, Thailand

Day 1002 – 5th March 2008 +7:00 GMT

Got the now usual pastries and fruit from the hotel bakery and then made our way to the end of the sky train line and caught a boat up the river to The GrandPalace.



Shrine At Our Hotel


Wiring ?



No Safety Harness


Riverside Apartments

Outside is full of people who say they are volunteers for the palace and tell you it is closed due to a service and to come back after 2:30pm. Then try and get you to take a tuk tuk for 20 baht to allt he temples, which ends up costing several hundred baht and they take you to Gem warehouses etc and try to get you to buy stuff you don’t want. Anyway since reading about these guys we turned them down and headed into the palace. You have to wear long trousers and you should have upto your elbows covered. The palace cost 250 baht each and is amazing to see it a massive area filled with various buildings mostly painted or covered in gold with many mosaic patterns on the walls. In the centre is a temple where you must take off your shoes and when you enter there is an altar and it is full of gold with a Buddha sitting on the top.


Me Outside The Grand Palace


The Grand Palace



The Grand Palace


The Grand Palace


The Grand Palace


The Grand Palace


The Grand Palace


The Grand Palace


The Grand Palace


The Grand Palace


The Grand Palace


Flowers At The Grand Palace


The Grand Palace


The Grand Palace


The Grand Palace


The Grand Palace


The Grand Palace


The Grand Palace


The Grand Palace


The Grand Palace


The Grand Palace

We spent a couple of hours wandering around the palace and just as we were leaving a load of guards marched in.


Guards At The Grand Palace


Guards At The Grand Palace

We then went back to the docks and had some food then headed back to the hotel for a siesta. We headed out again around 6:30pm and went to the night market. This is an area which from around 7pm has hundreds of market stalls selling clothes, Pirated DVD’s and Thai crafts. The area is famous for the Thai Ladyboys which line the streets and had many popular bars. We had a few drinks and wandered the market for a few hours and then returned to the hotel to watch a movie.

Jill At The Mango Tree


Night In Bangkok
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