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View Full Version : 80% happy together тАж (recent journey notes)



Smiles
November 10th, 2009, 14:07
http://www.sawatdee-gay-thailand.com/forum/gallery/image.php?album_id=51&image_id=3109

Wong Kar WaiтАЩs movie 'Happy Together' (photo above) is one of my all time favourite gay films. The title is more than mildly ironic, because of course the two Chinese guys who's story the film relates are often anything but happy.
But the movie is mesmerising on many levels: melancholy, dark, tender, edgy, funny, wonderful and quirky cinematography.
It tells the story of two lovers who travel to Argentina together. They love, fight (mostly fight) and break up and get back together continually. But more than anything they try to find their way to the giant Iguazu Waterfall. The journey tinges the entire story, there are false starts after false starts, and, in the end, one makes it there, the other doesn't.

SUKHOTHAI & ENVIRONS: But we had no highfalutin metaphorical waterfalls in mind as we took off down the road about 10 days ago to arrive at Sukhothai in time for the big Loy Kratong celebration held there every year. Our Iguazu ended up being the very Roof of Thailand, on top of itтАЩs highest point, Doi Inthanon, where we ended up searching desperately for A View.




Usually we save a few bucks by staying in bargain Thai hotels along the way ~ for instance, 400 baht a night including pool and breakfast in Lopburi ~ but an unusual splurge of a kind had come to mind a few months before (for I knew full well that Sukhothai would be jam packed with folks looking for a room) and we ended up at the quite lovely and supremely peaceful Ananda Museum Hotel just on the outskirts of Sukhothai. (The hotel gets it's name from the little Museum on the grounds which in fact turned out to be a quiet pleasure after we finished breakfast one morning and walked across the grass to look inside. Well worth a visit if youтАЩre in town).


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We entered into a huge room with a splendiferously sexy shower, a king size bed huge and inviting, covered in a silk throw the colour of an emerald green field of ready-to-cut rice, and a very trendy bare concrete floor which Mr Suphot declared "kind of cheap" ... having completely missed the whole Soho loft thing.
But the sweet extras made up for the floor, and the views from one long hall through the forever-open door through the opposite end were quite luxurious, kinda Muslimy, kinda Buddhisty.
Breakfast is the old staple Thai buffet, but this one was elegant, varied, and ~ for once ~ piping hot. Served al fresco in a greeny covered courtyard butted up against a number of rice paddies which were in the process of being harvested. ( Highly recommended: http://www.ananda-hotel.com/ )


That evening we took the car and traveled down the road and outside the town about six kilometers to the huge Sukhothai Historical Park. WeтАЩd been once before but never during Loy Kratong. Previously we were lucky enough to have the place quite to ourselves, this time no such luck: about 250,000+ Thais & Tourists purposely got in the way of my attempts at photography every fucking time.
Luckily, the temperature was close to perfect ~ one is getting close to the north of Thailand at the point on the map where Sukhothai sits and the coolness at 4PM was a luxurious pleasure in this crowded park ~ and this good fortune served me well as the lack of heat exhaustion transformed many a natural annoyance into тАШmai bpen raiтАЩ moments.

The Great Parade had started as we entered the gates and I managed to shove a meaty arm with a camera attached to the end through the throng to click on a couple of handsome young men (just for you guys!) moments before that fat cop in the background walked up to me and told me to quit being such a goddamn pervert or IтАЩd end up in his calaboose for the rest of the evening.


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So I focused on the more innocuous flashes for the rest of the night, which it turned out, was not so bad: Love the look on this chickтАЩs face: Is it a tender but unrequited love (for the guy behind?). Is it an aching disdain for the sweaty farangs pushing to get closer and closer to her, splattering her in dripping perspirations? Is it a final utter letdown at this, the тАШReal ThingтАЩ, after the last six weeks of practicing in that dusty parking lot with all those horny young Thai school boys in those ridiculous costumes trying to get in her pants?

And the King? He doesnтАЩt care, up there on his throne, above it all: тАЬ тАж just another bloody Loy Kratong in the middle of the boonies and really all I want to do is get moving to Bangkok tomorrow and make some real money working at Future Boys on Soi Twilight тАж тАЬ


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But as I said, the more innocuous shots were not too bad after all, and this delicious sunset was helped out by all the dust and smoke in the air, which always manages to turn a shot useles due to the blazing sun shining through a clean atmosphere straight into the lens, completely screwing things up.
Here however, the air pollution worked its wonders and I managed to capture a pinky hue in the sky which turns the ruins and statues into a sublimity which could not be attained otherwise.
Fields indiscriminately ablaze in the surrounding countryside are not always a bad thing.


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But cynicism aside, Loy Kratong at Sukhothai is in fact mostly a great pleasure and I would heartily recommend it to everyone at least once. The soccer crowds are usually difficult for me тАж a guy who has a certain, er, тАЩtroubleтАЩ in an elevator with more than three other passengers; who prays to any God whoтАЩll listen for the pleasure of an empty seat beside me on buses and planes; who prefers a dark, mostly empty, bar for a daily contemplative moment, rather than the company of loudmouth drunken expats; who doesn't care to hang it out in front of other guys in trough toilets.

But this place ~ and this time ~ was different. The madding hoards were peacefully and quietly on the move, happy to pitch their mats and picnic with the family on the grassy banks of the park lakes. This time, instead of the bumpy and intrusive claustrophobia of an Isaan music concert, or rush hour on the Skytrain, or a stroll on Silom Rd at midnight, we were met with a smooth flow of a civilized humanity тАж smoothed even more so from the ban on liquor of any kind within the park being enforced strictly.

Looking out across the lake just before sunset, the little lights and shiny things reflect graciously into the water as Thais wait for the night dark to drift over the lake and the time for unleashing the kratongs was almost upon them.


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As the photo below shows, quiet spaces can be found all over the park even during this spectacular and crowded celebration. Sukhothai Historical Park is huge, and in fact only a very small corner of it is taken over by the Mob. Wander off into the trees and old chedis and one easily finds peace around the corner: Mr Suphot prefers to shop around in the eating stalls and tourist traps . . . . I headed off into the bowels of the place to sit under a quiet tree and attain enlightenment.


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How could we not take in The Show while we were there?
My nature in Thailand is normally to shy away from these extravaganzas тАж mostly from long experience that the hype and advertising in Thailand rarely match the end fabulousness. But curmudgeonly plunking down 500 baht apiece for the Sukhothai Light & Music Show seemed like something I could not avoid this time, so serious was His Majesty that we had better bloody well go or my life (or dead body) would be worth perhaps only a few satang at the secret Chinese market in Bangkok which deals in such exotica.

But, it was worth it. Ninety minutes of showmanship later I was somewhat awed by the exuberance and quality of the undertaking. The background was not a set piece but the huge old wats an chedis of the park itself: that big bugger in the middle of the photos below probably never had it so good, even 800 years ago.

Everything was golden at one moment, blue at another, lit by laser light a few minutes later . . . the King stood 8 feet high bathed in a white light . . . the battles were noisy and thunderous with cannon shot and handsome half naked young soldiers clashed in the foreground, saving, losing, then re-saving Sukhothai from those sons-of-bitches the Burmese in numerous battles the names of which elude me but I think I remember the gist of it all from Bang Rashan.

The dancers danced тАж slowly and beautifully drifting to the center to the gentle strains of Lanna music: it took 15 minutes to get everyone there ~ all slow-dancing toward the middle ~ for the Great Finale. But it was worth it, and the whole kit and kaboodle was really quite, in a good way, hugely overdone and, in a good way, wildly spectacular, and, in the right way, heartfully satisfying.


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Did you think kratongs were only launched on the water? Not on your life. These fat paper puppies (with their own fiery power source) also went skyward, the result quite beautiful. In true trainwreck Thai-style all could not be perfect however: one of these babies drifted peacefully across the lake toward us, the watching and generally delighted audience at 500 baht a pop, when it decided to pull a Hindenburg.
For some technical reason, the details of which I do not know, this one (quite large) flying kratong broke apart in mid air directly over he seated crowd below (at 500 baht a German fraulein), and crashed blindly downwards and landed directly on the head of some farang (naturally) seated only four meters away from us. A minor pandemonium broke out around this unfortunate тАж everyone in the vicinity slapping him on the head and shoulders тАж Thai seating staff rushing in all directions at once тАж(lawyers taking feverish notes for future reference) тАжfarangs just outside the Danger Zone screaming.
But all seemed well after a few minutes, no ambulances arrived, and the audience returned to watching the finale and it assumed that The Unfortunate was probably OK but perhaps only minus some unimportant pieces of hair тАж or hair piece.


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THE FOLLOWING DAY: But like the to guys in the movie, conjugal bliss is sometimes difficult to attain 100% of the time. The last half hour at our night at Loy Kratong was not a happy one тАж a small number of annoying things added up over a small time, and became a Goliath of angst.

Neither of us are perfect human beings by a long shot, and the Goliath conspired to make the end of a quite charming evening not a happy affair. We didnтАЩt talk, went to bed annoyed, continued in this manner through breakfast, then carried it on, childlike, during an already planned side trip to another ancient site (Si Satchanalai), just north of Sukothai about 40 miles or so.

It turned out that, in spite of the bad moods, this magical place was arrived at in the perfect time of the afternoon for picture taking.
IтАЩve always advised new visitors to Thailand to do their touristy тАШvisitingsтАЩ (temples, waterfalls, ancient ruins etc etc) as early in the morning or as late in the afternoon as is possible. This plan of attack produces twin benefits: escape from the midday sun and heat, and a very nice low light-and-shadow ambiance in which to take pictures.

So came about that we arrived at this place at four in the afternoon, and probably due to that these photos came out better than they might have if taken earlier.

This was a quite large and wonderfully manicured park which probably deserves more visitors. A mini Sukhothai or Ayuttaya, but without a soul in attendance besides a renovation/cleaning crew of local village ladies.


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I like the eerie misty ethereal quality of these photos


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These gals were taking up a storm together and Pot could not help but laugh, and tell me one lady was gossiping to the others about her daughter who had taken up with a Thai man who she thought was rich, but whom the mother knew for sure wasnтАЩt and that the daughter was being taken for a fool and yada yada yada тАж.


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I looked up (after climbing an interminable set of stairs up a hill into the dark heart of the jungle) and Buddha once again quietly smiles at me for being childish in our relationship and tells me in no uncertain words to get my shit together and get things patched between Pot and me so that this argument does not colour the whole rest of the trip in darkling blacks and grays and whites. тАЬYou dummy!тАЭ he whispered in that annoyingly quiet way of his.


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THE NEXT DAY: We arrived at the bottom of Doi Inthanon both in much better moods after a bit of lunch where we spent quite a long time explaining each otherтАЩs interpretation of The Problem.
This catharsis was ~ as is often the case ~ reasonably successful (with the inevitable dregs and small strings hanging around until Next Time), and during the long drive up to the Roof of The Kingdom we joked about higher and more important things like тАШnuance misunderstandingsтАЩ and тАШlanguage difficultiesтАЩ and тАШfarang/Thai body languageтАЩ and тАШhypersensitivity-on-my-partтАЩ and тАШno-sensibility-whatsoever-on-his-partтАЩ. We were after all on the grand search ~ our quest ~ for The View and would try our best not be ambushed by foolish arguments and angers and assorted human deficiencies тАж the end game here was far more important.

After what seemed like a very long and slow ascent тАж past a growing heavy jungly rain foresty surrounding тАж through various misty parts which were in fact full-bore low clouds тАж through climate zones which determined that aircon was no longer needed тАж through the point where I changed into a wind breaker and from shorts to long pants in the car (the aforementioned argument guaranteed him a free grope during the disrobing).

The summit appeared just before us. The car park loomed like victory. The walk in the cold and biting wind toward The Goal seemed as triumph.

Until we realized there was no summit!

Well, technically there is a summit because great mountains always end тАШsomewhereтАЩ.
But this one was so anticlimactic, so clothed in nothingness that I was almost oddly exhilarated that I had finally been slapped hard across the face, Zen-like, by the full meaning of the BuddhaтАЩs great observation that life is nothing but suffering тАж that that is all there is.

We walked around the top ~ my mood slowly enveloping a plodding sadness ~ searching for the true summit, the place where we could see all of Thailand in one grand sweeping view. All we found at the top was a TAT welcome to The Highest Point in Thailand, a small coffee shop with freezing Thai and farang tourists warming their hands with atrociously bad coffee (in my hand as well I should add), and a very new and brilliantly clean toilet.

The farangs huddled at the coffee shop were all looking around wondering where in hell the summit (i.e. тАШthe viewтАЩ) was тАж the Thais huddling in a similar manner, but seemed to be mainly concerned that there was no food stands around. Suphot did himself no favours by observing nonchalantly that тАЬ тАж Thai people come to Inthanon to see the cold, not so much to see the view тАж тАЬ


Below notice the morose ~ deeply gray ~ shots of the two of us at the Top of Thailand. Big frigginтАЩ deal.
The flowers in PotтАЩs hand were for a sacred statue in the rainforest just along side this little so-called тАШlookout pointтАЩ. I just felt like ~ deeply ~ taking a good long piss.


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The two shots below are the best view available on the very top of Doi Inthanon, taken by squeezing between the tiny space of two concrete buildings, those being the coffee shop and the 'wrong side' of the (mostly spotless) hong nam.


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So we headed down the mountain again, demoralized and under the mundane realization that the best thing accomplished this day was the patching over of an argument.

But nothing is ever what it seems at the most lowly of moments (said the damn Buddha). It just so happened that, earlier while we were driving up the mountain, we had passed by two great chedis about half a kilometer before the summit. At the time they had looked rather compelling, but we were already in a bit of a hurry to reach Chiang Mai before five PM, thus we gave them a pass by in order to get to the summit and the Great View.

So as we descended we came upon these two chedis again, and Suphot asked if I IтАЩd like to go there before leaving.
At that point, already feeling defeated, I said тАЬwhateverтАЭ and we turned in and drove up a small incline the parking area. It had hardly looked like much from the road below, but once weтАЩd parked and walked up the very long staircase to the chedi (#1) we realized that these two structures were in fact quite huge.

At the top Suphot walked inside, but I stayed outside and walked around the chediтАЩs marble balcony as down and out as Capt. Ahab pacing back and forth on his dank and damp decks, knowing he's missed his Great Whale one more time.

And what did I see, you ask?

Incredulous, I stood there looking out over all of The Kingdom. I could see all of Thailand.



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I ran inside to get Suphot and brought him out into a cold and blustery epiphany. (The reason why he had been so interested in the inside of the Chedi was not to get out of the cold, but to look at the floor! Apparently, some 15 years before, his older brother Tuan Tong had worked on construction at this very chedi and in fact had made the floor).

We stared out over this place ~ this Great View ~ for another half hour or so, then departed тАж quietly happy, elated even, to have found our Iguazu.



I very much remember one of the sad ending lines from тАШHappy TogetherтАЩ: The Tony Leung character in the movie had finally made it to Iguazu Waterfall just before he left Argentina for his home in Hong Kong. As he stood on the view station almost underneath the crashing waters he became saturated by the mist of the falls, and the voice-over said (something like) this: тАЬ тАж I had found the waterfall, but I did not feel right. It felt like there should have been the two of us there тАж тАЬ

And so there was ... but this was no movie.

Sen Yai
November 10th, 2009, 14:27
Thanks for this nicely crafted essay. Very enjoyable.

And I am pleased to note that, no matter how cold it was on top of Doi Inthanon, you didn't resort to slipping on socks with your sandals.

Brad the Impala
November 10th, 2009, 15:27
What a great read!

fedssocr
November 10th, 2009, 21:15
I was in Sukhothai as well. Maybe we saw each other.

We stayed at the Tharaburi Resort. I love the way the Thais throw the word "resort" around to conjure up something in your mind completely different from what is actually on offer. But the location was great, very near to the historical park. The crowds were enormous for sure. There seems to be an overabundance of teenage boys in this part of the country...and they all wear "Playboy" jackets. My guide mentioned that Loy Krathong is like prom night...it's the night you are supposed to lose your virginity. So there were certainly plenty of hormones in the air. But I thought it was incredibly hot there the whole time. Especially for the parade on 2 November it was hot, especially in the sun.

I am usually not one for those big show extravaganzas either but I was pretty impressed by the whole light and sound thing. Too bad our seats were pretty far from the stage, but I still got a lot of great photos.

We happened to also visit Phitsanulok in the days before heading to Sukhothai. So we were there for their Loy Krathong as well. The whole city is lit up with gorgeous spinning and colored lights. Lots of great photo ops there. The festival and show there is much smaller. There are some good national parks in the area that are worth a visit. Our driver was channeling Michael Schumacher up and down the windy mountain roads which was a little scary.

I think if people are looking for a good cultural excursion Loy Krathong in this part of the country is definitely worth doing.

joe552
November 10th, 2009, 23:11
Thanks for sharing this, Smiles. A great read and good photos.

neddy3
November 11th, 2009, 04:14
Thank you, Smiles.

Another very enjoyable read. You're a deft hand at these travel stories. :hello2:

bao-bao
November 11th, 2009, 04:53
Thanks for sharing that story! I hope you took the Ang-Ka "jungle" trail walk while you were up at Doi Inthanon. I enjoyed that a lot and got quite a number of good pictures. My Thai friend was cold - wearing three layers (including a hooded sweatshirt). "Cool" and "forest-like" aren't words I'd usually use to describe Thailand. Some of this trail looked a bit like Northern California.

http://i192.photobucket.com/albums/z56/khunbaobao/W-JungleTrail.jpg

The Napamaytanidol (spelling?) chedi *were* really quite nice, and I agree about the views. The wind was picking up so we didn't stay there too long.

November 11th, 2009, 06:57
As an avid birder, Doi Inthanon National Park was a must see.

Near the summit, on the main road to Doi Inthanon, stand the two Napamaytanidol Chedi. These temples were built to honor the 60th birthday of the King and Queen in 1987 and 1992 respectively. They are located at 2145 m. above sea level and along side the road that leads to the summit at 2565 m.

It is chilly up there.

http://photos-c.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-snc1/hs217.snc1/8433_1069531237977_1816999307_137958_3250111_n.jpg

For birders, try this : http://www.thaibirding.com/locations/north/doi_int.htm

There are also waterfalls that offer a decent place to stop and relax. This one, Watchirathan, was strong enough to throw up a full mist that day.

http://www.sbayura.com/images/stories/attractions/chiang-mai/intanon/namtok-wachirathan/namtok-wachirathan_004.jpg

TrongpaiExpat
November 11th, 2009, 10:31
They are located at 2145 m. above sea level and along side the road that leads to the summit at 2565 m.


Nice of your to measure the altitude but did you count the steps to those chedis? Many of the farangs that visit Thailand would be unable to make the climb in the thin air. Smokers at the top look as if they are about to die if they make it.

Nice post Smiles, I have to put Sukhothai during Loy kratong on my to-do list.

I have been up there a few times but never really spent much time there other than the main historical park. but at the last Bangkok Travel fair I bought a few nights at The Sukhothai Heritage Resort. I'm planing on exploring the Si Satchanalai National Park and the near-by Historical Park. If there's time I might also get over to the Ramkhamheang National Park. Anyone been to either of these National parks and can recommend which is better?

Smiles
November 11th, 2009, 10:57
" ... Nice of your to measure the altitude but did you count the steps to those chedis? Many of the farangs that visit Thailand would be unable to make the climb in the thin air. Smokers at the top look as if they are about to die if they make it ... "
LOL ... My dear old decrepit friend Trongpai: The two chedis at Napamaytanidol (thanks for the actual name Ken Jung, I'd forgotten it by the time I wrote the original post) have escalators as well as the usual staircase. Visitors can puff away on the journey upward.

The 4 or 5 photos in the middle of the big post above (right after the Sukhothai show pics) were taken at Si Satchanalai National Park. It's as beautiful as you'll find, but cannot compare to Ramkhamheang as I've not been there.

Alaan
November 11th, 2009, 18:34
Smiles thanks for the interesting story. I have never been able to time a visit to Thailand for Loy Krathong in my decade of visiting.
But my, now faen, wants me to try and make it next year.....but i see it is on Nov 26th........late in the month as opposed to 2nd of Nov this year....would this be correct?

Also i would urge anyone heading north towards the Chiang Mai area by car to consider taking time to visit Sukothai on the way at any time of year (although i will point out that it is still some distance to Chiang Mai about 300km north...Phitsanulok is about 40km to the south of Sukothai). In June this year we decided to drive from Khon Kaen to Chiang Mai and stop here and there on the way. My faen particularly wanted to visit the Wat Si Chum in Sukothai historical park, so we stopped for an afternoon...and enjoyed it so much decided to stay overnight.... we found a lovely guesthouse beside the park for bt400 with all amenities and got up early next morning and had the area beside Wat Si Chum and the beautiful Wat Phra Phai Luang on grass surrounded by a lovely lake all to ourselves, it really is a serene and quiet area outwith the busy times and weekends.......

Plenty of info in English as well as Thai....good maps of the historical park available. It is not a huge town and so quite easy to get around...the historical Park is very large and it is a case of picking the Wats you particularly want to visit or your Thai friend wants to visit......it was also nice just to drive around and stop here and there....especially in the morning when it is very quiet......well it was in June.

I wish i could remember the name of the guesthouse we stayed in.......it was lovely...old fashioned Thai style wooden reception area and rooms....and there was a communal area in the yard for sitting around but used mainly for taking breakfast...where we met 4 young Australian girls and another party of 3 american guys.....with whom we got on really well and no raised eyebrows or strange looks for this gay 'mature' farang with his 21 year old Thai faen.....only asking how long we had been together and chatting about our mutual enjoyment of music.....it turns out they were in rooms close to ours and heard our Green Day cds playing..... Even if they had been the types with an 'attitude' it wouldn't have bothered me....i'm way past the stage of being concerned at others attitudes anyway....but it was nice to be accepted as just another pair of travellers rather than having judgemental straights showing their 'disapproval'........all that just to say the guesthouse had an easy going atmosphere.

Thanks again for evoking the memories of the two days we spent there.....and also to Ken Jung and Bao Bao for recommending Doi Inthanon National Park.......we are due another drive around when i visit in January...i hope we can include it in our travels then. Incidentally for those who like me, who do drive around Thailand by car, the roads from Phitsanulok through to Chiang Mai were the only roads i have travelled on and not seen any police or police stops.

fedssocr
November 11th, 2009, 20:34
The word we got was that Ramkamhaeng Nat'l Park wasn't really that great so we skipped it.

We did visit Thung Salaeng Luang National Park which is east of Phitsanulok. If you don't mind trekking it is fairly interesting and has some terrain I have not seen elsewhere. It was the communist stronghold during the 70s/80s and many battles were fought between the rebels and government troops. There are the remnants of the communist camps around the park. There are some waterfalls including one that is supposed to be really great. But it is an 8 hour hike from the nearest road point. So you would need to camp in order to see it. There are great views over the valley below from the relatively easy 2 hours or so circuit that takes you around one portion of the park. There are these interesting nodule rock formations that apparently formed a loooooong time ago when the supposition is that the are was under the sea. It was hot in the sun but nice in the shade. I thought it was worth the day trip.

Ron-Heng Vancouver
November 12th, 2009, 07:11
David... many thanks for this wonderful story and photos.... Ben and I loved this very much.

You're an excellent writer as well as a kind man.

By the way, did that policeman really threaten you and become unhappy that you were photographing those Thai men? If so, scary...

Thanks again.

Smiles
November 12th, 2009, 08:13
" ... I have never been able to time a visit to Thailand for Loy Krathong in my decade of visiting. But my, now faen, wants me to try and make it next year.....but i see it is on Nov 26th........late in the month as opposed to 2nd of Nov this year....would this be correct? ... "Loy Kratong is always on the day/night of the November full moon, so it moves with that

" ... By the way, did that policeman really threaten you and become unhappy that you were photographing those Thai men? If so, scary ... "Dramatic licence. Don't be scared.

November 12th, 2009, 12:51
LOL ... My dear old decrepit friend Trongpai:

I hope that's a tongue in cheek remark. If you have ever met Trongpai, you would know he is far from that.