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Smiles
November 11th, 2013, 12:20
Part 1 ~ Inheritance the Hard Way

We took off down the highway in mid-October with renovations in mind. How romantic is that?

About a year before, the ongoing тАШDownfall of Tuan TongтАЩ was becoming severe and precarious: ┬аbut worst of all, inevitable, predictable and fraught with melodrama, regrets and much gnashing of teeth. But yer makes yer own bed in this cruel life and Tuan Tong had folded back the sheets on his many years ago.

Tuan Tong is SuphotтАЩs (my partner) oldest brother, and in fact the oldest male in a household of ten тАж seven sisters and three brothers.
The father of this large brood of тАШThakoengsuksтАЩ died about three years ago and before the body was cold (or so it seemed), Tuan Tong, the oldest male and therefore the newly-crowned and self-proclaimed King/Patriarch of the family began his long and determined theft of everything his father had owned, including the family home (the very same house in the photos below)
The mother, still alive and healthy, received nothing. The two had parted company about three years before, her alone for a year and then a new boyfriend, he to his whiskey his cigarettes and his lung cancer.┬а┬а
He died in hospital of no-breath-left, without a will, but only with the spoken word as to who gets what. And even then the spoken words were few and far between. This informal end to 'everything' is very common in the north eastern land of rice paddies and cassava fields and gossip and village life.

So Tuan Tong brandished his new title, marched up to family members, and told them exactly what they were getting: which was essentially nothing.
He was taking it all.

Suphot's younger brother Suban, although having taken his dying father into his house and looking after him for some years, and apparently promised (by 'The Spoken') a few rai of land lost it to Tuan Tong. A sister didn't get a rai promised. And more ...

But underneath the pillage was a man in trouble ... in fact that was the main reason for his, shall we say, transference of assets.
Tuan Tong over the years had acquired a very large land holding: 5 rai here on the family plots, 10 rai over there in Buriram, a few rai in adjoining Si Saket, 6 more rai in the village, 20 rai in Nakhon Sawan. He owned a very large home ... the тАЬlargest and finest in Nang MutтАЭ (the family village), and he was prone to bragging. He was known to walk around the the village showing other folk there the 100,000 baht he had in his wallet ~ a fat one it was indeed. He wheeled and dealed in the village as a small-money loan shark ~ 1000 baht here to Somchai to rent a tractor, 500 baht there for Nut to take the bus to Groong Thep, 2000 baht for Tam to buy fertilizer, and on and on at 10%.
But his slow-moving downfall was mostly caused by one very specific and debilitating vice: Tuan Tong was addicted to gambling.
Not small gambling mind you ... big money gambling. He gambled a million baht once on the toss of a dice (lost). He gambled large amounts on his cocks (Won often I heard). He could drive to the Casino right across the border in Cambodia with his eyes closed (Lost. A lot).
He started selling land and other assets to gamble . . . or to pay back gambling debts.

Cut quickly to one year ago: Sometime in early 2012 Tuan Tong phoned Suphot and asked him whether he'd like to buy the family house.
A rai of land with a pond, and a house in dire need of renovation, he'd sell it to his baby brother for 200,000 baht (at that time about six thousand Canadian dollars). When Pot hung up the phone and told me about the offer, I thought about it for five minutes: тАЬTake it! Take it now before he changes his mind!!тАЭ

And as Suphot (The Buyer) well knew, this offer was far too cheap a deal for a 'regular' sale, and Tuan Tong (The Seller) was obviously in deep money trouble: the Perfect Storm for a predator buyer . . . and my old man certainly has the odd predator moment. (We calculated that at that price the holding would almost immediately be worth close to three quarters of a million baht even without plucking a single weed, or filling in a few cracks. Much less a wholesale reno).

And that is why we were driving down the highway from Hua Hin to Nang Mut in such good moods. We were off to claim the newly-acquired piece of Thailand.

Everyone in the family was happy that the home was staying in-the-family.
Every one of them ~ especially Mama ~ were well pleased at how things had worked out.
Every one of them secretly relished Tuan Tong's decline: he had treated many of them very badly over the last few years ... he'd lost his face in their eyes, he'd lost their respect. They feared him but they didn't particularly like him, or at least the way he had done business.


Part 2 ~ Blue printing inheritances


Although the ride started off as calmly as driving Miss Daisy, we eventually had to deal with the semi-notorious Thai floods of 2013 (minor really, compared to 2011 which we had also tackled). Barreling through Sa Kaeo Province ~ one of the most beautiful Thai farming provinces in October ~ was a festival of green and luscious marketable fauna on both sides of the road, all standing straight and proud ... one learns far more than one expects to sitting beside the accomplished farmer which Suphot is. Eucalyptus trees everywhere, rubber planations, cassava groves as far as the eye can see, fruit farms of every kind, banana trees with leaves touching the ground, sugar cane dense and sharp (like sharpened knives, they are) ... Sa Kaeo has it all, and beauty to match. The Thais who own land here take care of the 'look' as well as the crop and the homes along the roads here can be very 'new middle class', with garages and great porches, wild colour concepts, and lawns with garden gnomes.
And so far ~ except for small parts of Chachoengsao ~ deep sitting water was hidden away somewhere.

Not so in the next province, Buriram. The road ahead seemed to shimmer strangely in the sunshine as we approached, and soon we could see why.
The road disappeared and become simply part of a deep, heavy and fierce rush of water from the left ~ from what was once a placid lake ~ to the right, which was once low lying rice paddies.
I was the passenger here, and it looked disturbing, entering this deluge, feeling the strength of the water movement from one side to the other. One could just make out the faint yellow line of the lane divider in the middle of the road, our one and only guide except for the traffic ahead of us, none of whom had yet ended up in either lake. So follow them!
Needless to say, I was barely amused ... but kept quiet. We survived.


http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v18/sawatdeephotos/Message%20board%20posts/On%20the%20road_2013/reduced13_zps8a0be082.jpg


And made it to the castle. Finally.
This is the home we purchased. Suphot put a much-needed new roof on the place last summer while I was back in Canada, and had cut down the surrounding foliage around the house. It had been sitting abandoned and becoming more and more jungalized over the last two years.
A new well had to be excavated, the old original well now on one of his sister's property. So those two parts of the renovation had happened before I had had a chance to put eyes on the place.

This is the front wall of the place and there will eventually be a three meter wide cement and tiled veranda along the entire length.
The open room beside the car port used to be the original kitchen, and will now be walled up and will become the master bedroom.
The small porch on the other end where Suphot is standing will also be walled in, to end up as the kitchen.

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v18/sawatdeephotos/Message%20board%20posts/On%20the%20road_2013/Reduced2_zpsd03bd8e3.jpg


Mr Suphot with his beloved money printing machine: the income from which he obtains the means to participate heavily in the costs of buying and renovating his new home.
Gives me a fiduciary break as well ... for which I am grateful and feeling just as lovey-dovey towards the well put-upon Toyota Vigo as he.


http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v18/sawatdeephotos/Message%20board%20posts/On%20the%20road_2013/Reduced3_zps4cd5f786.jpg


The old dirt road in front of the house took a beating this autumn as the southern parts of Isaan were hit heavily by rains after rains. The local officials order up graders and heavy trucks to help out with this, but the workings are slow and they often react only to Thai folks phoning them up with dramatic complaints and crying and tearing out of hair. This works (as everyone knows it will) and the roads become usable one more time.
Until next year that is, when the phones start ringing all over again. It's the Thai Way.


http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v18/sawatdeephotos/Message%20board%20posts/On%20the%20road_2013/Reduced5_zpse93d765c.jpg


This is the back wall of the house. I stood on Pot's sister's property to take this, and the property line is actually only about 2 meters from the back wall. Not much you can do in that small a space, so the main water lines from the well will run along this side, with a line of planted (and speedy growers they are) bamboo trees.
All the windows will be replaced with modern sliding screened ones.

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v18/sawatdeephotos/Message%20board%20posts/On%20the%20road_2013/reduced16_zps989086df.jpg


This is the view looking from Pot's property towards that dirt road in the front, with the neighbour's home across the road also being renovated, a part of which includes a new fancy stone wall along the road face.
That place belongs to Pot's younger brother's in-laws (their daughter being Suban's wife), and I remember seeing their home many times over the years unkempt, very poor, half falling down. But here, this year, a new home has been raised: just one more small example of the Thai countryside being modernized and becoming richer ... in small steps for sure, but gradually rising up. This is a decidedly Good Thing for Thailand in general.


┬аhttp://img.photobucket.com/albums/v18/sawatdeephotos/Message%20board%20posts/On%20the%20road_2013/reduced15_zps1d59b6cc.jpg


As we were inspecting and planning and walking around and inside our new house, we heard some banging and crashing and raised voices coming from the road outside, just up aways.
So here, totally coincidently, I introduce to you Suphot's younger brother Suban. That's him with his ass pointing at you ... a rather nice one I must say.
He's a bit of a workhorse, a bit of a laze-about, a bit of a gambler, not much of a drinker but likes weed, an excellent father of a boy and girl, and a really sweet guy. We get along like houses on fire ... always a good thing with one's old man's family.
He's been sorely ripped off by his older brother (as explained above) but he seems to hold little anger (unlike Suphot, who is very angry with how things have turned out, and hurt his family).
Suban will never leave the farm. He cannot read nor write well. Unlike Suohot, he was taken out of school very early by his father and never looked back. Farming is it for him: unless things change of course ... (with Thais, you never know for sure.).

But anyway ... this time he's cutting logs up from a tree just felled. Piling them into the truck. Taking them who-knows-where for baht.


http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v18/sawatdeephotos/Message%20board%20posts/On%20the%20road_2013/reduced11_zps4425627d.jpg

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v18/sawatdeephotos/Message%20board%20posts/On%20the%20road_2013/Reduced6_zps0e52a69e.jpg


This is a shot taken looking out on the back yard. Pot planted some banana trees about six months ago and they've grown great guns and so far one of them has already produced one bunch. These trees were presented to Suphot by his mother who seems to plant her own banana tress on every inch of property she is able to. Obviously banana tress are more than fruit to her, and I suspect that worshiping that good old Thai favourite spiritual/mercenary human attribute, i.e. 'Good Luck' has got a lot to do with it. Also, Suphot is much loved by Mama.

There is a small plot of cassava there as well, newly planted.
In the background you can just see a portion of the pond, the back side of which is the back property line.


http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v18/sawatdeephotos/Message%20board%20posts/On%20the%20road_2013/Reduced4_zps4582934e.jpg


A larger shot of the pond.
There is lots of worked needed to clean things up on this property ... certainly one being around the edges of the pond. It will be very low ~ possibly even empty ~ by mid April, but then it will start to fill up again in July when the monsoons start again.


http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v18/sawatdeephotos/Message%20board%20posts/On%20the%20road_2013/Reduced9_zps5bcfe342.jpg


Another shot looking out across one of the neighbour's property.


http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v18/sawatdeephotos/Message%20board%20posts/On%20the%20road_2013/reduced10_zps9035d2ef.jpg


And last but not least: our newly purchased Death Mobile.
I've been humming and haaaing over whether we should buy a motorbike for a number of years now, but we got an excellent price on this new 110cc Suzuki. Just as a Honda is a 'Wave', a Suzuki is a 'Smash'. Now isn't that just a fine name ... a couple of different letters and would be even better ~ not to mention ironic ~ i.e. a 'Crash'.

But whatever, saving 4000 baht by simply just purchasing it out in the boonies sounded good to me, so I sat around and downed four or five beers ... and bought it! I'd always hoped that, in retirement, I'd make 'spontaneous' my middle name. (Better than 'drunk' I suppose.)


http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v18/sawatdeephotos/Message%20board%20posts/On%20the%20road_2013/Reduced1_zpsfedc9316.jpg

joe552
November 11th, 2013, 16:41
What a fascinating insight into a part of your life there, Smiles. I really enjoyed reading it. Thanks for sharing.

anonone
November 11th, 2013, 17:11
Agree. A great read...well written and insightful.

And I have to agree...Smash is a great name for a little motorbike.

Thanks for posting !

bao-bao
November 11th, 2013, 21:49
Easily one of my favorite top five posts of the year, Smiles, but I admit a bias toward true stories over re-hashed/re-worded fluff.

I can vouch for the area being quite lush and beautiful, and while the family drama taints the idea a little I'm so glad Suphot ended up with the house. It was looking a bit - ahem - careworn when I was there a handful of years ago on my journey into Isaan with him, but there were more pressing things to be done at the time. Wonders have been done with the exterior and grounds around it since then.

Tong's unfortunate habits aside he was a gracious host, and every one of the family I met leads me to believe you've been very lucky to have been taken into their circle. Please let Suphot know his father is still on my "remembrance" list when I'm doing my morning routine.

bkkmfj2648
November 12th, 2013, 02:32
Hello Smiles,

This is a great story - it is truly insightful into how rural life in LOS functions. ;)

It also proves the point that it can only be done with special Thai friends.

Wishing you and your partner all the best of luck. :-*

Martin

latintopxxx
November 12th, 2013, 05:24
the whole thing sounds like a real nightmare...you must really love your other half to put u with all this nonsense.

GWMinUS
November 12th, 2013, 06:37
Suphot is definitely someone to LOVE.
I did a great trip though southern Isaan several years ago.
And he was wonderful guide and a HOT man!!!
;-)
But in difference to Smiles, I just enjoyed my bed with a Thai friend who could cut fruit into beautiful flowers and my old ass into something else!!!
I am glad things have worked out for Suphot!!
so when do you two move from Hau Hin???
ALL MY BEST
George

Smiles
November 12th, 2013, 07:38
the whole thing sounds like a real nightmare...you must really love your other half to put u with all this nonsense.
I hear you Latin!
If I was getting myself actually involved in this family drama I'd probably have daily migraines by now.
But ... I keep myself out of the squabbles completely: Pot tells me the latest dope for sure and we talk about it and I give some opinions, but just to him. I wouldn't get myself mixed up in this stuff in a million years. The whole family ~ including Tuan Tong ~ seems to like me well enough on some levels, and I want to keep it that way: they are, for the most part, a pretty laid back group.

Luckily we live in Hua Hin, about 300 miles from Ground Zero. He's happy to be here, away from the drama, and so am I.

Tuan Tong has now disappeared somewhere ... hidden away in Bangkok I think, keeping a low profile. So his lack of presence in Nang Mut has calmed the waters considerably and Pot has not had as much as a phone call from him since August.
Tuan Tong actually sucker-punched Pot in the head in that month and the ensuing boxing match ~ the police were involved ~ seemed to have been the straw which broke the family's respect for him.

The 'nonsense' as you call it is simply something-of-interest to me ... a kind of TV soap opera which I watch, comment upon on occasion, have written this post about, but keep myself well away from.


" ... Tong's unfortunate habits aside he was a gracious host, and every one of the family I met leads me to believe you've been very lucky to have been taken into their circle ... "
He is that Bao Bao. I had forgotten that you had met him on that trip of yours.
One night, about a year ago, we arrived at his house rather unannounced. His wife made us dinner (I brought the booze) and we sat around for an hour or two while Tuan Tong gave me ~ in english ~ the entire opening spiel from Amway! He wanted to get Pot involved in it (good luck! I thought to myself) and he tried selling me seven different types of cleaning supplies. (This new career, along with a dozen other Tuan Tong 'life episodes', lasted about 2 months).
He's far from a stupid man ... but he is the quintessential Thai "Player", or as the Thais say it, a master "Sweet Talker".
He just can't stop himself.

PeterUK
November 12th, 2013, 09:31
A most enjoyable read, Smiles. A multi-layered slice of Thai life as it is lived by ordinary folk such as few of we westerners get to experience. Evocative pics too.

Smiles
November 12th, 2013, 13:32
" ... so when do you two move from Hau Hin?? ... "
Nice try George, but no, that's not going to happen.
This house in Surin serves many purposes, but none will see me living there full time. I may not be a BIG city boy, by I'm no country boy either. I like the medium size of Hua Hin, I like the laid back life here, I like the ocean, I like the non hectic gay scene here.
And this place is perfect for Pot's taxi/tour business (and he likes it here as well ... the farmer~full~time life was scratched from his list of desires years ago.)

(1) This house will be for us when we come to Surin. I can easily see living in the countryside for, let's say, a month or so a year.
(2) It will be for him for the 3 or 4 months of the year when his rice and cassava crops need work.
(3) It will be an integral part of his 'future' when I decide to die, and he decides to retire.

adman5000
November 13th, 2013, 04:50
Smiles - Thank you for taking the time to share this story of real life in Thailand. I always enjoy the insights into the life of Thai families but also think what a frustrating life it must be. No wonder there is sometimes a volcano simmering under that mai pen rai outward face. Add to that the drama and the bad habits of family members and I am sure it makes one appreciate a Thai with a decent amount of common sense such as the one you share your time with.

The country area has always seemed a nice place to visit but I would get bored out of my head staying there for any period of time. No wonder they need alcohol and weed. Fortunately I have always visited it with some good Thais and have enjoyed hearing their background stories, seeing the lifestyle and getting introduced to the simple pleasures. Interesting in small does, but I think I would have to be like you and live close to the beach and in a similar place where you have just about anything you need. I don't think I could take some of the personalities in Pattaya, both Thai and Farang. My dream would be some place more in the middle, not a overactive Pattaya, but not a too serene Hua Hin either.

Thanks for the post. B-)

catawampuscat
February 25th, 2014, 12:13
Smiles, thanks for the link. Well written and the photos really help too.

morse
February 26th, 2014, 06:54
I, too, have to jump on the kudos bandwagon, Smiles. It was a great read and interesting photos of the relatively quiet side of life in Thailand. I have often seen those kind of places from a bus window, but never have gotten off the bus. Some years ago I spent a long weekend with the then bf's family in Issan, but was overwhelmed by all the relatives and silent undertow of life in his small town. I couldn't have made the village my home under those conditions. I envy your situation.

Dodger
February 26th, 2014, 17:32
Smiles my friend, it appears that your new life in retirement, coupled with the serenity of Hua Hin, have unleashed your hidden talent for writing. What a great read!

Your story rekindled memories of the house Thep and I built in SiSaket which gave him a great sense of pride and provided us with a place to escape to when we needed a break from the flashing lights in Pattaya. I, for one, love being in the country, especially during holiday periods when there's some sort of celebration going on. I guess my eyes just need that extra visual stimulation (boys) regardless of where I am.

Phot looks great...haven't seen a picture of him in years. Enjoy your new house...transplant a few banana tees to provide some shade, and tell the family that your vehicle has a maximum capacity for carrying no more than 12 passengers.

Cheers

Smiles
February 27th, 2014, 00:55
" ... Phot looks great...haven't seen a picture of him in years ... "
Well Dodger, here's one from 3 or 4 years ago ... probably my all-time favourite. Taken at Baan Krut ... where we were just a week ago enjoying the pristine-ity of our favourite 'fuck-off-all-farangs' reasonably-undiscovered beach.
He's put on a few kilos since then (as have, unfortunately, myself) being a bred-in-the-bone aficionado of the most important (bar none) and strictly quintessential Thai phrase: one which sets aside politics, red shirts, yellow shirts, corruption, Buddha, the price of gold, The King, idiots-like-Neal, etc etc etc ... the attainment of, not enlightenment, but " ... good eat, good life ... ".

For me at least (and always acknowledging that we all hold our own personal definitions of desire) this photo is the epitome of 'Thai Manly Handsome'. And may well always will be. For me anyway, even if he kicks me to the curb.

March 1st, 2014, 03:38
I've always thought the Thais have got it right - what goes around comes around.

newalaan2
March 1st, 2014, 16:40
Smiles, thanks for the link. Well written and the photos really help too.
A great piece, as I said in one of my own observational posts this excellent post was responsible for my outpourings along similar lines. I see in drafts I did have a reply to this thread back in Nov, but for whatever reason..........busy with 'something or other' I suspect, I neglected to post it, so thanks to Cat for bumping this superb thread. The example to follow when composing a post of this type. Just wish I had the foresight, patience and skills to back up text with photos in mine, brings the post to life.

There must be more members/readers on this Board with similar experiences to post........if so please consider making a post on things outside the Pattaya/Bkk confines.......many of us here lap this stuff up! Guys like Bao Bao and Christian who have their own blogs, a duplicate piece here would not go amiss. There are many like me who simply don't have the time to go round all the blogs.

After this one I was hoping for more of the same from smiles at more regular intervals......hint hint ...I mean you ARE in Thailand on a full time basis aren't you? and therefore a vast amount of ordinary, mundane, wonderful experiences at your disposal to relay back, now more especially if you intend to spend regular periods up in Issan...... But no pressure though!

Good luck on the possible month-long stay up there, I am still in the 7-10 days max at one hit in Issan and I'm a country boy from the 'sticks' back in Scotland who feels perfectly at ease and relaxed when at bfs village, but as I am in 'holiday' mode after a while I crave just another kind of relaxation, be it beach, big city or fun/sin city. Mind you I'm like that at home too.

PLEASE keep them coming 'smiles'.

rochanasaze
September 17th, 2018, 09:42
Though I'm not really sure whether this write-up is meant for literary expression or a simple act of sharing one's story in a superfluous way, it makes for a good read. You should try to get published. This can be one of those slice-of-life short stories for Thai students trying to learn English.

Smiles
September 17th, 2018, 17:08
Wow ... where on earth did you find this thread? What were you looking for? I wrote it in 2013!

Well, while I'm at it, there was a denoument to the above story, so if interested I'll write here ~ in this old thread ~ for the newest regarding not one house but two ... also Karma, Luck, but thank god, no Death.

So this was the original plan (described in the opening post): to buy this house at a wonderful price (thanks Luck) and spend some time over the years to renovate it into a liveable structure. It needed a lot!

And this is that place, on one rai of land, out in Klog Charoen Village in southern Surin Province, fairly close to the border with Cambodia, deep in the heart of rice country:

Skip now to 2017.

On the right hand photo is the original house of which this thread (but not this post) was all about.

On the left hand photo is the house we ended up buying at the end of the day, four years later.


https://image.ibb.co/dj7FfH/Dualing_homes.jpg


The original house still stands, but it's a bit of a mess, and we still are not sure exactly what we will do with it.

But the real story is the right hand home. Quite stately in a proletarian kind of way, it was built about sometime around 2015 by one of Suphot's huge tribe of nieces and her husband.
I had visited Klong Charoen many times . . . seen this house, had raucous Thai-style parties outside (and in) there, and even mentioned to Pot that this was a pretty damn nice house. It needed lots of renovations mainly for its ghastly tiling and paint work, but it had good strong bones. The parties were great, beer and whiskey flowing, morlum music ubiquitous and I made friends with his niece. She liked me, I liked her ... and that's important in my life.

Jump to 2016:

Lying around in our on-the-sea home in Hua Hin watching CNN and Trump spewing his 'anus horribilous' over everything he touches . . . and Pots phone rang. It was his niece, the same niece as above. The phone call was about half an hour and I was paying no attention. After hanging up I asked what that was all about. (He was always on the phone with his family.)

The conversation went something like this:

Me: "Who was that?"
Him: "That was my niece"
Me: Oh really. What about?"
Him: "She wants us to buy her Klong Charoen house?"
Me: "What? What? What? They just built it! How much?"
Him: "One million Baht"
Me: "Say YES, say YES!!"

And that dear readers, is the best way of buying a house. It turned out that his niece and her husband wanted to move to Bangkok and open a restaurant . . . myself pointing out that there is about 6 million restaurants in Bangkok made no headway at all, but after a few minutes of thinking I thought that here's the Perfect Storm: they wanted to open a business, but had no money. All their equity was in the house. So sell it. Sell it to us.
Back on the phone after another half hour we owned the house you see above.

Bottom line: we spent about half a million baht on the renovations. Pot re-tiled and painted the whole house in and out. I used a wheel barrow a lot! Here are some photos apre/renos. I love the place. The peaceful quiet out in the rice paddys is stunning in its own way.
We'll always live on-the-beach in Hua Hin. I love it there as well, the sea lapping at my toes, reading the hundred or more books I have on my tablet ... me and my "Leo yai", dropping into the only gay bar left in town and playing snooker with the boys there.

Our monster patio. I spend a lot of time out here and watch the huge bamboo trees dancing in the slow motion breeze.


https://image.ibb.co/mkhefm/new_post_3.jpg


Suphot and Mama.

https://image.ibb.co/mjO7Y6/20170723_180717.jpg


Kitchen, laundry, our bar, beer fridge well filled.


https://image.ibb.co/i6WuD6/20170727_173346.jpg


https://image.ibb.co/cm7qmR/20170727_173443.jpg


Everybody happy ... ghastly shorts notwithstanding.


8034

Smiles
September 18th, 2018, 11:19
" ... But the real story is the right hand home ... "
Oops, I screwed up on an important point which may have any readers scratching their heads.
In the first photo in the above post ~ the one with a double image ~ shows our newest home, the one on the left, not the right.

francois
September 18th, 2018, 20:19
They both look the same to me. :devilsh:

paborn
September 18th, 2018, 20:28
Great storu, I did figure out that the nice house was the current one. I'm dumb but get by.........I suppose with online movies and e books life does not have to be boring. Besides your with someone you love.

Slightly off topic, I'm not familiar with a blog by Bao Bao. When I google it all I get is stories about a giant Panda. Anyone have a link?

Smiles
September 18th, 2018, 21:10
They both look the same to me. :devilsh:
Blind as you-know-who.

Smiles
September 18th, 2018, 21:58
Slightly off topic, I'm not familiar with a blog by Bao Bao. When I google it all I get is stories about a giant Panda. Anyone have a link?
Bao Bao's blog is still up, but not running very fast. The latest post there is from 2016. This URL works fine for me: http://khunbaobao.blogspot.com/ and no pandas in sight.

newalaan2
September 19th, 2018, 23:11
Enjoyed it second time round every bit as much as the first, especially with the recent updates.

This type of post/thread sadly missed here nowadays by many of us as I think members just can't be bothered making the effort on something which needs a bit of time (me included) under the new regime who seem obsessed with petty rule-following for the sake of it, and little in the way of encouragement preferring to nit-pick and make threats if any content has even the most infinitesimal air of controversy or content the regime simply doesn't 'care for' which often makes trying to post anything interesting or edgy pointless. This in a forum of worldly adults.

But as a member who does visit places in Thailand outside Pattaya/Bkk I suppose I should try make an effort after you see what 'smiles' managed to produce. I'll see what my upcoming trip starting next week throws up.