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Showing posts with label Temple of Dawn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Temple of Dawn. Show all posts

Monday, 9 January 2012

The First Day in Bangkok

Bangkok, Thailand

We can't get into the King's temple complex. Apparently it's the King's birthday. It's the same king that was in charge when I was here in 1967. Everybody still loves him, but you can't see what Wiki has to say about him. He's got that site blocked. I've been waiting to discuss the king until I was out of the country. American Joe Gordon is serving 2.5 years for translating part of a biography that the king found offensive. The sentence was relatively light compared to other recent cases. In November, 61-year-old Amphon Tangnoppakul was sentenced to 20 years in jail for sending four text messages deemed to be offensive to the queen.



I bought one of these funny hats at the Temple of Dawn and I've been wearing full time it at the RV park since we returned to  Florida.It's a lot classier than a baseball hat in my view.


We grabbed a tuk-tuk at the closed palace entrance and the driver took us to a jewelry store and a clothing store against our wishes. I had enough of that and paid him off to take us back where he picked us up. We then took a long walk though a sidewalk market beside the palace walls and then got on  the river ferry for $.20 to take us over the river to the Temple of Dawn.


The temple owes much of its decor to a sunken British ship that was filled with fine English china. Either that or Chinese ships filled with broken china for ballast. Despite its name (coming from Aruna, the Indian god of the dawn), the best pictures of the temple are taken at sunset from the other side of the river.


I think you can see Mrs. Phred climbing the temple (Wat Arun). She's the tiny climber with the blue shirt at the top of the stairs. Wat means temple, so Arun must mean dawn.


After the temple we chartered a long tail boat for a cruise up the river. We were the only passengers. There is much evidence of the recent flooding in the houses along the Chao Phraya river.


The floating market has been completely disrupted by the floods. There is only one vendor in a boat to represent the entire crowded floating market. We bought some bottled water and a beer for our boat driver from this hardy holdout.


A good place to rent one of these boats for an hour or two is at the Temple of Dawn. That is just over the river from the Wat Po temple complex which itself takes many hours to wander though. Wat Po has the huge reclining Buddha and lots of other remarkable stuff to see. The street outside the temple is full of tour buses and tuk-tuks.


The King's palace complex is huge and right next to the Wat Po temple. The Temple of the Emerald Buddha is the centrepiece of the King's compound. The picture below is just a common temple somewhere on the river in Bangkok.


After the river cruise we negotiated a return to the Oriental hotel river dock. It's five or six blocks from our hotel. There are sandbags everywhere because of the recent floods.


Notice the high water mark on this riverfront house.


and here is another flood victim.


I've been looking forward to dinner in the night air on the 66th floor of the hotel for months. It's grossly overpriced and the meal is skimpy, but the view is fantastic and music is good. The restaurant is called the Sirocco.




Incredible....high altitude rock...


There is another restaurant on a higher level. We had Mojitos up there on a balcony overlook before dinner. I imagine that the food is even pricier and skimpier.


Stairway to heaven...."it's just a spring clean for the May Queen"....say that backwards enough times and you're deep into satanic verses...



Tuesday, 6 December 2011

48 Hours (Tampa to Bangkok)

Bangkok, Thailand


Up at 5AM and off to long term parking in the Tampa airport.


We fly to New York on a bankrupt airline and get our seats on China East to Shanghai. Its a 15 hour flight. Our seats are the two middle seats in a four seat row. There are five Chinese babies in the row directly in front of us. Apparently they all have colic. The flight goes over the North Pole and down though Siberia.



In Shanghai we meet customs and immigration inspector #03893. He is very nice compared to American customs and immigration. Red China has changed. The Shanghai airport had free wifi, but Google was pretty much blocked out except for Gmail.


We planned to visit the palace complex in the old city but it was closed for the King's birthday. He is 87. He was also the king when I was here 45 years ago. The King was born in Cambridge, Mass. I would tell you more but his wiki page is blocked in Thailand by royal decree. It must be good to be a monarch.


Instead we grab a Tuk-Tuk (motor scooter with two passenger seats) and see a temple, a jewelry store and a tailor.


Later we go to the Temple of Dawn and take a long boat cruise on the river.


This is called the Floating Buddha as seen from the river.


The floating market is down to just one boat because of the flooding. We buy water and a beer for our boat captain from the floating vendor.


We nap a few hours in the afternoon and in the evening we have Mojitos and dinner on the 64th floor of our hotel.



Mrs. Phred climbs the Temple of Dawn.


Parts of the City have been flooded and show damage but the water is receding now.


The Temple used a lot of English china that was recovered from a ship wreck.


The bow of our long tail boat. After the river tour we get dropped of near our hotel.


All in all, more stimulation than we normally get in 48 hours.

Tuesday, 11 October 2011

The News Gets Weird

Believe it (or not)

So Santorum says that Mitt Romney belongs to a "cult" religion? Excuse me? Pot? Kettle? Black?

Sadly, my man, Obama, has extended the civil rights abuses of George Bush. He decides to summarily execute American citizens with a pen scratch and a Hellfire missile.. Off with his head....(belch)...

It's not that I'm against extrajudicial assassinations of troublesome citizens. I just think they should be kept secret.

The whole global financial system teeters on the edge of a vote by Slovakia to support an increase in the ECB (European Central Bank) assets or not....Slovakia????

We are faced with getting a lot of shots for our visit to Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam...

The Center for Disease Control recommends:
  • Tetanus shots
  • Polio booster shots
  • Malaria pills
  • Typhoid shots
  • Hepatitis A and B shots
  • Japanese encephalitis shots 
The Sarasota Health department is willing to help us with this for about $800. I'm starting to think that Part D prescription insurance would almost have paid for itself.

There's a statue in Bangkok that is a 15 ton solid gold Buddha. It's over 10 feet tall. 600 years ago it was covered with plaster because of an invasion. They were surprised a few years ago when a crane knocked off some plaster during a 1950 demolition of this minor temple and the gold shined though. Now tourists like me go to see it.

$36,000 a pound times 30,000 pounds is a little more than a billion dollars...I am no longer impressed with less than a triillion...to steal a 15 ton Buddha would take some planning...

I struggle to remember Bangkok in 1967. There was the lovely Temple of Dawn, a pyramid inlaid with broken blue and white china. I had a lunch from a vendor in a boat on the canal. He had one plate and one fork that he washed in the canal between customers. The rice and fish head cost a baht (that was a nickle then, but 3 cents now). My air force shots must have protected me from the feces and other drek in the canal.


I remember climbing the stairs of the temple. They were very steep, but I was young, stupid and fearless. We rode down the canal in a "long-tail" boat. Back then I think that 4 cylinder Renault engines were very common. This guy looks like he's handling a a Chevy V-8. Time marches on.



 An old lady on the canal with orange gums smiled at me and tossed me a narcotic betel nut. Betel nut makes your gums orange.