No, I didn't take the pic just to get cute Thai punk-rockers in background. |
Additionally you could grab any kind of sushi you wanted, which
was located around the perimeter of the restaurant. I have never really experimented with sushi
much, for several reasons: it is expensive, I have no idea what to order, and I
don’t know too many people that appreciate it.
So this was perfect, I tried a variety of sushi and found my favorite. I have no idea what was in it, but the flavor
was amazing. It was rectangular in shape
with green vegetables, rice and a swirl of sauce on the top. I convinced my friends to try it and they
wanted more. All of the sushi available
was colorful, unique, and artistic.
There were two kinds of fried rice, one was a seasoned-rice, the other
was a garlic rice. There was a variety
of juices and teas. I tried the guava,
which was good. Also, there was ice
cream, big fan. I tried a little sample
of all four flavors, double chocolate, vanilla, cookies and cream, and rum
raisin. I mostly wanted to try the rum
raisin because I see it all over here in Asia.
I didn’t hate it. The cookies and
cream, (originally founded at SDSU)…was a let down. The Thai’s have not
mastered this ice cream yet. Vanilla
won.
garlic naan with spicy Indian aloo gobi |
Saturday I slept in for one of the first times in Thailand,
after a late Friday night - Some of us went out to celebrate our
certifications, training completion, and our last night in Pattaya (amen). We did some karaoke and dancing. Saturday we
met for some Indian food before leaving Pattaya, the food was amazing. Hands down the best Indian food I have ever
tasted. At least that was what I
thought, up until 15 minutes after I ate. I was sick for about 3 hours, right
up until we were about to get on our 12 hour bus ride to Chiang Mai. Then all
was well.
I paid 785 Baht ($25) for a 13 hour VIP bus ride to Chiang
Mai 4pm-5am. This was on the spendier
ends of things, as I spent an extra couple dollars to take the VIP bus.
The VIP bus had AC, soft music, fully-reclining seats with foot rests,
blankets, and formally dress flight attendant (she was so cute, professional hat
with matching uniform) that provided us with cold water, lobster crisps,
chicken flavor-coated peanuts, room temperature sweetened soy milk, and a meal
(steamed white rice, a mini portion of ‘funky tofu sausage,’ and a mini portion
of spicy cauliflower, and ?beef). I would recommend VIP traveling, 785 baht was
more than reasonable and frankly more comfortable than I could have
imagined. The food isn’t as impressive
but I loved it for the experience. I
wouldn’t change a thing.
As we traveled out of Pattaya, life seemed to get greener
and exciting for me. I arrived in Chiang Mai around 5am Sunday morning. The air was clean, cool, fragrant with
flowers, and free of sulfur and methane gases. We all went to sleep around 7am
and slept until about 11:30am. Then we
went off to a pool Echo Resort on the East side of Chiang Mai, where the Thai
swim team used to train. It was 100 Baht
to swim all day. It was a beautiful area
and so was the pool. The setting was
tropical, paths leading to a pool. I
would describe it as an eco-friendly, green area. The walk in is through lush green tropical plants,
trees, bushes, and flowers. I had lunch
near the pool, cashew chicken and vegetables and supper out in a market square
area Sunday night, spicy cashew chicken. Yes, I like the cashew chicken with
vegetables. Each time I order it, it is
different. It’s so good and seems to
always have different vegetables. Most
of the dished have spring onions and carrots.
I experienced great food, but
with that lack of Thai spice I have been anticipating.
Another site along the way to the hostel.
Sunday and Monday we stayed the Hennesey’s Thai house. It is the home of Susan’s aunt and
uncle. I have video footage. I will have to find a good way to link these
videos to my blog. Ideas anyone? Is YouTube the best bet? Anyway, her aunt and uncle moved to Thailand
three years ago with their three kids.
Two of their kids are in college, one in Thailand the other in
Australia. The family happened to be on
vacation so we had the house to ourselves.
Their son Patrick is going to one of the universities here. He has been so great. He watched the house for us, toured us around
and answered all of our questions. His
parents and sister returned Monday evening.
His parents, Ed and Janet are great, they remind me of my Minnesota aunt
and uncle J. They are fun, lively, and world travelers. The have been great resources for us thus
far. Monday evening we stayed in at
their place and they bought us pizzas.
It was weird having American food here in Thailand. I had Greek Pizza, was pretty good. The company was nice.
Front of the Hennesey's home in Chiang Mai. We are going to take a left through those open doors.
Taking a left just after the gate at the front door. Notice the narrow moat that half-encompasses the property. Includes fish.
Now we are taking a quick right at the corner. Here is a nice pond, complete with small fish. I am told there are a couple of turtles that appreciate the small, zen sanctuary canopied by trees.
Looking a little farther in from the same angle. The house and front door is behind me as I take this pic.
Full view of the pond, again the house is behind me. We walked in from the left according to this pic.
This is what was behind me, the side or main door of the house. Kindly remove your shoes.
Ready to see inside?
Living room here. One bedroom to the left through that wooden door. Beautful!
Kitchen, of course one of my favorite rooms. Lots of windows and sulight. Through the left window you will see the pond, if you look left through it. No oven, stove is outside throught the other window. There is a cute porch out that way. A washer is also out there.
Kitchen again with the camera angle more to the right. There is a bathroom to the right of the refrigerator. Refrigerators are not common in households. Most people buy what they need on a day-to-day basis in the markets.
Looking a little farther in from the same angle. The house and front door is behind me as I take this pic.
Full view of the pond, again the house is behind me. We walked in from the left according to this pic.
This is what was behind me, the side or main door of the house. Kindly remove your shoes.
Ready to see inside?
Living room here. One bedroom to the left through that wooden door. Beautful!
Kitchen, of course one of my favorite rooms. Lots of windows and sulight. Through the left window you will see the pond, if you look left through it. No oven, stove is outside throught the other window. There is a cute porch out that way. A washer is also out there.
Kitchen again with the camera angle more to the right. There is a bathroom to the right of the refrigerator. Refrigerators are not common in households. Most people buy what they need on a day-to-day basis in the markets.
Tueday we booked 2 nights at the hostel literally over the
fence from their place. It’s beautiful.
This hostel was located with in the Echo Resort, where we swam Sunday. It was more than I wanted to spend, but it
was conveniently located next to the Hennesey’s place. The cost was about 375 ($12.50) Baht per
night. Our room was a 2-bunk bed, dorm-size
room. We shared a community bathroom (it
had bar soap and toilet paper!), showers with warm water, flushing sit-down
toilets, A/C, wifi, jinjoks, squirrels, bats, roo-ing and cawh-ing tropical
birds, and other creatures I have not yet identified. And mosquitos, imported
from Minnesota to make me feel at home.
Swimming, breakfast, sunshine, and fresh air were all included in the
cost. The breakfast varied between our
two mornings. It included items like fried
rice with tofu and vegetables, French toast (served with honey), stir-fry
vegetables, chicken rice in a broth, toasted white bread (butter solids
floating in water, orange marmalade, or strawberry jam), juice (longsan or
orange) crawling with ants, fresh watermelon, pineapple, chilled water. Today there was an interesting red tangy
clear-like noodle with vegetables and spicy cabbage vegetables in addition to
the fruit and juices. It was really
nice. I love it that you can sit under the trees to eat breakfast near an old
barnwood shack, canopied by large tropical leaves, branches, and trees.
Yesterday I spent most of my day chilling and researching
the job front. I have been working on
catering my cover letters and resumes.
Susan’s aunt and uncle have been giving me tips on job placement, as I
am looking more for positions outside of simply teaching English. For physical activity I enjoyed some diving,
swimming, dancing, and lots of walking. Tonight we had supper a half a block
from our stay. I had cashew chicken, I
ordered it spicy. It was tasty but
lacked spicy until I freely chose to indulge in the big red chili peppers
basking in the cashew sauce. I ate about
six or seven of them. The spice was
nice. However, I could feel my stomach
burning about a half hour later.
Chiang Mai in the evening - Moat
Love these Thai moons! Stop me in my tracks and I wonder what it will look life for those that will see it tomorrow.
7-Elevens...all over Thai. |
Twin, I know you planted this.
What's that? You need to make some copies and buy 6 dozen eggs on the way home? I know just the place!
What do you say to finishing the night with some Thai Reggae? This band made my night, but not as much as the hat and his Thai reggae moves. This was so fun. There were dogs coming in from the street..ahem, yes licking themselves to those fine reggae tunes.
2 comments:
1. Did you see the elephant in the gardens?! He was cool!
2. Shipped them there 'squitos first class to ya, yep.
3. That moo was clearly placed by an angel for you to find.
4. You should just strap a camera to your head every day so we can experience life with you :)
Go with YouTube, it's easy. Just set to private and share the link with those you want to see it.
Go with YouTube (pronouced Yo-Tub).
Funny you should mention eggs though I was just going to pick up a few dozen.
Do they transport well by motorbike?
And what did you actually purchase at the market?
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