Posts tagged Chiang Mai

Part 2: Chiang Mai

Aloha Aloha!

We hope all of you are doing well! Here is another chapter of our novel to read at your leisure.

Two days ago we went to Baan Chang Elephant Park, a elephant excursion recommended by Lonely Planet. We were picked up at our hotel by a driver and a guide named “Jimmy” or “Crazy Jimmy” as he likes to refer to himself.

According to Jimmy, he is referred to as "Crazy Jimmy" because his wife says he drinks too much.
According to Jimmy, he is referred to as “Crazy Jimmy” because his wife says he drinks too much.

An hour later we arrived at the elephant park with our group of 12 people. We were each given the equivalent of scrubs (but for hippies) because they say the elephants absolutely stink and your clothes will never be the same. So we all changed in to matching blue hippie scrubs and headed over to an open area with about 45 elephants all chained down by one leg (something we felt a bit uncomfortable with). Each elephant was accompanied by their “person or trainer” known as a mahoot. Jimmy told us about where the elephants were rescued from and the mission of Baan Chang. Then we were taught how to feed the elephants bananas and sugar cane.  At one point Jimmy called Daniel and I to come up and try something, and another couple approached him at the same time. Confused, all four of us shortly learned that we had almost the same names: we were Daniel and Lauren from America and they were Daniel and Laura from Germany (and with a Thai accent Lauren and Laura sound like “waurahn” anyway). Very funny.

Elephant “hippie scrubs”
Our group at Baan Chang—Daniel and Laura are standing next to Daniel (on the left)
Our group at Baan Chang—Daniel and Laura are directly next to Daniel (on the left—Daniel’s right).
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Fuzzy and freckled, elephants are contagious. They call her Mary Poppins for her pie crust promises.

We met one elephant who had previously been trained to give kisses, which entailed wrapping its trunk around you and vacuum sucking your check. One of the weirdest feelings I’ve ever encountered because it with both ticklish and terrifying in that I thought it might suck my flesh off. Then we all leaned some basic elephant commands (which for all intensive purposes could have been complete bullshit and just fun for Jimmy and the mahoots to hear us shout) and were taught how to get on/off an elephant—it made boarding and riding a camel feel like second nature (something I never thought I’d say in my life). We rode the elephants bareback, on their necks, because they say that the wooden chair platforms aren’t good.

Elephant Smooches—Thong Comp leaves one ginormous hickie
Elephant Smooches—Thong Comp leaves one ginormous hickie
Daniel riding his elephant off into the distance.
Daniel riding his elephant off into the distance.

Around 12 we all had lunch together inside. Vegetarian pad Thai and pineapple. Pretty decent.  When we were finished we went back out to the open area and were assigned an elephant (one per couple). Ours was named MeeNaa and was rescued from logging work in northern Thailand. At the beginning I rode on her neck and Daniel on her back, half way through we switched.   Aside from having a sore butt within 10 minutes of riding, the exposed parts of my calfs were chafing due to MeeNaa’s wiry black hairs—lets just say a mud bath wasn’t sufficient, she could have used a deep conditioning.

Mee Nah was rescued from logging work in the north of Thailand.
Mee Nah was rescued from logging work in northern Thailand.

At the end of the ride the elephants all went into a deep pool of “water” to bathe and almost everyone got in along with them to scrub them. Almost everyone excluded our new friend Laura and I, as we were informed that the elephants are happiest in the water and when they’re happy they poop—a lot. So basically everyone in the water was standing waist deep in elephant poop soup. Since elephant bathing time is considered bonding time, Daniel and MeeNaa will remain much closer than she and I, but I’m ok with that.

Daniel standing waist deep in elephant poop soup giving Mee Nah a nice scrub down.
Daniel standing waist deep in elephant poop soup giving Mee Nah a nice scrub down.
Daniel getting a shower from Mee Nah in return for her bath.
Daniel getting a shower from Mee Nah in return for her bath.

Smelly and sore, we showered and changed back into our clothes and got back in the car to go the hotel. After second showers at the hotel we met up with Laura and Daniel for dinner at a restaurant called Cooking Love (also recommended by Rakow). The food was ridiculously good as was the company. After dinner we walked around the old town of Chiang Mai, went to the night bazaar (same stuff everywhere), and went back to go to sleep.

Yesterday we went to Thai Farm Cooking School in Chiang Mai. We got picked up from our hotel by a cute little woman named Benny. Benny put us in the back of an open truck with 8 other people (two bench seats facing each other) and we headed to a local Thai indoor/outdoor market. On the way to the market we filled out a form of what we wanted to make from a menu of 4 dishes and a dessert. At the market Benny brought us around to show us different Thai herbs, spices, meats, and produce. She showed us 3 different types of chili—one which she took the liberty of calling “mouse poop chili” due to its size—and then quizzed us on which one was the spiciest. After the group being told “you fail!” after guessing each size, she screamed out, “I’m the hottest! So sexy” and proceeded to swirl her body. Needless to say, this woman was on her game the whole day and she totally made the cooking class 10x better than it already would have been.

At the cooking school our group of 10 had our own outdoor eating patio and indoor cooking hut. Benny took us around the outdoor vegetable garden where we tasted and picked different herbs and produce to cook with, while dressed in traditional Thai cooking attire; red aprons and sombreros. For whatever reason Benny couldn’t remember Daniels name so she just decided to call him Peter the whole day. I think that by the end he actually responded to it.

Thai cooking attire; red aprons and sombreros.
Thai cooking attire; red aprons and sombreros.
Team Benny eating our food outside.
Team Benny eating our food outside.

The facility was awesome and Benny was an excellent instructor. For our first dish we made soup. I made Tom Yum (vegetarian) soup and Daniel made Tom Kaa (coconut milk) soup. For the second and third dishes I made yellow curry and tofu with cashews and Daniel made red curry and tofu with basil (Benny made rice for everyone). Before we sat down to eat our group asked our driver to pick up beer for us. Lunch was delicious! For our fourth dish (which we took home for dinner because we were all too full to eat) I made pad Thai (using Benny’s special sauce recipe) and Daniel made vegetarian spring rolls.

What
Tom Yum soup, Tom Kaa soup, red curry, yellow curry, tofu with cashews, tofu with basil, and rice.

Throughout the day, as we were cooking, Benny went around the room taking selfies of herself on our cameras (with us in the background). For dessert we made mango sticky rice (coconut milk with palm sugar and salt). Before we left Benny added us on Facebook and then the car took us back to the hotel around 4. Thai Farm Cooking School was definitely a trip highlight!

Benny taking a selfie. Oh yeah, we're in the background.
Benny taking a selfie. Oh yeah, we’re in the background.
Homemade mango sticky rice.
Homemade mango sticky rice.

For the rest of the night we planned out our island travels, ate our pad Thai and spring rolls and passed out early because today we drive to Pai. Pai is a small hippie town filled with Israelis and chillers. The drive takes about three hours because the roads are ridiculously windy.

Lastly, and most importantly, Daniel has expanded the Scott Jacks School of International Language* to Asia. All syntax and pronunciation looks and sounds like ESL (English second language) Asians—replacing “L” sounds with “R” and “W” sounds, completely eliminating the use of the plural, and repeating the same word for emphasis (e.g. “I want nice nice car, not bad bad.) So happy to report the *SJSIL is alive and thriving.

From the Asian branch teachings of SJSIL “Hope you enjoy. Keep you post!”

Xx
Waaaarahhn and Peter

Part 1: Bangkok and Chiang Mai

Aloha (as they say in Thailand)!

***Disclaimer: this is a short novel That we’ll be parceling out over several long posts Read when you’re bored.

Missing all of you and thought we’d give you all a little update since we’re not able to chat with all of you yet on What’s App.

We’re having an awesome trip. Spent 3 days in Bangkok (the city is basically organized chaos to sum it up). The first day we went on a river boat, did 2 out of the 3 major temples—Wat Phra Kaew (The Temple of the Emerald Buddha) and Wat Pho (the birthplace of the Thai massage and the home of Thailand’s largest reclining Buddha)—and went to a vegetarian Thai restaurant (Arawy Vegetarian Restaurant) where they spoke no English. We asked what everything was and they thought we ordered everything, so we ended up with a random smorgasbord of vegetarian food.

Chao Phraya River in Bangkok
River boat down Chao Phraya River in Bangkok

 

Owner: "What you want?" // Us: "What is everything?" // Owner: "Everythinnnggg" // ... and that's how we ended up with a smorgasbord of spicy non-distinct vegetarian Thai food // welcome to Thailand — thanks for the recommendation @lonelyplanet
Owner: “What you want?” // Us: “What is everything?” // Owner: “Everythinnnggg” // … and that’s how we ended up with a smorgasbord of spicy non-distinct vegetarian Thai food // welcome to Thailand — thanks for the recommendation @lonelyplanet

 

Wat Phra Kaew
Monkey see, monkey do. Use at Wat Phra Kaew (Temple of the Emerald Buddha)
Wat Pho // the birthplace of the traditional Thai massage and Thailand's largest Reclining Buddha covered in gold paint // mother-of-pearl toe inlays
Wat Pho // the birthplace of the traditional Thai massage and Thailand’s largest Reclining Buddha covered in gold paint // mother-of-pearl toe inlays

The second day we went to the Jim Thompson House (an ex-pat American who moved to Thailand and made crazy things happen in the silk industry)—a really cool experience. Then we walked the streets. Went to a local market and then to one of the massive shopping centers for a food court lunch. We went to a sushi restaurant for dinner and then to Khoasan Road (the most touristy, dregs-of-the-world/middle earth type of place) to see what we were missing out on—absolutely nothing was the answer.

Jumping Jaxy emoji // at "The Legendary American of Thailand"—Jim Thompson's house
Jumping Jaxy emoji // at “The Legendary American of Thailand”—Jim Thompson’s house

The third day we woke up early and went to Chatuchuk Market—one of the largest weekend markets in the world, known for everything from amazing vintage wear, exotic animals, plastic fruits and foods (yes there is a whole section for this), food and much much more (27 full sections). I loved it! Then we went to another massive shopping mall for a food court lunch and air conditioning. We chilled at our hotel pool until we had to go to the airport that night. Daniel bought me a $1 fried rice at the airport for Valentines Day dinner (so romantic).

"Assuming the Identity"—I got bored waiting for Daniel to find something so I decided to try on all my vintage wears from Chatuchak Market at once. Oh and Daniel got me a selfie stick for V-Day . Happy ValentinesDay to you and yours
“Assuming the Identity”—I got bored waiting for Daniel to find something so I decided to try on all my vintage wears from Chatuchak Market at once. Oh and Daniel got me a selfie stick for V-Day . Happy ValentinesDay to you and yours

We got to Chiang Mai (up north) Wednesday night. This city is awesome.  We hired a driver named Mr M, who Rakow recommended to us when she was here.

Yesterday we met Mr M at our hotel The Royal Lanna (which Daniel as been calling the Royal Shithole) and went to The Tiger Kingdom —where we got to choose to go in the enclosure with “big, medium, small, or smallest” size tigers. Daniel and I went with the big ones and it was terrifying. It made the cheetah park in South Africa (where you either look at animals in a large enclosure or sit in a safari truck with a guide with a gun)!look perfectly safe. At this park it was us in a cage with 4 tigers, 4 boys with sticks and a few other idiots like us. It made for some awesome photos, though can’t say we would do it again. Best part is the animals were named Michael, Frankie, Nancy, and San Diego.

Daniel and lauren with a tiger
I imagine that if either one of us were on tinder, this would be the money shot // I’d call a tiger Shere Kahn but they went with Frankie (not pictured Nancy, Michael, and San Diego) // very safe

After the tiger park we went to Baan Tong Luang Village where 5 tribes live—most notably the Padong/Karen Long Neck tribe. All the tribes live in huts separated across the hillside and sell random goods according to their tribe’s style. We went straight to the Long Neck tribes and I feel very good saying that I supported all of them enough to send a child to school for a year. Just kidding, not that insane—but I played a very good tourist in true Jacks form.

Padong (Long Neck) Tribe
Malay is a Burmese refuge and member of the Padong (Long Neck) Tribe // she weaves beautiful scarfs, table cloths, & bags and her husband carves wood dolls, instruments, & penis shaped whistle—bottle openers // Malay said I’d look nicer with rings on my neck, a bag under my arm, and a penis shaped bottle opener // I followed 2 out of 3

Once we left the hillside we went to a traditional Thai restaurant and then to a small town’s local wat (Wat Pa Dara Phirom). It’s insane how much detail they put into these places, especially when there are so many of them around the city. After the local wat we went to northern Thailand’s most sacred temple at the top of a mountain Wat Phrathat Doi Suthep.  You have to climb 306 steps (not terrible, but we got our shvitz on) to get up there. Same thing there- lots of ornate paintings and enough Buddha statutes to populate a continent. We also found that lots of couples and families like to match identically (which I went insane about and chased them until I got them to let me take photos of them so Daniel could slyly get some good photos).

Two families dressed the same, priceless picture by Daniel
Two seperate families dressed alike, completely unrelated, coming together into one frame to create the perfect “Same Same, but Different” moment.

Around 5:00 pm Mr M dropped us off at the Sunday Walking Market—a massive street market that never ends (seriously we never found an end cause it just zigs and zags down each street).  We found an Italian restaurant (Girasole) outdoors that faced onto the market. Got a Thai pizza and wine and then went back to the Royal Shithole and went to bed.

Us with our driver Mr. M
Us with our driver Mr. M

This morning we checked out and found another cheap hotel (which Daniel thinks is better than the previous one —I can’t tell the difference) and just got picked up to go to the elephant sanctuary where you ride bareback. We’ll report more later!

Xoxo

LJ and Danny Boy

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