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Things
To Do and See in Chiang Rai
Hill Tribe Museum, Chiang Rai
A cultural exploration of the nine major hill tribes.
Attraction type: History museum
Wat Phrathat Doi Tong, Chiang
Rai
This temple supposedly dates back to 940.
Attraction type: Religious site
Wat Phra Kaeo, Chiang Rai
This was the original location of the Emerald Buddha,
now
housed in Bangkok's Wat Phra Kaeo.
Attraction type: Religious site
Mae Salong - the Chinese
village on the border, Chiang Rai
Attraction type: Historic village
Chiang Saen - the old city
walls, Chiang Rai
Attraction type: Landmark/point of interest
Road to
Chiang Rai
Author:
Adam Bryan-Brown
I like to
get out of Bangkok when I can. I find the noise, pollution, traffic
and scale of Bangkok a little wearisome. Recently I took a road trip
to the Chiang Rai region in the very north of the country. It was
was a lot of fun, very relaxing and we collected some great
pictures.
To see the original article, with accompanying pictures,
please go
to: http://www.blog.artthailand.net/?p=38
To see more pictures of the trip,
please go
to: http://blog.artthailand.net/gallery/index.php?level=album&id=10
Many people outside Thailand assume that if you have been to Bangkok
you have been to Thailand. In fact, Krung Thep (roughly translating
to City of Angels), to use it's Thai name, has been the capital of
Thailand, or Siam, only since the very end of the 18th century,
succeeding Ayuthaya and Sukothai.
Bangkok (translating as 'village of wild plums') was the original
site for the capital city and was located west of the Chao Phraya
river (in modern day Thonburi).
In 1782, King Rama I decided to move to a more defensible site and
moved across the river to found his new capital, Krung Thep. For
whatever reason, foreigners have never since caught up with the name
change and the old name of Bangkok has stuck. In recent years, Krung
Thep/Bangkok has expanded at such a fast rate that it now sprawls
over a huge mass of land on both the sides of the Chao Phraya and
has engulfed the once independent Thonburi.
Krung Thep is actually an abbreviated version of the ceremonial full
name, which is shown below in a romanized form.
Krung Thep Mahanakhon Amon Rattanakosin Mahinthara Ayuthaya
Mahadilok Phop Noppharat Ratchathani Burirom Udomratchaniwet
Mahasathan Amon Piman Awatan Sathit Sakkathattiya Witsanukam Prasit
In English this translates, roughly, to: The city of angels, the
great city, the residence of the Emerald Buddha, the impregnable
city (of Ayutthaya) of God Indra, the grand capital of the world
endowed with nine precious gems, the happy city, abounding in an
enormous Royal Palace that resembles the heavenly abode where reigns
the reincarnated god, a city given by Indra and built by Vishnukarn.
Perhaps we should stick to Bangkok!
Early August we set off to Chiang Mai from Bangkok. The trip is for
business, to attend a gallery opening in Chiang Rai. It's easier to
fly but I drive whenever I can. We decided to drive straight to
Chiang Mai, break for the night, then move on to Chiang Rai the next
day. It takes about seven hours to get to Chiang Mai, depending on
traffic, the lunatic Formula 1 aspirations of your driver, and
taking the right roads. Addisorn certainly has Formula 1
aspirations, and the only traffic problem we had was running into a
funeral, but he can't read a map, so we arrived late.
It's a pleasant though unremarkable route, mostly by expressway. One
joy is to see the rice fields. Field upon field stretching endlessly
both vertically and horizontally. Rice farmers and their families
working the fields. You feel as if you are going back in time to a
more peaceful and simple existence, out from the city into the
farming heartland of Thailand.
Last year I took the same route with my children but we spent four
days getting to Chiang Mai, stopping off at Ayuthaya, Lopburi,
Sukothai, Lampang and Phitsanulok to see a variety of sights.
In Europe I would never describe myself as a church freak. I am
happy to visit the odd cathedral here and there but that's about it.
In Thailand I definitely fall into the category of temple addict. I
love the Buddhist culture and the temples, whether extant or in
ruins, induce all sorts of strange emotions in me.
Of all the places we visited Ayuthaya is the best known, being close
to Bangkok, but Sukothai was for me the most interesting experience.
Finding good hotels proved challenging. We stayed in some fairly
weird places but I am now beginning to get to grips with the concept
of Thai travel lodges. Luxurious they are not but they are clean,
often set in very beautiful countryside and they do more for me than
the functionalism of a convention type hotel.
This time we got close to Chiang Mai at around six and stopped off
for dinner in a small town, beside the market. The markets are the
soul of Thai rural society.You eat there, you shop there and you see
Thailand there. Exotic smells, wonderfully fresh food, often grown
by small families selling off their surplus.
In the outer edges of the bigger cities there are very few non-Thai
and I always find myself being observed by young and old alike, as
if I am an alien from another planet. I try to speak Thai to them ,
asking perhaps for some noodle soup or some geng daeng (red curry)
and they respond with vacant stares which demonstrate that knowing
Thai vocabulary is not even close to being able to speak the
language!
As almost everywhere in Thailand the people are unfailingly polite
and charming. Eventually we find food I can eat and then I observe
the food sellers watching me to see if I can cope with the spice!
There are chuckles of delight as I cough violently on som tam and
expressions of satisfaction as I ask for more.
We get into Chiang Mai itself around eight. Part of our mission is
to find some high quality boutique hotels to recommend to future
clients.
It's a nice idea in principle but it can be hell finding these
places. We are staying at a place called Baan Singh Kham and we are
lost. We call the hotel and the manager tells us to hold on and he
will come and find us. After a few minutes he arrives and we follow
him to the hotel.
It's dark so it's difficult to assess the hotel
properly
but the rooms, while eccentric, are fantastic,
and we are
paying just 2,000 baht for the night. You can see more information
about the hotel at
http://www.hotelthailand.com/chiangmai/baansinghkham/index.html
The site is not great but don't let that put you off. The hotel is
charming, small (I like small), very clean and very beautiful. Take
a look at the bathrooms on the site! They are just a lot of fun.
I highly recommend this place. The staff are efficient, polite and
they speak good English too. Ok, the place is a little eccentric.
The fitness room is a bike on a balcony. New York this ain't! You
know, if I wanted New York I would go to New York. This is Thailand
and I am content.
We go into Chiang Mai for dinner and find a pretty good Thai
restaurant. We then wander off into the nightlife. It's not the same
as Bangkok. Yes, there are beer bars and gogo bars and a mass of
karaoke bars but it is very laid back. In fact it is fair to say
that Chiang Mai is generally a laid back city with its own, very
unique charm. The three of us play a little pool, drink a little
beer and eventually wander by accident into what is termed a gogo.
I am the only farang. No one speaks a word of English and who ever
heard of a gogo bar with no poles? Well, there is a pole but it is
at the entrance to the bar rather than in the bar itself. We are
"entertained" by girls spitting darts to burst balloons, opening
bottles of beer and doing various other weird and wonderful things
with (how can I put this subtly) various and unlikely body parts.
Next morning I wake early, read in a chair on the balcony and gently
watch the world pass me by. We all have breakfast and then set off
for Chiang Rai. It's not far, a little over a 100km but it's through
some very hilly terrain with slow, single lane tracks. Yet this is
Thailand maybe at it's best -- green and lush, sun reflecting off
the rice fields, the air fresh and clean.
Our destination is uncertain, meaning we have no idea where it is!
It's a new hotel called Doi Hom Fha. All we really know is that it
is accessible by track rather than by road and that we have to take
a ferry to reach the hotel itself.
Via many conversations on the phone we do eventually find the track,
though "track" is a poor description. It's more a mud trail to
nowhere.
Eventually we pass through a small village of open huts and see the
horizon of what appears to be a huge lake. We see boys playing in
the water, fishing with small sticks. There are men in small, lazy
boats fishing in the open water, also amidst the foliage of the
shores. The sun lights up a panorama and we are in another world.
It's magnificent, isolated, huge and inspiring.
The hotel itself is hard to describe. It's better experienced via
pictures. The lobby is like a giant cave. I have never seen anything
so big in my life. I sense there should be bats lining the walls and
ceiling. The manager is hospitality herself except I mean himself as
"she" later turned out to be a "he', wonderfully eccentric,
exaggeratedly feminine but fun to know. I could have done without
the details of the upcoming "final" operation however.
The rooms are small villas and it's clear we are occupying the only
functional ones, functional being a relative term. The hotel is not
properly open for business as yet. The grand opening is in January
2007. This is clearly meant to a 5-star resort and it is, but in a
Thai way. So the advertised DVD player is found in one room but not
in mine. The aircon works but vaguely so. The tap comes off my
shower and the wiring looks more dangerous than an unexploded
cluster bomb! And outside showers and baths are a wonderful concept
except when it is raining!
Yet it really doesn't matter. Everyone is friendly and you sense
they probably will get everything fixed by January and the place is
just so wonderful that I can manage almost any problem. Aso, we are
paying 2,500 baht versus a rack rate of 8,000.
The site address is http://www.doihomfharesort.com/index.html. It is
worth taking a look.
We are driven around the resort. It's owned by a Thai who made his
fortune in jewelry. You sense this is his fantasy project. Honestly
I don't see how the economics can work but feel the love that has
gone into the project. The basis of everything is wine. The
vineyards were laid down about 10 years ago with shiraz grapes.
There is an enormous, I would almost say fantastic, winery with
great vats full of wine.
Next we move onto the jewelry factory where gemstones are being
polished by about thirty workers. Beside is the tea house where we
sample about 10 different types of tea. All around is the most
wonderful scenery you will ever see. What a place this is. If I was
staying in a tent I would be happy here and I never do tents! If you
want to escape into a civilized wilderness, far from anyone, privacy
guaranteed, set in the most beautiful surrounds, then this is the
place for you. All of us fall in love with the place. All of us will
return.
Later we go into Chiang Rai itself for the gallery opening. On our
return we discover that the ferryman has fallen asleep on the wrong
side of the lake! Our driver is getting increasingly frantic trying
to raise him on the radio. I am beginning to think about the merits
of 4 of us sleeping in one car. He does eventually wake up and we
cross in the darkness, the lake holding its secrets from us like an
eclipse of the moon.
My previous time in Chiang Rai I had stayed right beside the Mekong
River. We took a boat into the Golden Triangle passing huge Buddhas
as we criss-crossed Thailand, Laos and Burma. We also visited the
Queen Mother's Summer Palace where there is a feast of flowers that
overwhelms the senses.
I also had the misfortune to be conned by my children into an
elephant ride across the river. This was not cool. Uncomfortable,
often scary, am I the only person who suffers from elephant motion
sickness? The Mekong and the areas around the Mekong are the equal
of Doi Hom Fha, but much more geared to the tourist. I can only say
that I adore the whole of the Chiang Rai region. It's my favorite
part of Thailand. I would happily get lost there for weeks on end.
The next day, Sunday, we drove home to Bangkok. It's a 10-12 hour
drive. Addisorn managed to lose us a few times, to the point that we
started to believe we might end up in Hat Yai if we didn't stay
awake to guide him! Oh for the joys of satellite navigation. In
Europe I can almost close my eyes on a 500km trip from Geneva to the
Arc de Triomphe in Paris. In Thailand I can get lost going round a
corner.
Three days is not nearly enough time to do this trip. We saw almost
nothing, yet we also saw everything. I would recommend taking 5-6
days, driving slowly, stopping often, keeping away from the main
metropolises, with the exceptions of Chiang Mai and Chiang Rai. It's
a wonderful experience and a fun and novel way to experience more of
what Thailand is about.
Last, some links for you about Chiang Rai:
http://www.chiangraiprovince.com/guide/
http://www.chiangmai-chiangrai.com/
http://www.hotelclub.net/hotel.reservations/Chiang_Rai.htm
http://www.thaiwaysmagazine.com/chiang_rai_map/chiang_rai_map.html
http://www.world66.com/asia/southeastasia/thailand/chiangrai
About the
Author:
Born in
England, Adam Bryan-Brown lives lived in Bangkok having spent many
years working in the USA and Switzerland. At the beginning of 2005
Adam set up his first independent company, 2nd AB Associates, a
virtual public relations agency. artThailand was created in January
2006 and is his second independent venture. He is a published writer
and is currently working on a book about his life in Thailand.
Website:
http://www.artthailand.net
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Traveler Reviews of
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