Monday, August 30, 2010

Movies, Birthdays, Foreigners and more

Technically it's still monsoon season, but the weather the past few days has been on the beautiful side, only raining when I'm fast asleep. We've run out of short work weeks and long weekends for now, and have no holidays in September, but October will be here in no time, and that means 3 weeks vacation! Nevertheless, even without long weekends, we've managed to entertain ourselves with the time we do have off from work.


Last weekend a group of us saw Toy Story 3(Spanish Buzz!!),

had Japanese food,

(Kelly trying out his new Thai skills with Khun Pooh...who seemed very confused.)

and attended the birthday party of one of the motorbike taxi drivers outside April's apt building.

It was great fun.

This past weekend, my favorite (and only) Dutch friend was back in Bangkok for his last weekend before heading back to Holland,

so we went out Saturday night, had Thai food and Italian food, and then dropped him off at the airport Sunday afternoon. Oh and Box #5 had to be picked up at the post office and paid for, but I got it!

Next week? Becoming an official member of International Church of Bangkok. :D

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Kanchanaburi

With last Thursday being Queen Sirikit's birthday (and Mother's Day, since she's "mother" of the Kingdom), we had a four day weekend again. Our newest member from Sac State arrived a few weeks ago, and hadn't been to very many places, so I invited him to go with me to Kanchanaburi, since the rest of the teachers have almost all already been there. We met up at MRT(subway) at 8:30am Thursday, and headed to Bangkok's Southern Bus Terminal, where we bought our tickets and settled in for the 3 1/2 hour ride to Kanchanaburi. I had reserved two bungalows at the BlueStar Guesthouse for 3 nights, at 200B(about $6) per night per room. It was right on the River Kwai, and the staff were more than helpful when it came to figuring out what we planned to do all weekend.



Thursday evening we went to the JEATH museum.

In WWII, Japanese soldiers forced POWs to build Death railway, the railway connecting Thailand and Burma, in only sixteen months, when engineers say it should've taken at least five years. They were fed very little, and often it was rotten food, and forced to work nearly 20 hours a day. Thousands died of malnutrition, starvation, disease, and heat exhaustion; the ones that did survive were severely emaciated, many missing a limb or two, amputated due to disease. JEATH stands for the six countries involved: J - Japan, E - England, A - Australia and America, T - Thailand(where it took place), and H - Holland. It was very hard to walk through, and I think we both felt sick to our stomachs as we were leaving.

Friday morning we hopped a bus to Erawan waterfall, and Robin INSISTED we climb to the 7th level(the top).

I wasn't too keen on that idea, but wasn't going to stand at the bottom by myself and wait, so I went along.

Somewhere around level 3 I decided to test the water and swim around...that was until I got about ten feet in and felt the unanticipated swarm of eager fish around my legs who had apparently been waiting all day to make my acquaintance.

Unfortunately, I was not as thrilled to feel them as they were to feel me, and after a few short girly screams and whimpers paired with a couple of panicky jumps, arms flailing, I managed to pull myself up onto a big safe rock. Then it poured. POURED.

I continued the climb to the top in my swimsuit, flip-flops sloshing with every step(it was easier barefoot, but then I had to carry my shoes, so I eventually just put them back on), single strap backback secured across my shoulders, trying my best to stick to the path that was now muddy, flooding, and slippery. We finally reached the top(which was an accomplishment in and of itself, but nothing spectacular to look at), and then headed back down...only to miss our bus by FIVE MINUTES. The staff member we spoke to must have sensed(or seen) my anguish, and said that her boss could drive us home in his truck in an hour. It was a much more comfortable ride than the bus, and he didn't even charge us. Gotta love Thais.
Had dinner at The Floating Restaurant that evening with our new friend from Holland, Lucas.

Lol, and yes, we "went Dutch."

Saturday we bathed with Elephants! Haha, though not quite as awkwardly as it may sound.

We rode them into the river, and got to scrub them down with heavy duty soap and brushes.

Then they'd dive underwater to rinse off.

That, and the baby elephant, made my day. I <3 elephants.

In the afternoon we took a long boat up and down the river.

Walked across the Bridge over River Kwai,

explored a cave,

and visited one of the cemeteries for the POWs.

That part was really sad, but at the same time really beautiful.

Slept in on Sunday, checked out at noon, then headed home. Overall, another great weekend in the Kingdom.

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Thailand vs Singapore

The Wednesday night before our four day weekend, David, Sunny, Brenda, me, Rani, Kristian, Shyr, Simon, Andrew, Harry and Melissa all headed out to the Thailand/Singapore soccer game at the Impact Stadium in Muong Thong Thani. The game was epic. Only one point was scored, but it was ours, and we cheered the..entire..game. Our seats were the cheapest you can get (100B) and were right behind the goal posts. Apparently that's the Thailand cheering section too. We had no choice but to be on our feet and attempt to chant with them. It was a blast.
Shyr..and everyone else with the cow on our walk to the stadium

Our view of the game

I'm gonna get me one of these

Rani with his Thailand scarf around his head

Candles for the Queen's birthday

Win

The Thai flag being unfurled over our heads when we scored

8 ball in the corner pocket

The weekend following Sports Day, Sunny and Brenda took me, Rani and Bauj out to the River Treehouse Restaurant. Nestled way back down a side soi, we parked and took the bicycle taxi to the entrance. It sits right along the water, and we had reserved a table right near the water. It was beautiful, and the food was pretty good too, considering I'm not a huge fan of Thai food. After the meal, we headed into Bangkok to The Saxophone, where we finished off the night enjoying a few really good live bands, and shooting pool.

In the bicycle carriage

Sunny decided he wanted to include himself in the picture..

Part of the "inside" of the restaurant

Rani and Brenda

The flame under the soup

Bauj joyously devouring the fish brain...and me not-so-joyously gagging

One of the live bands

Shooting pool at The Saxophone

Losing pool at The Saxophone

Winning pool at The Saxophone

Monday, August 16, 2010

Saaaahm, SEE!

Apparently uploading pics after the 10 second video were too much for my blog. Here are some more pictures from Sports Day:











Why does she even have this thing?

So I realize that I haven't posted in a week or two, and for that I apologize. But in my defense, I have had four short teaching weeks in a row, either for Thai exams, holidays, sports day, or something else, and have...been lazy about it. So here is the first of two potentially long posts. Sports Day was the week before last (yes, I know, I'm behind), and took up Thursday and Friday of that week, so the kids had no class with us. We still had to come in to the office though, of course. And wear the Sports Day polos that the school had made for us. Oh you want to know what kind of sports? It was more like "Dance Day." Or Cheerleading Day. Silly, I think, but two free days and having something to watch wasn't bad. They work very hard practicing their routines, and most of the groups were really good. And of course, the makeup and costumes were beyond elaborate.
Girls rushing for their pom poms

First, one of my 5/1 students

The start of the parade