Thailand Journal – Chiang Mai – Elephants, Shopping Mall, Chicken Satay, and Phuket!

Today was the day! We had signed up for an excursion to go to an ETHICAL elephant sanctuary. Turns out, I believe the only ethical sanctuary for elephants would be one that does not have visitors. But how would they operate without the tourist dollars? It’s a debate that is beyond me.

We visited a sanctuary that was, I have to admit, somewhat ethical. What this essentially means is that nobody is going to actually ride an elephant there. But interacting with the elephants? Yes, there is that…and even though it felt a little bit wrong, we can’t say we didn’t enjoy it.

David Sheldrick Elephant Orphanage in Nairobi definitely felt different…less interactive and therefore more ethical.

This sanctuary we visited was interactive. We fed the elephants AND went into the river with them. As we were going into the river, everyone was given some pretty bizarre looking clothes to change into. Hence the really bad fashion you’ll see in these upcoming photos.

After we changed into our ‘elephant clothes’, everyone was given a pail of food to feed some of the elephants.

I believe that’s bamboo shoots in there with the bananas, but I could be wrong…

They’re so regal, aren’t they?

Michael petting one of the elephants…
This smile says everything. It really was wondrous to share space with these beautiful rescued creatures.
Showing off our high fashion while posing with an elephant…

We prepared some special treats for the elephants. Apparently, they really loved this mixture. It was rather gross to put together, but well worth the efforts in the end.

The river we were about to enter in order to bathe the elephants…

We went across in little raft-like boats and an elephant followed us…

Crossing the river…
One of the elephants and its handler…

It was a glorious experience. Elephants are one of the most beautiful creatures on the planet. I’m not sure there is a fully ethical way to care for them in a sanctuary IF you’re going to have tourists visit. We don’t know what the interactions do to them. Not a month after our visit, a woman was killed by an elephant while she was in the river with it. If they weren’t stressed by the presence of tourists, this woman probably would not have died.

The David Sheldrick sanctuary seems to be the most ethical one I’ve visited. I loved our visit to this one, though. I love elephants. These ones were well treated. Honestly, there was a slight tinge of ‘is this okay?’ running through me while I was there.

After we were forced to give back our haute couture romping-with-the-elephants day wear, we went back to the hotel. Michael and I decided to walk our neighbourhood and go to a mall a few blocks away. Yes, we went to another mall. Like the ones we had recently visited in Bangkok and Chiang Rai, the one in Chiang Mai was also fairly high end. Any one of them could have been a fancy mall here in Toronto.

This one had a rooftop patio with restaurants and several amazing viewing areas! It was quite spectacular.

After our excursion to the mall and in and around the neighbourhood, we decided to have a quiet evening at the hotel bar/restaurant. It was really an excellent restaurant. We were glad we decided to stay at our home base.

The chicken satay was phenomenal at the Bella Nara Hotel!

The chicken satay was to die for! It’s so good wherever you get it in Thailand. I think it’s one of those signature dishes that they’ve perfected. Whether it’s from a street vendor or a high end hotel, you can’t go wrong! After dinner, it was time for bed. It was a long day…lots of time in the bus getting to and from the elephant sanctuary. Lots of walking. It was time to call it a night.

The breakfast was very good at the Bella Nara too. Lots of options to choose from. I highly recommend this hotel!

Just a couple of the things on offer for breakfast at the Bella Nara. They had a WIDE array of hot and cold foods to choose from in their buffet…

After breakfast, it was time to say goodbye to Chiang Mai! The thing about a tour like this is that you are always either on the move or thinking about your next move. It’s simultaneously thrilling and exhausting.

It was time for Phuket!

Leaving Chiang Mai for the beach!

THE BEACH!
You can literally see the beach as you approach for the landing…

Welcome to PHUKET!!!

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Thailand Journal – From Chiang Rai to Chaing Mai – Mountains and Temples and Dancers, oh my!

The next morning, we said goodbye to Chiang Rai. We drove by bus to Chiang Mai…two mini buses. It took several hours because of recent storms that washed roads away.

But first…silly photos in the hotel lobby at Chiang Rai…

I believe this was the first time I ever held an umbrella in my life.
The second time…

It was a picturesque drive with a rest stop in the middle. A rest stop that had a Cafe Amazon! It’s a bit like the Thai equivalent of a Starbucks.

Cafe Amazon quencher.
Whenever we get the opportunity to drive through a countryside, I LOVE it! We get to see so much. The trip from Chiang Rai to Chiang Mai was no exception. Some beautiful sights.

First stop in Chiang Rai was to visit Wat Phra That Doi Suthep. This was a Theravada Buddhist temple. This temple is atop a small mountain, and there are phenomenal views of the city at the top! Also, this temple contains a relic of the Buddha.

Wat Phra That Doi Suthep

It was a long funicular ride to the top!

There were so many beautiful flowers and paper lanterns everywhere. It felt a bit like a fairy tale up there…

 

paper lanterns…

Just when you feel completely enamored by the surrounding pretties, you catch a glimpse of the view beyond the distractions…

The views from Wat Phra That Doi Suthep
Below us? Chiang Mai. Above us? Only sky…

There was literally beauty around every corner up there.

I LOVE this shot of Michael!
This looks like Ganesha…not sure if there are other elephant deities, but Ganesh is one of my favourites…

Beauty wherever we looked. Buddhist statuary and iconography has always held a special place in my heart. It exudes serenity.

Us at the top of the mountain with a visiting monk in the background…

With all the fake AI wood carvings exploding all over the Facebook airwaves, it was so lovely to see an ACTUAL woodcarving at this temple…there were, in fact, a few.

A woodcarving of various Buddhas…
Ring dem bells…

We stopped at a beautiful lookout point about halfway down the mountain as we headed toward Chiang Mai in the distance…

Chiang Mai, sprawling below…

The Bella Nara Hotel in Chiang Mai was probably my favorite hotel of the trip. The only drawback was the pool. It was okay, but tiny and surrounded by the hotel…so almost always in the shade. The hotel was beautiful. I hate to use that despised word Colonial…but it did give off Colonial vibes.

Our room at Bella Nara Hotel…

The hotel restaurant/bar was luxurious and very Colonial…reminded me of such places in both Kenya and India.

After drinks at the hotel bar, we were headed off to a traditional Khantoke dinner. Khantoke is a culturally rich dining experience that originates from Northern Thailand, particularly the Lanna people. It’s a communal dinner served on low wooden tables called Khantokes, which are surrounded by floor seating mats.

The khantoke table we sat at, though, had a sunken-in area around it…so we had space for our legs and we sat normally as though we were at a regular sized table. I kinda wish that it was an actual low table so we could have experienced it more authentically. But the meal was exceptional! I loved it.

Before we get to the meal, though…it was just the 4 of us partaking in this one. The rest of the group were going somewhere else. As they were escaping the hotel parking lot, we happened to see them…I think the following triptych of photos speak for themselves. (-:

They were truly a fun bunch of fellow travelers!
Arriving at Khantoke Dinner…
It was an exceptionally tasty meal…

There was a lot of entertainment…from acrobatics, gymnastics, dance, knife wielding, etc.

It was really quite an action-packed day! We were ready for bed. And our next day! It would be our second ethically questionable excursion. Elephants!

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Thailand Journal – The Golden Triangle – Big Buddhas, Opium, and Shopping Malls!

A photo sent by Rio… back at the Train Market…
A Rio photo sent to the group…

The next day of our journey in Thailand was more Chiang Rai. We already knew our new guide was no RIO, but today we really saw the differences between the two guides. I don’t want to slag our new Chiang Rai/Chiang Mai guide, because he seemed like a lovely person. But Pom had this regimented teacher mentality. He breezed through things, spouting off details and leaving us in the dust unable to actually view what he had just spoken about. At our first stop, we literally had ZERO time to see a Buddhist Temple we walked around the outside of. As he spoke about the surroundings, we followed and listened. I’m sure I wasn’t alone thinking that we would have alone time after the talk to actually visit the surroundings. Spoiler alert! We did not. It was off to the bus. No photos. And there were occasionally cross words when somebody would wander to get a glimpse of something too. He definitely had a different, less tourist friendly, method of guiding.

We were brought close to this Buddhist Temple…but briskly guided around it. We never actually saw the gold Buddha inside that you can just glimpse a tiny bit of in this shot…
We saw only the things we could glimpse on the periphery of the temple we stopped at…
This stupa was quite incredible…
The Thailand Tourist Gang…

After our whirlwind almost tour of this temple (I didn’t even catch the name), we were off to the Golden Triangle. If you don’t know what the Golden Triangle is, it’s the land around the confluence of the Ruak and Mekong Rivers where Myanmar (Burma), Thailand, and Laos borders meet.

Golden Triangle…
We were there for a river cruise…to cruise through the waters where the three countries meet.

This huge Buddha–surrounded by what looks to represent a dragon boat–sat lotus watching over the rivers and the three converging countries, from the shore in Thailand.

Buddha…

The boat brought us close to shore at both of the surrounding countries, without actually taking us there.

After the short cruise through the two rivers in the Golden Triangle, we got to visit the lotus sitting Buddha close up!

There was actually so much more to see than the lotus Buddha. The entire area was a shrine filled with statues, flowers, etc, etc, etc…

The elephant entrance…
Three sitting Buddhas…
When sitting Padmasana (Lotus), Buddha touches the ground to help ground their body, maintain stability and support themselves.

Laughing Buddha

After our visit to the shrine, we went into the little town and visited an opium museum. The House of Opium Museum. Spoiler Alert: They did not hand out samples at the door.

The House of Extravaganza—I mean OPIUM.

It was quite an interesting place, filled with exhibits on the drug…from a vast assortment of pipes and drug paraphernalia to what happens if you’re caught selling or doing it.

The poppy…
Drug scales
an attack scene of an opium farm…
Busted!

I bought a great pair of pants at a little stall outside the Opium House!

Can’t wait for summer when I can wear these pants!

After the opium museum, we went to a buffet restaurant on the side of the road. It was one of my favourite Thailand meals!

This young man made the noodles for a really delicious soup! You can head over to my Instagram or TikTok to see a little five second video I took. He was fast. It went from dough to noodles in SECONDS!

Making noodles…

If you want to see the little video of the noodle making, you can click this Instagram link…but you will be prompted to log in if you’re not already logged in. If you follow the link, follow my account. I’ll follow you back. (-:

The meal was absolutely delicious, and we had great views!

Lunch with a Chang beer…

The view from our lunch table…

Another view from the restaurant…

So, after our lunch we did a thing. There are TWO events we did in Thailand that made me slightly to overly uncomfortable. The one I just could not deal with was our next stop for this day. We went to visit the Karen tribe…also known as the long-neck tribe.

I was not prepared for this. I was doing ethical somersaults the entire time I was in this little village visiting the long-neck women and children. I was not ready for this real life museum and all it entailed. Having experienced this add-on excursion, I would choose not to do it if I could have a redo.

Before the realization hit me…

I’m actually not going to share any photos of the tribe. I felt CRINGE the second I took them. I realize that our tourist dollars help them out and I’m glad we funded them by visiting the village…but the whole ON DISPLAY thing left a sick feeling in my stomach.

Michael and I had the evening to ourselves this night. Our first, I think? It was nice. We went to a mall down the street from our hotel.

Guess what! Remember the great clown scare of 2016 that swept across that failing nation to our south? You know, when Ronald McDonald was moved because of the gory clowns striking fear into everyone (AND the doctors who insisted it was unethical to use a clown to get kids to eat junk food). Well…

The clown is still doing his thing in Thailand…
Yes, dear reader…this horroshow is a reindeer…

It was great to do something so mundane as to walk to the mall and walk around inside. It was a bit of culture familiarity comfort.

We even had dinner at SIZZLER…

The mall was decorated for Christmas…

I just had to share a couple more pics of the reindeer. I don’t know how this did not strike fear into children everywhere…

Back at our Chiang Rai hotel for the night! Our next day was a short travel day to Chiang Mai.

The Heritage Chiang Rai…would recommend!

If you’re enjoying this series on our Thailand adventures and would like to support this page, you can do so by buying me a coffee! KevinCraig-BuyMeACoffee

A Link to the previous POST ON THAILAND.