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[111205] Singapore - Bangkok - Chiangrai, with two bags of old clothes, 4 capteh, 2 small boxes of crayons, a stack of A4-size rough paper, a sheet of shiny star-shaped stickers, & STB booklets & one issue of e URA Skyline newsletter with plenty of colourful photos of Singapore's landscape & food.
right outside e departure gate in Changi was a little garden showcasing several different species of bamboo, a reminder of our rush to complete e write-up on e importance of bamboo in e lives of hilltribes (ceilings, flooring, walls & balcony platforms of houses, fences, gates & cattle pens, fish traps, drinking cups, altars & symbols, food, etc) for e library@orchard exhibition....nice start =)
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[1] Don Muang domestic terminal [2] 60-70 baht for e can, how much for e drink? [3] Bangkok-Chiangrai One-Two-GO boarding pass - will e plane fly at e same angle as e printing? [4] flight oh3-eck4-waan1-sake1-tuu1 OX162 on a tiny little MD-82 that has a detachable butt at 'C' [5] cleaner & brighter than any international airline that e cat has travelled on before, & no one can walk through once cabin crew seats are folded out to occupy e aisle [6] how to emerge from e rectum of a MD-82 [7] beautiful scenery unfolding as e endless patchwork of rice fields in e Central Plains give way to e mountain ranges of e north [8] e reason behind e perpetual haze that cloaks most of Thailand every cool & dry season [9] rolling up e red carpet after a military welcome (not meant for us) at Chiangrai International Airport
in Don Muang, a Caucasian man in uniform sat down to wait together with all e passengers in e boarding area. turned out to be e pilot....who didn't seem to know where he was flying to....
in e middle of e flight, e plane started to circle above e mountains (probably Nan or Phrae province) as if preparing to land, with e late afternoon sun & mountains of Laos (east) alternating at least 4 times between e windows on e left & e right of e cabin. after 720++ degrees e cat decided to check its compass to confirm that it wasn't imagining things....
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wonder if this is how it feels like to fly in Laos, where most airports have no radar & pilots fly by sight, turning back if e weather turns foul & visibility drops....
& then we suddenly broke out of e roundabout & continued heading north towards Chiangrai. about 40-50 min later e plane started to circle again, & e familiar Mae Nam Kok (river) & two lakes of e Chiangrai Rajabhat University campus came into view as we lost altitude, erasing all doubt as to whether e plane was really going to land this time.
while paying for e 200 baht (fixed price) taxi coupon for e ride into town, e counter staff suddenly froze in mid-transaction & stood up as silence fell across e entire airport....& we all instinctively turned around to face e King's portrait as e familiar 'so-do-mi-so-so-la-so-fa-la-so....' strains of e national anthem played over e airport terminal speakers (& radio & TV sets across e kingdom)....this is 18:00PM in Thailand =)
& then it was over, & soldiers picked up their guns, security personnel passed e bags they had held aside through e X-ray scanners, arriving passengers started to file out of e transit area again, customers wandered back into e shops, people outside e terminal resumed loading their luggage onto vehicles, cars started moving, & life picked up where it had momentarily left off.
e taxi took us through Fang Min (supposedly e poorer area?) into Changrai city, a much faster & less crowded alternative to e Asia Superhighway 1 route. Baan4 Bua1 Guesthouse (879/2 Thanon Jet Yot, Tel: 053-718880 baanbua@yahoo.com) is a quiet place with spotless rooms off e main street, a short walk away from e night bazaar & bus station. had noticed e sign to this place a year ago when e expedition team was staying in e nearby Wang Come Hotel.
e Englishman owner Brian & his Thai wife run e guesthouse in e day, while J, a Thai/English/Mandarin-speaking Chinese guy, helps take care of things after hours. J is a third generation descendant from e Chinese (both civilians & Kuomintang soldiers & their families) who fled e communist takeover & crossed over from Yunnan into Burma, Thailand & Laos, settling in remote mountainous places like Ban Pha Tang near e Thai-Laotian border & Mae Salong (to be visited in a few days time) near e Thai-Burmese border.
[ filed under: thewandering straycat + chiangrai_2005 + thai1 ]
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