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| Thailands Travellers Tales Tell us your stories about travelling in and around Thailand. Where's cheap? What's good? Is Pattaya any good for families? Would Koh Samui be better? |
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| | #1 (permalink) |
| Watching the Wheels Last Online: Today 06:26 PM Join Date: Feb 2006 Location: east of Pattaya
Posts: 8,507
| Kanchanaburi Pick the widest part of Thailand, and it will be pretty close to our journey from Ubon Ratchathani to Kanchanaburi. A few days in an Ubon village was enough for Mum & her hubby, over here for a holiday, so I made a snap decision to visit Kanchan for a few days before heading home to Chonburi. We overnighted at a hotel in Kheng Khoi, Saratburi and enjoyed a fine steak at the nearby Chok Chai farm steakhouse-this is becoming a regular habit in my travels upcountry. Washed down with a quite decent Thai shiraz from the Khao Yai winery. I'd been curious to check out Kanchan for some time- for the river and mountain scenery, not the death railway stuff. War tourism isn't my thing. ![]() The following days drive was easy enough, and of course passing through the central Thai plains you go over several rivers and klongs such as this one, but barges made this one worth a shot. ![]() And so on to the gradual rise into Kanchan- you're in the mountains here but you'd hardly know it from the drive up. First stop of course, the River Kwai- this quaint little punt was just pulling in. ![]() We're actually looking out on the intersection of three rivers here- the Big Kwai, Little Kwai amd MaeKhrong (?). ![]() ![]() Nice and scenic- but I was surprised how relatively 'untouristy' the town was. Turns out we were in the real downtown, but the travellers sector is just over a kilometre away on the road heading towards the famous Kwai bridge. Different scene there- I was glad in retrospect we chanced upon here first.
__________________ To err is human. To blame someone else is politics. |
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| | #2 (permalink) |
| Watching the Wheels Last Online: Today 06:26 PM Join Date: Feb 2006 Location: east of Pattaya
Posts: 8,507
| It was lunchtime- I would have liked to go to this gaudily decked out place, but it was closed. ![]() Where we had lunch was nearby, a floating pontoon restaurant called Tawatburi or something very similar. It was nice- I should have got a photo We drove around a bit looking for decent riverside accomodation, and chanced across this place, on the other side of the infamous Bridge over the River Kwai from the township. This ones entered in the TD photo competition. ![]() ![]() ^ Nice enough place for a beer. ![]() ^ Mrs looking overfed. ![]() ![]() The Cast. |
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| | #3 (permalink) |
| Watching the Wheels Last Online: Today 06:26 PM Join Date: Feb 2006 Location: east of Pattaya
Posts: 8,507
| Chang Bones & Buffalo Pong Prolly shouldn't bore you with this, but this chang was nearby, all of 57 years old and looking it. ![]() Well used to us tourist types. ![]() I'm a sucker for Chang, so purchased the obligatory rip-off bananas and gave him a feed. ![]() How could I say no? There right across the track was his future. ![]() Another diversion prior to finding a Hotel was this herd of water buffalo. ![]() Amusing to see the motosai's zipping around and through the throng. The buffalo weren't bothered. ![]() Blimey they pong though- far worse than cattle. ![]() |
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| | #4 (permalink) |
| Watching the Wheels Last Online: Today 06:26 PM Join Date: Feb 2006 Location: east of Pattaya
Posts: 8,507
| River Kwai Bridge Resort First place we checked was Bamboo Resort. These floating bungalows are nice, and decent value at 400 bht- but the toilets and showers are shared, and on dry land. Mum was having none of that, especially as she was nursing a case of Rama's revenge. They had land rooms with private bathroom for 600 bht too, but Mrs firmly rejected them 'cus she reckoned the bathrooms stunk. ![]() Right next door though is the River Kwai bridge resort, and this was fine if not the cheapest option. ![]() Nice, tidy well kept resort- 1200 bht inc. breakfast, after a wee bit of haggling 100bht inc. 2 free breakfasts (I never have brekky anyway). ![]() Rooms were well designed too. ![]() ![]() And the ubiquitous swimming pool that noone uses, just to show your not in a scruffy backpackers type place. ![]() Theres loads of accomodation in Kanchan- from 250bht backpackers hostels that line the road leading to the Kwai Bridge, up to the large 5 star Felix Resort on the river. We were happy with our choice though, and it kept the oldies free of bed bugs and other such hippy vermin. ![]() Travelfish gives it a decent rap too. River Kwai Bridge Resort, River Kwai, north of the bridge, Kanchanaburi, Kanchanaburi - Thailand guesthouse review by Travelfish. |
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| | #7 (permalink) |
| Watching the Wheels Last Online: Today 06:26 PM Join Date: Feb 2006 Location: east of Pattaya
Posts: 8,507
| ^ Thanks fellas- I'm the one thats going to need a holiday after ferrying the Olds around for the last month though. The resorts got a nice bar by the River, looking towards the nearby Kwai Bridge- a fair few beers were sunk here. It ain't the infamous POW & Slave built 'Bridge over the River Kwai'- this replaced it, but it's nice. It's beer time, so I'll leave you with a few shots looking out from the Bar and get back to the thread later. ![]() ![]() ![]() We caught this train the next day- stay tuned for the Train journey from Hell. ![]() |
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| | #9 (permalink) |
| Watching the Wheels Last Online: Today 06:26 PM Join Date: Feb 2006 Location: east of Pattaya
Posts: 8,507
| Death Railway Built by the Japs beginning 1942, The Death Railway cost the lives of 90,000 Asian labourers and around 16,000 Allied POW's, in appalling conditions. What remains is in reality a shadow of the original project, which linked Thailand to the Burmese rail network, passing through some spectacular mountainous country on the way. After the war, the Thai and Burmese government promptly agreed to rip up 50km of the track on each side of the border. On the Thai side, the track now ends at Nam Tok- around 60km north of Kanchan by road. Today, the infamous Railway of Death by Boredom stands as grim testament to the power of Hollywood. It has become an iconic symbol of the brutality of the nasty Japanese to Us, and even a significant tourist attraction to Them- maybe because of what can be achieved through sheer human endeavour when the Japs are in charge. Kanchanaburi, a pleasant town sitting at the confluence of the Big Kwai, Little Kwai and Maenam Khrong Rivers, sits at the Apex of a sizable pyramid of tourism, and happily milks it for all it is worth. The day before we had decided it would be a nice idea to get the train from Kanchan- the plan being to get the train out to Sai Yok I think, get a bus back, and check out some waterfalls and the Tiger Temple (Yeck ![]() A moody shot of the pseudo Kwai Bridge. The Jeath War museum (one of three I believe) is off to the left of this photo. The VFW has erected this modest memorial near the bridge to the US POW's that lost their lives- ![]() There are other memorials around for the substantially more Brits, Aussies and Dutch that died too, and I hope there is one for the Asian labourers also. This toy train does little trips along the rail line for tourists, we however were getting the commercial service- ![]() We had some time to kill before the train was due at 11am, so my intrepid travel companions decided to walk across the Kwai rail bridge like hundereds of other tourists every day. After about twenty metres of walking and dodging other tourists, I decided this was totally naff and left them to it. I did however get this shot of them for posterity, whilst having a beer. ![]() |
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| | #10 (permalink) |
| Watching the Wheels Last Online: Today 06:26 PM Join Date: Feb 2006 Location: east of Pattaya
Posts: 8,507
| So, what do "Bridge over the River Kwai" and "Planet of the Apes" have in common? Well, quite a lot actually- and his name is Pierre Boulle (1912 - 94), a French author best remembered for these two novels, both of which were subsequently made into famous movies. I am sure this unassuming man had no idea of the chain of events he would set in motion, altering the town of Kanchanaburi forever, once Hollywood entered the equation. David Lean, the director, and Alec Guinness, the lead actor, were his unwitting accomplices in crime and the movie "Bridge over the River Kwai" was released in 1957. Both the book and the movie were best sellers. My intrepid travel companions had already purchased the train tickets by the time I finished my Chang and joined them on the platform. The train is a normal commercial service, running from Bangkok to Nam Tok via Kanchanaburi. That means wooden seats and no aircon- no ploblem, I like train journeys. The regular fare is 17bht from Kanchan to Nam Tok. For a non-Thai however, the fare is 100 Bht. Now thats taking falang pricing to extreme. The train arrived on time, we boarded and set off. Seemed to me a mix of about 50% Thai, 50% foreign, about 75% full. The train passed through some mildly interesting country, really nothing much to seperate it from any number of Thai train journeys, and stopped at a couple of stations. After about 45 minutes, I was getting a bit bored. The inevitable vendors were around, selling touristy stuff. The drinks vendor wanted 60bht for a can of Chang. Then at about the one hour mark, we pulled into a station in some one horse town. Somewhere on the journey- ![]() All hell broke loose- the train was besieged by what seemed like hundreds of tourists, attached to various tour groups dropped there by bus. Had a bottle of Chang in the shack on the right here, looking longingly at the road out. No one was going to Kanchan, so I was stuck here until the next train in about 2.5 hours. ![]() Wandered about for a few minutes. Had another coupla beers at the other shop in town. The other road out- ![]() The name of the town was- ![]() And got the next train back to Kanchan- with four large Chang in my belly, and no lunch, I was mercifully able to doze for most of the journey back, but took this shot- ![]() Not one of my great days out, but damn I'm glad I walked off that train. There to greet me in Kanchan was a nice tropical downpour. It suited my mood ![]() The train fare back was, of course, another 100 bht. What a ferking rip off. ![]() Last edited by sabang : 13-07-2008 at 05:33 PM. |
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| | #11 (permalink) | |
| Too drunk to fuck Last Online: Today 06:45 PM Join Date: Jun 2005 Location: Fuckwitistan
Posts: 25,952
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| | #15 (permalink) |
| Elite Member Last Online: Today 06:39 PM Join Date: Jun 2008
Posts: 2,041
| We stay in the Camelia resort which is I think next door to where you stayed or very close to it, great spot, nice pool and plenty of room as it is on a big block and only a few buildings on it. Great spot to relax by the river and the tarzan rope which my kids love is almost opposite. We go there several times a year. I wanted to buy a block there on the river, but was to worried about the river and young kids, that is not a river to mess with, its current is very strong and I am a good swimmer, but you barely move at times trying to swim upstream. We also tipped over a kayak at the base of the bridge trying to look up some girls skirt. Lost the paddle. if it had been a creek instead of a river....well |
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| | #16 (permalink) | |||
| Watching the Wheels Last Online: Today 06:26 PM Join Date: Feb 2006 Location: east of Pattaya
Posts: 8,507
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Truthfully, if you're gonna do this thing you might as well team up with the Bus tourists. You just do the most interesting part of the 'Death' railroad, then it's back on the bus to see Waterfalls and Tigers, and/or Cemeteries & War museums, lunch thrown in somewhere. You'll fit more in your day, and the train fare is an absolute rip off anyway. Lots of Lotus beds on the Kwai. ![]() My brave travel companions got back around dusk, I was sleeping off the Booze by then. The Waterfalls were nothing special and crawling with tourists (Erawan are the real Falls to see around here). The Tiger temple was expensive and crawling with tourists- but at least they got their photo taken with a Tiger, and they were happy about that. Time for everyone to take a nap, before the evenings activities. Quote:
Last edited by sabang : 13-07-2008 at 06:50 PM. | |||
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