I went to a driving range today. $6 for unlimited buckets, chipping, and putting. After a couple hours, a neighbor and I stopped at a local restaurant for my second lunch of the day. It was about 3:30. My neighbor speaks great thai and knows the place, so he ordered two tall sweet teas and two dinner plates of rice with pork, vegetables and an overeasy egg on top. Total price with generous tip-60 BHT = $1.85 per person. At 6:30 I had spaghetti and a salad cooked by Ahnika. Then at 7:30 headed out to a restaurant with about 10 others for what I thought would be drinks. This place was on a busy local street. It had a sheet metal roof with cheap 4 foot double fluorescent lights all around and no side walls. There was no atmosphere except all the locals and the pouring down rain (while still about 80 degrees). It's all about the food and drink at this place. The blackened halibut was $1.10 and a 22 ounce beer $2.25. So here I am blogging after midnight to digest some of this food.
I realized today while at the restaurants and on the taxi ride there, that I was learning thai. After my second lunch today I was able to tell the cook that I had a happy tummy. I could tell the taxi driver to take me to Chai raan ahaan, yuu thii soi samakee (Chai restaurant on street Samakee). I was able to tell him where and which way to turn or when to go straight or slow. I was also able to ask for change at the restaurant, trading 500 bht for sii loy, and haa, yii sip (4 hundreds, and 5 20). When I came here, I had doubts that I would ever pick up the language. Now I know that this will truely be my second language.
Ahnika swam in the swim-a-thon last night. She swam for two hours, taking only about 6-30 second breaks to drink water. About 3.5 miles and goodness knows how many calories.
This morning Micki ran her first cross country race. As an 11 year old she finished first in the girls under 13 group. It was fun watching her last 300 yards as she reeled in several people including a few boys. I'm sure you can tell the boy in this picture got toasted.
What a great start to the weekend!
Saturday, October 2, 2010
Thursday, September 23, 2010
3 Days in Hua Hin (Head of Stone)
How much would it cost to hire someone to drive you for three hours, drop you off, drive three hours back home, then pick you up three days later and drive you the three hours back to your house? Could you get someone to do it for $160? This is why we don't own a car.
Our latest adventure was a three day trip to Hua Hin, a long white sandy beach with a huge stone rock that apparently looks like a head at the end of the beach. We stayed at the Marriot. It was fabulous. We splurged, spending about $150 a night. The rooms were well appointed with two queen sized beds. The hotel workers were very courteous and the free breakfast was more like something you would find at Anthony's on a mothers day morning. I ate so much each morning that I didn't need to eat lunch either day. Even the girls went back for seconds and thirds.
Our first day there we had lunch while the room was readied, then had beers in a bucket of ice by the pool while we read and swam with the kids. We finished with a lavish meal at a restaurant on the beach.
The next day we had a driver take us to Pa Lu A falls and then to the giant Buddha. We hiked up to the forth of five levels and went for a swim in the river. The coldest thing I've experienced yet in Thailand but nothing like the rivers in Washington. The river was loaded with fish. If you look carefully at the picture of me and the girls standing next to the falls, you'll see a carp trying to jump up the falls like a salmon. Nice timing Kristy! We finished that day with dinner, drinks and shopping at the Hua Hin night market. No beer gardens here. Just walk around with any drink or beer as you please. The hustle and bustle, along with seeing how low you could get a vendor to go on a cd, jewelry, fake designer hand bags etc. was a blast.
The last day we finished with another huge breakfast and more hanging around the pool.
Over the course of the three days, Kristy and I did manage to get in plenty of exercise. I twice rode bike and lifted in the workout room along with a mile swim in the ocean. While Kristy and Ahnika got in a yoga class and a run on the beach. There was a family of 4 girls there from ISB that hung out at the pool a lot, so Micki was pretty much swim, swim, swim.
Saturday, September 11, 2010
Work For 3 Weeks - Get a 3 Day Vacation
The next day I got in a good work out in the hotel and then headed out for more shopping before we had to depart for the airport.
Oh, and the free hotel breakfast in the morning was fabulous.
Attached are two pictures from my hike
Saturday, September 4, 2010
Our Community
One wouldn't ever need to leave our little community of Nichada Thani, here in Thailand. Today I visited the clinic, with a friend who had an earache, which is right next to the dentist office and the bank. I worked out this morning I used the high school weight room, stopped at the small (expensive) grocery store called Villa and discovered a little "weekend market" which apparently occurs once a month. Venders included local artists, furniture, jewelry and antiques. My snack yesterday was a Starbucks and today it was at "twist" which is a scaled down version of jamba juice.
We live with people from all over the world. Today in the grocery store there was a family from Holland, the children both had on wooden clogs! A child's home country is usually the second sentence when meeting someone new. In my classroom I have students from Australia, Israel, Sweden, Idonesia, Thailand, Hong Kong, Canada and the U.S.
Mickey is one busy girl, she had school yesterday, after school choir practice, stopped by for dinner and then went to a friend's house for a sleepover. She appeared today for 10 minutes- to get some money for a shopping trip with the same friend. It was good to see her tonight for dinner, and tomorrow she is going to be at birthday party, poolside.
Ahnika and I went to the Home store yesterday to look at paint samples. ( We did have to take a taxi outside of our little bubble) I think we will have her room painted first. I am considering painting our family room a light yellow color and the dining area a gentle orange? is that possible, a gentle orange?
One teacher said that she had her family room painted for $35, sounds like the right price to me.
when we were at the Home store, there was an american family walking around, meandering the aisles looking a tad bit overwhelmed. They were buying the basics, microwave, iron, laundry soap, towels...
I said, Hello, and they all smiled at me quickly and said hello.
"New here?"
"Yep just got in yesterday, "
It did make me feel that we have accomplished a lot in the last 6 weeks- think of how we will feel in another 6 weeks- especially after our fall break at the end of October!
We live with people from all over the world. Today in the grocery store there was a family from Holland, the children both had on wooden clogs! A child's home country is usually the second sentence when meeting someone new. In my classroom I have students from Australia, Israel, Sweden, Idonesia, Thailand, Hong Kong, Canada and the U.S.
Mickey is one busy girl, she had school yesterday, after school choir practice, stopped by for dinner and then went to a friend's house for a sleepover. She appeared today for 10 minutes- to get some money for a shopping trip with the same friend. It was good to see her tonight for dinner, and tomorrow she is going to be at birthday party, poolside.
Ahnika and I went to the Home store yesterday to look at paint samples. ( We did have to take a taxi outside of our little bubble) I think we will have her room painted first. I am considering painting our family room a light yellow color and the dining area a gentle orange? is that possible, a gentle orange?
One teacher said that she had her family room painted for $35, sounds like the right price to me.
when we were at the Home store, there was an american family walking around, meandering the aisles looking a tad bit overwhelmed. They were buying the basics, microwave, iron, laundry soap, towels...
I said, Hello, and they all smiled at me quickly and said hello.
"New here?"
"Yep just got in yesterday, "
It did make me feel that we have accomplished a lot in the last 6 weeks- think of how we will feel in another 6 weeks- especially after our fall break at the end of October!
Wednesday, September 1, 2010
She's A Helluva Good Cook
The squid is to the left |
Tuesday, August 31, 2010
Elephant
Gary and I were in a taxi recently, going out to dinner to celebrate a coworkers birthday. We were stuck in after work traffic so I was a bit bored. I glanced out the window and there right beside me was an elephant! With one person aboard. Just moving slowly with the cars, taxis, bikes and motor scooters.
Apparently they are trying to reduce this type of sighting, on high traffic roads. It is also a bit of an attraction for tourist so folks were begging with elephants, so it is illegal. However, I am curious just how one removes an elephant from a 8 lane highway during rush hour!
Apparently they are trying to reduce this type of sighting, on high traffic roads. It is also a bit of an attraction for tourist so folks were begging with elephants, so it is illegal. However, I am curious just how one removes an elephant from a 8 lane highway during rush hour!
Hired Help
Today we paid our Mae Bon for her first month of employment. She works for us 5 days a week, and we pay her the equivalent of $300. I have struggled with this small amount of pay for quite a while- yet here is what I know now:
-this is the going rate in our community, if a mae bon is paid more than others she may have trouble with the other mae bons who will try to sabotage her work ( put bleach in the washer) so she will be fired and then they can get her job which has a better salary
-some mae bons work 6 days a week, 12 hours a day
-there is a pecking order for mae bons, based on your nationality and who you know
- if one mae bon helps another get hired, then the newly hired mae bon is expected to repay the first mae bon with some hours of labor
-they do like to take a long lunch and visit :)
- the $300 we pay our mae bon is close to what a college graduate earns in Thailand...
so it is all relative
-this is the going rate in our community, if a mae bon is paid more than others she may have trouble with the other mae bons who will try to sabotage her work ( put bleach in the washer) so she will be fired and then they can get her job which has a better salary
-some mae bons work 6 days a week, 12 hours a day
-there is a pecking order for mae bons, based on your nationality and who you know
- if one mae bon helps another get hired, then the newly hired mae bon is expected to repay the first mae bon with some hours of labor
-they do like to take a long lunch and visit :)
- the $300 we pay our mae bon is close to what a college graduate earns in Thailand...
so it is all relative
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