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The following day, it was all a bit subdued at breakfast. I was flying home in the morning, so I turned down Kevin’s request to sing a song for everyone in the hotel bar and went to bed. Afterwards, we went up on the big wheel in the rain and then walked back. I was looking for some new tennis shoes, but we didn’t find any decent shoe shops, so we went back to the hotel and then walked down to the Asiatique Riverfront for that superb meal at Baan Khanitha, where I had the best hot and sour soup I’ve ever tasted and a beef massaman curry. ShoppingĪfter our temple tour was over, we had time for a quick dash into town using the river shuttle. Gerlinde’s nickname is ‘turtle’, so it was fun to see all the baby turtles in the water, and there was even a fully grown adult on the path for us to photograph. The temple had a rocky outcrop surrounded by a moat, and we almost had the place to ourselves. I’m not sure how successful the project was, but it was very quiet with hardly any tourists, so it was nice to be away from the crowds.
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Instead, we quickly moved on to the Khao Mo Prayurawongsawas Temple, which was one of a series of ‘follies’ commissioned by the king to increase the ‘peace and harmony’ of the kingdom. The plan was to climb up the steps to the viewing platform at the top of the central tower, but it was closed when we got there. The Temple of Dawn (or Wat Arun) was much smaller, although it spanned both sides of the road, and didn’t take us long to visit. It now covers an enormous area and includes dozens of buildings, the most famous of which is the Temple of the Emerald Buddha (or Phra Si Rattana), which houses an 80cm carving of the Buddha made out of a single piece of jade. The palace was originally commissioned by the King of Siam to lift the spirits of the Siamese population after they’d lost a major war against Burma. We started off at the Grand Palace, which is an eclectic collection of buildings put up over hundreds of years and still not complete.
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The following day, Gerlinde booked a driver to take us to the Grand Palace, the Temple of Dawn and the Khao Mo. That turned out to be a mistake because I wasn’t actually allowed to go down to the river with the elephants. The publicity photos of elephants with howdahs wading through the river in the jungle looked great, so I asked if I could take pictures. On the way back to Bangkok, we stopped at a Buddhist temple, where we fed the fish and took a few pictures, and then we drove to Chang Puak Camp, where Gerlinde and Kevin went on an elephant ride. It was only later that she found out it was the only deadly, venomous primate in the world…! In fact, it was a slow loris, and it was so cute and cuddly that Bernie paid to hold it while everyone else took pictures. Almost the first stall we came to had a couple of guys offering to sell photo opportunities with a snake and a ‘lemur’.
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After a few delicious free samples at the sugar factory, where Gerlinde bought a couple of photo albums, we moved on to the market. However, it was very entertaining as Gerlinde pitted her finely tuned negotiating skills against the local shopkeepers, who often resorted to pleading, begging and in one case giving Bernie a massage to close the deal! We could’ve had a 60-minute or 90-minute tour, but it had taken nearly two hours to get there, so we decided to take the two-hour option.
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It was up to us to take a boat to visit each of the stalls on the banks of the canals, plus a factory making sugar from coconuts and a Buddhist temple. I was expecting the ‘stalls’ to be boats on the water, constantly moving between customers. The floating market was not quite what I thought it would be. Instead, she arranged a trip to the floating markets of Damnoen Saduak and then a sightseeing tour of the city. Gerlinde had only been once before – and that was when she was eight! – so she didn’t book any excursions in advance. When I was planning my trip to Bangkok, a friend of mine helpfully told me that I could get a blow job for 800 baht (or £20).įortunately, everyone was more interested in the floating markets and the palaces and temples. Bangkok Ramada Plaza Bangkok Menam Riverside