Sunday, January 31

Golden Triangle Motorbike Trip

I got seriously lucky on this one - most people go to Asia to ride elephants!

Wandering the streets of Pai, I looked up to see an old friend from Hanoi..surprise...to be honest, I looked to check out a sleek black roadbike and then my friend's face appeared.

Stix is my road tripping, Minsk riding friend from Hanoi, with his motorbiking fiend, Tom, the pair hired 650cc Ninjas to complete the Golden Triangle track.

The Golden Triangle is the area that overlaps the mountains of three countries, Burma, Thailand and
Laos..equalled to the 'Golden Crescent' of Afghanistan, it has produced the most opium in the world since 1950..today the bad guys have mostly fled and the countryside has returned to it's usual sleepy pastorial pace..and leaving it for the motorbike fanatics to enjoy!

It has been called the best motorbike riding road in South East Asia, perhaps the world!


Seriously fast bikes, seriously amazing roads..and one lucky little Australian who mana
ged to wrangle her way onto the back of one :)

Three days around the circuit through UNESCO World Heritage sites, crossing over mountain passes, north to the Burmese border and the highest mountain in Thailand...

1,800 turns...yep, someone counted them.
Silent screams..from me..
170km per hour was the fastest speed I saw

- and at this point I clo
sed my eyes -
I was told we went much faster.


Like a petrified koala, I spent two days with a death grip on Stix' belly, breathing through the turns and curves and silently screaming in pure...fear, joy, exhilaration...

At a beautiful moment, we stopped for tea in a tiny tea house on the edge of the Burmese border surrounded by hills full of history and still vibrating..it's the highest point I've been so far...the top of the world.

The next day, a sudden storm at Mae Hong Son saw the skies turn black. After talking to locals, the boys decided it would be to dangerous to go on and we turned around. Outrunning a storm..you need a good bike. It was pitch black in the rearvision mirror and blue ahead..for most of the way..and then, we were cut off and directly in the path of the storm. The dry season trees let go their leaves and branches and trees fell with the stinging, icy rain and the sharp winds..intense.


Wet, and tired, we made it back to Pai the next day after a short nights sleep in Soppong. What a trip. The boys headed south the Chiang Mai and I spent the rest of the day in a daze in Pai waiting for my bus to the border..

Mostly, I hobbled around taking pictures of this lovely town, said goodbye to the friends I had made, eating and drinking tea..and straight to the nearest massage palour for an hour of bliss before the next part of the journey appeared!

And it's going to be a two day journey on a slow boat to Laos...

Wednesday, January 27

Pai in the sky

Welcome Home - the sign should say as you burst out of weaving roads in into the Utopian city of Pai. Thailand's worst kept, most freely shared hippy secret :) it's the official home of peace and love in Thailand, tucked in the rolling hills and verdant valleys of the North.

Firstly, I haven't thrown up on a bus since a primary school trip to the Big Pineapple. My big night in Chiang Mai brought me to this ruin, the road curves and hairpin twists on the journey up - are never ending. It's hard to be discreet when sharing your insides with 10 other tourists on a mini bus..a kind old lady with purple plaits gave me a mint..hehe. just the start of the kindness :)

Nevertheless, I made it to the far north. Pai is an old secret, a small hippy village in the style of
Uki, Kuranda or Nimbin..yes, there are beautiful villages like this everywhere in the world.

As I fell through the door of the mini-bus a delicious sight filled my eyes..I am most comfortable surrounded by people whose preference lean towards rainbow colors and tie-dyed hemp. Around me were the smiling faces of 'family' from many countries, all colors, shapes and sizes and dreadlocks, on bicycles, on foot, barefoot and browsing bamboo covered rainbow shops..I took a deep breath..the city was covered in a smile!

My first day was spent luxuriating in the highest point of bliss I have experience in a long time.

1. being stationary!

2. swinging on a hammock absorbed in 'Kafka on the Shore' - wow, what a book..

3. and most importantly - and best said in prose -

ahem - framed by rolling green hills dotted with leaf covered bungalows... bamboo bridges crossing sunflower laced rivers... dirt fires burning freshly caught fish with smiles.
An invitation to your place, his place, their place..large drinks in large backyard pubs, red dust staining the hems of my pants and blending my bare feet with the earth. Green grass, pizza, wheatgrass, green grass pizza and smiles, smiles, smiles..from new brothers and sisters..

Pai will sit in my memory as one of the jewels of all my travels..

I spent hot days wandering sun soaked streets = more smiles. Jewellery making and chit chatting about life and change with Sandy the Chai tea lady, joking with a Thai rastafarian and learning how to work with leather, sharing music, the source of inspiration and endless rounds of 'Don't worry be Happy' with the Estonian - someone who wandered in here 4 months ago and hasn't left yet...haha, I think it happens frequently.

And at night, local live jams (Josh, these are times I miss you most!), friendly faces and new friends bonding you instantly to the town..after 2 days, I felt as though I had been a part of the water, moss and rocks for 2 years...I'll be back )

Tonight, I take a slow boat up the river, or maybe it's down...yes, down the river to Luang Prabang, Laos.. at which place I have instructions to walk along the Mekong 2km, turn left at the wishing well and find the banana place..or something similar..I'm not worried, there are a few hours left for me to savor this delicious place before turning and leaving..

Right now I'm sitting in an internet cafe with my ears tingling with the sounds of Oka and Josh's melodic new one..

I've just returned from a two day road Triiiiippppp....
.....on a 650cc black Ninja (the 'black' part is apparently the most important).

We followed the
snaking asphalt that carves tracks between Laos, Burma and Thailand, forming the 'Golden Triangle'. We moved at the speed of vibration, my brain rattling to the Burmese border and back again... mountainside, countryside...actually, I'm still vibrating.


Saturday, January 23

Chiang Mai

The beautiful city of Chiang Mai is about 700km north of Bangkok and surrounded by mountainous territory and jungle with tribes still dotting the high hills.

It's been a long awaited visit, Anna and I heard so much about it 7 years ago, but never made it this far north. Arriving in the cool light at an ungodly early hour of the morning, I tracked down the Canvas Cafe, a local public art-house, and dumped my bag..which for some reason is getting heavier and heavier!!

The Canvas Cafe is lovingly decorated with art, roosters welcome you at the front and there's a small green jungle out the back. Lek and Nong and their cute monkey child helped me out with a drink and a tip to the local art gallery and store. They have owned the house for four years and play host to alternative events in Chiang Mai including the Cycircus (a travelling troupe of musicians and clowns I juuuust missed)!

Chiang Mai is a city of temples, with 308 wats dotted around the 700 year old city, it's easy to walk and walk and walk. The four canals that border the old town are ringed by the ancient Thae Phae gate. It's an easy enough place to get around, mostly eating and visiting markets...if I was staying longer I would hire a bike though. (Never mind, Thai foot massages are cheap and everywhere!)

On my last night we were sitting watching UP..a mind blowingly beautiful animation! It's incredible to think that there are movies like this. Adventure, floating houses, conservation and an 80 year old main character! I was as entranced as the chubby little baby, Abaydi.

I went from this colorful mind-candy for a car ride with a couple of people I met through the house. Northgate Hotel has live jazz jams every Tuesday night and tonight jazz saxaphone, trumpets and a funky drum section were rocking the tiny corner bar. I sat and played congos in the corner for an hour and had a blast.

O and her brother Tomo were two of the Thai out with us, their mother had died recently after a long illness and they were out with their friends before 7 days of funeral ceremonies. They said monks would come to their home and chant, ensuring the spirit leaves as it is meant to.

Before I left, O said to me with a serene smile, that she knows her mother will be back again and hopes she can see her mother's spirit before she leaves. It was incredible to see how they were so trusting and content with their beliefs. I can only hope to be as calm and positive when my time comes to experience loss.

Learning, loving, canvas art, padding streets, smiling dogs, teeth cleaning, hippy babies, light and lots of it, sausages, fruit shakes, new leather, new string, new faces and plently of things to smile about!

From here, it's a 7:30 bus and a 3 hour straight shot to PAI!

Canvas Cafe
Phrapokklao Rd
Soi 9

Thursday, January 21

Bangbang Bangkok

Time's up again...visa run!

From the serenity of Laos to the concrete intensity of Asia's busiest city - Bangkok. It's been 5 years since my last visit and the streets are as colorful and crowded as ever. Bangkok is a beautiful, clean and bustling metropolis full of gorgeous glittering temples, monuments, impressive palaces, exotic foods, clean streets and orderly traffic...it's big and it's noisy, polluted and packed to the gills with backpackers.


Luckily, I landed directly on the soft cushions of Tu's Thai oasis. Another lucky find all those years ago, Tu's place is a sanctuary of calm. He's opened his house to travellers and hippies since 1988 when he was a travelling hippy himself following the trail to America and back...


Now the house is full or instruments, history, stories of The Grateful Dead, Jerry Lewis and other amazing artists, sitar playing, percussionistas, Rainbow kids, tailors, healers and artists..it's a wonderful place to recover and get back into the tie dye and inspired! I love Tu and there is always something happening in the house..

After Bangkok I'll be going to the city of Chiang Mai for a few days in the mountains..I've always wanted to go :)

So here I go!