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Comment from: aknj
I enjoyed your blog and read it almost everyday. I have visited many places that you talked about when I was young growing up in Thailand. It's a shame you have to pay for being "farang" while you were indirectly but actually doing this for Thai tourism. Your pictures were always great, too. Please keep up the good works!
2006-04-08 @ 22:55
The "farang tax" tends to negate attendance in such places that charge it!

Tourist traps of all kinds plainly live off of huge tour bus users, most locals, expats, travellers tend to skip these joints.

TOT might consider curtailing such "taxes" for things concerned with real Thai history & culture, museums, etc.

Is Thailand the only country that has a "farang tax"?

Years ago, my old Pal Samai tried to plan a trip to the Golden Triangle, specifically Laos, he said "we go in, we go out, nobody know"...Poor Samai, he's been in Brokedown Palace since the mid 80's.
2006-04-09 @ 00:19
Comment from: Betti
the Buddha statue and the elephants weren't there four years ago when I first visited. those package tours from Chiang Mai are really not worth going there :-( I was suprised to hear you're heading there, but I thought you had stumbled upon some hidden sights in your guidebooks.
last year I had to go back to Mae Sai on a visa run, and we visited two interesting places underway (I was with a group of Thai colleagues, so we DID go to this bigBuddha-elephant place as well). one was a small temple a few kilometres before Mae Sai town itself, forgot the name, it's a few minutes ride from the main road to the left (if you come from the south), and the big attraction are the monkeys living on a high vertical cliff, they come down for food if they spot people but they are not very aggressive, it's an interesting place if you haven't seen monkeys up close before. the other one was the "white temple" (Wat Rong Khun) near Chiang Rai, brand new attraction (not yet fully completed) with lots of Thai visitors, someone has recently written a blog about it over here.
2006-04-09 @ 00:24
I also was in the area 10 years ago and agree with much of what you say, Richard. I thought Chiang Saen was a sleepy but very friendly place at that time which only came alive for the weekly gemstone market. I did not have to pay to enter any ruins -but donated in the provided boxes.
I remember the opium museum as being a small bungalow with a nominal entrance charge and Sop Ruak much as you describe it today, (less elephants and Buddha). Absolutely agree it is not worth the effort from Chiang Mai to visit this tourist trap.
The border was closed at Mai Sai and we were constantly hassled by cigarette sellers -and a feral pack of child beggars that followed us everywhere demanding money and trying to snatch cameras etc.
Also went to Doi Tung -the house was closed to visitors but the gardens were nice. I remember a big billboard with a picture of the Princess Mother draped in black -a week or so later in Bangkok I witnessed the Sunday morning rehearsals for her funeral while visiting Wat Bo. Now I know more about Her I would like to go back to Doi Tung -maybe Chiang Saen as well to see how it has changed.
2006-04-09 @ 02:03
Comment from: KhunChin
I was in Golden Triangle with my wife early this month. Standing on side of the stationary "SHIP" where Buddha statute is housed and looking towards the congluence of the 2 rivers, I saw a dark-skinned corpse floating down the Mekong. The scene must has shocked and scared her so much that by the time we drove and arrived at ChiangKong, she refused to cross Mekong over to Huay Xai in Laos.

Construction works is ever going on in Golden Triangle. Now someone is collecting donation to build the statute of GuanYin (Avalokitesvara). Good business sense to make people come back.

KhunChin in Singapore
2006-07-30 @ 07:48
Comment from: Jonathan · http://jonlandrum.com/
I am about to move to Mae Sai in a couple weeks. Chiang Saen is probably my favorite town in the area because of its atmosphere. But I agree about the tourism in the area; there's not much to see, and pretty much all of it is a trap. However, a scooter is a great way to see the countryside ... a view which cannot be topped if you're into mountain scenery. And for that, the only charge is the gas.
2008-03-18 @ 02:37

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