« Loy Krathong In The Village Of Ban PhutsaSongkran Ponderance »
Comment from: Richard S
Your website is beautiful and sounds like an exciting adventure. I will certainly bookmark for continued reading. I could not find a logon registration however.
The best of luck to both of you.
04/18/06 @ 19:24
Thanks for the detailed Songkran story:

the Cleansing,

Preperation,

Offerig and

Respect

are what the villagers in Old Patong, Baan Nam Sai Yen taught us years ago.

Naturally as the day went on, everything and everyone were drenched!

But, it started off as you mentioned. Thanks again for the true meaning.

ps: yours n Cherrys new Blog will be followed by many here...:-) all the best!

04/19/06 @ 11:55
Comment from: SiamJai Email
Thank you for the kind comments. :)

Richard, you are very observant! The login option is intended for Cherry and me, when we have to write blogs from public computers. You see, once we are logged in, that option changes to "logout". (We could log in with "Admin" too, but there is no logout option with that link - not good when it comes to public PCs!).

I made sure that general functions such as commenting and downloading are possible without logging in, but if you find anything that requires a login, please let me know. I'm sorry about the confusion, I hope it didn't cause any inconvenience. And thank you for calling it to my attention. :)

Superman, I'm glad to hear that the tradition is so widespread. Although cultural changes push it increasingly into the background, I'm sure that these wonderful traditions will survive by word-of-mouth. :)

Cherry and I also thank both of you for taking your time to read and comment our fledging little blog. :)
04/19/06 @ 17:35
Comment from: Paul
Hi, thanks for that. I was very interested in some more traditional info on Songkran. I insisted this year that we all, especially the kids, experience a more traditional Songkran. It didn't quite match what you wrote, as I think many Thais have let those traditions die.

On the 13th we did the cleansing and offering parts of what you wrote and did the respect part as a whole village. On the 14th we had our own smaller family respect ceremony.

I am glad that the kids got to experience that. The water fights and fun bits still fit in well, but really are much better when balanced with these more profound / quieter (struggling for the right word) parts of Thai culture.

Pity that the 4 day ceremony seems to be dead. I wonder if it survives somewhere in Laos?

I haven't looked at your website yet, but soon will.
04/20/06 @ 13:06
Comment from: SiamJai Email
Thanks Paul. Yes, I think that one good thing about Laos is that traditions live strong there. I don't know for sure whether they celebrate Songkran the traditional way, but I think it's likely (at least outside Vientiane).

About our site: we're moving to a new server, so it may be down for day or two. Trying to get it back as soon as we can! :-)

Happy reading!

SiamJai
04/26/06 @ 18:01

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