Showing posts with label selfie-stick. Show all posts
Showing posts with label selfie-stick. Show all posts

Tuesday, 28 April 2015

Plan B for Better

The ancient philosopher Lao Tzu said "A good traveller has no fixed plans and is not intent on arriving."  Let's see how well I can misuse that wisdom.

Accommodation was something I thought I'd hastily sorted the night before, but after I arrived on this new island by ferry, the first two taxi drivers didn't recognise my intended lodging.  Koh Phangan had a limited number of roads, especially compared to the more developed Koh Samui that I'd come from, though I also had the feeling that addresses were a new concept here.  Undeterred, I jumped on the back of the second guy's moped after suggesting what I thought was a nearby landmark.

As we were leaving the port, he suggested that I put my arms around him to hold on.  That didn't seem necessary - is this how he adds a bit of excitement to his day?  The reason, soon became apparent as the roads took a vertical slant with a random selection of bumps and potholes.

After a short ride up the western coast, we took a right turn up an even steeper driveway.  This was a huge, ocean-facing property.  The stressed bike's engine climbed past a worker's building, then a small front office and a number of bungalows before the road came to an end at a clearing full of rented mopeds.  This wasn't the top of the hill, but it was the end of the ride.  I thanked and paid the driver then began up the stone-cut steps.  This place had boasted, among other things, the best sunset view on the island and the more I increased in altitude, the less I doubted the claim.


As I began my ascent, two smoking-hot European women were coming down the stairs while speaking a non-English language that I was a little too distracted to recognise.  Passing each other on the steps, there was a short pause to exchange eye contact and smiles.  This place kept getting better the higher I went.

The Amst*rdam Bar (spelt with a star) is actually two bars which take up a large deck each.  The lower section has a swimming pool, whereas the upper deck had an even more laid-back atmosphere with a cushion covered floor and small, square wooden tables.

Panoramic views overlooked nearby islands as well as ferry transits to/from those beyond the horizon.  Today's weather was overcast but the (monkey) magic of the place was irrepressible.

 
Most bars require footwear whereas this one requested the opposite.  Small groups were scattered across the place, sipping drinks and heating plant matter that could somehow justify harsh and extended cage-time in this country.

I put my bag down, ordered from the bar and took in the scenery.  It was good.  As I finished my drink, my intent was to quickly establish base camp so that I can return to relax here.

I went downhill to the admin building where they tried, unsuccessfully, to help me locate my prearranged accommodation.  There was a WiFi signal here though, and I used my phone to take into account two maps.  There was a low-resolution map from the booking page that roughly marked the location, and then there was Google maps, which didn't mark the location, but did show roads and topography.  Topography was the key word here.  It looked like the place was a short distance away as the crow flies, however, there was this mountain in the middle and a long road around.
 
They rang the place with a conversation that just led to more confusion and the best I could make out was that they'd ring back in a few minutes.  After a short wait I asked, "What about those bungalows?" pointing to the several wooden structures built into the aptly named, Stone Hill.  "Are any of those available?"



He quoted a price, lower than I expected, which prompted confirmation that they were dorms.  It wasn't an ideal situation, or at least that was my ill-perceived notion at the time.  There were still at least 24 hours before transferred funds became available though my travelling bank card and any delays meant creative solutions would be needed for the few remaining Thai baht in my wallet.  Paying by card wasn't the norm in Thailand, and less so this far from the mainland.

I paid in cash, wrote my name in the register (no id required) and was shown to a clean, empty dorm with the type of view that inspires postcards which inspire resentment.

There was another reason I wanted to have cash at hand.  Police corruption meant that an unwanted encounter with the cops could be settled with a bribe.  This encounter may be warranted or unwarranted, because tourists are sometimes seen as an easy supplement to their income.  My prior research for worst-case scenarios of scams, crimes and misadventure in this part of the world had included episodes of Locked Up Abroad.  That show didn't paint a pretty picture.

At first by accident, and then by curiosity, I'd been learning about the underworld influences in Thailand.  Russians played a big part with significant presence in many of the nightlife industries.  Even on Koh Phangan, which can only be reached by boat (airport unfortunately coming soon), they had a foothold.

On the ferry here, I'd sat behind a man cut from a rectangular boulder-block.  His main knuckles on both hands were healing with scabs that suggested someone else had recently come off much worse.  Travelling alone in an old, faded singlet and hat, he reserved the window seat for an immaculate, huge black leather bag with gold zips.  I didn't need to be a professional profiler to see that something was amiss with this picture.  Whatever was in the bag, I'm going to guess it didn't include a hardcover copy of Walden and a selfie-stick.
 
As I made my way back up to the top bar, I felt like I was on location of a classic cop movie, where a mansion of Uzi-wielding minions is stormed by the law-bringing main characters in the finale.  In this case though, I was on the side that gets either blown away or arrested.

I knew that the reason the bar was able to sell joints was because they'd paid off the authorities, but those types of relationships can easily turn sour and it would be a precautionary exercise to assess the situation for the possibility of a police raid.

As far as fortified locations go, this place was top notch.  The one road from the bottom of the mountain meant that any marked vehicles would be seen coming up the slow ascent.  I'd probably be first noted to this by a sudden change in mood from the chilled staff and I could go rogue in the surrounding jungle.

A police boat would likely come from Koh Samui and this place had the main transit line in view.  Even if they came in abseiling off helicopters, there was enough of a panoramic view that the surprise factor would be diminished.

Continuing this line of thought, I figured that the only way was if they had already infiltrated the place and were going to come out of hiding in a highly-coordinated yet low-stakes sting operation.  There were only Thai's working here and non-Thai's as patrons.  Everyone looked as relaxed as to be expected in this paradise setting.

I'd given paranoia a chance to search for possible threatening scenarios.  It could now set up mental trip wires for circumstantial changes and then be gone.  This would make way for deeper thoughts as my immediate terror-alert shifted to code green.

Via the bar, I sat on a cushioned floor-chair on the main deck.  The grey-could sky didn't make for any less than a million-dollar view.  At this elevated place, I inhaled introspection.
 



Time passed in the most pleasant of ways.  It was in complete contrast to how it passes in places like airport terminals - as if it was credited to my account instead of debited.  This was my birthday well-spent.  It had taken me this many years to truly appreciate Bob Marley and now I was catching up.  Primed set and setting assisted, as well as the appreciation of two guys I'd started talking to.  They were from Iraq and Syria and knew how to appreciate the little things, so when light rain moved many people back to the undercover area, we treated weather like wallpaper.

The crowd increased for an obscured sunset.  It was an interesting mix of world travellers.  I ordered a meal as there was nowhere else I needed to be and even the food was brilliant.  The rain hit harder, then ceased for a while before another downpour.  This validated concern from those with mopeds and accommodation elsewhere.  I watched as a few bikes chanced the steep, downhill path which was now fed by a steady flow of water.  Glad that my room was only a short walk away, I headed to my bungalow.  

As I approached the wooden steps, I realised a stray dog was curled up outside my room.  He was a little startled and rose up to leave, although this movement was slowed by the tiredness of old age.  I talked to him as a friend, without too much direct attention, and he decided not to leave this dry shelter.  This was a flashback to my lodging in the Amazon, where another dog did the same.  It was also a link to my dog at home.  If I put a full stop on the end of my thoughts here, all seemed right in this section of the universe.


Monday, 2 February 2015

Questionable Crotch Contents

Saturday night.  Time to see what Patong is all about.  I had two keen tour guides, including someone I'd recognised from back home and now officially met.  Located half an hour taxi ride away on the west coast, this is Phuket's debauchery district.  Getting there involves driving over a steep hill in the middle of the island.  Buses severely struggle when climbing this and they are a known cause of death to anyone behind them when the brakes fail.  Our taxi driver was quite eager to overtake the faltering bus in front, although that came with risks of its own.

Patong nightlife is mainly spread over Bangla road.  This is a wide street for pedestrians that was far removed from being pedestrian in the "dull" sense of the word.  A flood of people wandered along a smorgasbord of brightly lit neon disorientation.  Instead of sex being used to advertise everything, here it was direct marketing.  I'd say it was at least ten times more available than coffee.  Families kept a firm grip on each other as they navigated the outskirts of the zoo.  Budget party goers sipped their alcoholic beverages from straws in small buckets.  Middle aged men exchanged cash for charisma as Thai bar girls let them role-play high flyers.  Lady boys (and work-in-progress lady boys) made their presence know too.

Google provides the photos I didn't take
Being my first time here, the company I was with were treating it like it was my 18th birthday.  We sampled a variety of establishments.  There was only one place they didn't want to go, but sometime after midnight and vodka funnels, that's where we ended up - at Patong's main nightclub.  In the VIP area we met up with some of the Tiger staff.  Eddie Bravo had been there earlier, but left because of a seminar in Singapore that day.

On nights out like these, there comes a point in time where it seems that a futile chase is continuing for something that has long since fled the area, if it was ever there at all.  After 4-something in the morning, I decided to pull the pin.  In less than three hours I had to be at a meeting spot for an island tour by boat.  I exited the establishment, zigzagged past gender-unknown Thais selling their questionable crotch contents and found a taxi.  I first negotiated the fare then jumped in the back of an empty "songthaew" (I can type it, I can't pronounce it) which is basically two fixed bench seats on the back of a pick-up truck.  This allowed me to lean out the window and appreciate the night view of the island from the climb up the hill on the way back to base.


Sleepless, I prepared my gear for a trip to the Phi Phi islands and then rode to where a van was collecting the tour group.  The morning became a classic case of hurry-up-and-wait and by the time we were in the high-speed ferry, my head was noddy.  I would have caught some shuteye behind my sunglasses if it wasn't for the Russian bikini-clads sitting across from me.

Towards the front of the boat, a heavy-set guy with ill-fitting shorts was giving everyone a cringe-worthy display of bushy buttock cleavage.  His wife failed to address this mutant mohawk.  When the tour guide urged us to see something out the front of the boat, the Australian family sitting near me was the first to make comical remarks about "No thanks, I'll be right" and references to "furry crack".  I laughed and then joined in with comments about a full moon party and how it seemed to go up to the 7th vertebrae.  For the remainder of the journey, the persistent eye-sore allowed a fun trade of amusing remarks.  Childish humour is even better with a dose of sleep-deprived delirium. 

Part man, part stegosaurus.
The Phi Phi islands are beautiful.  The tourist experience of the Phi Phi islands is not beautiful.  I'm sure I've learned this lesson before.

"There is nothing new except what has been forgotten."  -- Marie Antoinette

In a horseshoe-shaped bay, short white-sand beaches are surrounded by vertical cliff walls.  Keeping the dinosaur theme, here's what it would look like to a pterodactyl in flight -


As far as I could tell, for all daylight hours a continuous tide of tourists battered the small coast.  The beach was subjected to the relentless unloading of boats, like a re-enactment of the Normandy landings.  Once emptied, each ferry would make way for the next expulsion of people.  As demand was high, the visit was brief, and our tour was soon herded back into our water craft.


Here's a much better picture found online, compared to the overpopulated ones I took from the same location -


Do hospital emergency rooms continuously update the types of grievous injuries for which they keep statistics?  If so, I suggest a new and soon to be increasing category - namely, "Impalement Upon Selfie-Stick".  Most likely administered by others, this penetrating wound is a questionable mix of malice and public service.

I'm sure there's some practical benefit, but holy shit, have you seen the trance people go into when they use this attachment to their mobile phone?  Held like a Hamlet prop, they swirl around taking dizzying footage as nearby people lean out of the way, lest they be clouted.  But there's also a strange stupor cast upon onlookers, as they can't help but stare at the use of this extension to vanity.

I try not to rant on this blog.  It's too easy to fall into the self-indulgence.  This has been an exception.  A recent podcast on my traveling playlist referred to the cleansing effect of getting annoying thoughts out into written form just to clear the way.  The expression was something to the effect of "I'm just caging my monkey mind on paper so I can get on with my fucking day."

Speaking of monkeys, there was an island with them scheduled on the tour itinerary.  This ended up being our boat watching people from another boat throw pieces of banana at them.  The primates climbed out on branches that overhung the water and took turns trying to catch the flying fruit.  That was a quality encounter, like throwing chips to seagulls.

There was a prior drinking night smearing my judgement, but this tour reminded me that my preference for travel wasn't tourism based.  This experience put my penciled-in plans for the next few days into question.  I had intended on booking a flight to another island for tomorrow, but another option was to explore a jungle on the mainland.  Some research would be nice when I got back to a wifi connection, but priority alpha was sleep.