01.20.06

Thailand- Myanmar/Burma Border

Posted in Asia, Trade, Travel at 1:25 by S

Thailand-Myanmar/Burma border

I visited Myanmar (former Burma) twice during my stay in northern Thailand. It wasn’t something I wanted to do, I had to. I needed to extend my visa. Anyway, I’ve written down some of my experienses in Thailand to share it with you. This is how I remember the first Up-North trip.

…Before continuing to Khung Khon, I had to visit Myanmar (former Burma) to renew my visa for another month. The bus ride to the northern border town of Mae Sai took 5 hours. We found Buddhist monks smoking cigarettes while talking in cell phones quite amusing, there are also the ladyboy monks that confuse me abit. Mae Sai has a border town feeling to it. People are going back and forth with things to sell in a big hustle. My border crossing was very undramatic, I was stamped out of Thailand, crossed the border , paid 200 bahts for Myanmar border officials and came back to Thailand. The bridge crossing the border and Mekong river used to be a major entrance point for drugs to the rest of the world. Today it acts as a gap between the rich and the poor, like the borders of US and Mexico or EU and Morocco (maybe not that extreme though). The music that blasting from loud speakers on the Myanmar side, had a soap opera touch in it, making my brief visit to this notoriously militant country absurd. After lunch we hurried back to the bus and sat for another 5 hours returning to Chiang Mai. There was a construction work of a major highway on its way between Mae Sai and Chiang Mai. With China border just some hundred kilometres away from Myanmar border, Thailand hopes that in the future Chiang Mai will become a centre of China-SE Asia trade…

Continue reading with pictures in my homepage

01.12.06

Thai Travelogue

Posted in Asia, Environment, Forestry, Travel at 13:47 by S

A paragraph from my Thai travelogue:

“…The day for unit’s workers started 8 o’clock with the national anthem and rising of the Thai flag in front of the office. The first day we walked through different plantation to find the most suitable ones to measure. The mountainous terrain offered beautiful views over the valleys with the highest mountain of Thailand Doi Inthanon looming behind the smoky sky. Only one plantation was chosen for closer measuring. This vast area had parts which had suffered a major forest fire six years ago and another part that hadn’t had a fire during it’s standing age of 26 years. Finally I would get the comparison that I needed. The two workers helping me were fun to be with, older Thai man knew all the plants like his own pockets and was constantly pointing around telling which trees produced something delicious to eat or chewing tobacco. He had a small bag with him where he kept this forest tobacco; fermented and dried leaves, bark and some white glue he called acid. All this would be wrapped inside a leaf and placed under a lip. The result: black teeth. The young Karen guy talked a bit English and worked as a scribe and a translator. He was especially pleased when he heard that there are hill-tribe people living in Finland called Saame people who nowadays use helicopters and snowmotorcycles (snowmobiles) to look after their reindeer. After the last days work (which took 10 hours) we headed to the Hmong village close to the unit grounds to buy couple of beers and a pair of Hmong trousers for my girlfriend. Villagers were playing football in the square while we bargained for the trousers. After half an hour I gave up and paid too much for the pants…”

Read more with pictures: Forest Inventories in Thailand and Then Some