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TravBuddy.com: Phangnga Travel Blogs and Reviews
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<copyright>Copyright 2005 TravBuddy LLC</copyright>
<link>http://www.travbuddy.com/</link>
<description>The latest travel journal entries and travel reviews from Phangnga</description>
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<lastBuildDate>Sun, 14 Oct 2007 19:21:34 PST</lastBuildDate>
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<title>Claustrophobia in Phang Nga/James Bond Island,Elephants Sans Shock Absorbers, &amp; When Monkeys Attack </title>
<link>http://www.travbuddy.com/travel-blogs/14299/Road-to-Myanmar-Is-Paved-With-Good-Intentions-Sea-of-Yellow-Shirts-Khao-San-Road-Backpackers-Bangkok-1</link>
<pubDate>Sun, 14 Oct 2007 19:21:34 PST</pubDate>
<description>our time on phuket is more relaxing/chill but the big tour we did was to phang nga bay and james bond island (a location for the man with the golde...</description>
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<p><a href="http://www.travbuddy.com/Phangnga-travel-guide-631861">Phangnga, Thailand></a>, Apr 03, 2007</p>
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<DIV>our time on phuket is more relaxing/chill but the big tour we did was to phang nga bay and james bond island (a location for the man with the golden gun).&nbsp; the tour took us elephant riding (sort of neat for the first time, but I can see how one wouldn't want to do it again) - elephant unemployment is a growing problem in thailand as they are revered but expensive to maintain and the traditional lumber work they do is limited now&nbsp;due to forestry conservation. so now most work in&nbsp;the tourist&nbsp;industry. the ride was fun but a bit unsettling at&nbsp;first because of the&nbsp;big steps these animals take - guess they don't&nbsp;come with shock absorbers.&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV>then we hit james bond island - the setting of the film "the man with the golden gun" which was nice but the huge volume of tourists coming and going was on par with DiCaprio's Koh Phi Phi Leh beach. so it was a bit anticlimactic and we sorta got yelled at by the tour guides b/c we didn't get on the boat in time &lt;shrug&gt; The other highlight was when&nbsp;art got attacked by some ultra aggressive ants while I was trying to take a picture of him.&nbsp;after I knocked them off I realized that the heads were stilll stuck in him and I had to pick out each ant head one by one. little buggers</DIV>
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<DIV>the highlight though was kayaking (with guides) into&nbsp;these really tiny passages that are probably impossible to get into during high tide.&nbsp; we literally were lying flat on our kayaks&nbsp;to get into these passageways (major claustrophobia) with rock formations mere inches from one's face.&nbsp;we were also kayaking through a mangrove area,&nbsp;basically a submerged&nbsp;tropical rain forest. the vegetation was so lush and green... of course, commercialism is always peeking around the corner, as we saw a guy in a kayak trying to sell us soda in the middle of the mangroves!&nbsp;</DIV>
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<DIV>then we went to a a thai muslim "gypsy village" floating on water (their ancestors settled on these piers jutting out from the land and out of tradition,&nbsp;successive generations stayed there,)&nbsp;&nbsp;In the past 20 yrs, I'm sure it's gotten quite lucrative as james bond island tours passs thru for lunch.&nbsp; Unfortunately, the lunch was ultra greasy and I was feeling a bit sick afterwards &lt;blech&gt;</DIV>
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<DIV>then, we dropped by this reclining buddha shrine inside a cave somewhere - the cave was pretty neat and so was the scenery, but there were more monkeys! there was some kind of commune/extended family living right outside the shrine entrance. I'm telling you, thailand is monkey heaven. I saw one alpha monkey&nbsp;sprint towards a man, ran up his front, and grabbed his ice cream one!&nbsp;makes&nbsp;me wish I bought that stun gun at khao san road&nbsp;</DIV>
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<DIV>the last part of the tour was this random visit to a cashew drink tourist trap. totally random... like they prob got kickbacks from the cashew drink co to bring tourists there.&nbsp; got free samples of the cashew juice (yeah, I didn't know there was such a thing either... like, is there such a thing as peanut or walnut juice?) the greasiness of lunch made me pretty much just wait outside</DIV>
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D(["mb","\u003cdiv\>\u003cdiv class\u003dea\>\u003cspan id\u003de_111c0938c3bd67c4_1\>- Show quoted text -\u003c/span\>\u003c/div\>\u003cspan class\u003de id\u003dq_111c0938c3bd67c4_1\>\n\u003cdiv\> \u003c/div\>\n\u003cdiv\>  \u003c/div\>\n\u003cdiv\> \u003c/div\>\n\u003cdiv\>\u003cspan class\u003d\"gmail_quote\"\>On 4/1/07, \u003cb class\u003d\"gmail_sendername\"\>Francis Vo\u003c/b\> &lt;\u003ca href\u003d\"mailto:francis.p.vo@gmail.com\" target\u003d\"_blank\" onclick\u003d\"return top.js.OpenExtLink(window,event,this)\"\>francis.p.vo@gmail.com\u003c/a\>&gt; wrote:\u003c/span\>\n\u003cblockquote class\u003d\"gmail_quote\" style\u003d\"padding-left:1ex;margin:0px 0px 0px 0.8ex;border-left:#ccc 1px solid\"\>\n\u003cdiv\>somuch has happened in the last 4 hrs. we got lost in the jungle in twilight and I wound up trudging ankle-deep in some kind of oil dump before leading a search party with flashlights to find arthur, but that comes later. \n\u003c/div\>\n\u003cdiv\> \u003c/div\>\n\u003cdiv\>I&#39;ll first talk about 2 nights ago (was it 2 days?  I can barely recall the flow of time) - our last night in chiang mai was spent at a place called chiang mai saloon - it was recommended to us by some other travellers that went on the golden triangle trip with us. the place was basically american with burgers and such - (way overcooked, personally) and we played some foozeball and pool. but the neat thing was talking to some of the waitresses. we got a bit of a hint of how big the difference is in lifestyles is between the local thai people and tourists. everything that we could pay for and consider cheap (basically food or other stuff that costs 2-5 usd) is still way too expensive for the local thai people. and this is the most economically advanced country in SE asia. one waitress challenged arthur to pool and afterwards she brought us to a club where the locals hang out (though there were a fair number of foreigners there, most were brought by other local thais) \n\u003c/div\>\n\u003cdiv\> \u003c/div\>\n\u003cdiv\>it seems that we always wind up in some local club (see my cambodia trip stories). 5 mins after we go in, there&#39;s some fight that breaks out between 2 girls and one had to be dragged kicking and screaming out of the place. other than that the place was loud, smoke filled, and it was obvious that some girls were &quot;working&quot;.  and, lo and behold, we find more poor, misguided thais fascinated by the k-pop culture (again see my cambodia trip notes on the tour guide I refer to as &quot;mini-Art&quot; bc of his korean obsession) We meet these 2 local thai girls and 1 of them wind up talking to art the entire time (we were there from 2pm to 5pm) about k-pop stuff (again, it is amazing what korean soap operas will do to give a PR spin on korean culture) while the other seemed a lot less interested. and, on a side note, jsut like in cambodia, they have these guys in the bathroom who massage your back and give you a rub down when you do your business - it really freaks me out. I don&#39;t want anyone (much less a guy) touching me while I&#39;m taking care of business \n",1]
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<title>Phangnga</title>
<link>http://www.travbuddy.com/travel-blogs/11450/Karon-Beach-Karon-Beach-1</link>
<pubDate>Wed, 25 Jul 2007 10:17:16 PST</pubDate>
<description>Tour on the sea.&amp;nbsp; </description>
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<p><a href="http://www.travbuddy.com/Phangnga-travel-guide-631861">Phangnga, Thailand></a>, Oct 12, 2006</p>
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<P>Tour on the sea.&nbsp; </P></p>
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<title>Wat Suwannakuha</title>
<link>http://www.travbuddy.com/Wat-Suwannakuha-v7758</link>
<pubDate>Sun, 15 Jul 2007 22:51:45 PST</pubDate>
<description>Wat Suwannakuha is a Buddist Temple inside a chain of connecting caves. We stopped here because of a tour we took (on the way to rafting). It cost ...</description>
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<p><a href="http://www.travbuddy.com/Phangnga-travel-guide-631861">Phangnga, Thailand></a>, Jul 15, 2007</p>
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Wat Suwannakuha is a Buddist Temple inside a chain of connecting caves. We stopped here because of a tour we took (on the way to rafting). It cost 20baht per person to enter (thats less than $1 AU) so it was really good value. Inside, there is a huge gold Buddah which is laying down. I guess once you've seen one Buddah, you've seen them all so it wasnt that exciting. However, the caves themselves are quite spectactular as there are amazing rock formations. The cave smelled quite bad (probably monkey poo) but the rock formations were really good to look at. As the cave went up-hill, there was no barriers or proper steps which was quite dangerous. One man who was with our group even fell down and hurt himself.

There are millions of cheeky monkeys running around, especially outside the cave, so watch out for them as they try and steal things off you. One even stole a little boys ice-cream! </p>
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