Friday, May 9, 2014

Northern Thailand Water Play

Chai Lai Orchid Nature Bungalows (http://chailaiorchid.com) also organized a day trek through the Mae Wang Mountains and a ride down the river on a bamboo raft.



First, we hiked through rice fields and got a close up view on farming.

Trekking through rice paddies


Liv getting her farm on
Then we hiked over to a waterfall near Mae Wang Mountain.  Kelley and I were the only ones to jump in and it was absolutely FREEZING.  It was not refreshing at all, just painful.

Mai Wang Waterfall
This is a bridge?  Am I supposed to walk across this?

Look mom, no hands..more like no handrails!
It doesn't look cold...


until you're in it.
Faking it… its freezing
Smart cookie, Summer, didn't jump in
Our last stop on our day trip was on a bamboo raft down the river adjacent to Chai Lai Orchid.  We expected a 3ft x9ft raft, but this raft was 2ft x 20ft! It was so long, it did not take the corners well.  Since I was in the back, I got quite a jarring every now and then, but not enough to ruin our awesome ride.  It was so fun and relaxing.  It was an amazing way to wrap up Chiang Mai.

Seriously, you want us to sit on 8 Bamboo sticks!


Summer, Liv and Kelley on the bamboo raft

See ya later!









Long Neck Tribe, Northern Thailand

Chai Lai Orchid (http://chailaiorchid.com) arranged a day trip for us to visit the Long Neck Tribe's Village. The Long Neck Tribe is a group of exiled people from Myanmar who have no rights in Thailand.  They are not allowed to occupy jobs that Thai people could otherwise occupy and thus depend on tourism to maintain their humble lifestyle.

Long Neck Village marketplace

Long Neck woman and girl drying plants
The Long Neck Tribe believes that the beauty of a woman increases with each gold ring she lengthens her neck with.  Girls are fitted with rings at a very early age and they are very heavy.  There are conflicting views about the humanity of such a practice considering the medical strain it buts on the women's collarbones and sternum.  

Summer and Liv with the Long Neck girls
7 rings on a 7 year old
Summer trying it on for size
I've got nothing on this giraffesque beauty - 24 rings!
 They are expert weavers and make most of their money weaving and making jewelry for sale.

Long Neck weaver
One woman was playing the guitar and singing.  She was selling a CD of tribal music.  While she was singing, Summer and I decided to entertain her and her daughter with a dance accompaniment.






Patara Elephant Farm, Chiang Mai, Thailand


Our second day in Chiang Mai was the BEST DAY OF MY LIFE!  I feel sorry for my future husband because our wedding day probably won’t hold a candle to this unless we get married on elephants. Oh, and future kids, although I will likely love you eternally and with a force that I can never imagine prior to, the fact that you’re ripping me open will probably NOT make your birthday my best day ever…it will probably still be second to riding and bathing and caring for elephants!

We visited Patara Elephant Camp (http://www.pataraelephantfarm.com) and signed up to be elephant trainers for a day.  Patara Elephant Camp is not just an elephant sanctuary, but they are also a breeding facility with the hopes of increasing the elephant population.  Their elephants are not chained to a tree or restricted in anyway, really.




Summer and Emily…happiest day ever!
When we were introduced to our elephants, we had to greet them by raising our hand and calling out their name, accompanied by ‘cha’.  If they flapped their ears at us, we were accepted to be their partners.  We then greeted them with a basket of sugar cane and bananas that we were able to feed them by either putting it in their trunk or asking them to open their moths by saying “Bon” and feeding it directly onto their tongues.  Honestly, when they lift up their trunks, their mouths look like a giant vagina….its gross and fascinating at the same time.




I had mentioned earlier that they let the elephants roam free and they were not chained to trees….well, while everyone else was feeding their elephant, mine was apparently still hanging out in the jungle.  Boon Pat moseyed on down about 15 minutes later.  When he pushed through the jungle clearing, my jaw dropped and my eyes went agape.  He was enormous and he was the first elephant we had seen with GIANT TUSKS.  He was magnificent and I was proud that he was all mine.  I loved him instantly and knew we had been paired correctly.  He was a little bit flashy and little bit defiant, and super noisy.  During our trek he tooted out elephant tunes of defiance that were music to my ears.  I loved him and I loved that he like to talk and sing.

Boon Pat came out of the jungle 15 minutes after everyone else's.

After we’ve fed them their fruit, it was time to check their health. We inspected: Their skin - to see if they had been rotating while they were sleeping.  Elephants only sleep 4 hours per day.  They sleep for 40 minutes, then get up and roll over to the other side, and then keep alternating like that until its time to wake up for good. Tail activity – you need to make sure they are wagging their tail and flapping their ears

Eye boogers – Elephants eyes water all the time.  If they have eye drainage, it’s all good.
Toenail sweat – Elephants sweat in their toenails, if there is moisture between them, they are healthy; and
Their poo - to make sure they had eaten enough the day prior and that what they were eating was vegetarian based.

They made Liv pick up the poo.  And then they made her squeeze it to see if had moisture.  And then they made her smell it and break it apart into bits.  It was hilarious!


After we had ensured that they were all healthy,  we had to dust them off with branches of leaves and then it was time to bathe them in the river.  

 


This was my FAVORITE part!  We grabbed a hold of their ear and walked next to them down the hill saying “mai mai.” (come come) and into the water.  They splashed and rolled around a bit, then we were handed a bucket and a scrub brush and hopped on top of our elephants and gave them  good scrub down.  It was hard work.  Summer and I had giant elephants and it took nearly 40 minutes to get them all clean.


The trainers then lined all of us up for a photo and the elephants grabbed trunks full of water and soaked us all with a mixture of dirty river water and elephant snot.  It was glorious and I would do it every day of my life if I could.



Girls gone wild…elephant edition
We rode our elephants bareback for a 40-minute trek up a mountain and through the jungle.  

Emily and Boon Pat
Um, Summer are you going the wrong way?

Kelley riding through the jungle
Livvie riding bareback
We crossed through another river and arrived at our lunch spot where the guides had set up an amazing lunch of fried chicken, sticky rice, fruit and various rice patties made with coconut, bananas, and other veggies.  The food was outstanding and the best part about it was that anything that didn’t get eaten – and was vegetarian – we got to feed to our elephants!  So we packed up a bunch of food and went to spoil our new companions.


During lunch, we saw that our elephants took it upon themselves to roll in the mud and then subsequently in the river.  They were joined by a 10 month old baby elephant that we were able to play with as well.

  
Summer's elephant took a mud bath

Boon Pat was nice enough to shower off

Family Bath Time!
We hopped back on our elephants to return them to their ‘other’ trainers, said goodbye, snapped a couple photos and went on our way happy and fulfilled and longing to be a real life elephant caretaker.

Goodbye…for now!

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

Caving in Chiang Mai, Thailand


Like I mentioned in my previous post, there is so much to do in Chiang Mai its unbelievable.  In addition to bike riding through the city, exploring wats and learning to cook some amazing food, we also went caving with Chiang Mai Climbing Adventures (www.thailandclimbing.com/tripadvisor) at Crazy Horse Buttress!

Summer, Emily, Kelley and Liv - climb on!
Yeah, it was ridiculous, in the most awesome sense of the word.  The girls and I harnessed up with our guides Ooan and EQ.  We scaled up a 30-foot wall with a combination of ascension and rock climbing, then scrambled along the rocks laterally. 

 
 
 
 

After weaving through 100 foot drop offs of limestone and hopping over a threshold, we finally got to our repelling spot, which was 90 feet!  

Yeah, that's a 150-foot drop between my legs
 

It was a straight drop down.  No footholds, no cushions….just a rope, gloves, a flashlight on our helmets and a harness.

Putting on my repelling gloves
Summer's ready to drop!
It was pitch black in the cave. Liv was only lit by my flashlight in this photo!

When we got to the bottom of the cave, we enjoyed some lunches that we had pre-packed and went searching through the pitch-black cave for adventure. It smelled musty of moisture and bat shit.  There were crystallized stalagmites and stalactites made up of salt, quartz and other minerals.

Safely dropped to the bottom…twinsies!
Quartz stalagmite
Summer and Kelley chill in the cave
 Kelley's favorite part was seeing all of the glistening spots on the cave walls…which were spiders' eyes!  They were everywhere and so were the bats.  Summer and Ooan ventured through the water to the end of the cave while Liv and I exercised our outdoor cave peeing skills…Which were successful.

Giant spiders' eyes glistened in the dark when our headlamps hit them

The ascent back up the 90-foot drop was exhausting.  If there were no foot or handholds going down, there also weren't any going up.  We just had a rope, harness and a contraption that locked the rope in place as we were yanking ourselves up.


What you did was you had a 1-meter long lead with a foothold on the bottom that was attached to your harness.  You had to lift your foot up to create slack on the rope, then propel yourself upward with the force of your thighs and then pull the locking contraption up to a neutral location.



I had assumed since my inseam is about 34-inches, I would propel up at least 2 feet per pull - boy was I wrong.  when you bend your leg up to meet your chest, it only pulls you up about a foot. It was a grueling 90 pulls of my full body weight up that drop off.

We all did it with amazing success.  Special kudos to Kelley who did it with a chest cold.  I can't imagine pulling myself up that threshold with limited lung capacity.  Summer, you are a giant and a million feet tall, I bet it only took you 45-50 pulls up with your 50 inch inseam, LOL!  And Liv, well you're a spider monkey and only weigh like 90-lbs, so you get no props…no props at all!  :)

This hike was challenging but doable and our guides were knowledgeable about the caves and the sport.  They were helpful, considerate, concerned and funny.  I would highly recommend a tour with them any day!

Ooan made this amazing video for us!  I'm pretty sure we were his favorite group ever….we were for sure the most fun group he has ever had.