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Chiang Rai in the Media

Andrew Biggs -There’s this new Google Service called Latitude

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A new web service that leaves users with no place to hide is enough to make even social media mavens tire of the tedium

Theerapon Ngerntueak wants to share their location with you on Google Latitude. You too can see where your friends are and share your location using Latitude from your phone, computer, or both.”

This email arrived last Monday.I can’t remember what I was doing at the time — reading a Buddhist dhamma pamphlet, perhaps, or downing my second Screwdriver of the day.

One of the two. Whatever I was doing, the email stopped me in my tracks.

I do know Theerapon and yes, there is only one of him so ignore Google’s reference to “their” in the first sentence.

He is a friend who lives in far northern Chiang Rai. Dong, as he is nicknamed, enjoys photography and raising a family — a fatal combination. He has emailed me so many pics I could pick out his two-year-old son in a police line-up from 100m away.

Our paths cross once or twice a year when I go to Chiang Rai or when he’s in Bangkok for an Education Ministry meeting.

So while I don’t communicate with him on a daily basis (what would his wife think?), I generally know where Dong is. Chiang Rai. That’s probably all I need to know.

With a simple click of a Google button last Monday, that could have all changed.

There’s this new Google service called Latitude. Thanks to the combination of Google Maps, GPS and your overpriced mobile phone you can now let the world know your exact location. Every minute. Every second.

In other words, if tonight I awake at 3am from a nightmare where I was chased by a horde of deranged hunchbacked Robinson salespeople, I can flick on my PC and know exactly where Dong is.

What has happened to the human race? Is this where we are heading? And more importantly, are my days of being in places I shouldn’t numbered?

I am not a technophobe. I like new gadgets and applications just like anybody else.

I even signed up to Google+ where you can make “circles” of friends based on all sorts of things. That was fun for a week, until I made way too many circles (“Good For a Drink”, “Dubious”, “Austcham Groupies”, “B-Now Alcoholics” — believe me, a lot of those circles intersected) and soon lost track.

I’ve been considering drawing the line on all this social network business for a while now. Last Monday when I was introduced to Latitude, I realised it wasn’t a line I needed to draw. It was a big, thick, 10m-wide painted strip.

Had I clicked on that ACCEPT button, I would now know at this very instant where Dong is — and he, me. I am writing this column at 5pm; perhaps he is down at his favourite khao soi restaurant ordering food for his family. Or maybe he’s running laps at his gym, or practising traditional northern Thai dance.

This is information of grave importance to Dong’s lovely wife and child, but to me? What am I going to do with it?

And is it just me, but knowing where Dong is every minute of the day  isn’t that just a little creepy? Next I’ll be cutting out words from headlines and gluing them together in poison pen letters to his wife.

How, when and where did this obsession with useless knowledge all begin? I am guessing it was 10 or 15 years ago when Hi5 took over Thailand. Everybody had to have their Hi5 page showing their favourite songs and stuff.

Facebook shoved that aside and suddenly we were all in a race to see who could amass the most friends. I did it too. And I know why.

Once back in high school I was the last one picked to be on a side for a game of football. The psychological damage resonated through the decades. I wasn’t the worst footballer in the group; it’s just that nobody wanted me.

This explains why, three months after signing up to Facebook, I reached my limit of 5,000 friends. I am the pin-up boy for Facebook. While I publicly have 5,000 friends, in the real world I have only six — and two of those aren’t even talking to me at the moment.

That didn’t satiate us. Twitter came along, in which you document your every thought and movement in under 140 characters in real time.

Ah, Twitter. We must bid farewell to Dong and meet another Thai man by the name of Nui. He used to be on my staff, and if I am the pin-up boy for Boys Who Never Got Picked For Football, then Nui is the poster boy for Too Much Twitter Information.

Nui is an accomplished TV producer. He is intelligent, witty and talented, recently picking up an award for his long-running TV show called Brainchild.

Despite this, Nui has an uncontrollable urge to tweet his entire life.

“I’m at Gloria Jean’s in the lobby of Channel 3,” he writes every other morning. On the other mornings: “Just arriving at Channel 3.”

Well  yes! Of course you are. That’s where you work! Imagine if you were just arriving at Channel 9 — what a commotion that might spark.

Nui’s tweets are mundanely fascinating.

“Checking in at Suvarnabhumi. Crowds of people.”

“It’s raining heavily and the roads are slippery.”

“I’m getting ready to go to Ubon. Packing now.”

And on and on. At 22,000 tweets and counting, I’m glad Nui has household help to pack his bags because he sure as hell doesn’t have the time or hands to do it himself.

Is Nui like the tree that falls in the forest? I mean, if you tweet that you are packing your bag for Ubon and nobody is following you, are you really packing your bag?

That question is irrelevant to Nui, who at last count has 2,000 followers. An audience of 2,000 while packing your underpants! The lunatics are taking over the world asylum!

I thought of Nui, and where we are all heading with this social network business, and in the end I chose to click DECLINE on Google Latitude last Monday.

Google didn’t go down without a fight. “If you don’t accept the terms, your friends won’t know where you are. Please go back.”

No, Google, I won’t go back. I know this is hard to understand, but I don’t want people to know where I am all the time.

I mean, what if I signed up to Google Latitude then decided to make a midnight trip to, say, Katoeys Kalore on Patpong Soi 6? Dong would be mortified. Nui would probably fold his arms and mutter “Just as I suspected,” before going back to tweeting about his underpants.

Dong and Nui are two friends from the real world I am blessed to know. I appreciate their humanity and goodness without having to know exactly where they are or what they are folding.

So I am destined to have a future of slowly retreating into myself.

As the whole world signs up to Google Latitude, I’ll just quietly slink off to the darkest corner of my bedroom and live out my hermit existence having closed my Facebook and Hi5 accounts, and be content with my six friends.

I’ll be that strange farang whom nobody quite knows what he is doing, or saying, or thinking. I’ll keep Twitter though. There’s something comforting about knowing Nui made it to work for another morning.

About the author

Writer: Andrew Biggs
Position: Writer

 

 

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Chiang Rai in the Media

Three Must-Visit Places in Chiang Rai

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CHIANG RAI – Situated in the northern part of Thailand, Chiang Rai slips under the radar of tourists as the area is not as popular as its neighboring city Chiang Mai.

However, Chiang Rai actually offers one-of-a-kind attractions, varying from a majestic white temple to Akha tribe tradition, which cannot be found anywhere else.

Those wanting to know more about Chiang Rai may consult the list below:

Wat Rong Khun (White Temple)

Pha Mee village

 

Located in Mae Sai district, Pha Mee village is home to the Akha hill tribe. In the past, the village was known as an opium producer and conflict area. However, with the help from the late King Rama IX, Pha Mee has transformed into a peaceful village.

During Asean Travel Journo Camp – a nine-day trip organized by Thai Journalists Association and Thai AirAsia to commemorate the 50th anniversary of Association of Southeast Asian Nations – The Jakarta Post discovered that the tribe recently developed a community-based tourism program, allowing tourists to catch a glimpse of their daily lives through various activities.

By contacting local guides such as Local Alike or go to the Pha Mee directly, tourists can expect to learn about Akha hill tribe tradition, the village history, sample the local Arabica coffee or hop on the village’s giant swing.

Singha Park

Singha is recognized as a Thai beer producer. However, in Singha Park, visitors would not see brewery or the likes, but instead a picturesque oolong tea plantation.

Meanwhile, tucked inside the park, the Phu Phi Lom restaurant is ready to satisfy your taste buds with Northern Thai delicacies.

By Jessicha Valentina
The Jakarta Post

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Chiang Rai in the Media

Learning Akha hill tribe’s way of living in Pha Mee village

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Two villagers pulled my seat and I screamed at the top of my lungs as the cool breeze hits my cheeks.

 

 

CHIANG RAI – The Akha’s giant swing, located on the hill of Pha Mee village in Mae Sai district, Chiang Rai, Thailand, was made of woods, ropes and tire. No safety equipment was seen around the swing, only a villager controlling one rope on the side.

Our guide, who is also Local Alike sustainable tourism initiator, Bow Pongnin, ensured us the swing is safe, explaining that it has been a tradition in the village for men to remove the wooden seat and swing as high as they could to prove their manhood.

I felt excited when seeing Pongnin and two Akha natives hopped on the swing. After they were done, I raised my hand, wanting to try it too, of course with a seat on.

As I walked towards the giant swing, I could see the bear-shaped mountains, reminding me of Akha tribe community leader Pho Luang’s story that Pha Mee village’s name was derived from the shape.

I climbed the seat and hold on the rope tightly. Two villagers pulled my seat and I screamed at the top of my lungs as the cool breeze hits my cheeks. I tried to keep my eyes open to make sure I would not fall down the hill as well as to record the breathtaking views on my mind.

After a while, I asked the villager to stop the swing. I felt fortunate as I landed on the ground, fully intact.

The giant swing is not merely for entertainment, but a part of Akha tribe traditions I learned during Asean Travel Journo Camp, an event initiated by Thai Journalists Association and Thai AirAsia.

Though the appearance looked decent, the giant swing plays a crucial role in the life of Akha people, indigenous tribe living in the northern part of Thailand.

In addition to a place for the men to show their manhood, the giant swing’s area is a central spot during Akha’s New Year. In fact, it is considered sacred as visitors are not allowed to look back while entering the gate. “They believe it is going to give bad luck,” said Pongnin.

After trying the giant swing, Pongnin and Pha Mee Community Tourism Enterprise vice president Phakakarn Rongpracharat brought us to a wooden lodge, explaining the community relationship with Thailand former King Rama IX.

Nowadays, Akha tribe grows coffee for a living. However, it was not always the case. Back in the early 1970s, the villagers produced opium to make ends meet.

Opium production was not the only issue. Pha Mee village is located a stone’s throw away from Myanmar border and conflicts happened frequently, making some of the villagers wanted to move from the area.

Fortunately, with the help of King Rama IX, Pha Mee has become a livable peaceful village. The King was said to study the area and suggest them to grow coffee, a tradition they still keep up to this day.

Though peace has come to the village, some people still associated Pha Mee with drugs.

To change the negative image and promote the village, 30 members of the community worked hand-in-hand to develop community-based tourism program, starting from October last year.

Before landing on the giant swing, this tourism community brought us to catch a glimpse of their daily lives through several activities, such as weaving, making local snack, homecoming tradition and trying Akha traditional clothing that includes a five-kilogram silver headpiece. These activities were designed for tourists to learn more about their culture.

Rongpracharat told The Jakarta Post that they enjoy hosting people. “At first we did not have any idea how to start [the community-based tourism], but with the help from several organizations, such as AirAsia and Local Alike, they started to understand it,” she said.

She added that tourism activity had become one of the ways to preserve the tradition.

“Time has changed. Sometime, the children feel shy to wear their traditional Akha clothing. [Since we started the tourism program] the children began to feel proud [to wear the traditional clothing],” she explained.

After the entire activities were done, the community sent us back to our vans. We bid goodbye and, surprisingly, I felt a bit melancholy. In less than 12 hours, this community not only made me understand their traditions, but their hospitality made me, temporarily at least, feel as a part of them.

Jessicha Valentina
The Jakarta Post

 

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Chiang Rai in the Media

How to Spend a Weekend in Chiang Rai

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Chiang Rai is often compared to what Chiang Mai was like years ago before tourism boomed and saturated the local community. This Northeast Thailand gem sits within the heart of the Golden Triangle just a mere few hours from the borders of Laos and Myanmar and a scenic four hour bus ride through Doi Luang National Park from Chiang Mai.

Out of the way for most travelers, Chiang Rai has remained unspoiled by the robust influx of tourism. It boasts contemporary Asian urban flair with an artistic and hippie-esque ambiance while retaining Thai authenticity. I set down roots in Chiang Rai after backpacking around Southeast Asia for five months. You can get a taste of the small town expat life here and how the expats and locals have peacefully integrated, living side by side in harmony.

Before I moved to Chiang Rai, a spontaneous weekend visit while traveling was enough to make me fall in love with its quirky charm and creative vibes. What does a weekend in Chiang Rai look like? Sit back, close your eyes and take my hand. Let’s go on a Chiang Rai adventure.

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First, we travel there on the back of an elephant…

Just kidding folks, I know riding elephants is a touchy subject; Chiang Rai has its own international airport if you’d rather fly. The popular option is to travel by bus from Chiang Mai. Purchase your ticket at the Green Bus counter in Arcade Bus Station. They have regular buses leaving throughout the day.

Transportation Tip: Renting a motorbike for the weekend allows the most freedom, but if you want to get around using local transportation, take the blue songthaews for 20-30 baht 50 cents- $1) per person.

WAKE UP. We’re in Chiang Rai! Let’s find a place to stay…

The bus station in Chiang Rai is located in the heart of the city center. You can find plenty of accommodation options at reasonable prices, whether you seek a dorm, guesthouse or hotel room. Here are my top recommendations:

Friends House Chook Dee: This is my ultimate hostel recommendation, conveniently located in the city center, just a 10 minute walk to the bus station. Chook Dee isn’t your typical Thailand hostel. The crew that runs the place have made it into a chill hangout where friends- whether local Thai regulars, expat regulars or backpackers gather to relax, drink and kick it. There are dorm and private rooms available.

Chian House: It’s tricky to find this teak wood Lanna style abode-turned-guesthouse, because it’s tucked away in a Thai neighborhood. There are soi dogs roaming the street, children playing, neighbors gossiping outside their homes and stores or they’re enjoying beers while watching football on TV. Chian has a quirky pack of guests- some are long term travelers, expats or weekenders. Nevertheless, everyone is family! They offer some tasty Thai and western fare enjoyed community style in the evening, a swimming pool and private rooms and bungalows.

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I’m hungry, let’s eat

The dining options in Chiang Rai are diverse and delicious. Coconuts Bar may look like just a…well, bar…but you’d never guess that their curries are out of this world. The Panang curry is the best I’ve savored thus far, or any of the indian curries for that matter.

For both Thai and western dishes, especially brunch, Chivit Thamma Da is a MUST. Dress cute and bring your camera because the setting is like something out of a fairy tale. Sit outside the rustic, shabby chic style farmhouse along the tranquil Kok River and dig into their smoked salmon benedict on crispy potato pancakes. For dinner, get lost in the aromatic flavors of the North Thai pork curry and don’t forget to indulge in a creamy slice of homemade lemon cheesecake.

If you want some super tasty, cheap local Thai food then you need to visit this family run establishment. The khao man gai (chicken and rice) and tom yum soup are superb, all for around 40 baht ($2) a dish.

It’s Friday night, time to dance

Chiang Rai nightlife isn’t overrun by backpackers, elephant pants and face paint. On Jetyod Road, there is a string of bars with a mix of expats and locals. Peace House is a favorite for live music on Friday nights, where talented reggae band Croissant fills the air with the sweet sounds of Pink Floyd and Bob Marley. Peace House is as laid back as it gets, with a beautiful sitting garden for guests to enjoy drinks and socialize.

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Let’s get out and explore

Chiang Rai is best known for the White Temple and Black House. Nationally recognized Thai artists showcase their eclectic architectural styles with earthbound renditions of heaven and hell.

If sightseeing isn’t your jam, nature reigns supreme on the city outskirts. Drive a motorbike into the mountains past rice paddies and trek through misty jungle to cleanse yourself in one of many gushing waterfalls. In Mae Salong the sprawling tea plantations offer breathtaking panoramic shots and just a couple of hours away, climb up into the heavens, where the village Phu Chi Fa sits far from the rest of the word. Wake early and witness a stunning sunrise from above the clouds.

Or, we can do some shopping

Saturday walking street in Chiang Rai isn’t a night market filled with cheap knock offs and Chang tank tops. The market is a weekend pastime enjoyed by the Thai community and visitors alike. City center streets are blocked off every Saturday evening and it seems like everyone in Chiang Rai is there. A Thai band plays traditional music (not 90s English covers) while Thais old and young enjoy dancing around the stage.

You’ll find one-of-a-kind arts and crafts for sale that you won’t see in other markets, and Chiang Rai is a thrifters paradise for trendy second hand clothing at cheap prices. I bought a dope pair of overalls for only 100 baht ($3)! The food vendors are plentiful, offering every Thai delicacy imaginable. Try the spicy som tum (papaya salad), North Thailand sausage and the small pancakes stuffed with tasty fillings such as Thai custard and fruit.

Courtney Lambert Travel writer and adventurer with the Huffington Post

Want to learn more about my travels through Southeast Asia? Visit her travel blog: A Great Perhaps

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