Posts Tagged ‘Destinations’

Growing Orchids Thai Style

Friday, January 27th, 2012

Orchids have the reputation of being hard to grow in the West. Gardeners shy away from trying to grow them because they think that they are a problem to grow and because they are expensive. This is easily understood, but there is more to the story than that. The fact is that most countries have their own native orchid species, so it is not that difficult to grow orchids wherever you live, if you select the right variety.

The other side of the coin is that what most gardeners in the West think of as orchids are orchids from exotic countries and they can be a problem to grow. I say difficult to grow, but that is not the whole story either. If you can create an environment similar to where the orchids come from, it need not be a problem at all.

A lot of the spectacular orchids are parasites, like mistletoe is a parasite plant in the temperate countries of the West. These orchids often grow on trees. In trees and on trees, that is. So, their natural environment is to become attached to the bark of a living tree or to be lodged in the fork of a branch.

The orchid will then draw its nutrients and water from the inside of its host much in the same way as does a flea or a bed bug. Another thing to be aware of is that if a plant lives under the canopy of a tree, it seldom, if ever, experiences direct sunlight. Wooded areas are also fairly humid. It is also worth mentioning that exotic plants usually come from warm or hot countries.

Therefore, if you can recreate these conditions of providing warmth, humidity and a host, growing foreign orchids should not become that much of a problem. And in truth, it is not, although in the West it might necessitate a greenhouse.

Thailand is home to many parasitic orchids, most of which grow on trees in the forests, which are warm to hot and humid, but most people do not live under those conditions. Most Thais live in either open villages or cities where conditions are not favorable to growing jungle orchid varieties. However, most Thai gardeners do not need or even have greenhouses.

Instead, if a Thai gardener is interested in growing jungle orchid varieties, he or she will buy (or acquire) the root complex of a dead tree which also has a tree stump of, say, a metre attached. They will then move this tree stump in to a very shaded place, say, under a shelter and grow their wild jungle orchids on that.

How is that done?, you may ask. Well, it is actually simplicity itself. First you acquire a sample of the orchid and then you affix it to the stump with a ’strap’ of something that will both permit the orchid to expand and to breathe. Most Thais use some of the fibres from inside a coconut.

The gardener will strap the baby orchid to the stump using the coconut matting as a band-aid with either staples or small nails. By the time the orchid has sunken its roots into the host, the matting will have rotted away, as will probably the staples.

The only thing left to do is to keep the tree and the infant flower well watered so that it can draw the remaining nutrients out of the dead tree. They will flourish for numerous years under these conditions and the tree stump will be a living flower pot, of sorts.

Owen Jones, the writer of this article, writes on numerous subjects, but is now involved with Loy Krathong. If you would like to know more, please visit our web site at Package Holidays to Thailand.

North Eastern Thailand

Wednesday, December 7th, 2011

I met my wife while on vacation in Pattaya, which is about 45 minutes south of the new international airport by taxi and the airport is about halfway to Bangkok. I met her on the first day I arrived on a double date with a friend who was already there. Within a fortnight she took me back to meet her family in what I later found to be north-eastern Thailand.

Isaan is known as north-eastern Thailand too, which is actually confusing because where we are is further north but not so far east. Anyway, most individuals who call Isaan the north east live in Bangkok and Pattaya, the two big hang-outs for foreigners (called farang or falang in Thai), and we are all north-east from there.

A glance at the map and you will see what I mean. If you travel north out of Bangkok, in due course you will come to Phitchit, which is formally the start of the north and the northern race as they call themselves.

Then comes Phitsanulok, once a capital of Thailand. A further 40 kilometres north is Sukhotai and Sri Satchenali, Thailand’s first capital and the spiritual home of Thailand. The original city is still there, uninhabited and mostly restored.

I live in the next province to the east known as Uttaradit, which borders on Laos to the east and the old mountain kingdom of Nan to the north. About 10% of the population of Nan are of the various Hill Tribes. One of these, the Mlabri, are nomadic hunter gatherers who live in temporary shelters fashioned from branches and leaves. Until very recently, they were living a stone-age existence and their language had never been heard by Westerners before 1978 so far as we know.

This is 250 km north-east from where I live. Sukhotai is about 30 km east. So much difference within 300 km. This area was part of the old kingdom of Lanna, which translates as ‘ a million rice fields’ or even ‘millions of rice fields’. Phichai or Fort Phichai, 12 km away, used to be the capital of Uttaradit province. Phraya Phichai Dap Hak (Phichai of the two-handed swords) fought here in the late 18th Century. He is Thailand’s most esteemed and well-known warrior.

Anyway, I live in among all this lot. Regrettably, I do not speak Thai well enough for anyone to give details of it to me and nobody that I know speaks English well enough to do it either. Even my wife. I wish I knew more of this fascinating place where very very few foreigners ever come.

There are five of us here at the moment in a 20 km radius. An English teacher, a Canadian teacher, a retired Dutchman and a retired Englishman and me. Often there is an Irishman and another Canadian, but they have gone home for a while. I usually do not see a foreigner or hold a detailed conversation for weeks on end. And I love it here.

Owen Jones, the writer of this article, writes on a lot of subjects, but is now involved with Khao Phansa - The Candle Festival. If you would like to know more, please visit our web site at Package Holidays to Thailand.

Thailand: Why I Live There

Sunday, November 27th, 2011

After my first night out in Pattaya, Thailand, when I met a woman on a blind date prearranged by one of my best friends, I sat up in bed and I recalled the events of the evening before. We had started in The Pig and Whistle, where I was staying on Soi 7. The Pig is a lovely, quiet, sedate, air-conditioned oasis of tranquility in a street, which is one of the liveliest, noisiest and busiest streets in Pattaya.

We went outside into the soi and into a stream of people not unlike that of a queue heading for a football match, except that all the women were dressed in bikinis. We had called into one of those outdoor bars, where my friend had a surprise waiting for me. His girlfriend of a while, whom I knew nothing about and a friend of hers who wanted to meet me. The four of us had dallied there an hour before walking the thirty metres to Beach Road. The traffic is one-way on Beach Road, so we took a Baht Taxi North going with the flow and got off two or three kilometres further on just before Walking Street, which is the most well-known street in Pattaya.

We had entered a complex of bars and sat at one at random. It was only then that I realized that the bars were all set out around a Muay Thai boxing ring, where the fighting was continuous and free, although foreigners are expected to contribute a prize to the winner of each bout; 20-100 Baht suffices.

We stayed there an hour and carried on to Walking Street to eat. We ate in a seafood specialist restaurant which has a pier or jetty as its dining area. The food was fantastic and the mood was romantic with the moon shimmering on the sea and the atmospheric lighting.

I don’t believe I had had a chance in reality, I fell for my gorgeous date that night and I saw her every day for the rest of my 30 days holiday. We had a magnificent time and when I had to go, I determined to see if I could live in Thailand. I went home and worked out, that if I was careful and a few things went in my favour, I would most likely have enough money to live there for ten years.

Six weeks later, I returned to Thailand and Joy was waiting for me at the airport. Nothing had altered between us and we caught a bus to go to see her family in northern Thailand. We slept in a room that her brother had given up for us and everyone made me feel very welcome. Joy’s family live in a traditional teak house built on stilts and everybody lived and slept in one room in the traditional way, except for Joy’s brother, who had built an extension, because he was hoping to get married soon.

I love that village and still live there now, five years later. Joy and I are married and have our own home - a traditional, European, concrete-block bungalow not five metres from Joy’s mum, who is a brilliant mother-in-law. Her family appear to understand what a big step it was for me to come here alone and are determined to be there for me, should I need assistance, like my own family in Britain would be. The mission at hand is learning Thai as no one else in the village, besides my wife, speaks English.

Owen Jones, the writer of this piece, writes on several subjects, but is now involved with Khao Phansa - The Candle Festival. If you would like to know more, please visit our web site at Package Holidays to Thailand.

Introducing Playa del Carmen

Tuesday, August 30th, 2011

Tropical Mexico has frequently been termed a striking location for vacationers, particularly inside the eastern region of Caribbean Sea. Here is where we uncover out Playa del Carmen that has an assortment nearby delights that only an approaching village turned explorer hot spot destination could possibly present a whole lot in upcoming events.

Playa del Carmen’s 3rd annual event i.e. Taste of Playa has been declared for November 20th, 2011. This upcoming event is really a Riviera Maya’s premier culinary occasion, will one additional time be held in Parque Fundadores on the sea shores of the Caribbean. This day-long festival will show travelers and residents alike a particular technique to sample a number of authentic royal-touch cuisines designed by plenty of the region’s nearby chefs. Several restaurants from all along the Playa del Carmen will come together to present fresh menu items and emphasize old favorites.

Based on the overwhelming accomplishment of last year’s festival, Taste of Playa 2011 is predictable to draw two times as very a number of travelers. This event was initially began in early 2009 by a team of Playa del Carmen organization possessor who desired to showcase the community of the Riviera Maya, a fundament portion that fabricated the region over the past decade. The Mayan Riviera was formed in a spirit of multi-cultural enterprise, with individuals from all over the globe approaching in Mexico because of the fact its eye-catching beaches, dense forest and inimitable past. Foodies won’t opt for to miss the annual Taste of Playa which is an occasion which celebrates the global community that has grown in this field plus has put it on the international-map as a hot spot vacation destination.

Moreover community events, just like the Mexican Wine Festival, held for the very first time in this Feb 2011 plus the Riviera Maya Jazz Festival, searching forward for its 8th flourishing year, have turned into a essential division of the promotion to encourage and draw new travelers to this appealing location.

Playa del Carmen presents this community-oriented culinary program, which celebrates the originality and diverse cultural influences of chefs, restaurateurs and food retailers having a portion of the proceeds aimed to assists a nearby non- profit food festival all the way by means of the Riviera Maya. Admission to this upcoming event is open to all with minimal tickets for sale in 10 pesos only. Whether or not you strategy to discover the stunning Mexican beaches, know more about the past or basically appreciate inside the social events!

Please visit our articles about Playa Del Carmen and Exterminators in Virginia Beach

100 Years Of Swimwear

Thursday, July 14th, 2011

Whilst you are putting your bathing suit on and heading for the water, the grass or the sand, have you ever given a thought to those generations who came before you? While you are sitting there in your swimming trunks or bikini, spare a thought for those who have worn a swimsuit before you through the ages. The history of the swimsuit and the history of women’s swimwear in particular is fascinating

We are so fortunate nowadays in the Developed world to be free of the shackles of the disapproval of society concerning beachwear and swimming costumes, because it still goes on in the Muslim and Asian world. They see our easy approach to near nudity as disgraceful, but so did our fore-fathers and particularly our fore-mothers.

But there was a bizarre duality in their opinion. I have seen photos of female bathers in the latest fashion designs taken around about 1900 where nipples are plainly visible, but the legs were covered in stockings. These are obviously family photos and not pornography, which was rife then as well.

The history of bathing suits through the ages (in the Developed world) for both men and women has seen a reduction in the amount of clothing society required to see for a person to stay decent. This varied from country to country and from religion to religion, but with the exception of the Islamic faith, the trend has been the same - towards less.

The less the better.

For instance, in 1905 a lady’s bathing costume was really a short dress made up of ten yards of material, but by 1945 that yardage had shrunk to one yard. These days some women’s swimwear is manufactured from a couple of square feet.

The same is a fact of men’s swimwear fashion. A hundred years ago, the predominant swimwear fashion for men dictated that they wore leotards in the water, whereas fashionable swimwear in the late 1930’s was trunks.

In the Seventies, they wore scanty speedos and now we are back to trunks, although some beaches permit men to wear thongs like ladies do. Such are the vagaries of contemporary beachwear and swimwear style as dictated by politics and fashion.

In 1917, women wore a knitted jersey a skirt, bloomers, black stockings and even shoes on the water’s edge. Men did not have to wear stockings or shoes, but their leotard usually came down to their knees.

The following years saw hemlines on women and men rising, but swimming costumes were still down-beat, unsexy dark colours. The emphasis was not to look sexy, although numerous photos taken at that time show that both sexes were going through a sexual revolution. They had never seen so much of each other outside the bedroom.

This was the time when lots of our grand parents were born so it is the history of their parents’ sexual liberation. In the West, we can hardly begin to imagine what it must have been like in those times ‘when a glimpse of stocking was something shocking’ and men ‘would rather hang around Piccadilly Underground, looking at the ankles of the fine-born ladies’.

Nowadays, you can find beaches all over Europe where (semi) nudity is allowed, and increasingly so in America and Asia. The only bastions of modesty are the Muslim countries of northern Africa and Eastern Asia, but after recent events such as the Arab Awakening, how long is that likely to last?

Owen Jones, the author of this piece, writes on a lot of topics, but is now concerned with strapless swimming costumes. If you want to know more, just visit our website at Swimwear For Big Busts.

Celebrity Cruises

Sunday, July 10th, 2011

Are you planning a pretty extraordinary vacation? Say to celebrate a special event like retirement or an anniversary? If you are, then you really should add a cruise to your shortlist of holidays to research more.

A cruise is a very special sort of holiday, because you get to visit a number of locations and even a number of different countries during the length of your holiday.

It is a very relaxing sort of vacation because you have nothing to do except enjoy yourself between destinations. You do not even have to pack and unpack between destinations because your hotel takes you to your port of call not a bus or a car. Usually, the cruise liner has already docked when you wake up for breakfast.

After breakfast, you can decide whether to go ashore or not, as you like. Usually, the ship will have a couple of tours you can pick from or you can go it alone. You are told what time to get back on board, say 19:00 hours and when you go down to dinner, the liner will weigh anchor and head for the next port of call.

This routine will be repeated every day, but at another port, although you do have a ‘day at sea’ on some cruises. This is not a bad thing as it permits you to spend all day relaxing and enjoying the motion of the ocean. Most cruise liners have lots to do during these days at sea.

Nearly all liners will have a cinema and special interest lectures or groups, some of which are led by guest celebrities. For instance, you may be interested in learning about wine. Well, there is normally a wine appreciation group on board or you might like to learn some of the history of the next port of call, especially if it has connections to an ancient civilization.

Food figures big on cruises. On my last cruise, we had: breakfast, elevenses, luncheon, high tea, dinner and a midnight feast. Breakfast, lunch and dinner were comparable to five course meals, but really you could just eat as much as you wished. In between the meals, there was room (or cabin) service.

Food was included in the cost of our cruise, but you had to pay for alcoholic drinks, although they are free too on all inclusive cruises. Luckily, cruise liners also have gyms, swimming pools and deck sports to help you endeavor to keep the pounds off. I was unsuccessful at that and I gained two pounds for each week of the voyage, which I am told is around average.

After dinner, there is usually a cabaret, a piano bar and a night club going on somewhere and if you can remain awake, you can normally visit all three dos to find out which one suits you the best that evening. For me it was cabaret, night club and last drink in the piano bar before going to my cabin.

The bunk was always turned down with a sheaf of papers on my pillow explaining about the next port and the excursions available, which could be booked any time of the day or night over the cabin phone. I would go again tomorrow.

Owen Jones, the author of this piece, writes on many topics, but is currently involved with cruises to St Croix. If you are interested in St Croix Vacation Rentals in the US Virgin Islands, please click through to our site.

Pet Friendly Rentals

Saturday, July 9th, 2011

The majority of people really love their pets, to the point where they become part of the family. Some pet owners cannot bear to be parted from their pets for more than a day or so and for these people, going on holiday can be a problem, because they do not want to leave their friends behind. Clearly the answer is to take your cat or dog with you. Dogs are easier to take away than cats, because they are more well-trained

If you are only going for a few days, say on business, finding a hotel near to the location of your meeting should not be too much of a problem, unless you want to stay at one of the big names in the city centre. It is often the smaller, family-run hotels or guest houses that consent to pets, although some want you to keep your dog in a kennel on the premises overnight. larger hotels tend not to be very pet-friendly.

If you propose taking your pet with you, it is better if you make this clear when you make your booking as more hotels do not allow pets than do allow them. Normally there is no extra charge for a pet, but you are responsible for any extra cleaning bills, should your pet get caught short.

If you are going away on holiday or for a longer period of time, it is usually a lot easier to find a holiday rental that will allow you to take your cat or dog with you. Again, it is wisest to make it obvious at booking that you want to take your dog with you. Luckily, there are about fifty percent of rentals or more that will permit this, although once again, you will be held responsible for any damage or mess caused by your dog.

A tip: if on getting there, you see that previous pets have caused some damage or stains, take photographs on your first day and have them dated. Modern cameras often have the facility to date stamp photos or you can use a newspaper. Otherwise, point out the damage to your host.

When you travel with your dog, it is best to put the animal in some sort of a cage particularly when driving. A loving dog can be a diversion in a car. If it wants attention just when you are trying to perform a complicated manouevre, it can cause an accident. Some dogs get very frightened in cars and want to sit on their owner’s lap, this is also not a good idea and could lead to a charge of dangerous driving. Additionally, if your dog is not caged and you have an accident, it could be thrown through the windscreen. If you are travelling by air, then the airline will insist on a cage, but they usually have their own.

Once you arrive at your pet-friendly rental, give your dog some of his regular food to eat, lay out his blanket from home, and put out one of his favourite toys, just to help make him feel at home. After all, everything will be strange to him and he might be able to smell the previous furry tenant. If cleaning staff will be going into your rental during your vacation, make sure that you are there at least for the first few times they call.

Owen Jones, the writer of this piece, writes on many topics, but is currently involved with Poconos rentals. If you are interested in a rental in the Poconos Mountains, please go to our website at Poconos Vacations

Picturesque Inland Beach Cottage Rentals

Wednesday, July 6th, 2011

When many people, singles and families alike, think about booking a holiday, many of them would only think about going to the beach for a two week’s lounging on the beach under the sun and swimming in warm, azure sea.

However, many of the best, most famous beach locations are magnets for crowds of people. It appears that most people like the sand, the sea and the sun. Now some people go to these places precisely because they are full of activity. They like the crowds and the night clubs that attract them. Mainly singles go to these types of destinations and a holiday affair is not far from many peoples’ minds.

Couples and older people may prefer a little less noise, pollution and bustle. However, there are beaches which meet these requirements too. Often they are private beaches. Some have hotels on them but some do not. Those that do not often have inland beach cottage rental properties instead. These are virtually always self-catering.

When most people think of a beach it is instinctively connected with the sea. However, this need not inevitably be so. There are also inland beaches on lakes and rivers. These beaches are usually referred to as inland beaches. Accommodation can be a problem with even some of the best inland beaches.

Many of these inland beaches are simply not well-known enough to make a hotel commercially viable, but some of them have cottage rentals instead. These cottages, or cabins sometimes, can be difficult to find if you do not reserve early enough. They are usually complete homes, fully equipped with all the household facilities you have grown used to: a fully furnished living room, multiple bedrooms, bathrooms, and a modern kitchen.

Inland beach cottage rentals are popular because they are usually situated right on the water’s edge. This makes the bit of beach right before your cottage your private beach. You can sleep on it at night if it’s hot, lie there all day or set up a few fishing lines.

In the evenings, you can hitch up with neighbours to have a party or keep yourself to yourself. For this reason, it is a good idea to check photos of the cottage before you make a booking.

If an inland beach cottage rental sounds right for you, there are thousands to pick from in the United States and Canada. The Great Lakes are a particularly beautiful place to go. There are excellent spots in the Finger Lakes region of New York state and along Lake Michigan and Lake Huron.

You will not regret going on holiday to an inland beach cottage rental property. There are so many variations that there is certainly something for every pocket and every family size. Singles are not so well catered for, but if you want a quiet holiday alone. maybe to study, then this might fitting be for you too.

You can fly into some of these resorts by seaplane, but it is more probable that you will take your own car or a rental car, if you want to get out and do some exploring further afield. Personally, I would rather rent a boat.

Owen Jones, the writer of this article, writes on many topics, but is currently concerned with Poconos rentals. If you are interested in a rental in the Poconos Mountains, please go to our website at Poconos Vacations

The Best Things About Cruising The Mediterranean

Tuesday, July 5th, 2011

Are you thinking of going on a cruise this year? If you have never been on a cruise before you certainly ought to try one and if you have been on a cruise before you could have a go at cruising the Mediterranean this time

Cruising at sea, calling into a different port every day or two soon becomes a lifestyle you soon get used to, so short cruises can be a little exasperating. A fortnight is all right but a month is much better.

Imagine it, a different language and a different culture each day for weeks! The Mediterranean Sea is not thought of as a substantial sea, but it has to be the most diverse region in the world, because there are countries like Portugal, Spain and France to the northwest; the Middle East is represented by Turkey and The Lebanon in the northeast; Arabic countries like Egypt and Lybia line the northeastern coast of the African Mediterranean and Arabic/Berber countries like Tunisia, Algeria and Morocco bring us back to within miles of Spain on the northwestern African Mediterranean litoral.

In fact, the Mediterranean Sea covers about 2.5 million square kilometres and has more than 120 substantial seaports around it. The variety of food, culture and language is quite extraordinary. If you are looking for variety, you will certainly find it while cruising the Mediterranean Sea.

If you get a thrill out of history, then you will not be disappointed by the ruins from the great Greek, Roman and Egyptian empires that spread around the region prolifically. I should not think that there is a single region without something to remind the people about the power of the Roman army 2,000 years ago.

There are dozens of different Mediterranean cruises available many of them specializing in one specific aspect or area of the Mediterranean. Some go for romantic destinations others specialize in Greek, Roman or Egyptian architecture.

The last Mediterranean cruise I went on was actually two cruises back-to-back. I flew into Barcelona from my home town. I did not have to take care of my luggage from my hometown until I saw it on my bunk on the cruise liner. That was a fantastic touch. On the first leg of the cruise we steamed east to Sicily and then north along the Italian litoral to the French Riviera and back to Spain.

The second leg went east to Sardinia and then south to Africa and returned along the coast calling into Tunisia and Malta on the way back to Spain. They were two totally different cruises on the same ship and separated just by a week from one another.

The luxury and the dining experience was wonderful and I discovered the saying to be a fact that you can expect to gain about a pound in weight every two days unless you take lots of exercise, so make sure you pack your swimming costume, even if you do choose to leave your exercise gear at home.

Owen Jones, the writer of this article, writes on various subjects, but is now concerned with the Bikini Cup D. If you would like to know more, please visit our website at Swimwear for Big Busts.

Pattaya, Chonburi, Thailand

Monday, June 27th, 2011

Pattaya is a city built for fun on the northeastern coast of the Gulf of Thailand. It is situated in Chonburi Province around 150 kilometres south of Bangkok. In the Sixties, Pattaya was hardly known, but the American soldiers fighting in Vietnam started using it for R&R and it started to boom. Pattaya is most famous for its entertainment and its nightlife, yet in fact it has a lot more than that to give.

As far as only sport goes, Pattaya offers horse riding, swimming, diving, wind surfing, golf, tennis and jet skiing among others. However, unlike most sporting towns or cities, it does not start to go to sleep when the sun goes down.

The bars, restaurants, discos and strip bars begin to open in profusion at around four o’clock. The bars are of each persuasion to suit each niche market.

There are Welsh bars, American bars, Irish bars, Lady Boy bars and every other sort of bar you can think of. Likewise with the restaurants, there are specialized restaurants for each country. There are bush game restaurants, Chinese, Japanese, American, French, German and fish restaurants. In fact there are thousands of restaurants and bars all trying to be unique.

I am certain that you could stay in Pattaya for months without going the same bar or eating the same sort of food twice. This is just as well because there are representatives from every country in the world there as well. You will hear English, Russian and each European and Asian language spoken in Pattaya on an everyday basis.

Pattaya receives over one million visitors a year. Most of these visitors are men, and the local government is trying to do more to attract women and families by relocating the girlie bars back away from the beach.

Despite it being quite big, you can remain in your favourite part of Pattaya and find nearly everything you want near-by. However, if you do have to travel around, nothing could be simpler. Most people merely hop on a ‘Baht Bus’. These small open-backed pick-ups can be seen going about the city by fairly predictable routes once you understand the layout of the city.

The ‘fixed fare’ is ten Baht for as far as you would like to go on the route, although some drivers will strive to trick more out of you if you go a long distance. Thais pay five Baht. If you do not feel confident enough to forecast where the bus is going, you could get on one of the thousands of motorcycle taxis.

They are dearer at around forty to sixty Baht, yet they will go anywhere you like. Ask for a quote before you set off to avoid disappointment on both sides. If you do not want to hire a car, there are other choices. You could hire a motorcycle or motorbike. A motorcycle costs around 100 Baht a day at the cheapest, but beware the traffic in Pattaya it can be pretty chaotic.

Owen Jones, the author of this piece, writes on several subjects, but is now involved with Songkran - the old Thai New Year. If you would like to know more, please visit our website at Package Holidays to Thailand.