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December 12: Day 5
Emily
Hey.
I got to sleep in a bit this morning. ‘Til 8! Crawled out
of bed to a breakfast of white bread and orange marmalade. A man wearing
yellow camo shorts and a white polo shirt and emanating so much swag rolled
up in a red Honda and became our personal driver for the day.
We drove allllll the way up to the mountains to get to the
temple called Doi Suthep. The drive was beautiful, with lots of trees, and
Joey noticed how smooth the roads were compared to the other places we’ve been
driving in. We expected the hike up to the temple to be long and painful.
Instead, it was short and painful. That’s what four months of sitting still
gets you – low stamina. Anyway, the temple was so shiny that I had to squint
and Joey even put on sunglasses. It was plated in gold and people walked in
circles around the gold tower with tulips, praying. It was sort of a weird
mix of really serious locals trying to pray and really serious tourists
trying to take pictures.
When we were done there, our swaggy red Honda guy took us
to go play with some tigers. Funny thing, at really touristy places, people
will always greet us in Thai first with their palms pressed together and a
huge, welcoming smile, and then switch immediately into English. Just
something I’ve noticed. Anyway, so they greeted us and then said, what size
tiger do you want to play with: smallest, small, medium, or big. We chose
medium. It was a great decision. We got to meet “Fat Boy” and all his lady
friends.
The trainers had some pretty funny jokes up their sleeves.
Jokes like, “Hungry tiger, tiger hungry! Oh, Fat Boy, don’t eat them!” and
“Don’t worry. His teeth are small” *lifts mouth to expose 2 inch long fangs*.
The best was, “They like American meat”. Ha. Hahaha. Ha.
We both fell asleep in the Honda ride home. Then chilled
in the room until we decided it was time to eat. Joey really wanted Massaman
curry, and found a good place online. We attempted to find it, and crossed
many streets, but it was to no avail. We ended up eating somewhere we passed
along the way… you probably know that I don’t eat very quickly, but there was
no stopping me this time. I am really going to miss the food in SE Asia.
We walked around for a while just to check the city out,
got tired, returned to the room. Lots of much needed chilling got done. We also
raced each other with online geography games. He beat me, 2/3. I won Africa,
he won Europe, and won South America (but only by 3 seconds), and we tied for
Asia.
Since Joey was determined to get this curry thing, we
traversed the scary streets with relentless traffic again. We eventually
arrived at the dot on the map, but it was just some outside hut where the
people were really confused by us, so we left. It took us 20 minutes to cross
all those streets again. Well, we made it to a really touristy spot where we
got the Massaman curry and mango juice. So. Worth. It. Good job, Joey.
Now we are in the hostel. Tomorrow we see elephants. Joey
will probably call them giraffes. They are not giraffes.
Byeee.
Emily
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Day 5, Dec 12
Joey
Highlights
include seeing Doi Suthep, a fancy Buddhist Temple on a mountain,
petting “medium” sized tigers,
lounging hard at the hostel, not finding a restaurant twice, seeing giraffes
again, and bringing my curry count to 4.
Emily and I left the hostel at 9 for
Doi Suthep. It is an incredible temple on a mountain just outside of Chiang
Mai. Not overwhelmingly amazing like Angkor Wat, but really pretty, with lots
of gold plated buildings, incense burning, statues of Buddha, and people
praying and feeling very spiritual. We took lots of pictures and were
generally thinking, “Dang, this is pretty dope.”
Afterwards,
we went to a tiger-petting area thing. Apparently in Thailand you can play
with tigers whenever you want, instead of in America when the only time is
the one day in 6 years of elementary school when the tiger man comes. (Ian
Dyckes, if you are reading this, know that I was thinking about you while
petting the tiger.) We didn’t really know what to expect, but we got to pet
these “medium” sized tigers that seemed massive to me. Huge paws and huge
teeth. I was pretty scared while petting them, but the trainers were there
with me and I think were enjoying how scared I was. They called one ‘fat
boy,’ and were playing with them and telling us its okay to touch them. They
also made comments like ‘Oh, he is so hungry. You are from USA? Fat boy loves
American meat.” Really comforting. We also saw some baby tigers, a lion, and
a parrot. Solid animal experience. Excited to play with elephants tomorrow.
From
here, we were exhausted, so we went back to the hostel and VEGGED OUT. Like,
we did nothing for about an hour, which is great because we have been running
around a lot the last few days, and we’re on vacation. Whenever I thought
“Yoo, you’re in Thailand! Go run around,” I replied to myself ,”Yo, you’re on
vacation, lay can lay in bed if you want!.” (Weird to think that I’m on
winter vacation right now.) So
we chilled out, eventually got up, attempted to find a restaurant called Bon
Kitchen, failed, and then stumbled on some great Thai food.
On
our purposefully detoured, long walk home, we saw two giraffe statues. They
were located at the end of a line of statues of all different animals. Emily
seemed to think the giraffe statues were in the middle of the row, but they
were on the end. Silly Emily, she loves giraffes so much but still doesn’t
know what they are.
For
dinner, we attempted again to find Bon Kitchen. Our friend from Cambodia told
us that the food to eat in Chiang Mai is massaman curry. So I googled
massaman curry, and google informed me that Bon Kitchen had the good stuff.
So again, we go on a journey to find this place. The first time, we weren’t
close. This time, we think we find it, but it’s a patio with 6 Thai men
laughing at us. So we left, found another place that served massaman curry,
and it was amazing. I don’t know anything about it other than there were
cashews, chicken, rice, peanuts, and some veggies in there. Guessing some
curry powder and coconut milk. Must learn how to make.
Peace
and love homies.
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