If you are going to Chiang Mai be sure to put Art in Paradise on your itinerary. Our family visited in November of 2015 and had so much fun! We spent hours jumping in and out of the art work, taking hundreds of photos.
Category: Thailand
Wat Sri Suphan: Chiang Mai’s Silver Temple
Chiang Mai is known for its beautiful Buddhist wats. You could spend a whole day or more wandering around the old city visiting these ornate temples.
After visiting Chiang Mai and exploring the wats on two different occasions, I thought I had seen all of the interesting wats in around the old city.
Yi Peng in Chiang Mai
“It’s been cancelled,” said Rand, a look of distress on his face.
“What?”
“The mass lantern release for Yi Peng at Mae Jo University, it’s been cancelled.”
Staying at an Airbnb in Chiang Mai
After spending the first half of November exploring northern Thailand, we decided to spend the last two weeks of the month in Chiang Mai. We love Chiang Mai and we also wanted to be there for the Yi Peng Lantern festival.
We looked around at lodging options and figured out that our most economical option would be to use Airbnb. We had never used Airbnb before so this was a new experience for us.
Cave Lodge: Soppong, Thailand
We watched as the two older Thai women lit the lanterns. Then we followed as they led us to the cave entrance.
Getting Food Poisoning in Pai
Warning: This post contains description of gastrointestinal, um . . . situations.
Please enjoy the above sunset photo as a preemptive apology.
Thom’s Elephant Camp
Twice now we have ridden elephants in Thailand. Once, in Chiang Mai three years ago. And once, in Kanchanaburi. Both times we rode in seats on top of the elephant’s back.
It is awe-inspiring to sit so high from the ground and be taken for a ride. But I wanted more. I wanted to ride bareback and I wanted to be thrown from the elephant’s back into the water. So we made plans to visit Thom’s Elephant Camp just outside of Pai, Thailand.
A Week in Chiang Rai, Thailand
From Chiang Khong, we traveled via local bus to Chiang Rai. It was pretty simple a far as travel days go. Our hosts directed to the bus station, which was a ten minute walk from our guesthouse. Buses leave every half hour, cost 65 baht, and take 2 – 3 hours.
Chiang Rai was a bigger city than I expected. It is a lot like Chiang Mai, only smaller. (But still bigger than I thought it would be). I was thinking Chiang Rai was a small mountain town. I guess being surprised is what happens when you are not the trip planner.
The Border Town of Chiang Khong
There’s not much going on in Thailand’s border town of Chiang Khong. We had just entered from Laos and were planning to stay a few days, thinking we could use the town as a base for exploring the Golden Triangle region where Thailand, Laos, and Myanmar meet.
Can a Family of 5 Travel in Thailand on $65/Day?
The answer: Yes… and no.
