



best to be had anywhere, from fried bananas to fish grilled in salt.





on motor scooters, as you can see.
Returning to Th. Anuwong we continued, turning right on the soi leading to Wat Chakkrawat, which is a Thai temple. The locals there were preparing for Maha Puja, setting out bundles of candles and incense, and we were enthusiastically shown around the Bot by a lady from their equivalent of the Temple's altar guild, who couldn't have been more hospitable. She showed us every single little detail of the Bot and its wall paintings.
The Wat also has a crocodile pond. The first crocodile was fished out of the river and given its own pool in the temple to stop it eating local swimmers, and its descendents have become a feature of the place.
This strikes me as the biggest difference I have encountered between Thai culture and where I come from. I can't imagine trapping a man-eating bear or a rattlesnake or whatever and then giving it and its descendents for all eternity a special enclosure and free food at the First Presbyterian Church. Even Quakers wouldn't come up with that idea. However, I can recall my son Bobby telling me when he was around seven years old that if we could find a snake-handling church that he would be happy to go every Sunday, so I suppose it is possible that the crocodiles are a ploy to get little boys to go to the temple.
By the way, there is also shabby grotto at the back of Wat Chakkrawatthat has Buddha’s real shadow painted on it and a statue of a fat man who is said to have been so handsome that he had to gorge himself in order to get away from his female admirers. Yeah, right.
We then headed deeper into
Charoen Krung until we came to the big tiered gateway to Wat Mangon Kamalawat (the ‘Dragon Flower Temple’). This important Mahayana Buddist temple is a completely different experience to the typical Thai Wat, always busy, but especially crowded today with worshippers coming to remember their ancestors by leaving offerings of oranges and paper money. The air is thick with incense and once through the second courtyard and inside the temple through a gateway with ceramic dragons overhead, it is hard to breathe but mesmerizing with monks and worshippers and larger than life statues of bearded wise men looking down on the confusion below.
Leaving the temple through the smaller exit on the western side, we returned to Th. Charoen Krung, walking westwards and then turning right on Th. Ratchawon until we turned left into Th. Yaowarat. On the opposite side of the street just a few doors down is the Shangri La restaurant, with cakes for sale outside, and a few tables downstairs, and bigger family seating (including private rooms) upstairs. We had fantastic dim sum there and a chance to recover from
Leaving Shangri-La, we continued down Th. Yaowarat, and turned right down Soi Itsaranuphap, which is filled with food hawkers and shops selling dried shrimps and other delicacies. There is a market, Kao Talat, to explore here, and, on the corner of Soi Wanit 1, the little Chao Kuan Oo Taoist sanctuary. You need to do this, if you are here in Bangkok on a full moon day. Outside the entrance, line up and buy a plate of turnip greens (at least they look like turnip greens), and a bundle of incense. Take off your shoes and squeeze your way into the temple. On the right you will see the life-sized golden statue of a smiling horse and a monk who accepts your plate of turnip greens on his behalf and rings the bell around the horse's neck too signify his pleasure. I didn't get a picture of this but I swear it is true: it's the Mr Ed Temple.
We then continued down the Soi and turned left down
This is the golden Buddha temple, known for its solid gold 13th century Buddha, at 10 feet tall the largest of its kind in the world. When it was brought to
Leaving the temple, we continued walking down Th. Traimit, past the Hua Lamphong train station to the MRT station at Hua Lamphong. We went straight from there two stops to Silom, for a well deserved foot massage at Ruen-Nuad! We took a taxi back to the flat and ate out at D-River (Dairy Queen) again, at a table on the river – a lot of spicy dishes this time including a Balsam Apple salad, that was actually bitter melon and shrimp, an eggplant salad, a green chicken curry with roti, a red curry with prawns and pad thai noodles.
We walked around looking at the attractive shrines that have been built, inlaid with photographs of the relevant dead person. Laurie thought it was kind of creepy, but I thought it was fine.
Actually, since mom and dad can’t agree on which part of Mt Olivet Cemetery in
Curiously, it appears to be theologically possible to put cats in the cemetery at Wat Prayoon. I think that is a great idea because a lot of people, myself included, would prefer to spend eternity next to their pets. But I am unsure whether even Anglican theology can stretch that far, so we might need to have a separate cat shrine back in Nashville. Of course, in that case, you could have mice instead of turtles, and skip the water which cats don't like (especially my cats, who are forever having mishaps and falling into the Thames and having to go to the vet). I am sure that cats would greatly prefer this arrangement because they don't care about us anyway.
From the market we walked along Th. Mahathat and stopped at River Books, which is a Bangkok Press that publishes a great list of titles on
For dinner, we went to Ruen Malika, a Thai restaurant in a rambling old teak house with a pretty garden, located at 189 Sukhumvi (02-663-3211/2): from
We explored the small Lana house museum attached to the Society, and then set out to find the Bangkok Doll Factory, which isn't a very easy place to find. Start out by walking north up Th. Ratchaprarop past the
Anyway, the doll factory is great. There is a ‘museum’ of dolls from around the world and a shop/showroom with stock ranging from handpuppets to angels for your Christmas tree. Bangkok Dolls also produces full blown tableaus of Khon dancers performing the Thai version of the Ramayana, which would be a striking addition to any living room. Laurie promised me that she is going to think about it. We were able to visit the room in the back where the dolls are made, too.
It was just a short taxi ride to the
We went by taxi to Erawan Tea Room again, because we wanted to sample their high tea. Fantastic deal – for 200 baht per person, you get an assortment of little savoury and sweet dishes (including a hot melting coconut ‘egg’ pastry that is one of the best things I have ever tasted) with tea or coffee, and they have the Herald Tribune and the Wall Street Journal.
This was so nice that we decided to round it off with a foot massage at Ruen Nuad Massage Studio, off of Soi Convent. This is one of Nicholas’s recommendations again, and it was superb. Thank you, Nicholas! I would go here all the time if I lived in
From the sublime back into the ridiculous, we walked up to the night bazarr in
I then met Laurie at the Erawan Tea Room overlooking the Erawan Shrine. The view of the shrine is limited, but the tea room is a real find, another one of Nicholas Song's excellent recommendations. We had barbecued pork skewers and fluffy catfish and mango salad for lunch, and bought teas, jams, and other delicacies there, all of which are delicious. It is essential to go to the Erawan tea room when you are visiting the Shrine. Like balancing hot and cold, or sweet and sour, the shrine and the tea room form a sort of cosmic balance to one another: weird and sublime.
The shrine was built out of desperation on the construction site of the Erawan hotel and shopping centre, because things had been going wrong, and angry spirits were clearly to blame. They were mollified by the shrine, however, and now everything that happens in the hotel and shopping centre is perfect, as evidenced by the Erawan Tea Room. This is why the good citizens of Krung Thep ('City of Angels' -- the real name for Bangkok) come here to make offerings, and indeed why Thais from all over the world ask for good fortune here.
If you forget to bring something to offer the spirits, you can buy a cage of sparrows:
Be prepared though, when you release the sparrows, they are trained to fly back to their cages so that they can be used over and over again.
I don't know what's been going on at the Taiko Supermarket in Canada, but with all of these elephant offerings, I am sure that everything is going to be okay now!:
If you are really in big trouble, you can pay for up to eight dancers to entertain the spirits who will then in theory pay attention to your problem and fix it. This group of young people, for example, had clearly had a party while their parents were out of town and were hoping that the dancers could fix it with the spirits so that they won't be grounded for the rest of their lives:
This ploy is not going to work, however, because Thai mothers are every bit as smart as their counterparts from Tennessee. So, don't have a party at your parents' house when they are out of town, no matter what part of the planet you are living on!!
We took a short stroll up Th. Ratchaprarop to Narayana Phand, which is a Government-run crafts store (about to move to a different location). This is arguably a better place to buy Thai crafts and souvenirs than Chatuchak because it is calm, air conditioned, empty of other people, and the crafts are reliable and priced fairly. We also saw a much wider range of things, from laquer to textiles, and a lot of Thai-inspired clothes there.