Wat Phu Thok

The Isolated MountainBack on the 29th of December, we took a trip to Wat Phu Thok (Wat Jetiyakhiri) maybe four or five hours to the northeast of the city of Udon Thani. Bua, Pop, and I were visiting some old friends of ours from Pattaya who were staying Si Wali for the holidays. Wat Phu Thok is a good size mountain for a predominantly flat farm plain. Visually, it’s identifiable for quite a ways away.

Wat Phu Thok was, and still is, a monks retreat. It’s a bit easier to access now with the stairs and pathways, but it’s still a good trek up the sides of it.The Stairs Fortunately, there are benches for rest stops along the trails. Some of the stairways are reasonable, and some seem nearly vertical. Thankfully, there are a couple of alternate paths going up, so the mountain goats can follow their inclinations, and those of us not quite so athletic can take a more reasonable climb — sometimes.

The upper levels have paths that circle the mountain. Parts of the walkways, a couple of people could walk abreast, and other areas, you almost have to lean out over the void to make your way around outcroppings. Our friend took one of the higher level tracks around the mountain. He took his jaunt alone though, since none of the rest of us felt all that comfortable joining him. Mountain Goat Gary If you look closely, you can see him up on the path. In case you are wondering, that is a wooden walkway anchored in sandstone, of unknown age. As and engineering feat, it’s terrific. As a walkway, parts of it border on terrifying.

All in all, it was a fun family trip, and well worth seeing. There is so much of the local area still left to discover.

Dinner with Jean and Mon

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Last night Bua and I went to visit our friends Jean and Mon in Jomtien. Jean is another volunteer at the school, who I met during last term. Right now, he’s splitting his time between France and Thailand–summer in France, winter in Thailand.

We got to Jean’s rented condo at around 6 pm, well before the evening rain storm. Jean owns a condo in the central portion of Pattaya, but he’s renting a studio with an awesome view of the bay out in Jomtien. I’d love to see the view sometime when it is sunny, I think it would be amazing.

[singlepic id=18 w=320 h=240 float=left]After some catching up and socializing, we set off for ‘the seafood restaurant’. I still don’t know the name of it, but there is a huge statue of a crab out in front of it. With the sky getting ready to open up we were fortunate enough to get an inside table after a short wait.

[singlepic id=19 w=320 h=240 float=right]The food at ‘the seafood restaurant’ is great, and not that expensive. We filled the table with selections, and the total was only 1400 baht for four plus one child. (about $46.00 USD) We had a hot and sour seafood (shrimp, squid, fish, etc) soup, stir fried seafood with glass noodles, steamed mussels, oysters on the half shell, gigantic prawns, grilled squid, curry crab, and some other dishes I can’t place on the other side of the table.

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We ended up eating through two separate rain squalls. By the time we finished, the roads were still wet, but it was no longer raining.

To get to ‘the seafood restaurant’ go out to Beach Road in Jomtien, and head south. The Soi numbers will be increasing. About Soi 15 or 16, the road will narrow. Keep going down Beach Road. Maybe around Soi 22 (at a guess) the paved road will turn into a dirt road. You are almost there. Look for a giant crab on the left side of the road. That’s the restaurant.[singlepic id=23 w=320 h=240 float=center]