Snow Cone

This weekend I heard Thai yodeling on the radio.  Noi said they were mimicking music they had heard from another country.  Thai music is pretty awful, Thai yodeling, well, those two things just don’t go together.

I asked Noi to take me to Tak to shop (I can’t get cheese or cereal here).  It was another all day event.  We went to the Saturday morning market which has a lot of plants.  I found a snow cone place as she was negotiating lime trees.  I asked for a small and she told me no small.  Ok.  No small.  I’ll take what you got.  Then it was a game of pointing to colored pictures on the sign until I found one she said yes to.  She must have been out of a lot of flavors and didn’t quite figure out that I have no idea what flavor any of them are.  I picked pink flavored.  Pink has to be good, right?  Her husband shaved some ice and put it in a bowl – oh got that’s a lot.  Then he shaved some more ice.  Oh, now that’s just ridiculous.  My eyes got so big and I said oh my god or something like that.  They just laughed.  Then she poured liquid pink sugar crack on it, then condensed milk, followed by some other white liquid, and fruit out of a can on top.  All around the base she put pieces of white bread.  How is white bread a good ingredient for a snow cone?  I love snowcones like I’m 8 years old, but no human being should ever eat this thing.  I tried to eat it, but I could barely hold it in one hand.  I walked up to Noi and she laughed.  I didn’t even make a dent in it.  I ended up throwing out most of it and felt horrible the rest of the day.  I think the pink stuff was toxic.

Noi bought 20 lime trees for school.  She is helping the students to plant a small farm.  It’s really cool.  So far the will have banana trees, lime trees, dragon fruit and a vegetable garden.  It’s a decent sized area at school.  It’s next to the school’s water filter system where I can fill my water jugs for free.  What?  How did I not know about this until now?  Pat had told me I could bring the water jugs to her and she’d fill them because she had a filter at home.  Is her filter better than the school’s?  I’m very confused.  After a full day, I had one of the worst headaches I’ve ever had.  I blame the snow cone atrocity. As soon as I got home, I went to bed and slept for 13 hours.  Well, I laid in bed praying for death for the first 3 hours until the advil kicked in.

Sunday I went to Mae Sot with Tip, Fai and Jeab.  Tip had a package that she had to pick up at customs.  I need to do a border run before the end of the month and I thought spending my Sunday doing this sounded better than going with Pat and Robin in a couple of weeks.  We stopped in Coffee Boom in Ban Tak on the way for breakfast.  I remember Tip taking me there once before and introducing me to Boom.  He was so nice.  I was disappointed that he wasn’t there today.  The road to Mae Sot is quite scary, but it was so much better in a car with Jeab driving than in a giant bus.  Fai had never been to Mae Sot and was the cutest thing I’ve ever seen squealing “weeee” in the back seat with her mom.  As Tip was picking up her package from customs, I ran to the border, left Thailand, crossed the street and came back in.  Now I can stay 3 more months.  Strange requirement.  We went to one of the coolest restaurants I’ve ever seen.  It was like eating in a garden.  There were waterfalls and orchids and other flowers everywhere.  The food was meh, but the atmosphere was top notch.  By the time I got home, I was exhausted and felt like I had a cold coming on.  Yay – great timing – just when I need all my energy for trying to finish my job and move.  Or, I guess I’m not moving.  That implies that I have somewhere to go.  I’m just preparing to be homeless.

(c) All rights reserved Kimberly Fiore

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New Lime Trees
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Mini School Farm ready for planting

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This is a restaurant

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To Mae Sot

The drama of the day is who will drive me to the highway to catch the bus.  I had asked Noi to drive me after class and she said she would.  Then Pat told me the school driver would take me because Noi had to be in a meeting.  Noi said she had plenty of time to take me.  So it became up to me to decide.  Oh jeeze.  I decided to go with the school driver.   Pat seems so stressed lately, I think she might implode.  I don’t want that.

I had to leave school at 3:00 since my bus is at 4:30, which means I get to sit at the side of the highway for over an hour.  I don’t understand, but this whole thing is ridiculous already so I just went with it.  The bus was late so I ended up sitting on the side of the highway for 2 hours.  This is why you never go anywhere without a book to read.  I got stared down by a stray dog for at least a half hour of this time.  The bus ride was ok except that the road from Tak to Mae Sot is terrifying.  It’s full of steep switchbacks.  There’s construction going on.  There are huge drop offs to nowhere.  There are tons of construction vehicles and large double semi-trucks taking stuff to the border.  Most of the semis struggle going uphill which makes the bus driver go around them, pulling blindly into possible oncoming traffic.  The bus driver seemed to have a mission to make up for being late.  I’m not sure how the bus wasn’t struggling with the hills, but it didn’t.  It must have turbo drive or nitrous or magic.  There are lines on the road to tell you where to drive, but he didn’t see them, maybe because he was going so fast.  He road down the centerline a lot and spent quite a bit of time on the shoulder very close to the edge to nowhere.  But, now I’m safe in Mae Sot.  My hotel room is nice and I’m waiting for a burger, fries with ranch dressing and a milkshake.  Yes, ranch dressing – I’m quite excited.

(c) All rights reserved Kimberly Fiore

 

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The stare down
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See that pavement, that’s the part of the road we should be driving on
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Some serious dedication to farming
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We are supposed to be on the other side of that yellow line
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Huge hotel room
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No one is getting into my hotel room…..

Mae Sot 2

So, there are roosters in Mae Sot too.  No sleeping in.   I debated leaving the hotel or not.  I’m still not sure what this mix of hating and loving Mae Sot is.  I have the thought that if I decide to stay in Thailand, but leave Sam Ngao, I’d like to live in Mae Sot.  But, I don’t want to leave the room.  There isn’t much in the way of sights to see.  I thought about trying to get to see a waterfall since there should be some fairly close, but decide on going to the Border Market instead.  But first, I have to get my bus confirmation for tomorrow printed, get breakfast (free at the hotel) and figure out how I’m getting to the bus tomorrow.  Google translator for the win.  Bus confirm printed and they will call a taxi for me tomorrow morning.  Breakfast was disappointing, but good enough to tackle a market.  They call a taxi for me since it will probably be an hour bike ride.  The hour ride to the market might be wonderful, but then it will get hot and I won’t want the ride back.  Lonely Planet says the market is unique because of all the Karen, Hmong and Burmese crafts that can be found there.  Plus lots of jade and gems from Myanmar.  It’s the best market I’ve seen in Thailand.  Not too big, but so many things, textiles, clothes, electronics, cosmetics, jewelry, jade, jade, gems, jade, metal work, wood work, furniture, strange food, on and on.  There was one entire row of dried fish products.  It was right next to the Friendship Bridge that goes over the river that is the border.  There were tons of cars on the bridge, but people walking over with suitcases too.  I read that this border was only opened in 2013.  I also read that there are tons of refugee camps near Mae Sot.  There were people camping next to the river and both sides were run down and horrible looking.  Even though it’s just lines on a map, it’s very weird to stand in one foreign country and look at another.

So glad I took the taxi because it got hot.  As I’m sitting waiting for a taxi, I realize why I’m having such polar opposite feelings.  I like Mae Sot.  It’s not a big city like Bangkok, but it’s a city and everything is moving.  Product moved from here to there and then over there.  Stuff and people in and out and around.  There are plant nurseries, warehouses, mom and pop shops all next to houses and farms.  There are animals and cars and bicycles all going down the street together.  Cultures and religions are all intermixed.  The city feels like it’s breathing on it’s own.  There’s a rhythmic flow to all this movement that I don’t understand, but it does and it is just doing it’s thing.  Then, on the other side of the river is a country that is trying to rebuild and figure itself out.  There are thousand of Burmese refugees living in refugee camps in Thailand.  Some of those camps are near Mae Sot.  The feeling at the bridge is tentative, movement, but forced and uncomfortable.  Many of these refugee camps have been set up for 20 to 30 years.  Many refugees have never known a life outside a camp.  Even though the border is open and it appears easy to come and go, I’m literally sitting under the bridge between a relatively free, vibrant country and a very uncertain country.  There’s a lot of opposites and an energetic line of fear and confusion in the middle.  This is what I’ve been feeling so strongly.  And of course, it resonates with all the parts of me that want to trust in the flow of life and all the parts that still don’t trust it’s a safe world.  I don’t cross the bridge, mostly because I don’t want to pay any fees, but symbolically because I want to live in the flow instead of the fear.  I will have to cross that bridge another day in the future when I need to do a border hop for my visa.  We’ll save it for then.

I had signed up for a cooking class at 3:00.  I have 2 hours to kill so I head out on bike in search of a coffee shop.  Either there are no coffee shops in Mae Sot, or google maps is lying again.  I give up and find a restaurant that has coffee.  Then I arrive at the place where the cooking class is and it’s delightful.  It has a fair trade hand made crafts store in the front, the kitchen and then a tea garden in the back.  The tea garden is so nice.  There’s one other lady in the cooking class.  They give us a cookbook full of local dishes (none are Thai).  We get to pick a snack, main dish, salad and drink to make.  Then we go to the market to buy the ingredients.  We make the dishes and then get to eat them in the tea garden.  There’s enough food for at least two more meals so I’ll get to eat them tomorrow.  We picked a lime basil juice which might be one of the best things I’ve ever tasted.  We had a ginger salad, Karen pumpkin curry and banana coconut wraps.

There was another lady in the tea garden at the same time and three of us got to talking.  The woman in the cooking class with me works for the US government and is here for 6 weeks interviewing refugees.  It sounds like it’s part of the process of deciding which ones will be allowed to relocate to the US.   The other lady is here for about the same amount of time working in a clinic for refugees.  She’s in between medical school and getting a job back in the UK.  I learned a lot more about the refugee issue, although I mostly learned that I don’t really know anything about the subject.  This cooking class is the most enjoyable thing I’ve done since I got here.

(c) all rights reserved Kimberly Fiore

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Gem Stone Trees
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Ooooooo Shiny things
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They put water in these powders and put all over their faces

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The Friendship Bridge looking toward Myanmar
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Standing in Thailand with Myanmar behind me

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The border

 

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View from my hotel

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Mae Sot 1

So I got up super early and drove to the hospital.  I was told to park there since the bus stop is next door.  Riding an old motor bike in the dark with bad headlights is sketchy, especially when you come upon a dog sleeping in the middle of the road.  Dogs are a major source of motorbike accidents in Thailand.  There was no one at the bus stop at 6:30.  There were a three kids there by 7:00am.  So, I was obviously told the wrong time.  Was it a joke on the foreigner?  Oh well, at least I wasn’t late for the bus.  It was a big loud bus full of students.  There were adults too, but mostly students.  The bus honked at everything that moved and as it was approaching every stop.  It was standing room only by the time we got to the bus station in Tak.  It was nice to see a teenage boy give up his seat next to me for someone else.  It’s typical for younger people to give up their seats for older people.  I then had to change to a mini van to get to Mae Sot.  The seats on the mini van were tiny and every seat was full.  It was a very interesting drive.  The roads were steep and very curvy.  Of in the distance you could see row and row of mountains (shadows of mountains really since it’s so smoky here).  We drove through several national parks so there was nothing but jungle.  The steepness of the roads reminded me of Colorado, if Colorado had jungle.

We went through 3 police check points.  I found that odd.  At the 3rd one, a policeman checked IDs.  I wondered what they were looking for.    Drugs, gems, poachers?  When we got to Mae Sot I got a motorbike taxi to my hotel, well to the wrong hotel and then to the right one.  This was foreshadowing for my afternoon.  Mae Sot looks different than anything else I’ve seen in Thailand.  I can’t quite identify what it is that is different.  It’s a border town near Myanmar and has a large concentration of hill tribes, Karen and Hmong.  It also has a large Muslim population and Chinese population.  The only thing I can figure is these influences made tiny differences in buildings, streets, clothing, etc and creates a distinct, but indescribable difference.  I tried to define it or capture it in a picture but i just can’t.

I got to my hotel and I didn’t want to leave.  I was overcome with a strong feeling of “I like Mae Sot” combined with “I hate it here”.   There was a lot of fear and I just wanted to crawl in bed and hide.  I watched tv for awhile and tried to find a phone store on google maps.  I tried to convince myself that it was ok if I locked myself in my room all weekend.  The part of me that needs a new phone and reliable wifi won.  The hotel had bicycles I could use for free and “how do I rent a motorbike” was not being understood.  So, I took the bicycle into town on a wild goose chase sponsored by google maps.  The first place  it took me was a Tesco which are like Walmarts here.  They usually have other stores around them including phone stores.  I went in and there were only two rows of shelves with stuff on them.  It was creepy.  The next place didn’t seem to exist.  It kept taking me down roads that I swear were in the wrong direction.  I had no idea where I was.  The streets are narrow, full of cars, bicycles and motorbikes.  Terrifying and fabulous all at the same time.  There’s that mix of opposites again.  There are stores and delivery trucks everywhere.  The variety of things being sold and/or delivered was mindblowing.  I still can’t process it and I saw it.  The third place I went was a print shop.  A guy across the street was drunk and bathing with a hose, fully clothed.  Then he came over and sat in front of the print shop and then back across the street.  Back and forth, soaking wet.  I decided this would be a good time to go eat.  The combination of Lonely Planet guide book and google maps got me to a Canadian restaurant that boasted having cheese.  I tried to regroup.  I had a cheese burger and fries.  I got a hold of the phone company by Line (a text program widely used in SE Asia) and they told me there was a store in Robinsons and one in a different Tesco.  Some British people eating next to me told me where the other Tesco was.

I have  a new resolve to get this phone since I don’t want to go through this again tomorrow.  On my way to Tesco, I stopped for a pedicure.  She tried to get rid of my ingrown toenails which I usually don’t mind because they drive me nuts, but she cut too deep and my toe bled and still hurts hours later.  So, now I’m grumpy, scared, hot, lost and injured.  I found the dtac store and no one speaks English.  I try using my phrase book and the guy behind the counter pulls out his phone and has me speak into it.  It translates what I said to Thai.  It doesn’t do the best job of translating.  Some of the things he said got translated horribly to English, but it was enough to get a new phone that can be a mobile hot spot and to get a data package paid for.  And I asked him to download the translator app too – google translator, who knew?  Now, hopefully, it works at my house!  I went back to the hotel and locked myself in.  I tried to nap, but couldn’t.  Around 8:00pm I decided I needed to go out and eat and see if I could get a massage.  I used my new translator to ask where to go for a massage.  They said 2 hours in my room for 500baht ($14).  Deal!  Who needs dinner?

(c) all rights reserved Kimberly Fiore

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Can I just stay here forever?
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Cheese on my burger and fries
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On the phone store hunt
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Those are funny looking dogs, no goats

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