Thursday, January 16, 2020

Chatuchak Weekend Market

Something we definitely did not do in 2008 was the Chatuchak Weekend Market, allegedly the world's largest, with 15,000 stalls. A younger but larger version of Instanbul's Grand Bazaar perhaps. We got there quite early, actually before it opened, at 9AM. Jet-lag. As the day and heat wore on, it became quite crowded, and, having got the gist of the thing in a few hours, we departed perhaps even before lunch.
It's a long way to Tipperary
























No business in Bangkok is too small to have a shrine; here's
one of our hotel's, appropriately sleek and modern

























Aboard the sometimes crowded but nonetheless air-
conditioned Skytrain; it took us a moment to figure out
who the orange guy was in the depiction who had priority
seating ahead of us seniors: monks)



























More of the usual metro warnings



















After a short walk from the Skytrain station, we are there



















Helpful map



















And signage



















And now just some random market and shoppe scenes...



















Franchise opportunity?

Among the hundreds of hall ways

Giant blue prawn; there are shoppes of every description...food, garment, eateries,
massageries, trinketries, jewelwries, household goods, furniture, collectibles....



Aromaries





Brew-in-the-bag coffee

Only delivery traffic is permitted





















































Multi-tasking men's room; perhaps a subtle reminder to wash your hands?



















Headed back to the Skytrain...a line of cabs and buses delivering people to
Chatuchak

Bangkok's MBK Center

We arrived in Bangkok with an understanding that we would be pretty fatigued and jet-lagged for several days. At least we would pass this time in the comfort of a new American hotel and in a city we had visited before. For a time, I resolved only to see Bangkok sights we hadn't seen before; but that quickly passed, in view of the spectacular nature of many of the sights, and also in view of our fading memories. Case in point: the MBK Center, Thailand's largest shopping center. We thought we'd visited another, more up-scale, shopping center back in 2008. Maybe the Siam Center? So, hoping to see something new, we headed via the Skytrain (metro) to the MBK and took in all six floors of shops and such, gawking throughout, and finished with lunch at the (Asian) food court. Only then did the neurons begin to dance, and a quick check of the blog confirmed that, yes, we had done the exact same thing in 2008, doing the MBK and then having a Thai lunch at the food court. Well, it seemed like a new experience, all the way to the end. Some may observe this is about aging. In my defense I would observe that, as full-time travelers, we've seen quite a few cities and quite a few malls in the past eleven years. And the MBK did not seem quite so upscale as I had remembered it (or whatever I remembered).
View from the 29th floor of the Aloft hotel, Sukhumvit, Bangkok; 9 million people
live here

Ditto; the haze/smog/whatever limited visibility to a mile or so





































The MBK, Asia's largest when it opened way back in 1985; 2,000 shoppes, a
couple anchors, giant food court, usual multiplex of cinemas; Ma Boon Khrong,
parents of the developer; in case you're interested




















Clue that you're in the retail zone: an array of ATMs greet you

Took almost the same pic in 2008

New King: Rama X; long live the King!

Maybe another day

Sweet shoppe on the 6th floor

Main course, a real Tom Yum...

Coming to a mall near you

Ditto


























































































































































Just like back home, except here, they're everywhere



















That's E-Bomb (Egg-Bomb)

Possibly not coming to a mall near you

Friday, January 10, 2020

On To Bangkok

Having packed and put Le Sport into storage, we departed January 7 for our next adventure, nearly three months in southeast Asia...21 hours in airplanes, another several at the terminals in San Francisco and Tokyo, and finally arrival at Suvarnabhumi at 1 AM on January 9th. After an initial short night at the At Residence/Suvarnabhumi, we moved to our new temporary home, the 29th floor of the Aloft Bangkok Sukhumvit.
Mothballed, so to speak, until end of March


















Traditional departure photo



















Traveling light: no trekking/backpacking planned, no RV to
refit/resupply; two carry-ons and a small backpack each


























Photo-bombing by Penelope

























Adieu, Frisco



















Toilet instructions at Narita

























Easing into Thai culture

























Apart from the utilities, Bangkok is anything but 3rd world; our hotel is behind
the telephone pole on the right...




















Anyhow, it's good to be back in this place we so much
enjoyed in 2008

Sunday, January 5, 2020

Fun Old-Fashioned Family Christmas, 2019

For the holidays, daughter Rachel and son-in-law Will traveled to Middle California to join the rest of our small extended family, Vicki and me, daughter Rebecca, son-in-law Jeremy, and grand-daughter Penelope. Despite flu, sniffles, cool and wet weather, and the rest, we had a great time.
Pre-Christmas, choir recital at Penelope's school
























And at her dance recital

























And at the San Francisco Symphony and Choir's holiday sing-along (box seats,
no less, where I could study the double-reeds)




















Night-before gift tradition: Penelope and Molly in her new
Harry Potter costume

Christmas morning seating chart (8 year olds are very
organized)





















Surprisingly, our 40 year old Christmas pyramid, from
Rothenburg an den Tauber, whizzed as never before





























Montana memories (this is about as religious as we get)



















Best costumes, Rachel and Will

























Continuing the Christmas Vacation motif, sporting my new
Cousin Eddie bobble-head, now proudly displayed on the
dash of Le Sport, our tenement-on-wheels, parked in the
drive-way outside..."shitter was full"


























Distributing the goods

























Rebecca with her new Jane Austin purse, from Winchester
















































Setting for Christmas brunch, major ingredients by Master
Baker Vicki (not pictured, alas: the traditional cheese, meat/
shellfish, and chocolate fondues, which we now have the
wisdom to spread over two days)



























Rachel arranging the day-after charcuterie and cheese-tasting (note fine CA wine)



















Me orchestrating the cheese tasting

























Thus: "Cows, Sheep, and Goats, Oh My" which I though quite clever; Star Cheese
was the Aged Mimolette, from Isigny Ste. Mer (Mickey would have loved it)



















Christmas decor in Le Sport

























More than a couple times I escorted Penelope to the playground and a rendezvous
with friend Conner, a fellow Potterite




















Post-Christmas cookie baking and decorating with Grandma; gluten-free



















I was called to join in the bake-off; I had just finished
reading Francine Prose's Blue Angel; thus my cookie
decoration


























Rebecca and Jeremy in their best Mary Berry/Paul Hollywood
poses


























Vicki documents the occasion



















And the Star Baker is...Penelope!



















Bonus additional shot: early January tea party with Grandma, a tradition