Saturday, January 18, 2020

Wat Arun, Reclining Buddha, But Not Wat Pho

After Chinatown, we walked back to the river, hopped on the boat, and zig-zagged our way to Wat Arun, from which we took the ferry to Wat Pho and the Reclining Buddha.
River scene; most of traffic we saw was tourist in nature, but there were a few
barge-trains




















Thai tug boat



















Beautiful Wat Arun, something we missed in 2008; it was
about this time we began thinking perhaps we should revisit
some of the sights we saw then


























Alas, you can't take your drone into Wat Arun without first
getting permission!
























Wat Pho, approaching on the ferry; we sought access to the temple, marched in
long lines, but at length were denied access for violation of the dress code--
which, we aver, is not consistently enforced at the various sights--our knees and
arms and shoulders were all covered, and other parts too, but still they said no





















Vicki did get in to see the enormous Reclining Buddha;
while I was visiting the Standing-In-Line-For-The Return-Ferry
Buddha


























Restoration work

























46 meters long, He is, about half the length of a futbol field;
not solid gold, however

























Murals abounding

























I don't think she was chanting

Vicki and the great Reclining Buddha

Note extremely balanced and harmonious toes

Nice sandals too

Unusual dorsal view; thanks, Vicki!

Major merit earned here

Penny ante merit

Friday, January 17, 2020

Bangkok Chinatown

It's best seen at night, they say, but we were there and didn't think we'd have the stamina to come back in the evening. We wandered the streets a bit, had a great Thai lunch at Tammour (spiciest ever, 3-alarm for me) and then waded into the covered alleys, which proved to be the great experience of the day.
River side gate


Stupid elephant tricks

Fuller Brush man

Popular restaurant on street

Now into the alleys

New Year's goods piling up everywhere

Cardboard costumery

Massive quantities of food everywhere



Dried squid



There are street food stands in Bangkok that are Michelin starred; this one only
Michelin Red recommended

Mushroom district


Rib stand



Architecture above

As elsewhere in Bangkok, you can buy pretty much anything
on the street





Golden Buddha

Two more things I wanted to see in Bangkok were the Golden Buddha and Khaosan Road, the old-time hippie/touristy bit. Vicki wanted to see the Reclining Buddha; again. The best way to get to these things, and others in the historical district, was to take the Skytrain to the river and then to buy all-day passes on the hop-on/hop-off river boat system. Which we did. In addition to the sights above, we also saw a bit of Bangkok's Chinatown, which we had omitted in 2008 (after a month in China, how good could a Chinatown be?!), as well as Wat Arun and bit of the Royal Palace. And then the night-time cruise back down the river to Sathorn Pier and the Skytrain back to Nana and our hotel.  It was a long, 22,000 step day, which I'll recount in this and the next three posts.
Us embarking upon the Chao Phraya (the river; major river of Thailand)

River scene

Long-tail boat; not the last we'll seen of them

Condos; the skyscrapers here are typical Asian, mostly
steel, glass, and concrete, until you get to the top, where it
gets possibly interesting or maybe even nods to architectural
history 

Ashore now: container store

Skirting Chinatown, en route to the Wat Traimit, where sits the Golden Buddha;
enlarge and look through the gate to see another wat/stupa: attempted artsy-fartsy
shot

Inside the main building of the Wat Traimit; wats are monasteries, with all
kinds of buildings, educational, residential, religious

I assume this doesn't apply to blogs

You have been warned


And there, on the top floor, He sits



















Looks pretty much like any of thousands, maybe tens of thousands of Buddhas
in Maravijaya pose throughout Thailand; but WAIT! as it was discovered a few
decades back, when trying to move Him, this guy is made of SOLID gold,
weighing in at 5.5 tons; largest golden sculpture in the world; had been plastered
over centuries back to avoid looting by invaders 

As in the UK, you can donate to the monastery via your phone; smart merit

Rare dorsal view

Making merit is very big in Thervada Buddhism; also other religions, we have
noticed

Impressive palm sculpture

Vicki, there

Wat Traimit