Phuket Town and the Big Buddha - Nai Harn (again), Phuket, Thailand
Harmonie
Don and Anne Myers
Sun 27 Mar 2011 00:56
07:46.534N 98:17.961E
February 24, 2011 - February 26, 2011
(My dad asked me to make the dates each blog entry pertains to
more prominent so it's easier for him to collate the printouts my mom
reads. He says the printout stack has reached a thickness of 8
inches. I'm not sure whether to be proud or
embarrassed.)
After Phi Phi (Pee Pee) Don, we mostly motored 35 miles west
back to the bay we anchored in (Nai Harn) when we first arrived at the big
island of Phuket. The big, heavily tattooed, unsmiling Russians were still
there looking hostile in their tiny bikinis and speedos, but there were fewer of
them since the end of high season was approaching. We didn't spend much
time on the beach staring, instead the four of us took a taxi to Phuket Town for
the Maloney's last hurrah.
Kathie admiring one of the quaint lanes in old Phuket
Town. The architecture was influenced in a big way by the Portuguese in
the 16th and 17th centuries when they were drawn here by the veins of tin found
underground. Now the multi-colored, narrow, two-story buildings have
been renovated to their original decorative glory, and house trendy
restaurants, traditional Thai, Malaysian and Indian fabric
stores along with lots of other stores stuffed with odd
assortments of stuff.
One of the stores stuffed with an odd assortment of
stuff.
Lunch stop. Well, not really. We aren't that
adventurous. Instead of eating at this food cart, we went
to a trendy restaurant in one of the renovated Portuguese buildings.
You have to love these street food carts though. The food is
probably good....we just haven't quite gotten over the street-food-cart
squeamish factor yet. Anyway, the beauty of these carts is they are
generally attached to a motorcycle, so when it comes time to pack up and go
home, the proprietor simply packs up and motors away. All good until
you're the one in a rental car trying to zip by street food carts
motoring in the wrong direction down the motorcycle lane on the highway.
To put it in more familiar terms, picture yourself driving I-90 through Buffalo
at rush hour and having to suddenly avoid a motorcycle equipped
with side car, deployed picnic table umbrella and several large cooking
pots coming at you going the wrong way in the breakdown
lane. Now imagine doing the same thing, but driving a rental car on
the opposite side of the road while simultaneously looking out for street
food carts and 'lane wanderers' (defined as those with a
tendency to drift from one driving lane to another for no apparent
reason). That's Phuket driving in a nutshell. That, and no apparent
speed limits - or at least none that are enforced. Don has had occasion to
drive a rental car in the weeks following the Maloney's departure, and has found
it to be...let's see, how would he put it? Challenging.
Ahh, now there's the photographer. We have so few
pictures of Bill that it's only fair we post those we do have.
Here's Don and Bill at the entrance to the Big Buddha.
This, is Big Buddha (and Kathie and I). He's big...and
still under construction. The building of Big Buddha has been
going for 20 years at a cost so far of around $2
million. He is seated in the lotus position, on a lotus flower base, all
of which is constructed of reinforced concrete covered over with tiles of
Burmese alabaster. He is really quite stunning. The sun was shining
relentlessly on the day of our visit, and although this photo doesn't quite
capture it (not the photographer's fault), the light was radiating off Big
Buddha's white skin causing him to literally glow. Perfectly fitting as
the little bit of research we've done on Buddhism indicates Buddha had a
glowing complexion after he reached the state of enlightenment.
This billboard shows a model of what Big Buddha and his
surrounding temple base will look like when finished. Wow. If it's
finished in our lifetime, we'll have to come back and see it. We
contributed to the construction (as did Bill and Kathie) by donating ~$10, which
bought us a square of alabaster tile and the ability to write a message
on the back. Our tiles will eventually be incorporated into Big
Buddha's lotus flower base. About a week ago, we heard a news story on the
radio about the mishandling and possible corruption associated with donations to
the construction of Big Buddha. Ah well, this is Thailand - you can't
always expect your baht (money) to go where it's supposed to.
Farewell to the Maloneys. We ended our day of Phuket
land travel at the elephant shrine and the restaurant we like so well
because it overlooks Nai Harn Bay with our anchored boat floating in
it.
The next day we ferried Bill and Kathie and their small
luggage in the dinghy (two trips) to a nearby bungalow resort so they could
catch a taxi to the airport. Everyone and everything arrived on the sandy
beach mostly dry, which is commendable given the choppy water, small dinghy
size and necessary beach landing through small breakers. Kudos to Bill and
Kathie for surviving the dinghy beach delivery, not to mention two weeks on
Harmonie with very little land or marina time in nearly the
hottest conditions we've ever experienced. They've since
completed their Southeast Asia travels after spending another week
in northern Thailand and Bangkok before flying home via Hong
Kong. We've once again had to deal with the empty boat syndrome that
haunts us every time our guests leave. Having guests aboard is like being
on vacation for us - we generally don't do boat jobs (unless absolutely
necessary), we eat a lot, drink a lot, do more sightseeing than usual, and most
importantly, enjoy the company of our guests. For us, guests
provide excellent entertainment, as opposed to the other way around.
Thanks to the Maloneys for traveling halfway around the world to sweat and
laugh with us in Phang Nga Bay.
Anne
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