Inveterate dabbler in business, travel, gadgets & life

Geoff in SE Asia with a bike – Hua Hin to Kuiburi

Another early start and the hotel had made me a egg sandwich for breakfast, once again they thought it needed a slice of ham 🙁 So i fished it out.

The previous night I had created a route with bikemap.net that stuck to the coast and avoided the dreaded main highway 4, the route worked beautifuuly even including a bit of dirt track hill climbing 🙂

1-IMG_1058Amazing to see multistorey massive hotels just plonked in some remote bay, so incongruous, really makes you wonder about our civilization. The further from Hua Hin the more low key the place s become culminating after 30 miles in the rather bohemian village of Dolphin Bay with massage beds on the lovely beach & lots of low key hotels. After my massage & snooze (an experiment to see if my pm performance would improve – it didn’t 🙁  )  I moved on although i should have stayed I think.

Monkey businessI went on the edge of Khao Sam Roi Yod national park and even got to see a pack of monkeys rummaging in the Sulo bins, thoughtfully placed there by the park staff! Eventually after 58 miles I arrived at the Kuiburi Hotel & Resort which I’m not enjoying at all, crummy internet, staff who don’t know about smoothies and loads of mossies, so I’m currently having dinner & using their excellent internet at the neighbouring Vartika Resovilla.

Here is the days Strava:

Hua_Hin_to_Kuiburi___Strava_RideI make it that I’ve now biked 1,656 miles (2,650km) so still about 1,100 miles to do, which if the temperature keeps increasing at the present rate I’m unlikely to be able to do it all on the bike in the remaining 26 days.

The days pics are here 

 

Samutsongkhram to Hua Hin on Geoff’s SE Asia bike ride

Samutsongkhram_to_Hua_Hin___Strava_RideI departed once again with the dawn, However, due to the absence of bridges I had to do 10 miles to cross the river a distance gained of less than 1 mile 🙁

UntitledToday I was finally travelling South again. however, that’s where the  hot wind was coming from too, making life doubly difficult for me 🙁  Also I met the worst stupidity of the Thai road system. When joining the main 35 road (akin to the M6, M1) there is no flyover to get you onto the other side. They expect you to cross the three lanes  of the ‘wrong’ carriageway and make a U turn in the designated place!  OK if you are a car but on a push bike the very definition of hell as when you have finally got to the meridian you are of cause in the ‘fast’ lane of the other carriageway!, now I know why so many folks travel the ‘wrong way” on their mopeds etc.  I guess there really is a steel & cement shortage here.

Getting closerI was stuck on the very busy 35 road most of the day, although I did find a few detours especially to the rather magnificent Gold Temple at Huai Rong

I made numerous stops for smoothies, water & nourishment but also to escape into an AC room to cool off 🙂 I managed to get the guys at the Tesco car cleaning place  to pump up my tyres up and oil the chain & pedals, although why this country hasn’t heard of small oil cans etc is a mystery to me, they used a 1 litre bottle & splashed it in the general direction of the said items 🙁  But it worked the pedals no longer creak & moan with the chain much smoother too.

I finally gave up after 77.5 miles for the inappropriately named White Sand Hotel, but a good location all the same, albeit very expensive at  £42 🙁

Here is the Strava:

Samutsongkhram_to_Hua_Hin___Strava_RideTodays pics are here

 

Geoff’s SE Asia bike tour – Bangkok to Samutsongkhram

Setting of from BangkokBack on the road at the crack of dawn, very pleasurable too, even the 12 lane highways out of Bangkok were good fun,  apart from when 3 lanes peel of to the left and I needed to be going straight on  but, as you can tell, I survived.

Oops a shortcut using the track!Later on I decided to do some exploring all was OK until I came to a section where the road stopped 🙁 looking at OSM I could see it restarted again a couple of miles further along the railway track I could also a track where other folks had had the same idea so I went for a bit of off roading, where the missing road bridge was someone had thoughtfully put planks on the sleepers so you could use the railway bridge – good fun until I noticed a train in the distance 🙂 The remainder was through delightful villages & around Buddhist  temples.

I made the 61 miles it to the previously booked  Baansuanphidchamika so called resort , although it’s just a group of chalets, a bit more deluxe than the ones from my childhood at Butlins in Skeggie but chalets all the same.

1-IMG_1003The great thing about this place is that the floating market at Amphawa is literally a hundred metres down the road, so I gave Sally a little tour on Facetime, which works incredibly well on 3G, and then returned this evening for a  gorgeous fresh fish & rice.

The new iPhone holder worked very well, once I had discovered thE two lugs that stop it sliding out! The big plus is that I can leave it plugged into the charger so I arrived with 100% charge the minus (as always) is that my sweaty hands and head stop the finger action working 🙁  but no overheating today!

Here as usual is the Strava:

Bangkok_to_Samutsongkhram___Strava_Ride

 

and the pictures of the day are here

 

River Kwai one day trekking tour

Yesterday was another of my tourist days. Very tiring too, we covered 270 miles via minibus, train, boat & elephant 🙂 but no biking.

Kanchanaburi war cemetryOur first stop was Kancchanaburi military cemetery dedicated to the 6,981 folks killed whilst building this part of The so called “Death Railway”  a startlingly high number from Cambridge who were part of of The Fen Tigers as The Cambridgeshire Battalion was nicknamed , more details can be found here and here Apparently  24 Officers and 760 Other Ranks killed in action or died as prisoners of war in the hands of the Japanese. All terribly sad since one of the survivors worked at The Cavendish so I got to know him quite well and his intense loathing for the Japanese.

Mind the gapWe toured the museum which was a bit higgledy piggledy but interesting especially, for the old train spotter in me, that one of the engine’s used by the Japanese on the line was built in England in 1921.  We then took the train for 100 minutes crossing the famous bridge over the  fast flowing Kwai (actually Khwae Yai) river and the amazingly close shave with the cliff face at Tham Krasae.

Outboard improvisedThen it was onto a lovely lunch at Kitti Rafts restaurant  on the river Khwae Noi followed by a high power bomb up the river, you should see the Thai idea for an outboard motor 🙂 then a leisurely drift back on a bamboo raft.

Geoff on a ElephantAfter the river excitement it was a sedate ride on a 42 year old elephant, must say I prefer the bike! it’s decidedly very wobbly up there. After this we paid a quick visit to the Sai Yok Noi waterfall which was OK but not in full flood mode.

13 hours later we arrived back in Bangkok. The tour was booked with R.A. Travel Agency  and given the full on day was good value at the equivalent of  £36 but please guys cut out the buses with blackened glass, we are tourists wanting to see out not the president wanting no one to see us!

Here is the route we took:River Kwai day outThe 150 photos of the day are here