I had big plans for Bangkok- myself, Sam and Jo were going to go on a night out on Ko Sang Road, a street notorious for its bars and clubs. But again, I wasn’t feeling so great. By this one, I’d figured out that it was just exhaustion of running around for months on end, plus perhaps not getting on so well with Asian diary products. So instead, I went to bed really early.
I had definitely chosen a good hostel in Bangkok. Again, it was much more like a hotel (infact, it had a hotel section), and the beds were comfy, high end and private. It was walking distance from lots of sights, but annoyingly, not that close to a sky train or metro station, which is where I seemed to be needing to get to throughout my time in Bangkok. Although this did give me a fortune of meeting Kamul the grab driver on my way to brunch with Sam and Jo the next day. Kamul was the nicest driver ever and we had a great chat. He had lots of recommendations too and proved to be really helpful over the next few days. Brunch was great, I ate prorridge for the first time in weeks and was soo happy. We were in an area called Sukhumvit, which was busy, with lots of high end hotels and shopping centres around, as well as the skytrain and metro, and I was really pleased to be in a more western setting for the first time in weeks. I also managed to squeeze in a quick video call with mum opening her birthday presents in the in UK too, the wonders of technology!
Upon Jo’s recommendation, I visited a shopping centre called “Terminal 21” and was not disappointing. Each floor was themed to a geographical area or city, including elaborate toilets. The basement was Caribbean, then there was Rome, Paris, Tokyo, London, Istanbul, San Fransico City, San Fransico Bay, Hollywood. Bathroom highlights for me included a full sized replica ‘Bocca Della Verita’ and fountain taps on the Rome levels, a full sized replica side of a tube in London and huge elaborate Turkish lamps in, yup you’ve guessed it, Istanbul (which I think wins in terms of nicest bathroom). The other great thing about the shopping centres is that you could get street-ish food that would be less ‘risky’. But craving the beige, I went for a subway.
That evening, I had planned to go for a walk to check out Ko Sang Road, but instead got chatting to some Germans in my dorm room- Philip, Leonie and Lucas. They were vloggers, and were spending their evening editing their footage and playing games and definitely on the same vibe as me.
The next morning, we all ate breakfast in the café down the road which was lovely. We hatched a plan to go to a weekend market in the north east of the city and Kamul came and picked us up. It was massive and full of the most random things. At one point, we accidently ended up in the pets section, which included hundreds of puppies, kittens and even tiny monkeys. It was quite sad to be honest as a lot of the animals were in small cages and you could see the ones who just hadn’t been sold yet. I wanted to rescue them all! We thought we would only be half an hour or so, but actually spent a good 3 hours there. I ran out of cash pretty quickly, which was probably a good thing, as I wanted to buy everything (it was good value for money). The best thing in there was the leather engraved goods- you could get any name or initials you wanted embossed onto various items for free.
It was great to be in a group too as it meant we got the bus back to the hostel which was a fun experience. I had avoided buses until now, not because I was worried about personal safety, just because it was confusing and not clear! It was definitely an adventure.
That evening, we had a dip in the pool and played some games.
The next morning was my ‘chill out day’ to make up for cutting my time in Koh Lanta short. I knew the pool at my hostel didn’t get the sun, so had booked a day pass to a rooftop pool (and gym) at a Hilton in the city. For about £9, I had access to the pool and gym all day and about £4 credit, which was enough to pay for most my lunch. Kamul gave me a lift to the skytrain station (for free!! I tried to give him some cash, but he insisted not to as it was less than 10mins in the car). He also offered to take me to one of the temples near where I was staying at in the evening so that I had at least experienced one in Bangkok. And after going the wrong way twice on the skytrain, I made it to the hotel. It was perfect! Very quiet and I was able to get a bed in the sun no problem. It was my lucky day, a nearby German woman in her 50s got chatting to me and offered me the spare bed in her room that night. I declined as I had plans, but also because it could’ve been the start of a horror film. It’s difficult isn’t it? When to trust people and when not to. I got the sense she was just being generous towards a young (she definitely thought I was about 22) backpacker and perhaps wanted some company. I’d like to think that I’d be like that one day, but probably wouldn’t be inviting them to share a room for fear of how it looked. Anyway, I had a disappointing pool side gluten free pizza, but definitely caught some rays (it was 32c!) before my return to the English winter.
That evening, Kamul took me to a local temple where he prays which was really beautiful by night and not something I would’ve considered. He also picked up some fried bread on the way back which was delicious. On the surface, perhaps the whole thing might’ve seemed suspect, but, like a lot of Thai’s he believes very strongly in Karma, and often takes his customers to places to experience stuff like this. If anyone is heading to Bangkok, let me know and I’ll pass on his details!
Afterwards, myself and my friends went to Ko San Road. It was slightly over hyped in all of our opinions and probably only enjoyable if you were very drunk. So instead we went back to the hostel and played more games. A perfect final day in Bangkok. Overall, I really liked Bangkok. Lot's of people had slagged it off, but I am definitely going to keep my eyes out for cheap flights there for a week or so.
The next morning, it was off to the airport for my flight home! I did cheekily enquire about an upgrade at the Thai Airways desk (I’m a silver member these days thanks to my return Melbourne- London ticket with them in July), but they quoted me at £900. Seeing as I had only paid about £300 or so for my ticket, I decided against it. Annoyingly, my flight was delayed by three hours, but luckily I had made a friend in the queue. Plus the plane was pretty empty, so I had a whole row to myself which meant I got a good few hours sleep in.
And with that, my trip was done! I’ll post some more random entries here over the coming weeks that might be interesting e.g. useful things I travel with, things I’ve learnt etc. But if you’ve made it to here, congrats on reaching the end and thanks for reading!
Here is a link to Philip and Leonie's video: Sandy Souls
Please do subscribe. If you put captions on, then you can change the settings to auto translate to English.
Rome themed bathroom
London themed bathroom