Thursday, March 31, 2011

ACS: Warden Message: Flooding in Southern Thailand


US Embassy American Citizen Services Warden Message
Thousands stranded due to flooding and landslides.
If your immediate travel plans  include  Koh Samui, Koh Tao, Koh Phangan, Krabi, Similan, and Phuket, and other southern destinations, consider alternate destinations.

Best times to use the internet in Thailand's rice jungle

Internet is really slow in Thailand at the moment
I'd venture to guess, the system is old, antiquated, and overused.
Best times to use the internet in Thailand's rice jungle (back country / outback) is when they're sleeping or otherwise engaged: 3AM to 10AM.

After 10 AM things begin to slow down, especially when school is in session.  The rest of the time is peak usage. 

Quite often I've had success by disconnecting and reconnecting internet provider hardware or software (network control panel)
By doing that you are most likely disconnecting from an overpopulated node, and then reconnecting to a less used node (node=connection point).

Upgrading Thailand's connectivity has been underway for quite a few years.  Stalled in political and legal wrangling.  There seem to be promising developments that an upgrade might finally begin this year.  But for heavens sake don't hold your breath.


3G services approval under consideration Reuters


Thai News revisited


Radioactive sweet potatoes destroyed
THAI VISA
The comments to the article are at times informative and hilarious at THAI VISA

Tourists stranded by Thai floods The Australian

One million stranded in the South THE NATION

March 25, Sakon FC looses to Kalasin FC 2-0



News from Afar



NASA - First Image Ever Obtained from Mercury Orbit


Panama accepts resignation of cross-dressing diplomat 






That's Entertainment


Waitress of the month                                         Watermelon in the snout


Skid Marks                                               How real men change fan belts


When not to clean your glasses                                          Bizarre British

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Take the last bus from Bangkok

Weather-wise it hasn't been a pretty picture in Thailand lately.
Locally it's been a temperature roller coaster ride.  Extreme heat with feels like temperatures above 45C (113F) at times, then dropping down to 15C (59F).

One day my pool is overcrowded, the next day my visitors are dressed as if they were on an expedition to the North Pole.

A little over a week ago Bangkok experienced some of it's coldest weather in five years, 20C (68F).

 Coldest day ever in Bangkok 9.9C (49.8F) in January 1955  Bangkok Blogger

Southern Thailand is getting hit by rains, floods, high waves, and heavy winds for the past week.
Boat, train, bus and air service to the southern provinces has been halted due to flooding.
Hundreds of touristst are stranded at Koh Samui.

With local cool temperatures and almost continuous light rain I'm asking myself, isn't that why I left Seattle and moved to a supposedly warmer climate. So I wouldn't notice all those aches and pains.

SakonNakhon Outlook:
A few more cool days ahead. Warming slightly at first, then accelerating.
It's a bit early to tell with certainty, but Accu Weather is predicting feels like temperatures of 42/26C (108/79F) for April 12.  NOTE TO SELF: Keep the air conditioner remote for the bedroom handy.


Last bus from Bangkok to Surat Thani  
video by





After Burma, quakes rocked Thailand too 
The Nation

 Eight dead as Thailand hit by floods and cold spell    Monsters and Critics
The numbers continue to rise

 Deadly Antibiotic-Resistant Superbug Spreads in Southern California  abc news
Two facts got my attention in this article
  • The bug is spread in hospital environments.
  • The most common means of spreading bugs is the handshake.



    Why I don't accept game and application requests on facebook

     Data Mining: How Companies Now Know Everything About You  Time



    This dog owner doesn't need a housekeeper

    Monday, March 28, 2011

    Thailand's deadliest driving Season Ahead

    Songkran, the Thai New Year begins in less than three weeks.
    It's the annual celebration when Thai's near and afar make a pilgrimage home to be with family.

    A few days before the holidays it becomes obvious: 
    Extra buses are put into service from major metropolitan centers.   
    Highway traffic is at its peak, and so are accidents and road mayhem.

    Plenty of extra road checks are set up along highways to insure driver sobriety.
    Many of these checkpoints now have breathalyzers.



    Sunday, March 27, 2011

    After 5 pm the police are asleep or ...

    100% helmet use campaign started in Phuket last November.
    The following month a nationwide campaign was kicked off.
    Quite recently, posters and banners started to appear locally promoting the campaign.

    The campaign seems to be working to some extend, but it's not quite 100% yet.

    While adults wear helmets, their passenger children are mostly without head protection.

    5 pm seems to be the time when helmets are discarded by almost everyone.
    As one neighbor explained it to me, after 5 pm the police are asleep or...

    I'd suggest eventually the law will expand, requiring eye protection for motorcyclists.  It's mandatory in many western countries.  Until then, we'll see plenty of eye patches.

    Somewhat reminds me of the headlight law.  When I first started driving a motorcycle in Thailand (2003), Thai's would laugh at me for keeping my headlights on during the daytime.  A few months later it became law.  But it took another year before it became accepted practice.

    Motorcycles sold these days are manufactured in a way that the headlights are on automatically when the engine is running.  Unfortunately helmet wearing can not be built into motorcycles.

    Sakon FC experiences 0-2 loss

    Kalasin scored twice during the first half.
    Sakon FC had plenty of near misses, hitting the goalpost a few times and going over the goal a number of times.

    During the second half Sakon FC continued to have a number of near misses, but were playing much better, foiling any attempts by Kalasin to increase their score.  Some player changes seemed to make the difference.

    Large crowd of Kalasin FC fans was cheered on by a five drum cheering section.  Noisy!






    About Thai time


    There's a pattern here
    Just like I noted two weeks ago in Korat, Kalasin score seems to function, but not the clock.

    Round trip SakonNakhon/Kalasin

    2:30  Telephone conversation
    • Do you want to go to Kalasin to see the football game?
    • How much, how long is the drive?
    • Bt3,000, 1 1/2 hour

    We agree on a lesser price and leave Sakon Nakhon around 4 pm.
    The game is advertised to start at 6 pm.

    A short while underway, Joey receives a phone call.  The game is to start at 5, not 6 pm.
    From that moment I'm sitting next to speedracer.
    The Phu Phan mountain range has some very sharp curves.
    I looked at the speedometer, at times we were nearing 145 kmph (90mph) on the straightaways.
    I was hanging on for dear life.  There were a couple close calls.

    I gripped the overhead handle so tense that I actually loosened it.
    5:20 pm we received another call.  Game hasn't started, the ambulance isn't at the stadium yet.
    Can't start without it.

    We arrived at 5:40, the game had been underway for 10 minutes.  As we walked through the parking lot, the crowd roared.  Kalasin had scored.

    The return trip started after the game.  Eight PM. Traffic was very light.
    There was an exiting moment when a bus was passing traffic, head-on in our lane.
    We were forced off the pavement.  We were lucky there was enough space for us to get out of the way.  The bus never slowed and just kept on going.

    We were doing 145kmph more frequently now.  We were home in two hours.

    If you drive safe and at the posted speed limit, 
    the drive can't be done in under two hours

    Saturday, March 26, 2011

    Flabbergsted


    I've been subscribed to  arakwarits You tube channel for some time.
    It's quite a collection of videos.  I started watching his videos when I noted a number of Sakon FC games and a few other local events in his uploads.

    His recent upload simply left me bewildered

    I recognized the pink elephant and I had not been consuming any spirits.


    The starting scene, snow covered mountains, I'd seen them before, looked very familiar.
    Then that boat shaped tour bus jarred my memory.
    I lived there for 25 years.  Well not there, but 87 blocks away.
    Used to drive past the car wash twice daily on my way to work and home.


    Really Old Fashioned Football Evening at home

    Remember the days before television.
    Television arrived on the scene just before my teens.



    Before that, people gathered around the radio.

    Local TV stations, probably due to budget constraints do not have the facilities to broadcast games live.
    The only way to follow the game as it happens is through Sakon FC's website radio (which someone has to translate for me, as it's a Thai broadcast).

    I had considered the drive to Kalasin on a motorbike.  Done it before.
    Thought about the slow progress through the curves of Phu Phan Pass, and the cold temperatures at the moment...
    Nah not this time!!


    Really Great Sakon FC photography here