Monthly Archives: July 2010

Thailand in the News Week Ending 07/17/10

Thailand Buys Sugar

Thailand sugar farmers

Sounds innocuous enough but when you consider that Thailand is the worlds second biggest exporter of those sweet crystals and the fact that they haven’t made a sugar purchase in over 30 years then there might be a problem. This, as sugar prices continue to climb, is just more bad news for Thailand on the agricultural front this year.

With rainfall down across South East Asia it has proven to be a tough year for rice and sugar growers and with Thailand buying back 74,350 metric tons of domestic sugar from traders this week the market was sure to react in an upwardly mobile way. The sugar bought back from the market was to meet local consumption needs.

With this news you will be sure to see sugar prices rise even more and stay high until next years crops are in.

British Behavior Abroad Report’s that Brit’s are Lacking

Brit Tourist

With more cheap options for holidays in Thailand and an increasing number of eager tourists to explore the world the British Behavior Abroad Report says that tourists just aren’t taking into account much more than cheap prices at the expense of their health and bank account.

According to figures from the survey, which is based on the number of incidents reported by British people abroad to Foreign Office branches worldwide, 957 people required help when in Thailand between April last year and March 2010. With Thailand being a cheap destination in many ways and with cheaper flight options becoming available a lot of Brit’s are foregoing trip insurance and not taking into account the possibility of needing medical attention while abroad.

Foreign and Commonwealth office minister Jeremy Browne stated:

The worrying fact is that so many of these situations are preventable. Helping out Britons in trouble abroad is part of our job, but we can’t get you out of jail or pay your hospital bills.

Thailand has become increasingly popular with Britons and with cheaper flights and holiday packages available now travel abroad has really been made available to those that wouldn’t have considered it before due to cost. Unfortunately cheaper holidays means that people will stretch to their limit to plan a holiday in Thailand and let the essentials such as insurance fall to the wayside.

Insurance is cheap in the long run and should be the first thing on your list after purchasing your plane tickets.

U.S. Names new Thailand Ambassador

 Kristie Kenney

Barack Obama on Thursday named veteran diplomat Kristie Kenney as the US ambassador to Thailand. Ms Kenney most recently served as ambassador to the other key US ally in South-east Asia, the Philippines, where she helped smooth out relations through a series of incidents including rape allegations against a US Marine. Ms Kenney, who has also served as US ambassador to Ecuador, was known in the Philippines for her public diplomacy including taking to blogs and Facebook to reach out to Filipinos.

It’s nice to know that Ms. Kenney is good at sweeping under the rug smoothing things over such as rape allegations involving U.S. Servicemen. I am sure her skills will be invaluable in Thailand where the political scene has been quite robust as of late. Lets hope any hopeful rapists, pedophiles and or just ugly Americans realize she is on the job and will help to make her job easier by just admitting to your crimes so she doesn’t have to smooth things over as it were.

It has also been stated that Ms. Kenney is very good at facebook which should come in handy as ambassador to Thailand.

With Thailand’s political scene what it is it might have been a better idea to nominate someone with a better grasp of the situation but then again we all know that Ambassadors are about as useful as tits on a bull anyway.

There Be Dinosaurs

Dinosaurs in Thailand

When the rains come and the rivers swell odd things begin to appear in Baan Na Kum, Thailand…dinosaur bones…and lots of them. For years the locals had no idea what they were or what to do with them. The more superstitious among the Thai farmers buried them again while others took them to their local Wat where monks were collecting them, others just threw them away.

Over time the word has finally gotten out, Don’t throw out those bones!

Thailand is known for its beaches, great food and, more recently, its propensity for political protests, but not much for dinosaurs. It turns out that the creatures of prehistory, like the tourists of today, found certain parts of Thailand very hospitable.

Paleontologists say that the Khorat Plateau of northeastern Thailand was teeming with dinosaurs starting about 200 million years ago (Bangkok was under the sea at the time), and that the proof is in the frequency with which villagers find dinosaur bones and other fossils.

Paleontologists have documented five new genuses of dinosaurs and six previously unknown species since research began in the 1980s in partnership with French scientists. About 10,000 dinosaur bones have been collected nationwide in three decades, scientists say.

In terms of the breadth and scientific significance of discoveries, China remains a more important center for dinosaur research in Asia, according to Mr. Varavudh, but Thailand could contribute more if it had more trained paleontologists. He counts only 10 dinosaur experts in the country.

Mr. Varavudh and others hope that the younger generation will embrace the region’s dinosaur past more enthusiastically. The Sirindhorn Museum, a dinosaur museum named for Thailand’s crown princess, Maha Chakri Sirindhorn, who has shown an interest in paleontology, opened in the area three years ago, drawing about 200,000 visitors a year, many of them schoolchildren. Large dinosaur replicas have been erected along some roads here in Kalasin Province, home to the region’s most significant dinosaur discoveries.

Among the most compelling attractions are those found here in Baan Na Kum, an eight-hour drive from Bangkok past endless rice paddies and fields of sugar cane. Shrouded by jungle and accessible only by a single-lane road that winds through the hills, it is where visitors can view the giant footprints left in a riverbed by a tyrannosaur, the fierce carnivore that roamed these parts 140 million years ago.

Each claw of the footprint is about the size of an average human foot. The imprint is well defined and deeply embedded in the sandstone riverbed, as if the tyrannosaur had walked there only last week.

I’ve seen some dinosaurs myself walking about Bangkok and Pattaya in recent years but that is yet another story…it does make me wonder though if some poor punter will ever hear  ” Teelac, you can send money….dinosaur is sick”

DON”T FEED THE ELEPHANTS

bangkok-elephant-days-numbered

Just to reiterate a story I ran earlier. Bangkok is cracking down on elephants wandering the streets and their Mahouts, but they are also cracking down on tourists. If you are caught feeding an elephant in Bangkok YOU WILL BE FINED 10, 000 BAHT ( roughly $300 ).

Do not encourage this business of using animals to make a living. These elephants are often mistreated and wind up maimed and injured if not dead just so tourists can have what they think is the Thailand experience.

This ordinance is being taken seriously and the Mahouts have all but cleared out of downtown Bangkok, although there are reports of Mahouts now using baby elephants in the back of pick up trucks on the outskirts of the city.

You have been warned again…DO NOT FEED THE ELEPHANTS BECAUSE YOU WILL BE FINED!

Monthly Archives: July 2010

Thailand in the News Week Ending 07/17/10

Thailand Buys Sugar

Thailand sugar farmers

Sounds innocuous enough but when you consider that Thailand is the worlds second biggest exporter of those sweet crystals and the fact that they haven’t made a sugar purchase in over 30 years then there might be a problem. This, as sugar prices continue to climb, is just more bad news for Thailand on the agricultural front this year.

With rainfall down across South East Asia it has proven to be a tough year for rice and sugar growers and with Thailand buying back 74,350 metric tons of domestic sugar from traders this week the market was sure to react in an upwardly mobile way. The sugar bought back from the market was to meet local consumption needs.

With this news you will be sure to see sugar prices rise even more and stay high until next years crops are in.

British Behavior Abroad Report’s that Brit’s are Lacking

Brit Tourist

With more cheap options for holidays in Thailand and an increasing number of eager tourists to explore the world the British Behavior Abroad Report says that tourists just aren’t taking into account much more than cheap prices at the expense of their health and bank account.

According to figures from the survey, which is based on the number of incidents reported by British people abroad to Foreign Office branches worldwide, 957 people required help when in Thailand between April last year and March 2010. With Thailand being a cheap destination in many ways and with cheaper flight options becoming available a lot of Brit’s are foregoing trip insurance and not taking into account the possibility of needing medical attention while abroad.

Foreign and Commonwealth office minister Jeremy Browne stated:

The worrying fact is that so many of these situations are preventable. Helping out Britons in trouble abroad is part of our job, but we can’t get you out of jail or pay your hospital bills.

Thailand has become increasingly popular with Britons and with cheaper flights and holiday packages available now travel abroad has really been made available to those that wouldn’t have considered it before due to cost. Unfortunately cheaper holidays means that people will stretch to their limit to plan a holiday in Thailand and let the essentials such as insurance fall to the wayside.

Insurance is cheap in the long run and should be the first thing on your list after purchasing your plane tickets.

U.S. Names new Thailand Ambassador

 Kristie Kenney

Barack Obama on Thursday named veteran diplomat Kristie Kenney as the US ambassador to Thailand. Ms Kenney most recently served as ambassador to the other key US ally in South-east Asia, the Philippines, where she helped smooth out relations through a series of incidents including rape allegations against a US Marine. Ms Kenney, who has also served as US ambassador to Ecuador, was known in the Philippines for her public diplomacy including taking to blogs and Facebook to reach out to Filipinos.

It’s nice to know that Ms. Kenney is good at sweeping under the rug smoothing things over such as rape allegations involving U.S. Servicemen. I am sure her skills will be invaluable in Thailand where the political scene has been quite robust as of late. Lets hope any hopeful rapists, pedophiles and or just ugly Americans realize she is on the job and will help to make her job easier by just admitting to your crimes so she doesn’t have to smooth things over as it were.

It has also been stated that Ms. Kenney is very good at facebook which should come in handy as ambassador to Thailand.

With Thailand’s political scene what it is it might have been a better idea to nominate someone with a better grasp of the situation but then again we all know that Ambassadors are about as useful as tits on a bull anyway.

There Be Dinosaurs

Dinosaurs in Thailand

When the rains come and the rivers swell odd things begin to appear in Baan Na Kum, Thailand…dinosaur bones…and lots of them. For years the locals had no idea what they were or what to do with them. The more superstitious among the Thai farmers buried them again while others took them to their local Wat where monks were collecting them, others just threw them away.

Over time the word has finally gotten out, Don’t throw out those bones!

Thailand is known for its beaches, great food and, more recently, its propensity for political protests, but not much for dinosaurs. It turns out that the creatures of prehistory, like the tourists of today, found certain parts of Thailand very hospitable.

Paleontologists say that the Khorat Plateau of northeastern Thailand was teeming with dinosaurs starting about 200 million years ago (Bangkok was under the sea at the time), and that the proof is in the frequency with which villagers find dinosaur bones and other fossils.

Paleontologists have documented five new genuses of dinosaurs and six previously unknown species since research began in the 1980s in partnership with French scientists. About 10,000 dinosaur bones have been collected nationwide in three decades, scientists say.

In terms of the breadth and scientific significance of discoveries, China remains a more important center for dinosaur research in Asia, according to Mr. Varavudh, but Thailand could contribute more if it had more trained paleontologists. He counts only 10 dinosaur experts in the country.

Mr. Varavudh and others hope that the younger generation will embrace the region’s dinosaur past more enthusiastically. The Sirindhorn Museum, a dinosaur museum named for Thailand’s crown princess, Maha Chakri Sirindhorn, who has shown an interest in paleontology, opened in the area three years ago, drawing about 200,000 visitors a year, many of them schoolchildren. Large dinosaur replicas have been erected along some roads here in Kalasin Province, home to the region’s most significant dinosaur discoveries.

Among the most compelling attractions are those found here in Baan Na Kum, an eight-hour drive from Bangkok past endless rice paddies and fields of sugar cane. Shrouded by jungle and accessible only by a single-lane road that winds through the hills, it is where visitors can view the giant footprints left in a riverbed by a tyrannosaur, the fierce carnivore that roamed these parts 140 million years ago.

Each claw of the footprint is about the size of an average human foot. The imprint is well defined and deeply embedded in the sandstone riverbed, as if the tyrannosaur had walked there only last week.

I’ve seen some dinosaurs myself walking about Bangkok and Pattaya in recent years but that is yet another story…it does make me wonder though if some poor punter will ever hear  ” Teelac, you can send money….dinosaur is sick”

DON”T FEED THE ELEPHANTS

bangkok-elephant-days-numbered

Just to reiterate a story I ran earlier. Bangkok is cracking down on elephants wandering the streets and their Mahouts, but they are also cracking down on tourists. If you are caught feeding an elephant in Bangkok YOU WILL BE FINED 10, 000 BAHT ( roughly $300 ).

Do not encourage this business of using animals to make a living. These elephants are often mistreated and wind up maimed and injured if not dead just so tourists can have what they think is the Thailand experience.

This ordinance is being taken seriously and the Mahouts have all but cleared out of downtown Bangkok, although there are reports of Mahouts now using baby elephants in the back of pick up trucks on the outskirts of the city.

You have been warned again…DO NOT FEED THE ELEPHANTS BECAUSE YOU WILL BE FINED!

Monthly Archives: July 2010

Thailand in the News Week Ending 07/17/10

Thailand Buys Sugar

Thailand sugar farmers

Sounds innocuous enough but when you consider that Thailand is the worlds second biggest exporter of those sweet crystals and the fact that they haven’t made a sugar purchase in over 30 years then there might be a problem. This, as sugar prices continue to climb, is just more bad news for Thailand on the agricultural front this year.

With rainfall down across South East Asia it has proven to be a tough year for rice and sugar growers and with Thailand buying back 74,350 metric tons of domestic sugar from traders this week the market was sure to react in an upwardly mobile way. The sugar bought back from the market was to meet local consumption needs.

With this news you will be sure to see sugar prices rise even more and stay high until next years crops are in.

British Behavior Abroad Report’s that Brit’s are Lacking

Brit Tourist

With more cheap options for holidays in Thailand and an increasing number of eager tourists to explore the world the British Behavior Abroad Report says that tourists just aren’t taking into account much more than cheap prices at the expense of their health and bank account.

According to figures from the survey, which is based on the number of incidents reported by British people abroad to Foreign Office branches worldwide, 957 people required help when in Thailand between April last year and March 2010. With Thailand being a cheap destination in many ways and with cheaper flight options becoming available a lot of Brit’s are foregoing trip insurance and not taking into account the possibility of needing medical attention while abroad.

Foreign and Commonwealth office minister Jeremy Browne stated:

The worrying fact is that so many of these situations are preventable. Helping out Britons in trouble abroad is part of our job, but we can’t get you out of jail or pay your hospital bills.

Thailand has become increasingly popular with Britons and with cheaper flights and holiday packages available now travel abroad has really been made available to those that wouldn’t have considered it before due to cost. Unfortunately cheaper holidays means that people will stretch to their limit to plan a holiday in Thailand and let the essentials such as insurance fall to the wayside.

Insurance is cheap in the long run and should be the first thing on your list after purchasing your plane tickets.

U.S. Names new Thailand Ambassador

 Kristie Kenney

Barack Obama on Thursday named veteran diplomat Kristie Kenney as the US ambassador to Thailand. Ms Kenney most recently served as ambassador to the other key US ally in South-east Asia, the Philippines, where she helped smooth out relations through a series of incidents including rape allegations against a US Marine. Ms Kenney, who has also served as US ambassador to Ecuador, was known in the Philippines for her public diplomacy including taking to blogs and Facebook to reach out to Filipinos.

It’s nice to know that Ms. Kenney is good at sweeping under the rug smoothing things over such as rape allegations involving U.S. Servicemen. I am sure her skills will be invaluable in Thailand where the political scene has been quite robust as of late. Lets hope any hopeful rapists, pedophiles and or just ugly Americans realize she is on the job and will help to make her job easier by just admitting to your crimes so she doesn’t have to smooth things over as it were.

It has also been stated that Ms. Kenney is very good at facebook which should come in handy as ambassador to Thailand.

With Thailand’s political scene what it is it might have been a better idea to nominate someone with a better grasp of the situation but then again we all know that Ambassadors are about as useful as tits on a bull anyway.

There Be Dinosaurs

Dinosaurs in Thailand

When the rains come and the rivers swell odd things begin to appear in Baan Na Kum, Thailand…dinosaur bones…and lots of them. For years the locals had no idea what they were or what to do with them. The more superstitious among the Thai farmers buried them again while others took them to their local Wat where monks were collecting them, others just threw them away.

Over time the word has finally gotten out, Don’t throw out those bones!

Thailand is known for its beaches, great food and, more recently, its propensity for political protests, but not much for dinosaurs. It turns out that the creatures of prehistory, like the tourists of today, found certain parts of Thailand very hospitable.

Paleontologists say that the Khorat Plateau of northeastern Thailand was teeming with dinosaurs starting about 200 million years ago (Bangkok was under the sea at the time), and that the proof is in the frequency with which villagers find dinosaur bones and other fossils.

Paleontologists have documented five new genuses of dinosaurs and six previously unknown species since research began in the 1980s in partnership with French scientists. About 10,000 dinosaur bones have been collected nationwide in three decades, scientists say.

In terms of the breadth and scientific significance of discoveries, China remains a more important center for dinosaur research in Asia, according to Mr. Varavudh, but Thailand could contribute more if it had more trained paleontologists. He counts only 10 dinosaur experts in the country.

Mr. Varavudh and others hope that the younger generation will embrace the region’s dinosaur past more enthusiastically. The Sirindhorn Museum, a dinosaur museum named for Thailand’s crown princess, Maha Chakri Sirindhorn, who has shown an interest in paleontology, opened in the area three years ago, drawing about 200,000 visitors a year, many of them schoolchildren. Large dinosaur replicas have been erected along some roads here in Kalasin Province, home to the region’s most significant dinosaur discoveries.

Among the most compelling attractions are those found here in Baan Na Kum, an eight-hour drive from Bangkok past endless rice paddies and fields of sugar cane. Shrouded by jungle and accessible only by a single-lane road that winds through the hills, it is where visitors can view the giant footprints left in a riverbed by a tyrannosaur, the fierce carnivore that roamed these parts 140 million years ago.

Each claw of the footprint is about the size of an average human foot. The imprint is well defined and deeply embedded in the sandstone riverbed, as if the tyrannosaur had walked there only last week.

I’ve seen some dinosaurs myself walking about Bangkok and Pattaya in recent years but that is yet another story…it does make me wonder though if some poor punter will ever hear  ” Teelac, you can send money….dinosaur is sick”

DON”T FEED THE ELEPHANTS

bangkok-elephant-days-numbered

Just to reiterate a story I ran earlier. Bangkok is cracking down on elephants wandering the streets and their Mahouts, but they are also cracking down on tourists. If you are caught feeding an elephant in Bangkok YOU WILL BE FINED 10, 000 BAHT ( roughly $300 ).

Do not encourage this business of using animals to make a living. These elephants are often mistreated and wind up maimed and injured if not dead just so tourists can have what they think is the Thailand experience.

This ordinance is being taken seriously and the Mahouts have all but cleared out of downtown Bangkok, although there are reports of Mahouts now using baby elephants in the back of pick up trucks on the outskirts of the city.

You have been warned again…DO NOT FEED THE ELEPHANTS BECAUSE YOU WILL BE FINED!

Monthly Archives: July 2010

Thailand in the News Week Ending 07/17/10

Thailand Buys Sugar

Thailand sugar farmers

Sounds innocuous enough but when you consider that Thailand is the worlds second biggest exporter of those sweet crystals and the fact that they haven’t made a sugar purchase in over 30 years then there might be a problem. This, as sugar prices continue to climb, is just more bad news for Thailand on the agricultural front this year.

With rainfall down across South East Asia it has proven to be a tough year for rice and sugar growers and with Thailand buying back 74,350 metric tons of domestic sugar from traders this week the market was sure to react in an upwardly mobile way. The sugar bought back from the market was to meet local consumption needs.

With this news you will be sure to see sugar prices rise even more and stay high until next years crops are in.

British Behavior Abroad Report’s that Brit’s are Lacking

Brit Tourist

With more cheap options for holidays in Thailand and an increasing number of eager tourists to explore the world the British Behavior Abroad Report says that tourists just aren’t taking into account much more than cheap prices at the expense of their health and bank account.

According to figures from the survey, which is based on the number of incidents reported by British people abroad to Foreign Office branches worldwide, 957 people required help when in Thailand between April last year and March 2010. With Thailand being a cheap destination in many ways and with cheaper flight options becoming available a lot of Brit’s are foregoing trip insurance and not taking into account the possibility of needing medical attention while abroad.

Foreign and Commonwealth office minister Jeremy Browne stated:

The worrying fact is that so many of these situations are preventable. Helping out Britons in trouble abroad is part of our job, but we can’t get you out of jail or pay your hospital bills.

Thailand has become increasingly popular with Britons and with cheaper flights and holiday packages available now travel abroad has really been made available to those that wouldn’t have considered it before due to cost. Unfortunately cheaper holidays means that people will stretch to their limit to plan a holiday in Thailand and let the essentials such as insurance fall to the wayside.

Insurance is cheap in the long run and should be the first thing on your list after purchasing your plane tickets.

U.S. Names new Thailand Ambassador

 Kristie Kenney

Barack Obama on Thursday named veteran diplomat Kristie Kenney as the US ambassador to Thailand. Ms Kenney most recently served as ambassador to the other key US ally in South-east Asia, the Philippines, where she helped smooth out relations through a series of incidents including rape allegations against a US Marine. Ms Kenney, who has also served as US ambassador to Ecuador, was known in the Philippines for her public diplomacy including taking to blogs and Facebook to reach out to Filipinos.

It’s nice to know that Ms. Kenney is good at sweeping under the rug smoothing things over such as rape allegations involving U.S. Servicemen. I am sure her skills will be invaluable in Thailand where the political scene has been quite robust as of late. Lets hope any hopeful rapists, pedophiles and or just ugly Americans realize she is on the job and will help to make her job easier by just admitting to your crimes so she doesn’t have to smooth things over as it were.

It has also been stated that Ms. Kenney is very good at facebook which should come in handy as ambassador to Thailand.

With Thailand’s political scene what it is it might have been a better idea to nominate someone with a better grasp of the situation but then again we all know that Ambassadors are about as useful as tits on a bull anyway.

There Be Dinosaurs

Dinosaurs in Thailand

When the rains come and the rivers swell odd things begin to appear in Baan Na Kum, Thailand…dinosaur bones…and lots of them. For years the locals had no idea what they were or what to do with them. The more superstitious among the Thai farmers buried them again while others took them to their local Wat where monks were collecting them, others just threw them away.

Over time the word has finally gotten out, Don’t throw out those bones!

Thailand is known for its beaches, great food and, more recently, its propensity for political protests, but not much for dinosaurs. It turns out that the creatures of prehistory, like the tourists of today, found certain parts of Thailand very hospitable.

Paleontologists say that the Khorat Plateau of northeastern Thailand was teeming with dinosaurs starting about 200 million years ago (Bangkok was under the sea at the time), and that the proof is in the frequency with which villagers find dinosaur bones and other fossils.

Paleontologists have documented five new genuses of dinosaurs and six previously unknown species since research began in the 1980s in partnership with French scientists. About 10,000 dinosaur bones have been collected nationwide in three decades, scientists say.

In terms of the breadth and scientific significance of discoveries, China remains a more important center for dinosaur research in Asia, according to Mr. Varavudh, but Thailand could contribute more if it had more trained paleontologists. He counts only 10 dinosaur experts in the country.

Mr. Varavudh and others hope that the younger generation will embrace the region’s dinosaur past more enthusiastically. The Sirindhorn Museum, a dinosaur museum named for Thailand’s crown princess, Maha Chakri Sirindhorn, who has shown an interest in paleontology, opened in the area three years ago, drawing about 200,000 visitors a year, many of them schoolchildren. Large dinosaur replicas have been erected along some roads here in Kalasin Province, home to the region’s most significant dinosaur discoveries.

Among the most compelling attractions are those found here in Baan Na Kum, an eight-hour drive from Bangkok past endless rice paddies and fields of sugar cane. Shrouded by jungle and accessible only by a single-lane road that winds through the hills, it is where visitors can view the giant footprints left in a riverbed by a tyrannosaur, the fierce carnivore that roamed these parts 140 million years ago.

Each claw of the footprint is about the size of an average human foot. The imprint is well defined and deeply embedded in the sandstone riverbed, as if the tyrannosaur had walked there only last week.

I’ve seen some dinosaurs myself walking about Bangkok and Pattaya in recent years but that is yet another story…it does make me wonder though if some poor punter will ever hear  ” Teelac, you can send money….dinosaur is sick”

DON”T FEED THE ELEPHANTS

bangkok-elephant-days-numbered

Just to reiterate a story I ran earlier. Bangkok is cracking down on elephants wandering the streets and their Mahouts, but they are also cracking down on tourists. If you are caught feeding an elephant in Bangkok YOU WILL BE FINED 10, 000 BAHT ( roughly $300 ).

Do not encourage this business of using animals to make a living. These elephants are often mistreated and wind up maimed and injured if not dead just so tourists can have what they think is the Thailand experience.

This ordinance is being taken seriously and the Mahouts have all but cleared out of downtown Bangkok, although there are reports of Mahouts now using baby elephants in the back of pick up trucks on the outskirts of the city.

You have been warned again…DO NOT FEED THE ELEPHANTS BECAUSE YOU WILL BE FINED!