Art in Garden


Art in Garden, art in natural rubber plantation environment, created to show art works of Thai artists, Mr. Niran Chanhom , a place that artist can share their knowledge with others.Niran was born in Chiang Mai in 1970, and is a graduate of Chiang Mai’s Teachers College with a Bachelor of Arts degree in Education. He now lives in Phuket which he calls his ‘Paradise’, where he creates his works of art.Using both oil and acrylic on canvas, his recent works are finely detailed figures with a touch of the exotic, even alien, and reflect the sea and the sea life that abound in Thailand’s southern island habitat. Niran explains, ‘Phuket made me realize the greatness of nature, I am appreciative of the peaceful, tranquil and immaculate environment that is so different from the big city. I just picked up some of the beauty and sense of nature around me in my daily life and put it into my paintings.Niran’s work has been exhibited in a number of exhibitions in Bangkok, Phuket and Chiang Mai, and he was awarded a Certificate of Recognition by the Philip Morris Group Annual Asian Art Competition. He has also presented two solo shows in Phuket, one of which was named ‘Tsunami’ which opened on the anniversary of the disaster which devastated the island and much of the area.Address: Art in Garden, 88/5 Moo 1, Viset Road, Tambol Rawai, Amphur Muang, Phuket - 83100 Thailand
Website : http://phuketindex.com/artingarden

Elephants at Work

Jumbo enterprise
FROM Bangkok Post

Elephants have been big business in Thailand for centuries, but it is only recently that they also have become tourist attractions.
Elephants painting, playing musical instruments, kicking soccer balls, dancing in mini-skirts and trekking with humans strapped to their backs, are some of the various attractions available in northern Thailand.
According to government figures, there are 40 elephant camps, employing up to 650 pachyderms, catering to tourists in the northern provinces of Tak, Sukhotai, Phitsanulok, Nan, Lampang, Chiang Mai, Chiang Rai and Mae Hong Son.
"I would estimate that about 65 per cent of the tourists who come here visit an elephant attraction," said Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT) Chiang Mai office director Junnaporn Salanart. "Elephants are big business."
Elephants have been big business in Thailand for centuries, but it is only recently that they have become tourist attractions.
In ancient Siam, as Thailand was called before 1939, elephants were used as battle tanks in wars against her traditional enemies, in other words all of Thailand's modern neighbours - Cambodia, Laos, Malaysia and Myanmar.
A white elephant once adorned the Siamese flag, although it disappeared with the name Siam.
When Thailand plunged into the world economy last century by opening her forests and jungles up to the voracious timber industry, it was elephants that did much of the dirty work, dragging away the trees that had once provided protection for their wild counterparts.
By the time Thailand finally banned logging in 1989, the country's total elephant population had declined dramatically to about 5,000 from the 120,000 recorded in 1900.
Nowadays, there are an estimated 3,000 elephants in Thailand, 2,000 registered as "livestock," and the remainder wild.
Thailand's tame elephants, once mighty war machines and destroyers of the jungle, have been reduced to tourist trekking or roaming city streets begging for their food, and income for their mahouts.
"The elephant is the symbol of our country and yet Thailand is the only country that allows elephants to beg in the streets," said Sangduen Chailert, founder of the Elephant Nature Park.
Sangduen, now a bit of a legend in Thailand's elephant lore, started her Elephant Nature Park in the Mae Tang valley, 60 kilometres north of Chiang Mai, in 1995 as a refuge for injured or traumatised pachyderms.
Among her current herd of 31, are Phu Max, a 61-year-old bull who was hit by a 16-wheel truck a few years ago, Mae Do, a female (now going out with Phu Max) who lost part of her left foot to a landmine and was saved from limping in the streets of Chiang Mai begging, and Lilly, a former methamphetamine addict.
There are also frisky teenagers at the park, such as Jungle Boy and Hope, elephant orphans who have been nurtured back to health by Sangduen, better known by her nickname Lek.
Lek, who won the Ford Foundation/National Geographic Hero of the Planet Award in 2001, among other accolades, funds her elephant sanctuary by donations and "hands off" tourism. The park and nearby Haven, where some of the pachyderms spend the night, requires about 250,000 dollars a year to keep the jumbos fed, employ mahouts and staff and buy medicines.
Tourists, charged 2,500 baht ($79) for a day trip and 4,000 baht ($127) for an overnight stay, are allowed to visit Lek's park where they can participate in feeding the elephants and taking part in their twice-daily bathing rituals in the stream.
It is the only elephant camp in northern Thailand where the pachyderms are allowed to do pretty much what they like doing.
"This is more like an elephant spa," said Lek. "All the elephants do is eat, swim and sleep."
The elephants are attended by paid mahouts, without whom the elephants would pose a hefty danger to visiting tourists, and paying volunteers who do much of the clean up work.
"I came here originally for a one-day trip and stayed two nights instead," said Sam Frankowsha, a British national. "I went back to Chiang Mai and checked out of my hotel and spent two weeks here."
Frankowsha was on her third two-week-long visit to the park. Other volunteers have stayed two years.
Part of the attraction is Lek herself, who has become a bit of a legendary character after being named an Asian Hero by Time Magazine in 2005, and has been featured in several documentaries.
"You're my hero," oozes one Western tourist visiting the Elephant Nature Park.
Lek, however, is not without her critics in the elephant industry.
"I came here six months ago because I believed in the project," said one volunteer who recently quit the Elephant Nature Park. "When I realised it's basically a business I decided to leave." Lek claims to be in the process of changing her operation from a private company to a foundation.
"All the money I get for my company I give to the elephant park, and I even have to pay taxes on it. As a foundation I will not have to pay taxes," said Lek. dpa

Songkran Festival


The Thai New Year (สงกรานต์ Songkran) is celebrated every year on 13 April to 15 April. It is also celebrated in Laos (called pi mai lao or 'Lao New Year' in Lao), Cambodia, Myanmar (where it is called Thingyan), and by the Dai people in Yunnan, China. Sri Lanka also celebrates a similar festival called Sinhalese and Tamil New Year on the same dates.

The date of the festival was originally set by astrological calculation, but it is now fixed. Songkran falls in the hottest time of the year, at the end of the dry season.
Probably you don’t know, but until 1888 the Thai New Year was the beginning of the year in Thailand; thereafter 1st April was used until 1940.

Now, as elsewhere, the 1st January is the beginning of the year and Songkran has been a national holiday since then.

Songkran, a Sanskrit word, means the entry of the sun into any sign of the Zodiac, in this particular instance, in Aries or the Ram. Its full name is Maha Songkran or Major Songkran to distinguish it from the other ones.

The most obvious celebration during these days is the throwing of water. People roam the streets with containers of water or water guns, or post themselves at the side of roads with a garden hose and drench each other and passersby.

Traditionally Songkran was the time to visit and pay respects to elders, including family members, friends and neighbors. Besides the throwing of water, people celebrating Songkran may also go to a wat (Buddhist temple) to pray and give food to monks. They may also cleanse Buddha images from household shrines as well as Buddha images at monasteries by gently pouring water mixed with a Thai fragrance (น้ำอบไทย) over them. It is believed that doing this will bring good luck and prosperity for the New Year. The water is meant as a symbol of washing all of the bad away.

Songkran is a time for cleaning and renewal.

So… enjoy and สวัสดีปีใหม่ (sa-wat-di pi mai), "Happy New Year".
10-13 April 2008
Venue
Loma Park and The Port, Jungsilon Department Store Patong beach, Phuket
Activities
View the procession of Phra Phuttha Sihing along Patong Beach, paying homage to the elderly, demonstrations of Thai culture and Thai games, procession of motorcycles, and enjoy splashing water. Hi-Light

13 April 2008
09.00 hrs.
Giving alms to monks at Dophin Park, then splashing water “Water Festival on the Beach” at Patong beach and Mid-night Songkran at Soi Bang La.

Further Information
TAT Southern Region Office, Region 4 (Phuket)
tel. 076-212213, 076-217138.

Massage School

Phuket has some of the best trained massage therapists in the world.

You can try yourself, from the best and acclaimed Spa f the world, to the normal and busiest massage parlour on the roads.

In Thai culture, massage is a family tradition: most children are taught the fundamental concepts from an early age. It’s habit, at the end of the day, while the family gathers after a long day's work, to share a meal and give each other a relaxing massage.

The traditional Thai massage is mainly based on the teachings of Cheewaka Ko-Marrapat, an Indian healer who lived at the same time of the Buddha. It’s a form of pressure applied by touch to specific energy points and energy lines on the body, is a combination of Thai and Indian healing therapies. It is a very effective and comprehensive system to energize and strengthen the body. It promotes the flows of the energy in the energy lines and the flow of blood in the blood vessels and capillaries.

Thai massage has been one of the ancients healing arts of traditional Thai medicine. In Wat Pho, in Bangkok, there are significant paintings about the roots of this art, and a International renamed school of massage.

In Phuket also you can find a Traditional Thai Massage school, the PTM (Phuket Traditional Massage), operated by Arjarn Pinit Soysuwan and his partner, Dr. Pheangchit Lim In.
The PTM offers courses for tourists and visitors to Phuket who want to learn Thai Traditional Massage techniques.
The school is at 47 Nimit Soi 1, Chana Charoen Rd, Muang, Phuket (Near Buddy Café).
For more information call at 076-211456.

Cheated in Love?


FROM: Bangkok Post


Police in Khon Kaen raided two firms offering match-making services after allegations of swindling women looking for foreign partners.
The police team raided the Thai Publuk and Thai Zury companies in Muang district in the province of Khon Kaen which provide online match-making services for Thai women wanting to find foreign partners.
The raid followed complaints by more than 50 northeastern women, who claimed they had been deceived by the firms, which promised to find foreign husbands for them.
They claimed the firms failed to honor agreements.
The correspondence and online match-making service lasted two months and each woman was paid 5,000 baht to the firms.
If the two sides wanted to meet, the firms would arrange places for them to see each other face to face. The meeting places included Suvarnabhumi airport and other tourist venues.
If the two sides agreed to marry, they had to pay 50,000 baht to the service providers. The firm would also get 10 per cent of any dowry money.
Police had been unable to act against the firms earlier because women had not filed charges. Many felt they would be embarrassed if their stories were made public.

Mall Fever

The malls are a great place to be on a hot and humid day.
A big air-conditioned oasis with great bargains. Some enters and would probably never leave. For thais, and Phuket people, the malls are a temple of non-religious fever.
In Phuket, hundreds find their way to their favorite mall every week, sometimes everyday. Some are lured by low prices and discounts, others are attracted by quality and still others to absurdly extravagant price tags.
Different shelves for … different selves.
Everybody has his own mall, his favorite shop, and his best seller.
A plethora of malls have sprung up over the last decade or so, with Central Festival and Jungceylon, more recent additions to the scene.
You can lose yourself eating and buying food in Tesco Lotus (there is a new small one in Cherng Talay) or in Big C, choosing décor and artistic lamps in Index or Design Square, or looking and buying all kind of objects and stuff in Central or JC (the short name for Jungceylon, the newest and biggest mall in the heart of Patong). The choice is huge, it’s just a matter of time.
In a survey conducted by the Phuket Post, covering 200 odd locals and tourists in the island, an impressive 24% admitted that they visit a mall daily, 28% said they made weekly visits to malls, and 42% are to be found heading the mall way at least once a month. An overwhelming 66% said they thought Phuket's malls were “excellent”, with only a small group of 14% insisting they are not as good as those in bigger cities around the world and a tiny fraction of 2% putting them down as “terrible”.
There is no other way: don’t try, you risk to become an addict…

Latitudeslife.com

Lucky we are!

One of the most prestigious travel magazine online made an article on our house.
We are honored.

Latitudeslife.com dedica sei pagine a Villa Phuket in un servizio che svela il fascino nascosto dell'isola:


Lemongrass House: the best for soaps and Co.

From TimeAsia Magazine


If you want to smell like no one else, try mixing a selection from the more than 90 natural scents at Phuket's Lemongrass House—a small, bamboo-lined shop across from Surin beach in Phuket. There's everything from extract of anchan (a Thai flower better known for the violet food coloring it yields) to ylang-ylang (a fragrant oil distilled from the flower of a Cananga tree), but if you want to get really adventurous, American owner Bobby Duchowny will gladly oblige. He once created a bacon room spray (used by a hotel to lure guests to breakfast) and a body wrap made from Godiva chocolate, sake, Dead Sea mud and 24-karat gold flakes. Duchowny's skills aren't limited to arresting scents—he's made a natural insecticide to help organic farmers in Thailand, and Lemongrass House produces a nourishing range of spa products based on its signature blend of jojoba, sweet almond and vitamin E. But he loves a challenge, and encourages individual customers to experiment "with what smells and feels good to you." Champagne and dollar bills anyone?





And, if you are staying in our house, http://www.villaphuket.eu/, you can reach one of the shops in few minutes. Just at the end of the road in Cherngtalay.





More info in: http://www.lemongrasshouse.com/

Do It: JW Marriott at sunset


This is a very good advise.


For a sunset unique experience go north, at JW Marriott Hotel.

The beach, the pristine Mai Khao Beach, is calm and facing the sun...

but...

not only!


The night show is unique: music and dancers in the water with an orange sky on the back.

Trust me and try it!


Then you can get a sundowner at Out Of The Blue Bar and choose one of the esquisite restaurants.


For more information:



And for the Spa, one of the top of Asia, we will make another post...

Good Food: Catch Beach Club


On bustling Surin Beach the latests "open-air", private and trendy restaurant from the boutique hotel Twinpalms.


Not only because of the italian chef but for the location and the "chiringuito" mood, this is one of our favourite spots in the island.


Friday and tuesday barbecue with beach bonfire and private terrazzo on the sand: these are two of the masterpieces of the restaurant.


Beautiful spot for the sunset and for a romantic dinner.

Night live music with international duos and bands.


Better to reserve at 076-316500.

Monks for one day

Everybody can stay in a temple and study meditation.

Westerner either.

The only problem could be the language (if any of the monks speak english) never the ospitality.

Emprove your spirit and try: one day, week or month.


It doesn't matter!

Tsunami Panic!!!!!




If you think that something like that could happen again.

I swear NO



Also my friend Thita thinks like me




Anyhow this link is for you


http://www.tsunami-alarm-system.com/en/index.html

Tsunami Alarm System
Forever take the fear out of visiting the coast anywhere in the world, for you and your family, by turning your mobile phone into a reliable Tsunami Alarm System.

TV-News and Videos
With the Tsunami Alarm System you are able to live at the sea or visit your favorite coastal destinations, without being concerned about your safety. Subscribe to the Tsunami-AS and you will receive these life-saving alarms reliably and timeously on your mobile telephone wherever in the world you have GSM coverage. You will also protect the lives and health of your family and children.


Here you can understand how it works:
http://www.tsunami-alarm-system.com/en/tsunami-alarm-system/tsunami-alarm-system.html

here you can subscribe at 29,95 Euros per year or 9,95 per month

http://www.tsunami-alarm-system.com/en/shop/php/subscribe.html