Saturday, June 12, 2010

Week 5

Before we launch into this past week's events, I need to quickly report on our activity last Saturday which was fantastic. We hiked to the biggest waterfall in Chiang Rai, Khun Kon, and did some swimming and trekking down the river while it rained. We were literally walking through rainforest jungle with all the jungle sounds around us, ducking through bamboo groves, and swinging on lowhanging branches.

Some things that went on this past week...

Monday night bocce ball. Several of he boys here served missions in Australia and they started talking in Australian accents which turned into English, Scottish, and others as they kept playing the game. It was too dark to film so here is just a sound clip if you'd like to have a listen...

"the beautiful lass" is referring to Rosemary

One night this week, Pim bought all of us floating lanterns. They're like mini hot air balloons, except you don't float up into the sky with them and they have fireworks. The Thai people light them and send them away in floating lantern festivals in November or December. Really cool...slightly dangerous.





Thursday, on our way to a soccer tournament with the soccer school kids, we took the long way in the back of the truck and it was one of the most beautiful drives we've taken. Stuff like this is when Holly thinks, "Wow, I'm in Thailand." (direct quote)


Thirteen farangs (white people) versus 4th through 6th grade Thai boys made for an intense game, made all the more fun with the huge turnout of parents, teachers, music, announcers, and a halftime show by the girls in Jordan's dance class. We had full on uniforms for both teams and the field was legit, some of the volunteers went and painted it the day before.

Pi Pi let us help her make her sweet green curry. She doesn't have a recipe, apparently that's only what Americans do, she just goes by taste and look. I (Holly) took notes though so we can make it for everyone when we get home.

We watched the Mexico v. South Africa game at a bar/restaurant that had a separate room with a pool table and dancing. Rose got serenaded to and a man at least twice my age who thought I was Scandinavian bought me a drink. (Don’t worry mom, it was only Coke). I had Dave go talk to him. Turns out he works for an NGO that works with some hill tribes here in Chiang Rai and our organization might end up partnering with him. Awesome.

This week new volunteers have been coming for the second part of the trip, so yesterday we picked up one more and drove straight up to Mae Sai, up to this mountain with a temple at the base.

It's famous because there are monkeys swarming the place. The people make a lot of money off the tourists who go and buy bananas to feed the monkeys, but the monkeys aren't very nice. They nearly attacked two of the volunteers and kept making really menacing noises and rolling their eyes back in a way I've only seen Andrew do on fast Sunday when he really wants his steak dinner.


At the same temple, we hiked up stairs Holly felt we should've crawled up rather than walked because they were so steep and uneven. But at the top there was a big cave with a Buddha shrine inside and a cavern full of screeching bats. Some of the guys banged on the walls to make them go crazy. Our hair got slightly dirty...




Two weeks ago, we did some marketing and art therapy with the kids at AIDS Access and last night at the Walking Street Bazaar, we had two booths selling their paintings, bracelets, journals, and keychains to raise money for their organization. We also had a face painting and a fishing booth.

It was so different to actually be part of the market rather than just tourists walking through. However, since it is the rainy season, the inevitable happened. Rainstorms here come on full board in about 2 seconds and we barely got all the stuff under cover in time. As the sheets of rain came pouring down, we stood under the tarp while the more prepared natives stood under umbrellas and covered buildings, but it wasn't long before we decided "Why don't we take advantage of the situation and captive audience and double dutch for donations?" so that's exactly what we did. We got our ropes, ran out into the street and cheered each other on as the Thais looked at us like we were crazy for standing out in pounding rain. It worked though, tons of them gave us donations and after a while we moved down the street to entertain more people. We're pretty sure we raised more money doing that than if we'd just been sitting at our stall the whole time so even though the rain tried to ruin our project, it didn't work. We did sell more products when the rain stopped, though.

Hanging out at the markets are pretty fun here. There was one whole strip dedicated to food and we walked down it looking for some dinner and spotted whole chickens hanging from spiggets. Naturally, as four girls, we bought one, bought some sticky rice to go with it, sat down in the rain and dug in with our bare hands. One of the best meals yet. Mostly cause we were so cold and hungry (cold is a relative term).

Friday, June 4, 2010

Best week thus far...

Wan can (Monday) -

Me, Rose, Ryleigh, Brandalyn, and Kenny painted our landlords bamboo fence while listening to some tunes. We may or may not have gotten a little high off the turpentine in the paint...

Wan angkhaan (Tuesday) -

After we taught english, we went outside to find the principle planting flowers so we went over and helped. When school ended, all the kids came over, picked up hoes and flowers and started working. We were in awe of those kids. No American child would have done that without being asked or complaining and I doubt you would ever see an American principle out on the school grounds planting flowers during the school day. Thai people are freakin awesome.




Wan phut (Wednesday) -

In the morning, went to the hospital and put together medical kits with the mothers group. They put toghether 7,200 medical kits every week. That night, we went into town to go to Swenson's Ice Cream for BOGO night and we ended up finding a really awesome night market, watched a drag queen show, met some attractive Italianos, and bought some souvenirs.



Wan pharuehat (Thursday) -

We started our day planting rice fields at the Saman Mit Community at 8:30 a.m. I was telling Rose that it was kind of therapeutic in a way; walking barefoot through the warm, soft dirt, surrounded by green, rolling hills while tossing rice seed and in good company. We had no idea rice planting would be so much fun!


After doing that for a couple hours, the community members fed us fruit, cold water, and some other, shall we say, interesting things...

Those are red ants that are still alive and very, very fresh fish as the video will show. We watched them pop the fish heads off, squeeze the guts out, and stick them in the bowl.





Our lunch also included sweet fish skin, squid, and melt in your mouth fish meat all of which was pretty tasty. There were other weird and spicy things were a little too exotic for Rose and I, but Rose was lucky enough to get offered some fish guts and she's too nice to say no so she ate it. Proud of you Rose!

Good eatins' everyone!
Next, we drove to Sister Nisarat's house and revamped her chicken coops. We used machetes, caught chicks, stirred cement, and tied the roof on with strings of bamboo.

The remodeling in process.


Sister Nisarat's house - She's the Relief Society president in the branch here.

It was dark by the time we started heading home. We did a lot of hard work, but it was super rewarding and probably our favorite day yet.

Wan suk (Friday) -

Within a few hours, eight HELP volunteers, including Rose and I, put together 2,200 medical kits. In the afternoon, we had a chance to relax, read, sketch, and nap.

This is the life.

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

What we're here for...

So, the past few days we've had some really cool experiences doing what we came to Thailand to do. On Saturday, we had a day camp for teenagers who either suffer from AIDS or know someone who has it. Our partner organization, AIDS Access, gives these kids all sorts of cool opportunities to learn, find friendships, and be accepted into the world. At the day camp, we did yoga with them, taught them marketing skills, and Holly and I taught them some drawing and painting, lessons it turned out they didn't really need.

We worked in a building on the grounds of a Buddhist temple and told the kids to go outside looking for something to draw that was inspiring to them. They came back with incredible sketches of the temple, Buddhas, trees, flowers, and tons of other stuff. We couldn't believe how good they were and then they started painting and they were just as good. The thing about these kids is that they all live pretty hard lives. I have no idea what people with AIDS go through on a daily basis...it can't be easy. But they were all so happy. They smiled and laughed and played games together like nothing was wrong.

The arch of the wat. Probably cost close to $30,000 to build.

Today, we taught English again. Kindergarten, 1st grade, and 6th grade. Kindergarten started out nicely, ended looking like a warzone. Kids crying, biting, putting bugs down Holly's shirt, screaming, laughing hysterically...who knows what kind of moms we'll make. The 1st graders love us though, the 6th graders think they're the shiz. We're getting to them though. After we taught, the principal was planting some flowers and needed some help so we got down in the dirt in our skirts and dug holes with our bare hands in the sweltering heat for a couple hours. No exaggeration. Ha.

A really cool thing happened after the first hour though. The kids finished with school and when they came out and saw the farangs (white people) doing all this planting, they started helping, hoeing, shoveling, carrying flowers around. Thai people are extremely hard workers. And these are Thai children, not even asked to help, they just did it voluntarily. Pretty sure some of it was to impress us, but a lot of it is just in their culture, too. They are really just very polite, kind, and genuinely friendly, happy people. Makes it pretty easy to live here :)

Sunday, May 30, 2010

Tipping Bucket Fundraiser: the Saman Mit Community


So I'm in charge of a project here where we're building an observation tower in a farming community just outside of Chiang Rai, where we're living.

Read about their need for an observation tower and visit tippingbucket.org to make a donation of at least $1 to help get it built! We have four days to raise $950 and we need everyone's help!

Saman Mit is a farming community consisting of 148 families located 30 minutes outside of Chiang Rai, Thailand. They migrated from the Isaan province 33 years ago when their farmlands were flooded as a result of a government hydro-electric project that dammed the Isaan rivers. Many were left without homes or land to sustain their livelihood. The land they found in Chiang Rai was fertile and well suited for their way of life, but it was too small to support the community.

Acknowledging their plight, the government has recently granted them six square hectares of land to cultivate and develop through their traditional cooperative system of farming. They plan to increase their fish stocks in the ponds, grow trees to sell, cultivate and sell rice, potatoes, and other vegetables as they pursue a goal of becoming a wholly self-sufficient community.

However, to achieve their goal, the community needs to prove to the government that they are using the land wisely, developing it productively, and protecting it from any problems that may arise, such as wildfires or theft.

Through long debate and discussion, the village council has decided that the most effective way to watch over the land’s crop development, while detecting possible problems of theft from outside private farmers, is to build an observation tower. The observation post will be located high atop a hill that provides an ideal purview of all the lands within the 6 hectares of the co-op. The tower will be thirty feet high, built by community members and HELP International development volunteers. The community has come to HELP International looking for a partner to help with construction, fundraising, and business consulting workshops that aim to boost productivity, sales, and land efficiency.

Remember to tell friends and family about this fundraiser, too! Thanks!

Go to tippingbucket.org for more information about the non-profit organization partnering with us on this.


Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Chiang Mai, anyone?

Flight of the Gibbon Zip line Canopy Tour

Pim was able to get us foreigners a sweet deal to do this. She pulled the "they are just students here to help our people and do humanitarian work" and it worked like a charm. We should've paid $70, but we paid what a native Thai would pay which is about half that.
- Zip line through a 1500 year old rainforest with gigantic trees. Just picture Avatar.
- 2 km of zip line
- 15 different platforms
- An awesome, all-you-can-eat lunch was included after a hike to a beautiful waterfall


We were in this little village way up in the mountains with really cool houses, almost like tree houses. Really peaceful place to live except for when tons of foreigners come to swing like monkeys through the trees.




Chubby rice cheeks...what can we say, we eat rice here. Everyday. Multiple times a day.









Sorry about the scream...definitely not necessary.

Wat Phrathat Doi Suthep Rajvoravihara





350 stairs doesn't seem like a lot, but it kind of is.

Umbrella Factory


Night Safari

It was overrated. A day safari would have been much more worth the time and money or just a real one in Africa. The best part was the lone chimp on an island that danced like a ballerina when we made monkey noises and pounded on the railing. That may have been worth our ฿250...

Overall, it was a fun weekend!