Monday, November 2, 2020

#Shopping in Bangkok

Shopping Paradise

    Thailand is a paradise for shoppers. Regular visitors to Asia Know that, in many ways, Bangkok beats Hong Kong and Singapore for deals in terms of handicrafts, textiles, gems, jewelry, art and antiques. Nowhere else will you find the same selection, quality and price. Fixed prices are the norm in department stores, but a most other places bargaining is a common practice and prices may be reduced by as  much as thirty percent.

Shopping Streets

    Bangkok has many shopping streets, which you can buy just about anything from clothes, souvenirs, all kinds of antiques and electrical goods. Generally, you can obtain a final figure ten-to-thirty percent lower than the original asking price. Much depends upon your skills and the shopkeeper's mood. With patience, and a broad smile, you will not only get a better price. You'll also come to recognize shopping in Bangkok as an art-form! Here is a selection of the many shopping streets visitors can enjoy:


                                   Photo Credit: travel.kapook.com

Phat Phong Night Market (Phat Phong Road)

    Apart from the colorful nightlife, where an amazing variety of bars, clubs, discotheques and other exotic venues exist, there is a pulsating night market to attract all-night revelers. This is where you can buy clothing and souvenirs of all kinds. Phat Phong lively night market spills over on Silom Road in one of the city's main commercial districts.



                                      Photo Credit: tourbk.blogspot.com

Soi "Lalai Sap"

    This is one of Bangkok's most popular lunch-time shopping area, located next to the Bangkok Bank headquarters on Thanon Silom. Starting just before noon, and closing not long after lunch breaks on weekdays only, the market is packed with office workers who shop for clothing, leather goods, food, gifts and knick-knacks. It is almost impossible to walk the through the tiny alley without spending some money, hence the name "Soi lalai Sap."

Siam Square (Thanon  Rama I)
    
    This area is brimming with restaurants, including the  trendy Hard Rock Cafe, Center point; Discovery Center, Siam Center, cinemas, book shops and specialty stores. There is also a street market selling clothes and accessories. This area is most frequently visited by teenagers.

                     
 Photo Credit:th.wikipedia.org (Baiyok II Tower)

Pratu Nam

    Located on the intersaction of Phetchaburi and Ratchadamri Road, this vast bazaar is jam-packed with stalls and countless peddlers which attract large crowds. This is where you can buy fabrics and ready-to-ware fashions. Also of interest here are open-air restaurants, a shopping complex and the soaring Baiyoke II Tower, the tellest apartment building in Southeast Asia.


                               Photo Credit: smeleader.com (Phatu Nam Market)


Bang Lamphu
 
        A shopping area once frequently visited only by the local people and now a popular place for tourists. This area offer various inexpensive items, especially read-made clothes, handbags, men's and ladies shoes, cosmetics and curious. Bargaining is recommended.


Lang Krasuang and Woeng Nakhon Kasem

    For moderately priced, second-hand goods, no other place is better suited than these two markets in Bangkok. The first is Lang Krasuang which is on Thanon Atsadang. The other is Woeng Nakhon Kasem, located around some of the smaller alleys of  New Road, near Chinatown. Visitors will  get a better bargain by talking along a Thai friend to haggle over prices! Both markets have goods from pawn shops; such as musical instruments, electrical goods, uniforms and camping equipment.

                              
                                    Photo Credit: posttoday.com (Khlog Thom Market)


Khlong Thom

    Located near Chinatown, in the area around Maha Chak  Road and Soi Chong Charoen Phanit, this market specializes in hardware such as wire-cutters, screwdrivers, and other kinds of tools. This area also features a market selling all kinds of antiques and electrical goods. 

                  
                              Icon Siam
                             Photo Credit: chingyunsong /Shutterstock.com and kapook.com

#Department Stores
    
    Bangkok has a number of good quality department store chains such as Central Department Store, Central Worlds, Robinson, The Mall, Icon Siam, The Emporium, Thai Daimaru, and Isetan. These are usually located in major shopping plazas or mega-malls dotted around the city. Bangkok's top shoppers tend to frequent the following:

    Peninsula Plaza (Ratchadamri Road)
        Imported brand name labels, jewelry, top local fashion designers, gourmet shops.  

                            Central World in Bangkok 
                                  Photo Credit:centralpattana.co.th

   Central World (Ratchaprasong Intersection)
        Mega mall where the young and trendy hang out. Zen Isetan Department stores, restaurant, cinemas, ice skating rink, Thailand Duty Free Shop.

    Narayana Phand  (Ratchadamri Road) opposite Central World
        This is a handicraft centre, under government supervision. Visitors may inspect and buy selections of handicrafts from all parts of the country. Items available include Thai silk, ceramics,  wood carvings, lacquerware, bronze objects and Khom masks. The store is open daily from 10:00 until 20:00 hours. 

    Gaysorn Plaza (Thanon Ploenchit)
        Import brand neme clothing, trendy restaurants, imported household furnishings.

                        Ma Bun Khrong
                                Photo Credit: mbk-center.co.th                                                                                                                                       
Ma Bun Khrong (MBK) Shopping Centre
        For those shoppers who enjoy a market-style atmosphere, in air-conditioned comfort. Ma Bun Khrong is the place to go. Located on the corner of Phayathai Road, it is packed with stalls selling everything from clothing and leather goods to electronical equipment, furniture, cosmetics and general gift items.

The Galleria Plaza
    Shopping mall specializing in gems and jewelry. Located on Silom Road.


                               Siam Centre
                               Photo Credit: th.wikipedia.org                    

Siam Centre
    Located on Rama I Road. Featuring mainly trendy fashions for the young and young-at-heart.

River City Shopping Centre
    This shopping centre is known mostly for its quality antique stores and regular auctions. Most price are negotiable. Another Thailand Duty Free shop is located here. The shopping centre is next to the Royal Orchid Sheraton Hotel.

Seacon Square
    Located on Srinagarindra Road, this is a mega mall that draws crowds of suburban Bangkokkians each weekend. It has everything for the whole family, including shops, cinemas, amusement park, wholesale supermarket, and restaurants.

Duty Free Shop
    Thailand Duty Free Shop is the only government-operated, downtown duty free shop in Thailand. Located on the 7th floor of the Central World, Ratchadamri Road, it is open everyday from 11:00 until 20:30 hours. Featuring a wide range of quality products, Thailand Duty Free Shop enables tourists, and those going overseas, to choose their purchases at leisure, pay for them and them collect them later at the airport prior to departure.

Floating Market
    Despite the emergence of the ubiquitour farm pick-ups, paddy farmers and orchard gardeners still continue to meet and barter their products in age-old trading spots on the canals (Khlongs). Early every morning, Sampans laden with all kinds of tropical fruits and vegetables and fresh products, wind their way to the floatingmarkets around Bangkok.


                 Photo Credit:
 เฟซบุ๊ก ตลาดสุขใจ นครปฐม และ travel kapook.com

    There is one particular floating market in Bangkok that visitors can enjoy: Taling Chan Floating Market in front of Taling Chan District Office, open from 09:00 to 17:00 hours. Boat trip services are available for sight-seeing along the canal where gardens and a village lifestyle are still to be seen. The market is also accesible by bus No.79 and 83 Which pass nearby. Contact Taling Chan District Office on telephone 0-2424-1742 for more information.
                                           





Saturday, October 31, 2020

#Traditional Thai Massage

 Traditional Thai Massage

        Visitors to Thailand should include traditional Thai massage, also call "ancient  massage" (Nuat Phaen Boran in Thai), on their things-to-do list. However, those having sensitive muscles may prefer to abstain. The massage helps release blocked channels of energy and alleviates jet lag experienced by newly-arrived travelers. Be aware that not every place advertising massage services offers a traditional Thai massage.

                                   Photo Credit: justrelaxspa.weloveshopping.com

Massage in Bangkok come in many variations, ranging from traditional massage to the "modern" or "physical" massages with lots of soap-suds and seductive body contact. They also range from joint-breaking pulls and pushes to gentle muscle kneading. According to Thai massage aficionados, blind  massages give the best traditional massage.

    Wat Pho, Bangkok's oldest temple, is most renowned for its traditional massage. A massage here costs 90 baht per half an hour or 150 baht per hour. Visitors can also get similar services at the highly-praissed  Oriental Hotel but at a much higher price tag. Many hotels in Bangkok also offer legitimate massage services. If time permits, visitors may also want to learn about traditional Thai massage at the Traditional Medical Practitioners Association Centre (at Wat Pho) which offers a thirty-hour Thai massage course.

Friday, October 30, 2020

#Muay Thai & Other Sports


Muay Thai &  Other Sports

   Bangkokians are avid sports followers, enjoying the excitement of many sports and games. Through sports in the West Like snooker, soccer, golf, American football, volleyball, tennis and badminton are very popular, traditional sports, pastimes and games still play an important role in their lives. These include Thai boxing, takraw, kite flying and fighting, and cock, fish, and insect fighting. Since most Thais are inveterate gamblers, during many sporting events, there is usually as much activity on the sidelines as on the field. Wagers could be on a boxer, a cricket, or a kite.

                                   Credit Photo: thairath.co.th

Thai Boxing (Muay Thai or Simese Kick Boxing)

   It is not uncommon for foreign visitors to Bangkok to come across a group of Thais crowding around television sets at night watching the latest boxing match. Thai boxing, or Muay Thai, attracts the most attention of the Thai people. Your visit to Bangkok will not be completed if you do not see at least one Thai boxing match. Although boxing matches are regularly televised, attending the live event is a thing not to be missed. Thai boxing is almost universally regarded as today's most exciting ring sport. It is considered by many to be the most violent martial art compared with Japanese Karat, Korean Taekwando, and   Chinese kang Fu. A boxing stadium is normally a noisy crowded arena, full of spectators cheering and screaming supports for their favorites. Each fight start with both corners performing a ritual, honoring and paying homage to their teachers (Ruam Muay Thai).


                                  Credit Photo: siamsport.co.th

A match consists of five rounds, each of which lasts there minutes with a two-minute break between rounds. The bout is normally accompanied by the music of a three-instrument orchestra (drums, cymbals and flute). The music rises and falls with the action taking place in the roped ring. Apart from using their gloves, boxers are allowed to use their feet, legs, knees, elbows, shoulders, or any other parts of the body, except the head, to overcome their opponent. A winner is awarded for a knock-out or a points decision given by a panel of judges. There are two boxing stadiums in the city: Ratchadamnoen Nok Road (near the Tourism Authority of Thailand's Office), and Lumphini Stadium on Ramintra Road (near Central Ramintra, which moved from Rama IV Road). Events take place at Ratchadamnoen Stadium on Mondays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, and Sundays, and at Lumphini Staduim on Tuesdays, Fridays and Saturdays. However, interested visitors are advised to check in advance for information on venues, time and ticket prices. (Credit: Tourism Authority of Thaialnd)