When you arrive in Thailand, you'll probably fly into Bangkok and be thrown into a world of organised chaos. This city is the needful way to begin any Thailand trip. Road vendors selling fried scorpions and huhu grubs, tuk-tuk drives zigzagging their way in and out of the traffic and the overwhelming aroma at every Road corner of spices and incense. Bangkok has a marvellous selection of temples, Wats and Buddha's and haggling at the markets for a fake Gucci watch or the price of a tailor made suit is an sense I would recommend to everybody travelling in Thailand. Any way In the last 15 years or so Thailand has been evolving from faraway destination for hardened travellers to what is becoming a package holiday. With air travel so facilely available Thailand is now also a house travel destination. Thailand is also a great place to travel for the elderly and the inexperienced gap year traveller alike, and of policy at a budget price. However, travelling in Thailand has something other than just the tourist route to follow and this record will give you some of those incommunicable gems that the throng of Thailand travellers will not have found... Yet.
The majority of international flights to Thailand arrive in Bangkok and although this is not an area to miss, once you have seen the golden temples, Wat's and floating markets why not head a miniature out of the city to the north east to a Road called Soi 1. Although it was previously a dirty miniature Road with a smell rivalling that of open sewers things have now changed and in 2007 it was cleaned up and serves the most overwhelming local food to the locals and few Thailand travellers lucky adequate to stumble across it. Intestines and entrails may be on the menu on many of the stalls but when travelling in Thailand why not try everything! And of policy there is an array of locally cooked curries, pad thai and sticky rice for those Thailand travellers with slightly weaker stomachs. The cost to eat is minimal as it is off the tourist trail and you will get a true sense of what Bangkok used to be like before the Weston invasion.
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From Bangkok you have many options at your disposal for your Thailand trip and with a travel agent on every corner contribution you jungle treks and trips to the River Kwai you can fast get sucked in to their sales patter. My guidance is to avoid the mass route and if you are seeing for something distinct on your Thailand trip jump on a bus to Sida, 3 hours north east of Bangkok passing straight through the striking jungles of Koh Yai on the way. In the miniature village of Sida get off the bus and arrange a night in one of the few guest houses. From here the guest house owners will help you organise a home stay with a house in the local area - an unforgettable part of any Thailand trip. You can visit schools, live in with a local family, go frog hunting and depending on the time of year see how they harvest their crops, celebrate festivals and get a true idea of how a typical Thai house lives in the country side. A true Thaiand travel experience.
Travelling to the north of Thailand is a must as the jungle are dense and teaming with wildlife, but rather than stop at Chiang Mai where the majority of travellers in Thailand get off, keep on going. A night in Chiang Mai will give you time to visit local markets and survey the old town but don't stay too long as there is so much more to offer in this region. Heading North West by bus you will travel straight through some of the most gorgeous serene country side and the winding road up straight through the mountains will make you feel a miniature queasy but the views and miniature towns you pass straight through will make this journey well worthwhile. Mae Hong Son a miniature supplementary west is the home to the Paduang hill tribe noted for the numerous golden rings around their neck, "The long necks". Exploring this area by motor bike is the best way to see all the miniature incommunicable gems, meet the locals and with the Mekong River flowing along the border there is the occasion to go white water rafting with a local guide. These experiences undoubtedly will help you get hte most out of your Thailand trip.
The first thing many people think about when travelling to Thailand are the idyllic white sands of a photograph exquisite tropical island and with so many to pick from the demand is which is the best. Well to be honest with such a large estimate of islands there is something for everybody travelling in Thailand. Any way if the view of sharing a beach with a hundred other backpackers drinking Chang Beer and riding jet skis isn't your cup of tea then why not try one of the islands off the south west coast. There appears to be a trend of Thailand traveller who will go to a determined distance and survey no supplementary but taking that extra miniature exertion will open up and array of empty beaches, less industrialized miniature islands and cordial genuine locals. Taking the sleeper train from Bangkok south, approximately every backpacker gets off at Surat Thani which gives you great way to the east coast islands but instead of following the crowds, stay on that train for an additional one merge of hours to the station of Trang. From here you are reaching an area which has been largely kept out of the Thailand tourist route. The train station is 20 miles or so to the west coast and so getting a taxi to the port of Pak Meng and jumping on a boat out to one of these remote islands is easy to do. Koh Ngai which less than a 1 kilometre wide and with only 3 or four resorts is a great spot to start and an overwhelming place to relax during your Thailand trip. You can spend your day's snorkelling in the warm waters, reading your book under a palm tree or naturally taking a walk along the white sandy beaches to one of the restaurants that serve an array of fish caught that morning. You truly will feel like you have found paradise.
Thailand tour Ideas