Monday, August 17, 2009

Putting Phanat Nikhom on the virutal "map"

Want to know all that Phanat Nikhom has to offer? When I heard I was going to teach in a small town 50 km south east of Bkk, the image conjured up in my mind is not at all what I found when I got here. I did many google searches of this place only to come up practically empty handed. So I’m making it my personal project to give Phanat Nikhom an “on-line” presence. I wander the streets for hours sometimes and am always fascinated how there is nothing to do, yet so many things to do all at the same time. The pace of life in Thailand is slow and content, unlike the pace of my roots in the US. People just hang out – seemingly doing nothing for hours at a time – what on earth are they doing? Don’t you HAVE to be doing something to be happy? Ha ha - gosh I love that about this place – turns out you CAN be happy doing nothing. Just being.
I finally went to the see the proclaimed “Worlds largest Hand Woven Basket” today. It was pretty big. They are known for their hand-woven baskets around here – beautiful. Unfortunately for me, the portability is not so convenient, so I doubt many will make it home with me in the future.
On Monday nights and Thursday nights there are markets where you can find many treasures and ALL of phanat nikhom comes out of their hiding places. The food is amazing and cheap, I even found a popcorn vendor! Yum. I get to practice my negotiating skills – I love to bargain – wish I could do it at TJmax at home! Every day there is also an Old and New market selling all sort of food. No-one cooks in Thailand, so a venture to the market for breakfast or dinner is in line daily.
My two favorite coffee shops are Coffee Tree and Ying Ying. I have truly madly deeply fallen in love with Green Tea and Milk Frappe’s – delish. I love spending time at these places writing, thinking and playing with my computer.
I personally love it here. I don’t think I could permanently settle here, yet, my six month stay is a blessing.
The Chinese School - there is a large Chinese population here. 
A Thai BBQ birthday party for our co-teacher Jann - one of the best evenings in PN!
I think about this little girl everyday.  I watched her and her father drive around town and go through garbage can after garbage can.  She had a smile on her face despite her tatty clothing and dirt stained skin.  I just wonder what that must be like for anyone to start thier life out in these circumstances.  Makes me so grateful for all that I have.

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Ayutthaya - Thailand's Rich Past




The pictures really speak for themselves. Ayutthaya is filled with historic ruins from Thailand’s days gone by. It is a city surrounded by a river – called an island yet I have a hard time thinking of it that way. After a day of touring around via tuk-tuk and then river boat – I was armed with about 300 pictures of glimpses into Thailand’s past. Truly beautiful. I can’t seem to wrap my mind around the passage of time – in my nearly 30 years, I have the ability to conceptualize back about 100 years, even 200. Yet, when I stood in front of the Roman Coliseum, or in the Egyptian Tombs, and now Buddhist Ruins – it really just blows my mind. 500, 1000, 5000 years – wow. What a privilege I’ve had a glimpse into that part of our human history.

Sunday, July 19, 2009

I have a Special Visitor!

My boyfriend Jeff ventured to the other side of the world to see me… literally the complete opposite side of the planet! A weekend in Bkk, a few days in Phanat Nikhom, then some major play time scheduled on the Islands of Koh Samui and Koh Tao!

I really can’t tell you much about Koh Samui except that I was beyond spoiled by accommodations and stuffed with some of the best food I’ve ever eaten. So this is what Thailand is like on a larger budget….. towels in your room, air-con, a mini-bar, private bath ha ha! Our resort room at Nora had an outdoor shower, private beach and swim up bar. Baan Bo Phut was an adorable boutique hotel with 8 rooms looking straight out onto the beach. Waking up to watch the sunrise, it seemed like our own little private beach at 5am! Except for the dog that came up and decided to pee on the chair we were sitting on – missed jeff by inches! Ha ah


Koh Tao is known for its diving – they certify more divers per year than anywhere else in the world. We stayed at Baan’s Dive Resort – a “Diving Factory” if you will. The grounds were nice, our room with a view fantastic and the diving set up great and convenient. It was crowded and the food was just okay, but if you venture a ways down the beach there are some amazing places to relax and eat delicious dinners. We got to dive 4 dive sites with Chumpon Pinnacle being my personal favorite. Though this dive was far from easy and peaceful, the coral and fish are amazing, bright, beautiful and plentiful. The other three were some of the easiest, most laid back, pleasant dives I’ve done. This was the first time since my Red Sea dives that anything compared to that beauty. Yes! This is what I was looking for ;)

I was spoiled for 9 days – both with the company and happenings – thank you babe :)

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Meet my kids! Wai Kru - Teacher Day!

I went from having no kids in my life to having 31 for many hours a day! Most are 7 or 8 years old, so they’re young enough to still have that innocent sparkle, but old enough to know better and still cause trouble! A fun handful! Thursday was Wai Kru (teacher’s) day here in Thailand – there was a huge ceremony where every child in the school presented flowers to all of the teachers. It was beautiful, though lengthy ;) Imagine a couple thousand kids from the ages of 4-13 parading across a stage presenting flowers in a surprisingly organized style – not being a Thai forte. It was a fun day for me; being a part of an official Thai ceremony and getting recognized by the kids – not to mention getting some great pictures and taking home some gorgeous flowers home!

Enjoy the slideshow!

Sunday, June 14, 2009

Sala Keo Kou – Nong Kai Sculpture Park

Truely one of the more amazing parks I've been to. Many times i find statues boring after the 3rd or 4th one… like in Paris’s Luv – get me outta there! However, this guy (Luang Pu Bunleua Sulilat) has quite the imagination and brings it to life in form – concrete form. On my visa trip to Laos, i spent the weekend in Nong Kai – a northeastern Thai/Laos border town – home of the Thai/Laos Friendship bridge – a common area to cross from one country to the other. Anyhow the park came highly recommended by the people at Mut Mee (one of the best hostels I've stayed at! great place, great food, great people!) – so I rented a bike and headed out to see what it was all about. Agreed, the best part about the place was this sculpture park – sculptures hundreds of feet in the sky, many towering over others, new ones in every direction, a mixture of many different countries and religious influences. Bunleua Sulilat and his band of followers, a community of over 100 men and women who lived on the grounds and gave their labor for free and created this masterpiece. More here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sala_Keoku
My conclusion – he is the salvador dali of thailand – and oh how i enjoy both of their work! Intriguing, fantastical, obnoxious, creative, and surreal.


Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Welcome to Phanat Nikhom…. My home for the next 5 months

Think small town USA, but in Thailand. 12,000 people – 99.9% of which are Thai – there are about 6 westerners in the whole town – including me. Its located about 50k southeast of Bangkok, making it convenient to travel to other parts on the weekends – just a semi-quick 2 hour bus ride away. The closest major town is Chonburi – about 20k away and a 40 min bus ride – everything around here is buses – NO car taxi’s or tuk tuk’s in the towns. Just motorcycle taxi’s which don’t help in the pouring rain – which is often the case seeing that we are in the “rainy” season. So, I mostly stay around here during the week or walk into our little main area of town – the big deal apparently is the KFC in the Tesco Lotus. It’s the only “chain” type fast food restaurant in town – fine by me! I’m excited that I just bought a bike yesterday – my new way to get around! We have a Monday night market which has a random smattering of goods and some great eats. There is also Ban Seng beach located just beyond Chonburi – fun place to go on the weekends – good getaway only about 1 hour away. And that about sums up the life around here – not a whole lot, but leaves plenty of free time to pursue new hobbies and self time! I’m getting back into Yoga and running, plan to buy a guitar and finally learn, study Thai so I can communicate with the locals (who speak NO English for the most part), lots of reading and playing with the puppy and wandering aimlessly.
So, the whole reason I ended up here is due to my new teaching job. I am 3 weeks into my 5 month contract to teach a semester at Anubanphanatsuksalai School – yes, that is the name! It has taken me this long to remember it all ;) I have a boisterous classroom of 30 Second graders – they are a fun handful of 7 & 8 year olds. Who would have thought I’d be spending my days surrounded by young children! What a change from my life back home – but I’m enjoying it. It has been an interesting adjustment period, but I’m getting the hang of it. I’m teaching in the English program, so I teach various subjects all in spoken English: English, math, science, social studies, art and computers. It is a challenge to teach another subject in English, their second language – it’s like teaching English while teaching math or science – constantly introducing new vocab. Many of the kids are pretty smart and are picking it up well – my greatest difficulty is keeping them in line and their attention! I didn’t know people so small could make so much noise! Between my new adorable, whiney, peeing puppy and rambunctious classroom of kids I could swear that my great lesson to be learned here is patience! Wow!
If you’d like my address: (everything sent to the school)
Natalie Burgard
Anubanphanatsuksalai School
10 M 6 T Kudnong
Phanat Nikhom, Chonburi 20140
Thailand

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Tuesday, June 2, 2009

STP Special Thai Project – TEFL International

So, this post is strictly a summary of MY opinion thus far of the program I’m involved with via TEFL Int’l called the Special Thai Project. This post is for those random’s out there looking for info to make up their mind whether to head out here or not. I could find barely anything and just took a leap of faith – I’ll try to give a quick summary to maybe help – email me if you have any other specifics! I’m about 3 months in of working with TEFL Int’l (1 month in US and 2 here) – here goes nothing: I have a lot of pluses and negatives – as do many others around here. The positives – I’m in Thailand. Plain and simple this country is amazing and offers a wonderful opportunity to live in Asia, learn a new culture, work, live comfortably on much less than you could elsewhere, shop (don’t bother bringing anything – you can buy it here cheaper), easily travel about the country and Laos/Cambodia/Vietnam/Malaysia/etc. So all of this is not a bonus of STP – just Thailand. The TEFL 3 week course is slightly intensive but a lot of fun. You live in the Condo chain – which is somewhat like a 2 star Miami slightly run down hotel – easily livable and directly across from the beach! The best part is going to class everyday at a local Monastery/Temple/School which houses and schools about 200 young monks that come from poor/orphaned families. You also get to do all your teaching practice with them – absolutely the BEST part of the program! (see my pics on this blog) The course is good, the teacher Ji is great and it seems to be a decent overview of teaching English at basic levels. There was a break between the end of classes and when we started teaching, so TEFL let us stay for free at their school – nice bonus. I have no complaints about that part of the program. The negatives – 1. the organization/communication is very poor leading up to the program, logistics/details/etc. are just NOT this co’s forte. Emails/calls were rarely returned before I got to Thailand and much of my participation was a leap of faith – turns out this was the feeling of everyone in my program. The CEO Bruce says the admin has been moved “in house” so this shouldn't happen anymore – we’ll see. Example - My Visa was not correct b/c I didn’t get my “invite” letter until 5 days before I left the US and had to scramble to get a visa in general – from there they had my visa over 7 weeks to help me/inform me of the problem (wrong status) and even after getting here and asking tons of times I was told it was ok, yada yada – just visit the border in 90 days. Then the day before I start working I’m told I have to go to Laos immediately to change my visa so my school can apply for my work permit. Anyhow – just got back from my costly extra trip ( I was up north 2 weeks ago and it would have cost much less) – a frustration and a costly oversight – so, just be sure to figure as much out as you can yourself – they say they will take care of it, but it just won’t happen. I thought I asked all the right questions many many times, but oh well – I got a quickie trip to Laos out of it (on my own dime of course). 2. They say you can request where you will teach but it isn’t guaranteed – I would have preferred them not even ask – most didn’t get anywhere close to what their preferences were. It is all up to the school’s they all ready have relationships with and what teacher they want. I understand it from their business point of view – but why bother asking us if they don’t even take it into consideration? We didn’t find out where we were going until the end of the course – not in the beginning as they claim. 3. Once placed they help you move (if nearby – which is nice). My situation might be a bit different than most but 2 of us got placed in a small town 50k south of Bkk – the “house on sticks” we were given to live in was talked up as a nice place to live, with Internet/Air-con/washer etc. Come to find out it was quite the sh*t hole and most of the teachers placed there have left over the past 4 years. Luckily we have worked with the school and moved into a great new place. I just don’t understand why tefl would keep placing new teachers here full well knowing that many have left for similar reasons year after year – and talk it up even???? Honesty is the best policy. Our ending is so far a happy one (3 weeks into teaching) – TEFL did call to check up on us and called the vice principle for us to translate and make sure we were moving etc. It was nice they made the effort to help. Again – I know business and commissions are involved – but why not be clear on the situations so that teachers know what to expect and stay their contract through! They only make their commissions if we stay and teach! Duh. (your are paid B30,000 – the school’s pay B35,000 for you and TEFL takes B5,000 – this is how they charge less for the course – I’m fine with this – all business make their money some how)
FYI – I’ve heard from many here working that you don’t need a TEFL to get a decent job and it’s not hard to find one – so if you want to just show up – that’s another option.
So – I say this – if your willing to go with the flow and not be attached to any expectations – this is a great opportunity. Maybe STP isn’t for you if need a big say in where you teach, what grades, where you live, need lots of details to be comfortable etc. I’m glad I’m here and the appeal of having a company work out the majority of the details for me has been nice – just don’t assume they have them all worked out for you. Thailand’s way is not the way of the USA. Flexibility is key – come here (whatever way you want), you’ll see, and you won’t regret it!

Monday, May 11, 2009

Meet Jezebel

so, guess what! we have a puppy now! i got tempted into rescuing one of the puppies that was born at Olivers (the dude's bar by tefl) - one of the other puppies had just died and she desperately needed a good new home. so sunday night before we left evan and i were hanging around and i fell in love with the last one - they talked me into keeping her. impulse decision. Julie immediately agreed - so we picked her up in the morning on the way to our new home in Phanat Nikhom! We named her Jezebel (after the temptress in the bible story! haha) so there you have it - i kinda became a doggy mommy on mothers day!


She is adorable and fits in perfect in our thai house on sticks :) (that's a whole other story) there are about 20 other dogs around here also living on the grounds of the school - so it's no problem! I was a bit nervous they wouldn't let me keep here her at the school housing.
she's snuggled on my lap now - adorable.


here's a video of here at 12 weeks!:
From Jezebel

Sunday, May 10, 2009

Who wants to go trekking jungle style?

3 days 2 nights… Julie and I head up to the northern Thailand hills/jungles to experience the elements and all there is to offer. Promises of elephant rides, waterfalls, hill tribes, hiking in jungles, white water and bamboo rafting allure us north. And it delivered. I had an incredible time sweating my ass off hiking through the jungles and mountains – certainly not for the weak at heart – it humbled my athletic ability at moments. We slept on mats surrounded by mosquito nets in huts, meandered into villages of locals and field workers. One day my shower was in a fresh stream, the next in a waterfall. I rode an elephant and got to climb on his head for a picture. I ate bananas and papaya fresh from the trees. I floated down the Mea Kong river on a bamboo raft and a white water raft (though I would barely call them “white” waters due to the season). All lead by “Tuk-Tuk”, our Thai guide, who had personality beyond his size, lead campfire sing alongs while playing his guitar, even showed us how ‘real’ men kill chickens with machete's and bbq them for dinner.



Want more pics? here you go:
http://picasaweb.google.com/nattyfish/TwoWeekTravelsThailand#

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Tiger Temple

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For real… petting tigers…. Rarrhhh!

Blend intrigue, amazement, a bit of craziness and you can sum up the experience of laying your head and snuggling upon the back of a tiger. Just another one of the many things Thailand has to offer. It was 15 minutes of uneasiness but well worth the pictures! I’m glad I’ve done it – in fact it wasn’t nearly as spooky as you would assume. In fact, i’m of the opinion that theses tigers are not only well fed, but probably doped up. What wild animal just lays there like a sleepy slug while multiple humans gather around to snuggle up on them only to self indulge and snap the perfect picture? (guilty) An occasional self-lick or gaze around was about all they mustered. Hmmm suspect. For that reason, I can say I’ll never do it again – its just not fair. but…Here are my fabulously guilty pics :)

Monday, May 4, 2009

Chiang Mai – Northern Thailand – Charm and Tradition all wrapped in one

Would you believe the 16 hour overnight train could be the best sleep I’ve had in a month? A moving hotel room – you wake up where you want to be! Chiang Mai is northern thailand’s gem –a big city full of culture, markets, tons to do/see and Julie’s Guest house – a neat backpacker haven with cheap rooms and great food. The night markets are some of the best I’ve been to – especially the Saturday/Sunday night Bazaars. Too many cheap eats to even attempt to try, lots of handy crafts, local artists, and top it off with a massage in the street – for about $3. I had 3 massages in 4 days – can I say pampered?
So, I’ve seen my share of Wat’s (temples) and golden buddah’s, but Chiang Mai has some of the best. On a walking tour of the “said best”, I came across some old, some new, but they certainly had the most personality and old world charm I’ve experienced. Dragon heads, elephants, ruins, golden everything galore…. Even a wax monk that looked so real I couldn’t tell if he was staring at me pissed that I was in his holy house or that indeed he was dead…. Very weird.
I saw my first “dancing” elephant at the chiang mai zoo! This zoo was incredible – first time I got to see a non-concrete zoo. The habitat for most animals was created with the existing jungle terrain – this made the afternoon quite the work out – walking up and down hills, wandering paths from site to site. IT was nice to see the animals at a much closer distance, unlike the US mandatory jail cell, 150 foot separations enforced etc. gorgeous.

Here is a slideshow of my two week travels!



Wednesday, April 29, 2009

2 weeks let loose in thailand….

I start teaching in 2.2 weeks….so we decide to meander around the country. Kick it off Island style in Koh Chang – a fabulous jungle island with beaches and night life – not taken over with too many tourists….yet. Bungalows on the beach are the standard, Lonely beach is a fun place to hang with other backpackers, and there’s even tasty Mexican food! Not to mention opportunities to play pool and dance with lady boys :)

Friday, April 24, 2009

Wat Kao Sab - 3 weeks of amazing...

What can I say.... I feel that my pictures will have to do most of the talking. The past three weeks training and teaching at Wat Kao Sab have been so rewarding - all around amazing. Certainly more than I'd ever hoped for! These young boys are astounding and it's an understatement to say that we are leaving a piece of ourselves behind with them.
My first day teaching - Thumbs up is universal!

A Monk making bricks - they sell these to earn money for the school.


Their smiles are so genuine.

The boys are all great friends.

I swear these are the smartest, most attentive 14/15 year old boys I've ever met!


Robe Ceremony Sunday - We got to donate money and robes to novice monks and participate in the ceremony - beautiful! Amazing opportunity to give back after graciously opening the school for our use.



Pond - my favorite student! He is so ridiculously smart and precious!
The magnificent drawings of Nina and I done by Pond, Ben & Piel - it was so touching! Us girls and Pond, Ben & Piel - our little Artists!

Our last day, they made us all drawings! We gave them art supplies!

Sunday, April 19, 2009

It’s Monkey Time!

Just 20 minuets out of town in an old abandoned temple, you can go visit and feed monkey’s! We were told to bring a ton of banana’s, show up and they would come take the banana’s from our hands. Well, after about 40 minutes of wandering around, tossing bananas and attempting monkey calls – we’re all frustrated and are left wondering where these darn monkeys actually are! Luckily on our trek down the road, we flag down a local who seems to understand what we’re looking for – he takes a bunch of banana’s and disappears on his motor bike…… hmmm… next thing we know he’s racing back down the hill telling us to come and hurry! (that’s what we think he was saying) so we run back up the hill in 95 degree heat and lone behold monkeys appear! Wow – there are about 40 or so hanging out in the trees and about 10-15 coming up to us at any given time. They were so cute!

The baby’s were precious, even grandpa Yoda monkey made an appearance. Some of them were braver than others and would kindly take the banana’s from our hand! Others would run up, grab a banana off the ground and skitter back a ways to gorge themselves. Certainly worth the wait…. How cool is that?


See more Monkey's!