June  2010

  1. Sunday
    Departure
  2. Monday
    Thailand & Kran
  3. Tuesday
    Full day with Kran
  4. Wednesday
    Lazy day with Kran

July 2010

  1. Thursday
    Computer & Swimming
  2. Friday
    Last day with Kran
  3. Saturday
    Off to Krabi
  4. Sunday
    At Gillham's
  5. Monday
    Lovely at Gillhams
  6. Tuesday
    Meeting Tiap
  7. Wednesday
    Lovely day with Tiap
  8. Thursday
    Turbulent Tiap
  9. Friday
    Off to Arcadia
  10. Saturday
    Schack 9
  11. Sunday
    Snorkeling trip
  12. Monday
    Lazying around
  13. Tuesday
    Fishing trip
  14. Wednesday
    Visiting Orchid
  15. Thursday
    Shack 9
  16. Friday
    Back to Bangkok
  17. Saturday
    Martin in BKK
  18. Sunday
    River Kwai Bridge
  19. Monday
    Off to Nakhon Sawan
  20. Tuesday
    Kran's Parents
  21. Wednesday
    Thai House Inn
  22. Thursday
    Fooling around
  23. Friday
    Off to Pattaya
  24. Saturday
    Kran to Pattaya
  25. Sunday
    Walking Street
  26. Monday
    Rotary & Cross Bay
  27. Tuesday
    Cross Bay & Fishing
  28. Wednesday
    Wees,Kran's friend
  29. Thursday
    Siam Bank
  30. Friday
    Alcazar Show
  31. Saturday
    To Pitsanu Lok

August 2010

  1. Sunday
    Pawiki's Teacher
  2. Monday
    River Kwai
  3. Tuesday
    River Kwai
  4. Wednesday
    Death Railway
  5. Thursdays
    Taxi trip
  6. Friday
    Last day at Kwai River
  7. Saturday
    Leaving Thailand
  8. Sunday
    Back in Norway

More data?
Use email or
+47 901 83 492
or
+66 863 357 440

Summing it all up.
 

Jul 29 - Siam Bank and account in Thailand
The pictures below are thumbnails, meaning they are small copies of the real thing. You just click them. The weather in Norway and in Bangkok just now.

Another lovely day in paradise with Kran. Martin loves her more for every day. She is so dedicated to Martin because he is such a wonderful teacher to her.

To the left, Kran's red dress that Martin bought for her.

The entrance of the Centera Beach hotel where Martin and Kran stayed for 7 days.

At the Siam bank, opening an account is a lengthy business. TTT (Things Take Time).

Time for a snack. What could be better than dried pork and beef meet quickly grilled?

Here is the dried meat you can by at any street corner.

The owner of Paddy's Pub, Maureen ready to meet her boyfriend.

The street cook and Kran. Lovely food at bargain prices.

Time to visit some exclusive resorts. Only 8500 baths a night (some € 200,-).

More exclusive, 18 000 bath a night or € 430,-. Which idiot would pay these prices?

Kran outside the Norwegian Seamen Church in Pattaya.

Over to the pool Martin will be staying in during November 2010. It is the Whispering Palms at Thappraya Road, Jomtien, Pattaya. Tel. no. is +66 38 250 058 9. Martin paid 19 000 baths or the whole of November. Good value for money.

The lovely business woman running the Whispering Palms, Mayuree Issarapayup. Contact her if you want to stay and Martin if you want a reference after November 2010.

TK, the nicest Thai man Martin ever met in Thailand.

Kran with her dinner, king prawns from the sea.

Big squid, not for dinner.

The fish restaurant in the Walking Street of Pattaya next to the sea.

The tourist police does a splendid job sorting out problems with stupid tourists. Well done fellas !

Kran spent a day on the sea, during half of it, it was raining and still she got a tan as can be seen here on here white bum. Lovely.

     

The next day, Friday July 30th, it was time for visiting the Alcazar LadyBoy or katoey show.

Kathoey
or katoey (Thai: กะเทย, IPA: [kaʔtʰɤːj]) is a male-to-female transgender person or an effeminate gay male in Thailand. Related phrases include sao (or phuying) praphet song (Thai: สาวประเภทสอง,"a second kind of woman"), or phet thi sam (Thai: เพศที่สาม, "third sex"). The word kathoey is thought to be of Khmer origin[1] (the equivalent Khmer word is "kteuy").[2] It is most often rendered as ladyboy in English conversation with Thais and this latter expression has become popular across South East Asia except in the Philippines where the term bakla[3] is often used.


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Last updated on July 11, 2010 at 07:31 hours Norwegian time.