* Spent all day on April 23rd traveling from Siem Reap to Bangkok: a 2 hour taxi ride to the Cambodia border, a long line at Thailand immigration, followed by a 6 hour rickety train ride from the Thai/Cambodia border point to Bangkok
* April 24th we devoted to seeing the sites in Bangkok: the Grand Palace (which houses a beautiful emerald Buddha statue that was ripped off from Laos and simply never returned), Wat Pho (famous for a huge reclining Buddha statue), a boat trip on the river, and Wat Traimit (famous for a solid gold Buddha statue)
* Spent one night at the @ Hua Lumphong hostel, located right next to the train station; hotel was average; we chose it because of its proximity to the train station given our overnight train booking to get from Bangkok to Chiang Mai; absent its location, there are definitely better places to stay in the city
* April 24th we devoted to seeing the sites in Bangkok: the Grand Palace (which houses a beautiful emerald Buddha statue that was ripped off from Laos and simply never returned), Wat Pho (famous for a huge reclining Buddha statue), a boat trip on the river, and Wat Traimit (famous for a solid gold Buddha statue)
* Spent one night at the @ Hua Lumphong hostel, located right next to the train station; hotel was average; we chose it because of its proximity to the train station given our overnight train booking to get from Bangkok to Chiang Mai; absent its location, there are definitely better places to stay in the city
The Good:
* Bangkok is a bustling city with some great architecture and even better food
* Bangkok is a bustling city with some great architecture and even better food
The Bad:
* The hustlers. In the span of two hours after leaving our hotel the first day, four separate people tried to scam us, each with a variation on the same theme: (1) the site you are trying to see is closed until the afternoon, (2) have you seen this other site, (3) I can arrange a taxi for you and show you around the city. The outright lying (in one case being told the Grand Palace is closed as we stood outside the gate to the Grand Palace with a guard right there) is almost shocking, and very disappointing. Once you get used to ignoring these people and knowing what to say to get them to leave you alone, it’s OK.
Our trip to Bangkok began at the Cambodia/Thailand border in Poipet, Cambodia, which we got to by hiring a taxi from Siem Reap to Poipet, a 2.5 hour trip. Once we got to the border, this was the scene at the border point and the line to get through Thai immigration:
Once at the train station, here is our train and some pictures from the trip, which included the nicest Thai man who sat across from us and constantly tried to talk to us (despite him not knowing too much English) and making sure all of the other Thai people and train personnel took care of us:
And here are some of the sites.
And this structure (Wat Phra Kaeo) houses the Emerald Buddha statue, of which we of course were prevented from taking pictures.
And that was our day. We finished by heading back to the Hualamphong train station for our overnight trip up north to the city of Chiang Mai.
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