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Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Nan, Northern Thailand - January 2014

We caught the bus from Chiang Mai.  The bus takes between 5 and 6 hours to get to Nan, but we decided to stop off en route at the town of Phrae - 3 hours away.  Not many western tourists visit this remote corner of northern Thailand, which was great for us!  Lots of smiles and hellos from the school children as they zoomed past on their mopeds.  Whilst in Phrae we visited the Yongburi House Museum, which was originally the residence of the lords of Phrae.  The house, built in 1897 and is painted pink and white.  The woodwork looks like white lace.


Another 2 hours on the bus took us to Nan through wonderful scenery of paddy fields and rolling hills. Nan is located 50 kms from the border with Laos.




The town of Nan is fabulous and it was everything and more than we hoped it would be. It really felt like the real Thailand.



We stayed in the wonderful Pukha Nanfa Hotel  - a traditional Thai wooden place with an open breezy terrace overlooking the bustling street below. To learn a little of Nan's history we visited the Nan National Museum.

Our stay coincided with the walking streets (night markets), which are held on Saturday and Sunday nights.   We passed on the insects and instead headed to the Poom Sam restaurant where we ate a  delicious masaman veg curry.  The food was so good we ate at Poom Sam's every evening!


The next day we visited the temples of Wat Phumin with its famous murals (see photo) and Wat Chang Kham where we had our first monk chat - a petite moment.  Wat Chang Kham is over 500 years old.  The main feature is the gold-capped Chedi, supported by stone elephants (see picture).


Another day, another temple - we needed transport to reach Wat Nong Bua as it is 50 minute drive from Nan so we enlisted the help of Fhu Travel and the owner, Oon Ang, drove us herself.  En route, we stopped off at the Riverside gallery, where, amongst other things, they had a Haiku art exhibition - if only I could read Thai!   


Wat Nong Bua is also famous for its murals.  Behind the temple it is possible to see the Tai Lue hill tribes women weaving their traditional cloth.  Each intricate design was laboriously created on an ancient loom.   
Here's one she made earlier - how could I resist!

In the evenings, we borrowed  bikes from the hotel to get out and explore the surrounding countryside, a
patchwork of paddy fields, shimmering temples and grazing cattle.  Nan is famous for its longboat racing. The races are held on this stretch of river every September/October.


It was hard to drag ourselves away from this unspoilt place, but we had booked our internal flights south and the beaches beckoned.  



2 comments:

  1. Sounds absolutely amazing. You should have taken a photo of the haiku, we could have asked Aw to translate them! :)

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  2. That would have been a good idea!

    ReplyDelete