MY VIEW OF CHIANG RAI
My other life was spent on the Australian navy and being medically discharged, moved from Sydney to Tweed Heads area in northern NSW in 2007. It is very beautiful area of New South Wales.
But I needed a change and a chance to see other countries.
I have always wanted to see Thailand and being single allowed me to take my time and live here for while and get the true experience of being in another country. I have lived in other countries for short periods of times, so it is nothing new to me.
As my experience with other parts of Thailand is rather limited. I can only write about my experiences here in Chiang Rai. It is gifted with some really beautiful scenery and plenty of good places to go and visit. If you are bit of a coffee nut, well you are in paradise, there are good coffee shops every where.
Why did I move here, well to honest I never intended to stay here for the time that I have. Which is nearly 3 years, as to how much longer I will stay I do not know.
When I first arrived here in Thailand I met an Australian man his Thai wife, just be genuine, smile and treat people with respect. You always going to meet good, not so good and the bad where ever you. Fortunately I have been lucky in meeting a lot of good local people. The locals are nearly always eager to help you and want to know more about you. The biggest problem is the language barrier, not always an easy barrier to solve. Especially since I am lousy with learn another language, I am a bit of a perfectionist and a little shy, so I am not likely to say anything in Thai until I have learned to say properly. Work in progress on that front, but think that also learning about the culture should be just as important. Which would give a far better understanding of the way Thai people think.
I live here on a retirement visa, which you have to renew every year and you have to report to the local immigration office every 90 days.A lot of foreigners have a complain about it, I just put it down to living in another country and do not worry about.
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Hope you are enjoying you time here in Chiang Rai. We built our house some ten years ago but before that I lived in Bangkok for thirty years.
Over the last ten years things have gotten much better in Chiang Rai. We now have a mall, better restaurants, better roads, better internet and I quite enjoy the drive to Chiang Mai if not too frequent. My wife has been flying down to Bangkok more often recently and usually adds an extra day for shopping so anything we can’t get here she can pick up there.
If I were single, like I was for the first twenty years, I would still be living in Bangkok and going to the health club everyday. If you have a really good relationship, loneliness and boredom don’t seem to be an issue.
PS: i have some interesting pics of my front and back yards in Thailand, but not sure how to load them into this window. Cheers
I prefer to accentuate the good rather than dwell on the bad. For example I think it is great that we don’t have blizzards, hurricanes, volcanos, mass murders and various other bad stuff. We do get enough flooding to affect the rice crop some years and we get some small earthquakes in the region but not near us.
We do get some smoke but not enough for me to consider moving. Thais most certainly don't do everything exactly as I might wish but issues like burning are regional problems and picking fights with every one of my neighbors won't solve the problem or make my life better. For those who prefer to look at the bad stuff...
Once, during the burning season, I flew over to Vientiane, Laos. The plane reached an altitude of about 17,000 feet. That smoke was up to 17,000 feet.
Again, as I have been told - Chiang Mai sits in a valley. That presents the typical problem of creating a pocket until winds can pick up and clear the area. Unfortunately with Chiang Mai that could take two months, or more.
Meteorological conditions are also very important with inversion layers trapping the smoke part of the year. Burning goes on throughout the year but wind and rain help to clear the air part of the time. The bigger particles are the most dramatic but it is the tiny particles which do the most damage to our health as they penetrate deeper into our bodies.
Some people are all about being punitive and punishing poor farmers but it isn’t that simple when considering social realities. One could probably make a dent by taking on the corporations but they are very powerful. Things do get better in Thailand eventually but it often takes generations. For now we need to find ways to adapt just as one does with the seasons in other regions.
The plan is to burn the corn left overs at a very high temperature, leaving something like carbon stalks that can be used either as charcoal or fertilizer. I might have been snoozing for that segment. Another part of the program is to provide means for small electrical plants for some of the village areas. They said something about smaller villages not having electricity 24/7. The electricity could be used for temperature control for storage of crops giving farmers a greater choice for growing different crops.
It also seems that the big corporations are against this program because it takes their control away from the farmers. Presently they manipulate the market, of course to their benefit.
It's a very interesting topic.
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