Archiv der Kategorie: Asia

Digital Nomad Stop #5: Northern Thailand

After spending a couple of weeks in Austria over Christmas, I decided to fly into the new year and spend my next few months in one of my favourite countries of all time: Thailand. It’s one of the countries I have been wanting to go back to for a while, but didn’t, as I always wanted to visit new countries during my precious vacation days. Now that I’m travelling and working remotely full-time, it seemed like the best point in time to return to Thailand!

Due to corona, I had to go through quite some administrative steps to be able to fly to Thailand and luckily got my „Thai Pass“ just in time before they put the program on hold. I juuuust made it into Thailand! After spending the compulsory night at a test & go hotel in Bangkok, I decided to immediately fly North to Chiang Rai.

Chiang Rai had been on my list of places to see since 2012, when I skipped it as a stop on my way to Laos because I was too hungover travelling on Jan 1st 2013. Funnily enough, almost exactly 9 years later (Jan 2nd 2022), I finally made it there! 🙂 My main reason to visit Chiang Rai was the White Temple which of course ended up being one of the first places I visited on my sightseeing tour – and it did not disappoint:

In addition to the White Temple, there is also a Blue Temple which is equally as pretty. On my second sightseeing day in Chiang Rai, I rented a scooter and checked out the Blue Temple, the Black House (not sure why every major sight in CR needs to have a colour in its name!?) and Wat Huay Pla Kang (a massive white buddha statue built on a hill, NOT called white buddha luckily). It was fun to have my own scooter again for a day, to drive around and explore the area.

Of course I also walked around the town of Chiang Rai for a bit, visited some more temples, a kitschy flower exhibition and ate lots of amazing food. And I worked from my hostel. It took me a bit to adjust to the high temperatures and the time difference, so I was a bit slow during these first days, compared to my usual standards.

After 2 days, I took a bus to Chiang Mai and settled into my cute little AirBnB apartment for the next 12 days. It was a busy time at work, so I did spend a lot of time inside and only really had evenings and weekends to explore the city. I still managed to do and see quite a bit! The most exciting adventure was my scooter ride through the mountains up Doi Suthep which started rather harmless with a little hike to a waterfall but ended with an off-road adventure where everyone around me was on dirt bikes and looking at me as if I was crazy. In all honesty, I probably would not have driven this road on a normal scooter had I known how bad it would be. The photo is from the best part of the road, I was too busy not crashing on the bad parts…

On other days off, I hiked the monk’s trail up to an old temple, which was very beautiful and I explored some more temples – newer ones and old ruins – South of the city.

I also went rock climbing once outdoors at Crazy Horse, a crag about 1h drive from Chiang Mai. Amazing rock and beautiful routes… unfortunately I was only able to find climbing partners for one day, otherwise I definitely would have gone back.

On my very last day in Chiang Mai, I took a cooking course. This is something I had done before in 2012 already, but loved so much that I decided to do it again. Good decision! As I’m writing this blog, my time in Thailand is coming to an end, but I have yet to eat better than during that course. Of course, that is more due to the teacher’s skills than your own… but still. We went to the market first and then cooked a menu of 7 different dishes which all tasted delicious!

After that, it was time to catch my flight to Krabi to spend some time in the South of Thailand. I loved Chiang Mai and wouldn’t have minded spending some more time there, but I really wanted to do some more climbing and the bouldering gym in Chiang Mai just wasn’t cutting it for me when I could be outdoors on real rock instead.

Here you can find more photos from the North of Thailand.

Back in Kuala Lumpur & Singapore

Saying goodbye to Taiwan was difficult since I really liked the country and felt like I didn’t have enough time there. However, I was also looking forward to being back in Kuala Lumpur and Singapore, two of my all-time favourite cities.

I was lucky to find a Couchsurfing host for most of my time in KL, and spent a lot of time getting organized, working on my blog, doing laundry etc. Sometimes when travelling for a longer time, you need days like these in between! I only had two things I really wanted to do in KL: finally visit the Batu Caves – and to eat as much Roti Cheese as possible!

 

Mission accomplished I’d say! I then decided to take the bus down to Singapore – not such a smart decision in hindsight. The journey took much longer than expected, the wait at the boarder was endless… So I arrived in Singapore much later than expected, and super tired! The next 2 days I spent walking around the different parts of the city: Chinatown where I was staying, Little India, the marina with the merlion and all modern buildings etc.

 

I fell in love with Singapore during my exchange semester in Malaysia 11 years ago – and I’m still loving it! It’s just the perfect mix between Asian and European. I could totally imagine myself living here. The best part of my visit this time were the Gardens by the Bay which didn’t exist in 2007. I visited in the late afternoon and stayed until it got dark. There was a light show around 7pm which was simply stunning! I felt like in the movie Avatar. Photos cannot quite capture it, but here’s some anyways.

 

And with that, I said goodbye to Asia and hopped on my plane to Australia…

Taipei and surroundings

I finished my stay in Taiwan the way most people start it: by spending a couple of days in Taipei and it’s surroundings. The weather forecast could have been better: it looked like I was gonna be stuck in the rain for my last 2.5 days in Taiwan! But…I wasn’t going to complain – after all I was travelling Taiwan in rainy season and had not had a single day of bad weather yet. And in the end, I actually only ended up having one greyish afternoon and one half day with fog and a few drizzles. Could have been waayyy worse!

So I arrived around noon from Tainan and quickly dropped my stuff at the hostel to go sightseeing as long as it was still dry. This was the greyish afternoon I mentioned and while it was not great photo weather, I was just thankful that it wasn’t raining! I first walked to Huashan 1914 Creative Park, expecting something similar like Pier 2 Art Center in Kaohsiung. It wasn’t though – much less interesting for the spontaneous visitor. I guess there are some cool shows on if you have time to check the agenda! Then I continued to the Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall – another famous building – and this one was massive! Unfortunately a big part of it is under renovation at the moment, but still…wow!

The rest of the afternoon I walked past some smaller sights in the area – temples, churches, memorial halls and passed through the busy central districts. I then visited the Longshan temple, one of the biggest and most important temples in the city. When I came there, a ceremony was just happening (or a mass? Not sure how to properly call it), there were loads of people and they were all singing… In those moments, while they are very special to experience, you just feel like a stupid tourist who shouldn’t be there. Lol. So I walked around a bit as discreetly as possible and snapped some quick pictures.

Then I left the locals to their ceremony and checked out the Huaxi night market nearby which was just starting and found a little chocolate snack. I needed some energy because my day was not over yet! I decided to still visit Taipei 101 tower, to get another city view from high up. Since the weather was not great, I went up late to rather see the city lights. Probably a good idea since there were actually more clouds and they were hanging deeper than expected. Ok, it was maybe not such an amazing idea to head up a viewing platform on a day like this! Haha, in hindsight you’re always wiser. Still, it was nice to see. Again, wish the windows would have been cleaner…! Since the Tonghua night market was just around the corner (my language: a 15 min walk), I decided to drop by after for dinner and found some nice chewy noodles.

Next day, I met up with my Couchsurfing host for the next few days – Paul. He lives nicely central, so we were able to start out sightseeing from there afterwards. He first showed me Dihua street and the Dadaocheng Pier. Then we walked up North to two very important temples of Taipei: the Baoan Temple and the Confucius Temple – two temples of very different styles which are located just next to each other.

I ended up liking the Baoan Temple more, but they were both pretty! After walking around a bit more in different areas, I continued on my own to Beitou. Beitou is famous for its hot springs, but it was far too hot for me to book myself a spa day! I just wanted to quickly see the thermal valley – where the water is literally smoking hot! It was cool to see, but more a photo stop for 10 min.

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So I decided I still had time to continue to Tamsui – a place that had been recommended to me for late afternoon/sunset time. However, it being Saturday, I was not the only one with that idea! Haha. The whole place looked like a fun fair and crowds were pushing their way through the streets and along the corniche. It was fun to watch for a bit and I made an attempt to explore some streets and temples, but it was a bit too much for me at that moment!

Hence, I left after a bit over an hour and decided to have dinner at Shilin night market – one of the city’s most famous. Of course, this place was also super busy, but well. Night markets are supposed to be full and busy, right!?

On my last day, I had planned to go on a day trip to Jiufen and Jinguashi – about 1.5h bus ride away from Taipei. Unfortunately the closer we got, the worse the weather became. In Taipei it looked like it was going to be a rather sunny day – in Jiufen thick fog was hanging low, sometimes in the streets and it was drizzling out of the fog now and then. Luckily, a big part of Jiufen’s streets are covered market streets. Too touristy for my taste, but at least you were able to stay reasonably dry.

Jiufen was ok, but I was a bit disappointed. I had expected less tourists and more of a local village feel – totally not what I found. So after walking up and down the steep stairs a couple of times, I took another bus onward to Jinguashi – an old gold mining town. I had wanted to visit the Gold Ecological Park, but people didn’t seem to know about it, I couldn’t find it on Maps.Me and I also couldn’t find a lot of motivation inside me to keep looking in that weather. So I just went to the Gold Museum instead, which is actually more like an open air museum. It was not extremely interesting, but strangely enough, the gloomy atmosphere fitted quite well to that place and gave it almost a kind of ‚lost place atmosphere‘ even though it’s a museum of course!

Supposedly the area is really nice for hiking as well, but with no views and even the hilltops disappearing in the fog, there really wasn’t much of a point. I had a feeling that weather was gonna be better in Taipei, so took the bus back and right I was! Sunshine and heat, perfect for my short visit to the National Martyr’s Shrine, basically just to take some pictures as there was not much to explore or look at.

I spent the next hour or so at a little cafe, cooling down a bit and charging my batteries. Later, I took the metro outside the city to the point where you can hike up Elephant Mountain. While it’s more a hill than a mountain, the climb as such is quite exhausting, going up many steep flights of stairs. Luckily my knees are fine again, otherwise this would have been impossible for me to do! There’s many awesome viewpoints clustered around the hill, each providing really cool views over Taipei. It’s a popular spot also for locals at sunset, so I definitely wasn’t by myself up there… nevertheless it was amazing, probably my highlight of my time in Taipei!! Taiwan treated me to a last beautiful sunset – as if it was a goodbye present to me! 🙂

Taiwan, you’ve been amazing and surprising in so many (good) ways. Wish I would have had more time to spend in this small but great country!