My hotel’s proprietor stopped at the circuit breaker as we walked down the hall, to make sure my room’s electricity was turned on. It wasn’t the hotel I expected to stay at. I planned to go on that evening to an even smaller town, near a wildlife sanctuary that I found by accident on the Web. But a late start from
Shortly after settling in to the room, I got a call from the owner of the place in the small town. She was worried I’d gotten lost. That same kind of thoughtfulness radiated from her the next day when we finally did meet. She welcomed me for nearly an hour, talking in Thai of things we both really were interested in, not just about the weather or how long she’d been in business.
Here I was thinking that I’d come to surround myself with the beautiful landscape and its biological diversity. But the main attraction turned out to be this beautiful human being. She invited me to have dinner with her and her husband, the deputy mayor. We ate home cooking, not restaurant food. I felt more like a relative than a guest.
Then out of the blue appeared a fellow speaking English in an accent I didn’t recognize right away. This was Mark, from the
The only downside is that he doesn’t speak much Thai and nobody in town speaks much English. So when a roundeye like me shows up at this lovely little roadside resort, Mark wanders over and dives in to the conversation that he’s seemingly starving for. I didn’t mind. He soon had me in stitches with a story of being hospitalized after eating a pound of crabmeat at one sitting.
I had to smile, too, when we ended up going together to an unusual temple that sits a little way outside town. Even though he’d been there before, he couldn’t remember the way, and so thought it best to pay somebody to take us. Finding a driver was easy enough, but explaining what we wanted to do then fell to me. The newcomer helped translate for the local.
We made it. Wat Tham Khao Wang was gorgeous. The style and the building materials were like no temple I’ve visited in
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