Monday, July 15, 2013

A Quick Picture Update

Weaver ants and their nest. Suuuper cool bugs, but damn
they pack quite the bite for such little things.

Hannah eating some self-made Khanom Jeep. Aroy Mak!!

Maaaaan, my family even puts me to work sometimes!
(When I'm not taking pictures of them working!)  :P

Hanging out with my pals on the bus

Sunset over the Ping River. 



Water buffalo. Don't those ears look
 like they come from Avatar???
Chinese Temple tucked away
in the woods

Gusti leaving us!!! :'(

GOSH DARN BEAUTIFUL!

Carol's birthday with her family! Big ol' 16.
What a baaabbyyyy!

It's not a juice box, it's a milk bag. 

Me and the neighbourhood gang



Adorable stray puppy with my American pal, Gusti

I HATE MOSQUITOES!!!!!!

An island just of the coast of Pattaya

Hannah and I cruising up the mountain on a Motorcycle Taxi to see the
ocean view.  I Love youuuu!

Going away party and gifts from some of the teachers

Sunday, May 12, 2013

April in a Nutshell

Alrighty, I'm gunna cheat a bit on this one...

Instead of writing a whole brand new post, I figure I might as well just put up the report I have to do every month for my club, a general overview of my April here, so voila! Read away...


Itʼs coming down to the last few months of my exchange now, however I'm trying to not letting them slip away wasted. April was on of the busiest months of my trip so far with a weekend trip to Bangkok, Thai new year, and my Southern trip. It was one heck of a month, and a pretty good way to end off my summer vacation here. 
First came my trip to Bangkok. Now, I have been to Bangkok before with my second host family, and again with Rotary on the Central Trip. This time however was a little different. I got to go with just  a few friends and myself! My host father is really good about understanding that as exchanges students, we want to see as much of Thailand as possible while we're here, and was therefore okay with me taking this trip on my own. I went with an American AFS student as well as one of our good Thai friends. What was super cool though, was that during the long, hot bus ride, I sat next to a monk the whole time who spoke pretty decent english. We chatted most of the way there, and holy moly, this guy has had a crazy life! He has worked in all parts of Thailand, in Burma, Japan, Vietnam, Pakistan and even Israel. He did loads of odd jobs here and there, but generally ended up working as a cook in most of those countries, which he received a certificate for while in Thailand. He's been all over the place! He certainly had a lot to say about life. So we fiiiinally got there and navigated our way through an absolute maze of a bus terminal, but managed to make our way out and meet another Thai friend of ours who was letting us stay at his place for the weekend. He is an old rebound who went to America 4 years ago, and now lives in a Bangkok condo with his sister. We met up with 4 other people while we were there from all over the world (I Love exchange!!) and started our weekend. It was full of markets, malls and exploring the city. Totally by luck, at one of the malls we went to, there was a huge Cosplay festival going on, and hundreds of Thai kids and young adults walking around in their favourite Manga, Anime and cartoon characters. It was really a cool thing to see, and something I wasn't expecting at all. We also hit up Khaosan road, which I heard was a must for tourists. It wasn't really at all what I was expecting, and kinda disappointing, but still glad I went and saw it. 60 Baht for a plate of Paht Thai is just outrageous!!!! At the end of the weekend, my Thai friend and I got some seats in a passenger van to head back to my city, as the rest of my friends were going to continue with their travels over Songkran, something I wasn't about to do, as we received and email from the our Chairman threatening to send anybody found in another city for Songkran home immediately. Not quite worth it. 
Next up came Songkran. That was incredible. It was the most anticipated holidays of the year here, and it didn't disappoint. The three day new year celebrations were crazy, and had way more people come out for it than I thought. People from all over the province came into my city to celebrate, so the whole place was completely jam packed for the whole thing. People in the backs of trucks, people on the street, in their homes, hanging from balconies and everywhere in between. I spent the majority of it at my friend's Aunt's house in the city (since I live outside of the city). We had our barrels set up on the side of the road, our water guns holstered, and buckets filled to the brim. Every car, motorcycle, truck, cyclist and pedestrian that walked by, they got drenched. It was impossible to go even a single block in the city without somebody bombarding you with water. One of the days, my host dad took my brothers and I and few friends in the back of his truck to drive through the hoards of people and join in some more of the festivities. That was a blast. It was kinda weird, but I got an odd Christmas feeling over Songkran, more that when Christmas was actually here. Just the very apparent sense of community and family, and everybody just in their holiday cheeriness and all that good stuff. It was a super strange sensation. 
The next big event was our Southern Trip!!! I friggen LOVED it. It was the first time I had been to the south, and it was stunning. Over the 10 day trip, we went to Krabi, Phuket, Koh Lipe, Trang and Pang Nga. Everyday we had something to do, and a decent amount of free time to go and walk around the cities. From snorkelling, to rock climbing, and speed boat rides to sight seeing, we got a really fun taste of the south. My favourite place had to be Krabi though. It was settled right on the ocean, with mountains and islands all around. It had enough tourist business to bring a good amount of tourism companies, but not so much that is was just farangs everywhere (Phuket...) and a sizeable area to walk and explore for the 4 days we spent there. It would certainly be a place I would want to return to if/when I end up coming back here. It was really interesting to see the difference in cultures between the very Conservative north, and the (relatively) liberal south. Things like bikinis and hand holding in public is a very rare sight in the north, even in touristy places, but down south, it is a lot more commonplace. Much to my own surprise, I was actually able to distinguish a fairly noticeable accent difference as well, and could even see slight physical differences in people from the south.  It was one of the trips I was looking forward to since I knew I was coming here, and would go back in an instant if I had the opportunity. It was definitely one of the highlights of the trip so far. 
As far as my day to day life and how all the learning is going… meh. Being out of school and spending so much time with other exchange students during April, my Thai didn't progress a heck of a lot. It's also kind of a crappy situation at home for that as well. I live with my mom, dad and two brothers, and my dad really wants his sons to learn english… That really doesn't work to my benefit, because nobody in my family really speaks Thai to me, and they want me to speak english back to them. I was pretty bummed about that, because I was really hoping to learn a lot from this family because they are much more sociable that my other families, but then I got here and only speak in english. Luckily school starts up again soon, and I'll have 8 hours a day to practice the language. My relationship with my mother also isn't really that hot. I don't exactly know why, but she just has not taken a liking to me. It's not that we fight or anything, it's more of just her not acknowledging that I live there… She communicates to me through her sons, and very rarely speaks to me directly. It can be kinda awkward with her sometimes. My brothers are great though, and my host dad has a better idea of what we want as exchange students than most of host families that any of us have had. It's going fine overall, but just from time to time, I kinda run into some lonely situations here. 

Life is still great, and I'm Loving it all. Home is ever more on my mind, and that crazy jumble of emotions is really starting to sink in. I'm gonna be in for an interesting next couple months! Talk to you again soon. 

Much Love,
     William Cole

Saturday, April 13, 2013

This is what happens when I'm really lazy and I can't write in my own blog :)

Oh, Hey there.

Just want to give you another little update.

Since the language camp I've been keeping myself busy, kinda. I had about five days before my little sneaky trip to Bangkok in which I just chilled and did some college stuff. Even got to hangout with the family a little more. Anyways, getting to the exciting part! My two friends and I Augusta from America and Opal who is Thai decided to take a little weekend getaway to the big city. With approval from my family and not from my Rotary, because I would have gotten a big fat NO. So with the promise of staying at my Thai friends apartment we headed on the bus towards Bangkok. Oh, and I got a little surprise on the way, I got to sit next to a MONK! I even took a couple of stalkerish pictures. But the best surprise was when Hannah came running towards me, she had told me that she wasn't going to be able to make it. But YAY! So our group consisted of Opal, Augusta, Hannah, myself and our Thai friend Mack, who's house we would be staying at. We climbed into a cab and funny enough it took us like 5 baht just to get out of the parking lot because there was so much traffic going out of the bus terminal. Later that night we were supposed to meet up with Augustas two friends from AFS, but first we went to Mack's apartment and headed straight for the pool! While there I tried to teach Opal how to swim because here in Thailand it isn't uncommon for them to not know how to swim. A lot of people go into the river in Kamphaengphet but it's just deep enough to stand in or they get floaties. Then we decided to go to a Japanese buffet! YUM. We finally met up with the two other girls, one from America named Carly and a Belgium named Marine. We had great conversations about what they've been up to and how they've just been running around all over Thailand, which I was super jealous about! After about 10 glasses of drinks for each of us (I promise they were non alcoholic!) and WAY too much food we headed to the train market, which didn't even have a train! We walked around everywhere, our biggest goal was to find Augusta an iPod 5 case. We even had another add on, which was a teacher from AFS from Germany named Max. Then Mack, Hannah and I headed back first for the night. All showered up and ready for bed we decided we all needed to have some midnight hot chocolate, which we would save for the morning, which none of us ended up having anyways. Next morning we all woke up late, just like any teenagers would and watched Red Dawn, which was horrible. Then we headed to MBK for lunch which took a long time to find because they don't have maps in the mall and people don't know where anything is. This place is just a huge throw up mall with everything you could think of. We finally got lunch and I actually found a charger for my waterproof camera. BOOYAHHHH. We shopped around a bit more and then we found out there was a huge Cosplay convention outside and surprisingly enough Hannah's sister Bye Bye was dressed up too. It's this huge anime convention and there were photographers EVERYWHERE. These Thai students make there own costumes and act out there characters. It's was really interesting to see and be apart of. After all that excitement we decided to go on the beautiful buses of Bangkok which are only 8 baht, which is about 25 cents! Only a couple set backs, no air conditioning and we didn't have any seats so we stood the whole way. I mean 40+ degrees out and you're trapped inside this vehicle, standing. We finally made it backed to Macks and got changed and what not and then headed to Kao San Road the infamous road that every farang must go to. Thai sellers everywhere with their Ping Pong invitations ( you don't wanna know) and all there "come drink here" signs. The food was more expensive but I mean a mans gotta eat! We walked around a bit, it was all shopping. Mack, Hannah and I stayed as a group as the others went off to a club. Hannah decided to get a dread lock and we actually wound up meeting a really nice lady who was traveling around Asia, we chatted with her for a bit and then headed back to Mack. Randomly while sitting someone called Hannah's name and it was another girl named Lola from the southern district and her boyfriend. We chatted with them for a while and then the lady we had met before joined us too. It was a great little get together but it was pretty late so all three of us headed back home, except for some reason in Bangkok cabs just decide they don't want to drive to places. But luckily Hannah used her female-ness and got us a cab back. We crashed at the apartment while the others stayed at a hostel for the night. The next morning was the last day and we decided to start it off on a happy note, not. We watched a documentary that was on t.v about poor people in America. :( Then we decided to head to this huge market called JJ Market. It took us a while because Mack was staying back because he was headed back to Chiang Rai so we were to fend for ourselves. We met another two AFS students also, Martin from California and Annalia from Germany. It was pretty toasty inside and we all were just overtired but we walked around for a bit and then Opal and I had to head to the bus station back to KPP. We said our goodbyes and got in a cab and got to our van that would be taking us back. Mack thought the van would be better but it actually wasn't because the air conditioning didn't work very well but Opal and I did get the entire back row. Finally in KPP and we both headed back to Opals house were I stayed the night and pretty much the entire next day and watched videos all day. I had a great trip and it was a nice little rebellious thing to do. Next few days are SONGKRAN and then we'll have our SOUTHERN TRIP. This month's probably the busiest I will be!

Much Love
     Hannah

P.S Hannah wrote this because William(Cole) is lazy.


Saturday, March 30, 2013

Shout Out

Hello everyone out there!

Well I just got back from a 6 day "Language Camp" out in Lampang Province, which turned out to be a lot better than what I thought it was going to be. But that's no what this is about. What I want to talk about is that while I was gone, I got some views on my blog that I kinda wasn't really expecting.
     First of all, another Canadian exchanger in my district sent me a message a couple days ago saying that an entire class from the University of Guelph was reading my blog, so I think a shout out to you guys is in order. I have no idea why you were checking out my blog, or if you ever will again, but if you per chance do, thanks for stopping by!
     Secondly, the website I post my blog through has an audience tracker that shows me where people are seeing my blog from, and sorts them based on their countries from around the world. Over these past 6 days, I got a very abnormal influx of views from Germany... and Russia, about 75% of my views came from those 2 countries alone. Again, noooo idea why this happened, but to all you people, I hope you enjoyed what you read, feel free to come on back!
     Thank everyone else as well for checking in on me every once in a while. It means a lot, and inspires me to keep posting and writing about my adventures here. I'll do my best to keep them coming!


Much Love
     William Cole
Totally irrelevant, but I just thought this was kinda funny.
You certainly wouldn't see this in Canada!

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Was that... English??

I never realized how much translating I would do here.
I expected the whole English-Thai and Thai-English, but I was flabbergasted at the amount of English-English translating I would be doing!

It just goes to show how important structure is to a language, and it isn't all just about the vocabulary. Thai's might know a fair amount of English words, but their speech structure is sooo vastly different from ours, that 50% of the time, it make no sense what so ever. So you end up having to translate the garble of english that comes out into comprehensible sentences.
And yes, I'm quite certain that the people I talk to in Thai, are doing their fair share of Thai-Thai translations as well, I don't think for a second this is only a one-way street!

Just me thinking again, that's all...



Much Love,
     William Cole

Monday, March 18, 2013


Things I've eaten whilst in Thailand
(some of which I may have been better off avoiding...)

Fish (the whole thing at once)
Pig stomachs
Pig intestines (fyi, better than stomachs)
Grasshopers
Cockroaches
Fish eyes
Frogs (also eaten whole)
Clotted blood
Silk worms
A plethora of unknown creepy crawlies that wriggled their way into my food  
Crab eggs
Black eggs
Pink eggs
Skin of various animals (only skin, sometimes with hair still on it…)
Alligator
Entire squids (not just tentacles)
Chicken feet
Tongue (of unknown origin)
Hearts (chicken I presume)
Pig Ears
Shark Fin Soup (I'm soooorry, I didn't know at the time!!!)
Lungs and Hearts (pork)

Sunday, March 17, 2013

PICTURES!!!

Voila some photos of my trip. They don't have any particular relevance to anything right now, and many are from a few months ago or more. Just a few shots to show you my surroundings, as all but one of these pictures (the one of the dam) were taken in my city. Enjoy! 

An old lady making her way home through the fields
after a long day of work.

Each of those little orange dots is a lantern that has been released into the air,
as people send off their hopes wishes to the heavens

Some of the guys of M.6 on their graduation day. 
This is the Bhomibol Dam, the largest dam in Thailand. 


Interestingly enough, my classmate's birthday was the day before this was taken, to for HIS birthday, he GAVE the class 1500 Baht (about 50$) so they could get massive amounts of fried chicken and pop and fries, and celebrate during school the next day. 55555 Happy Birthday Dtay!
Reading Thai, easy as cake right?

Just getting a wee bit of a trim... as half my head now lays on the floor.
Having long hair in Thailand in pretty much suicide. It is waaay too hot. 

The girl that has changed this trip for me in more ways than she could imagine. She's been a better friend to me than I could ever ask for, and am so grateful she was forced to go to Thailand, otherwise I would never have met her. Here's hoping that when she's forced to go back home, she'll still wanna keep me around!  :)
I Love you Hannah!




If there are any pictures you would like to see in particular, (temples, monks, school etc), whatever it may be, just leave me a comment, and I'll do my best to find a couple pics of that for you. 


As always, 
Much Love,
William Cole