Red gold and green Christmas decorations on a tree branch

The Christmas Tree is Ready at the Mandarin Oriental Hotel

This is a wonderful time of year in Bangkok.  It is officially “Cool Season” [ฤดูหนาว], which means that most days you can walk around without breaking into an immediate sweat.  It is also the season of lights and decorations.  Some festive decorations go up for The King’s birthday on Dec 5th – then, although 94.6% of Thais are Buddhist, the city adopts Christmas as if it was born to it… any excuse to dress up and party!

Night landscape: Green Christmas trees with white lights

Traditional Christmas Trees at Q-House Lumpini

Non-Traditional Christmas Trees at Q-House Lumpini

View of Patpong street and blue-lit Christmas tree by night

Even the Girlie Bars on Patpong (พัฒน์พงษ์) get into the Christmas Spirit

Night street scene with Christmas tree and cars

How Many Mixed Cultural Symbols Can You Find in One Picture?

Christmas decorations on the Peninsula Plaza, Bangkok

Christmas Lights: The Perfect Backdrop

Night scene: Christmas light and a man and woman looking at a digital photo

The Perfect Backdrop for Holiday Photos

Large red electric candle decorations on a staircase

Candles on the Peninsula Stairs…

Thai male

… Another Photo Op!

Christmas ball with reflection of Peninsula Plaza

Reflections of The Peninsula

Toddler with toy elephant and toy panda

Christmas is for Kids: Battle of the Toys

Shoppers

Christmas Shopping ~ Paragon Shopping Centre

Pink Christmas Bells

Pink Bells ~ Paragon Shopping Centre

For a few weeks, just as in any Western country, Christmas songs and carols can be heard everywhere.  They are blasted from loudspeakers in the shopping centres and train stations.  They are played on the radio and in elevators.  They are performed on the streets and at the various parties and luncheons.  At one lunch I attended, we had not one, but two groups of orphans singing in return for their visit with Santa.   Christmas in Bangkok is not only about bright lights, parties and shopping; it is also a timely reminder of those less fortunate.

Portrait of young Thai female in a santa hat and dress

Singing for Her Supper ~ one of the many AIDs orphans of Klong Toey. 

Thais are happy to “celebrate” Christmas, in terms of the trees, and the lights, and the gifts, and all the other trappings.  As I said earlier, any excuse for a party!  But, the spiritual practice of most Thais is grounded in the Hindu/Brahmin/Buddhist traditions, and is very much a part of daily life, every day of the year.  The evidence is everywhere: every house and business has either an animist spirit-house or a Chinese shrine, or both.  People routinely get up early to give rice and other food to the monks walking their morning alms rounds.  Buddhist ceremonies are an integral part of all major life-events like births, deaths, and marriages, and blessings are sought for most other changes, like new houses or new cars. In the course of their daily lives, Thais wai or ‘pay respect’ to statues of Kings or Buddhist Abbots, Buddha images and shrines for Hindu or Brahmin deities.

Night view of Erawan Shrine, Ratchaprasong

The Erawan Shrine, One of Bangkok’s Most Important Hindu Shrines, is Busy Every Day of the Year

Candles and incense at Erawan Shrine, Ratchaprasong

Candles and Incense

Woman saying prayers at Erawan Shrine

Anyone Can Say a Prayer… Any Day of the Year

Yellow candles burning

May the Spirit of the Season be with You.

Text: May the Spirit of the Season be with You.

May the spirit of the season be with you! Happy Holidays.

  • Signe Westerberg - December 24, 2010 - 12:29 am

    Wishing you both an amazingly wonderful Christmas and a truly fabulous New Year…

    love the pics…as always… beautiful colours, beaming children.

    from the land of the truly blessed….

    Signe, Lance and Co.,ReplyCancel

  • Haakon - December 24, 2010 - 5:32 am

    Great blog and some fantastic photographs!!! Merry Christmas!ReplyCancel

    • Ursula - December 24, 2010 - 7:14 am

      Thanks, Haakon. Same to you. 🙂ReplyCancel

  • Guava - December 24, 2010 - 5:03 pm

    Great collection of Bangkok night shots Ursula. Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!ReplyCancel

    • Ursula - December 29, 2010 - 3:50 pm

      Happy New Year to you and yours, Guava!ReplyCancel

  • Virgonc - December 29, 2010 - 10:45 am

    Merry Christmas 🙂ReplyCancel

    • Ursula - January 1, 2011 - 9:52 am

      “Kellemes karácsonyt és boldog új évet” (I hope that’s right!!) Virgonc!ReplyCancel

  • […] But, even though December 25th is a normal working day in Thailand, the country goes all out to decorate for the season. Aside from a rather tacky Nativity scene at our local shopping centre, the neighbourhood around […]ReplyCancel

  • […] But, even though December 25th is a normal working day in Thailand, the country goes all out to decorate for the season. Aside from a rather tacky Nativity scene at our local shopping centre, the neighbourhood around […]ReplyCancel

“All objects, all phases of culture are alive. They have voices. They speak of their history and interrelatedness. And they are all talking at once!”
Camille Paglia

Landscape of bare stone and dry grass: Pha Taem NP

The Roof of the World? Pha Taem National Park, Ubon Ratchathani

I grew up in North America where the artefacts of culture are relatively modern. By contrast, Asian cultural objects speak of time… endless time… with it’s ebb and flow of history and change.  I know that this is so, but being able to traverse from prehistoric artefacts, to ancient temples, and then to modern arts and crafts in the space of hours and kilometres, still surprises me.

The fertile Mekong river valley between Ubon and Laos was home to an agrarian people thousands of  years ago.  They left their mark in red paints made of soil, tree gum and fat, on a 200 meter stretch of cliffs at Pha Taem.  These paintings, depicting scenes of rice cultivation, as well as elephants and enormous fish traps, are thought to be between 3000 and 4000 years old.

Landscape with large rock overlooking the Mekong and Laos, Pha Taem NP

Overlooking the Mekong and Laos: Pha Taem National Park, Ubon Ratchathani

Small cairn of rocks, Pha Taem NP

Modern Markers: Cairns under the Cliffs of Pha Taem

Wide angle shot of rocks overhanging a cliff path: Pha Taem NP

Under the Cliffs: Pha Taem National Park, Ubon Ratchathani

Pre-historic paintings of humans and elephants in red on Pha Taem Cliffs

Ancient Rock Art : Pha Taem Cliff Paintings

Composit: Monk looking at Pha Taem paintings, and Monks walking away

Visiting Monks: Pha Taem Cliff Paintings

Close-up: young Thai monk

Composite: Thai man and his stone amulets

Thai Guide and his Protective Stones ~ Amulets and Ruesi, the Hermit Sage

Home, not just to the Mekong, but also two of it’s major tributaries, the Mun and the Chi, this area has been at the crossroads of competing cultures and warring empires for centuries.  As I mentioned last week,  Khmer influence is seen in the local silk designs.  It is also evident in artefacts housed in local museums and the many temple ruins that dot the landscape.

B&W portrait of 11th C Khmer head sculpture

Khmer Head, 11th Century, Surin National Museum

Stone frieze carving of Krishna

Krishna's Battle with the Beasts: Angkor Wat Style, Surin National Museum

Landscape of Prasat Ban Phluang ruins

Hindu Sanctuaries: Prasat Ban Phluang (11th -12th C Baphoun Khmer Art)

Landscape of Bodhi Tree and stone Khmer sculptures, Prasat Ban Phluang

Religious Crossroads: Living Bodhi Tree and Ancient Stone, Prasat Ban Phluang

Garden landscape: Ancient Sandstone Carvings, Prasat Ban Phluang

Ancient Sandstone Carvings, Prasat Ban Phluang

For all their monuments to civilisations past, these are living, breathing communities.  In the out-of-the-way rural village of Ban Chok, we found a woman fashioning ‘Prakueam’, or round metal beads of silver or gold made into jewellery.  The daughter of a man who makes large silver ornaments for public buildings, she uses a centuries-old Khmer tradition to make delicate pieces with a surprisingly modern appeal.

Close-up of turquoise amethyst pieces on a stone work-table

Jewellers Workspace ~ Turquoise Flower

Close-up of silver pendants in Khmer Prakuem style

Finished 'Prakuem' Silver

Close-up of fine silver jewellery on a littered table

Silver Beads ~ Jeweller's Workspace

Close-up of Thai woman beating silver with a small hammer

Jeweller Working on Silver

Thai woman hand-working silver in open-air basement

Fine Work ~ Prakueam Silver

As the ultimate tribute in stone, it is hard to go past Ubon’s 22 meter-high ‘candle’ in an ornamental boat, guarded by a mythical garuda.  The sculpture, which was completed in 2000 to honour the current King, the ninth king of the Chakri dynasty, pays tribute to the giant bees-wax sculptures which are carved in Ubon every year and paraded through the streets during Phansa (Buddhist Lent).

Giant yellow-painted garuda and candle sculpture, Ubon Ratchathani

Tying the Ancient and the Modern: Candles in Stone

Truly symbols of  Thai culture’s ‘history and interrelatedness’!Text: Safe Travels! Ursula

Wishing you safe travels, wherever you are!


.





  • Signe Westerberg - December 16, 2010 - 11:20 pm

    as always thanks for the share…. and the card, (still doing mine, appalling me thinks ;-( )ReplyCancel

  • Northeast Thailand Events - April 18, 2011 - 7:36 pm

    Cool, a really interesting post!…

    [..] Today I was reading this amazing blog post and I wanted to link to it. [..]…ReplyCancel

    • Ursula - April 18, 2011 - 8:03 pm

      Glad you like the posts, Travel Isaan! 😀ReplyCancel

Close-up woman with a camera, with colourful silks over her arm

Colours, Layers and Textures: Shopping for Surin Silks ~ Ban Khwao Sinarin

Isn’t the English language wonderful?  In the title “Weaving Communities” you probably read ‘weaving’ as an adjective – that is, communities that exist about or for weaving.  But, weaving is more usually a verb: the art of forming something, (a fabric or a fabric item; a basket, a story, a rug, a community…) into a pattern by interlacing long threads passing in one direction with others at a right angle.

Close-up of silk threads on a large loom

"Interlacing Threads at Right-Angles"

As I mentioned last week, I had the pleasure of visiting a number of villages in Surin; villages where both meanings are true. These are communities of weavers who produce beautiful textiles, and it is the act of producing these textiles that binds the community members together and allows the communities to grow and flourish while staying grounded in traditional values and practices.

Traditionally, women and girls produced silks and cottons for their household to use and to present to the local temple.  In the old days, bells were attached to the moving parts of looms, so that local bachelors knew that ‘a modest, hardworking, diligent girl’ who might make a good wife, was hard at work. Every village in Surin has at least one loom, and although weaving usually only takes place in the free time when the rice harvest is in, most villages these days manage to produce silk for sale, to supplement their meagre cash-crop income.

Some communities, however, have taken the traditionally sought-after Surin silks to a whole new level.  The first place we visited, Thasawang Silk Village, has been developed into an atelier of world standard by Ajarn Weeratham Trakulngernthai.  A. Weeratham studied Arts before returning to the village to expand the silk production there to such an extent that he was chosen to design and produce the gift-silks for the international leaders visiting Thailand for APEC, 2003. He also produces much of the silk used by the Thai royal family.

This community of artists is involved in every aspect of silk-making. One purpose-build open-air building houses two-story looms operated by three or four workers.

Elderly Thai Woman at the Head of a two-story silk loom

Experience at the Head of the Two-Story Loom

Thai woman at the head of a two-story silk loom

Concentration ~ Tying off Threads

Young Thai women at the sides of a two-story silk loom

Young Women at the Sides

Young woman

Young Woman in the Weave

One woman at the side, one women underneath, a two-story silk loom

Women at the Loom: Sitting at the Side and Standing Underneath

Colourful weft threads on a silk loom

Silk Thread: Weft ~ Warp ~ Weave

Unfinished weave of red, white and multi-coloured silk

Fine Weaving in Process

Golden Brocade Silk on a loom

Golden Brocade Silk

Five two-story looms at rest

Lunch Time! The Two-Story Looms at Rest...

Small scissors and tweezers on an unfinished gold embroidery

Precious Gold Embroidery

Thai male (Ajarn Weeratham Trakulngernthai) explaining traditional silk patterns

Ajarn Weeratham Explaining Traditional Silk Patterns

Silk sales take place in expensive up-market shops, street stalls and in the downstairs open areas of village houses; anywhere that the community has a bit extra to sell and the buyers are ready.

Young Thai woman smiling

Village Silk Seller, Thasawang

Young Thai girl with pigtails, wearing a yellow shirt

Young Girl at the Silk Markets

Colourful Silk Elephants on Keyrings

Silk Remnants are put to Colourful Use

Portrait of a toothless elderly Thai woman with short white hair

Beetle-Nut Granny

A pile of colourfully woven cotton cloths

Cotton Pha Thung (ผ้าถุง): Belt, Sarong, Head-dress, Baby Sling...

Glass window of a silk shop reflecting passing traffic

Silk Layers ~ Shop Front, Surin

Women examining lengths of silk

Examining the Silks ~ Under the House ~ Ban Chok

Thai woman with length of silk

Showing Off the Wares ~ Ban Chok

Intricate, multicoloured silk design

One of 700 Surin Silk Patterns

Surin boasts 700 traditional silk designs, many which were of Khmer origins.  They involve complex weaving or dying processes, or both.  Many villages produce “Mut Mee” or tie-dyed silk. The warp threads are wound onto a frame of the correct size, banana fibre is carefully tied around sections of thread according to a specific pattern, and then the whole frame is dipped in dye.  When the dye is dry, the fibre is carefully cut away and the undyed spots are dabbed with other colours.

Thai women tying thread around silk for tie-dying

Mut Mee at Ban Khwao Sinarin

Smiling Thai woman with tied silk threads on a frame

Producing Mut Mee Silk

Hands with a razor, cutting tie die threads away from dyed silk.

Careful Mut-Mee Hands

Elderly Thai woman Reeling red Silk

Reeling the Silk

What impressed me, even more than the silks, however, was the way silk production, as a community cottage industry, drew the neighbourhoods together. Because it is such a labour-intensive and important industry, there is meaningful work for everyone, and the loom or looms become the village centre. At Ban Khwao Sinarin, when it was getting too dark for the carful attention that preparing and weaving Mut-Mee silks require, the traditional instruments came out and the singing and dancing started.  The undisputed star of this impromptu “show” was the master-weaver’s eight-year-old daughter.  One of my Thai companions said: “I am so glad that this is still happening in my country!” I completely understood her emotional pride.

Young girl in Thai dress dancing

Traditional Dancer ~ Khwao Sinarin

Smiling baby and elderly woman; both with few teeth

Toothless Smiles!

Young boy with smiling mum

Khwao Sinarin Family

Man and young girl in traditional Thai dance:

Dad and Daughter in the Dance

It was truly an enchanting experience, and a reminder of the true value of locally produced, hand-crafted products.  ‘Till next time…

  • Gabe - December 10, 2010 - 11:50 am

    lovelyReplyCancel

  • Guava - December 10, 2010 - 11:49 pm

    Wonderful set of photos and really interesting text.ReplyCancel

    • Ursula - December 11, 2010 - 4:50 am

      Thanks, Gabe and Guava!
      It’s always nice to know someone is out there. 🙂ReplyCancel

  • Signe Westerberg - December 13, 2010 - 4:50 am

    what an amazing life(&)style these people lead and a reminder of the people who make this amazing silk…just lovelyReplyCancel

  • dietmut - January 26, 2011 - 7:50 pm

    really interested site and images. I wish you a nice week with
    beautiful things, DietmutReplyCancel

    • Ursula - January 27, 2011 - 1:12 am

      Hi Dietmut!
      I’m so glad you stopped by. I hope you will pop in regularly. Have a good week yourself! 🙂ReplyCancel

  • Northeast Thailand Hotels - April 18, 2011 - 7:36 pm

    Cool, a really interesting post!…

    [..] Today I was reading this fantastic blog post and I wanted to link to it. [..]…ReplyCancel

  • Andy Varga - April 6, 2012 - 7:10 am

    Hi Ursula – thanks for your fascinating blog about Surin produced silk – and great photos. I’d love to visit those villages and find out more about silk production. Could you put me in touch with someone who could organise a visit for me? Best wishes and keep up the good work!ReplyCancel

    • Ursula - April 6, 2012 - 11:33 am

      Hi Andy,
      I’m glad you enjoyed the photos.
      My visit was with the Thai Textile Society. They organised it through a Thai travel agency: Ubon Jinda Travel (+66 86 777 2118). Our guide, Pradit Deerorb (+66 83 364 1182) loves textiles and speaks good English. I can’t find email addresses for any of them, and as our visit was a long time ago, my information might be out of date.
      But the places we visited are well known to any Surin agent (and are geo-tagged on my Flickr site) so any licensed agent in the area should be able to help you.
      I hope this helps! Cheers.ReplyCancel

Yellow silk cocoons in a woven wicker frame

Silk Cocoons Nesting

The only downside, for me, of traveling to up-country Thailand, is that I end up with so many pictures I have trouble figuring out how to organise them!

I spent last weekend in Northeast Thailand (Isaan): Ubon Ratchathani, Sisaket and Surin.  I was with a group of women from all parts of the world who were traveling, as members of The Thai Textile Society, in search of silks.  Surin, in particular, has been producing beautifully hand-woven fine silk fabrics for over two thousand years. I was predominantly in search of images, although I confess that I also returned home with more than a few pieces of silk and cotton!

Silk production is a major cottage industry in this area, and is a source of community pride as well as income.  Every stage of the production, from the growing and harvesting of the silk worms (sericulture), to the treating and dying of the threads, and finally the designing and weaving of the patterns, follows centuries-old traditions.  For the sake of some sort of coherence, I decided to start at the beginning with the sericulture itself, and move on to the design, weaving and finished products next week.

Silk production is an incredibly labour intensive and costly job: about 3,000 cocoons and a lot of time are needed for just one meter of woven fabric.

Fluffy yellow silk cocoons

Cocoons ~ like Cotton Candy

Silk cocoons being boiled and reeled

"Stoving" or "stifling" the chrysalis and "reeling" the threads

While this process is undeniably rough on the silk worms, there is, at least, no waste.  Rejected shells are made into artificial flowers and other ornaments, the filaments become fabrics and the worms themselves become food.

Cooked silkworms in a bowl with a spoon

"Chim Dai! ชิมได้!" "Have a taste!" Thanks, but no...

Portrait of Thai female in a yellow collared shirt

Explaining the Process of Reeling and Re-Reeling

Gray haired Thai woman re-reeling silk

Re-Reeling the silk fibres renders the filament a more even texture

Skeins of Silk fibres ~ Raw and Treated

Silk fibres ~ Rough-Raw and Smooth-Treated

After a lengthy treatment process, the silk filaments are ready for dying.  Although commercial chemical dyes are sometimes used, most of the producers in Surin prefer the traditional, natural dyes from their own gardens.

Red Bixa Orellana flowers on green leaves

Bixa Orellana: a source of red and orange dye

Clay pots and brooms under a tree

Tools of the Silk production trade

Workers in Thai straw hats and blue overalls cleaning with brooms and buckets

Isaan Workers in their Typical "Protective" Clothing, Keeping the Surrounds Tidy

Green plastic basin with leaves and soaking silk fibres

Green Leaves and Yellow Silk

Dried Persimmon Peels

Dried Persimmon Peels make Red

Metal drum with clay firepot and flames

Dye-Fires Burning

Blackened pots of boiling yellow goop on outdoor fire pots

Boiling Dye Fires in the Yard

Terracotta pots of indigo dye

Terracotta Indigo Pots

Black rubber gloved hands plunging silk into indigo dye

Making the popular indigo-coloured silk is a laborious process of plunging and wringing...

Black rubber-gloved hands with a skein of indigo silk

... twisting and circling.

Thai woman in black rubber gloves with skein of indigo silk

The skein of wet indigo silk needs to be kept in perpetual motion!

Lengths of died silk thread drying on a line

Threads on the Line ~ Dyed and Drying

Large wooden spools of silk threads

Dyed, Spooled and Ready for weaving!

As I said earlier, it is a long and involved process just to produce these fine silk filaments, which are not yet the beautifully coloured and textured fabrics they are destined to become!

Until next week, happy travels.

  • Lesley Fisher - December 4, 2010 - 9:38 am

    Hi Ursula,
    Thanks for sending me the link of your website, I love it 🙂 and such interesting stories with wonderful images. Congratulations. Did you build the site yourself after your course?
    Take care for now
    Lesley XReplyCancel

    • Ursula - December 4, 2010 - 12:17 pm

      Hi Lesley!
      Thanks for stopping in – I’m glad you like it. The “design” is a bought theme (same as Jackie’s)… although my html skills are improving – slowly… 😉ReplyCancel

  • Patama - December 4, 2010 - 3:26 pm

    Hello Aj. Ursula
    Wow, I’m Thai but I never been to Isaan, that’s bad.
    and you didn’t try the worms 🙂 (me neither)
    Patama AnnReplyCancel

  • Virgonc - December 7, 2010 - 6:40 am

    Thank you 🙂 I never seen before how they made the silk. 🙂
    Great photos 🙂ReplyCancel

    • Ursula - December 7, 2010 - 3:01 pm

      Glad you like the photos, Virgonc! (Not as impressive as some of yours, I must say!!) Thanks for stopping by. 🙂ReplyCancel

  • Larry Oien - December 29, 2010 - 6:54 am

    An amazing story beautifully told.ReplyCancel

    • Ursula - December 29, 2010 - 3:51 pm

      Thanks, Larry. Enjoy your time in Aus. 🙂ReplyCancel

  • Ulli Pluemacher - February 7, 2011 - 7:02 am

    Hi Ursula,

    thank you for sharing this interesting information and beautiful photos!ReplyCancel

    • Ursula - February 7, 2011 - 7:11 am

      Hi Ulli! So glad you stopping in to have a look. 🙂ReplyCancel

  • Ines - February 16, 2011 - 2:31 pm

    Hi,

    Very nice pictures! We would like to go to Isaan/Surin too, to see the silk production. Is it possible to specify where in Surin this is because I don’t know whether it is hard to find a place where you can see all the steps of making silk.
    ThanksReplyCancel

  • Northeast Thailand Events - April 18, 2011 - 7:36 pm

    Cool, a really interesting post!…

    [..] Today I was reading this great blog post and I wanted to link to it. [..]…ReplyCancel

  • yuwadee - August 10, 2013 - 9:17 am

    hi. I’m a thai people and I come from Surin my proven also make silk. and my mom also make silk every step must talk a long time. but silk very wonderful. in my proven have many people make silk. here we have big land It can make farm I think if some one want to run besiness of silk I think very good.
    but here me make for use in family. but I hope one day if have some one want to make besiness about silk and order from my proven every body here will got income from silk.ReplyCancel

    • Ursula - August 10, 2013 - 12:21 pm

      สวัสดี Yuwadee,
      You are right – most families make silk for themselves. But, it is beautiful, and many people will buy it if they know where to find it! 😀ReplyCancel

Solemn faced Karen boy aged four

Solemn-Faced Karen Boy

I had a lot of enthusiastic response to last week’s “Wander”; clearly the good works that are happening in Mae Hong Son province, in Northwestern Thailand, strike a chord with many people.

Road into Mae Hong Son hills with sunflowers

Driving into Hills and Valleys

Middle-Aged Karen Woman smiiling

Big Smiles

Over the years, a number of interested parties, sponsors and sponsors’ representatives have accompanied Susan Race, who established “THEP -Thailand Hilltribe Education Projects”, on her trips north to organise and supervise the various building projects in marginalized ‘Hills’ schools in Mae Hong Son. Not surprisingly, these visitors, like myself, have been impressed by the practical projects that have been undertaken to support the educational needs of local children, and have also come away from these visits with vivid memories of the beauty of the area and the warmth of the people.

Susan tells the story about one of her first projects: a cement floor. In the hills, most houses are on stilts, with woven bamboo flooring over a wooden frame. This is practical enough for small buildings, built on uneven ground and steep slopes, but doesn’t work very well for larger, public buildings. The Thai government has undertaken to build classrooms in all villages, but does not supply sufficient funding for auxilliary buildings like cafeterias, dormitories or libraries. If you are in a Hill village school compound, and you see a solid building, chances are pretty good that it will have a plaque on it naming the sponoring organization!

Steps up to a one story white building with a signboard

A Donated Building ~ Huay Pheung Mai School

Three young Hmong boys reading their school books outside

Pre-Class Reading

Concrete water tanks with satellite dishes

Seven years ago, there was no electricity at the school; now there is satellite!

Anyway, Susan, who at the time was part of a women’s organization who had money to donate to charity, heard the story of a remote school with a lunch/cafeteria shelter (I think it was) with a dirt floor. She organised the money for the cement and materials needed to put a proper floor in, but NOT for labour costs. She was able to visit the project while it was in the works, and observed first hand the school staff, including the director, breaking up the gravel, mixing and pouring; in short, laying the floor themselves after finishing a long, arduous day at their normal jobs.

For me, this story is such an apt metaphor for the projects themselves: good buildings, like a good education, require a solid foundation; if you want people to take ownership of a project (or their own learning) give them the tools they need rather than doing the job for them; and with the right tools and materials, and a bit of guidance, co-operation and goodwill, people can accomplish almost anything.

Blue electric fan, paint and cement buckets

Tools in the School Yard

Two men on scaffolding

Look Up!

Two men on scaffolding: one hammering, one sitting smiling

Men at Work

At one of the schools we visited, a new building was being constructed in true Thai style: workers in thongs or bare feet were smiling, up in the rafters without the benefits of harnesses, while on the ground materials were everywhere.  The building was not going up exactly to plan – but it was going up, and that, after all, was the main thing!  The children in the playground at this idyllic but remote school were oblivious to the work going on in their midst.

Cement school yard with mountains in the background

Mae Toh School Yard

Thai wooden shutters on school classroom windows

Typical Thai Classroom Windows

Thai boy and girl laughing

Giggles

Young Thai children in school shirts looking up at the camera

Have Camera ~ Find Kids!

Brown canvas school shoes on a shoe rack

School Shoes outside the Classroom

Brown school shoes on concrete steps

Late for Class!

Two Thai schoolgirls in Traditional Dance costumes

Traditional Thai Dancers

River bank and Thai houses

Attractive and ‘Modern’ Mae Toh…

Wood Pile under stilted Karen house

…but, five minutes up the road, the electricity and ‘modern’ stops.

Two young Karen children

Two Young Karen Children Looking to the Future

Road at twilight, with mountains and clouds

Layered Dusk ~ Mae Hong Son

Nok Air nosecone

The trip is at an end ~ the last smile for the road

If you are interested in learning more about projects conducted through “THEP -Thailand Hilltribe Education Projects” and “ISGF – International Support Group Foundation”, they’ll be happy to talk to you.

‘Till next time, here’s looking to a better future for us all.

  • gabe - November 25, 2010 - 11:39 pm

    Good piece – thought provoking!ReplyCancel

  • Signe Westerberg - November 25, 2010 - 11:57 pm

    Great post as always, lovely to hear good news stories of people making changes themselves and not waiting for someone else to do it for them. thanks for the share!ReplyCancel

    • Ursula - November 26, 2010 - 1:27 am

      Thanks to my two most loyal followers for stopping by. 😀ReplyCancel

  • […] talked about this collection of projects before, after my first visit, in my posts of mid- and late-November last […]ReplyCancel

  • […] of these charitable organisations. I’ve been on these trips before (see: Budding Potentials, Building Futures, and Schools), and what always impresses me – other than the beauty of the countryside […]ReplyCancel

  • Henny de Groot - February 19, 2012 - 3:52 am

    Thank you for your nice informational articles…
    I love to read and see those nice pictures.
    If I have a car I would love to travel to all your
    places….
    Best regards,
    HdG
    PattayaReplyCancel

    • Ursula - February 19, 2012 - 5:24 am

      Hi Henny,
      Thanks for joining me on my travels! Pattaya has some lovely spots as well – especially to the south. 🙂
      Cheers, UrsulaReplyCancel

  • […] deep in the hills of Mae Hong Son. I’ve talked about previous trips (Budding Potentials, Building Better Futures, Schools at the end of the Road, and True Colours) in several previous posts, but I never tire of […]ReplyCancel

  • […] mentioned THEP and the work it does several times before (Budding Potentials 1, Building Better Futures, Schools at the End of the Road, True Thai Colours, and For the […]ReplyCancel