Friday, 6 January 2012

Pattaya's Soi 6

 
Well away from Pattaya's nightlife central, Walking Street, is one of Sin City's more infamous naughty boy areas.  Running from Beach Road up to Second Road is Soi Yodsak, or as it is also known, soi 6.  It might only be a few hundred metres long, but soi 6 is home to more than 50 bars and perhaps 1,000 naughty girls.
Soi 6 has it all, with open-air beer bars, sports bars, a few gogo bars, a traditional English pub, massage houses and even a number of regular, mainstream businesses such as a dive shop.  But the main feature of soi 6, and the reason so many guys visit, are the short time bars.  With such bar names as Route 69, Hole In One, Love Club and Horny Bar, there's no second-guessing what soi 6 is all about.
Gogo bars and beer bars need no introduction, but the short-time bar format is less common.  Short-time bars are just that - a bar you go to for a drink and to take the girl for a short-time experience.
In the short-time bars of soi 6, girls typically sit outside in sexy, skimpy apparel showing plenty of flesh and call out to any and every guy passing by.  Competition is fierce with bars offering the same services at the same prices lined up next to each other.
If you decide to enter a bar, you should choose a girl before passing through the curtain and into the often dark bar area.  A drink for you and one for her and she will cut through the BS and do everything in her power to convince you to take her upstairs.  There's no pretension about what's on offer and not even a hint of the girlfriend experience.  What soi 6 offers is cheap, readily available sex, much as I expect prostitution is like in the West.  You walk into a venue, order a drink, choose a girl, go upstairs and do the business.

The short-time bars open for business late morning but things don't really get going on soi 6 until around midday or later and peak late afternoon when most have a full compliment of girls.  Some bars put their girls in uniform and on the right day you might see a bunch of sexy Thai girls wearing nurses' uniforms or other sexy theme.  In addition to their uniforms, one of the hallmarks of soi 6 is the way many girls go totally over the top with make up.  Garish eye shadow in pastel pinks, blues and greens seems to be a feature of the soi.
Soi 6 is a favourite for many Pattaya-based Westerners, but I often wonder what all the fuss is about.  My memories of soi 6 in the past is of walking past bars with a line up of dreadfully ugly girls, many heavily tattooed and some who could have done with dropping 20 kg or more.  It was quite possible to walk up and down the soi and not see one girl you even remotely fancied and making it worse, many seemed desperate.  It would be a thrill to walk along and have dozens of girls screaming at you, pleading for you to choose them, but is that really that great when they don't look too flash?!
But things have changed somewhat and in fairness to the soi, it is one of the few bar areas which seems to have improved in recent years.  While there are still plenty of uglies to be found, it seems to have shirked the industry trend of girls getting bigger and bigger.  Dare I say it, on my last stroll along soi 6, I thought some of the girls were quite pretty.

The prices on Pattaya's soi 6, which is also known as Soi Yodsak, used to be a street-standard 200 - 300 baht barfine, which covered a short-time barfine and the use of a grotty room above the bar.  Then there was the girl's fee which was typically 500 baht.  Throw in a drink each and a tip and all in you'd be up for around 1,000 baht.  Prices are said to have moved a bit with 300 baht being the standard barfine / room fee and 700 baht most girls' expected compensation.  So with drinks it's going to run closer to 1,200 baht all in, still a fair deal.
In what I find to be a curious development, soi 6 has become a hunting ground for gogo bar owners who trawl the soi often, keen to recruit new girls.  Ironically, pretty girls on soi 6 can potentially make a lot more money on the down-market soi of brothels.  Those who making several trips a day upstairs could make 5,000 baht upwards a day, a figure few Pattaya gogo girls reach.  But there's a stigma with soi 6, even amongst the girls, and there is a certain pride in being offered a position in a gogo bar, which says to the world that "I have got a hot enough body to get out of this environment and join the crème de la crème of Pattaya bars."  The soi 6 bars are little more than brothels - and the girls know it.

In some ways soi 6 reminds me a little of Soi Cowboy with some girls living on site in the rooms above the bars.  Apparently this was more common in the past than it is now and more girls live outside, the same as it is at Soi Cowboy.
Soi 6 is not somewhere I spend time hanging around.  I guess that more than anything it just doesn't feel welcoming to those who aren't participating.  For someone like me who likes to linger, sip on something non-alcoholic and people watch, you're given a very definite look that you're really not welcome.
The soi attracts some pretty grotty characters.  Like the Beach Road, some of the local characters who spend time on soi 6 have seen better days but with that said, the lane happens to be a favourite with some youngsters too.
Customers on soi 6 are very much the Pattaya crowd of yesteryear - white guys, Westerners.  Certainly the Russians, Indians and Middle Easterners who make up the bulk of the Walking Street lurkers these days don't seem to have found soi 6, at least not en masse.  You'll always get the odd stray, but for the most part they're strangers to the area.  Signs in Russian which can be seen up and down Walking Street can't be found on soi 6.  Yet.

Soi 6 is a high traffic bar area.  I'm not talking cars, motorbikes, or pedestrians.  Some of the girls, the pretty girls who make up a small percentage of the girls in the soi, can turn as many tricks in a day as an English teacher does lessons.  Some years back a notorious whoremonger who wrote outrageous sexpat reports under the pseudonym of Ranger told of a particular favourite of his on Soi 6 who did 180 short-times in one month.  Hardly the norm, of course, but the traffic can be considerable.
I've seen plenty of photos taken inside the rooms above the bars and they're grim, often worse than what 150 baht gets you on Khao San Road.  That said, some bars are said to have been done up with nice rooms similar to what 1,000 baht would get you in a Pattaya hotel.  In fact many of the bars don't just rent out rooms by the hour but by the night.  The hardcore could check into soi 6 and spend their entire stay in the heart of the action.
Many of the bars on the south side of soi 6 - that would be the right-hand side if you were waking up from the beach - back out on to its sister soi, soi 6/1.  Few venues can be entered from soi 6/1 and that lane is more like a thoroughfare with service entrances for the bars and other businesses.  Soi 6/1 is worth a stroll if you're into ladyboys and features a bunch of giant ladyboys, some of whom can be quite aggressive, making very direct offers about what's available and on offer.  There are also a few ladyboy bars, or bars with a mix of girls and ladyboys, on soi 6.

In some soi 6 bars anything goes and bars where anything goes right inside the bar - the main drinking area - are sometimes referred to as diddling bars.  Venues such as My Friend You Bar have no restrictions on what happens in the bar so don't stick your head inside if you're shy!
Not everyone likes soi 6.  I'm ambivalent about it, as much as anything because I don't partake.  Hardcore Pattaya sexpat residents love it whereas those who are picky about the girls tend to prefer the gogos.  A Pattaya media mogul once said to me that soi 6 is the one part of Pattaya he really doesn't like and would rather it didn't exist.  I have to admit a degree of surprise that it still operates as it does, with girls frequently yelling out all sorts of interesting phrases in English to passers by, often gesticulating and sometimes even flashing them.  Like everywhere it faces crackdowns from time to time but things always return to normal quickly.
Soi 6 doesn't attract mainstream tourists like Walking Street or Bangkok's nightlife areas do.  The sort of ambling up and down soi 6 with a camera or video camera that is the norm on Walking Street won't win you any friends on Soi 6.  Pulling out a camera gets a similar reaction to pulling out a gun.

Comparisons between soi 6 and the Coconut Bar are inevitable.  You'd have to say that liaisons in soi 6 would be safer and the chances of being ripped off are remote.  In fact at least one bar on soi 6 used this as part of their promotion using the slogan "get laid without getting scammed!"  The girls found on soi 6 are for the most part more attractive than those loitering on Beach Road.  It is more expensive but at a thousand or so baht all in, it's hardly going to break the bank.  Given that everything takes place on the premises, a better comparison may be with the massage parlour experience.
You can get a cheaper beer elsewhere and if you're down to your last few baht, you can always find a cheaper bonk on the beach, but for the combination of the laid-back atmosphere of the Pattaya of old and a relatively stress-free experience without tourists gawking at your every move, soi 6 remains a favourite afternoon spot for many Pattaya locals.
Pattaya's Soi 6 offers a purer form of prostitution than what you find in other Westerner-oriented nightlife areas where customers seem to want to know the girl's life story and hope that she will treat him like her boyfriend.  Whereas other areas are about fun, entertainment and the girlfriend experience, Pattaya's soi 6 is simply about sex.

 

About Thailand




There are many countries in the world that have their own beauty and value which different from the other in locations, cultures, customs and traditions. Thailand is also the one of those that locates in Southeast Asia near the equator.
Thailand has a lot of different beauties and colors of cultures, customs and traditions on each localities in old Thai-Style constructions, art objects and architectures which continues from the past to present more than thousand years.
However, foreigner, who is interested in Thailand, should has a basic information about Thailand first before coming to visit Thailand for any reasons as traveling, history studying, business or etc.:

1.Thailand has five different areas as Central, North, Northeast, South and East and having 76 provinces.
2. Metropolis is Bangkok or Krung-Thep Mahanakhon (grung-teab ma-har-na-korn) in Thai.
3. There are about sixty-two million citizens which are different in races and cultures but stay consistently in the society.
4.
People have freedom for respecting in any religions but most of Thai people are Buddhists.
5. Thai language is nation language for writing and speaking more than thousand years since Sukhothai Kingdom.
6. Administration in democracy with Prime Minister that has king as the most respectful institute for the people.
7. Thai currency is made up of baht that changes by the stock market.
8. Thai agriculture products are rice, corn, sugarcane, cassava and etc. which Thailand is important base food producer of the world.
In addition to information upward, Thai people have characteristic of friendly, enjoyment and modesty which can notice from bringing the hands together to the face and smile that gives to each other every time. Thus, Thailand has another name as "The land of smile".

There are a lot of beautiful natures in different areas around Thailand; beaches, waterfalls, mountains and colorful hot forests; for tourists to join and relax in different activities. So, don't be surprise to hear that the most of tourists come back to Thailand more than once and also a lot of foreigners move to stay in Thailand.

Sunday, 1 January 2012

Bangkok: attractions

Ten top sights

Wat Pra Kaew and Grand Palace Complex
The royal complex, located on Ko Ratanakosin, an artificial island by the Chao Praya River, includes Wat Phra Kaew (1) – the Temple of the Emerald Buddha. The sacred statue itself is housed in a richly decorated hall while the temple walls are covered with exquisite murals of the Ramakien, Thailand’s interpretation of the Ramayana. The Grand Palace, a curious blend of Italian Renaissance and Thai architecture, was designed by British architects in 1882. Visitors must be covered up.
Contact: 00 66 2 2241833.
Opening hours: Daily, 8.30am-3.30pm.
Admission: 350 baht (£7), including entry to Dusit Palace Park.
Transport: Tha Chang pier or taxi.
Wat Po
Home to a 150ft-long reclining Buddha, Wat Po (2) also houses the largest collection of Buddha images in the country. Traditional massages offered here are highly recommended, and visitors who want to learn about Thai massage should begin here.
Contact: 00 66 2 2219911.
Opening hours: Daily, 8am-5pm.
Admission: 50 baht (£1).
Transport: Tha Thien pier or taxi.
Bangkok: attractions
Wat Po is home to a 150ft-long reclining Buddha
National Museum
The country’s largest museum (3), on Na Phra That Road, offers exhibitions illustrating Thai history, plus collections of Buddha images, textiles, ceramics, musical instruments and weapons. The guided tours (in English, 9.30am Wed-Thur) are recommended.
Contact: 00 66 2 2241333.
Opening hours: Wed-Sun, 9am-3.30 pm .
Admission: 200 baht (£4).
Transport: Tha Chang pier or taxi.
Dusit Palace Park
This park (4) contains various palaces and museums, including the attractive Vimarnmaek Teak Mansion (compulsory tours in English every 30 minutes, 9.30am-3pm) – the world’s largest teak building, apparently, containing a vast collection of royal antiques. Visitors must be covered up.
Location: Ratchawithi/Ratchasima Road.
Contact: 00 66 2 6286300.
Opening hours: Daily, 9.30am-4pm.
Admission: Adult 100 baht (£2), child 50 baht (£1); free with same-day Grand Palace ticket.
Transport: Taxi.
Wat Aroon
The spectacular 19th-century Temple of Dawn (5) rises on the western bank of the Chao Praya, its main tower covered with impressive mosaics made from shards of Chinese porcelain.
Location: Arun Amarin Road, Thonburi district.
Contact: 00 6 2 8911149.
Opening hours: Daily, 9am-5pm.
Admission: 20 baht (about 40p).
Transport: Tha Thai Wang pier.
Wat Traimit, Chinatown
Bangkok’s Chinatown (6) was founded in 1782 and is a warren of narrow alleys, incredibly congested roads and street markets. Wat Traimit contains a 10ft-tall solid gold Buddha. Pahurat, to the south-east of Chinatown, is Bangkok’s lively Indian community.
Location: Wat Traimit – Yaowarat Road.
Contact: 00 66 2 2259775.
Opening hours: Daily, 9am-5pm.
Admission: 20 baht (about 40p).
Transport: MRT Hualamphong, or taxi.
Lumphini Park
Named after the Buddha’s birthplace, Central Bangkok’s only spot of green (7) offers an artificial lake and well-kept lawns. Early in the morning, locals practice t’ai chi, while in the late afternoons aerobics classes shatter the peace; prostitutes take over at nightfall.
Location: Rama IV, Wireless and Ratchadamri Road.
Opening hours: Daily, 5am-8pm.
Admission: Free.
Transport: MRT Lumphini, BTS Sala Daeng.
Bangkok: attractions
Lumphini Park, central Bangkok’s only spot of green
Jim Thompson’s House
These traditional wooden Thai houses (8), in a wonderful garden compound, were once the home of Thompson – the US spy and founder of the Thai silk industry, who mysteriously disappeared in Malaysia in 1967. The main house contains a collection of antiques and personal belongings (compulsory tours in English every 10 minutes).
Location: 6 Soi Kasem San 2.
Contact: 00 66 2 2167368.
Opening hours: Daily, 9am-5pm.
Admission: Adult 100 baht (£2), child 50 baht (£1).
Transport: BTS National Stadium.
Mahariamman Temple
Impressive southern Indian-style temple (9) built in the 1860s, open to non-Hindus. The nearby Kathmandu Gallery on Pan Road features regular photo exhibitions.
Location: Corner of Silom Road and Pan Road.
Opening hours: Daily, 6am-8pm.
Admission: Free.
Transport: BTS Surasak.
Tha Pra Chan
This sprawling riverside market (10) sells religious amulets and carvings, including wooden phallic fertility symbols and a huge variety of brass figures. Several small restaurants with river views offer good local fare.
Location: Maharat Road.
Opening hours: Daily, 9am-5pm.~
Admission: Free.
Transport: Tha Chang pier.

Day trips

Ko Kret – an island in the sun
Visitors looking for respite from urban congestion will find a perfect getaway along the Chao Praya River, an hour north of the city. The artificial island of Ko Kret is home to the Mon, a minority specialising in pottery production. Numerous workshops can be found on this traffic-free speck of green. At weekends, Ko Kret is popular with Thai day-trippers and countless food and souvenir stalls open along the narrow paths that crisscross the island.
Admission: Free.
Transport: On weekdays, take a taxi to Pak Kret, then the cross-river ferry. On Saturdays and Sundays, Chao Praya Express (00 66 2 6236001, www.chaoprayaboat.co.th) operates ferries from Tha Sathon pier, 10am-4.45pm. Adult fare 300 baht (£6), child 250 baht (£5).
Taling Chan Floating Market
Bangkok’s floating markets – a network of canals teeming with small samphans, (narrow rowing boats), whose owners sell noodles, fruit and many Thai snacks – have long been a highlight on tourist itineraries. Taling Chan, about nine miles north-west of Bangkok, is one of the most accessible. Restaurants and shops line the canal banks. Location: Klong Chak Phra, Thonburi district.
Admission: Free.
Opening hours: Sat-Sun, 8am-5pm.
Transport: Taxi.

Friday, 16 December 2011

Come fly with he/she! Thai carrier PC Air takes to the skies with 'ladyboy' flight attendants

Fasten your seatbelts! A Thai airline that hired transsexuals as flight attendants to set itself apart from competitors has taken to the skies.
PC Air, a new charter airline that plans to fly routes across Asia, originally set out to hire only male and female flight attendants.
But it changed its mind after receiving more than 100 job applications from transvestites and transsexuals.
Welcoming: The team of (left to right) Nathatai Sukkaset, Dissanai Chitpraphachin, Phuntakarn Sringern and Chayathisa Nakmai greet passengers in Thai tradition by clasping their hands together
Welcoming: The team of (left to right) Nathatai Sukkaset, Dissanai Chitpraphachin, Phuntakarn Sringern and Chayathisa Nakmai greet passengers in Thai tradition by clasping their hands together

Thai President of PC Air Peter Chan (third from left) and chairman Chatwiwat Klamkomol (fourth from left) during the airline's inauguration ceremony
Thai President of PC Air Peter Chan (third from left) and chairman Chatwiwat Klamkomol (fourth from left) during the airline's inauguration ceremony

In demand: Thai transsexuals flight attendants, from left to right, Chayathisa Nakmai, Nathatai Sukkaset, Phuntakarn Sringern and Dissanai Chitpraphachin inside an airplane
In demand: Thai transsexuals flight attendants, from left to right, Chayathisa Nakmai, Nathatai Sukkaset, Phuntakarn Sringern and Dissanai Chitpraphachin inside an airplane

Four were chosen, along with 19 female and 7 male flight attendants.
They are Chayathisa Nakmai, Dissanai Chitpraphachin, Nathatai Sukkaset and Phuntakarn Sringern.

Now the new trolly dollies have made their first journey on a flight from Suvarnabhumi Airport in Bangkok to Surat Thani province, southern Thailand.
The airline is hoping to expand with new routes later this month.
During the interview process the airline said that the qualifications for the ladyboy flight attendants were the same as for female flight attendants, with the additional provisos that they be like women in how they walk and talk, and have a feminine voice and the right attitude.
Flight attendant Chayathisa Nakmai introduces in-flight safety before the airline's first journey
Flight attendant Chayathisa Nakmai introduces in-flight safety before the airline's first journey
Thai transsexual flight attendant Phuntakarn Sringern serves food during the first domestic flight
Thai transsexual flight attendant Phuntakarn Sringern serves food during the first domestic flight


Though there is very little discrimination against ladyboys in Thailand, they are not officially recognised as women and their identification cards will always say 'male'.
Known as 'katoeys' or 'ladyboys,' transgenders and transsexuals have greater visibility in Thailand than in many other nations, holding mainstream jobs in a variety of fields.
They are especially common in cosmetics shops or health stores, which almost always have a ladyboy shop assistant.
Nathatai Sukkaset, right, and Phuntakarn Sringern serve soft drinks to passengers
Nathatai Sukkaset, right, and Phuntakarn Sringern serve soft drinks to passengers

Just the ticket: Transgenders and transsexuals are more accepted in Thailand than in most other nations, holding mainstream jobs in a variety of fields
Just the ticket: Transgenders and transsexuals are more accepted in Thailand than in most other nations, holding mainstream jobs in a variety of fields
President of PC Air Peter Chan said he want to open up opportunities for Thai ladyboys before the first plane set off from Bangkok
President of PC Air Peter Chan said he want to open up opportunities for Thai ladyboys before the first plane set off from Bangkok

Monday, 12 December 2011

The annual monkey buffet festival at Pra Prang Sam Yot temple in Thailand

Monkeys eat vegetables during the Monkey Buffet Festival at the Phra Prang Sam Yod temple in the city of Lopburi : The annual Monkey Buffet Festival
A long-tailed macaque eats fruit and vegetables during the annual monkey buffet festival at the Pra Prang Sam Yot temple in Lopburi
The Monkey Buffet Festival is held annually in Thailand to promote tourism. In 2007, the festival included giving fruits and vegetables to the local monkey population of 2,000 in Lopburi province north of Bangkok.
The festival was described as one of the strangest festivals by London's The Guardian newspaper along with Spain's baby-jumping festival. A photograph from the Monkey Buffet Festival at Pra Prang Sam Yot temple in Lopburi Province shows a monkey trying to get at fresh fruit and vegetable captured in blocks of ice.

A long-tailed macaque licks an ice cube with fruits encased in it during the annual Monkey Buffet Festival at the Pra Prang Sam Yot temple in Lopburi: The annual Monkey Buffet Festival
A long-tailed macaque licks an ice block with fruits encased in it. The festival is held every year on the last Sunday of November to promote tourism in Lopburi

Sunday, 11 December 2011

Bangkok losing its sex appeal

thailand
A bar girl waits for business in Bangkok's Patpong - a place that's lost its attraction for this reporter.
Patpong in Bangkok Thailand
The bright lights of Patpong in Bangkok, Thailand. 
BANGKOK'S Patpong red-light district is fast losing its appeal.
It used to be a tourist hot spot - a place where you could be shocked, and awed, as you wandered the parallel side streets in the area celebrated for its sex trade, found between Silom and Surawongse roads.

The strip joints and bars offering girlie shows flank the night market where you can buy a knock-off Gucci bag or a Polo shirt on your way home from watching one of the shows.

At one time this was all done with a sense of theatre. And a sense of fun. It was a "must see" part of the Bangkok culture for visitors to Thailand.
But it is definitely losing its lustre.

I was in Patpong on the weekend and yes I did end up at one of those girlie bars after being dragged there on a hen's night.
OK, dragged may be too strong a word - I admit I went along willingly in a group of five women and two guys.

What we saw though was not "fun", it was not even bad theatre.
The undercurrent in the bar felt nasty, with the girls angrily demanding money after every show.

It was like we had been sucked into a freak show and we were now part of the performance.

We were all uncomfortable and the women on stage looked bored out of their minds.

There were more women guests in the bar than men, something that surprised me. Most people had one quick drink, and left.

We were approached seconds after we set foot on the pavement and asked if we wanted to go to the girlie bar.

Our tour leader, a Bangkok veteran, negotiated the entry fee deal right there on the street before we entered the venue.

This, we later discovered, was essential if you didn't want to get ripped off.

For 300 baht (about $10) each we were allowed in, given front row seats and one beer each.

Three young South African backpackers paid 2700 baht each for the same thing.

They entered the bar without negotiating a price first. As soon as they sat down, they were swamped by six bikini-clad women who hassled them for money. The young South African girls handed over the money out of fear, they felt they had no choice.

It was an expensive lesson to learn for travellers on a budget.

The plan was to spend an hour at the show but left after 25 minutes. The bride decided that she would actually rather look for a bargain at the night market.

Sadly, the vendors here were also nasty. The idea of markets, I thought, was to bargain.

But the prices were double that of other Bangkok markets and there was no sense of them wanting to bargain.

It is certainly not a shopper's paradise. The vendors just laughed when you offered a price.

For a tourist mecca there was not a lot of people around and nothing much was being bought and sold.

There was also little happening in the bars down Silom road.

They had one or two white males holding court with Thai girls pretending to hang on every word.

Business was not booming.

Bangkok will always have Patpong.

Despite what anyone thinks of the morals of a place like this, it will continue to exist.

It is a part of the fabric of the city.

Its days of prospering however may be over.

Today's Bangkok has so much more to offer tourists.

Patpong is now an oddity rather than a attraction.