Saturday, October 25, 2008

The eagle has landed.

Best foot forward, ladies.
Suddenly, it's a team effort.

Ker-ching! We're in the money!


One for the folks back home.

Friday, October 24, 2008

Marching on into Lamphun / Visiting Driessen


"Hi ho! Hi ho! Oi you!! You ain't seen me, right?"

Nearly there, laddie. Only another 3 hours till we get home!



Glenn: "Won't take long to wipe the smiles off their faces."

A rose between two thorns or what?

Alex from Driessen and Glenn with all the kids before they ran off with the money boxes.

If you have any comments about the site, please feel free to get in touch at g_croston@yahoo.com.
Please click HERE to go to the official Croston House Children's Home website.
Click HERE to go to my personal website.
Phone (66) 086-3857118.
Or leave a comment here at the Blog.

Check out some more sites that are following us;
http://this-is-chiangmai.info/
http://siam-chiangmai.co.cc/#Glenn
Akha Silver
http://siam-chiangmai.blogspot.com/
http://akha-hill.blogspot.com/
http://this-is-chiangmai-info.blogspot.com/

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Thank you, thank you, thank you. I love you all!!

Wednesday, 22 October: So we've been back home here at the Foundation since last Friday afternoon and I've spent the last five nights in my own bed catching up on some of the z's I missed out on over the previous 6 weeks on the road. Actually, that's not true as I spent one night on one of the spare bunks as Ros had half a dozen of the younger kids crashed out in the bedroom with her when I got back from Chiang Mai on Sunday night and there was no room for me! I've slept like a baby most nights, with or without the Chang, but with all the kids being off school at the moment, it's been a tad noisy in the mornings and only threats of extreme violence seems to work when it comes to ensuring that Paw gets that extra hour or two of shuteye early doors. Ros, who's also now recovered somewhat, and I have been out and about since we got back and obviously people, both Thais and expats, want to know about how we got on (or, from time to time, how we didn't get on!) during the journey. In all honesty, I really don't know what I would say to someone who had just finished walking over a thousand kilometers in a little over a month but I know for a fact that I wouldn't say anything like "I bet your feet hurt!"

Was thinking the other day that I haven't mentioned on the blog some of the people who helped to make the whole thing possible. So, in an Oscar-winning speech stylee, here goes; Obviously, we couldn't have left the kids on their own for 7 weeks and Yai and Da did a stirling job trying to keep a lid on things in our absence. Yes, we know that there were some problems and we'll be addressing some of them over the next couple of weeks before the new term starts but they did their best and Yai made sure that the bruises she left wouldn't show. Joke!! Also Ann and Denis and Mark and Jenny in Chiang Mai made regular visits and spent some considerable time at the Foundation when they did so to ensure that all was well and kept me in the picture either by e-mail or via the mobile. That was much appreciated and I'll try and find a way to repay them for their commitment before too long. I must admit that I was a bit concerned when Jenny said that she wanted to take a couple of the kids home for a few nights but she obviously chose them carefully and nothing untoward took place and they still have a lovely home! The people that organised and attended the charity nights before, during and after the walk also deserve a mention for making the evenings extremely enjoyable as well as being successful in the main in terms of raising extra funds. Certificates of appreciation are being sorted. And all the good people who we met on the journey who gave me water, food, made donations or simply wished us the best of luck with our endeavours should be mentioned. It was nice meeting them all and maybe just one or two will visit us here in Lamphun if they're passing through.

As for my hairdresser (nice lady in Soi Honey, Pattaya), clothes designer (Beefy, in Pattaya; your shirts could become collector's items, mate. Want one signed?), footwear provider (German Sport & Lifestyle, Naklua: much appreciated, gents), my Mum (sorry I haven't called for a while), the staff and students from The Regents and St. Andrews who joined me on the first leg from Banglamung to Banchang and raised so much money, Dave Higgin in the UK for sending me the Camelbak (great piece of kit), Grant Elliot in Chiang Mai for updating the blog with photos and captions and the Foundation's main website and last, but definately not least, the majority of the kids at Croston House Children's Home for doing what they were told when they were told and not making life difficult for people while we were away. Sorry if I've forgotten anyone but it's quite late and I'm ready for my bed. Thank you all; couldn't have done it without you.

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

The last supper.

Guide and Eve prepare dinner while Glenn supervises. It's good to be The Boss.

Just jesting!! Some people fooling around again. Young Beer isn't impressed though.


Ros getting back into cooking mode. Note the beer bottle on the table. And the 3 under it!!

If you have any comments about the site, please feel free to get in touch at g_croston@yahoo.com.
Please click HERE to go to the official Croston House Children's Home website.
Click HERE to go to my personal website.
Phone (66) 086-3857118.
Or leave a comment here at the Blog.

Friday, October 17, 2008

I'm walkin' on sunshine, who-oh. And don't it feel good!!

Saturday, 18 October: It's the morning after the night before and time to write the last instalment in the story of the sponsored walk which reached a successful conclusion at the Foundation at just before 3 pm yesterday. Here's how it went yesterday;



Now the final leg was supposed to be a nice leisurely affair with a lie-in to sleep off the beer that I'd consumed the night before at Ros' friend's house. But that was until I was informed by Nie during said drinking session that her house was actually 15 km away from Doi Ti which was a further 5 km or so from Northern Region Industrial Estate where we were going to visit one of our sponsor companies before I had to walk another 5 km or so back to the Foundation. TWENTY-FIVE KILOMETERS!! Well, this was not good news and certainly spoiled my evening by putting an end to my drinking. An early night was ordered for all. If I can't enjoy myself then no-one can either, right? So it was that reveille was called at 6 in the morning and I was on the road before 7 with the two boys, Guide and Eve in tow, Beer having wimped out with 'girly problems'. And Nie was spot on about the distance and the big hill we had to climb as well. Fair play to the lads; they kept up with the pace throughout though Eve would have done better with a pair of training shoes instead of a cheap pair of flip-flops! What was he thinking?



On arrival at Doi Ti, we had a short break for a belated breakfast before we made tracks to the industrial estate, arriving there at shortly after 11. We didn't have to wait long for Ros' sister and brother-in-law to turn up at the entrance to the estate with all the other kids in the back of their pick-up and we then headed off to Driessen for some lunch that Alex, one of the managers there and a good friend of the Foundation's, had laid on for them. Having eaten and after a short photo session for their magazine and website, as well as having been presented with seven cardboard boxes containing money donated by the staff from the various departments at the factory, all the small kids were loaded back onto the pick-up and driven back to the Foundation, while myself and the four eldest, having now been joined by May, started the last part of the walk home.



I distinctly remember saying to one of the expats at Driessen that this was going to be a breeze when he asked me why I didn't just get into the car and drive the last bit home. After all, I'd already walked well over a thousand km to get there, right? But I really did struggle and had to stop a couple of times as my feet felt like they were on fire and my ankles, calves and thighs were all threatening to let me down at the last minute. It was remarkably warm all of a sudden, no, not warm, very hot, and it took a lot longer than I'd anticipated but we did it, even though Guide and Eve barely made it out of the industrial estate before jumping into the support vehicle and Beer's 'problems' re-appeared and she hitched a ride for most of it. Thankfully, May, with a fresh pair of legs, stuck it out with me to the end and we re-grouped at the entrance of the road that leads to the Foundation to arrive home together hand-in-hand. And that was it. No brass bands. No press. No yellow ribbons. No fuss. Just as Ros and I had left Banglamung six weeks and over 1,200 km earlier. If you hadn't have known what we were about to embark on, you wouldn't have thought anything of it. And so it was at the end too.

The kids all enjoyed the 'home-coming' party we laid on in the evening yesterday and half a dozen of our friends showed up too as well as a couple of Ros' relatives to help out with the cooking. All our guests left at a reasonable hour so we could pack up and have an early night ourselves. After a good night's sleep, it was time to pick up where we left off nearly 7 weeks ago and a children's home to run. My feet are a tad tender but they don't hurt any more. Nothing hurts. I'm on a high but not one that can be induced synthetically. It's 100% natural brought about by having completed something that , at one stage, I seriously doubted I could, and I have proved all those who also doubted me, and there were many of them, wrong. This morning, we have already had one lady here to see if we can take in a local boy and his sister and we need to follow up on another young boy in Lampang that we were asked to help while we were passing through on the walk. All of which serves me as a reminder as to why we did the walk in the first place; there are many, many children out there who need a helping hand and we here at Croston House Children's Home, can help them if we can find good people who are willing to help us do it. Anyway, got the car to clean up as well as the store room to look at and go through some of the things that have been donated while we've been away. And a couple of beers to finish off that some kind soul left for me last night. I'll keep you posted.

Thursday, October 16, 2008

Are we nearly there yet?

Altogether now; "The only way is up, baby."

Observation question; How many cowboys are there in this picture? A clue; More than one!


"Psst! Wouldn't 'appen to be interested in a second-hand spirit house would

you, guv? Mint condition; only a couple of hundred left."


If you have a site that is tracking Glenn's Walkabout or news on
Croston House Children's Home,
email Glenn at mailto:atg_croston@yahoo.com
and I will add it to the list.(all links help boost your Google ranking)

Conquering Khuntan/The End Is Nigh!!.

Thursday, 16 October: It's taken two and a half days for us to get to this point from Lampang but we are now not much more than a stone's throw from home and Ros has gone back there to make sure that all is in place for the big finale tomorrow. The last 3 days, including today, have seen progress made at just 19, 21 and 15 km per day respectively though I have beaten Doi Khuntan during that time and we can expect a relatively flat and straight-forward finish tomorrow. I wont say that it's been easy because it hasn't but it hasn't been the bogey man that I thought it was going to be either. Coming at the end of the walk I think played a part as well as having come so far over the last 6 weeks, it was going to take an awful lot to break my spirits at this stage. Having said that, I wouldn't recommend anyone else walk it as you really do need eyes in the back of your head regardless of whether you go with the traffic, as I did, or you follow the good old Highway Code and walk against it. It also confirmed my long-held belief that, as much as I love living in Thailand, there are way too many cerebrally-challenged people in this country allowed behind the wheel of anything bigger than a dodgem car (Ros included!)

We've been able to use the tent the last two nights and I think getting some decent sleep was key to keeping up a decent pace despite the climbs that getting through Khuntan involves. Many thanks to the 'boys in brown' at Khuntan Service Area for allowing us to use their car park last night and the shower facilities in the police station. Free Coke and coffee too! There was supposed to be a security presence in the service area itself after it closed at around 5.30 but as no-one had showed up by 6.30 yesterday evening, we decided to move. We had been joined by a number of other vehicles there by the time we got up this morning. I think that's the fourth time on the walk we've used police facilities and perhaps we should have used more earlier on in the journey. I'm now sitting in the garden of one of Ros' old school friends whose home is, rather conveniently, less than a hundred meters from the Chiang Mai - Lampang Highway. This is where we'll pick up the walk tomorrow and where we'll pitch the tent up for the last time tonight though we could do with being a bit further away from the highway!

The plan from hereon in is to have three of the older secondary school kids, Guide, Beer and Eve, come out here later this afternoon and spend the night with us and then we will be joined here by Ros' father, Da, tomorrow morning for the walk up to Northern Region Industrial Estate. We will then meet the rest of the kids from the Foundation plus Frankie, Anya and Rosie, our own children, at the entrance to the estate and make our way to one of our sponsor companies, Driessen Aircraft Interior Systems (Thailand) Ltd. who will host us all for lunch for an hour or so from 11.30. From there on, we will walk the final 5 km or so back the Foundation in Makrua Chae. There will be a small home-coming party later in the afternoon after we've cleaned up and we hope that some of our friends from Lamphun and Chiang Mai will join us for that. On Saturday evening, there will be the last of the walk-related charity nights at The Pub in Chiang Mai from 7pm. We hope that we'll get a good turnout for that and the whole event will end on a high.

It's certainly been an experience and it's going to take a while for us to know exactly how much we have raised these last 6 weeks or so as other people have been raising and pledging money on our behalf all over the place and it will take some time to get it all in. I'm thinking of getting a commemorative t-shirt made up when I get back but I can't decide which slogan to use; I Survived Walking Through Khuntan or I Survived Six Weeks On My Jack With Ros. Maybe you can help me to decide. And finally, a message to all those who said I couldn't do it and then pledged to pay me if I did (you know who you are and there were plenty of you!);

GET YOUR MONEY READY!!

Monday, October 13, 2008

Map of Lampang | Glenn's Walkabout

If you have any comments about the site, please feel free to get in touch at g_croston@yahoo.com.
Please click HERE to go to the official Croston House Children's Home website.
Click HERE to go to my personal website.
Phone (66) 086-3857118.
Or leave a comment here at the Blog.

Thoen to Lampang in pictures.

Getting closer to home.
The first sign post for Lamphun.
Ros having one of her 6 meals a day.
The horse-drawn carriage; the symbol of Lampang.

Sunday, October 12, 2008

Landed in Lampang; last chance for some time out!

Sunday, 12 October: The penultimate leg of the sponsored walk is now behind us and we are now in Lampang and I'm looking forward to that night in a proper bed in an air-conditioned room and a lie-in in the morning that I've been thinking about for the last couple of days. Tomorrow will be our final rest day as I need to get some things sorted out at a bank and the time off will stand me in good stead I'm sure when I have to take on the hills at Kuntang later in the week. Although the 75 km we still have do seems like nothing compared to what we've done over the last 5 weeks or so, there are still 3 day's worth of hard walking to do and we both need to stay focussed on what we're doing as Khuntan is a notoriously dangerous stretch of road and it's the only way to get to Lamphun and beyond. My ankles are now looking and feeling OK, though I was more than a little concerned in that department early yesterday. Ros has also been under the weather these last couple of days and is also looking forward to a break from being on the road. She managed to get to a clinic yesterday and was told her blood pressure is high due to the lack of sleep she's had of late, or should I say, quality sleep. It could also be because she's had to put up with me on her own for the last 6 weeks but I'd like to think that it's not been that bad! I'm considering booking myself into a private room at Baan Thi hospital for a few days when I get back so that I'll be able to catch up on some of the sleep I've missed out on over the last 6 weeks. Fat chance things will improve when we get back to the Foundation, what with all the kids being off school at the moment.



All the bedding needs airing too tomorrow as it really does smell and despite what Ros will say, it's not all down to me. Although most of it has been washed a couple of times like the towels we've been using it's never really been dried out properly but, with less than a week to go, I'm sure we can put up with it for the remainder of the trip. Ros has always got the option of sleeping in the front of the car where as I haven't; it's either in the back of the car or in the tent with the smelly mattress and both pillows! We have decided that the walk will definately end this coming Friday afternoon with a walk from Northern Region Industrial Estate to the Foundation with all the kids in tow. We've asked Yai to start preparing things for a small home-coming party and I need to get some money to her during the week so that she can organise that for us. Going back on Friday will also allow us to get money out for the shopping for next week as I banked all the money we received from the charity nights in Pattaya, Banchang and Korat. I couldn't see any point in going on to Chiang Mai and back when there are things that need sorting out at the home. Although I'm aware that Yai and Da have done an admirable job in our absence, there are some issues that need addressing and the sooner we do that, the better for all concerned. Anyway, that's for next weekend, time to get aquainted with some bedding that doesn't smell!!

Friday, October 10, 2008

Took on too much yesterday ... paying for it now!

Saturday, 11 October: Seemed like a good idea at the time to press on when I'd really set my heart on pitching up the tent in the rest area we arrived at around 4 o'clock yesterday afternoon after clocking up 24 km for the day, the last 5 of which served to remind me of what to expect when we eventually get to Khuntan, between Lampang and Lamphun. But unfortunately, one of the stall-holders there told Ros that all the peope that work there leave at 5pm every day and she wouldn't recommend that we camp out there as it was so far from anywhere should we have 'a problem'. I don't know for sure what she meant by that but we decided to take her advice after she said that there was a service station about 5 km up the road. Well, now we know that there isn't but there is one about TEN km up the road! So, shortly after 7, I followed Ros onto a pieceof wasteland behind the petrol station in Sop Prap where we set up the tent for the night.



At that stage, I didn't feel too bad physically but when I woke up some time around midnight to go to the toilet, I couldn't get up! My ankles had both locked and I had to wake Ros up to help me get to my feet. Even when I was upright I nearly pulled the tent in on us both trying to find something to hold on to! I was in a real state and must have resembled Bambi when it had to get up and walk for the first time! Having done what I needed to do, I had to go through it all again so that I could get some more sleep. I actually slept quite well but we had to repeat the performance at around 6 so that we could move on. This morning has subsequently been a nightmare and with clear, blue skies and lots of sunshine, any advantage gained yesterday will be lost today and my hopes of spending Sunday evening in an air-conditioned hotel room with clean, crisp sheets and a mini-fridge full of chilled beer have now been dashed unless Ros can find somewhere this side of town late on tomorrow.



The roadside donations fund now stands at 940 baht after a couple of people chipped in down in Thoen. I'll be calling Grahame at The Pub in Chiang Mai later today to confirm the arrangements for the charity night there next Saturday, the 18th. Once I've spoken to him, I'll do a block e-mail to all the Chiang Mai and Lamphun-based people on our mailing list to let them know and I'll keep you posted on here.

St. Andrews School sponsored walk photos.




St. Andrews Sponsored Walk Photos from the start
of the Walkabout.
**************************************
If you have any comments about the site, please feel free to get in touch at g_croston@yahoo.com.
Please click HERE to go to theofficial Croston House Children's Home website.
Click HERE to go to my personal web site.
Phone (66) 086-3857118.
Or leave a comment here at the Blog.
Check out some more sites that are following us
http://this-is-chiangmai.info/
http://siam-chiangmai.co.cc/#Glenn
Akha Silver
http://siam-chiangmai.blogspot.com/
http://akha-hill.blogspot.com/
http://this-is-chiangmai-info.blogspot.com/
If you have a site that is tracking Glenn's Walkabout or news onCroston House Children's Home.email Glenn atg_croston@yahoo.comand I will add it to the list.(all links help boost your Google ranking)

Thursday, October 9, 2008

900 kms down - 160-ish to go!!

Friday, 10 October: Apologies for not updating the blog for a couple of days but we've been unable to find places where we can plug the laptop in until Ros found this place for breakfast this morning. The battery's had just enough power to check my mail in the evenings but not much more than that. We arrived in Thoen yesterday afternoon and, at some point yesterday, I clocked up my 900th km on the road. We are still some 85 km short of Lampang or another 3 days walk including today. The distances covered over the last 3 days have been shorter than I would have liked but this leg is more difficult than the others have been and we've had some quite hot weather to contend with as well.



We've stayed at a variety of places this week including the duty officer's bunk in a police box, camped out less than a hundred meters from a 24-hour manned police vehicle check point (not exactly condusive to a good night's sleep) and a couple more service stations and I think that's also played a part in slowing me down over the last few days. Not getting much sleep every night is going to take its toll eventually, I'm sure. We're going to make a decision about the Chiang Mai legs over the weekend and if we do cancel them, then we need to make arrangements with the folks up in Lamphun to get the kids to meet us at Northern Region Industrial Estate next Friday afternoon. We have made arrangements to call in at a couple of companies there who have been supportive of our efforts in the past and it would be nice to get the kids involved with that as well now that they are all on their mid-term holiday.

Monday, October 6, 2008

Sitting out the rain.

It's nearly 9.30 now and it's been raining here in Baan Tak since around 6 this morning. Frustrating to put it mildly but now that I'm down to just the one pair of trainers, I can't afford to get them soaked as it may take a while to dry them out and we'll lose even more time so we're going to have sit it out until it lightens up, whenever that may be. We've been drawing up contingency plans in case things become drawn out over the next week or so what with the weather, my ankles and the route. There is only one way to get to where we need to get to and part of it is not very 'walker friendly'. In the worst-case scenario, we could drop the leg to Chiang Mai. It is, after all, our aim to get back to the Foundation in Lamphun, which we'll pass en route to Chiang Mai if we stick with the original plan. We're going to play it by ear for the time being, though.

Yesterday was tough going; parts of the road once you get out of Tak city limits are built on a slope and I was therefore walking at an angle that put more pressure on my ankles. You wouldn't even notice it in a vehicle but you certainly do when you're walking! The terrain is similiar to that between Korat and Saraburi, one long climb after another with some fairly flat stretches in between. I've been saying all along that this would be the toughest part of the route as I've driven it many times and it's going to be extremely challenging. Although doing 30 km a day is my objective, as it has been from day 1, that may prove to be too much of an ask on parts of this leg and we do therefore need to have a Plan B. I took some more of those pills this morning and the swelling has gone down though my ankles are stiff at the moment. Once I get started, I hope that'll wear off but for the time being, I'm not going anywhere!

Checkin' out of town | More Maps

.


Checkin' out of town.
Every place seems to be a long way away from here.
A private moment; time for reflection .... and some pain killers!


The next Charity Night is on the 18th of October at The Pub in Chiang Mai.

(click here for the web page and directions)

Just scroll it down a little and close that big photo that covers the map.


On my screen you have to grab the map and drag it down to get at the exit button.


Click here for some awesome high tech MAP technology.

Drag the top photo from left to right or vise versa to get a 360 view of the road and buildings.



Where Jack is standing is at the entrance to the Soi leading to Tuskers,
the beginning of Glenn's epic journey.

After that event, Glenn and Ros travelled all the way down to Banglamung
for the start of the Walkabout.

When it loads, click on the No.5 orange balloon on the left/top of the bottom map
to get to The Pub, 189 Huay Kaew Road, Chiang Mai 50200, for
the last of the Charity Nights for the Walkabout. Not the end for Glenn, though. He still has the long walk back to Croston House Children's Home in Lumphun.

Move MapJack around Chiang Mai to have a look at our fair city.

Chiang Mai was one of the first cities in the world to be MapJack'd.

**********************************

If you have any comments about the site, please feel free to get in touch at g_croston@yahoo.com.
Please click HERE to go to the official Croston House Children's Home website.
Click HERE to go to my personal web site.
Phone (66) 086-3857118.
Or leave a comment here at the Blog.

Sunday, October 5, 2008

That was the week that was!

Well, it's just after 4am on Monday morning at the beginning of the penultimate week of the walk. Yes, 4am! Had something for dinner last night that obviously disagreed with me and it's capped of what has not been the best of weeks quite nicely. What with car problems, Rosie coming and then going, stuff being left behind in Lamphun and Ros spending all the petrol money on tyres that we didn't need, you'd think it couldn't get any better, right? Wrong! Our arrival in Tak yesterday was soured by the return of the dreaded fluid on my ankles, something that has been causing me problems for some time on and off. A few days before the start of the walk, I visited a clinic in Naklua and was given an injection and less than 24 hours later and over 600 baht lighter, it had cleared up the swelling and it has not been a problem since, despite all the mileage I've done, until now. I've got some pills that the same doctor gave me so I'm hoping that they will keep things in check but it's a worry. Less than two weeks to go and I can smell the lamyai but I've got to keep moving to stay on schedule but that's easier said than done when you can't even put your trainers on!

On the home front, I got word on Saturday morning that one of the older girls had jumped ship and legged it back to join her folks in Bangkok. Permanently. This was rather surprising news as I was not aware that she had any problems at the home but what do I know, eh? I'm only the Director, right? Apparently, it was decided that it was best that I was kept out of the loop because I have "a lot of problems" and I have "a hot heart", whatever that means. The only 'problems' I have is when I'm not told what's going on, for whatever reason, and then I have to explain to other people what's going on when I don't even know myself, if you know what I mean. It's a cultural thing I know, Thais not wanting to bother the 'boss' with 'little' things that they don't 'need' to know about. Well, for the the record, I 'need' to know about everything that goes on in the Foundation. Why? Because I founded it. It's my baby and I look after it. I want to see it stay healthy and grow and become something all of us that are connected with it can be proud of. If somebody's not pulling their weight around the home, I want to know. If somebody's not performing at school, or playing up, I want to know. I want to know about everything that's happening that's relevent to the Foundation and then I can decide if I need to do do something about it. So, Nada's gone, permanently, and we're now down to 27 in Bedlam House with the younger kids finishing school this coming Friday for the mid-term break. We need to get some activities and visitors organised for next week so that Yai doesn't have to contend with them all on her own 24/7 before Ros and I get back. Any volunteers?

Friday, October 3, 2008

Auf Weidersen Kampaeng Phet!

Saturday morning, 4 October, day 30; Here's a recap of what's been happening since we resumed the walk on Thursday afternoon:

Having hoped that Ros would get back to Khlong Khlung at a reasonable hour on Thursday morning, she eventually bowled up at just before 1pm after I had had to check out of the motel I'd stayed in the night before at midday. And things got worse from then on. We had a sudden downpour that lasted about half an hour thereby delaying our departure even further and then I discovered that my spare trainers had been taken out of the car in Lamphun and not put back in again! Likewise our torch! And my hand towel! Wait! There's more! Ros had replaced the dodgy tyre while she was back in Lamphun but had also decided to replace the other rear tyre. So almost all the money that I had authorised her to withdraw from the bank to pay for petrol and othere bits and pieces for the remainder of the walk had just about been blown. And I had about 300 baht in my pocket to pay for our food for the next fortnight or so!

Feeling the need to get some fresh air and put some distance between the two of us, I started walking and kept walking. When these things happen, it's best to have a bit of space. Fortunately, it remained overcast for the remainder of the afternoon and my thighs and calves seemed to have sorted themselves out. The road to Kampaeng Phet, and the inside lanes in particular, is not the best and could do with being relaid in many parts. On quite a number of occasions I found myself sharing the motorcycle lane with HGVs, tour buses and other assorted vehicles trying to dodge the pot holes in the road. It was a problem for Ros too when she was parking up waiting for me. Fortunately, we managed to get to a place called Bahg Dong without anything untoward happening just as it was getting dark and Ros parked up on a piece of wasteland next to a large temple with a row of food stalls at the front of it and this was to be our resting place for the night, still some 20-odd km from Kampaeng Phet. I can't remember at what point I started talking to her again but peace had broken out before we went to bed in the back of the car.

Because of the money situation, we needed an early off yesterday to make sure that we got into Kampaeng Phet at a reasonable time so that we could get round the banks before they closed and find one that could give me a cash advance on my visa. And as yesterday was Friday, we had to get money from somewhere to get us through the weekend at least. So, I was on my way by 7 after skipping breakfast to save some money and hit town just after midday. Had no joy with the first bank we found but struck lucky second time around, though it did take the woman in the bank some 25 minutes to process the transaction! Cashed up, we could then relax and afford some time to get some food ans tock up on water and some fruit. There was a fair on in the town centre and we had a quick look around after lunch before heading back to the car and on to the highway. Our next major destination is Tak and that's about 70 km further down the road and Ros then reminded me that the petrol stations between here and Lampang, some 250 km away, are few and far between. Another 10 km or so on, we arrived at where I'm writing this from now. Didn't know where the next service station was likely to be so this was deemed as good a place as any to rest up last night. And we could put the tent up so we both slept quite well last night. Well, until a couple of soi dogs decided to have a fight next to the tent some time in the early hours! By close of play tomorrow, Tak will hopefully have been conquered and then there's that long, long road to Lampang to look forward to, with those nice hilly bits where I'm sure we'll have plenty more slow moving HGVs to keep us company. Can't wait!

Thursday, October 2, 2008

Glenn's Walkabout | Map | Croston House Children's Home


View Larger Map

I will ask Glenn (if he has the time or the energy) to jot out his itinerary/route on a map that we can put next to this.
Then you will be able to zoooom in and see him walking down the road. (I don't think!) But you will be able to follow his route.

From Glenn's last post, this is were I think he is. Every Thai map spells place names in English in a different way.
Just zoom back out to get a perspective.

If you have any comments about the site, please feel free to get in touch at
g_croston@yahoo.com.


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official Croston House Children's Home website.


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Rosie

Rosie