There are so many pictures for this one. Marc and I went with our group to Northern Thailand. There we walked in the forest, swam in waterfalls, eat rice in palm leaves on rocks, tried worms and grasshoppers for dinner, learnt how to cook various Thai dishes including Pad Thai and sticky rice, ride elephants, and more.
This is where we stayed the first night there. We were all scared of breaking the bamboo floor. The wake up call was engineered by the 50 roosters glouglouing all at once. (french word transformed into english verb - sry).
mmmh, worms! The grasshoppers were crunchy then all gooey inside.
Preparation for the swim. Kev is pumped.
Going down the waterfall.
Bamboo forest.
Sawati krab! (hello)
posing!
Petting the elephant.
Tamara and I on top of Para (the elephant's name was Paracetamol)
Lindsay and Marc
Para splashing us.
This is where we stayed the first night there. We were all scared of breaking the bamboo floor. The wake up call was engineered by the 50 roosters glouglouing all at once. (french word transformed into english verb - sry).
mmmh, worms! The grasshoppers were crunchy then all gooey inside.
Preparation for the swim. Kev is pumped.
Going down the waterfall.
Bamboo forest.
Sawati krab! (hello)
posing!
Petting the elephant.
Tamara and I on top of Para (the elephant's name was Paracetamol)
Lindsay and Marc
Para splashing us.
Making Pad Thai
1. you now have to make pad thai for me when you get back
ReplyDelete2. I need some more bamboo for my thesis so feel free to bring some back with you, if they let you take it through customs ;)
3. the elephant ride reminds me of this one time in america's next top model when models had to pose with an elephant (only their pictures looked way more fashion than yours, hahaha)
4. you should eat more
5. I think english-speaking roosters do cock-a-doodle-doo and not glouglou(...). They might do glouglou if they're drowning though. In spanish they just "sing" (although I really don't know why because being woken up by roosters is too far from pleasant to call it singing). But I googled it and, according to word reference, in dutch, roosters do kukeleku and in filipino they do tiktilaok(I thought it was funny, hahaha)
6. I should really work on my homework instead of googling rooster sounds :)