Once a day Caffe (Visit 1)


Not sure how many times we have visited Once a day Cafe but we usually visit after dinner at a local Thai restaurant.


We have a coffee


and a cake. Very nice....
 1) Oct 2020        2) Feb 2023            3) April 2023






Sawang Satthatham Foundation มูลนิธิสว่างศรัทธาธรรมกุศลธรรมมูลนิธิ (Chachoengsao)


Sawang Satthatham Foundation มูลนิธิสว่างศรัทธาธรรมกุศลธรรมมูลนิธิ was somewhere we came upon when we went to Chachoengsao for the weekend.




It was an enormous Chinese Temple with a lot to discover - but we did not have a lot of time.




I also found some information in French.


        







One More Piece (Visit 2)



We have visited One More Piece more than one time....


The coffee is always very good. And then so are the cakes....


Always worth investigating the wall and the shelves...



Interesting...

Previous Posts


        




Another day trip to Ayutthaya


We decided to go out for the day - it was a Saturday.


The first place we stopped was Bla Bla Boo Dog Cafe. This was a lot of fun for the rest of the family but for me the food was good and they were happy.


Then we left to visit a temple - Wat Maha That. This was clearly a Wat with a lot of history to it and I could have taken photographs forever - worth visiting.


Then we had to stop at a tree in the grounds - Buddha Head in Tree Roots - and this was clearly quite moving and a place that if you can make a stop here it was certainly worth it (and there are a lot of websites about this). Or was it so long since I had visited some special places?


Then it was Wat Racha Burana (Temple of the Royal Restoration). Again an old temple and taken care of by the people - it was very busy but beautiful.


After this it was time for a coffee - so we chose a cafe adjacent to Wat Racha Burana - it's name was Prang View Cafe. And it certainly had a great view! And the coffee and cakes were good BUT the Oreo milkshake was superb!!!



Then another temple - Wat Thammikarat. This had a magnificent Buddhist head at the front, 

a set of candles for the Chinese New Year and an Ancient Well. Well worth visiting.


Then the next temple was Wat Mongol Bophit. This had both an old area and a new area - which was very busy and had an enormous Buddha inside. 


Over the wall of the old part there were elephants walking along the road!


On the way home a Chedi (วงเวียนเจดีย์วัดสามปลื้ม) had been turned into a roundabout!

We would come again.

        

Mrigadayavan Palace Tea Room (Hua Hin)


Mrigadayavan Palace Tea Room in Hua Hin is the former Summer Palace of King Rama VI (1924).



We have visited more than once and each time we like to have Afternoon Tea here.




Here's our visit for Mother's Day and here's some ideas for things to do in Hua Hin.








Wat Xiong Tong (Laos)


When we visited Laos for three days we visited Wat Xiong Thong on the first day.


This is Luang Prabang's most famous monastery (built in 1560) and it is so well respected that it was spared from the plunder in 1887.


There is a plethoras of information here on Asian Historical Architecture.

Wat Xieng Thong (Xieng Thong Ratsavoravihanh, or Volavihan, the "Golden City or Golden Tree Monastery") is the most historically significant and impressive of Luang Prabang’s many wats. The low sweeping double-tiered roof (the front portico actually forms a third tier) and the rich interior and exterior decoration of its sim create an exceptionally fine example of the classic Luang Prabang style. The various chapels and other buildings make the entire monastery complex an architectural gem.

Xieng Thong is situated on an embankment above the Mekong near the juncture with the Nam Khan River and often served as the gateway to the town. Visitors from Siam, which long controlled the region, would end their journey at Ban Xieng Mene on the right bank and be ferried across to the city at the river entry of the monastery. This was also the entry point for the king-designate on the eve of his coronation after his three days of prayer and meditation at Wat Long Khun . It was the site of coronation of Lao kings and also the center of numerous annual festivals honoring the Buddha and various folk spirits.

An early legend about the origin of Xieng Thong suggests that two hermits settled on a site (and set the boundary stones of the town and the monastery) near a notable mai thong, or flame-of the-forest tree (the tree is depicted on the rear façade of the sim). The sites were also near the home of two of the city’s powerful nagas that lived at the juncture of the two rivers.

The monastery had its origins in the 16th century. King Setthathilat, or Sai Xetthathilat, (1548-1571) founded it in 1560 to commemorate the memory of the Chanthaphanith (8th century AD?), a betal merchant and the legendary first king of Luang Prabang. The sim was built at this time, as doubtless were the kuti, or monks’ quarters. A number of gold on black stencils inside the sim recount the story of Chanthaphanith and Jataka stories from Buddhist cosmology. Setthathilat’s direct association with the monastery was not long, however. Shortly after he founded it, he moved his capital to Vientiane (Viang Chan); the exact date of this move is uncertain.

From its beginning until 1975, when the monarchy was terminated, Xieng Thong was under royal patronage. The king, his family, and others, built, embellished and maintained its many structures. It is impossible to know its original form, since doubtless there were numerous changes to the original buildings through the centuries. Fortunately it was spared destruction during the Chinese Black Flag maurader invasion of the city in 1887, when part of the city and many of its monasteries were damaged or destroyed. The leader of the invaders, Deo Van Tri (Kham Oun in Laotian), was in his youth a novice monk at the wat and used it as his headquarters.

A number of restorations have taken place in the twentieth century, included a notable one in whch the French participated. In 1928, when the French Governor General visited Luang Prabang, the King Sisavangvong successfully demanded that the French share in the cost of restoration. Major projects took place in the 1950s and 1960s, when the funerary carriage house was built, and especially in more recent times to repair the damage brought by years of neglect because of wars and neglect. As Luang Prabang has become more accessible to outside world it has become a major attraction for tourist and pilgrims alike. The seasonal changes in temperature and moisture necessitate continual maintenance and refurbishment.

Wat Xieng Thong is one of the most important of Lao monasteries and remains a significant monument to the spirit of religion, royalty and traditional style of a fascinating city. There are over twenty structures on the grounds including shrines, pavilions and residences, in addition to its gardens of various flowers, ornamental shrubs and trees. Many of the structures are notable, in addition to the magnificent sim, several deserve special attention.

Text by Robert D. Fiala, Concordia University, Nebraska, USA



    


Phetchaburi



We recently took a day trip to Phetchaburi and we visited a lot of places.


We came upon a quite spectacular temple whilst we were outside of Bangkok and we had to stop - สำนักสงฆ์ยอดคีรีศรีวนาราม อ.เขา


Somewhere where I would stop again.

Then we found somewhere to stay - Ban Maka - very nice it was as well.


A tidy room in a forest with lots of flowers in the Kaeng Krachan National Park.


Then over the suspension bridge in the rain. 


Not sure how safe we were though...


Then into Ban Krang National Park - this was full of animals - a very real escape.


We could not even begin to list what we saw here!!


Butterflies and monkeys were popular.