วันศุกร์ที่ 29 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2553

Gray Market

Grey market (also sometimes known as "gray market") involves the trade of legal goods through unauthorized, unofficial, and unintended channels of distribution. Hence, trademarked products are often exported from one country to another and sold by unauthorized individuals or firms. This practice is also often known as parallel importing, product diverting, and even arbitrage, and typically flourishes when a product is in short supply, when manufacturers resort to skimming strategies in specific markets, or when the products are subject to substantial markups. For example, even as Apple, Inc., rolled out its latest third-generation iPhone on July 11, 2008, several retail stores throughout the world, including those in China and Thailand, continued to take orders even though this product was not being sold in those markets. Their computer codes were unlocked, so that the phones could be used with different mobile service providers.

Even in India, one of the fastest-growing markets for cell phones, Apple delayed the release of the original iPhone until mid-2008, a year after the release in the United States and six months after its release in Europe, for fear of grey market sales. A wide range of goods and services have been sold through grey markets, including automobiles, broadcasting delivery, college textbooks, pharmaceuticals, photographic equipment, video games, and even wines. Research has demonstrated that every one of the world's eight major export regions has experienced grey marketing activity damaging to their operations. One trade group, the Anti-Grey Market Alliance, in conjunction with a study with the consulting firm KPMG, estimated the global grey market for information technology (IT) products to be over $40 billion. In the United States, grey market goods are prohibited according to Section 526 of the Tariff Act of 1930, which expressly forbids importation of goods of foreign manufacture without permission of the trademark owner.

However, the implementation of regulation by the U.S. Customs Service and the courts' interpretation of the law have not been in line with each other. In a recent study, about 13 percent of the firms in North America have reported some form of grey marketing. A positive outcome of grey markets is that they form an arbitrage that forces prices down and provides brand-name goods at lower prices to the customer. They can create incremental sales in markets not in direct competition with sanctioned dealers, and sometimes help companies overcome distribution bottlenecks because of local government regulations. Occasionally, it is less expensive to tolerate grey marketing than to shut down the operations completely because of the time and resources required to monitor the violations. Finally, uncovering grey marketing activities can provide a firm with sound marketing intelligence regarding customers in these markets and their buying behavior.

On the other hand, the phenomenon obviously also has several drawbacks for companies. It simultaneously undermines the manufacturer's distribution arrangements and their ability to control quality-it creates the dilution of exclusivity and damages existing channel relationships. Official dealers may not choose to offer significant services in order to compete with the grey market price for the product. There is likely to be an erosion of the brand's global image, and the firm is unlikely to have the ability to use traditional pricing strategies, thus having less control over their overall marketing strategies. In order to reduce the impact of grey market goods, firms can take pragmatic strategies to evaluate quantity- discount schedules, reduce price differentials between markets and keep them lower than the costs of shipping and inventory holding costs, differentiate products sold to different markets, and sell unique products and names in each market.

They can also leverage the Web and Internet technologies to facilitate surveillance of the names and locations of grey marketers. On the demand side, customers can be made aware of the risks of buying goods sold in these markets, refused warranties for the products purchased through these markets, and offered attractive rebates on authorized and legal goods to compensate for the price differentials between those sold through legitimate channels versus those that are not.




Francesco Zinzaro

วันพุธที่ 27 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2553

Tiger Muay Thai Camp Review (Phuket, Thailand)

This is a review for Tiger Muay Thai & MMA in Phuket, Thailand. I turned up and originally planned and paid to stay here for 1 week... 1 week turned into 2 weeks. Then I came back for a month.

Pricing
The cost for training is about average for a Farang training in Thailand, and is as follows:

  • Half day 300B

  • Full day 500B

  • Week 2500B

  • Month 9000B

  • 3 Months 24000B

A strong recommendation I will make, is that if you are coming here on a budget and/or have not done much intense training before, then only pay a week or so in advance. Time and time again people pay up for 3 months in advance, then only train a few times a week. Pay a week in advance and then see how much you think you will train before shelling out loads of cash in advance.

Payment is accepted via cash or credit card (Visa & MasterCard).

Accommodation

Rooms vary from 2,500B (small room with fan) to 20,000B+ (room with air con and all modern facilities and a swimming pool)/month. I was paying 12,000B for a very nice double room with cable TV, Wi-Fi, hot electric shower etc. at a place just down the road called 'The Nature House'.

My advice for accommodation is to only pre pay a few days or a week to start with. As you may find something much cheaper or if you already have a cheap room you may not like it and wish to upgrade.

A good (but not exhaustive) accommodation list is available on the TMT website.

Food

Eating in the local area can be anything from 40B a meal to 350B+ depending on where and what you eat. The cheaper meals tend to be Thai food (generally consisting of rice or noodles dishes), western food is much more expensive. A restaurant called Mama's is one of the cheapest around here and has a solid reputation. They also have cheap rooms available (9,000B/month).

Whatever you do, DON'T pay in advance for the food plan at the gym. It is overpriced and many people end up missing meals. There are plenty of other places to eat, variety is more fun than eating at the same place every day.

Training

As well as Muay Thai, the gym offers classes in MMA (mostly no gi jiu jitsu and sparring), Western Boxing, Krabi Krabong, Yoga and Circuit training.

In all honesty, the Muay Thai classes are overcrowded, and you will unlikely be recognised and given individual attention unless you stay a long period of time, or pay extra for private sessions. But you can still get a good work out.

The western boxing classes are good, with two world champions and a stadium champion instructing. But can still get very busy.

The MMA classes I have mixed feelings towards. The mornings are just no gi jiu jitsu (which is taught to a fairly decent level by Ray Elbe) and the afternoons are fairly intense sparring. And they do have a nice cage to train in. However no wrestling is taught.

If you want to do MMA here then my advice is to get the best of it by training the morning no gi BJJ class and then do the Muay Thai or Western Boxing class in the afternoons.
The gym also hosts seminars often (most of which are free) with visiting fighters. Whilst I was there Royce Gracie, Alberto Crane and Roger Huerta gave seminars!

Facilities

Tiger Muay Thai has some of the best facilities in all of Thailand. At the time of writing they have 6 rings, a MMA cage, a weights room (with enough benches, racks, machines and weights to get a really good workout), another weights area with lots of kettlebells and several spinning bikes, and many heavy bags. They are also having a large extension built.

Location

Phuket is a very large tourist destination. However, Tiger Muay Thai is located in the subdistrict of Chalong, which is cut off from most of the distractions this brings (beaches, bars, nightlife etc), but these are easily accessible by taxi or if you rent a scooter for 3-4,000B per month.

I'd recommend a scooter if you are staying for any period of time (just be careful, there are some 10,000 accidents a year in Phuket alone involving bikes).

With the freedom of a bike you can access the food and clothing markets, Central Festival shopping centre (including cinema), Beaches, Bars & Clubs, the local Zoo, the aquariam, Elephant trekking, Snake shows etc!

Equipment Shop

The price of most things in this shop are jacked up. Shop around unless there is something really specific you want here.

Personal Comments

Your time at Tiger Muay Thai will be what you make it. It can be a serious training camp or you can come here with the best of intentions yet get caught up in boozing most nights and spending your days on the beaches... or you can do a bit of both.

This place is aimed more towards the casual trainer on holiday with plenty of cash to spare, so unless you are quite tight fisted you can easily spend a lot of money.

I made lots of friends and enjoyed myself and what all the different classes had to offer, but after a time I grew tired of the overcrowded and commercial side to the gym and decided to switch over to Dragon Muay Thai just down the road...




Check out my blog for more reviews: MMA & Muay Thai blog.

วันพุธที่ 20 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2553

Using an iPhone With AIS 12Call

While in Thailand, I'm using my iPhone on Advanced Info Service's (AIS) mobile network. They are by far the largest mobile carrier in Thailand. They do have one competitor called True which actually has an edge over AIS in the fact that they have a much larger 3G presence than AIS at the moment...in fact, I think that AIS only uses their 3G for data services using USB cards. Either way, 3G doesn't matter for me. I did plenty of research before coming to Thailand and found that the parts of Thailand I will be spending most of my time have very limited to no 3G access. That is why I've been hanging on to my trusty 2G iPhone for so long. After Jailbreaking my phone, I am using the AIS 12Call prepaid plan.

To get started, I bought a 12Call SIM card from 7-11. Almost every small store sells them however. The card costs 99 Baht and you get 10 minutes free talk time. This plan allows me to add minutes whenever I want. Every call that I make is 3 Baht (9 cents) for the first minute and 1 Baht every minute past that. Incoming calls are free. This is why it is very common for people to ring your phone and hang up to show their number, that means they want to talk but have no money. SMS messages are 3 Baht each and they can be sent Internationally but these cost 9 Baht.

Adding minutes can be done multiple ways...adding minutes are called "top up" minutes. I used to buy top up minutes from 7-11 stores which are on almost every corner in Thailand. Lately however, I have a contact that sales top-up minutes using SMS top up. Using this method, I can call them and "show my number". This is their signal to add 200 Baht of minutes to my phone. Then I pay them back later on when I see them. I will receive an SMS message notifying me when minutes have been added to my SIM number. Checking your balance is as easy as dialing *121# A message will be displayed letting you know how many minutes you have left.

You can also use Internet data services (EDGE mainly or GPRS) with the voice minutes but you burn through these very fast. I don't know what they charge (or how) but I lost 300 Baht very quickly. A better method is to call AIS and request a data package. With these, you can get 20 hours of data for 150 Baht or 50 hours for 200 Baht. At first I opted for 20 hours and was very happy. Then I dialed *139# to check how many hours/minutes I had left on my phone and was surprised that after beginning the program, I used up nearly all of my time. After some trial and error with my iPhone, I finally figured out several things:

1. Turn off "Data Roaming in Settings -> General -> Network
2. Make sure any apps that use "Push Notifications" are disabled. Facebook and IM apps use this for sure. In addition, Skype has a "Stay Online" on/off switch. I turned this to off.
3. In Settings -> Mail, Contacts, Calendars -> Fetch New Data, turn off Push and set Fetch to Manually. Now, I won't use up minutes until I actually go to check my email. Yes, you won't know if you got mail until you check, but this is the best option for me.
iPhone Email Fetch Thailand

Doing these three things helped me to drastically slow down my data usage. I still will come across a game app that uses online leader boards or some other app like Amazon's Kindle app that checks to see if it needs to download any new books you purchased. There is no way to turn off most of these so you just have to be careful. Or if you're really concerned, turn on airplane mode!

Most of my time is spent in locations where I have Wi-Fi access so the only real time I need cellular internet is when I travel. So far, 50 hours is just about perfect!




Andrew Froehlich, CCNA, CCNA VOICE, CCNP, CCSP, CCDP, F5 Systems Engineer, is the President of West Gate Networks, a network and IT consulting firm based in Chicago. He also writes articles for Any Tech at http://www.westgatenetworks.com/anytech

วันอังคารที่ 19 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2553

Martial Arts in Bangkok Thailand

After watching a Muay Thai kickboxing tournament in Bangkok, Thailand, I decided to search for a training center and try out the sport myself. Since I had a black belt in Tae Kwon Do and Judo, I had the mistaken belief that Muay Thai would be easy. After a two hour session, my ribs were bruised, I'd lost about six pounds from sweating, and I could barely kick the pad that the instructor held in front of me.

Muay Thai kickboxing competitions start out with the competitors walking into the arena accompanied by the uniquely Asian sounds of a small band beating drums and playing handheld wind instruments. The opponents each enter the ring and proceed to do a traditional dance to honor the sport and the history of Thailand. After taking off their stylish robes and ornamental headbands, they face each other, wait for the referee to begin the match, and then proceed to fight with punches, kicks, and brutal knee attacks. Each school in the Bangkok area regularly enters competitors into weekly fights so they can gain experience for the much larger national and International tournaments held throughout the year. Because the daily pay for a Thai worker averages $2 and the reward money of winning at a large tournament are so high, the competition between fighters is fierce.

I was backpacking through Thailand at the time, so naturally I stayed in the Khao San Road area with all the other travelers from around the world. Finding a training center was as easy as walking down the little side streets and keeping a look out for heavy bags and gym related equipment. It wasn't long before I stumbled upon a small Kickboxing center. Since the gym was located in the Bangkok district, where most foreign travelers stay, the head coach spoke some English and was used to people dropping in for a day class. The cost was $5 for as long as I wanted to train that day; which turned out to be two hours.

We started the class by individually stretching and doing some cardiovascular for warm-up; this was different than the Martial Arts classes that I had attended in America because we did all the stretching and warming-up as a group. After everyone was feeling good and awake, we broke off into pairs and went to the different stations that were set up around the gym. These included; working on actual sparring inside the ring with the instructor, more cardiovascular areas like a stationary bike and jump rope, heavy bag punching, a speed bag, and also an area where one person would hold a large two-handed pad while the other trainee would practice knee attacks.

I had a great experience training there and ended up going back quite a few times over the next three weeks. However, I never felt comfortable enough with the sport to actually try out a weekly tournament. There are some local competitions in Bangkok that allow foreigners to fight, but you have to be sponsored by a local coach, and the only way to receive that blessing is to find a gym and train there for awhile.



วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 14 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2553

Boat Racing In Thailand

The Boat races are held in Thailand every year during the month of September when all the rivers and waterways are in full spate. The races are held across the country specially in provinces of Pichit, Phitsanulok, Narathiwat, Nan, Angthong, Pathum Thani, Surat Thani and Ayutthaya.

The boat racing is a traditional event in Thailand. History of boat racing goes back to Ayutthaya kingdom, some 600 years ago. During those times the boat races were held to keep men physically and mentally fit during times when there were constant shadows of war looming over the country. However, today boat races are entertainment and boat racing is considered to be a national sport.

The boats used in boat racing are constructed from a single large trunk of a dugout tree. Each boat can accommodate a maximum of 60 oarsmen. The oarsmen sit in two rows in order to make the boat move with maximum speed. Each boat is given a different colored dress. All oarsmen in a boat wear a similar outfits. During the race, the boats are decorated with a large number of flowers and ribbons.

The boat race is a colorful festival, which attracts several local as well as the foreign spectators. The spectators watch the sport with utmost enthusiasm and this lasts right till the end of the race with spectators cheering their favorite team. The impromptu narration of the professional announcer makes the sport all the more interesting and the spectators have a plenty of fun during the sport. At the end of the race, the winning team is awarded a trophy and prize.




Check Out More Articles:

Tasty Thai Food Recipes , Pad Thai Fast Food Recipe, Escort Agency In Thailand

วันพุธที่ 13 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2553

Burmese Gem Smuggling is Part of Border Life

MAE SOT, Thailand – The futility of stopping smuggled goods coming into Thailand hits you like the proverbial two-by-four in the face when you look across the Moi River into Myanmar

The Friendship Bridge has a constant stream of pedestrian traffic, and at least as many people are crossing the river on inner tubes or in small boats. And in the dry season the two months both sides of New Years many just wade through the knee-deep water.

The Thai military keeps an eye on the movement but makes no effort to stop the traffic. The Thai immigration net starts with a check point nearly 10 kilometers (six miles) inside the country. And at that point they are more concerned with people entering illegally than the movement of goods.

And the crossing into Mae Sot is only one spot along the 2,107-kilometer
(1,309.8-mile) border.

Thai law requires import duty on precious stones, and police have on occasion arrested people for breaking the law. But it’s rare and when people are charged it is usually in Bangkok.

The laws are old - Sections 27 of the Customs Act of 1926, and Sections 16 and
17 of the Customs Act of 1939 – and pre-date Thailand becoming a global cutting and polish center for colored stones. Now most stones are imported for value-added work then exported again, so Thailand makes money from the business and the duty charge doesn’t help encourage bringing stones to Thailand. For some time when Thailand produced its own rough from mines near Cambodia and Myanmar, they didn’t need the imported goods. Now though, with their own mines dried up, the rough has to come from outside Thailand.

In America it is legal to import loose stones and not pay duty, as long as you declare their value. Even stones illegally taken from their country of origin can be imported without duties to the United States.

But, Thailand has not changed their laws to accommodate their gems and jewelry industry; so the duty charges remain. And duties add cost, and smuggling is easy and cheap, but adds one more obstacle in an arduous and risky business.
That is the smuggling on the Thai side, in Myanmar it’s more difficult.

An indication of how spread out the industry is in Thailand, it was in Chanthaburi in the east of the country near Cambodia, that a man who smuggled colored stones out of Myanmar explained part of the game.

He said the trickiest part is in Myanmar itself where the over-bearing military government wants their take and imposes an export tax on all stones. The generals have made efforts to increase gem sales within the country so more of the money stays in Myanmar.

On September 29, 1995, they enacted the Myanmar Gems Law to foster a free market for gems. The law allowed dealers to sell the stones mined, cut and polished in Myanmar on the open market in Myanmar.

But the seller in Chanthaburi said vast amounts of stones continue to be smuggled out of Myanmar, with a lot of people involved carrying small amounts.
Some deliver to buyers at the border, and others bring the stones to market in Thailand themselves.

It’s hard to get details of how things are moved within Myanmar, with most smugglers seeing little benefit in telling, and suspicious when people ask too many questions.

But, as some say in Mae Sot, stones travel by all means. Even the soldiers smuggle stones. And some of the ethnic armies that have signed peace deals with the Yangon generals are involved, too. In fact smuggling occurs at virtually every level.

Those who don’t want to smuggle the goods themselves can find people who will.

The route from the mines at Mogok and Mong Hsu for colored stones, and Hpakan for jade is by far more dangerous and difficult in Myanmar. It is generally a two-day journey to Mae Sot, often much of it on foot, and there are a host of potential dangers passing through areas controlled by various groups and fees paid along the way.

But, the smuggling routes are decades, even centuries, old so well established with their own accepted rules. They are so entrenched that many consider it carrying goods along a trade route not smuggling.

Once in Thailand, moving stones in small amounts is pretty easy and requires few precautions. But if someone wants to move a lot of valuable stones it is wise to make arrangements. And it can be cheaper to pay the right people a small sum of a few thousand baht (a hundred or so dollars) before moving the stones, than having to pay them a lot after being discovered with them.

Stones sometimes piggyback with other goods coming into Thailand from Myanmar.
The Myanmar vegetables and perishable produce go little further than the border towns, but teak goods, old and antique furniture and ornaments from a desperately poor country selling its heritage to survive, are pretty common.
And then there are the drugs.

The movement of metamphetamine the Thais call “ya ba” (crazy drug) started changing the border dynamics about 2000 when the drug started being manufactured in large quantities along the border regions.

Crackdowns on the drug seen as destroying the fabric of Thai life were severe and common. More than 2,500 drug dealers were killed in 2002 during the government’s effort to ride Thailand of the drug. Government authorities were quick to point out most of the killing was between drug dealers.

The result for the gem trade was the more thorough searches for drugs could also turn up stones, which would drive the price up with the carrier having to pay a “fine” to continue with their wares. But, the authorities look for big shipments of drugs, so the impact on caring small amounts of stones has been minimal.

Still, the drug trade is widespread along the border regions, and sometimes linked to the gem trade. The United Wa State Army (UWSA), one of Myanmar’s numerous ethnic armies, is one group involved in the drug trade, and using the gem trade to hide their drug dealings, according to Thai government sources.

The military government in Yangon signed a deal with the UWSA in June 2001, which included the condition they stopped dealing in drugs and turn to gems.
But according to Thai government sources, the UWSA decided the two businesses were better than one. And they reportedly used the bi-annual gem auctions hosted by the Myanmar Gems Enterprise to launder drug money. At past auctions, Wa traders bid on their own gems paying more than the original costs to launder the money.

But a lot of gem dealers say the drug connection is overblown. They point out that it’s too risky to transport gems with drugs. Carrying them alone is safer and there are many willing to do so.

Finding “mules” to carry stones is easy enough with much of Myanmar in dire economic straights. Migrants come to Thailand in the hundreds of thousands looking for work. An Amnesty International report released in June (2005) states migrants from Myanmar take the dangerous, dirty jobs that Thais don’t want.

The report says they are “paid well below the Thai minimum wage, work long hours in unhealthy conditions and are at risk of arbitrary arrest and deportation.”

Some add it’s a long border and gem rough can be carried in small amounts. Some Bangkok gem dealers, in fact, say many stones are “smuggled” into Thailand in coat pockets.

The gems are getting in, have been for centuries, and will continue to do so.

In Mae Sot the number of gem dealers hawking stones during the daily street market has increased in recent years. Now Prasatwithi Road is often crowded between 11 am and 2 pm. And you’re as likely to hear Burmese spoken as Thai.

The stones are from everywhere, including Africa, but most are from Myanmar. But some of them go from Myanmar to Chanthaburi, then back to Mae Sot. Cutting and polishing is much better in Chanthaburi, it's pretty mediocre in Mae Sot, many say.

Jade has become more abundant, but the more precious stones generate more interest, and rubies remain the biggest draw.

But buyers say more sellers does not necessarily mean more sales. Noi said she had 20 years in the business in Mae Sot, and the quantity of stones is not much more than before, there are just more people selling smaller amounts.

The American embargo of everything from Myanmar had little impact on gems because it didn’t have time to. And now rough from the pariah state is legal again. That might be a good thing considering the futility of a world ruby market without rough from Myanmar, where most dealers estimate about 80 per cent of the original content coming from. And, it’s the better of the lot in the world, too.

During the time when even rough was considered banned from Myanmar, high quality rubies started appearing from Vietnam, Sri Lanka and elsewhere. Now with rough from Myanmar legal – as long as it is significantly improved else where – those same stones are back to being from Myanmar.

American customs agents would be hard pressed to know a Mogok ruby from a Vietnam ruby, anyway, so enforcing the ban would have proven difficult at best.
And those same customs officials have more pressing items to search for such as weapons and drugs.

But its not just rubies and other colored stones that were getting around the embargo. Garment factories reportedly sew on labels that say made in Thailand, China other another country, and through middlemen there sell the clothing in the U.S. and EU countries.

Embargoes are difficult to sustain, and it the case of something as valuable and easily transportable as colored stones, next to impossible.

American companies stopped buying rubies and everything else from Myanmar in
2003 when the United States banned imports of all Myanmar products with the Burmese Freedom and Democracy act enacted on August 28. The ban was in protest of the ruling generals’ human rights abuses.

Then in December 2004 the US Customs department changed the rule on colored stones. The new rules stated that gems mined in Myanmar, but cut and polished in other countries, are not classified as from Myanmar. So rubies and other stones were effectively exempted from the ban.

Most colored stones from Myanmar are cut and polished in Canthaburi, a global center for heat treatment. Even stones already cut and polished in Myanmar, are often done so again because the skill level there is inferior to Thai workmanship.

Still, some American companies have stuck with the ban, reportedly including Tiffany & Co, which in March 2005 said it would not buy stones from Myanmar.
Chairman and CEO Michael Kowalski said in a state: “We support democratic reforms and an end to human rights abuses in that country and we believe our customers would agree with that position.”

Aung Din, a Burmese co-founder of the US Campaign for Burma called it a good policy.

“Mining in Burma (Myanmar) supports the ruling dictator while bleeding the Burmese people, which is why no one should buy these ‘blood gems’,” he told Thai-based Irrawaddy magazine.

Gems are currently a main source of income for the military government.
According to Myanmar government figures, they earned $22 million at the second of the two official auctions in 2004, an event held twice a year since 1992.

The Myanmar Gems Emporium as it is called dates back to 1964 when it was an informal gathering. Then in 1992 in an effort to earn more from the gems, the generals had the Myanmar Gems Enterprise, under the Ministry of Mines, hold two a year.

But, that was for official sales. The Myanmar government gets nothing from stones smuggled into Thailand.

“There are two ways to get stones from Burma. One is to deal with the Burmese government at their auctions. The other is to deal with people who smuggle it across the border into Thailand. What they are smuggling the government in Burma doesn’t get anything,” a Bangkok gem dealer said.

Jade is another matter. A lot comes into Thailand, but more is going straight to China, with a growing market for the stone in the expanding economy there.

And the jade mines in northern Myanmar are conveniently close to the 2,204-kilometer (1,370-mile) border between the two countries.

It doesn’t seem how tight the generals in Yangon tighten the net; colored stones will continue to travel their well plod routes out of the country and into the world market.

For more information on these can be found here, Burmese gemstones [http://gemdreamz.com] & jewelry [http://jewelry].



วันอังคารที่ 5 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2553

Adventurous Thailand

Most of the resorts in the coast offer adventure games like paragliding, bungee jumping and jet skiing. So, free falling from great heights and cutting through the water at great speeds in easily achievable. For people who enjoy exploring life underwater, places like Phuket and Phi Phi Islands offer diving, snorkeling and also submarine drives.

Many people confine themselves to the south of Thailand and make a mistake of not travelling north. The Northern Thailand is full of adventure with high mountains and terrains with challenging forest areas and waterfalls. Trekking is a very big business in this part of the country and the peak season for trekking is between November and February. During this period the air is clear and the weather is also apt. There are many services in the provinces of Chiang Mai, Chiang Rai, Mae Hong Son and Pai that offer trekking tours. The trekking often lasts between three to five days and you will need a good pair of trekking shoes and a back pack to encounter the heat.

The trekking tour is lead by a guide who will take you through small ethnic villages of Lisu, Karen, Meo, Akha and Paduang. All these tribes are very different from each other with different language, dress and culture. These people have migrated to this part of Thailand and also to Vietnam from China within the last century. The trek tour will also include rafting and elephant riding too.

If rafting while trekking is not good enough adventure for you then there are many services that offers the white water variety. In the rainy season starts from June to January and the water level raises with intense rainfalls and it adds to the fun. Pai is the place where you can find the best of such services.

If you are a biker then Thailand offers the best off road motorcycle riding in the world. The roads passing through the mountain regions with awesome and flabbergasting scenery are simply excellent. There are many developed motels and restaurants in the route and you will never be in need of anything while riding as it makes you forget almost everything. You can chose to go on a tour or hire your own bike/ Chiang Mai offers the best services when it comes to renting bikes. It is good to have a guide with you while travelling off roads; someone who knows the place very well.

Also nowadays mountain biking is getting really popular and there are many operators who run tours. Thailand is a must go place for people who love to live their life at its fullest. You can have almost everything in Thailand. From serenity to adventure; you can get almost everything and the best part is, all these comes real cheap




Yukorn Chanmanee : [http://www.thailandinfomation.com].

วันอาทิตย์ที่ 3 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2553

Mid-Life Game Plan

Are you in control of your life? When a friend starts a new yoga class or reads a "fascinating" book about astrology or the latest benefits of cinnamon, they suddenly become an expert and want to tell you how such and such is going to change their life and you should start doing the same thing right away. What do you do? Being the responsible, skeptical Capricorn that I am, I never pass along far fetched email messages without checking them with scambusters or hoaxes.com etc. Yes, it would be easier to just pass on the information like so many other people do. Have you become just one of the mindless followers?

Combining the experience of having my in-laws move in with us and the research for my "great retirement guide", I have once again come to the conclusion that 80% of the population are sheep, maybe another 15% are vaguely aware that there is a better way to live but can't seem to take any action, maybe a few people who "see the light" too late in life and then that 2-3% of enlightened souls who actually "get it." If it feels good, it is good; happiness comes from within, only you control how you feel and react in every situation; and everything is part of the ever expanding energy of the universe. I may be just too "practical" to ever be truly enlightened but little by little I'm being convinced that we create/control a lot more of our life than we realize.

Ok, my point is...you and I have another thirty to forty years of life left in us. Are we going to live those years pretty much like we lived the last forty? I say we will, unless we stop what we are doing and try to rise above, detach ourselves from what our bodies are doing every day and sort of look at the big picture. They say we all have made our own little map of reality. From our teachers and our own experiences we created this map and it comes in handy so we don't have to re-learn everything every day. We know how to drive a car, we know what a good mother or father should do, we know the process of aging: getting older, weaker and deteriorating until we finally die. The thing is, most people believe their map is reality. So when something happens that they don't understand, instead of adjusting their "map" to match reality, they cling to the map and clash with realty by getting angry, depressed, sick or just go into some kind of denial.

This can explain so much to me. Two specific instances: I know a woman who has always made up her own version of reality and I never understood how that was possible. As a child, she had quite an imagination. Maybe as an escape from life with a rotten step-father, she slipped up and made sort of a fantasy map of reality where families were supposed to be a certain way, her career path was far beyond her abilities and everything in general would be perfect. (I totally understand and may have done something similar) The problem is that she burned the map into her mind as reality and everything that didn't match the map was caused by some unreasonable person or extraordinary event beyond her control. She has probably lost a dozen jobs and not a single one was because she couldn't do the work. They were all "politics" or someone lied to her when she was hired or the people she worked with were jealous, etc. The "truth" didn't match her map so it couldn't be true.

The second instance was when I found out that some people actually don't like me! (can you imagine that?) Of course I knew I wasn't a "fit" with the jocks or high society types and accepted that I could just rate a neutral "zero" with some people. I was never openly mistreated by anyone so it never even occurred to me that someone could actually not like me. Maybe just my ego but that possibility wasn't even on my map. I'll admit that I was a little shocked for a few days. But unlike the woman above, I adjusted my map and it is something I have to consider when dealing with new people.

Back to thinking about the next forty years. Do I continue to work constantly, feeling guilty when I "sneak" in some time for myself? Grow old, feeble, deaf, blind and finally die? In other words, do we follow the same path as our parents and 98% of their generation? I am trying to flesh out the idea of re-inventing myself for my second adult life. There are many people who believe that we can make at least the next 25 years, the very best of our lives. It wouldn't be easy in the beginning but they could be right and I think it is worth taking a closer look. If you were living with your parents, you would be reminded every day of exactly what I am saying. I am determined to find out exactly what it will take to make my next forty years extraordinary. What about you?




Rick Perkins and his wife, Deana have owned and operated their offline manufacturing business since 1980. http://www.bestbadge.com Rick used their experiences to create http://www.SelfHelpPress.com, a free site for personal and business success tips. Now he tackles the challenge of the "Baby Boomer's" quest for a great retirement life in his book "A Smart Person's Guide to a Great Retirement" Enjoy your 2nd Adult life with everything we can provide. http://www.AddedYears.com