Ive made it safely (although not without stress) into Thailand and I’m now on the Island of Ko Chang! Its totally different from Laos and Cambodia, more developed with lots of cars and trucks and still lots of motorbikes and they all drive on the left hand side! The food is excellent and the people are REALLY friendly. You just don’t get the hassle that I did in Laos and Cambodia.
I left yesterday morning from Sihanoukville and got on the boat to Koh Kong (still on the Cambodian side) and that was a fairly uncomfortable 4 hours. At first I sat on top of the boat due to some advice I was given, but it was so hot and uncomfortable and the live chickens tied up next to me were starting to escape that after 2 hours I went downstairs with everyone else and had to squish between two people and the seat in front of me and I couldn’t move for the rest of the journey.
When we got to Ko Kong it was absolutely pouring (you never get drizzle or showers here) and as soon as I stepped off the boat I was assaulted by the rain and many moto taxi drivers, one grabbing my bags, one pulling my arms in different directions all shouting “Thai Border Thai Border!” I managed to take a few steps forward then found myself (and my bags) on a truck with various other travellers from the boat but they packed about 20 of us in and it was quite a squish. I asked the driver how much it was and he was just shouting “Same Same", so we all thought it would be a dollar. Turns out when we got there he had tripled the price and many people just walked away refusing to pay while he is saying he is going to just take us all back if we don’t pay. When we got to the border in the end, me and a few others gave him a couple dollars each because I couldn’t just give him nothing, even if he was trying to overcharge us.
They had put our bags on a cart which many people weren’t happy about and we all starting taking our bags out of the cart (they were going to charge us for taking our bags 20m) and mine was at the bottom and I couldn’t get it out and I kept slipping and the Cambodians just watched. When I did get it out, I slipped again and dropped all my bags in the mud and puddles and they all thought that was hilarious. I was not happy with that at all, after all the friendliness I had experienced over the last 16 days this was the impression I was left with as I crossed the border. On the other side there were happy smiling Thai officials doing anything to help us. It was such a relief.
After that I got a mini bus along with a few other people to the first main town in Thailand, Trat. As soon aswe stepped off the mini bus there was a smiling woman asking if we wanted to look at her guesthouse, with free transport there …. couldn’t believe our luck. We got driven for free in a car (a real car!) to this guesthouse where everyone else from my mini bus went as well and they all got free transport too. It was pretty shabby but it had a hot shower and was really cheap.
This morning I got a Tuk Tuk to the port and took a boat over to Koh Chang, where I got another Tuk Tuk (along with a French couple and a really friendly retired Canadian couple who gave me some advice on places to stay in Bangkok) To Kai Bai beach. Though I had to wait for ages to get another taxi to take me to Lonely Beach. By that point I was so hot and bothered I just stayed at the first place I came to, they are all pretty much the same, wooden shacks with a bed and a mosquito net and THATS IT. Though I can get a fan for an extra $2. Might get that tomorrow.