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Royalty and
commoners enjoy the seaside ambience of Hua Hin, on the Gulf of Thailand
not far south of Bangkok.
Tackiness
and pollution have taken their toll... but the now-notorious Pattaya
was just a deserted strip of sand way back when the royal family and the
elite of 1920s Bangkok discovered Hua Hin. Thailand's original resort,
the Hua Hin Railway Hotel, welcomed carriage loads of guests arriving
on the new railway which ran south to British Malaya.
Royals and
commoners alike continue to make the journey from the capital, joined
by a swelling contingent of falang who appreciate the difference from
better-known resort towns.
Hua Hin lies
232 kilometres (139 miles) south of Bangkok in Prachuab Khiri Khan Province
- less than four hours by road or rail from the Big Mango.
At first pass
Hua Hin seems a microcosm of modern Thailand: another fair-sized, dusty
Thai town boasting several ugly wedding-cake waterfront towers and a scattering
of tourist bars. Three-wheeled samlors and tuk-tuks whine past dilapidated
teakwood shophouses, clusters of dried-squid stalls on street corners
and the many tacky, bathroom-tiled 'Asian moderne' concrete boxes. Let's
make for the beach...
The beaches,
periodically scoured of touts and litter, are equipped with lounge chairs
and umbrellas, and vendors bearing steamed crabs, mussels and beer.
Pony rides are
on hand, for the children. Before breakfast you can watch the orange and
blue striped fishing trawlers nose into the main pier, then disgorge their
catch in buckets full.
Golfers enjoy
a wide choice of diversions here. In 1932 Rama VII was playing golf at
the Royal Hua Hin, Thailand's oldest 18-hole layout, when he received
the news of the country's first military coup. Springfield, a Jack Nicklaus
design, Majestic Creek, Lake View, Palm Hills, and Milford, join many
others on the way in from Bangkok.
Away from the
waterfront, Hua Hin's timber-panelled railway station, with its charming,
filigreed royal retiring room standing alone on the platform, looks a
treat in the golden light of late afternoon. Time to head back to the
waterfront, where the seafood served in the open-air restaurants next
to Tha Thiap Reua Pramong, the big fishing pier, has to be as good as
any. Cotton fish, perch, mussels, crab and the ubiquitous squid can be
recommended. After dark, the action moves to the bustling night market
flogging bootleg watches, cassette tapes and designer tee-shirts. Many
night-market vendors also set out mouth-watering treats to sizzle on their
charcoal grills.
Right on the
beachfront in the heart of town, the 1923-vintage Hotel Sofitel Central
- formerly the Railway, and which some may recognise as the Hotel Le Phnom
in The Killing Fields - commands fifteen hectares of landscaped greenery,
including a topiary garden of intricate animal shaped bushes, a giant
chess set, an orchid and butterfly farm, two putting greens and a croquet
lawn. Renovations in 1986 took the hotel back to its Edwardian past, richly
decorated with cut-glass chandeliers, antique teakwood verandahs and cool
marble floors.
Chiva-Som, a
luxurious spa resort, also helps place Hua Hin on the international tourism
map. At this 'Haven of Life' the staff blend eastern and western health
philosophies with planned nutrition (wine only at dinner-time!), aerobics,
massage and hydrotherapy. My sybaritic spies, posing as ladies of leisure,
found it all a little bit over the top; if you question the cost, you
can't afford it.
Ratchaniwet
Marukkha Thayawan, the Palace of Love and Hope, was built on the coast
between Cha-am and Hua Hin for King Vajiravudh, Rama VI, who reigned 1910-1925).
The monarch hoped to father an heir in this breezy pleasure pavilion where
sea breezes waft through fretworked golden teak, but he seems to have
made little use of his love nest. It is enclosed within a military reservation
but open to the public. In 1928 his successor Rama VII built Klai Kangwon,
another Hua Hin palace which is still in use.
The small town
of Cha-am, 25 kilometres down the road, is blessed with a long casuarina-fringed
beach and an even quieter atmosphere. Resorts are springing up between
the two towns and the most spectacular of these is the Dusit Resort &
Polo Club. Faced with competing against the cachet of the Sofitel Central
Hua Hin, the designers of this property created something quite distinctive.
When the lights come on at dusk the cascading pools tumbling down towards
the beach are spectacular. The Thai Royal Family dines here on occasion
- need one say more?
On the way back
to Bangkok is the city of Petchburi, where the steep limestone pinnacle
of Phra Nakhon Khiri, the Holy City Hill, commands the hot, steamy lowlands.
King Mongkut, Rama IV, built himself a retreat up here in the mid-19th
century, creating a beguiling mix of Thai stupas, Chinese screens and
the framed prints of Napoleonic battles which encapsulates his Kingdom's
historic relationships with the outside world.
Alone among
their less adept neighbours, the astute kings of 19th-century Siam (as
it then was) kept one step ahead of the great colonizing powers, adopting
western technology and ideas whilst maintaining their country's cultural
integrity. A cable car provides an easy ascent out of reach of the marauding
monkeys for which cameras, necklaces and snacks are easy targets - the
staff carry slingshots to keep these shameless thieves in check!
Thai Song Dam
people, an ethnic minority whose forbears emigrated from the Dien Bien
Phu region of northern Vietnam two centuries ago, have settled in a village
outside Petchburi.
The village's
3000 people still preserve their telltale preference for sticky rice and
their skills in dyeing homespun cotton with natural indigo (although one
learns that chemical dyes must often substitute for the time-consuming
business of collecting and treating the bark of the indigo tree).
Also in the
Petchburi district is Kaeng Krachan National Park, Thailand's largest
forest reserve yet one of the least visited. There are virtually no amenities
but abundant vistas, thick rainforest, long distance hiking trails and
rivers suitable for rafting. Residents include, reportedly, the rare Sumatran
rhinoceros among less endangered species like elephants, serow, the giant
hornbill and gibbon.
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