Wednesday, 26 October 2011

Bangkok Flood Update

Hello!

It's been confirmed that the majority of Bangkok is going to flood and be under water. Much more than that, we don't know. I could be between 10cm to 2m, it could be all of Bangkok or just some areas, it could last for weeks or just for an hour and no one really knows when it'll hit. That's about the size of it!

Why? An especially heavy monsoon season in the north, build up of water at dams in the north, quite a bit of rain in Bangkok (although it's thankfully been quite dry for the last few days) and high tides making the Chao Phraya river higher than normal. Many of the provinces in the north have been totally wiped out. Although there is flooding every year in Thailand, this is claimed to be the worst in half a century. The flooding has been hard and lasted long. Areas that would usually be reasonably unaffected, like the old capital Ayutthaya, has been under 2 metres of water for weeks. Homes, crops and temples have been destroyed, not to mention the ever rising number of people who have sadly lost their lives.
Ancient temples at Ayutthaya under 2m of flood water
From what I can gather, Bangkok floods regularly. The locals are used to wading through flash floods from the huge storms that rage through the monsoon season. They're even used to flooding in some localised areas - Bangkok is built on a flood plain after all. But Bangkok is not used to quite so much water heading towards them.

Some reports say 10 billion cubic metres of water need to reach the Gulf of Thailand, others say 12 billion. Either way, a massive amount of water is making it's way, slowly but surely towards the sea and Bangkok stands in its way.

Many northern districts of Bangkok have been flooded already and panic is beginning to set in. 2 weeks ago, this was the view of my apartment building.
Small pile of bags and a row one bag high, just to the left of the
security guard
And this was the sand bag wall at school - 2 or 3 bags high
Some preparations were being made. Water was still available in the shops at this point, although many shelves were already clearing pretty quickly. Then on the Wednesday before half term, it rained - and I mean RAINED. It was about lunchtime and we were at school. It was so heavy that within literally 5 minutes the storm drains were full and water was rising in the play ground.
View at the back of the school overlooking the river
About 2 inches of water in 5 minutes
The thunder and lightning was some of the loudest and brightest I've ever experienced and the kids were screaming every time it flashed and cracked. But within 20 minutes it passed and the drains recovered and everything returned to normal. It did make us realise quite how much difference a rain storm would make to the flooding though.
And this is the height of the sandbags now! Again with the
security guard. 
The sandbag wall goes right along the building - I presume they're
expecting flooding from both the river and Chan Road (which floods often)
You can see how high it is! About 4 foot?
The back door to the school theatre is piled high
And the sandbags at school have grown in height...
...and volume

I don't really have any pictures of raging torrents of water or thigh high wading because that, thankfully, isn't happening here. It's very slow and subtle. The river height varies between high and low tide, but it is beginning to breach the banks in the field next to the apartments and the low tide is looking a little like high tide looked last week. Apparently it'll rise another metre or so in the next few days which is when the real flooding will hit the riverside area.

This is a picture of the field outside my apartment windows that my balcony overlooks. Some people live in lean to huts on it and often sit on the pier and fish, or the children swim in the river (not something I fancy!). This is probably the easiest way for me to judge the extent of the flooding at the moment, although for you lot it probably won't mean much. So... the green line is where the river has flowed to so far (when the tide is high). The blue line is the edge of the field and the start of the concrete pier that stands above the edge of the river. The red line is where the pier ends and is above the water usually but it has now covered it completed. The little red line at the bottom is next to a person and kinda shows how big a person is to give the picture some scale. Hmm...think I'll have to work on my explaining skills... :P

The apartments and school are very close to the river. While we are the second building and about 300m away from the bank, if the river does breach we are likely to have water outside the apartments.

The English Thai newspapers have been keeping us updated with maps and charts. Here is one that has been released by the Bangkok Post in the last few days to give an idea about which areas will flood most and by how much. I live in the small red area by the river in the distract marked 4 called Bankholaem which looks like it can expect 1-2 metres. June and family live in Suan Luang to the east of me and looks like they can expect up to a metre. Very much hoping that will not be the case xxx

So, we're preparing as much as possible. Being on the 12th floor I'm lucky enough not to have to move my belongings or worry about my possessions getting destroyed like so make other poor people in Bangkok and Thailand. I'm also lucky enough to have access to clean and safe drinking water as both the apartments and school have their own reverse osmosis machines that will filter the tap water and make it safe to drink (unless the tap water is brown as it has been reported in some very flooded areas of Bangkok). I'm again very lucky as the apartments have a range of measures in place to feed, water and help us should we be stranded in the building for a few days. I'm even more lucky to have family and friends and colleagues who are supportive, caring and are looking out for me both in Bangkok and in the UK - updating me on breaking news, sharing supplies and giving advice. Thank you!

Many people are panicking and being incredibly dramatic - this is frustrating when there are so many people in situations far worse off that we are, having lost their homes, families, health or worldly possessions and being unable to get clean drinking water, food or medical supplies. Many people are being flippant and commenting on how nice an extra weekend's holiday will be - even more frustrating knowing how serious and destructive the flood has been for many people. I would like to think I'm somewhere in the middle - aware of how difficult a time this could be and being sensible and safe but also making the best of a bad situation and remembering how lucky I am. I'll keep you posted!

Sunday, 9 October 2011

Food Shopping Experience - Foodland

Now...some people (Rachel) have already taken the mick out of my photo taking and blog posting. Well...I don't care. I know there are some geeky people out there (Helen) who will enjoy finding out about food shopping a la Bangkok and some supportive friends (Katie, Kate and mostly the rest of you) who will read this and pretend I'm not a loser. :P

I miss UK supermarkets and farm shops! Oh to pop to Bell's farm shop and buy some potatoes that grew a few metres away from where I'm standing. Or to pick my own strawberries! Or to buy some ROOT VEGETABLES. These things aren't impossible here, but they are more difficult.

Having said that, I love food shopping (as you all know) and I am enjoying finding which are the best places to go. So, I'm going to document my exciting adventures around Bangkok's leading supermarkets. Until I go and visit some more interesting places and will then blog about them!

Supermarket Number One: Foodland!

Rach and I spend 30 hot and sweaty minutes wandering around and around Sala Daeng BTS station looking for this place. The map was clearly wrong. Although we did get to practice some Thai - and were understood!

My short walk to the boat
The boat - best way to travel!
Then the skytrain - another pretty good way to travel!
Off just a few stops away at Sala Daeng
Hurrah! After 30 mins of wandering we find the promised (food) land
Many a snack
But a small selection of fruit and veg
So all in all a disappointing trip! Was it worth traipsing around for? No. Give me TOPS and Villa anyday! To make us feel better we accidentally fell into Coyotes. 

Where they have 75 different types of Margarita and it happened
to be buy one get one free...go on then 
We were also forced to have enchiladas with extra guacamole and sour cream
Verdict: Not a great selection, not really worth the trip. However, Coyotes saved the day! 

Saturday, 8 October 2011

Food Episode 1

Homemade sausage, cider and onion gravy, mash and veg. Yum!

And the aftermath!

Where I go to buy nice bread! 

This is in a supermarket...but looks like a posh outdoor market!

A good place for quick lunch - Thai, Chinese or Indian!

The bakery downstairs...good for chocolate indulgence desserts, quiche and macaroons.

Street food - aroy maak! 

Koh Samet Wet Weekend

So, I went for a well needed weekend break to Koh Samet with some friends from work. The hotel was booked, the taxi was booked, the bag was packed...lessons finished...and the rain started! Well, not quite that soon but still...the wettest weekend ever!

Lovely swans on the bed at the hotel.

Fire show on the beach

More fire show



We had about an hour of sunshine!

And then the clouds started coming

And coming...

We braved it out for as long as we could before...

A night out for dinner and drinks left us drenched through!
It was a fab weekend evening though we got soaked. Haven't laughed so much in ages! We had a back and shoulder massage, foot massage and foot refurbish on the beach all for 500THB! Amazing and although I had to hold an umbrella over me and the masseuse it was relaxing!

Will definitely be going back, but hopefully it'll be a bit drier!