Bike travel to ancient cities

| Posted in Historic Places, Thailand

After a couple of days spent in Bangkok I eventually decide I can’t postpone departure any longer so in the morning I take my bike to the nearby train station. Yes, it’s the easy way, but I already had a look at a map of Bangkok and just the thought of finding a half pleasurable way of escaping that humid chaos of cars and tuk tuks that define Bangkok gave me a headache. Sure, there’s the highway but spending most of a day riding a highway just didn’t appeal when I knew I could put myself and the bike on the train. So 15 Bath bought me a ticket but it cost another 90 Bath to have my bike with me.

The train is 3nd class and doesn’t move much faster than I could have done on my bicycle. After two and a half hours of travel I have made it to 85 km north of Bangkok, where I get off in Ayutthaya. I have been here before, so being familiar with the city’s layout I zip right out of the train, crosses the bridge over the river – actually the city is connected to to Bangkok via the river Chao Phraya – to the old part of town and in less than ten minutes I’m installed in a guesthouse. Eventually, I meet to other cyclists, just arrived from Bangkok. They had been riding the highway and said it was just fine. Oh well!

Ayutthaya is the first of a number of ancient cities with a glorious past on my route, all known for their ruins of temples – we are of course talking UNESCO classified stuff here… Next up is Lopburi, where I spent a couple of days in good company with some nice people and monkeys (Lopburi is famous for its monkeys). From Lopburi I went to Uthai Thani. Here I made the dubious decision to stay away from the main roads and instead explore the back roads. A miscalculation of distances on my part meant an improvised stop in Pat Yao some 80 km up the road – I think my map should rather be called a sketch or maybe I need to work on my map reading skills. From Pat Yao it was another 130 km to Kamphaeng Phet. That was a long, warm day on the bike figting a head wind in not so inspiring territory. Anyway, Kampaeng Phet is where I am know and just have explored some of its lesser known ruins. I will save the history lesson for later and possibly do a write up on all cities at some point. Now the road is calling!

Cycling in Ayutthaya.
Thais playing football in Ayutthaya.

Thais playing football among the ancient ruins of Ayutthaya.

Write a comment