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Where did the tourists go in Pai, Thailand?


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13 hours ago, Don Chance said:

Pai is so over rated. Maybe people just some good sense.

 

I'm in Nepal, much better scenery, rice terraces, huge mountains with snow on top, cheap, people speak english and very few tourist right now.

I need to make that Nepal trip soon before I get too old.  Suggestions?  Where to go, what to see. 

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13 hours ago, bendejo said:

I've never been to Pai.  From what I could make out of hearing what travelers say about it the place was a Lonely Planet destination: be there or be square (how's that for an ancient expression?).  Maybe with the certain negative incidents that garnered media attention LP has stopped listing the place, and the new generation of backpackers don't know about it. 

This may sound like a shallow assessment of bp destinations, but it's not completely off.

But it sounds like you found a nice spot OP.  Until the Chinese tour groups arrive.

 

 

I've seen a handful of Chinese here too.  And never saw many in the past.  I don't think this is on their bucket-list of 'go-to' places.  The Chinese seem to get off the plane and into large tour-buses.  Highway 1095 isn't a bus-friendly stretch of road. Vans at best - long tour-buses aren't going to navigate the curves. Flights into the airport spotty.  I don't envision Chinese flocking to Pai anytime soon.

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4 hours ago, boonrawdcnx said:

Not sure what you are going on about? Nobody except a few xenophobe nationalists care about that flag incidence.

Pai has only itself to blame for it’s demise.
Pai was a sleepy village 20 years ago with some tourism - mostly drug related. When in 2004-2006 it suddenly was made famous when the Thai hit movies “Jood-Mai Ruk” and “Ruk Jung” came out and hordes of Thai tourists from all over the country descended on it. The town was not ready for such a sudden influx but expanded rapidly with lots of people trying to cash in on it’s sudden fame. It lasted about 15 years.
Greed, police corruption, environmental damage, uncontrolled development led to it’s demise as it is slowly reverting back to the sleepy village it once was.



Sent from my iPhone using Thaivisa Connect

Sleepy mountain village is good! 

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13 hours ago, Denim said:

Bad people out, good people coming. This time next year there 

will be plenty of Chinese tourists in town to take up the slack.

without the bad people, there is no Pai

Backpackers are Pai. Why would Chinese tourists want to go there?!  

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11 hours ago, mania said:

 

No way would there be such a reaction in tourist sales so quickly. That flag incident just happened Sunday

 

Pai has been on drip feed for awhile now & Thailand in general is headed in the same direction due to obvious reasons.

Agree , when you read about some of the goings on in Pattaya every day the whole place would be boarded up.

 

I went to Pai about 2 years ago and the street food was great but 100 B for a small Leo beer was a bit strong. This was when 50 B - quid.

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Was in Pai last January, and it was packed. Typical for high season. Which made me wonder if it might just be low season now, and that's the reason? 15 years ago you couldn't even guarantee reaching Pai this time of year, such were the roads. Even now it's a seasonal place, with many of the business owners from Bangkok shutting up shop and heading home for 6 months.

I've never been there is low season myself, so just speculating.

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There is absolutely nothing special about Pai. Yes, it is a nice drive and a good place to relax, but it has no wow factor. We only go to see wifes brother and to take our friends elephant for a play in the river for a few hours. Worth going just for that !

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2 hours ago, orang37 said:

Are you living in Nepal ? I've considered moving there.

 

thanks, ~o:37;

 It's changed now too much. Pokhara.

It's easy to find apartments with kitchen living room, 1-2  bedroom for 300-400 a month.

Visa you renew your visa easy enough up to 5 months a year. Not sure maybe you can get a biz visa after that.

 

A lot of pollution from October to May (not as bad as N. Thailand thou.) Then rainy season, now is nice actually, air is clean, a bit hot in the day, then it clear up after a thunderstorm clear view of the mountains, cools down at night. 

Cook for your self is cheap. Nepalis are friendly and speak english more fun than Thailand.

Lot of garbage around, Nepalis spit and litter a lot.

Quality is low, you probably won't like it long term. It's a poor country. Give it try and it is a nice change for SE asia.

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1 hour ago, jaiyen said:

There is absolutely nothing special about Pai. Yes, it is a nice drive and a good place to relax, but it has no wow factor.

Ridiculous.

What "wow factor" are you talking about.

It is special because it is low key and a nice place to hang out for a few days.

Stay in a nice resort a few km outside of town.  Beautiful surroundings and mountains at very reasonable rates.

If you want a Disneyland environment then don't go there.

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3 hours ago, toofarnorth said:

I went to Pai about 2 years ago and the street food was great but 100 B for a small Leo beer was a bit strong. This was when 50 B - quid.

Do you know how hard it is to get a beer truck up that windy road?... :coffee1:

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47 minutes ago, sfokevin said:

 

Do you know how hard it is to get a beer truck up that windy road?... :coffee1:

That's strange coz beer in Mom & Pop stores in Soppong (Bang Ma Pha) over the next hill from Pai are exactly same as my local shop in Chiang Mai ????

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Think of the most popular 'backpacker' area in Thailand. You are correct! But there is more to do there than eat street food and shop for t-shirts. What to do after that 15 minutes of adventure? Pai needs to unclench its granny state cheeks just a bit. Got a massage there. A convent of nuns working with TSA couldn't have come up with a more ritualistic, desensitizing format. Everything for a Stations of the Cross except the incense. I asked about the ritual and was told it was police regulation. Oh well, I really liked the cabin-type hotel we rented.

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17 hours ago, CNXexpat said:

Many years ago Pai was the center of the hippies, then yoga became famous. Now it´s a place for tourists in elephant pants and dreadlocks. The night market is bizarr, you can get lots of pizza, kebab, pasta and other western food but very limited Thai food.

 

The way to Pai and the surrounding is beautiful, the city itself not worth a visit. But if you are in the area, visit the Tham Lod cave. Im my eyes one of the most beautiful caves in Thailand. 

As i recall, it was first put on the map by Joe Cummings, author of Thailand on a Shoestring in the first Lonely Planet edition way back in the 70s or early 80s. I did the circuit by motorcycle from Chiang Mai back in the late eighties when it was still pretty much untouched by tourism. I haven't been back so I can't speak for now, but I believe at one time Cummings lived there - perhaps he still does. In any event, it's a well-worn path from unspoilt, bargain paradise to rapacious, over-touristed, trinket-selling cliche, so perhaps that is what has happened - who knows? I don't.

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