GammaGlobulin Posted April 12 Share Posted April 12 Would it be somehow better for an old Farang to die in Thailand having made ZERO preparations? For example, if an old Farang were to die with few assets in Thailand, having chosen to keep all/any personal assets safe in the Home Country, then what would happen? Would this be the best strategy, in fact? What about if the Farang just kept a simple DIY Document, stating the preference to be cremated in a local Temple of the Farang's Choice? Would anyone respect His wishes? Or, what would actually happen. I have just read that the Farng's home-country embassy must be contacted. But, I doubt that the Farang's embassy will arrange some sort of elaborate and expensive funeral procession with tons of flowers, and chanting guys walking behind, and wailing women white sackcloth, with children ahead strewing rose-petals, and big drums banging away, and fireworks overhead. No embassy would spend the money for the average Farang. And, so would the Farang just be burned in an oven, and then what might happen to the ashes? Would they just be left in the oven, to fuel the next cremation? It seems to me that making no provisions might be best. Some suspense might even be the result of zero preparations. And, might it also be the absolute cheapest option? Of course, the Farang would not know the difference, not matter what circumstances might eventually evolve. My guess is that when a Farang dies with zero preparations, and few family members in the Home Country, then the Farang might receive more tender loving care than if the same thing happened to said Farang in his/her Home country. Anyway, it's something to think about....maybe.... Regards, And inquisitive, as ever, Gamma 1 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post fondue zoo Posted April 12 Popular Post Share Posted April 12 nope, into the klong you go, received by the stinky deeps. 3 1 5 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post Georgealbert Posted April 12 Popular Post Share Posted April 12 (edited) If there are no family in Thailand, the embassy will try to contact a next of kin, to deal with the body. The embassy normally only assists and not pay for anything. Some families may not be able or want to get involved because of costs, etc, and can give permission for a friend to have the released to them for cremation, if such friend is available and the friend will then have to pay the costs. Current law in Thailand states that a unclaimed body is not cremated, but must be buried, after a period of time, normally done by a local charitable foundation. Thanks to @JensenZ who posted a link of those details in the below thread. Edited April 12 by Georgealbert 2 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GammaGlobulin Posted April 12 Author Share Posted April 12 33 minutes ago, Georgealbert said: Some families may not be able or want to get involved because of costs, etc, and can give permission for a friend to have the released to them for cremation, if such friend is available and the friend will then have to pay the costs. Important Addendum: Let us say that the old Farang in question has ZERO friends, and has made ZERO preparations, and that there are Zero relatives willing to become involved: Then.... What is likely to happen? Note Two: Will there be a post mortem, and is this enforced? Note Three: Can the DIY Document left behind by the old Farang state that any earthly belongings be given to an "acquaintance", and will this DIY Document's contents be respected and adhered to? (Or, will the meagre belongings left behind by the old Farang be sold or trashed or donated to the Temple?) Still very inquisitive concerning these points...am I...! 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bubblegum Posted April 12 Share Posted April 12 Ashes are not fuel they rather kill the flames. Zero preparation : Unmarked grave thru hospital/charitable foundation DIY will is preparation actually Post mortem: depending on embassy. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Georgealbert Posted April 12 Share Posted April 12 5 minutes ago, GammaGlobulin said: Important Addendum: Let us say that the old Farang in question has ZERO friends, and has made ZERO preparations, and that there are Zero relatives willing to become involved: Then.... What is likely to happen? Note Two: Will there be a post mortem, and is this enforced? Note Three: Can the DIY Document left behind by the old Farang state that any earthly belongings be given to an "acquaintance", and will this DIY Document's contents be respected and adhered to? (Or, will the meagre belongings left behind by the old Farang be sold or trashed or donated to the Temple?) Still very inquisitive concerning these points...am I...! 1. If no one comes forward, then the body will be disposed of in a pauper burial. 2. Normally if the death is not in hospital, with known medical conditions/accident, the police investigator will send the body for post mortem, in my area that will be Police Hospital BKK. It can vary, but with no relative or friends the local government hospital will be happy to send the body away for post mortem, as to reduce their costs. 3. Any last will, which meets the relevant Thai laws and standards is normally honoured. It will depend if the DIY document has the correct legal standing. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post Gandtee Posted April 12 Popular Post Share Posted April 12 My mother aged eighty eight died here in the year 2000. She was cremated after three days in the local Wat, with a gathering of Thai family and farang friends at a local resort. Most of her ashes were scattered in Sattahip Bay and some were taken back to England by a friend to be scattered where my fathers remains are. He died in 1953. All very inexpensive. My family, Thai and English, are aware of my wishes that are the same as what happened to my mother. I will join her in Sattahip Bay and some of my remains will go back to England to be scattered where my first wife's are who died in 1982, to give my English family a place of remembrance of their parents. I'm aged ninety now so it wont be long before its put to the test. But just not yet. I'll let you know how it goes. 😉 5 2 3 1 6 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post PoorSucker Posted April 12 Popular Post Share Posted April 12 4 minutes ago, Gandtee said: I'll let you know how it goes. Hey, that will be the post of the year. 1 1 2 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GammaGlobulin Posted April 12 Author Share Posted April 12 7 minutes ago, Georgealbert said: 1. If no one comes forward, then the body will be disposed of in a pauper burial. What are the conditions of a pauper burial in Thailand? a. Will the location be completely lost and forgotten? b. Will this be a bass burial? For example, do all the pauper-bodies dying in any given week get buried together? c. In Thailand, do people ever come to pray over the buried paupers? d. Any other interesting facts about the pauper burial sites in Thailand that one should know about? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post Gandtee Posted April 12 Popular Post Share Posted April 12 Just now, PoorSucker said: Hey, that will be the post of the year. Watch this space.😀 1 1 1 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Georgealbert Posted April 12 Share Posted April 12 After every Thai funeral, when I have gone with others, to collect the ashes it has always contained some bone fragments, Depending how good/hot the temple cremation has been, will govern the size and amount of bone fragments.Medical and dental prosthetics are not normally destroyed by the cremation. Also remember that before cremation pacemakers, which can explode in the heat, should be removed. plus silicone implants, radioactive "cancer seeds" and injectable or implantable radioactive isotopes used to treat several types of cancer. The local undertaker will use a mortar and pestle, to make the ashes if you request it, or you can take away the bone fragments.In the UK bone fragments are normally placed in an electric processor which converts them to the ashes. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Georgealbert Posted April 12 Share Posted April 12 11 minutes ago, GammaGlobulin said: What are the conditions of a pauper burial in Thailand? a. Will the location be completely lost and forgotten? b. Will this be a bass burial? For example, do all the pauper-bodies dying in any given week get buried together? c. In Thailand, do people ever come to pray over the buried paupers? d. Any other interesting facts about the pauper burial sites in Thailand that one should know about? From the link to the thread I posted above, “the bodies were buried in the cemetery at Nakhon Nayok until it ran out of space and many of those remains were unearthed and then placed in separate containers at Thammasat University Hospital and the Central Institute of Forensic Science offices”. I have no further knowledge of these sites and no wish to visit them, as past experiences of the local government hospital mortuaries have been enough. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PoorSucker Posted April 12 Share Posted April 12 7 minutes ago, Gandtee said: Watch this space.😀 My grandma talked to her grandmas, grandmas,grandma. born 1796-died 1912. its in the church books. my Grandma asked her about century celebrations, second one was better because she could drink some vodka. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GammaGlobulin Posted April 12 Author Share Posted April 12 30 minutes ago, Georgealbert said: After every Thai funeral, when I have gone with others, to collect the ashes it has always contained some bone fragments, Depending how good/hot the temple cremation has been, will govern the size and amount of bone fragments.Medical and dental prosthetics are not normally destroyed by the cremation. Well, say the old Farang has a large piece of titanium inside him: Would this be worth anything to the mourners, after the flesh was cooked away? 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gottfrid Posted April 12 Share Posted April 12 (edited) Stop with the BS. What happens is that a random temple burns the body and it's thrown out in a selected field. Edited April 12 by Gottfrid Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SenorTashi Posted April 12 Share Posted April 12 2 hours ago, Georgealbert said: the body will be disposed of in a pauper burial. that sounds quite fitting for me really 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Georgealbert Posted April 12 Share Posted April 12 (edited) 7 hours ago, GammaGlobulin said: Well, say the old Farang has a large piece of titanium inside him: Would this be worth anything to the mourners, after the flesh was cooked away? After cremation the metal replacement joints, pins and implants will remain. These are commonly made of stainless steel, cobalt chrome steels and titanium alloys. So I guess there will be some scrap value if the family really want it, or the undertaker or temple would just collect the pieces. A titanium hip after cremation. Edited April 12 by Georgealbert 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Georgealbert Posted April 12 Share Posted April 12 8 hours ago, GammaGlobulin said: What are the conditions of a pauper burial in Thailand? a. Will the location be completely lost and forgotten? b. Will this be a bass burial? For example, do all the pauper-bodies dying in any given week get buried together? c. In Thailand, do people ever come to pray over the buried paupers? d. Any other interesting facts about the pauper burial sites in Thailand that one should know about? Here are a couple of articles about what happens to unclaimed and unidentified bodies. https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3297183/A-brush-death-remains-3-890-unidentified-people-exhumed-CLEANED-ancient-Thai-Buddhist-tradition.html https://damirsagolj.wordpress.com/2012/03/23/bizarre-thailand-unclaimed/ This is the Poh Teck Tung Foundation Cemetery in Samut Sakhon province, for the unclaimed/unidentified bodies. 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GammaGlobulin Posted April 13 Author Share Posted April 13 7 hours ago, Georgealbert said: After cremation the metal replacement joints, pins and implants will remain. These are commonly made of stainless steel, cobalt chrome steels and titanium alloys. So I guess there will be some scrap value if the family really want it, or the undertaker or temple would just collect the pieces. A titanium hip after cremation. That's a really NICE hip-replacement-prosthetic photo you found! Is this your photography work? Nice job! I can't tell the "brand" and manufacturer. Personally, I prefer the Titanium and Ceramic hip prosthetics...because... They stand up much better to heat, when being cremated. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Georgealbert Posted April 13 Share Posted April 13 (edited) 32 minutes ago, GammaGlobulin said: That's a really NICE hip-replacement-prosthetic photo you found! Is this your photography work? Nice job! I can't tell the "brand" and manufacturer. Personally, I prefer the Titanium and Ceramic hip prosthetics...because... They stand up much better to heat, when being cremated. Of course not my picture, but you asked the question about left over metal parts. Been to a lot of crematoriums, previously in the Uk, and there were boxes of items like this keep by the staff to be disposed of later. In Thailand if you go back after the cremation, the remains are raked out by the undertaker onto a metal tray. Depending on how good/hot the cremation process was, will depend on the size and amount of bone fragments left. The family and friends will usually pick through the remains, before they are disposed of. This is my picture, of a friend, last month in pattaya area, after using a mortar and pestle to break the bone fragments up, to transport his remains back to the UK. Edited April 13 by Georgealbert 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GammaGlobulin Posted April 13 Author Share Posted April 13 5 minutes ago, Georgealbert said: Of course not my picture, but you asked the question about left over metal parts. Been to a lot of crematoriums, previously in the Uk, and there were boxes of items like this keep by the staff to be disposed of later. In Thailand if you go back after the cremation, the remains are raked out by the undertaker onto a metal tray. Depending on how good/hot the cremation process was, will depend on the size and amount of bone fragments left. The family and friends will usually pick through the remains, before they are disposed of. This is my picture, of a friend, last month in pattaya area, after using a mortar and pestle to break the bone fragments up, to transport back to the UK. Quite interesting. Thank you. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lacessit Posted April 13 Share Posted April 13 A funeral in my GF's village is about 30,000 baht, including monk rituals. I don't know how much of that is the actual cremation cost. It includes food for mourners. I have told my GF nothing fancy, whether she listens is another matter. I want my ashes scattered on any golf course, probably easier to do that in Australia. Here, the fear of ghosts is still a factor. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post Smokin Joe Posted April 13 Popular Post Share Posted April 13 5 minutes ago, Lacessit said: A funeral in my GF's village is about 30,000 baht, including monk rituals. I don't know how much of that is the actual cremation cost. It includes food for mourners. I have told my GF nothing fancy, whether she listens is another matter. I want my ashes scattered on any golf course, probably easier to do that in Australia. Here, the fear of ghosts is still a factor. When I made my will I wanted it to stipulate that my remains would be scattered around the places that had special meaning to me while alive. My lawyer refused and just pointed to the part where it said I didn't want to be cremated. 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
edwardflory Posted April 13 Share Posted April 13 (edited) What I would like to know is the estimated no frills cost to my wife to cremate me at a local temple - if possible. Someone mentioned 30,000 bt, is this no frills? Edited April 13 by edwardflory spelling Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
The Fugitive Posted April 13 Share Posted April 13 5 minutes ago, edwardflory said: What I would like to know is the estimated no frills cost to my wife to cremate me at a local temple - if possible. Someone mentioned 30,000 bt, is this no frills? Love to know how that's possible (including food). Minimum in our area seems to be 150,000 baht. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
surreybloke Posted April 13 Share Posted April 13 Um reminds me of the song about Ilkley Moor. Bury me / worms eat me up / duck eat worms and someone eats ducks. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lacessit Posted April 13 Share Posted April 13 18 minutes ago, The Fugitive said: Love to know how that's possible (including food). Minimum in our area seems to be 150,000 baht. It was 30,000 baht for my GF's father. Thai rural village. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
khunPer Posted April 13 Share Posted April 13 19 hours ago, GammaGlobulin said: For example, if an old Farang were to die with few assets in Thailand, having chosen to keep all/any personal assets safe in the Home Country, then what would happen? If there are assets in the farang's home country, then costs for funeral should finally be taken from there. Bear in mind that it's the country of primary residence that handles the estate; so, if primary residence was in Thailand, then the estate shall in principle be handles by a Thai court. A good reason to consider last will if you have any assets to leave behind. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Scouse123 Posted April 13 Share Posted April 13 18 hours ago, GammaGlobulin said: Important Addendum: Let us say that the old Farang in question has ZERO friends, and has made ZERO preparations, and that there are Zero relatives willing to become involved: Then.... What is likely to happen? Note Two: Will there be a post mortem, and is this enforced? Note Three: Can the DIY Document left behind by the old Farang state that any earthly belongings be given to an "acquaintance", and will this DIY Document's contents be respected and adhered to? (Or, will the meagre belongings left behind by the old Farang be sold or trashed or donated to the Temple?) Still very inquisitive concerning these points...am I...! Why don't YOU just make proper arrangements instead of ' passing the book? ' 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Georgealbert Posted April 13 Share Posted April 13 (edited) 1 hour ago, edwardflory said: What I would like to know is the estimated no frills cost to my wife to cremate me at a local temple - if possible. Someone mentioned 30,000 bt, is this no frills? My friend on holiday, died last month, Chonburi, the costs were. 1. Government hospital costs, plus 6 nights body storage - 2400 baht 2. Coffin, few simple flowers, framed picture, etc. and transport from hospital to temple (all sorted through hospital mortuary department) - 14750 baht. 3. Simple temple cremation, no nights at temple, 4 monks said prays and undertaker, 30 minutes - 10000 baht (temple used was more expensive than most, but family wanted the place. The hospital and police did not request a post mortem, so police report, ambulance transport to government hospital and Amphur death certificate was about 3000 baht in total. Receipts attached with personal details removed. Total - just over 30000 baht. Not planned to be on a budget, the family just wanted a simple cremation. Most was claimed back off his travel insurance. Edited April 13 by Georgealbert 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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