Jump to content

Local people and Honda dealers in rural Thailand


billd766

Recommended Posts

I remember a Brit, a retired dentist, who built his dream home in a village in Northern Thailand years ago. Installed every convenience and a nice big fat expensive generator to run his gizmos when the brownouts came, as they used to regularly.

On returning from a trip back to the UK not many months later, he was taken aback to find that his generator had migrated, seemingly permanently, several hundred metres up the road to the Kamnan's house.

Surprising Rural Thailand.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

In my village and in the nearby town, with the exception of the banks, I have always had great service, anything that needed done to my house, car, bike, computer etc, in the eight years I have been here has been fantastic, and no overcharging. The same thing cannot be said about the nearest city about 60 Ks away.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

What a great place rural Thailand is. Friendly people, good service and low prices.

i drive my pushbike every day in the fields (30km trip) and one day the innertire blasted/torn, so no way i could fix it myself. this guy saw me walking back with the bike, asked me what happened and drove me home 10 km away, bike in the back of pickup. i offered to pay for fuel but he was too "proud" to accept. i have had PLENTY of great experiences here, ungreedy people helping out for free. also in Burma where i travelled with motorbike. many people still believe a foreigner is a guest and should be taken care of. free food, free shelter, free shower, free drinking water, etc. all that still happens here (and burma and laos and cambodia).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

One of the great joys of living in Chiang Rai is that when something breaks you don't have to go into the "dread mode"

that is so often the case in the USA...you simply dread to even call for a repair as you are pretty sure that it will be expensive and a big hassle to get most anything fixed.

In Chiang Rai it is normally fixed quickly and I am almost always surprised at how cheap it is...heck I have had guys come to my house to fix things that the falang couldn't figure out and then try to charge me ZERO.....of course they could charge me most whatever they want and I really wouldn't know the difference as I am just happy to get it fixed.

The ripoffs that you so often read about on TV just don't seem to happen very much in Chiang Rai...maybe I am just lucky but I suspect in CR if you treat the locals nicely you will have very few problems.

Not just Chiang Rai either. This is common in Thailand and one of the true delights of living here.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

From what I have seen and experienced in rural Thailand over the last 10 years what happened to me is nothing out of the normal.

A few years ago driving down Sukhumvit road at On Nut in Bangkok my car broke down at a bus stop. Not one of the 50 odd people could see me trying to push it 50 metres down the road and around the corner except a guy pushing his handcartwith stuff to sell on it.

He left his cart and helped me push the car out of the way. He accepted my thanks and nothing else. He was probably from rural Thailand too.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I lived in Issan for 6 years and I loved living in Issan, one thing about Thais as i'm sure the majority of you on here know is if you act like them you will be treated like them, if you however decide to bring your western ways here then you will be shunned at every opportunity. Western arrogance, tempers and "common sense" do not have a place here and if you display these traits you soon become known as an idiot, harsh but the truth.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

One of the great joys of living in Chiang Rai is that when something breaks you don't have to go into the "dread mode"

that is so often the case in the USA...you simply dread to even call for a repair as you are pretty sure that it will be expensive and a big hassle to get most anything fixed.

In Chiang Rai it is normally fixed quickly and I am almost always surprised at how cheap it is...heck I have had guys come to my house to fix things that the falang couldn't figure out and then try to charge me ZERO.....of course they could charge me most whatever they want and I really wouldn't know the difference as I am just happy to get it fixed.

The ripoffs that you so often read about on TV just don't seem to happen very much in Chiang Rai...maybe I am just lucky but I suspect in CR if you treat the locals nicely you will have very few problems.

Apply that near anywhere, especially Thailand and all is correct.......................nice day.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I lived in Issan for 6 years and I loved living in Issan, one thing about Thais as i'm sure the majority of you on here know is if you act like them you will be treated like them, if you however decide to bring your western ways here then you will be shunned at every opportunity. Western arrogance, tempers and "common sense" do not have a place here and if you display these traits you soon become known as an idiot, harsh but the truth.

So...If you use "common sense"...you will become known as the village idiot...?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I lived in Issan for 6 years and I loved living in Issan, one thing about Thais as i'm sure the majority of you on here know is if you act like them you will be treated like them, if you however decide to bring your western ways here then you will be shunned at every opportunity. Western arrogance, tempers and "common sense" do not have a place here and if you display these traits you soon become known as an idiot, harsh but the truth.

So...If you use "common sense"...you will become known as the village idiot...?

read again ggt. I said if you displayed so called Western "common sense" you will be known as an idiot, not "Thai "common sense" which is another thing altogether

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I lived in Issan for 6 years and I loved living in Issan, one thing about Thais as i'm sure the majority of you on here know is if you act like them you will be treated like them, if you however decide to bring your western ways here then you will be shunned at every opportunity. Western arrogance, tempers and "common sense" do not have a place here and if you display these traits you soon become known as an idiot, harsh but the truth.

So...If you use "common sense"...you will become known as the village idiot...?

read again ggt. I said if you displayed so called Western "common sense" you will be known as an idiot, not "Thai "common sense" which is another thing altogether

...so,what's the better option...to 'be known as an idiot'....or become one..? tongue.pnglaugh.png

Link to comment
Share on other sites

i was lost one nightwhen i was new in bkk ,comlpetely exhausted and my vision was getting blurry and i was drifting off to sleep while riding

(id been awake for 2-3 days on coffee finishing a late project ) so i parked my bike outside an army base

the next day i couldnt find it and arrived at the wrong army base (they were both on the same road/area ) soldier came out saluted me and asked me

whats the problem ? i put him on the phone to my gf and she explained i parked outside the army base on that road and they told her theres another base

in the area ,its probably that one

i said thanks and asked for directions to it ,he said no no ,you stay here

he ran inside and another older guy in military uniform came out on a honda wave and said jump on ,lets go

in 5 min he took me to the other base and sure enough ,my bike was there

he wouldnt even accept a tip either ,refused about 3 times until i practically forced him to have a drink on me

,theyre not all scumbags ...........

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

The ripoffs that you so often read about on TV just don't seem to happen very much in Chiang Rai...maybe I am just lucky but I suspect in CR if you treat the locals nicely you will have very few problems.

I find that the people who get ripped off come into the situation with a Western arrogant attitude.

I smile, speak quietly and slowly, ask for their help ...

Never had a problem. 9 years running.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.









×
×
  • Create New...