Lemongrass House: the best for Soaps & Co.


From TimeAsia Magazine


If you want to smell like no one else, try mixing a selection from the more than 90 natural scents at Phuket's Lemongrass House—a small, bamboo-lined shop across from Surin beach in Phuket. There's everything from extract of anchan (a Thai flower better known for the violet food coloring it yields) to ylang-ylang (a fragrant oil distilled from the flower of a Cananga tree), but if you want to get really adventurous, American owner Bobby Duchowny will gladly oblige.

He once created a bacon room spray (used by a hotel to lure guests to breakfast) and a body wrap made from Godiva chocolate, sake, Dead Sea mud and 24-karat gold flakes. Duchowny's skills aren't limited to arresting scents—he's made a natural insecticide to help organic farmers in Thailand, and Lemongrass House produces a nourishing range of spa products based on its signature blend of jojoba, sweet almond and vitamin E. But he loves a challenge, and encourages individual customers to experiment "with what smells and feels good to you." Champagne and dollar bills anyone?

And, if you are staying in our house, http://www.villaphuket.eu/, you can reach one of the shops in few minutes. Just at the end of the road in Cherngtalay.


Goof Food: Catch Beach Club at Phuket


On bustling Surin Beach the latests "open-air", private and trendy restaurant from the boutique hotel Twinpalms.


Not only because of the italian chef but for the location and the "chiringuito" mood, this is one of our favourite spots in the island.


Friday and tuesday barbecue with beach bonfire and private terrazzo on the sand: these are two of the masterpieces of the restaurant.


Beautiful spot for the sunset and for a romantic dinner.
Night live music with international duos and bands.

Do it: JW Marriott at sunset


This is a very good advise.
For a sunset unique experience go north, at JW Marriott Hotel.
The beach, the pristine Mai Khao Beach, is calm and facing the sun...


incredible!!! You are in Phuket not on a desert island...
but...
not only!
The night show is unique: music and dancers in the water with an orange sky on the back.
Trust me and try it!
Then you can get a sundowner at Out Of The Blue Bar and choose one of the esquisite restaurants.



And for the Spa, one of the top of Asia, we will make another post...

Art Finding


La Luna Gallery is Chiang Mai's centre for contemporary art.

The 400 sqm. venue promotes art from both renowned and emerging young artists from Thailand, Myanmar. Malaysia, Vietnam and Indonesia.

The newly renovated 2nd floor displays more stunning paintings together with designer furniture from the Philippines and modern home entertainment systems, as well as fashion jewelry and accessories.

La Luna Gallery was established to promote art from Asia and the Pacific, and simultaneously to encourage and support the local contemporary and abstract art scene.

Focus is on colorful paintings reflecting and commenting on aesthetic, spiritual, social and cultural issues in our rapidly changing society. Many are by young and up-coming artists, although well-established and internationally respected artists are also featured.Adding another dimension, the gallery carries art photos from Thailand-based photographers as well as posters, cards, notebooks, and pottery from famed artists and art houses in Chiang Rai, Bangkok and further afield.

La Luna Gallery also specializes in organizing art events in and around Chiang Mai.La Luna Gallery is a limited partnership with three partners all of whom are intimately involved in the concept, direction and management of the Gallery.

Mr Sommai Lumdual, a Thai citizen, has worked in the hospitality business in Bangkok for many years and for the past two years as a manager of a company/shop in Chiang Mai selling unique handicrafts and art.Ms Joanna MacLean, Ms Joanna MacLean, a New Zealander, has had a long career with an international humanitarian organization, and has initiated and organized a number of global events and campaigns. Also a keen photographer, her work has been exhibited and featured in books and publicationsMr Lasse Norgaard, a Danish freelance journalist, has lived in Asia for six years and is now living in Chiang Mai. His work has included the writing and design of books and brochures, and the production of documentary videos.


Address : 190 Charoenraj Rd. T.Watgate, A.Muang, Chiang Mai 50000 Thailand
Telephone: 053-306678
www.lalunagallery.com/

Elephants at Work

Jumbo Enterprise
FROM Bangkok Post


Elephants have been big business in Thailand for centuries, but it is only recently that they also have become tourist attractions.
Elephants painting, playing musical instruments, kicking soccer balls, dancing in mini-skirts and trekking with humans strapped to their backs, are some of the various attractions available in northern Thailand.
According to government figures, there are 40 elephant camps, employing up to 650 pachyderms, catering to tourists in the northern provinces of Tak, Sukhotai, Phitsanulok, Nan, Lampang, Chiang Mai, Chiang Rai and Mae Hong Son.
"I would estimate that about 65 per cent of the tourists who come here visit an elephant attraction," said Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT) Chiang Mai office director Junnaporn Salanart. "Elephants are big business."
Elephants have been big business in Thailand for centuries, but it is only recently that they have become tourist attractions.
In ancient Siam, as Thailand was called before 1939, elephants were used as battle tanks in wars against her traditional enemies, in other words all of Thailand's modern neighbours - Cambodia, Laos, Malaysia and Myanmar.
A white elephant once adorned the Siamese flag, although it disappeared with the name Siam.
When Thailand plunged into the world economy last century by opening her forests and jungles up to the voracious timber industry, it was elephants that did much of the dirty work, dragging away the trees that had once provided protection for their wild counterparts.
By the time Thailand finally banned logging in 1989, the country's total elephant population had declined dramatically to about 5,000 from the 120,000 recorded in 1900.
Nowadays, there are an estimated 3,000 elephants in Thailand, 2,000 registered as "livestock," and the remainder wild.
Thailand's tame elephants, once mighty war machines and destroyers of the jungle, have been reduced to tourist trekking or roaming city streets begging for their food, and income for their mahouts.
"The elephant is the symbol of our country and yet Thailand is the only country that allows elephants to beg in the streets," said Sangduen Chailert, founder of the Elephant Nature Park.
Sangduen, now a bit of a legend in Thailand's elephant lore, started her Elephant Nature Park in the Mae Tang valley, 60 kilometres north of Chiang Mai, in 1995 as a refuge for injured or traumatised pachyderms.
Among her current herd of 31, are Phu Max, a 61-year-old bull who was hit by a 16-wheel truck a few years ago, Mae Do, a female (now going out with Phu Max) who lost part of her left foot to a landmine and was saved from limping in the streets of Chiang Mai begging, and Lilly, a former methamphetamine addict.
There are also frisky teenagers at the park, such as Jungle Boy and Hope, elephant orphans who have been nurtured back to health by Sangduen, better known by her nickname Lek.
Lek, who won the Ford Foundation/National Geographic Hero of the Planet Award in 2001, among other accolades, funds her elephant sanctuary by donations and "hands off" tourism. The park and nearby Haven, where some of the pachyderms spend the night, requires about 250,000 dollars a year to keep the jumbos fed, employ mahouts and staff and buy medicines.
Tourists, charged 2,500 baht ($79) for a day trip and 4,000 baht ($127) for an overnight stay, are allowed to visit Lek's park where they can participate in feeding the elephants and taking part in their twice-daily bathing rituals in the stream.
It is the only elephant camp in northern Thailand where the pachyderms are allowed to do pretty much what they like doing.
"This is more like an elephant spa," said Lek. "All the elephants do is eat, swim and sleep."
The elephants are attended by paid mahouts, without whom the elephants would pose a hefty danger to visiting tourists, and paying volunteers who do much of the clean up work.
"I came here originally for a one-day trip and stayed two nights instead," said Sam Frankowsha, a British national. "I went back to Chiang Mai and checked out of my hotel and spent two weeks here."
Frankowsha was on her third two-week-long visit to the park. Other volunteers have stayed two years.
Part of the attraction is Lek herself, who has become a bit of a legendary character after being named an Asian Hero by Time Magazine in 2005, and has been featured in several documentaries.
"You're my hero," oozes one Western tourist visiting the Elephant Nature Park.
Lek, however, is not without her critics in the elephant industry.
"I came here six months ago because I believed in the project," said one volunteer who recently quit the Elephant Nature Park. "When I realised it's basically a business I decided to leave." Lek claims to be in the process of changing her operation from a private company to a foundation.
"All the money I get for my company I give to the elephant park, and I even have to pay taxes on it. As a foundation I will not have to pay taxes," said Lek. dpa