Tag Archives: Songkhla

“Ride of Hope” in Southern Thailand – Day 4

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If anyone partied the previous night, it didn’t show. Everyone was checked out of the hotel and ready to ride at 6:30 a.m.

Photograph courtesy of ML

Most of the route from Hat Yai to Padang Besar is due south. I think I selected the wrong course on my Garmin to navigate. The map took us north out of Hat Yai along the same roads to Songkhla Lake. The detour added 12 km to our route. We lost more time because I had a flat tyre 21 km into the ride. Thank goodness we had a time buffer.

Map courtesy of Ride With GPS

It was a relief to get onto Route 4 heading in the right direction. As we have come to expect of Southern Thailand, the roads are good. With the occasional Wat along the way.

In this case, the Wat Hua Thanon near Sadao.

Photograph courtesy of Google Street View

It wasn’t as hot as the previous days. It was ‘only’ 30ºC but still very humid. We were all sweating a lot. We stopped at a Seven-11 to refill bottles and let the support vehicles catch up with us. We had lost them in the detour around Hat Yai.

Photograph courtesy of CKS

We needed another stop with 13 km to go to the Thailand-Malaysia border. It was 34ºC and shade was limited.

Photograph courtesy of CKS

It was an up-and-down 13 km with 125 metres of elevation to the border. A little sting in the tail of our four-day ride.

All that was left was the queue at Malaysian Immigration, where we had to tell the locals not to cut in front of us.

Photograph courtesy of ML

Despite the 12 km detour, we all arrived at the homestay in time for a shower before being driven to the KTM station by L and P.

We needn’t have rushed. Our train left Padang Besar fifty minutes late. Problems with the onboard signalling system caused the delay.

This message hit my mobile at 3:38 p.m. Late too, and ultimately wrong.

We arrived at Sentral Station at 9:10 p.m. Two hours and forty minutes late.

B and K arrived in Klang with our bikes two hours later. They got caught in heavy rain. As did S on his motorcycle after riding to Penang with TH. They got to Penang at around 5:00 p.m. We were all glad to hear that S got to Klang safely at 10:00 p.m.

Photograph courtesy of K

All that was left to do was to deliver the four KL guys’ bicycles to Pegasus Cycles. Which N did on Tuesday morning.

Photograph courtesy of N

That wrapped up our four-day adventure in Southern Thailand. 291 km in all.

Thank you, H and J, for arranging the travel and accommodation, and for the jerseys. Thank you, B, K and K, for the support throughout the four days. Thank you to all the cyclists for the camaraderie and the laughs.

Image courtesy of WordPress AI

“Ride of Hope” in Southern Thailand – Day 3

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Despite the late night for some, we started our sightseeing ride at 8:00 a.m. The route took us to Songkhla Lake and Samila Beach.

Map courtesy of Ride With GPS

Songkhla Lake is the largest natural lake in Thailand. We stopped on the southern Tinsulanonda Bridge for some photographs. The bridges linking Ko Yo island with the mainland are named after General Prem Tinsulanonda, a former Prime Minister of Thailand.

Photograph courtesy of LTH

Wat Laem Pho on Ko Yo Island was built in 1787 during the reign of King Rama III. The large golden Buddha image in the nirvana posture was constructed in 1994.

Photograph courtesy of KC

We rode over the northern Tinsulanonda Bridge and took a short ferry ride across the estuary where Songkhla Lake meets the Gulf of Thailand.

Photograph courtesy of KC

A kilometre from the Car Ferry City Side dock is the Golden Mermaid. An icon of Songkhla. This bronze statue was sculpted in 1966 by Jitr Baubus. The Mermaid was a main character in Phra Apaimance, a story written by Soonthorn Phu, the great poet of King Rama II. In this ancient Thai folk tale, a mermaid sat and combed her hair on a beautiful beach on a starry night. A young fisherman met and frightened her, and she fled into the sea. The fisherman waited for her to return, but she had disappeared forever.

We didn’t clamber onto the rock to get close to the statue.

Photograph courtesy of LTH

Samila Beach turns into Chalathat Beach as you head south.

It was hot again. 39ºC. We went looking for an air-conditioned place for a coffee. Instead, we found the Nong Keng restaurant. We ordered drinks. Then H looked at their menu and ordered lunch. It was a pleasant eighty minutes in the shade by the sea.

Photograph courtesy of ML

It was 37ºC when we left Nong Keng. We had about 30 km left to ride. Unsurprisingly, we needed another stop after cycling 15 km. A 7-Eleven at a PTT petrol station fit the bill.

Photograph courtesy of Google Street View

We got to the Centara hotel at 2:40 p.m. It was far too hot for a swim. Some had massages. I should have had one too. I had a knot in my right scapula that needed releasing. The need for sleep was strong, though.

I had planned to walk to the See Kim Yong Market to buy dried fruit and nuts.

Photograph courtesy of tourismthailand.org

The market, named after a wealthy individual who owned the original land in this area, is 400 metres from the Centara Hotel. The market closes at 6:00 p.m. I woke up at 6:45 p.m. Just in time to meet the others in the hotel lobby for dinner.

The Kai-Tai-Num restaurant is 3 km from the Centara Hotel. We went there in tuk-tuks. Nine of us unknowingly got into a party tuk-tuk. It was dark, and the tuk-tuk looked like any other. Then the flashing lights, the video, and the music started.

Six tweeters, six mid-range speakers and three subwoofers, all driven by three amplifiers, pump out a lot of sound. M and I were deaf in our right ears for a while.

Photograph courtesy of LCH

A waitress said “Sorry Ahhh” to H at the Kai-Tai-Num restaurant. Again, for serving us food that we had not ordered. I wonder if it is a ruse that some restaurants employ to boost their takings.

We discussed the following day’s departure time over dinner. We initially planned to start cycling at 7:30 a.m. That would give us some extra time to cope with any problems along the way and still arrive in Padang Besar in time to catch the 1:50 p.m. Malaysian time train. Fortunately, H remembered that Thailand is one hour behind Malaysia. We would have to leave at 6:30 a.m. Malaysian time to have the buffer time we wanted.

That would prove to be a wise decision.

“Ride of Hope” in Southern Thailand – Day 2

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Thai hospitality was on full display throughout our stay at the Navakiri Boutique Resort. The staff stored our bikes safely in their laundry room.

Photograph courtesy of LCH

The breakfast buffet opened early to accommodate our early departure. Our destination was Hat Yai.

Map courtesy of Ride With GPS

We were all present as planned at 8:30 a.m.

Photograph courtesy of LTH

As expected, the roads were excellent to ride on.

Photograph courtesy of CKS

I did give the group a short taste of gravel for variety’s sake.

Photograph courtesy of CKS

Immediately after this gravel section, we stopped at a Bangchak petrol station. L had a flat tire. caused by a staple rather than the gravel.

It took forty minutes to change the inner tube. First, we had to figure out how to unscrew the through axle. A rubber O-ring covered the indentations a hex key fits. It took a phone call to Pegasus Cycles to discover that a size 6 hex key pushed past the O-ring would do the trick.

The tubeless-ready tyre was a very tight fit on the rim, and it was a battle to get one side of the tyre free of the rim.

There was no shortage of observers!

Photograph courtesy of CKS

It was another 38ºC and high-humidity day. We struggled to find shade at times. B and K did a sterling job handing out a variety of ice-cold drinks every time we stopped.

Photograph courtesy of LTH

Our last stop before Hat Yai was this Delicafé at the Shell station on the Phet Kasem Frontage Road. I needed that iced latté.

Photograph courtesy of Google Street View

We had lunch at the Jae Lek restaurant before checking into the Centara Hotel. It would not be the first time a waitress said “Sorry Ahhh” to H because we were served and charged for more food than he had ordered.

It was a 91 km ride to the Centara Hotel. The hotel has a swimming pool, but I decided I needed a nap more than a swim. Some others had a massage. I showered and slept.

Photograph courtesy of CKS

We had a late lunch. Nevertheless, we ate a lot at Ar Restaurant that evening. The stewed goose was especially delicious.

Photograph courtesy of ML

There was some partying after dinner. That is all I can say. What happens in Hat Yai stays in Hat Yai!

“Ride of Hope” in Southern Thailand – Day 1

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In 2023, K asked if TH and I could help organise a charity ride to Penang. That is how I met the group from ECONFRAME®. A few R@SKLs went on a delightful multi-day ride from Teluk Intan to Penang with the group from Klang.

A few months ago, the idea of another charity ride arose. We chose to spend four days riding in Southern Thailand. Many hands contributed to the planning and execution of this trip. The daily routes were plotted. Train tickets were bought. Hotel rooms were booked. Cycling jerseys were designed and ordered. Support vehicles and drivers were lined up.

The long weekend began on Thursday with bicycles transported to Padang Besar by B and K in a pair of pickup trucks, accompanied by TH and S on motorcyclists.

Photographs courtesy of LTH

This update during the trip was a sign of things to come.

Photograph courtesy of LTH

The quartet was joined at the Chek Embun Homestay by a few others who also drove to Padang Besar. They all did a wonderful job stocking ice chests and preparing the bicycles.

The rest of us caught the 7:30 a.m. Friday ETS departure from KL Sentral to Padang Besar.

Photograph courtesy of ML

While we were on the train, the guys in Padang Besar went on a cave walk in Gua Kelam in Kaki Bukit.

Photographs courtesy of PC and S

L and P picked us up at Padang Besar KTM station. We changed at the homestay and were ready to ride at 1:30 p.m.

Photograph courtesy of LTH

The Day 1 route from Padang Besar to Satun was the shortest of all the daily rides. However, the 49 km ride did include the most challenging segment we would face.

Map courtesy of Ride With GPS

The climb to Wang Kelian is on slopes like this. Made even harder by the high humidity and 38ºC temperature.

Photograph courtesy of KC

This is the Wang Kelian climb in numbers.

Map courtesy of Ride With GPS

The view at the top is worth the effort.

Photographs are essential. That is the patriarch of H’s family. 85 years young.

From the summit of the climb it is a mostly downhill run to the Malaysian Immigration post at Wang Kelian.

Photograph courtesy of J

You go through the Wangprachan Boundary post to enter Thailand.

Photograph courtesy of CKS

The roads in Southern Thailand are wonderful to ride on.

30 km from the Malaysia-Thailand border is the Navakiri Boutique Resort in Satun.

That is a bar at the far end of the swimming pool. A bar that was well-patronised by the eleven of us who went for a swim.

Dinner was at the Coconut Gardens Restaurant. The restaurant is 850 metres from the resort. Close enough for most of us to make the trip in the bed of a pickup.

Photograph courtesy of LTH

Our first and not the last big meal of the trip.

Southern Thailand Tour Day 3

Any plans to have a long lie in after the Satun International Century Ride were quickly put to rest.  We had about 150km / 93mi to cover from Satun to Hat Yai, via an extended route which would take us around Songkhla Lake.

s-thailand-tour-3-route

We were all present and accounted for at the entrance of the SinKiat Buri Hotel at 7.30am.

s-thailand-tour-3-satun-departure-leslie

Photograph courtesy of Leslie Tong

Our first task upon rolling out was to scan the streets for a place to eat breakfast.  We didn’t see anything that looked promising for the first couple of kilometers.  7 Eleven came to mind, but Leslie reminded us that convenience stores should be our choice of last resort.  He had a point.

Then we found this place, selling packets of nasi lemak, just like we get at home.  But with a Thai twist.  The nasi lemak came with a variety of toppings to choose from.  Fish, or shrimp, or egg, or plain sambal.

I had already grabbed some pulut with kaya (sticky rice with coconut jam) as well.

s-thailand-tour-3-breakfast-1-leslie

Photograph courtesy of Leslie Tong

We were on the only road that links Satun province with Songkhla province to the north.  Route 406, like the other roads we had already ridden on in Thailand, was wide and smooth.  And in this case it was a dual carriageway.

s-thailand-tour-3

Photograph courtesy of Leslie Tong

About 27km / 17mi outside Satun we were diverted to the opposite side of the dual carriageway.  The northbound side of the road was closed.  A bad accident perhaps?

A few minutes later we saw the reason for the diversion.  There was a row of more than a dozen double decker buses like this one parked on the road.

s-thailand-tour-3-bus

All waiting to load passengers coming out of this place.

s-thailand-tour-3-satun-cowboy-land

I can’t find any information about Satun Cowboy Land, so why hundreds of people were there remains a mystery.

1o kilometers later we were riding through the karst outcrops that mark the border into Songkhla province.

s-thailand-tour-3-on-the-road-to-songkhla-province-leslie

Photograph courtesy of Leslie Tong

It was turning into another hot day.  We had planned to stop for a drink every 30km / 19mi or so, and we stuck to that plan.  Our first rehydration stop had been just past Satun Cowboy Town.

At about 60km / 37mi we were in Ban Na Si Thong.  We bought large Sunkist orange and milky green tea drinks here.  There was enough Sunkist in my drink that I could dilute it three times over from the water dispenser near our table.

We were grateful that the Thais are also not stingy with ice.  The drinks come loaded with ice, and are often accompanied with a bucket of more ice.  We were always able to keep our bottles topped up with ice.

s-thailand-tour-3-make-that-a-large-cold-drink-leslie

Photograph courtesy of Leslie Tong

By noon we had covered 75km / 47mi.  The temperature was up around 38°C / 100°F.  Too hot to ride a further 15km / 9mi before stopping again.

A 7 Eleven in Khuan Niang to the rescue!

s-thailand-tour-3-seven-11-leslie

Photograph courtesy of Leslie Tong

We felt much better after fifteen minutes in air conditioning.

Lunch was about forty five minutes away.  We may have been smiling on the bridge at Ban Pak Ro, but we were hot and hungry.

s-thailand-tour-3-pak-ro-bridge-hot-and-hungry-leslie

Photograph courtesy of Leslie Tong

We found a great restaurant on the other side of the bridge.

s-thailand-tour-3-riverside-lunch-1-marco

Photograph courtesy of Marco Lai

We were on the water, in the shade, under a fan, with cold drinks in hand.  (Note the blue ice bucket on the table).  We kicked back there for almost two hours.

Oh!  We did eat too.

s-thailand-tour-3-lunch-marco

Photograph courtesy of Marco Lai

We roused ourselves and got back onto our bikes at 3.40pm.  We had 55km / 34mi to go to Hat Yai, and we wanted to get there before sunset at about 6.00pm.

The 10km / 6mi from the restaurant was the only bad section of road we encountered during the entire 430km / 267mi tour through southern Thailand.  We felt right at home.  Which is a bit sad!

s-thailand-tour-3-bad-roads

The next landmark was Ko Yo island in Songkhla Lake.

s-thailand-tour-3-apiduras-on-ko-yo-island-marco

Photograph courtesy of Marco Lai

30km / 19mi to go to Hat Yai.  We had been riding long enough from lunch that we needed a drink and to refill our bottles for the stretch to our final destination.

There are lots of roadside drinks stalls to choose from.  All identifiable by the rows of syrups and cordials on display.

s-thailand-tour-3-drink-stand

There is nothing quite like an ice cold Coke!

s-thailand-tour-3-iced-coke-marco

Photograph courtesy of Marco Lai

There was about an hour before sunset.  So Philip and Leslie proceeded to pull us along at 31kph / 19mph for the next thirty minutes.  Then we made the left turn onto Lopburi Ramesuan Road, heading south into central Hat Yai.

We had prebooked the hotel in Satun, but had not done the same for Hat Yai.  So it was hotel hunting time.  We were turned away from the first two hotels we tried, when we revealed that we intended to take our bikes up to our rooms.

While Lay – our designated negotiator – was trying for the third time to get us into a hotel, the Lee Gardens Plaza, I struck up a conversation outside with a security guard.  He was quite impressed that we had ridden from Satun, and was interested in our bikes and saddle packs.

When Lay returned with the news that once again we wouldn’t be allowed to take our bikes into our rooms, the security guard was not pleased.  He immediately pulled out his walkie talkie, and after thirty seconds of conversation – the only word I understood was “Satun” – he ushered us all, bikes included, into the hotel.

If you visit Hat Yai, stay in the Lee Gardens Plaza Hotel.  Especially if you bring your bicycle!!

Showered and changed, we wandered along Prachathipat Road looking for a nice place to eat.  We chose Jaepen Restaurant, on the basis of a stall at the entrance selling leng chee kang (a sweet drink or dessert containing lotus seeds, longans, lily bulbs, dried persimmons, and malva nuts).

The leng chee kang turned out to be a bit of a bust, but the food was excellent.

s-thailand-tour-3-dinner-marco

Photograph courtesy of Marco Lai

Not only is the food in Thailand delicious, it is also cheap.  We had steamed grouper, omelette with crab meat, squid in curry sauce, fried shrimp with petai, fish and shrimp cake, and white rice.  Plus two bowls of leng chee kang and two bowls of bubur cha cha (a Nyonya dessert of bananas, sweet potatoes, taro, and sago pearls cooked in pandan -flavoured coconut milk).

All for THB 1,820.  Or RM46 / USD10 per person.  So there was enough cash left over for a mango with sticky rice dessert on the way back to the hotel.

It had been a long and hot day.  Add a full stomach.  No wonder I was ready to hit the sack.  Day 4 to come.

Samila Century Ride 2013

Samila Century 2013 Graphic

We started talking about this ride in August.  The number of riders in Team KESAS Kruisers fluctuated as Sunday 17th November approached.  Six of us loaded our bikes into Keat’s pickup truck early Friday morning for the 565 km / 350 mi drive to Songkhla.

Samila Century 2013 Truck

Keat, Marco and I rode in the truck, and Marvin, Chris and Mark were in Marvin’s hot hatchback.

Some planning went into fitting six bicycles into the bed of the pickup truck.  Meticulous planning went into deciding where to eat along the way.  Breakfast was at the Sungai Buloh R&R.  I should be embarrassed to admit that this was only 26 km / 16 mi into our journey.  This stop was chosen for convenience over the quality of the food available.

The first “foodie” stop was at the Pun Chun Noodle House in Bidor.  Pun Chun is noted for its duck noodles.

They go through a lot of duck!

Samila Century 2013 Pun Chun Duck

Lunch was at Ong Cheng Huat Seafood in Bagan Lalang.  The restaurant is tucked away in a small village.  Marvin knew how to get there.  The food was outstanding.

The Steamed Red Snapper was particularly good.  This was Keat’s favorite bit of the fish.

Photograph courtesy of Mark Lim

Photograph courtesy of Mark Lim

We got to the Thai border at about 4.30 pm Malaysian time.  Chris, Marco and I watched the world go by while Keat and Marvin sorted out the paperwork required to drive their vehicles into Thailand.

Photograph courtesy of Mark Lim

Photograph courtesy of Mark Lim

We may have planned our food stops well, but we weren’t so clever when it came to picking the time of day to drive from the border post at Sadao to Hat Yai and on to Songkhla.  Thailand is one hour behind Malaysia.  It was about 4 pm Thai time by the time we left Sadao.  Which meant that we drove into the height of the evening rush outside Hat Yai, and then crawled all the way to Songkhla.  The last 95 km / 60 mi of the drive took more than two hours.

So it was nice to be in a hotel in the center of Songkhla, within walking distance of places to eat.  I wouldn’t go so far as to describe the Pavilion Hotel as “elegant” (see the hotel website).  It may well have been elegant in its heyday, but is a bit worse for wear today.  It met our needs well enough though.  And at RM215 / USD68 per person for three nights, including breakfast, we shouldn’t complain.

We wandered into Mr. Steak for dinner.  Ribs, steaks and pasta are not what immediately come to mind when you think of what to eat in Thailand.  Mr. Steak hit the spot though.  This is the team – and a photo bomber!

Photograph courtesy of Christopher Chin

Photograph courtesy of Christopher Chin

We chose our hotel because it was very close to the official hotel and the start and finish for the ride.    The organizers ran into a last-minute snag with that hotel and had to move everything to the Haad Kaew Resort.  Which is about 30 km / 19 mi away via the two parts of the Tinsulanonda Bridge that join the mainland to Ko Yo Island in Songkhla Lake.  Or 10 km / 6 mi away if you take the ferry across the narrow strait that connects the lake to the Gulf of Thailand.

We weren’t able to cancel our reservations at the Pavilion Hotel.  So the plan was to cycle from the hotel to where the ride would start.  Hence the first order of business after breakfast on Saturday was to recce the shorter route to the Haad Kaew Resort.

On the way to the ferry we explored a little.  There is a well-known statue, the Golden Mermaid, on Samila Beach.  This statue, dedicated to knowledge, looked more interesting to Marvin.

Photograph courtesy of Marco Lai

Photograph courtesy of Marco Lai

The scenic route to the ferry runs along the beach.  Marco, Marvin and I, and the others, took turns being photographed with the sea behind us.

Samila Century 2013 Samila Beach

Photograph courtesy of Mark Lim

We had to do a bit of deciphering of signs along the way, but we found the ferry.

Photograph courtesy of Mark Lim

Photograph courtesy of Mark Lim

The ferry operates from 5am, which meant that we would have no problem getting to the start before 7am.  An added bonus is that the ferry is free for cyclists.

We shared the ferry with a few cars and pickup trucks, and a lot of small motorcycles and scooters.  One family was going to have chicken feet, prawns, and squash for lunch or dinner.

Photograph courtesy of Mark Lim

Photograph courtesy of Mark Lim

Once off the ferry we were cycling along the tail end of the ride route, so there were arrows guiding us to the Haad Kaew Resort.  Where we discovered that the Samila Century Ride was the shorter option.  The Songkhla Ipoh Friendship Ride had started the day before.  It is about 360 km / 224 mi from Songkhla to Ipoh in Malaysia.

Photograph courtesy of Marco Lai

Photograph courtesy of Marco Lai

Our jerseys and ride numbers were waiting for us when we got there.  We introduced ourselves to the event organizer, Ms. Metharin Pongratchatakaran.

As for our footwear.  We thought it was going to rain and didn’t want to risk getting our cycling shoes wet.

Photograph courtesy of Mark Lim

Photograph courtesy of Mark Lim

The sandals worked out well.

Photograph courtesy of Mark Lim

Photograph courtesy of Mark Lim

We were all a bit peckish by the time we got off the ferry back across the strait.  There are a host of seafood restaurants to choose from on Samila Beach.

It was time for some Thai food.  Food doesn’t come more Thai than tom yam soup.

Photograph courtesy of Mark Lim

Photograph courtesy of Mark Lim

I’m surprised we could ride our bikes the rest of the way back to the hotel after all the seafood we ate for lunch.  I’m not surprised that everyone took a long nap that afternoon.

That evening we wandered through the night market that is just down the road from the hotel.  To be more accurate we wandered through the food section of the night market.  We didn’t bother with the part where you can buy clothes, alarm clocks, toys etc.

The first thing we saw was a pickup truck that had been converted into a Japanese restaurant.  Two cooks were in the kitchen on the roof.  The diners sat at tables on the bed, or at tables that folded out from either side of the truck.  Food came down from the kitchen on a small electrically-operated lift.  All quite ingenious.

Samila Century 2013 Sakura Truck

These sweets are called Look Choop.  They could substitute for energy chews.  They certainly look prettier than your average Clif Shot Blok.  Sweetened mung bean paste is moulded to look like fruits and vegetables.  A candy glaze adds color.

Samila Century 2013 Sweets

I’m not so sure these treats will catch on as a substitute for energy chews though.

Samila Century 2013 Protein Pods (Mark)

Still on the subject of food (no munchies no ride)!  The Pavilion Hotel may no longer be elegant, but they do start serving breakfast at 5am.  So we had no problem fueling up before our 6.15 am departure from the hotel.  We rode out into a drizzle, which eased by the time we reached the ferry.

We got to the start outside the Haad Kaew Resort just as it started drizzling again.  The rain got steadily heavier and heavier.  By the time we were 30 km / 20 mi into the ride it was pouring.  So much for wearing sandals the day before to keep our shoes dry.

We rode in the rain for the first third of the ride, which took us north along the coast before turning inland and then back south.   Highway 408  is excellent for cycling.  The road surface is amazingly smooth.  Not a bump or a pothole to be found.  Despite the heavy rain there was rarely any standing water on that road.

The rural road inland is another story.  There are lots of bumps and potholes.  The rain made riding quite tricky because standing water often hid holes in the road surface.  Keat hit a pothole and has seven stitches in his elbow to show for it.  He won the hard man award for cycling some 90 km / 56 mi with a gashed elbow, a scraped knee and a bruised hip.

Samila Century 2013 Route

Keat’s mishap aside, we were all glad that it rained.  The rain kept us cool.  By the time we made our first stop at the halfway point the rain had ceased however, and the sun was peeking through the clouds.

Mark and Chris are all smiles here.  The heat and the headwind in the final kilometers wiped those smiles off their faces.

Samila Century 2013 Rest Stop

We made a stop at a 7-11 in Khuang Niang.  Keat caught up with us there, which is when we learned of his accident.  Marvin had stopped early on for what we thought was a loose quick release skewer.  He actually had a flat.  It took him a long time in the pouring rain to replace the tube.  We didn’t see him again until the finish.

I bought chocolate milk and chocolate chip cookies.  The others bought food and drink also.  While we were standing outside the 7-11 consuming our purchases a procession came by.  My guess is that it was a wedding procession because of these money trees in their gold pots.

Samila Century 2013 Money Trees

Not long after the stop at Khuang Niang we turned left onto Highway 43.  The road surface improved markedly.  More importantly there was a wide shoulder to ride on so we could stay as far as possible from the speeding cars, lorries and buses.  It helped that the highway was arrow-straight for a good 20 km / 12 mi.

We made a final stop at a petrol station just after the right turn off Highway 43 and onto Lopbun Ramesuan Road.  We needed a rest room.  While we were there we took advantage of a water hose to rinse the sweat off our faces, to soak our hair and jerseys in an effort to cool down, and to wash the sand and mud off our bikes.

The highlight of the ride for Mark and I came a few kilometers after we made the left turn back onto Highway 408.  There was quite a strong headwind as we rode over the first part of the Tinsulanonda Bridge.  We had our heads down, pushing against the wind as we rode past Wat Pranon Laem Pho.  So we didn’t fully appreciate the large reclining Buddha that the temple is famous for.

About halfway across Ko Yo Island something like this rolled past us.

Samila Century 2013 Low Loader

Mark and I had drafted a lorry once before.  What a blast that had been!  This was too good an opportunity to pass up.  Especially given the headwind we were battling.

We swung to the right and accelerated into the still air about 1 meter / 3 feet behind the lorry.  For the next 5.5 km / 3.4 mi we averaged 54 kph / 33.5 mph.  As we came off the second part of the Tinsulanonda Bridge and onto the mainland we were exceeding 64 kph / 40 mph.  What a treat to run out of gears on the high end of the cassette for once.

Sadly this low-loader wasn’t going all the way to the Haad Kaew Resort.  We waved our thanks to the driver as he honked and turned to the right.  Then our normal cycling speeds were resumed for the last 7 km / 4 mi to the finish at the beachside resort.

Samila Century 2013 Haad Kaew

I had expected to wait for the rest of the KESAS Kruisers and then ride back to our hotel.  Instead Mark and I were ushered into an air-conditioned hall for a sit-down lunch.  Thai green curry, stir-fried vegetables, spicy tofu, chicken in soya sauce.  All good, and all much appreciated.

Before long our group was together again.  As we ate we were were entertained by a singer, and a group of Thai traditional dancers.  That was followed by a lucky draw.  We all had our numbers in our hands and hope in our hearts, but none of us left with a prize.

We did have a certificate and a finisher’s medal to show for our efforts.

Samila Century 2013 Certificate and Medal

And memories of a wonderful trip with a first-class group of friends, and a very well-organized ride.  I think we will be back in 2014.

Photograph courtesy of Marco Lai

Photograph courtesy of Marco Lai