We grabbed a cab from our hotel going to the van terminal (Ayutthaya-bound
vans) when the cabbie told us that he could bring us there for the same rate
they would charge us when we commute, we agreed, worst decision of the
day.
We had great plans that day. We would go to Ayutthaya (by commute) and
chill there for the whole day. Until our cabbie pointed out that it would be
cheaper for us (there were four of us in the group) to rent a cab going there
for 1,700 Baht (US$ 52). I calculated silently and realized that it would
really be cheaper and less of a hassle for the group.
Until we saw an advert
inside the cab about a certain floating market near Bangkok. The group wanted
to go there, the cabbie agreed right away but the deal was that he would still bring us to
Ayutthaya no matter what. And so we thought that was a great deal.
The plan was to visit Damnoen
Saduak Floating Market that morning and then head straight to Ayutthaya
afterwards (around 170 km./2.5 hours far away from each other). Everyone agreed and
the ride to the floating market went on smoothly.
It took us an hour and a half southwest of Bangkok (90 km. away) to
reach Damnoen Saduak Floating Market. The cabbie brought us to a tour agent
near the canal and told us to transact there. Apparently, the rates were so
steep that I immediately glued my fiery eyes on our cabbie.
1,500 Baht (US$ 46) each person for a boat tour around the canals for
two hours, that’s an easy 6,000 Baht (US$ 184) for the four of us. I was like, Are you kidding me? We're all stunned. I was asking our cabbie before going there on the
boat rates and he would just give me this Just
ask them when we get there spiel a thousand times (apparently, he gets monetary commissions for every tourist he brings there).
Our scammer/cabbie for the day |
I was really mad at that
point. I knew that we could've went
straight to the market and observe everything from that standpoint or just hire a boat from the market but our cabbie was
acting like he didn’t know about all of these things (extensive research
next time Carla, please).
I was about to confront our cabbie when my cousin pulled
me and said that we should just proceed with the tour (a peace-friendly guy). Well, he’s the boss for
this trip, it was his treat for all of us and I couldn’t just decide based on
my fuming anger. My cousin seemed to be amused with the thought of riding a
boat along the canals, I was not.
Two hours along the canals and small channels, we were given two hours.
With the heaviest heart, I hopped on the boat and my buddies were all
trying to cheer me up to no avail.
We started from a narrow canal and head on to some village submerged in waters. It was literally a floating village (but not as grand as the floating village in Siem Reap, Cambodia). It was as if some heavy floods devastated the whole community which lasted for years. The water was, well, muddy and murky.
Lined souvenir shops along the banks were our first stop. Everything was
overpriced compared to some items in Bangkok. We sped off right away.
Next was the Sugar House where we needed to descend the boat and check
out the factory. It showed us the process of sugar-making (and some
by-products) from sugar canes. We have that in the Philippines so we didn’t
stay longer and hopped on again on our assigned boat, we’ve got limited time.
Next stop was the most awaited Damnoen Saduak Floating Market. The boat
traffic was starting to get heavy because it was mid-noon and the market
was flocked with locals and tourists.
Boats with fresh produce, grilling stations, ice creams, hotpot noodles, huge frying pans and other stuff dominated that part of the market. We, of course, tried everything we chanced upon.
I love this special holder for the condiments |
Next on our food trip list was Pad Thai. A lady was armed with, again, a huge tank of LPG, a large pan and the assortment of ingredients around her boat was game in making our stir-fried noodles. Everyone agreed that the Pad Thai was yummy, those Pad Thais in Khao San Road however, are way better.
Freshly-made Pad Thai |
The best ice cream! |
It was the best
ice cream for me, bar none. We had some more and savored it on the way to our
next stop (we still wanna try some more stuff but then again we wanna relish
the lingering taste of the coconut ice cream, it was divine).
I love how our boat food trip turned into a quirky balancing act. The
passing on of the noodles and the money and the change were very challenging
yet fun. Plus, the food is cheap here. I was starting to feel giddy and happy
at that time that I totally forgot the cabbie and the tour agents who ripped us
off.
Moving on, we headed to a Buddhist temple, still on the floating
village, where you could take some time to check it out. Me and my buddy
decided to just stay in our boat while my cousins went on to check out the
temple.
Next stop, our last, was the Damnoen
Saduak Elephant Village where you can experience riding an elephant. The said
village holds some trained elephants for riding around a “forest” and a small
stream for around 20 minutes. You can also feed them with bananas (which you
need to buy from them).
Elephant ride costs 600 Baht (US$ 18) per person. Me
and my buddy didn’t wanna try it for we really don’t get the point in riding
elephants (if you only knew how these elephants were trained for this). But my cousins really
wanna try it, so, okay.
My cousins were so excited |
We waited for them on the café for 20 minutes and saw them approaching the exit amused and were laughing so hard, they seemed to have enjoyed the whole trip. They even bought a souvenir photo that was printed on a plate or something. I was having fun watching them having fun.
I wanna see them roaming freely on their natural habitat... |
And then the end. We were
brought back to where we started two hours ago. We paid the exorbitant fees and
went to our cab where we saw our cabbie patiently waiting for us (we haven’t
paid a cent for the ride yet).
Hi there! Let’s now
go to Ayutthaya.
Ahmm. But it will be
closed in an hour.
Hmm… We still have to
go!
*Cabbie scratches his head and started the 2.5 hours ride to our next
destination
Sometimes, you need to be smarter than your scammer, or maybe just play
along with their games.
Damnoen Saduak Floating Market
Ratchaburi, Thailand
awesome!! you just out smart the scammer hahahah
ReplyDeleteim glad the tour and trip went smoothly
tnx for the tip
Haha. Kamot-ulo moments :)
DeleteI was planning to go there, but I have read how overpriced everything was so I happily skipped it.
ReplyDeleteWe loved the market though Michy :)
DeleteThat didn't sound like a scam to me at first, either. Glad I was able to read about it here.
ReplyDeleteSo were you able to make it to Ayutthaya? :)
Oh yes Claire! That will be my next post :)
DeleteDi ko pa na-try yang floating market kasi mostly ng nababasa ko puro scam. Anyway, natakam ako sa pad thai. I miss thai food. :)
ReplyDeleteTara Thai tayo Marx! :)
DeleteIt was even cheaper sa kinuha namen na tour sa Airport. May kasama ng van an tour guide. Kung wala sana kami kasama matanda we could've taken a more affordable means for the ride. Isang round lang pwede na sa boat ride, hindi nman maganda view. hehe!
ReplyDeleteHahaha. Keri lang naman Katherine kasi treat ng pinsan ko to eh :)
DeleteI'm not comfortable with the look of your cabbie driver - parang bolero at hindi puedeng pagkatiwalaan. Why did you hire him?
ReplyDeleteHahaha. Di kasi ako talaga mahilig mag base sa itsura ng tao eh. Napatunayan ko na yan ilang beses na wala sa itsura ang ugali :)
DeleteThanks for sharing, for my next trip
ReplyDeleteNo worries, Pham! :)
Delete