I
sit in the back of a Tuk-Tuk and cruise along Phuket’s spectacular west coast.
The Sunday sun slowly sinks into the Andaman Sea and conjures a breathtaking
red glow onto the few lonely clouds in the sky. I sit and drive and let all
those coconut palm trees pass by.
Simultaneously,
I try to process the past 24 hours.
It
is Saturday evening, the 12th of April 2014. Adam, my good friend
from Barcelona, and Sofie, our new Danish intern at Elephant Hills, hire a
whole minivan to drive us to Patong – basically the Ibiza of Thailand. Adam and
I bought supersoakers for the whole team, because it is…
SONGKRAN!
Songkran
is the traditional Thai New Year. In former times, younger persons washed older
persons’ hands at this occasion, to symbolically wash away the sins from last
year. Over time, this has developed into the world’s wildest water fight.
(Probably because only washing your hands wouldn’t be sufficient for all the
sins we commit these days… ^^)
So
we chuck our stuff in our hostel room and dress up. Sofie gets her black dress
out, Adam and I – our swim shorts. After carefully elaborating our options for
half a minute or so, we decide to go topless. A very wise decision, as we would
learn soon.
As
walking doesn’t get us anywhere, we hire a tuk-tuk to bring us to Bangla Road.
What Khao San is for Bangkok, is Bangla for Patong. Just worse.
A
tuk-tuk is a semi-open vehicle, perfect to have fresh wind blowing through your
hair while enjoying a ride and the views. Not so perfect to move forward during
Songkran – way before reaching our destination, we are soaking wet. And by soaking, I mean that I am certain there was nothing
left in the inside of the tuk-tuk that was not
wet. In retrospect I must admit that pointing my empty supersoaker at passersby
and making a *splash* noise probably didn’t help much to keep us dry… ;)
So
we finally reach Bangla Road. We are soaking wet. But – so is everybody else! I
bet you cannot imagine what this place looked like: The roads were blocked with
pick-up trucks stuffed with people throwing water from the back of the cargo
area. The sidewalks were full of people, all armed with super soakers, water
guns and other water sputtering gadgets. In front of each bar you’d find a
massive ton where people refilled their equipment. And behind most corners
there were kids lurking around with hoses, waiting to blast a heavy water-jet
right into your face.
So
we fight back. “Save the Queen!” Adam shouts, and instructs me that we two guys
would have to save Sofie’s life from now on. We fight hard. We fight dirty. We
fight … almost successful. I honestly believe if Sofie had had like 3.287
lives, there could still be one or two left.
We
retreat to a bar. They have free water for all customers. And some kind of team
morality: All bar clients fight together. Most of the time. Unexpected guerilla
attacks do happen occasionally. Not that anyone would care anymore, every
person along this road (and there are several thousand!) is as wet as the
Andaman Sea itself. The only troubles are the varying water temperatures – from
ice-cold to urine-warm, Tom Hanks would probably compare it with a box of
chocolates. You never know what you gonna get.
We
flee into another place, a closed one, and enjoy the dryness of the moment for
around 30 minutes, before it’s time to hit the road again.
There
are occasions when I imagine I am not too bad with words. But I must capitulate
here – words cannot express what we witnessed that night. In case you’re up for
a first impression: Type “Songkran Patong 2014” into the YouTube search engine.
In case you’re up for the real thing: Book flights to Thailand April next year.
Believe me – you will not regret a single Cent you’ll spend!
The
following day. Adam departs to the airport. Estimated travel time is usually
around 30-45 minutes. Today, the hostel receptionists hurries him to leave
right now. He has only four hours left…
Sofie
and I fight our way through Bangla Road again, enjoy a mouthwatering lunch and
delicious strawberry milk shakes, dive right into an open air foam party and
then recover at the beach for a little while.
Sofie
somehow finds the energy to stay for another night; I will have to work tomorrow,
so I head back to Chalong. We find a driver, deliver Sofie to the hostel to
freshen up, and I snuggle into the back of the Tuk-Tuk to watch the sensational
Sunday sun set while cruising along Phuket’s spectacular west coast.
The
journey takes double as long as usual. By the time I arrive back at my
apartment, I am still trying to process what has happened, but I am quite
certain by now that I’ll probably never fully understand this unique event I
have just witnessed.
But
one thing I have realized once again today:
LIFE IS AWESOME!
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