Dec. 10th, 2024.
Our small village of Hang Quae (rhymes with ‘air’) still relies upon agriculture for its livelihood. There are rice paddies, longan orchards, vegetable gardens, irrigation canals and fish ponds all around us, and herbal medicine is still used widely by our neighbours. We ourselves grow most of the herbs we use in our garden, and the fruit we serve at our tables is either picked from our own trees or brought home early in the morning from the village earth market.
Walks and bicycle rides are a delightful way to explore the countryside, and we have a whole fleet of bicycles for our guests.
Maw Hom is assisted by her husband, Christopher Woodman–you can click on his name for a bit more about him. He’s fascinated by the local Thai community, and if you ask him will lead you into it anytime, on foot or by bicycle–the river, the rice paddies, the ruins, wats, sacred groves, graveyards & spirit houses. This is what Christopher says about Katja’s photo above: “The rice is most beautiful in the monsoon light like this. It rains extremely hard from June through October for 20 minutes or so everyday, then the sun comes out with rainbows that arc across the sky — and you can see all the way to the Burmese mountains, the air is so clear and fresh much of the time. The kapok tree in the center of the photo is one of my favorites. It loses all its leaves in the dry season in February, like so many tropical trees, then bursts into bright red flowers a few weeks later when it looks most dead. The petals are gathered up everywhere and dried to make kaeng khae, the delicious spicy noodles everybody so loves. Then a few months later the green fruit-pods split open and the ground is covered in kapok as white as snow — all our Baanhom mattresses are filled with it. But be careful of the thorny knobs on the trunk of this tree — according to Thai legend, the unfaithful must shinny up and down it naked forever and ever in hell!”
It was shot by our great friend, Sam Kalayanee, who died at just 50 leaving a huge gap in our lives. He was the co-producer of ‘Burma VJ,’ the documentary nominated for an Oscar in 2010 — indeed, some of the scenes in ‘Burma VJ’ were set in Baan Hom’s old wooden farmhouses. And needless to say, Sam was at the table that very evening.
The film was shot during a single afternoon, and stars just whoever happened to be there at the time. The old crank-up gramophone was brought by a Norwegian friend — the last one out of the steam bath smiling sheepishly at the camera. The fire is what we have every evening in December and January. All the rest is what happens any time of the year.
International travelers arriving in Thailand no longer have to be vaccinated, or carry special Medical Insurance; But please take note, the entry requirements are different for some countries, and if you are unsure you should contact your country’s Royal Thai Embassy before you come to Thailand;
Students from Asia, Australia, and Europe can usually fly directly to Chiang Mai International Airport (CNX).
You may still be able to avoid Bangkok.
Check international carriers that connect to Chiang Mai, such as:
American • Delta • United • JAL • ANA • Qatar • Emirates • Cathay Pacific • Thai Airways
Many European routes transfer in Asia to regional airlines. Some of these continue directly to CNX.
Examples include:
EVA • ANA • Korean • Thai Smile • Thai AirAsia • China Airlines • China Southern • Singapore • VietJet • Hong Kong Airlines • Bangkok Airways • AirAsia • JAL • Cathay Pacific • Qatar • Emirates
All students must arrive at least one day before the course. Why?
Rasidaton (Thai Yoga) starts at 7:00 AM on the first morning.
🕒 Best arrival time → afternoon
⚠ The night before class is considered part of your first course day.
Please email us:
We use this to confirm whether you land at the international or domestic terminal.
Where to meet:
Our driver will hold a sign with your name.
If you don’t see them:
wait at the baggage room exit
stay there
they will find you
Please email us:
Evening:
Coming by Yourself
You should take a Grab, blue and yellow taxi, or song taew (red pick-up truck taxi) — show ‘Baan Hom Samunphrai’ on your phone and the driver will use his GPS if he needs to.
Duration: 20 minutes
Cost:200 baht
Departures
The course ends after class at 4pm on the last teaching day.
Many students like to stay on for one more night, and they are always welcome to do so — it’s hard for us to see you leave too! We charge 1 extra day for that which includes 3 meals — we”ll give you a refund if you miss lunch on the extra day.
081 885 1429
20 minutes