Bangkok Part 4: The floating market, good eats, and good friends

By Joe Berk

It was to be a busy day in Thailand starting with a long ride south out of Bangkok to the famous floating market, an awesome shrimp lunch after that visit, then back to Bangkok, and then dinner at a fabulous Italian restaurant with a couple of good friends (I know people everywhere).  Imagine that: Italian food in Bangkok (and it was good, too).

About the floating market near Bangkok: I’d first sort of heard of it way back in the early 1970s when I saw a James Bond movie and its chase scenes with those narrow Thai boats.  The Bond flick was The Man With The Golden Gun (if you’re reading this blog, my guess is you’ve seen all the Bond movies).  The movie showed the boats in Bangkok, not the floating market, but it planted a seed 50 years ago and I when I heard about the floating market on this visit, I wanted to see it.  Here’s that scene I remembered showing James Bond doing his secret agent stuff (with an appearance by Sheriff J.W. Pepper, ably played by the late Clifton James) on Bangkok’s waterways:

The floating market is about 100 miles south of Bangkok.  The concept is that there are shops on the canals in the delta where the Chao Phraya River meets the sea. The idea is you are on these long narrow boats and you float along, visiting shops.  In some places the vendors paddle out to visit you.   Every turn in the floating market was a photo op, and for me, the photo ops were the best part of our visit.   I took close to 400 photos in the space of a couple of hours.  All were with my D3300 Nikon and its 18-55mm kit lens.  That combo is a stellar travel photography approach.  The 18-55mm lens is not as sharp as a good prime lens, but it does a good job and it is versatile.

A typical scene in the floating market. It was very tranquil. In some places, it was also very crowded.
A happy coconut vendor.
Need a python? I have one. You can read about it here.
One of the long boat captains.
Imitation, the sincerest form of flattery.  Here, this young lady is imitating me photographing her.
Mango. It looked good.
Some folks make amazing photo subjects.
Some animals do, too. If you’re wondering what this guy is…it’s a pygmy slow loris, rare primates that live in bamboo forests in Southeast Asia.  They look friendly.

On the way back to Bangkok, our driver took us to a nondescript restaurant that didn’t look like much from the outside, but our driver knew where the good spots were.  We had shrimp fried rice for lunch, and it was delicious.  The freshness, the aroma, the taste…it was marvelous.   It was easily the best shrimp plate I’d ever had, and I’ve had some good ones.  I’m not supposed to eat rice and I’m not supposed to eat shrimp, but I’m glad I broke the rules for this meal.

A hidden gem…a Thai shrimp plate. I knew when I was enjoying it I’d probably never find this restaurant again. Maybe that added to the experience.

We returned to downtown Bangkok and I wandered around grabbing a few more photos.  I promised something related to motorcycles in every Bangkok blog.  Promises made; promises kept:

The Bangkok Moto GP. It’s at the head of every traffic line at every traffic stop.

Our plans for that evening included having dinner with our good friends Kevin and Nan at Rosseno’s Italian Cucina.  It was another five-star dining experience, a world-class Italian restaurant in the middle of downtown Bangkok.  It was only a couple of blocks from our hotel, so Sue and I walked there.

Rosseno’s Italian Cucina. It was superb. I had lasagna.
From left to right, it’s Nan, Kevin, Susie, and me.

During dinner, it started raining.  After dinner it was pouring.  It does that a lot in Bangkok.   Kevin and Nan had arrived on one of Kevin’s motorcycles.  I would have been concerned about the rain, but as folks who live in Bangkok, Kevin and Nan were not.  To them it was no big deal.

Nan put on her rain gear (Kevin did not) and they rode off into Bangkok traffic.

Bangkok is one of the world’s great cities.  It’s about the size of New York, and like most major cities in the world, it pretty much has everything you can imagine (including great Italian food).

Tomorrow’s adventure is going to be another Bangkok hidden treasure:  The Jim Thompson house.  Stay tuned.  You’ll enjoy it.


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2 thoughts on “Bangkok Part 4: The floating market, good eats, and good friends”

  1. Do the Thai eat those snakes?
    Maybe I will make over to there sometime. If I ever make it back to the Philippines. I Should have been doing this 40 years ago.
    I do really like Thai food.
    And the woman are Buddhists which ,
    Well as I said , I should have been going this 40years ago.

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