We landed there on a Friday afternoon and grabbed a taxi to our centrally located hotel, where we took a quick dip in the pool and then hit the streets looking for action. With the exception on Suni spying a rat and having a major freak out right in the street, there wasn't much action to be found. We ate and returned to the room to relax. But Saturday was our day to party!



Sunday arrived early when Bow and Ake pulled up at the hotel with their little angel of a daughter and Bow's dear sweet mom. In just over and hour we were out of the new and into the old. Ayutthaya is a step back into the past - like 700 years into the past, when it was founded. You can see the remains of an early kingdom many miles up the Chao Phraya river away from the Gulf of Thailand that traded with merchants from India, Japan, Indonesia and even as far away as Portugal all when the U.S.A. was still a colony of the British. The old kings were forward thinking pragmatists who respected all religions and cultures, so long as they wanted to trade. Here, Buddha's wisdom was practiced and his images worshiped. As you walk along the crumbling remains of ancient temples and palaces, you can almost still feel the vibrations left by the centuries of chanting and meditation that took place here. It all amounted to the contrast of the millennium with the place where we ate dinner that evening: An entire little German town recreated to host and feed a parade of tour buses filled with Chinese tourists, though, to be fair, the food was excellent.

But parting is such sweet sorrow! We had to say good bye to Bow and Ake for the last time in Thailand (at least for this trip). Thanks for everything guys! We had a blast! Off to bed because the next day was sure to be just as eventful - or more so.
Monday morning and it was to be another special day - this time a very emotional one. We had made plans weeks earlier to meet Suni's foster mother, with whom she lived for about 2 years before we adopted her. Since Radd had already reunited with his foster mother on the trip where we adopted Suni, we thought we'd just give Suni the same opportunity. That's what we thought....

Oh well. So we didn't have a gift for her, which is traditional, and we weren't mentally or emotionally prepared, which is normal for us. We still had a nice time catching up with her and got to meet her husband for the first time. He was rather emotional - this being the first time he'd seen Radd in over 9 years. Radd is a pretty special guy, so I could understand how he felt.
Then it was back in the van and off to Grandmother's house we went. Yai Jah was also emotional to see her little Teng Mo (Watermelon, in Thai - and Suni's nickname). We looked at old pictures and told stories and had a Coke. It was just like a commercial. But we wanted to see the house where Suni lived when she was young, as we were visiting Yai Jah at her son's house.
So....back in the van! A few minutes later we met Yai Jah's grown daughters who also helped care for Suni, and even met their little kids. We walked around the house as Yai Jah told us about how Suni liked to swim in the river as it reached flood stage and hide among the plants in her nursery. It was all very touching. But finally it was time to leave them as well. There are so many good byes when you meet so many good people.
Our last stop of the day brought us to the subway, which we took to the end of the line, which was the big old Bangkok Train Station. And here, finally, we boarded an overnight southbound train for phase two of our summer vacation: 8 days on Koh Phangan.
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