
Do you know this game “Never have I ever…”? Thailand was the reason I had to drink on “stayed in a police station over night” I would have to get out my travel diary and count to find out, how many nights I spent there. Unfortunately I had most of my police related photos on the phone that got stolen and never did a backup on.
No worries. I never was in trouble. I was a guest. Thailand wants tourists to feel safe and the police is accommodating to that. There is actually a special tourist police around – even came past a sign once: “The tourist police – your first friend in Thailand” and a phone number. Once they even slowed down, rolled down their window and asked me and my companion if they could be on any help to us and if we wanted directions.
So for you as a foreigner feel comfy, rural police stations have a place to sit in front where you are protected from the rain. Most offer drinking water and some of them some snacks. Once I was even invited for dinner.
Some police stations would even offer wifi to visitors. And – to get back to the topic of this article which is sleeping – I was invited to spend the night and given an opportunity to shower. Sometimes I was camping near by or I would sleep on the floor next to the head of the police office and his wife.

Another safe bet for a place to sleep are monasteries. I would walk up there during dusk and friendly-smilingly underlined with a lot of gestures tell a bit about me and my tour as well as my desire to pitch my tent somewhere.
Only once I was turned away but found another place to sleep with no hassle.

I stayed with people I met as well. Even getting into the really special problem of being offered to stay by TWO families at the same night.
The down-side of this is that you don’t get to sleep in as monks, police officers and everyone else, gets up early in the morning and so do you as their guest. I didn’t mind as I appreciated cycling in the cooler wee hours of the morning.
Finding places to sleep never was as easy as in Thailand. Unless I wanted a hotel, they were hard to find. Especially the ones that didn’t have a bunch of girls sitting in front.

Twenty-two hours later back in Hamburg

Taiwanese-dinner at the very same restaurant they took me for dinner on my first night in Hong Kong.



So yummy, so happy!
City wall and view from the city wall which was- surprisingly – free of charge

Great service and great language skills by the waitress of the Kung-Fu fast food restaurant.
Last day – first(!) flat between the two of us
That’s the view we got – I was too exhausted to care enough to cross the street for a better pic

Two kinds of highway, water and road – and we ‘sleep’ in-between
We put some effort in finding a secluded camp on one the side roads, but eventually gave up as every spot of land was either field, dump or a house. Camped between the river and the highway.

Only bummer is that I forgot to ask for his we-chat.
Best-ever dragon eyes
Stuff, we came past, but never understood – fire crackers are being laid out along side this field. Every night, we would here fire crackers going off and in the morning cycle past the remains. My theory is that it might keep birds or other vermin away from the rice.
Unser Nachtlager zwischen Bäumen – leider trieb uns ein Gewitter viel zu früh in die Zelte.






Appears to be a perfect road…
Please mark the road conditions we had instead.
Such beautiful, intense colours!
The roadworks we followed for kilometers and kilometers in the morning
Shanghainese-style eggs with tomato and a lot of sugar. All gone, eaten by half-starved-me in 15 minutes during the end of the day.

Please take in the beautiful-blue, not-thunderstormy sky we had all day!
Same same!

Along the way
There he is. Up on the wall!

Lunch break



At the museum: Nü-Shu and translation into simplified Chinese.


Heat-protection for our saddle during lunch






