Winter is practically around the bend and Chiang Rai, the kingdom's northernmost region, is presently more than prepared to welcome guests looking for cool climate.
Roosted on an edge sitting above the slopes of Thailand, Myanmar and Laos at the conversion of the Ruak and Mekong Rivers, Anantara Golden Triangle Elephant Camp and Resort is nearly 70 kilometers north of Chiang Rai Mae Fah Luang International Airport.
On our way to the resort, my companion prescribes a short break at the honor winning Choui Fong Tea Plantation in Mae Chan locale. Acclaimed for its oolong mixes, the tea estate won the Gold Prize for Jinxuan and Ruanzhi oolong teas from the World Green Tea Association in Japan in 2009. Of the three ranches crosswise over Chiang Rai, totalling nearly 1,000 rai in region, Choui Fong is the littlest at 50 rai [1 rai = 1,600 square metres].
Guests after a photograph of themselves wrapped in the greenish cover weaved by the lines of tea, overcome the bursting sun and stroll along the way. I settle on a less demanding way, tasting hot oolong tea and chomping matcha cake at the bistro on the slope, getting a charge out of seeing a huge number of tea shrubs that extend for nearly to the extent the eye can see.
After a short rest in the van, we land at the Anantara Golden Triangle Elephant Camp and Resort. We have a fast lunch at Sala Mae Nam eatery before taking off to one of the features of the excursion, the Walk with Giants, where we stroll with infant elephants and their mahouts to watch their conduct in a characteristic setting.
"These elephants are amicable yet despite everything we must be watchful when strolling with them. On the off chance that you happen to be behind them and might want them to know that you are there essentially call their names. These youthful elephants resemble kids, they generally love to play so they may stop when they see something fascinating and they don't dither to utilize their trunks to investigate," says Decha, the veterinarian at the resort's nearby elephant camp.
In excess of 30 elephants have been saved from Thailand's city boulevards, joined by their whole mahout family and gave a place to rest and develop at the Golden Triangle Asian Elephant Foundation (GTAEF) situated at and bolstered by Anantara Golden Triangle and Four Seasons Tented Camp Golden Triangle. Two child elephants, Rak and Khok-khoon, raise their trunks when their mahouts instruct them to welcome us. Khok-khoon is calm and respectful while Rak is more lively and dependably takes after her heart. She stops at each bamboo we pass, enthusiastically stripping the leaves from the branches with her long trunk at that point scratching her sides against the storage compartment. Be that as it may, her best trap is scaling the slant to achieve eatable leaves and after that sliding down, much the same as a child playing on a slide. Strolling with these adorable child elephants influences me to comprehend why Henry Mancini's tune "Infant Elephant Walk" sounds so energetic.
The designated two hours appear to be much too short when strolling with these fun loving goliaths. "Look! Rak is exceptionally astute. She holds the hose with her trunk and beverages from it," my companion says as we alternate showering water over the infants after the long walk. The following morning we wake up ahead of schedule as we are planned to ride elephants bareback. We as a whole wear the thick Morhom pants that the resort has arranged for us over long jeans to shield our legs from the hard elephant's hairs.
Riding an elephant isn't different to me yet this is the first occasion when I've attempted it bareback in the immense prairies where they live.
As the elephants walk nimbly towards us, I can't resist the opportunity to feel little and powerless. The delicate daylight punctures the mist behind the elephants making a lovely outline and the sight quickly washes away my trepidation.
When compelled to walk the boulevards with her young calf, my elephant Poonlarp went to the establishment hinting at great mishandle and stress, including a head bouncing conduct common of very pushed and on edge elephants in imprisonment. The Poonlarp I see today is quiet, pleasant and kind. She is gentle to the point that I might want to hold her a little longer when I move up on to her back.
My companion sits on Poonlarp's neck while I sit on her back. All is well while Poonlarp sits and gives us a chance to change in accordance with an agreeable position yet once she stands, I ponder what on earth persuaded me to mount such a huge mammoth.
When she begins to walk, my heart thumps speedier and I stress that I may tumble off and be ventured on by the pachyderm. At about three meters over the ground, I think that its difficult to adjust and that is the point at which I review I don't have medical coverage.
Poonlarp's delicate pace progressively gives me genuine feelings of serenity. After my frenzy passes, I unwind my grasped situation is dire freely around Poonlarp's chest and begin to glance around.
Presently I have an inclination that I am joined with this eminent monster.
At her delicate pace, I feel peace.