Sunday, 23 February 2014

Bikes and beaches, Thailand

My post-workshop holiday began with a 100km bike ride with my friend Naomi who lives in London but is working on a BBC documentary at Bangkok airport at the moment. It was so nice to get back on a bike and get my legs moving after a week of walking round 3 points of a triangle. (Hotel room, restaurant, conference room. Repeat.) It wasn't meant to be 100km - we were aiming for 70km but got to our lunch spot early so managed another 30km after lunch. All good training for the RideLondon 100 miler I'm doing in August. Gulp.

In terms of location, apart from going to see the ancient capital of Thailand (Ayutthaya), we weren't really in a tourist area so it was nice to see some of the real Thailand as we peddled the streets with our guide Krit and Bobby our support driver/out-of-the-car-window photographer/ice cold flannel provider. Definitely no slumming it for this one!

Setting up the bikes with Krit and Bobby
Under arches...
And electricity cables...
Past chicken satay stalls...
And elephants...
And paddy fields...

And temples...
And billboards...
And over bridges...
King coconut stop at Ayutthaya
Lunch stop at 70km
Tired (or full?!) after lunch so drafting Naomi (-:
Still fresh 90km in!
Finished!
Celebrating with cold flannels... 
And cold beer!

After our day of cycling Naomi had to go back to work so I headed down to Krabi for a few days of beach time. I stayed at a little guesthouse called The Laughing Gecko with bamboo huts set in a cashew nut orchard at the quieter Hat Noppharat Thara end of Ao Nang (the Benidorm-esque centre of Krabi's tourist area). Basic but friendly and with wifi so I could email and call my solicitor about the flat which I was still waiting to exchange and complete on. So I didn't have the most relaxing of evenings (during UK working hours) but kept busy during the days with kayaking, snorkelling and exploring beaches.

On the penultimate day of my holiday I finally received the call I'd been waiting over 5 months for (more about that in my next post) - simultaneous exchange/completion 2 hours before my mortgage offer expired. Talk about going to the line...........



So THAT's what a cashew tree looks like!
Bedroom in bamboo hut 
Bathroom
Waiting for the solicitor to call...
Kayak trip to the limestone cliffs, caves and mangroves



Lived off these - satay sellers by the beach - and mango juice from the next door stall
Monkey walk to Centara Grand beach 
Centara Grand beach from the Monkey Walk
For Jenny and Penny who actually stayed at the Centara Grand at Christmas - I didn't dare cross the rope but thought you'd love to revisit the sun-loungers!
Centara Grand from the sea
Boat trip to Railay beach
Railay rock climbers
Long tail boats at Railay beach
Cooling off at Railay
Snorkelling off Podha island

Completed flat sale. Done. Home time (-:





Saturday, 15 February 2014

Regional ICS Asia Workshop, Thailand

In between facilitating workshop sessions at the ICS Latin America Workshop in Nicaragua last year (see 15th November blog post), I was also busy arranging flights and booking the hotel for a similar workshop to take place in Thailand in February 2014. Working to a range of 14 hours of time zones doesn't leave a lot of time for anything else but who needs sleep anyway?! What I didn't know at the time was that there was any potential for political unrest in Bangkok. But just after Christmas, with elections finally scheduled for February 2nd (8 days before the workshop), I found myself researching alternative locations (at the same time as trying to exchange and complete on the flat I was buying). Fortunately it never came to that, but it definitely kept me on my toes! 

So on February 10th, 28 participants from 5 different ICS agencies (VSO, Raleigh International, Restless Development, International Service and Y Care International) delivering ICS in 7 different countries across the Asia region (India, Nepal, Bangladesh, Tajikistan, Cambodia, Philippines, Palestine) arrived in Bangkok ready for the Regional ICS Asia Workshop. As well as staff from country offices within the region, my colleague Iain (co-facilitating) and I were joined by other colleagues from the ICS Hub as well as UK agency staff from VSO, Restless Development and Y Care International.

28 participants - 5 agencies (plus ICS Hub) - 7 countries (plus UK)

Timetable for the week - my terrible handwriting as neat as I could make it!

The week followed a similar format to that in Nicaragua but with Country Office presentations being integral to the themes of each session. Again structured around the ICS Programme Quality principles, we covered a wide range of themes from monitoring and evaluating ICS projects through to supporting a diverse range of volunteers. Like Nicaragua there was also space at the end of each day for individual country offices to plan what actions to take forward based on what they'd learned each day.

Talking to Sophia from Y Care International and Daniel from Restless Development 

Restless Development Nepal action planning at the end of a day of workshop sessions

Habib from Tajikistan presenting on their regional Tajik/Afghan recruitment model

Gaby from VSO sharing feedback in a plenary session

Feeding back on the monitoring and evaluation timelines

I particularly enjoyed the launch session for the volunteer learning resources I've been working on over the last two months. The resources are designed to support volunteers in their ICS learning journey, enabling them to reflect on key questions on a group and individual basis. I've been in near-continuous proof reading mode over the last month (damn that detail oriented nature of mine!) and they were finally printed just before we left for Bangkok, so now I'm excited about getting them into the hands of the volunteers and hearing about how they are actually used in practice. As a starting point I'll be going to Malawi in April to see how Lattitude Global Volunteering are incorporating the resources into their in-country orientation and training.

Introducing the new Active Citizenship Pack and ICS Learning Journal resources

Small group discussions about the new learning resources

Evaluating the week with post-its (what else?!)

This week has been really interesting but also pretty intense - I barely saw daylight/breathed natural air for 5 days straight, so once I had had my last meeting with the hotel events manager today it was really nice to venture out and see a bit of Bangkok. 35 acres of the bustling Chatuchak market was like going from one extreme to the other with all my senses coming back to life in one hit. I explored the maze of market stalls with Sophia from Y Care International, but even bumped into Mabel and Sheilla from VSO Philippines so 35 acres didn't seem that big after all! 

Tuk Tuk mirror selfie

And self selfie

Chatuchak market

35 acres but still bumped into Mabel and Sheilla from VSO Philippines

In the afternoon Sophia and I took the boat along the Chao Phraya river through the centre of Bangkok and went to see the Wat Arun temple before Sophia headed home to the UK and I joined my friend Naomi from London who's working on a BBC documentary about Bangkok airport at the moment. We're off cycling to Ayutthaya (the ancient capital of Thailand) tomorrow. Naomi is a GB triathlete so I'm pretty confident it won't be a little pootle past some paddy fields but hope it doesn't involve tri-suits and 10km splits....

Chao Phraya river in Bangkok

Sophia in photo bomb ferry boat shot

Wat Arun - not for the faint hearted!


Some of the most intricate temples I've ever seen

King coconut cool down