The capital of Thailand appears the capital of pandemonium, its streets filled with tuk-tuks, motorcycle taxis, cars and 12 million people. But the Thais have mastered the art of creating tranquility behind closed doors, whether in homes, hotels or temples. Rudy takes you to back streets and the quiet, residential klongs, or canals, of Bangkok.
Visits to Bangkok’s legendary food carts and markets reveal the real city that captures the affection of visitors who take the time to seek out what makes Bangkok special. Marvel at the Emerald Buddha (made no less spectacular by the fact it’s really jade), visit the city’s flower and fish markets, join locals offering incense and flowers at colorful outdoor shrines, celebrate the king’s 80th birthday with an all-day and all-night party, and take a wooden boat along the city’s main artery, the wide Chao Phraya river.
A side trip takes viewers to the world’s only outdoor market whose vendors must fold back their displays 16 times a day as a train passes through the heart of commerce, missing vegetables, meats, and fish by inches.