Anyway, the elephant shiz was actually just part 1 of our day on Wednesday. Parts 2 and 3 were a hike to a waterfall and longneck village, and a bamboo whitewater rafting ride, respectively. Both of those were varying shades of cool, but couldn't hold a candle to the shadeless elephant experience #weirdmetaphor.
I didn't really take too many pictures of this part, but here are a few.
This is the longneck tribe. So this part was pretty odd: the longnecks are not giraffes, despite what the young U.S. Military guy traveling with us thought (sidebar: this guy had a paid-for Thai female "companion" with him, and it was pretty uncomfortable for us to see). The longnecks are tribal refugees from Burma who wear these bad rings around their necks that lengthen their necks. It's a real thing, but the village we hiked to was not authentic. There were a handful of people who maybe lived there but likely did nit--despite professing abject poverty, they seemed pretty clean and well put together, and one was conspicuously covering her left hand to obscure her digital watch. So this part was pretty scammy. You can sort of see the purported longnecks in the picture above, but we didn't get any good shots because it feels weird to take pictures of humans like their in the zoo. In fact, just like the zoo, there was even an informational kiosk:
We went to a second village of the Karen Tribe, which was only slightly more authentic. It had no smoking signs, satellite dishes, and a lot of pigs.
They stank. 






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