Phuket's English-language newspaper... since 1993
| Home | Issues & Answers | Classifieds | Events | Jobs | Property | Queer | Movies | Yellow Pages | Phuket TV
 
Daily News 
Queer News 
Bulletins 
Events Calendar 
Issues & Answers
Classified Ads 
Gazette Guide
 
Jobs
Phuket Property
 
Computer Stuff
 
Current Issue of
Full Newspaper
(Digital Gazette)
 
Archives
 -   Web Content Only
 
 -   Full Newspaper
(Digital Gazette)
 
Subscriptions
 
Ad Power Card
 
Currency Converter
Weather
Tide Tables
Weights / Measures
 
Privacy Policy
See Our Stats
 
Info Services for
Phuket Websites
 
Contact us
 
Site Map
Link Exchange

 

 

Phuket, Thailand: Monday, May 12, 2008

Search Queer News
[Click here to add our queer news to your website

Thursday, May 8, 2008

Little larvae, powerful performance

KALASIN: Aphrodisiacs and sex aids come in many forms. The Chinese have rhino horns and tiger penis, while Viagra has spread from America to become a worldwide craze allowing a generation of aging lotharios to revisit the prowess they enjoyed in younger days.

In Isarn, however, the latest sex-aid craze is neither the body part of an endangered species nor something cooked up in Dexter’s lab. It is small, green and lives on leaves: the humble caterpillar.

Villagers in Kalasin, especially young men, have been collecting bags of the little larvae to eat raw and enjoy as a drinking snack or to use as an ingredient in traditional dishes.

The caterpillars have become so popular that the price has shot up to a hefty 200 baht a kilo.

After hearing of the craze, a reporter from Thai daily Khao Sod on April 28 headed to Kalasin Polytechnic to investigate. The school has become a focus of caterpillar collectors due to the abundance of the larva’s favourite food source, the somewhat smuttily named golden-shower tree.

At the school, the reporter met a crowd of villagers who had travelled all the way from Khao Wong District armed with baskets and sticks, ready to collect the creepy crawlies.

Phunsuk Sripramai, 31, told the reporter that collecting caterpillars to eat was nothing new in Isarn. The bugs are a seasonal food, found mainly on golden-shower and Siamese cassia trees. The caterpillars, known as nang bong, are larger and tastier than those found in Northern Thailand, he said with pride.

The bugs are highly sought after by local people, who believe they have healing properties and improve sexual performance. They are now particularly popular with young men who eat them raw as a drinking snack, he explained.

Wirasak Janthadee, who had come from Thakhantho District to look for caterpillars, said he liked to eat nang bong in the hot season. Village elders say that whoever eats nang bong at this time of year will enjoy improved performance in bed and the healing of many body organs.

K. Wirasak, 45, recalled how he had long been stricken with gout until he began eating nang bong.

As for the sexual performance, eating caterpillars while drinking whiskey creates a potent aphrodisiacal effect, he added.

“Mostly they are used as an ingredient in traditional Isarn dishes such as laap and kaeng pa. They can be fried or roasted; whatever you prefer. What is certain is that if you eat about 12 of them they will fill your body with vigor,” K. Wirasak said.

As for a medical opinion, Dr Phisit Eua-wongsakul of the Kalasin Provincial Public Health Office said that eating the caterpillars would do no harm. In fact, they are similar in nutritive value to eggs, he said.

However, he could not confirm the rumored healing and aphrodisiac properties, which require further study. To be on the safe side, the caterpillars should be well cooked before eating, he advised.

Print this story | Send it to a friend
Send Letter to Gazette Editor
Source: Khao Sod


Friday, April 25, 2008

Snake wife makes grand eggs-it
Not many guys can claim to have had such a curvaceous creature in the sack!
Not many guys can claim to have had such a curvaceous creature in the sack!


UDON THANI: The peculiar story of a man who married a python said to be a 600-year-old spirit from his past has taken yet another bizarre twist.

Satien Kenkudlung’s python wife (pictured, right, with her husband) slithered away last week, after a short marriage. The volume of curious visitors has dried up, but K. Satien has kept the interest of the public sated with the discovery of an egg, supposedly laid by his now-departed wife.

K. Satien hit the headlines in early April when his marriage ceremony to the python was publicized. It was said the snake had been his soul mate for six centuries.

The egg development seems “well planned”, said Udon Thani Governor Supoj Laowansiri. Gov Supoj suspects the snake was hidden when the “charlatans” heard experts were on the way. He suspects a “grand return” at some stage, too. If the snake comes back by the end of the month, the governor and his subordinates will be ready to pounce.

Experts have debunked a theory that the egg is the fruit of Satien’s union with the snake, as the gestation period for a python is 80 days. The marriage was just a fortnight long. Plus, snakes usually lay a nest of up to 50 eggs. A mother never abandons her eggs.

Print this story | Send it to a friend
Send Letter to Gazette Editor
Source: Daily Xpress


Friday, April 25, 2008

Monk cops out royally

TAK: While impersonating a policeman for personal gain is nothing new in Thailand, one monk in Mae Sot who thought he may have picked the wrong career took it one step further over the Songkran holidays.

The monk not only claimed to be a high-ranking policeman, but also a member of the royal family and a representative of the Bureau of the Royal Household.

Phramahasamat, known as Samat Saengsai before his ordination, marched into Mae Sot Police Station in full uniform on April 15, demanding a police escort car during his participation in a Songkran procession.

Phramahasamat, 29, told officers that he was a police major attached to the Bureau of the Royal Household and also a mom luang, a descendant of Thai royalty.

Phramahasamat showed the officers his police ID card, identifying him as Mom Luang Pol Maj Kritaphol Kasemsri.

ML Pol Maj Kritaphol Kasemsri’s story was given extra credence by the fact that he drove to the police station in a Toyota Yaris with a ror yor lor registration plate, indicating it was a royal vehicle.

Col Phatsawat Tangjui, superintendent of Mae Sot Police Station, was unconvinced by the distinguished guest, however.

He asked to have another look at his police ID card and registration plates for the royal Yaris. On closer examination, both documents proved to be forgeries.

After a few minutes of awkward questioning, ML Pol Maj Kritaphol admitted that he was neither a police officer nor a royal descendant. In fact, he was actually just a country monk from Wat Srisanga Prachathamm in Roi-Et’s Selaphum district.

Phramahasamat told police that he had always dreamed of becoming a policeman, but had never been able to quite make the grade. With the path to a career in law enforcement closed to him, he opted to become a cleric instead.

As for the “royal car”, Phramahasamat said that one of his many followers in Roi-Et had donated it to the temple.

Before his arrest, Phramahasamat had been touring around the countryside, celebrating Songkran with the locals and claiming to be a representative of the Bureau of the Royal Household out on tour.

Phramahasamat was charged with impersonating a police officer, forging official documents and forging a royal car registration document.

There was no report of what action the Buddhist council of Roi-Et would take.

Print this story | Send it to a friend
Send Letter to Gazette Editor
Source: Khao Sod


Friday, April 25, 2008

Man stands by limbless bride

UDON THANI: Villagers from across the Northeast and as far away as Laos have been flocking to get a glimpse of a high-profile newlywed couple in Phen District. This couple are not celebrities, but a local Udon man and a female reticulated python he has fallen love with.

The happy groom, 35-year-old Sathian Khenkutrang, said he believes that he and the 12-foot snake were lovers in a former life. In the previous incarnation, K. Sathian was a bodyguard to Phrayanakho, a naga deity who lived in Beung Chuan in Tambon Na Phu, Phen district, he said.

K. Sathian fell in love with Sathida, the deity’s daughter. Phrayanakho, however, did not approve of the relationship and had K. Sathian executed. He then cast out his daughter, who wasted away and died of a broken heart.

Sathida’s spirit passed through a number of incarnations looking for her lost lover before being reunited with Sathian in this life, during which she happens to have the limbless form of a snake, K. Sathian explained.

On the morning of April 6, on hearing of this bizarre case of herpephillia, a Daily News reporter headed to Na Phu to find the couple, who were staying at the house of Yuan “Pu Yuan” Kongsuwan, 75, a spirit medium who had been guiding them.

When the reporter got to the house, however, K. Pu Yuan said that the couple had left after being challenged by an assistant village chief a day earlier.

K. Pu Yuan said that Samrong Sinthutham, assistant chief of Na Phu Village 2, had come to his house and accused K. Sathian of being a scam artist. He demanded K. Sathian prove the truth of his tale about his wife by correctly predicting the numbers in an upcoming lottery draw.

When villagers who had come to see the couple saw what K. Samrong was doing, they became angry and started to shout at him. In the end K. Samrong had to flee for his life to avoid being lynched.

Later, however, K. Samrong told the local news office to announce that the police and provisional livestock authorities were on the way to arrest K. Sathian and confiscate his unwieldy wife. K. Sathian therefore decided to head back to his home village, Ban Don Yannang in Udon’s Muang district.

On hearing the news of K. Sathian’s expulsion, the chief of Tambon Na Phu, no doubt ruing the lost revenue from visitors wanting to catch a glimpse of the cross-species couple, called a meeting of the village committee. The committee decided to invite the couple back to stay in Wat Na Phu. The report, however, did not say whether K. Sathian would accept the offer.

The reporter then headed to Ban Don Yanang to find K. Sathian and his serpent bride. The road heading to the village was filled with traffic caused by people heading to see the couple. Cars were parked along the roadside for a full five kilometers. K. Sathian told the newshound that when he returned to the village, a miracle had happened: a storm sprang up out of nowhere, knocking down a tent erected outside his home, ripping the roof clean off the dwelling.

K. Sathian said that he became very dejected at this and began to think that, if he couldn’t be happy with his wife in this life, maybe it would be better for the pair to die so that they could be reunited in the next life in more compatible forms.

That night, K. Sathian and his wife had to sleep in the small, half-destroyed house with his aunt and two nephews. His wife, apparently unhappy with this arrangement, bit his hand in the night, he said.

At 3 pm that afternoon, the onlookers were joined by Deputy Minister for Agriculture and Cooperatives Teerachai Saenkaew, who had come to see what all the fuss was about and offer some advice.

K. Teerachai told K. Sathian that the government “was worried” about how he was living and joked that he would help find him a human wife if he liked.

K. Sathian replied that his snake was the only wife for him.

Saying he was worried about the couple’s health, K. Teerachai advised K. Sathian to keep his wife in a cage at night, when pythons like to go out and hunt for prey.

K. Theerachai said he would instruct livestock officers to give K. Sathian some tips on feeding reptiles so he wouldn’t have “any problems”.

The minister also called for the public not to get too worked up over the couple, saying that it was just “a man and his snake”, nothing to get too excited about.

As for the wedding, K. Theerachai said it was a personal belief, which was OK, but he warned people not to believe everything they heard.

He also said that he was pleased to see the effect the couple were having on the local economy. He cautioned people, though, to keep their distance from K. Sathian’s wife, especially when she is hungry.

K. Theerachai said that he hadn’t brought a psychiatrist along with him as he didn’t want to jump to conclusions about K. Sathian’s mental state.

K. Sathian has yet to reveal whether or not the marriage had been consummated, however.

Print this story | Send it to a friend
Send Letter to Gazette Editor
Source: Daily News


Wednesday, April 9, 2008

Fowl play suspected in local election

ANG THONG: Police Region 1 are leaving no stone unturned in their attempt to bring to justice a vicious gang of youths who abducted 1,500 waterfowl from a local politician, in what police believe could be a politically motivated ducknapping.

At about 3 am on March 28, six young men, some on motorcycles, some in a six-wheeled truck, pulled up at a duck farm in Village 2 Tambon Yan Seu in Ang Thong Muang district.

The youths grabbed the lone security guard, 44-year-old Reuangsak Khrueakaow, and bound him hand and foot before administering a savage beating for good measure.

With the security guard taken care of, the youths turned their attention to the not-inconsiderable task of getting the 1,500 ducks from the coop into the back of the truck.

When all the birds were safely on the truck bed, the gang sped away amidst the sound of startled quacking.

When a badly bruised K. Reuangsak managed to wriggle free from his bonds at about 5 am that morning, he called Ang Thong Police to report the crime.

When police learned that the missing fowl belonged to a Lamlee Noinongwun, deputy president of Bang Phlap Tambon Administration Organization (OrBorTor), they jumped into action.

Maj Gen Thanisak Thirasawat, commander of Ang Thong Provincial Police, said, “The criminals are probably from within the world of duck rearing as they knew how to properly transport the birds and also knew where K. Lamlee kept his ducks, which is a quiet and secluded location.

“We are now taking statements from witnesses who saw the truck [used in the robbery].”

Gen Thanisak added that his superior, Police Region 1 Commissioner Lt Gen Rachot Yensuang, was also following the case closely and had urged him to rapidly bring it to a close.

He therefore ordered Muang District Superintendent Col Wareeroj Kongkanphai to take personal responsibility for the case.

Col Wareeroj said that he had contacted the Provincial Livestock Office for information on local duck-keepers who could be involved in the crime.

He has also ordered police and Volunteer Defence Corp officers to inspect all duck farms in the area to look for any ducks acting suspiciously.

If two flocks of ducks are introduced to each other, they will not mix and will stay as two separate flocks, Col Wareeroj explained.

Police have received tip-offs from confidential informants indicating who the gang of youths are and believe the mastermind behind the plot is likely to be one of K. Lamlee’s competitors in the duck-rearing business, but are not yet ruling out a political motive for the ducknapping. K. Lamlee was preparing to run for another term as OrBorTor deputy president, Col Wareeroj added.

K. Lamlee told reporters that the ducks were worth about 150,000 baht.

K. Lamlee added that he didn’t want to believe that the theft was politically motivated, but admitted that he did have some problems with political rivals.

A source told the Gazette’s Thai-language sister-paper Kom ChadLuek that the motive behind the great duck theft was to intimidate K. Lamlee ahead of the upcoming OrBorTor elections.

The perpetrators were a group of youths from Tambon Pho Rang Nok in Pho Thong District under the control of one of K. Lamlee’s political rivals, the source explained.

Print this story | Send it to a friend
Send Letter to Gazette Editor
Source: Kom Chad Luek


 

Login
Gazetteers log in here.
For full access to all the community facilities on this site, become a Gazetteer. It's free!
Phuket Television
Search this site
Yellow Pages
Search for any of  3,653
BUSINESSES IN PHUKET
Search by category
Issues & Answers
Where can I dispose of my UPS?
Queer News
Little larvae, powerful performance