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June 2010 • ScandAsia.Thailand 1 Thailand JUN 2010 ScandAsia.dk ScandAsia.fi ScandAsia.no ScandAsia.se The Story of the Stable Lodge

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ScandAsia Thailand Magazine for residents from Denmark, Sweden, Norway and Finland living in Thailand.

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Page 1: ScandAsia Thailand - June 2010

June 2010 • ScandAsia.Thailand 1

Thailand

JUN

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ScandAsia.dk ScandAsia.fi ScandAsia.no ScandAsia.se

The Story of the Stable Lodge

Page 2: ScandAsia Thailand - June 2010

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Page 3: ScandAsia Thailand - June 2010

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Page 4: ScandAsia Thailand - June 2010

Coming Events

ScandAsia is the only magazine that covers all the Danish, Finnish, Norwegian and Swedish residents in Thailand.

We also publish a ScandAsia magazine in China, Singapore and the rest of South East Asia.

Your FREEScandAsia Magazine in Thailand

Please sign up for your own FREE copy: www.scandasia.com

Publisher: Scandinavian Publishing Co., Ltd. 4/41-2 Ramintra Soi 14, Bangkok 10230, Thailand Tel. +66 2 943 7166-8, Fax: +66 2 943 7169 E-mail: [email protected]

Editor-in-Chief: Gregers A.W. Mø[email protected]

Advertising: Finn Balslev [email protected]

Piyanan Kalikanon [email protected]

Nattapat [email protected]

Graphic Designer: Disraporn [email protected]

Distribution: Pimjai [email protected]

Printing: Advanced Printing Services Co., Ltd.

Daily news and features here:www.scandasia.com

Ambassador’s Cup Lam Luk Ka Golf & Country Club north of BangkokSaturday, 28 August, 2010.

“The Ambassador´s Cup Golf Tournament” is one of the flag ship annual events of the Thai-Finnish Chamber of Commerce. This year, it takes place at Lam Luk Ka Golf & Country Club north of Bangkok on Saturday, 28 August, 2010. The entry fee - Baht 12,000.– for a team of 4 players or Baht 3,000.– for each individual player - includes green fee, caddie fee & dinner buffet. As usual, the event is loaded with gifts and prizes. Each player will receive tournament branded Cool-Max Golf Polo Shirt and Golf Ball Marker. Link to signup for the event is on www.thaifin.or.th

Hua Hin Regatta 2010 Hua Hin Beach in front of Sofitel Centara Grand Resort & Villa Hua HinTUE 3 - SUN 8 August 2010.

The Hua Hin Regatta will take place this year from 3 - 8 August. The racing event takes place on Hua Hin Beach in front of Sofitel Centara Grand Resort & Villa Hua Hin and is organized by the Royal Thai Navy, Yacht Racing Association of Thailand the Tourism Austority of Thailand and the local Hua Hin municipality. This year, it will be the 10th time the Regatta is held. Contact the Regatta Office at Naval Yacht Club, Hua Hin +66 32 514210 up to 7 or the Yacht Racing Association of Thailand. http://www.yrat.or.th

Bicycle Trip to Khao YaiEco Valley LodgeTHU 12th - SAT 14th August.

A bicycle weekend in Khao Yai has been on the aganda of the Viking Wheelers every year since the start of the popular club. This year, the Khao Yai long weekend takes place 12th - 14th August. The staring point will as always be Eco Valley Lodge, the resort of the veteran Viking Wheelers members Morten Luxhoi and Mads Tranum. From here the route goes through the very scenic areas at the foothills north of the Khao Yai Park. There is ussu-ally a trip both Saturday and Sunday. Another highlight is traditionally the great dinner and friendly atmosphere in the evenings. Signup is on www.vikingwheelers.com

Thailand Travel & Dive ExpoQueen Sirikit National Convention CenterTHU 8 - SUN 11 July 2010

Thailand Travel & Dive Expo 2010 was originally sched-uled for 20-23 May but due to the political disturbances in Bangkok, they were re-scheduled to 8 -11 July. Around 85,000 visitors are expected but with the drop in tourism there should be plenty of good deals. Supported by Tourism Authority of Thailand, Thailand Photo Business Association, PADI Asia Pacific, DAN SEAP, NAUI Asia Pacific, and Wahoo Diving Center.

Page 5: ScandAsia Thailand - June 2010

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Page 6: ScandAsia Thailand - June 2010

6 ScandAsia.Thailand • June 2010

Queen Margrethe II’s Birthday

GlenAsia Charity

Swedish housing developer in Thailand GlenAsia participated in a local charity project in Rayong province called " Happy musical with sunlight and the wind creation" held on April 24th, 2010.

The project aimed at providing children and youths in the area with an opportunity to develop their creative potentials and abilities, learn to be a giver, and share happiness, and to strengthen relationships between children youths in the community as well as to encourage kids to say no to alcohol and tobacco.

Denmark celebrated the 70th Birthday of Her Majesty Queen Mar-grethe II of Denmark at a reception in Oriental Hotel, Bangkok on Tuesday 20 April 2010. Members of the Danish community in

Thailand enjoyed the evening mingling with Thai dignitaries and diplomats from other nations. The reception was the first diplomatic activity after the battle a week before between red shirt demonstrators and soldiers in the old part of Bangkok had left ten dead and over a hundred wounded. Michael Sternberg, Ambassador of Denmark to Thailand, used the oc-casion to once again urge all sides in the Thai conflict to seriously engage in a process of reconciliation if further blood shed should be avoided. Michael Sternberg ended his speech by proposing a toast to Her Maj-esty Queen Margrethe II of Denmark and His Majesty King Bhumibol Adu-lyadej of Thailand.

1. Mrs. Jaana Kopra, Mr. Ole Madsen and Mr. Anders Normann listening to H.E. Ambassador Sternberg. 2. H.E. Ambassador Michael Sternberg.

3. H.M. Queen Margrethe II on the big display on the wall. 4. Mrs. Ambassador Waltraud Sternberg.5. Guest enjoyed the fine wine and good food at the reception.

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Page 7: ScandAsia Thailand - June 2010

June 2010 • ScandAsia.Thailand 7

SSS AGM Elects New Chairman

The many people of different nationalities, who turned up at the cel-ebration of the Norwegian National Day on 17 May, made the whole event a good one. It was hosted at the new church located on Soi 7

in Thappraya Road, and the many children who attended just made the day that much more special. This year’s 17th May was kicked off with a hearty breakfast for all at-tendees after which the Seamen Chaplain Jan Olav held a simple and friendly service. Then it was time for the children’s parade which was full of cheer-ing and smiling faces. It ended at an empty space by the Seamen’s Church where everyone enjoyed sausages, soft drinks, and ice cream in the shade during the May 17th speech by Anne Gunnerød. Everything was free thanks to the sponsors and Terje Kalback who co-ordinated the whole event did a great job.

The Annual General Meeting of Scandinavian Society Siam - postponed two times due to the violence in Bangkok - on Tuesday 8 June 2010 elected Mr. Søren Wettendorff as new Chairman. The meeting

elected several new members of the Board as well. As usual, the evening was also a social event for members to meet and discuss matters of importance to the Society and the Scandinavian commu-nity in general. For details of the election please visit www.scandasia.com

17 May Celebrations in Pattaya

1. Mrs. Eid Alexandersen wishes Mr. Soren Wettendorff good luck. 2. The newly elected Chairman Mr. Søren Wettendorff addressed the meeting.3. Some of the new Board Members, from left: Dr. Kristian Bø, Mrs. Torrill Stenseth, Chairman Mr. Søren Wettendorff, and Mr. Jesper Døpping.

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4. Outgong Board Member Mr. Erik Dahlström5. Among the twenty six regular AGM attendees were again this year Poul and Vicki Weber. The meeting was not all serious matter!

Page 8: ScandAsia Thailand - June 2010

8 ScandAsia.Thailand • June 2010

Steffen of The Stable Where in Bangkok do

you go when you get a craving for a piece of Danish

rye bread for lunch or fried slices of pork with parsley sauce for din-ner? Where can you celebrate Dan-ish Christmas or Morten’s Night with duck ad libitum? There is only one place, and that’s Stable Lodge on Sukhumvit soi 8. The legendary Danish restaurant and hotel is a whole institution in Southeast Asia and a regular meeting spot for Scan-dinavians. Both tourists and expats gather there when they are in need for some Danish ‘hygge’ and Scandi-navian food. The man who runs Stable Lodge is Steffen Ingemann. He spends most of his time at the restaurant, keeping an eye on both guests and staff. Ev-eryone knows who he is – and yet they don’t. Because the fact is that Steffen behind his very social role at the restaurant, is a private man who doesn’t like to talk about himself. Just to do this interview with ScandAsia took a good deal of convincing and encouragement to happen. “Well, you know… there is not much to say about me,” Steffen Inge-mann, 62, says, sitting in the restau-rant by a table with the characteristic red and white chequered tablecloth. He orders a cup of coffee. “I never drink alcohol before 5pm… and only two beers maxi-mum per day. Then maybe a glass of red wine and a drink later but that’s it. I also exercise every day,” he reveals. Stable Lodge is Steffen’s second home, and no doubt about the fact that he is proud of it and its great success. “We are the best Scandinavian restaurant outside Denmark, both in terms of food, service and Dan-ish ‘hygge’. You will not find a place with better traditional Danish food than here. Go to Spain, Pattaya or anywhere else. Our food beats it,” the Dane promises, adding: “All credit for the good food goes to Erik ‘Buddha’. Everyone

knows how much he loved food. We still have the same Thai kitch-en chef as 18 years ago when Erik taught her to make the dishes”.

Freedom as travel guide To get to know the history of Stable Lodge we need to go back to the mid 70’s in Bangkok. Here, a Dan-ish guesthouse named ‘Mermaid’ opened on soi 8, on the opposite site of Stable Lodge and closer to the Sukhumvit road. It was the Dane Jørgen Lundbeck who started Mermaid which was mainly used by Danish seamen who came to there to get a place to stay or some Dan-ish home cooked food far from home. In 1979 the young man 31-years old Steffen Ingemann from Nykøbing Falster arrived to Thailand as a travel guide for Tjæreborg. He had been a guide for two years and worked in many different countries. “I had been married nine years in Denmark, had a house, a big car and a really good job for the Scandi-navian Tobacco Company. But then I got a divorce and went on a char-ter trip to Italy. I saw how the local travel guides lived their life. The sun was shining, the wine was plentiful and it simply looked like a good life. Shortly after, I quit my job in Den-mark. Everyone thought I had gone nuts, but I didn’t care. Money isn’t everything. I grabbed the opportu-nity to enjoy my new freedom and exploring the world,” he remem-bers. He travelled to many countries and enjoyed it; however, when he arrived to Thailand, he was sold. “I had already seen a lot of Asia but I knew that I would not find a better place than here. But hey… it’s the same old story. Everybody falls in love with Thailand,” says Stef-fen.

The Stable name As a part of the Danish community in Bangkok Steffen started hanging around at the Mermaid Guesthouse. However, as Thailand became more and more popular among tourists in the beginning of the 1980’s, Mer-maid with its 25 rooms became too small. The owner Jørgen decided to get a new apartment building in the same soi 8 on Sukhumvit, and

Stable Lodge is an institution in Bangkok. All Scandinavians know the Danish restaurant and hotel. But how many know about the history and origin of the place? The same goes for owner Steffen Ingemann. He is there all the time, however not many know about him either. Now, you have the chance.

By Rikke Bjerge Johansen

Steffen and his wife, Nim, work side by side at Stable Lodge, and she is part of the reason the restaurant has become such a great success. Here they celebrate her 50th birthday.

Page 9: ScandAsia Thailand - June 2010

June 2010 • ScandAsia.Thailand 9

Lodge he did it with Erik ‘Buddha’Winther and Steffen. However, it took a few years before it became the Stable Lodge we know. First, a rich Thai woman bought the whole place, made it into a hotel, which didn’t work and then she asked Steffen, Jørgen and Erik if they wanted to run it again as a Scandinavian con-cept. They agreed and it is now 18 years ago. “We needed a new name for it and the name ‘Stable Lodge’ was actually suggested by an American friend. We loved the name instantly; it had a catchy sound in English but also in Danish ‘På Stalden’. It sound-ed good and we decorated the place after its new name,” Steffen says and looks around in the restau-rant. The team of three – Jørgen, Erik ‘Buddha’ and Steffen – expanded the hotel with the restaurant and has run it ever since. In the late 1980’s Steffen stopped working as a guide and was now fully devoted to Stable Lodge. It isn’t a secret that Erik ‘Buddha’ was a man who enjoyed life, includ-ing a lot of food and beers. Unfor-tunately, he got very sick, had a leg amputated and needed to move back to Denmark four years ago. Jørgen and Erik took over his share

of Stable Lodge. “Erik used to be the restaurant entertainer and front figure while I was running the hotel and adminis-tration. When he went to Denmark, I had to come out in the spotlight,” Steffen says with a shy smile. His partner Jørgen is busy with other business and is a ‘sleeping partner’ as Steffen describes it. “Jørgen doesn’t interfere but trusts my judgment and work. He is a perfect partner”.

Family business Steffen spends 10-12 hours every day at the Stable Lodge. However, he still sees his family a lot, since his Thai wife is the one with the over-all responsibility for staff and paper work. They met in the beginning of the 1980’s, she went to Sweden to get an education. 17 years ago after finishing her education, she came back to Thailand and later became a lawyer. She is working fulltime at the Stable Lodge, making sure that ev-erything is up and running. Together her and Steffen have 15 year-old daughter. “Our daughter is more Euro-pean than Thai and speaks Danish, Thai and English fluently. She studies at an international school out here

and is going on a Danes Worldwide summer camp to Denmark this year for the first time,” Steffen says with a proud smile adding: “After my mom died three years ago I haven’t been to Denmark. However, this Summer I will go with my daughter, so she doesn’t have to travel all alone to Denmark,” he says with a warm smile.

Future of Stable Lodge Last year was tough all over Thai-land for hotels and restaurants. However, Stable Lodge with its 41 rooms managed to get by. “Usually we help filling up the neighbor hotel since we can’t ac-commodate all our requests. We couldn’t help them last year, but even though it went slower than

the previous year we were never in a crisis. We are fully booked ten months of the year,” Steffen says. Being 62 years old, Steffen has thought about the future of Stable Lodge. “I’m getting older and one day we want to sell. Of course the price should be right, but the ownership is also very important. I really hope it will be kept on Scandinavian hands with the Scandinavian concept. I would be sad to see it being turned into an Indian restaurant,” he says adding: “I mean, why change some-thing that is such a success as Stable Lodge.” Steffen has to go and the inter-view is done. ScandAsia’s reporter forgot to thank him and his partners. Thank them for the little piece of Danish ‘hygge’ that exists in Bang-kok, far away from home.

Pailin is Steffen’s 15 year old daughter. This Summer, they are going to Denmark together for the first time in three years.

Erik “Budda” and Steffen cutting and enjoying the cake at the Stable Lodge’s 10 year birthday party.

Page 10: ScandAsia Thailand - June 2010

10 ScandAsia.Thailand • June 2010

One of Scandinavia’s most successful writers and cartoonists, Øyvind Sveen, 36, is do-ing fine combining private life with his Viet-namese wife and their seven months old

daughter Annika, and a professional life together with his partner Ivan Emberland, in a small “boring” complex sub-urban Saigon in South Vietnam. The two guys have been together since they were fourteen. Mostly in Norway, but during the last two years while Øyvind has been in Vietnam, his partner Ivan has lived at the other side of the planet, namely in Brazil. Thanks to Skype, the two of them work literally together doing at least two pages of cartoons almost every day. “My wife Sang and I met each other while we both were backpacking in Vietnam. She had been living in Sin-gapore for many years, so you can say we were equal in our desire to discover this fantastic land”, Øyvind explains a late morning in his house in the suburb Tru Duc, an hour on a bike from the centre of Saigon. His wife is in Singapore to take care of her real es-tate business, so the Norwegian cartoonist, illustrator and writer take care of their little daughter with the help of a housemaid. “We have lived a little more than four years in Viet-nam. It’s a good place to live. Both Sang and I were happy to be here, so we decided to buy this house”, says Øyvind, while he is waving his hand toward the fantastic and rather unusual view from his working desk in his office. Banana palm trees, coconut palms and bushes fill up the neighbouring land. “It was a little funny and strange when we went here for the first time to check up on the complex. All the houses in the centre were sold. Vietnamese people seem to like the security of being close to other people. But that was fine for us. Then we could have a little privacy, and a wonderful view, as longs as it may last, until someone makes a similar complex at the other side of the fence”,

Norwegian Cartoonist The last four years Øyvind Sveen has been drawing his daily two pages of football cartoons in Vietnam.

By Bjarne Wildau

Page 11: ScandAsia Thailand - June 2010

June 2010 • ScandAsia.Thailand 11

as “Sleivdal IL”, while its named “Slarvhult BK” in Sweden. In Finland, they lose every game under the name of “FC Hutivaara”. In all three countries our stories are published by the football magazine Boing”. The other Boing cartoon is the more realistically drawn series “Dennis Kickstart”. This is about the young local boy who experiences every boy’s dream when he sparkles during a test match and gets picked up by a top team in the English Pre-mier League. We follow his career and personal life as it hits its highs and lows. But Øyvind and Ivan also has a third project - “Hinsidige Bar & Grill”. It’s the pair’s third main proj-ect. Roughly translated to “Beyond Bar & Grill”, this is a satire strip where mythological creatures dis-cuss, and sometimes cause, current affairs. Combined, “Hinsidige Bar & Grill” and “Sleivdal IL” have been published in more than 20 Norwe-gian papers and magazines. At this phase of the interview it could be interesting to hear about the sources to all the ideas and epi-sodes. “I have always played football, even in the Vietnam expat league, so some of the football cartoon stuff comes from personal experiences, failures and dreams on the pitch. We also pick up stuff everywhere, like funny things people say, we get inspired by travelling, reading books,

Øyvind is laughing. After the first visit to the com-plex he did not hesitate at all before he sold his condo in Oslo, and for the same money was able to buy this wonderful house. While he is running down to the nearest fridge after some re-freshments, I am looking around in the office. The room is dominated by a huge poster on the wall oppo-site his desk showing Øyvind and a Norwegian photographer standing on some ice in Svalbard with a snow scooter in the background. When he returns, I ask about the picture. Without going into details he explains that the picture is from an assignment he had as a writer. Back in our chairs again Øyvind explains that he has had a pen in his hand as long as he can remember. And no, there are absolutely no cre-ative people among his parents or forefathers. “I have no explanation about how I became what I am. I was just making my drawings without think-ing of it. And it all got a little serious when I was fourteen, when Ivan and I started to do things together” As they grew up, the two guys carried on with their cooperation. They even took the same educa-tion at the same time at Westerdals School of Communication in Oslo. And almost ever since they have been doing a monthly football magazine and six comic books with more than 5000 pages together. The biggest hit for Øyvind and his partner is the tale of the worst football team in Scandinavia. This is published in a variety of formats, from newspaper strips to monthly magazine episodes and thick books. “In Norway the team is known

in VietnamHinsidige Bar & Grill” and

“Sleivdal IL” have been published in more than 20 Norwegian

papers and magazines.

and an almost constant change in scenery for our daily lives help feed our fantasy. I get restless and cre-atively empty if everything around me stays the same for too long. Maybe that’s the good thing with Vietnam - the constant changes. Because Vietnamese art, architec-ture and creative achievements are mostly rubbish, so inspiration must be found in other areas. When Øyvind started his car-toons he had the same age as his readers. He gets older. Is there any reason for concerns? “Yes. I think so. At least I fear the generation gap a bit. I’m old enough to already disagree with current popular trends in movies and music, which might be danger-ous. But I try staying in touch with the audience. And hopefully we will keep our readers: With our car-

toons, my colleague Ivan and I have always aimed at targeting on two levels at once. Funny drawings and slapstick humour for the younger ones, but also political satire, radical environmental messages and hidden links that just a very few will get, for the older readers. We actually try to show some teeth between the lines, and sneak our own opinions into young minds”. And despite Øyvind loves his stuff and its audience, he can easily see him self start writing and maybe drawing something closer to his own life. To draw, or maybe only write, for an older audience is certainly ap-pealing. Who doesn’t have a dream of one day publishing the perfect novel? One day.

Page 12: ScandAsia Thailand - June 2010

12 ScandAsia.Thailand • June 2010

“The importance of Lizza’s part in this can never be overestimated. Without her, I would never ever have been able to do what we did,” he says. “It’s common knowledge that friendship and business go together. But with the military, that business culture is much more developed. For us, Lizza became friends with the navy decision makers at the navy. They never talked business, but she made the important social-izing with the wives of the generals”, says John Lundin. While Lizza was busy making contacts with the navy, John made his design department create an al-most seventh wonder in the world of patrol boats. The X2K became first X2K Fast Interceptor and then the additional X2K RIB was born which has a combination of a fi-breglass body/ hull and an inflatable part. “Plus night vision, special chairs designed in Sweden and so on,” John Lundin adds. “The Indonesia navy was happy with what they got. Since the first delivery, we have sold more than thirty to different military units or police units in Indonesia. Today, Ma-laysia and Singapore are also among our customers. Together, the two neighbour-ing countries bought more than 40

boats,” John Lundin explains. “The Americans have made a trimaran 120 metres long but in alu-minium. The only sort of compara-ble boat on the market is Kockums Visby which is more advanced - but also much much more expensive,” John Lundin adds. John and Lizza Lundin’s path into being a regular supplier to the Indonesian Navy started when John designed a seaworthy high-speed boat suited for pleasure, fishing, div-ing that could fit into a 40 foot con-tainer and called it X2K. Since then he has produced and sold more than thirty of these X2K speed boats “A couple of years after we sold the first X2K, we painted one grey and launched at a military exhibition in Indonesia”, says John Lundin. Since then he, his wife Lizza and PT Lundin have gotten stronger and stronger.

Military Suppliers“The entrance to be a supplier to the military was a whole new ballgame for us,” John Lundin concedes.

Shrouded in military secre-cy, an extremely powerful speedboat is about to be built for the Indonesian Navy by the Swedish

boat builders John and Lizza Lun-din at their boat yard in Sokuwidi in Banuywangi, Indonesia. The couple have already sold many smaller patrol speed boats to the navy, but this is something spe-cial. “We have a contract with the Indonesian Navy to deliver one tri-maran patrol boat 60 metres long made in carbon glass fiber and we have the option of three more

Indonesian Navy Buys Swedis

John Lundin with his wife, Lizza.“Without her, I would never ever have been able to do what we did,” says John.

In the middle of nowhere, Swedish John Lundin and his Indonesian wife Lizza are designing and producing high speed boats for patrolling and to ambush pirates with the help of some of the world’s sharpest brains in designing speedy boats. The latest project is a gigantic trimaran 60 metres long with the speed of around 150 kilometres per hour. The details are still covered as military secrets but the Swede lifts as much of the curtains as he can in this feature.

By Bjarne Wildau

Page 13: ScandAsia Thailand - June 2010

June 2010 • ScandAsia.Thailand 13

most be a competitor to the much more expensive Swedish patrol boat. Three years after the Lundins’ first trip to New Zealand, the cou-ple has spent more than 5 million US dollars in design and develop-ment. Less than half of that amount has been sponsored by others. Today the production facilities are ready in Banuywangi. A 63 me-tres long hall has just enough space for the new project. Workers al-ready prepare wood to make the skeleton for the carbon fibre boat. The carbon fibre witch is also used for production of air planes and For-mula One cars are 20 times stron-ger than steel. Upstairs at the offices some of the world’s best on design of speedy boats do their best to make a differ-ence. “We have done almost what-ever to hire the absolute best avail-able designer and engineers on the market. We have designers with experience from The America Cup, Volvo Ocean Race and have also hired experienced designers special-ising in Patrol boats from Sweden”, says John Lundin. While this big project is pro-gressing, John Lundin and his staff also have their creative fingers on some of the smallest boats John has ever had his hands on - patrol boat designed for rivers. “The need of patrol boats is huge. The new product is for small rivers. You just put it into a contain-er and off you go to the river, you need to patrol,” says John Lundin.

Read the full story of John Lundin and his life in Indonesia on the website www.scandasia.com

boats. Then Brunei followed, the same did WWF Indonesia. “And we are still developing on the original X2K concept,” John Lundin laughs. The latest PT Lundin product at the market is X-38 Patrol and com-bat Catamaran whose design was commissioned in-part by the Swed-ish Search And Rescue Service. The boat reaches a speed of 40 knots or approximately 100 kilometres per hour.

„Something Truly Special!‰The latest secret speed monster started with another lunch appoint-ment which John Lundin had three years ago with the head of the Indo-nesian Navy. “At that meeting I was asked to come up with something truly spe-cial. Something worthy coming after a proven success as X2K,” says John Lundin. John tries to explain as much as he can about the creative process of this military project without breach-ing any military secrets. At first, he looked around for a design with lots of speed. It was obvious that it had to be a trimaran At that time some designers in New Zealand were designing a speed ghost called EarthRace. The boats later won the around the world race. EarthRace has proven the fastest boat ever designed and built. “Lizza and I plus seven other staff went to New Zealand where we got the attention from day one. I asked them what would happen if we more the less made EartRace three or four times bigger. The an-swer was that the result would be much much better. The people be-hind the EarthRace were very ready to take part in the development of a super patrol boat witch would al-

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Page 14: ScandAsia Thailand - June 2010

14 ScandAsia.Thailand • June 2010

Richard Järvinen places his mobile phone, a Nokia N900, on the table next to him. Two minutes later, a little tone indicates he has gotten a message. Soon after, he gets another.

And then another. He looks at it briefly and scrolls over the touch screen. When Richard Järvinen joined Nokia China as a senior manager in 2004, it was for a specific reason: The famous non-breakability of Nokia products suddenly mattered less than the soft-ware within the phone. To stay on the market, it had become more and more important to sport unique features, useful applications and compat-ibility with other technological products, mainly computers. At his own request, Richard Järvinen, was transferred from the head quarters in Finland to the 1200-man strong daughter company in Bei-jing, to focus on the development of phone soft-ware. As a Master of Science, this is his field. “I am good with software, not so good with hardware. I like things to work and if they do not, I want to know why,” he says. His brown hair is speckled with a little gray, his suit tailor made and his brown eyes never flicker. But his manner is quiet, polite. He speaks in a soft voice, which he never seems to raise.

Business life is interestingSoon after his arrival in Beijing, he started to work with the Finnish business community, involving himself in different boards and projects, amongst them the Finnish Business Council. To him, dia-logue is essential and he found himself unable to not engage in discussions about market trends, Finland’s role in China and Chinese company cul-ture. “I enjoy the meetings in the Council and I enjoy the fruitful discussions. It is a fascinating world”, he says. His drive and interest in the Finnish society in China made him the natural selection for the job as Chairman of the Finnish Chamber of Com-merce, despite his relatively short career here. He is acting Chairman today and looks forward to

the job officially, if he is elected, he says. And already from the start, he has a clear idea for the future decision making process of the Chamber – this is going to work on Scandinavian, democratic values. “I am a team worker kind of person. It gives me motivation to reach decisions together and I get my energy from the teams, I am part of. I think, that is the best approach for the Chamber, to discuss things”, he says.

Family adapting to FinlandToday, he found a balance in between the Scan-dinavian and Chinese that fits him. “I had been in China one or two times, be-fore I started realizing which opportunities, the country has to offer”, Richard Järvinen says. Not only in relation to his job, but also to him as a father and husband. His two sons, 12-year-old Vihtori and Nestori, who is 10, have now spend more than half of their lives in China and go to a British school. Every summer, they spend their holiday in Finland. “Our family has gotten used to Asia, and we frequently have Finnish friends coming to China to visit. The school is good and both my wife and I have found work, we are very involved in”, he says and elaborates. “It’s a very dynamic place, where things hap-pen very fast. I like that very much”, he says. He stops to think a little bit. Then, very slow-

ly, as if weighing his words carefully to not offend anyone, he says: “Also, I think living in a country as big as China expands your thinking. When you live in a smaller country… I believe, it gives a broader view to live here. You cannot plan what is going to happen. The more you plan, the less it is going to be like that. I think, you need to adapt to that to be suc-cessful in China”, he says. Behind him, the Nokia logo can be seen from the massive glass windows in the meeting room, he is in. In front of him, his phone beeps once again.

Dialogue the KeywordRichard Järvinen is the senior programme manager of Nokia China. He is a father and a husband. He is ambitious and tech savvy – he is also the Chairman of the new Finnish Chamber of Commerce currently being established in China.

By Anya Palm

Facts about Richard Järvinen:

Took a bachelor of logistics from Jyväskylä Institute of Technology in 1995Master of Science, Tampere University of Technology in Finland in 1997 He is Senior program manager at Nokia China, chairman of the acting board of Finn-ish Chamber of Commerce, and Chairman of the board of the Finnish Business Coun-cilHe has been in China for six years 2004-2009 Head of Nokia Software Platforms China Site He changes his phone three times a year – currently he has a Nokia N900

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16 ScandAsia.Thailand • June 2010

Some people have a clear goal in life. They have di-rection and it almost seems as if a golden path lights up the way for them. These

people have talents that make their choice of career is so obvious – they were born to do it. The 42 year old Thomas Christiansen has been the General Manager of the Grand Mil-lennium Sukhumvit for five months, and it seems that he is one of those people.

Business in the bloodGrowing up in Vejle as the son of the most successful hotel and night club owner in town, Thomas Chris-tiansen’s biggest dream was always to make it big within the same line of work. “I grew up in the business,” he says. “Before I could even walk or talk, I sat in my stroller in the kitchen of the hotel, and when I was older, I started joining my father at meet-ings. At an early age, I learned a lot about running a hotel because I ex-perienced it through him.” Thomas Christiansen recalls how interesting the hotel world al-ways was to him and it was the only field he ever wanted to work in. Therefore, he immediately accepted a job in Paris when Disney offered him a position at one of their hotels. It did not matter to him or to Dis-ney that he was very young at the time. When Thomas Christiansen left

for France and his new life in the ho-tel business, he had just graduated from high school the day before. Between now and then, he has only returned to Denmark for vacation. For a long time, Thomas Chris-tiansen worked all over the world. After living in Greece, Africa, Russia, America, and Spain, he got a job at Palace Hotel in Beijing. From there, his career in Asia took off. As he moved from country to country, Thomas Christiansen con-tinued to climb up the business lad-der of the hotel world. So far, he has been in charge of several luxury hotels in South East Asia, and in Oc-tober 2009, he started his new job as General Manager of the Grand Millennium Sukhumvit in Bangkok.

Scandinavian approach to managementIt has been a long time since Thom-as Christiansen left Denmark, and although he misses it at times, he does not think he could ever live there again. “I think it is too complicated to work in Denmark. Work days in Thailand are long but at the same time I have a good life here. “I have so many more opportu-nities to bring ideas to the table and change things at the hotel than my colleagues in Denmark do,” Thomas Christiansen says, and to him the challenges and influence a job gives him are very important. Having lived in Thailand for nine years, it has become home to him and it always will be. But even though Thomas Chris-tiansen has left Denmark for good, he is still very proud to be Danish and he tries to incorporate the Dan-ish mindset into the way he runs one of Bangkok’s best hotels. According to the General Man-ager, this is a good approach to hotel management, and he firmly believes that he is creating better employees as well as a better work environ-ment by doing things Danish-style. “I don’t want to be the boss that my employees are afraid of or ‘that guy on the fifth floor’. I want to work side by side with them, and I think that is a particularly Danish mindset. That daily contact is so im-portant and so far it has gone well. It seems that I am doing something right, anyway,” he says with a laugh.

Destined to SuccessThomas Christiansen is at the highlight of his career. As General Manager of Grand Millennium Sukhumvit, he runs the hotel with common sense and a Danish mindset, and that appears to be a good combination.

By Katrine Bach Sigvardt

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June 2010 • ScandAsia.Thailand 17

Flair for hotel managementIt does indeed seem that he has got it right when it comes to running a hotel, but according to Thomas Christiansen, he owes a big part of his success and rapid career advance to luck. “It is almost as if my career has been planned ahead somehow,” he says and adds that he has always been very lucky. “I have worked at some good hotels that have continued to help me develop my skills, and I have had excellent superiors who have helped me advance career wise.” Whether Thomas Christians-en’s success has been due to higher powers or not is debatable. In any case, luck, in the hotel business, can only get you so far and Thomas Christiansen does admit that luck and talent are often closely linked and that he is actually very good at his job:

“Running a hotel is actually not that difficult. Our job is to provide the guests with a high service level and a good experience. My ambi-tion is to give them more than they expect. I am good at service,” he says and adds with a grin: “In the hotel business, that means I am good at making mon-ey.” Thomas Christiansen has the skills and the eye for a successful business. His resume as well as the ambition he radiates speaks for itself. Both have undoubtedly also helped

shape his career. “I have never actually quit a job,” Thomas Christiansen says, and he explains that he has always been fortunate enough to receive increasingly better job offers along the way.

His fatherÊs legacyHis early experiences with hotel management have given Thomas Christiansen an edge and a solid foundation for a successful life in the business. Watching his father work and build successful hotels and bars up from scratch has been a tremen-dous source of inspiration for him.

It has also provided him with an instinct that helps him decide whether a risk is worth taking or not. “I always have a gut feeling,” he says. “But I make mistakes too. I am no super hero, but most of the time, I am right.” On several occasions his gut has inspired him to take chances during crisis and it has almost always turned out to be the right decision. “Sometimes it is necessary to make an investment. That’s what we did during the economic depres-sion. We didn’t cut back on service for our guests. Had we done that, we would have been like any other hotel,” Thomas Christiansen says, and that is the one thing a five star hotel cannot afford to be if it wants to stay ahead in the hotel world. This is what Thomas Christians-en has dreamt of his whole life. It is what he has always wanted and now he just feels privileged to be able to fulfil what he almost believes is his destiny.

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18 ScandAsia.Thailand • June 2010

Koh Phangan attracts young people like no other place in Thailand for its no-worries at-mosphere and famous Full Moon parties. This is the kind of place where young party people can slurp their booze bucket all night, and then nurse hangovers while snoozing on white hot sand.

Fishing and coconut production remain mainstays of the economy, and villages still have a traditional air – although tourism is now by far the largest single industry.

Getting thereKoh Phangan is about 2 1/2 hours from Surat Thani Province and 45 minutes from Samui Island by boat. There are ferries between Surat Thani, Samui and Phangan. You can also go by a speed-boat from Bo-phut pier on Samui.

Boat Services to Koh Phangan- Surat Thani - Koh Phangan- Koh Samui - Koh Phangan

Linkshttp://www.lonelyplanet.com/thailand/lower-southern-gulf/ko-pha-nganhttp://kohphangan.sawadee.com/

But Koh Phangan also of-fers some remote beach-es with a laid-back atmo-sphere if you are not in a party mood. In recent

years more hotels, from simple bun-galows to 4 stars resorts, have been built to respond to everybody’s idea of an unforgettable beach vacation. Enjoying a relaxing massage in one of the spas, exploring the underwa-ter world or meditating at a hilltop temple. If you’re looking to party, as many coming to Ko Pha-Ngan are, head to Hat Rin, home of the leg-endary Full Moon parties, the biggest beach party in the world. Although nowadays it seems any phase of the moon is an excuse to get out the fire sticks, set up the mats on the sand and pump up the trance music – nightlife is huge here, and scant-ily clad revellers party on buckets of cheap Thai whisky on a regular basis.

No Worries Island:

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June 2010 • ScandAsia.Thailand 19

Koh Phangan

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20 ScandAsia.Thailand • June 2010

Where to Eat @ Koh Phangan

NIRA’S BakeryA bakery selling a gorgeous range of cakes, pastries, brownies and bread 24 hours a day. The spinach and feta pastries and spinach muffins are a specialty. The next door café has great coffee, shakes and breakfasts. Watch BBC World out the back or sit roadside on wooden picnic tables and chairs. Lo-cated at Hat Rin.

Koh Phangan in Stockholm and Uppsala

When opened in 1994, the Koh Phangan res-taurant in Stockholm intended to serve a

little trip to paradise. The idea was born on a beach on the island of Koh Phangan in Thailand’s eastern coast. The entire concept of the restaurant is brought to Sweden from Thailand with great efforts. In 1994 there were neither Thai vegetables, herbs, spices or beer in Sweden, so everything was imported

Boat AhoyRestaurant and Bar

Me’n’u Firmly established as one of the island’s

premier gourmet restaurants, using top class, fresh ingredients and techniques to produce modern European cuisine. The

fine location, superb wine list and relaxed am-bience combine to create a memorable dining experience. Located on Hin Kong.

from Thailand, today it is a bit easier but it is still very important always to have the best ingredients in order to serve the best Thai food.http://www.kohphangan.se/information.html

Be seated in in many different atmo-spheres: open air, air conditioned boat or

in a nice and beutiful garden. Biggest menu in town serv-ing Thai, Chinese as well as Western food. Extra services includes a barber shop and karaoke room. Find it at the Thongsala-Bantai road.http://firstvilla.com/boatahoy/

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June 2010 • ScandAsia.Thailand 21

The Colors Of LifePhangan Bayshore Resort and Spa Haad Rin Beach

Phangan Bayshore Resort and Spa is directly on Haad Rin Nok,

at the heart of the action most suitable for the Full Moon Party

and to enjoy the exotic nightlife available at Haad Rin.

141 Moo 6, Haad Rin, Bantai, Koh Phangan , Suratthani Thailand Tel: 66 77 375224, 375227 Fax : 66 77 375226

Email : [email protected]

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22 ScandAsia.Thailand • June 2010

SanthiyaResort & SpaThailand luxury Resort

This gem of a resort embraces the true meaning of natural beauty. Stretched over 18 acres of glorious tropical landscapes, Santhiya Resort & Spa is an all-inclusive natural hideaway with glorious teak wood accommodations and deluxe service and hospitality.

Lush tropical forests, crystal clear bay and private beach set the perfect backdrop for gourmet meals, cascading poolside waterfalls, luxurious spa treatment at Ayurvana Spa or an exciting array of outdoor water activities.

Rates: 4000-12150 THB/Nighthttp://www.santhiya.com/

Where to Stay @ Koh Phangan

Beautiful, quiet and perfect place to relax for your holiday with friendly

services. The bungalows are just two minutes walk to the beach. A distinguishing feature is the traditional Lanna, Northern Thai, archi-

tecture style, which is in harmony with the natural surroundings while you relax and enjoy. Smilebeach Resort is located on Haad Salad, a beautiful secluded beach; good for swimming in high tidal seasons, with a reef about 150metres off-shore also a well-known dive site.

Phangan Bayshore Resort and Spa

Directly on Haad Rin Nok, at the heart of the action most suit-able for the Full Moon Party and to enjoy the exotic night-life at Haad Rin. The resort has an excellent range of air-con bunga-lows and main building superior room deluxe room, rooms for

families with hot water, TV and mini-bar. Enjoy more than 80 meters of clear beach front with amazing sunrise views at the quieter end of the beach. The friendly Bayshore staff are also waiting to serve you Thai or West-ern food at the Bayshore restaurant just next to the resort.

Rates: 1320-2700 THB/Nighthttp://www.phanganbayshore.com/

Rates: 175-400 THB/Nighthttp://www.hostelworld.com/availability.php/Smile-Beach-Resort/Koh-Phangan/16223

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June 2010 • ScandAsia.Thailand 23

What to Do @ Koh Phangan

About 10,000 people ev-ery month join the Koh Phangan beach party. Be one of them and lis-

ten to international and Thai DJ’s making the crowd go wild. The DJ’s play Techno, Trance, Goa, D&B, Dub, Reggae, House. Sit at one of the many small tables on the beach with your friends or meet new ones while ordering drinks and food from the restaurant bars just next to the beach. And join the dancing crowd and go crazy.http://fullmoonparty-thailand.com/

The largest waterfall on Koh Phangan and one of the most beautiful in Thailand. It is also known as the Roy-

al Stream because many members of the royal family have visited the waterfall and beautiful valley, which are part of the Sadet Koh Phangan National Park.

Located on a hilltop, the monastery is an ideal spot for meditation in the middle of unspoiled nature. Learn

how to practice meditation, retreats are held one time per month and last for 10 days. To reach the mon-astery, take a chartered car or rent a motorcycle at Thong Sala Pier and drive for approximately three kilo-metres south. From the entrance of the temple, drive approximately one kilometre up to the compound. Everybody interested in the meditation retreats, check watkow-tahm.org for details and schedules.http://watkowtahm.org/

FullMoonJointhe

Party

The waterfall can be reached from several locations including Haad Sadet Beach. Caution should be taken, however, as the road can be bad in places.http://phanganislandguide.com/thansadetwaterfall.html

Meditation atWat Khao Tham

For Reservation :Tel : (66) 77-456-039, 77-456-251, 08-7263-8856

www.tommy-lvdive-resort.com

offer 50 sea view roomschoose which room style that you like

3/1 Moo 2, Tumbon Koh tao, Koh phangan,Suratthani 84280 THAILAND

Page 24: ScandAsia Thailand - June 2010

24 ScandAsia.Thailand • June 2010

Come stay with us at Sunda Resort, where you will always be welcomed with a warm, friendly smile.

You will experience nature at its best in the tranquil, garden setting and are just a ten minute walk to beautiful Nopparat Thara beach.

Make Sunda Resort your ‘home away from home’ and discover the true hospitality of Thai-land - The Land of Smiles.

Period : 01 Nov’2009 till further noticeRoom Type Single doubleGarden View 3,500 3,800Poolside Room 3,900 4,200Carnal Side Room 3,900 4,200Extra Bed 900

Rates include:- Breakfast, service charge, & tax, per night. Complimentary late check out till 01.00 p.m. Special benefits:-2 consecutive nights paid: Free round trip airport transfer from to Krabi Air-port – hotel – Krabi Airport 3 consecutive nights paid: Free round trip airport transfer from to Krabi Air-port – hotel – Krabi Airport

The Legend Maeklong

The Legend Maeklong invites you to ex-perience a Thai way of life down by the river, through the first colonial building of Maeklong; which has been dated back

to the period of King Rama IV. Apart from the main building by the river, The Legend Maeklong offers holidaymakers a range of traditional Thai style houses to choose from. While the sun is settling down for the night, guests will experience a refreshing coolness at the end of the day, provided by the river breezes, while enjoying a cuisine dinner at Khun Tawee Restaurant. Last but not least, our guests can enhance their vacations with a large variety of activities and trips to many nearby destinations are available for their viewing pleasure.

For more info, please contact : the legend Maeklong : 1285, Pathummalai Road, T. Maeklong, Muang District, Samut Songkram 75000 Reservation: +66 (0) 2513 4913, +66 (0) 2513 4996

Free 1 hour of Traditional Thai Massage at Aonang Massage for every 3 consecutive nights paid. Free 30 minutes of Foot and Head Massage for every 3 consecutive nights paid. 4 consecutive nights paid: Free round trip airport transfer from to Krabi Air-port – hotel – Krabi Airport Free 1 hour of Traditional Thai Massage at Aonang Massage for every 3 consecutive nights paid. Free 30 minutes of Foot and Head Massage for every 4 consecutive nights paid. Free 1 dinner at Sunda Resort for every 4 con-secutive nights paid. Remarks: Applicable for booking request direct to hotel or ho-tel’s website. Airport round trip transfer service between 05:00 a.m. till midnight and timing not within this period will be on request with additional charge. Free of charge for child between 4 and 12 years old, sharing room with parents utilizing existing bedding with supplement of buffet breakfast at 150 Baht net per day and dinner at 250 Baht for every 4 nights paid (except Thai Massage, Foot and Head Massage).

Special benefit cannot use in conjunction with any other promotions or offers. Booking is required one day advance with reference to above promotions. Hotel reserves the right to releases reservations made at anytime, unless otherwise guaranteed by acceptance credit card with a first night deposit. Rates are subject to change prior notice.

More information, please contact: Sunda Resort19 Moo. 3, Ao-Nang, Muang Krabi 81000 Thailand Tel: +66(0)75-661-262-4, 66(0)2-509-5848 Ext. 12,13 Fax: +66(0)75-661-266, E-mail: [email protected],[email protected], www.sundaresort.com

Sunda Resort Krabi

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June 2010 • ScandAsia.Thailand 25

Sunda ResortKrabi

Warmly welcome to Sunda Resort where offers you the peaceful and nature atmosphere. The resort provides 48 modern rooms with different colors style and air conditioning ensuring your relaxing holiday. Only 10 minutes walking to Nopparat Thara Beach with crystal clear water and Ao-nang coast where you can find entertainment night life and shopping area.

Sunda Resort is your home away from home where you discover the true hospitality of Thailand – The Land of Smiles.

RELAX & ENJOY THE NATURE AT ITS BEST!!!!!

Address: 19 Moo. 3, Ao-Nang, Muang Krabi 81000 Thailand Tel: +66(0)75-661-262-4, +66(0)2-509-5848 Ext.12, 13 Fax: +66(0)75-661266E-mail: [email protected], [email protected] Website: www.sundaresort.com

Sunda AW.ai 30/3/2553 14:02:36

Page 26: ScandAsia Thailand - June 2010

26 ScandAsia.Thailand • June 2010

By Flemming Winther Nielsen

When checking in at this little neat guesthouse north of Kanchanaburi, I

was warmly greeted by Tok the ca-shier. She is a 51-year-old lady with lots of humor in her eyes and an ironic twist in her conversation. Tok speaks good English and when she learned I was Danish, she asked whether I would mind hav-ing a talk with her Danish husband, Richard, 72 years of age. “He is lonely, he likes to meet Danes, doesn’t speak a word of Thai, although he has been here for many years now,” she says as if to excuse him. “He also has some problems with the Danish government; we have been treated badly by them,” she adds Richard arrived on his motor-bike half an hour later, grey haired, limping quite a lot, carrying a bag with two ring binders filled with correspondences between him and Danish authorities both in Denmark and Thailand. I promised to look through them until the next day. Tok suggested we speak Danish and left us with two bottles of min-eral water and a coffee, “on me” as she said. Richard and I talked for a long time. We talked about Denmark, about ourselves, the past and pres-ent. He clearly needed to tell the story of his life.

Richard's storyBorn in a low income family in the Western part of Jutland, Richard became a skilled lock-smith, then worked at various factories, be-fore he became trucker and tour-ist chauffeur. He married and got three sons and two daughters, but later got divorced, much against his own will. Today he is only regularly in contact with one of his sons. Richard met Tok on a tourist tour to Thailand 10 years ago, and – understandably – fell deeply in love with her. He wanted to bring Tok with him to live together in Denmark. That was when his fight with family and authorities started. His children and their spouses also clearly stated that they did not like the idea of having Tok as part of their family either; in fact they didn’t like foreigners at all. “What will happen with Tok

when you die?” they argued. Then the contact with the family faded out and Richard moved more or less permanently to Thailand.

The end is nearIn the evening I read the material. The content showed me a man who had fought and hated authorities, and who finally realized that he was getting nowhere. He had lost the fight, maybe out of stubbornness, or because he was so self-opinionated. He had no address in Denmark anymore. Although this was caused by his own mistakes, he claimed that he had been deported to Thailand. The ministry in Copenhagen had in fact earlier offered his wife per-manent residency; they could have both gone, but didn’t. Richard explained, that he could not raise the deposit of 55.000 DKK demanded by Danish Immigration. Maybe so, maybe he didn’t dare to uproot Tok. With no Danish address, he was now receiving the lowest pos-sible pension, the equivalent of circa 24,000 THB per month. However, this amount is not nearly enough to show Thai immigration for the re-newal of his one year residence visa. He also needs an operation for his hip, has much too high blood pres-sure, no savings and no close family

ties. Richard will not relent and seek help from authorities any more, no matter what the reason or his own mistakes. It can be foreseen that he will soon be badly off, and it is doubtful that Tok could manage to stay on with him. Will he then be living on the mercy of Thai people and authorities? We also talked about life and death of course; we agreed that if we lose control of bladder and bow-el we will find the exit door. Richard has no relation to Buddhism, but is now leaning more to the faith of his childhood. He would like a decent Christian farewell. I mentioned the Anglican/Prot-estant church on Convent Road and the graveyard administered by them.

Richard's story is typicalI have taken up Richards’s story be-cause it is somewhat typical. Life sto-ries differ of course, but they mostly contain the same elements. Many of the veterans here look back in anger, blaming their home countries of inhumanity and bureau-cratic arrogance; they were not able to fit in with the sometimes harsh rigidity of the bureaucracy and other norms back home. I have even spot-ted some in wealthy Hua Hin, fre-

quenting our own tribal restaurants: walking slowly, often alone, large varicose veins, and falling asleep over the first beer. They all have their story about how they woke up one morning fi-nally realizing, to the bottom of their soul, that they were now old and no longer capable of fighting the world. There is this true anecdote about an elderly American,. He was ill and in serious trouble, so the lo-cals called the embassy. The embassy asked whether this American had a credit card. The answer was ‘yes’. “Then let him use it,” was the final remark from the officer. The Nordic people are still relatively too few and the solidarity among us, hopefully, still so strong that we will not allow a fellow coun-tryman to be left by the roadside. But we need to mobilize ourselves and arrange among ourselves how to handle this, since the official chan-nels seem somewhat silted up — and in the Scandinavian community golf and black ties shouldn’t be the whole focus. There is another, very prosaic and ‘realpolitik’ reason why neglect should not be accepted. It is not, on any level, a clever signal to send; Thai people may come to conclude, that we cannot take care of our own elderly, perhaps not even our own countrymen here. In my mixed Thai-Chinese family of bankers and civil servants there are many older members, and it is, in mine as in all such families, obligation number one to take care of parents, aunts, uncles, etc.

We should remain humaneThere is a growing uneasiness among Thais, especially in areas with a high concentration of foreigners, like Chiangmai, Korat, Pattaya/Jomtien, Hua Hin, Kanchanaburi, Phuket. “Who will take care of the old and ill farangs? Why aren't their fam-ilies taking care of them, are these people cruel?” One of the reasons why Nor-dic people are successful on many levels here, both in the private and business sector, is that we are re-garded as humane, reliable and having achieved a high standard of justice and welfare — shouldn’t it remain that way?

The Old Farangs

Page 27: ScandAsia Thailand - June 2010

Tel +66 (0) 2274 3444 [email protected] www.kis.ac.th

As an IB world school, KIS International School’s kindergarten has an Early Years programme designed to cater to the needs and developmental stages of children aged 2 ½ to 6 years, nurturing the whole child... physically, intellectually, emotionally and socially. Our qualified and experienced Early Years teachers inspire confidence as they nurture children’s natural curiosity, develop their skills and promote independence in a caring, creative and open-minded kindergarten environment, with a strong emphasis on individual learning styles. Through the combination of the International Baccalaureate programmes and our special blend of Knowledge, Inspiration and Spirit, we provide Early Years students with a global playground to become active, responsible citizens and life-longlearners. Come and share our love of learning and zest for life that is abundant in all we do!

AccreditedWorld School

think, therefore IB

Accredited

Page 28: ScandAsia Thailand - June 2010

28 ScandAsia.Thailand • June 2010

ing for Danes but later offering also related language services and other related services,” says Allan Nielsen, who is founder of Thai Integration ApS and spouse of the sole owner of the Thai company, Vilai Promsan. During the early years of the company, Thai Integration accu-mulated knowledge of the need in the Thai marketplace for its services by offering their language classes for free. Most students were Thai women of all ages who had a Dan-ish fiancee and was about to relo-cate to live in Denmark, but a few were also Thais employed in Danish companies in Thailand for whom knowledge of the Danish language could be a professional advantage. During these years, a core staff was Clyde Haumann, who used to assist his students both as a lan-guage teacher and as an adviser in the Danish visa application process. When Clyde became seriously ill last year, it became paramount for Allan Nielsen and Vilai Promsan to bring the company up to the next level. “We had at the time 20 stu-dents,” recalls Allan Nielsen. “We had already started charg-ing a fee for our services and we saw that this was not a hindrance to our further development.” The business plan, which is now being implemented, positions Den Danske Sprogskole close to the Danish “Hoejskole” Concept. “The students can stay in a house in the same little street as the language school, and the tuition in-cludes far more than just language. The students are also taught Dan-ish social manners, Danish cooking, the structure of the Danish soci-ety and other useful subjects that

will help them become more eas-ily integrated in the Danish society, once they relocate to Denmark, if that is their goal. Living and studying together facilitates a strong friend-ship between the students which then forms the foundation of their future Thai-Danish network,” Allan Nielsen explains. The mix of the students will also include more aupair girls, exchange students and other professionals. Future plans for the company includes expanding the classes to offer also Thai language training for Norwegian and Swedish expats liv-ing in Thailand or visiting Thailand. A Swedish teacher will also be add-ed to offer the parallel services to Thai nationals interested in learning Swedish language and culture as is today the case for Denmark. Allan Nielsen's company in Denmark is training and re-integrat-ing Danish people into the Danish work-force when they for some reason have become long-term un-employed. Many of these have over the years been foreigners who have become Danish citizens but have dropped out of the work-force. As such the Thais can also be assisted by Thai Integration with their inte-gration process once they have re-located to Denmark

The new teamJohn Olesen was employed as the F&B Manager at a hotel on the island of Bornholm in Denmark, when he first met Allan Nielsen, who was the owner of the hotel. It was from this position, that Allan Nielsen later re-cruited him for his current position at den Danske Sprogskole. Apart from John Olesen spending most of the winter months in Thailand dur-

Den Danske SprogskoleThai Integration is now focused on what it does best - help Thai people learn Danish language and culture. Typically the students are about to move to Denmark for an internship, as aupair or to live with their spouse.

By Gregers Moller

Allan Nielsen (right) with his new team, from left Saveerawan ‘Tiew’ Seerup, Louise Olsen, Vilai Promsan, Surat Kongthai, and John Olsen. Just as the new team was put together, Clyde Hauman - who has been teaching Danish at Thai Integration since the beginning - reported back to work.

Den Danske Sprog-skole – the Danish Language School – is the new additional name that the Dan-

ish company Thai Integration has taken to clarify its core services: Danish language training. At the same time, the school has also strengthened its compe-tence with the employment of three new staff, Louise Olsen and Surat Khongthai, who both have profes-sional educational backgrounds from Denmark, and John Olesen, who brings with him a wealth of knowledge about Thailand from a Danish expatriate position. “We feel that Thai Integration is now ready to emerge as a fully flexed language institute offering currently Danish language training for Thais and Thai language train-

Vi glæder os til at møde dig

I en globaliseret verden er det vigtigt at kende sine rødder

og Danmark er et af de bedste og mest trygge steder i verden at være barn og ung.

Vi optager dagelever fra begynderklasse til 3.G. – kostelever fra 6. klasse til 3.G.

Få mere at vide på www.bagkost.dk, hvor du også kan rekvirere vores brochurer.

Med venlig hilsen Jimmy Burnett Nielsen, Rektor

Bagsværd Kostskole & Gymnasium

Aldershvilevej 138 2880 Bagsværd

T +45 4498 0065 www.bagkost.dk

Page 29: ScandAsia Thailand - June 2010

June 2010 • ScandAsia.Thailand 29

Making the students become a group of close friends is an important part of the integration process. The other students will become the first network that the students willl get once they move to Denmark

ing the past 25 years, he has also previously been involved in business in Thailand when he helped estab-lishing a resort in Kanchanaburi. Louise Olsen holds a degree in language psychology from Univer-sity of Copenhagen. This is a cross-disciplinary education combining language training with psychology and social science. She has previ-

ously worked as an English language tutor in Seoul and last summer she trained a team of Indian nurses in India in Danish language and culture before their departure for Den-mark. Surat Kongthai came to Den-mark as a five year old to live with his Thai mother and her Danish husband, which explains his Danish

second last name, Hart Hansen. He studied Nordic languages combined with Thai at the Asian Institute un-der the University of Copenhagen and already when he was a student he started teaching Thai language to other Danish students at the insti-tute. Surat thus brings a solid expe-rience in this field to his new job at Den Danske Sprogskole. And then – just as this new team had been picked – Clyde Hau-mann got well and is now back on the team as a strong guarantor for continuity and know-how. Last, but not least it should be mentioned that even the chef and matron of Den Danske Sprogskole, Khun Saveerawan Seerup, is Danish related as indicated by her Dan-ish last name. Her husband lives in Nykoebing Mors but years of legal complications has prevented the couple from being able to live to-gether. Instead she is a core staff of the “hoejskole” and typically be-comes the first friend of the Thai students who move to live at the school.

Page 30: ScandAsia Thailand - June 2010

30 ScandAsia.Thailand • June 2010

Photo Contest:

Sea Sand Sun in ThailandScandAsia is excited to announce our 1st Photo Contest among our readers. The contest is a great opportunity to have your images judged and commented on by an experienced panel – and maybe win one of the attractive prizes too!Theme:

Send us your photos NOW!

Deadline for submitting your photos is 10 August 2010.

Prizes:1st Winner will receive a hotel voucher for

one night at one of our attractive advertisers.

2nd Winner and 3rd Winner will receive dinner vouchers.

All entries will be displayed on scandasia.com/photos with comments from our expert judges.

Submit your photo now! The first ten entries will receive a

smart ScandAsia polo shirt.

How to enterBy entering this competition you must have read and agreed to the terms and conditions outlined below.

Terms and Conditions• This competition is open to the Scandinavians living in Thailand and

their close family.• Entry in this competition is FREE• Entries should be sent by email to [email protected]• Please submit images as high quality JPG files (unzipped). • Maximum file size per picture: 4 MB.• Maximum 5 images per photographer.• Submissions must include photographers full name and adress, a title

and a short description including the place and date (month/year) where each photo was taken. Preferably also the equipment used.

• Deadline for submitting your photos is 10 August 2010.

Prize Winners will be announced in August 2010. Winners will be contacted directly as well as announced on the website and in the weekly E-Newsletter ScandAsia Weekly.

Note: By submitting your images, you allow ScandAsia Magazine the right to publish the submitted photo in the ScandAsia Magazine with credit to the photographer but with no further compensation. We will not sell or give away the right to use your photographs to any third party.

Page 31: ScandAsia Thailand - June 2010

June 2010 • ScandAsia.Thailand 31

www.europcar.dkReservation +45 89 33 11 33E-mail: [email protected]

Fri kilometerKaskoforsikringLufthavnsgebyrMomsPersonbilerStationcars

LuksusbilerMinibusser40 udlejningskontorer

inkl. alle lufthavneIntet one-way gebyr i Danmark(ved min. 3 dages leje)

Special Priser

Page 32: ScandAsia Thailand - June 2010

32 ScandAsia.Thailand • June 2010

¡ÒèͧàμçÁ¶Ö§ 10 à ×͹㹻‚·Õ輋ҹÁÒ” àÁ×èͶÒÁ¶Ö§Í¹Ò¤μ¢Í§ÃŒÒ¹ ÊμÕ࿆¹ä´ŒºÍ¡¡ÑºàÃÒÇ‹Ò Çѹ¹Ö§àÃÒÍÒ¨¨ÐμŒÍ§¢Ò¡Ԩ¡ÒÃãËŒ¤¹Í×è¹æ ä´ŒÁÒ ÙáÅμ‹Í áμ‹à¢Ò¡çÂѧ¤§ÁÕ¤ÇÒÁËÇѧàÅç¡æ Ç‹ÒÌҹ¹Õé¨ÐÂѧ¤§ä ŒÃѺ¡ÒôÙáŨҡÁ×ͧ͢ªÒÇÊ᡹´Ôà¹-àÇÕ¹᷌æ à¾×èͤ§äÇŒ«Öè§àÍ¡Åѡɳ �¢Í§ÃŒÒ¹ “¼Á¤§¨ÐàÊÕÂ㨠¶ŒÒÇѹ˹Öè§ÃŒÒ¹¹Õé¡ÅÒÂ໚¹ÃŒÒ¹ÍÒËÒÃÍÔ¹à´ÕÂá·¹” ÊμÕ࿆¹¾Ù´μÔ´μÅ¡ ³ μ͹¹Õé àÃÒ¤§ÃÙŒÊ֡䴌NjÒÌҹÍÒËÒùÕéäÁ‹ãª‹á¤‹ÃŒÒ¹ÍÒËÒÃËÃ×ÍâçáÃÁ¸ÃÃÁ´Òæ áμ‹à»š¹Ë¹Öè§Ê¶Ò¹·Õè ·ÕèàμçÁ仌ǤÇÒÁ·Ã§¨Ó áÅÐÃÍÂÂÔéÁ¢Í§¼ÙŒ·ÕèÁÒ

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สตเฟนและคณนม ภรรยาททำงานเคยงขางทสเตเบล ลอรจ และเธอกเปนสวนนงททำใหรานอาหารประสบความสำเรจ รปนถายในงานฉลองวนเกด 50 ปของคณนม

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Page 33: ScandAsia Thailand - June 2010

June 2010 • ScandAsia.Thailand 33

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The old Farang

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Page 34: ScandAsia Thailand - June 2010

34 ScandAsia.Thailand • June 2010

Firing Blanks

Khao PhansaKhao Phansa marks the beginning of the three-month Buddhist ‘lent’

period. Buddhist Lent is an annual three-month rains retreat known in Thai as “Phansa”. Khao Phansa means to “enter” the period in which the monk will remain in one place during the rainy season.

It was on this day that the Lord Buddha preached His sermon to fol-lowers after attaining enlightenment. The day is usually celebrated by merit making, listening to a monk’s sermon and in the evening there will typically be a beautiful candle light procession at the temple. For the coming three months, monks should not venture out or spend the night in any other place except in cases of extreme emergency and, even then, their time away must not exceed seven consecutive nights. Phansa is also the time when young men should enter the monk hood for spiritual training or to gain merit for themselves and their parents. Many Thais still feel that a man cannot be considered a mature adult unless he has been a monk. Khao Phansa falls on the first day after the full moon of the eighth lunar month. This year, Khao Phansa Day is Tuesday 27 July 2010. Ok Phansa Day - this year on 23 October 2010 - marks the day to “come out of” the Buddhist lent and falls on the full moon of the eleventh lunar month. This is a day of merit-making too and the day to welcome a son back into the home upon his successful completion of a term in the temple.

An 86-year-old man went to his local doctor for his quarterly check up. The doctor, who was an old friend, asked him how he was feeling. “Never felt better,” he said. “I’ve just come back from Thai-

land where I met an 18-year-old girl who is now my wife. What’s more, she’s now pregnant with my child. So what do you think of that?” the old man asked proudly. The doctor considered his question for a moment and then began to tell a story of his own. “I have an old friend. He’s about your age and an avid hunter. He never misses a season. One day as he was setting off to go hunting in a bit of a hurry he picked up his walking stick instead of his gun by mistake. “As he neared a lake, he came across a large, male beaver sitting at the water’s edge. “He realized that he’d left his gun at home so he couldn’t shoot this magnificent creature. Out of habit he raised his walking stick, took aim and called out “bang, bang” “Miraculously, two shots rang out and the beaver fell down dead. “So what do you think of that?” asked the doctor. “If you ask me,” began the old man, “someone else must have pumped a couple of rounds into that beaver.” “Exactly!” smiled the doctor.....

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June 2010 • ScandAsia.Thailand 35

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36 ScandAsia.Thailand • June 2010