Laem Chabang, Bangkok’s Cruise Port

Laem Chabang The Cruise Gateway to Bangkok, Thailand

Cruising in the South China Sea is becoming increasingly popular which normally includes one or two ports of call in Thailand.

Thailand is one of the most advanced and open nations in Southeast Asia, once known as Siam. It is bordered by Myanmar (Burma) to the north, Laos to the northeast, Cambodia to the southeast and Malaysia on the south along the isthmus. Thailand is a constitutional monarchy, and tourists are welcomed with open arms by these friendly people.

Where Your Ship Docks

Most cruise ships dock at the port of Laem Chabang on the Gulf of Thailand, a full hour and a half south of Bangkok, the nation’s capital.

Inside the Grand Palace Complex

Smaller ships can dock at Klong Toey on the Chao Phraya River, on the outskirts of Bangkok.

Terminal facilities at Laem Chabang

This port is located along the southeast coast and serves primarily as a working industrial port. While there are supposed to be facilities being developed to include a terminal, as of early 2023 there is not much available for cruise passengers.

Wheelchair Accessibility

Disembarking – This is a working industrial port without a cruise ship pier. Disembarking varies by the individual ships gangway design and a steep ramp or even stairs can be encountered. For passengers using wheelchairs there can be a difficult time disembarking.

Port City Characteristics – This port is a working port providing a number of obstacles to walking out. Usually taxis and vans are allowed onto the docks which helps if you have a destination in mind. Outside the port wheelchair infrastructure is typical of large Asian cities. The waterfront and near port area has moderate inclines in sidewalks but the city itself can be more difficult. Intersection crosswalks may have curbs or other wheelchair obstacles.

Transportation

The main reason for cruise ships docking at Laem Chabang is to visit Bangkok. There are a number of options available to get into the city but it is about a 100 mile trip. The good news is transportation options are reasonably inexpensive. Getting into Bangkok by taxi takes about two hours and should cost about $40 each way. While there is bus service costing about $7.50 each way it’s a challenge. We’ve known people that tried to use the buses and eventually gave up trying to catch the right bus and eventually hired a taxi.

Local Taxi companies include:
Sriracha Taxi Phone +66 92 958 1732
Grab Taxi at website grab.com
P.T. Taxi Service at website pttaxiservice.com Phone +66854449035
Cherry Taxi Service at website cherrytaxiservice.com Phone +66841205646

Hiring a car and driver is another popular option especially if you’re traveling with a group but you should book in advance. Car hires can be arranged and purchased online at 12go.asia and start at $70 each way with a number of vehicle types available. Phone 086 165 4696 or email to bangkoktaxi@gmail.com

The roads and highways in Thailand are very well maintained and if you want to go it alone and see some of the countryside there are good car rental services. One rental company near to the port that comes highly recommended is:

Take it Easy Bike & Car Rental

Address: 329/48, Soi Pattaya New Plaza, 50m off 2nd Road, Opposite Soi 7 – Soi 8, Central Pattaya, Pattaya 20150 .                      Phone: 089 007 7804    Rental cars can be arranged ahead of arrival for pick up at the port through their web site above.

Hertz also has a rental office in Laem Chabang and cars to pick up at the port can be reserved on the Hertz web site.

We’ve also been amazed with Thailand’s highway rest stops that are usually lined with a half dozen or more American franchises and Thai businesses.

Currency

Thailand uses the Baht at an exchange rate to the U.S. Dollar of one Baht equals about 3¢. While most credit cards are welcome if you are going to spend a day or two in Bangkok it is recommended that you exchange for currency for local Baht.

Attractions

The capital city of Bangkok is the big attraction, with the best place to start being the Grand Palace grounds. This is the central sightseeing attraction in the city, and it’s overwhelming in its historical significance and stunning architecture. The grounds are packed full with royal palaces, temples, and history, the highlight is Wat Phra Kaeo, Temple of the Emerald Buddha. A relic within this temple is said to be a piece of bone from the Buddha himself. While there you also visit the Temple of the Reclining Buddha, its official name is Wat Phra Chetuphon Vimolmangklararm Rajwaramahaviharn and it measures 135 feet long. Allow a number of hours to do the Grand Palace grounds. In addition try and fit in a visit to the famous Wat Po and Wat Arun, the Temple of the Dawn rising above the Chao Phraya River. Another popular attraction is seeing the city from the river and on the canals with numerous options.

Thailand is also famous for floating markets where goods are sold from boats. Originally developed when rivers and canals played an important role in daily life, most floating markets operating today serve primarily as tourist attractions.

Maeklong Railway Market

One unique market outside Bangkok is the famous Maeklong Railway Market. It is located in a congested town and sits right on an active train track. As trains approach vendors pull back their awnings and displays with only minutes to spare and are right back in business as soon as the trains pass. A unique experience as you stand there with train traveling only inches away.

While there are tons of cultural and historic attractions to see in Bangkok and the people are remarkably polite and friendly be aware of con artists; they frequently prey on tourists. Though the cruise port is a good distance from the city, venturing into the the city to see the sights is something that shouldn’t be missed.

Temple of the Dawn

Todays Featured Poster • Santorini

One of the most popular Greek islands, Santorini or officially Thera is one of the most amazing places to explore. Bright white washed villages, incredible geology and a remarkable archeological site.

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Athen’s Port of Piraeus, Greece

General –  Piraeus is the seaport serving the city of Athens. This city is a major metropolis in its own right and the commercial area southeast of the port and near the sea has a number of excellent restaurants and attractions. While most passengers visiting this port for the first time will head out toward Athens and the Acropolis, if you have visited before consider spending some time discovering this remarkable port area.

Where Your Ship Docks

Most cruise ships will dock along the northwest side of the port. There is a good walking sidewalk around the port and if you walk north and than continue around the port off to the east you will reach the central district in less than half a mile.

Wheelchair Accessibility

Disembarking – This port has several cruise ship piers so the access varies by the docking area. There is one cruise terminal with very good ship access but for other piers the ease of disembarking varies by the individual ships gangway designs. For passengers using wheelchairs there can be a moderate ramp incline to deal with.

Port City Characteristics – This port has an average wheelchair infrastructure typical of large cities. The port area has moderate inclines in sidewalks. Intersection crosswalks may have curbs or other wheelchair obstacles.

Transportation

There are a number of ways to go from Piraeus to Athens. If you want to head out on your own the best bet is the metro with a station located at the head of the harbor. You can also take a bus or taxi and rental cars are also available.

The metro can be used to travel from Piraeus to central Athens. A trip to Athens using the metro costs <€1. Also a free bus usually operates in the port taking passengers from the ships to the metro station.

The metro station is about one mile away from the cruise terminal, or a 15-20 minute walk around the harbor. After that, you have a 20-minute ride on the metro to Athens. If the shuttle isn’t running you can take bus (number 843) from the cruise port to the metro station. The ride should take no more than 5 mins. The cost of the ticket is 1€.

To get from Piraeus to the Acropolis by metro, take the metro from Piraeus to Thissio (15 mins). At the metro station follow the pedestrian avenue towards the Acropolis. The walk is another 10 minutes to reach the Acropolis.

Traveling from Piraeus to Athens on a bus will cost roughly €0.80. Due to the usual heavy traffic, you should avoid the bus if you don’t have a lot of time.

Taxis offer more flexibility. To get to Athens one would spend about €15. This will get one to the centre of the city. If you plan to travel to the airport, the price can be about €40.

Money – Greece uses the Euro and US Dollars are not readily accepted.

Nearby Attractions:

Acropolis -First and foremost there is ancient Athens and the Acropolis and if you haven’t visited before this is not o be missed.

In Piraeus if you have free time be sure and visit the Greek Nautical Museum and the Piraeus Archeology Museum both within a reasonable walking distance of the cruise piers.

Antarctic Cruises

Occupying a land area about the size of the United States and Mexico combined, Antarctica is the highest, driest, coldest, windiest and brightest place on Earth. It is completely covered by a layer of ice that averages more than one mile thick, but is nearly three miles thick in some places. It is without question the loneliest place on the planet.

Today a number of major cruise companies offer cruise itineraries to Antarctica including:

  • Celebrity
  • NCL
  • Princess
  • Royal Caribbean
  • Viking

Most major cruises ship itineraries sail from Buenos Aries and include visits to the Falkland Islands, Ushuaia, and Puerto Madryn, Argentina with cruise time at Elephant Island and Paradise Bay, Antarctica.

Recently launched is the Viking Octantis, Viking’s first-ever expedition cruise ship, that makes it one of the best cruise ships for exploring Antarctica. Viking Octantis is designed to carry 378 passengers, which is on the high side for Antarctica expedition cruise ships but still allows for shore visits. Like Hurtigruten’s Roald Amundsen and Fridtjof Nansen, it isn’t able to land all or even most of its passengers in Antarctica.

In addition there are a number of expedition cruise companies that feature smaller ships including some icebreakers to get to more remote areas.

  • Hurtigruten Expeditions
  • Lindblad Expeditions

Small expedition ships offer itineraries that are expensive usually starting at around $15,000 per passenger and can go as high as $40,000 based on the ship and the itinery length.

Hurtigruten Expeditions, a Norway-based expedition cruise company operates the 528-passenger Roald Amundsen and sister ship Fridtjof Nansen in Antarctica and you can find more information HERE.

Lindblad Expedition ships include the National Geographic Endurance and National Geographic Resolution both designed to hold 126 passengers or less allowing for shore visits to see seals and penguins. HERE

Over the past decade the frozen continent has hosted less than forty-five thousand researchers and visitors per year. The requirements that define and manage how visitors travel in Antarctica is controlled by the International Association of Antarctica Tour Operators. One of the rules is that any vessel holding more than five hundred people is not allowed to put anyone ashore while visiting.

Just imagine that we live at a time when we can actually take a vacation to the continent of Antarctica. Never in our wildest dreams would we have thought something like this possible. Today there are a number of options.

An expedition boat prepares to sail to Antarctica

If you would like to visit and go ashore there are a number of expedition boats that travel to Antarctica that carry about one hundred passengers and land using Zodiac rubber boats. We talked to several people while making our way south that were taking advantage of that option and indicated that the fare ran $20,000 per person for a week-long trip. Luxurious accommodations can also be booked on major cruise ships starting at under $2,500 for a two week cruise.

On of the reasons that Antarctica is so isolated and harsh is that it is ringed by the Southern Ocean with a circular current that races around the continent. Some of the worst weather on Earth is in Drake Passage, that is the gap between Cape Horn in South America and Antarctica, and is often afflicted with high winds and heavy seas.

Lighthouse in the Beagle Channel

Many of the expedition trips to Antarctica start from up the Beagle Channel at the city of Ushuaia at Terra Del Fuego. This city has grown to a population of almost 100,000 with a lot of help from the Argentine government. It is also usually a last port of call for large cruise ships heading south to the frozen continent.

Terra del Fuego National Park at Ushuaia
Expedition boats dock next to the Celebrity Eclipse in Ushuaia

We chose to travel with a bit more luxury and a lot more stability and cruised on the Celebrity Eclipse out of Buenos Aries in January (summer season). After a port stop in Ushuaia we headed out for our first destination in Antarctica, Paradise Bay. Passing the “light house at the end of the world” and the Mariners Monument, we entered Drake Passage facing high winds and twenty foot seas for a rocky afternoon and evening. The next morning the Sun broke out as we approached Antarctica with ice bergs the size of Manhattan in the distance. The seas calmed, the sky turned blue and the temperature soared to 35°F as the Eclipse became the largest ship to ever enter Antarctica waters.

The Mariners Monument at “the end of the world”

breaching Stark, snow drifted mountains towered above the horizon and ice floated everywhere with many icebergs being as big as our ship. We sailed for hours up the channel toward Paradise Bay and were told the area had the most snow covering along the shoreline for this time of year that’s been seen in a long time. The water around us was full of whales and penguins that shot by like little black torpedoes. Albatros and other sea birds where everywhere. The professionals that were with us said they hadn’t seen such a beautiful day in over six years and we couldn’t imagine how it could have been any better.

Albatros at the end of a perfect day

Just a decade or two ago a visit to Antarctica was something never considered possible by tourists. Who would have thought that this incredible, isolated, frozen continent could become a travel destination? There is really no way to describe this experience in words so I’ll close by simply suggesting that this should be added to wanderers bucket list.

Todays Featured Poster • Antarctic Summer

Shortly after the Sun rises our ship approaches Antarctica while seabirds glide above us, penguins shoot the the water like miniature torpedos and whales breach every few minutes. It’s Summer in the Southern Ocean, the ski is bright, there’s a slight breeze and the air temperature is a refreshing 36° F.

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Todays Featured Poster • U.S. Capital

A Cold Day Dawns – A January snow just after sunrise blankets Capital Hill in Washington D.C. The only real color radiates from the “Stars And Stripes” flying in front of the dome. A study in shades of black and white.

These giclée prints are available in several sizes and are custom printed for each order on archival paper using fade resistant inks. Perfect for adding travel memories to any decor.

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