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a-447

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Everything posted by a-447

  1. Imagine what would happen if a fire broke out! Escaping quickly would be a nightmare, especially if you'd had a few drinks. That's why I stopped staying there.
  2. I can't comment on the breakfast, Peter, as I don't eat in the morning. Just coffee. However, if I'm staying at a 5-star hotel - usually only when I go to Japan - I always eat breakfast.
  3. Think of Nature Boys as Good Boys on steroids. Anything goes and if you are a bit shy, you can go behind the curtain at the back of the bar. If you cum in the bar -I don't recall ever doing that - you are charged the off fee. Chances are that guy back in October also has lots of guys on call - they are his friends, some of whom used to work in NB. They are always willing to turn up to the bar to meet you. I have a regular guy Bangkok so I even though I made it clear I wouldn't be offing anyone, they still came to the bar and we had a few drinks. I said I might be up for sex during the day and if so, I'd get in contact with them. Some may recall that I wrote about a medical problem I had at the start of my trip. Unfortunately, one of the side effects of the medication was a diminished libido. Even though 2 guys who I have offed numerous times over the years from NB came to the bar and I was dying to get into bed with them - both are hung like donkeys and one always insisted that I cum in his mouth (I love that!) I just didn't feel up to it, so to speak, during the day. In the past, a guy in the bar also recommended his Lao friend. "He have very big cock and like to fuck." So he called him and he certainly didn't disappoint. He was slim, handsome and OMG! What a cock! He was on offer in April too, but I had to decline. But now that I've become used to the medicine I think I'm ready to up my game! I feel a trip coming up.
  4. There is. The audience in the Bangkok bars back in April consisted of lots of young Asians - male and female - and very few farang. As a stale, pale male I felt decidedly out of place. I think it's true that the young ones don't off guys like we do -it seems to be the young women who off the guys -but they do spend up big on drinks and tips in the bar. If you want fun in a bar without the women, head to Soi Tawan. While there aren't many guys in Nature Boy, if you ask Jay, the mama-san, he'll call in as many guys as you want. Super A can be hit and miss, but you never know your luck. Does anyone know if the bar opposite Nature Boy is open yet?
  5. I stayed at the Westgate Hotel. It was perfect! It is very modern and the bed was really comfortable. It is just around the corner from the Red House and also a street filled with fod stalls.
  6. Given the gruesome nature of this crime, maybe bikies were involved. Either that or it was a drug deal gone wrong.
  7. After returning from Bangkok in April, where I had to take myself to hospital due to urine retention (caused by an enlarged prostate), I went to my doctor here in Perth. He sent me for a very comprehensive series of blood tests and an ultrasound for my bladder and prostate. He said the results showed that I was in perfect health, apart from the enlarged prostate and that he wished all his patients were as healthy as me. My job ensured that I led a healthy lifestyle - no smoking or drinking - and I had to undergo regular health checks during my working life. They got more arduous towards the end of my career as I got older. Like Vinapu, I also only smoke when I'm in Thailand. So I intend to live way past 80! (fingers crossed!) Like Shonen, my doctor also refuses to recommend shingrex. When I ask him why he simply says not to bother.
  8. Then look into a medication called Tamsulosin. But best consult a doctor first to see if it is suitable for you. It can lower blood pressure and cause dizziness. Check it out on youtube to see what other side -effects there are. Some you may not like. You can buy it over the counter. I good mine at Boots. It works very quickly and you'll never have that problem again.
  9. I used to run up large drink bills at the old Eros bar in Pattaya, but it was the boys who were drinking - I was usually drinking Diet Coke.
  10. Recently CCTV showed a woman tripping on some steps and falling flat on her face in Bali, She ended up in hospital with serious injuries but her insurance company - one of the biggest in Australia -refused to pay up, citing the fact that she was drunk. How do they know that? Because they checked the bar tab and saw that a lot of alcohol had been consumed. But as she said, how does the insurance company know who drank what? She could have been drinking Coke all night.
  11. I've got a rather large collection of sneakers, 95% of which are Nike. I've got to say mine have all lasted well - most of them are the AIR models and some are probably over 15 years old. I've never had a problem with Nike. Maybe it depends on where they are made. (I haven't checked but I presume the Nike's I've bought in Japan over the years aren't made there.) Maybe it's because I own so many that they don't get worn all that often and so last longer. But I do have my favourites which get worn often and they are still hanging in there.
  12. As I've mentored here before, for me, value for money is more important than price - which is why I don't mind paying for expensive drinks in the bars if there is a show to enjoy. But I object to being asked to pay ridiculous prices for a drink just to sit and watch the rotation. On a recent trip to Japan I bought 2 pairs of Onitsuka Tiger Nippon Made sneakers. They cost twice as much as their made in Vietnam models. They are hand made in Japan using only Japanese materials. And given the Japanese obsession with perfection, they are exactly that. https://www.onitsukatiger.com/au/en-au/nippon-made/c/ou10651000/ There is a specially sneaker maker situated in the Asakusa district of Tokyo which makes sneakers using kimono fabric. I bought a pair featuring the dark blue used in men's traditional clothing. They cost a lot more than Nike (which are cheap in Japan) but again, what price quality? When you take into account the amount of time and effort needed to make them - and the fact that each pair is unique - they are incredible value for money. https://tokyokimonoshoes.com/ If you are ever in Japan and want to buy something unique and perfectly made, check these stores out.
  13. And yet Ralph Lauren and Hugo Boss are now writing their names in big letters all over their clothes, à la Tommy Hilfiger. When I asked the shop owners why, they said the change in policy was brought about by young people who need their social media followers to see what they are wearing.
  14. I've been to Siem Reap at least 6 times and there are still parts of Angkor Wat I'd like to see! A note of caution - if you take US dollars out of an ATM, make sure they don't dispense large denominations. I took out $100 but instead of getting smaller denominations, I got one $100 note. Nobody would accept it because they didn't have enough change.
  15. Yes, and I refused to go in and ended up across the soi instead. I capitulated the next night and was shocked to see that it was virtually standing room only. They found me probably the only seat left - it was on the side of the stage - but as soon as a better one became available, I picked up my drink and rushed over and sat down. However, the show continued from around 10:30 onwards until the end of the night, so I think 600 baht was value for money. My regular guy in Bangkok started working there after his bar closed down due to Covid. He only lasted a couple of weeks because as he said, there were so many guys working there that the chance of an off was limited. Also limited was the numbet of rotations during the show - unless you were in the show it was hard to be noticed by the customers. As for designer goods, they are mainly aimed at relatively "poor" people who buy them because they want to look "rich." Witness the number of average people lived up outside Louis Vuitton, for example. The rich don't line up - there are special collections of very expensive goods made just for them. On the top floor of Louis Vuitton in Tokyo there is a "secret" shop set aside for the uber rich. With regards to Rolex, they are considered an investment but they are not considered to be the best watches in the world. (That title goes to Grand Seiko.) Rolex manipulate prices by restricting supply. You can't just walk in and buy what you want - you have to put your name down on a waiting list. I don't like Rolex, although there is one model - the green "hulk" - which I was interested in. That interest disappeared when I was told there was perhaps a 2 year wait and even then, the shop couldn't guarantee that they'd get one in. They just sell whatever Rolex deigns to send them each month, That watch was $11000 (257,000 baht) at the time. It is now selling for $29000 in Tokyo, if you can find one. I went to the Rolex shop in Siam Paragon looking for one (a few years ago, before the price sky rocketed) but the staff totally ignored me as I was dressed in my holiday clothes and they presumed I wouldn't be buying anything. I have a pair of Gucci shoes and a pair of Louis Vuitton boots. The designer logos are hardly visible and they are not in the usual colours expected of those brands, I've got to say that they are the most comfortable shoes I've ever owned and even after a lot of wear, they still look brand new. If you look at them closely you can see they are extremely well made - the embodiment of perfection. So I consider them value for money.
  16. Ah, yes. The HIV thing! I wish I had a dollar for every time a Japanese would tell my that HIV was a disease that only foreigners got and besides, there were no gay people in Japan. They'd never wandered around the back streets of Ueno at night or walked past the gay sauna in Takadanobaba, let alone wandered through Shinjuku ni-chome. It wasn't long before doors started closing firmly, but always politely, in my face. In those days I belonged to a couple of private clubs. Everyone knew me and that I was a resident, not some disease-ridden tourist, so things didn't change. I was still welcomed with open arms (and legs) whenever I walked through the door. But the ticket seller at my favourite gay cinema - a guy I'd spoken to hundreds of times - suddenly became distant (literally, as he would lean back in his chair when I was at the window of the ticket booth!) and no longer had time to chat to me. But knowing Japan so well, I never took offense.
  17. I grew up on the Japanese version of Italian food. On my trip to Italy I was really looking forward to trying the real thing. I was very disappointed as the food was quite bland compared to the Japanese-style. My Italian "friend" here told me the originsl delicious food can be found only in the home, and preferably cooked by nonna. Next time I go to Italy I think I'll take my own Dolmio sauce! BTW, the Japanese Western-style food (called 'youshoku') is better than anything else I've eaten in any Western country, including France. Their beef stew is to die for!
  18. Vinapu wrote: "As for the dish, that's the beauty of it, with few ingredients which can be mixed in different proportions and meat which can be added cooked or fried there's possibility of multitude of variations." I've always been happy to follow Vinapu's recommendations - the Classroom hotel in Pattaya, the Raya in Silom - but am reluctant to try the chicken and cashew dish. I find stir-fry dishes in Asia use way too much oil. I once went to the Central Festival foodhall in Pattaya where you can watch them cooking your meal. I saw the chef pour a huge ladle of what I thought was water into the wok. When I sat down to eat it, it turned out to be oil! The food was literalky swimming in it. Yuk!! I learnt how to say "just a little oil" in Thai and they were quite happy to accommodate me, but it was still too much for me. When I used to cook at home - I eat out these days - I used a little water instead of oil to stir -fry. One of my favourite Chinese dishes is fried rice; well, it used to be until I saw how it was made. Never again!
  19. I think Screwboys in Soi Twilight was the first gay bar I visited in Bangkok. A tout approached me in Patpong market and took me there - for a fee, of course. I still have very vivid memories of a handsome young guy in white briefs coming towards me, clutching his junk. And there was a fuck show happening right in front of my eyes. I thought I'd died and gone to heaven! I wonder what they charged for drinks back then? Anyone remember? I think I gave the tout 200 baht.
  20. I grew up in Japan at a time when everyone wanted to have sex with a foreigner - not a relationship or even a friendship, just sex. No matter where I went, I was the centre of attention and it did wonders for the self -esteem! I was pounced upon as soon as I walked into the gay cinemas and I actually had guys fighting to get to me. I was touched up on the crowded train virtually every day and if I was able to figure out who was "molesting" me and I found him attractive, we'd often get off at the next station and go back to his place for sex. My cock was getting a real workout, morning, non and night. Then everything changed. The Japanese appeared to lose their inferiority complex vis-a-vis foreigners and started looking at each other. The days of standing back and waiting for the hordes to go straight for my cock were over. Sure, I still got more sex than I could poke a stick at, so to speak, and I still got touched up in the train but it wasn't the same. How I miss those days!
  21. Might that have been Holiday 2? It was diagonally opposite Nice Boys and was previously known as Butt Boys.
  22. I stayed at the Elephant Plaza Hotel - later called the Don Plaza - numerous times during the years Sunee was up and running. It was perfectly situated, just a minute or two from my favourite haunts - Krazy Dragon, Goodboys, All of Me and Eros. (Sigh) It was very basic, but the room was large and the ladyboy cleaner did an excellent job. I just made sure I kept well away from the pink sofa, held together as it was by years of cum! Back in April I walked past the Marina. It didn't look very inviting at all. With only 2 bars left, there is no incentive for anyone to open a hotel there.
  23. A numbet of years ago a member of this forum wrote about a massage guy in Pattaya who was recruited to go and work in a middle eastern country. He found conditions unbeartable but was trapped there - apparently, his boss had confiscated his passport and was demanding payment before he would allow the guy to leave. If I recall correctly, the member paid for his return to Thailand. Around the same time, a guy in Pattaya who I knew very well - he was a gogo boy in Neal's old Bar, then moved to BBB and finally ended up doing massage at Copa - told me he was considering going to the middle east. His parents were pressuring him to go. I did my best to warn him of the possible dangers and suggested he do his research carefully before committing to going. On my next visit to Pattaya I was relieved to find him still working at Copa.
  24. If I wanted someone who looks like a female, I'd go to the girlie bars on Walking Street. Thankfully, I don't.
  25. No. I spoke to the bottom who performs in the fuck show at xboys in Pattaya. He was sitting outside having a cigarette at the time. I asked him how on earth he was able to take such a huge cock and he said "poppers."
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