10th Edition Sealed

July 28, 2007

This month’s sealed featured the newly released 10th Edition. I haven’t been thrilled with the cards so far. A lot of my favorites were taken out of core from 9th and replaced with retarded and janky filler. Limited though, is always different and today I got maybe the best cards for limited I’ve ever had.

I ended up with a green/red aggro zoo deck backed up with a lot of removal. I splashed black because… well, you’ll see.

Aggro Burn Zoo

9x Forest
5x Mountain
4x Swamp
—– 18 Land —–

1x Siege-Gang Commander [2/2]
1x Anaba Bodyguard [2/3]
1x Earth Elemental [4/5]
1x Rhox [5/5]
1x Stalking Tiger [3/3]
1x Llanowar Sentinel [2/3]
1x Giant Spider [2/4]
1x Enormous Baloth [7/7]
1x Karplusan Strider [3/4]
1x Elvish Piper [1/1]
1x Pincher Beetles [3/1]
1x Troll Ascetic [3/2]
—– 12 Creatures —–

2x Terror
2x Assassinate
1x Chromatic Star
1x Naturalize
1x Hurricane
1x Lure
1x Shock
1x Blaze
1x Incinerate
—– 11 Spells —–

Seriously! Look at those cards! I have 8 removal spells! TWO freaking Terrors! How could I NOT splash black?! A Blaze, Shock, and Incinerate!!! I might as well had thrown in a Char. Then, I had a Troll Ascetic, my bomb today and definite favorite card from 10th backed up with Earth Elemental, Enormous Baloth, and a Rhox all called by Elvish Piper. The mana curve was quite steep but I was generally able to get going from about turn 4 or 5. I lost once in the 1v1s from mana screw but aside from that, I did rather well.

The lone Naturalize was thrown in when Thierry “accidentally” announced that Guillaume got a very bombalicious Loxodon Warhammer. While it never got to kill the Warhammer, it did come in handy in the DHG when a Pariah was thrown onto our little monsters.

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Thailand

July 27, 2007

Note: click on the thumbnails for a bigger and clearer picture. You can also skip my commentary and head directly to the pictures too.

July 14

Bangkok was to be our stepping stone onto Siem Reap. The lady’s company has a branch in Bangkok and she has been corresponding with people there for years. She’s also known Japanese nationals who have been sent there for five year stints as well. While she’s been communicating with them via phone and email, this would be her first time meeting most of them face to face.

Bangkok is about 6 hours away from Osaka but Bangkok Airways made it much easier to bare. They have personal entertainment units in each seat. The remote control doubles as a phone and video game controller. You can choose when to start any of the dozen or so movies available. Also you can even customize playlists from the different music tracks but as always, the music selection was sketchy, at best.

When we got there, the heat and humidity really hit. It was at least 30 degrees when we arrived around 6:30pm and the humidity was around 80% supposedly. The lady’s friends jokingly told us that in Thailand, there are three kinds of weather: hot, hotter, and hottest. They weren’t kidding.

Her friend Parinya picked us up from the airport and took us to our hotel. It was an awesome hotel with a great lounge with live Thai music. The service was excellent and it was located in a very interesting part of town - Siam Square. Right away you can notice the different bars and clubs and the presence of foreigners. Some of the rather shady looking clubs had scantily-clad girls sitting outside in rather… provocative ways. They all called out to guys… in Japanese. Unfortunately I now know what Japanese travelers do in Bangkok.

Afterwards, about half a dozen people from the company and some family members came out and met us for dinner. We went to a nice Thai restaurant near the hotel and having that beer after a long flight really hit the spot. Unfortunately my stomach wasn’t in the best of shape and I couldn’t enjoy all the awesome Thai food that was placed before me. The spices were making my stomach scream for toilet. We thanked them for their most gracious visit and dinner and we parted ways.

The baby elephant. Look closely

Later that night the lady and I walked around the area. I noticed a lot of people hanging out on the streets. Some of them sat in make-shift food stands and ate and drank. Others just sat on the street speaking, or trying to pawn off crappy goods. Everyone seemed pretty relaxed. To our surprise, I saw a guy walk by with a baby elephant in tow! Unfortunately I couldn’t set up my shot right so it came out too blurry and dark. After that we were too tired to do anything else and the scantily clad ladies were calling out so we headed back to the hotel and got some good rest.

July 15

We got up early and had breakfast at the hotel. I must say I am beginning to fall in love with these hotel buffet breakfasts. They serve a bit of every kind of breakfast I can think of and offer limitless portions. More importantly a hot cup of coffee is just soothing to a wary traveler, especially one with stomach issues already.

a tuk tuk

Parinya met us with the company car and he took us around town. We drove past many neat looking places - the current palace grounds, the city spire, many gold-colored buildings, and many huge pictures and paintings of the King. Of course the roads were full of cars, motorcycles, and the infamous tuk tuk - imagine a motorcycle and a horse drawn carriage had an extramarital affair: a tuk tuk would be its illegitimate lovechild.

Wat Phra Kaew

Eventually we survived Thai traffic and ended up at Wat Phra Kaew and the Grand Palace. I think Phra Kaew means golden mountain if I remember what Parinya said. The main attraction is the big golden spire in the middle of the area. There are several pavilions in the complex and reconstruction continues in several parts of the temple. The Grand Palace is no longer inhabited by the royal family but I guess they move around every few years.

Wat Phra Kaew

Thai temples really differ from Japanese temples in a few big ways. Thai temples tend to be much more colorful than the humbling colors of Japanese temples. The carvings and decor seem to be more outspoken and bold, with statues in man kinds of positions, whereas the Japanese counterparts seem to be more reserved. It was also interesting to see influences from different cultures. Noteably Guan Yu statues protect a few buildings.

Stone statues against gold foil was a very neat sight Chicken Boy! (The right one...) Although the idea is the same, the entrance guardians are very different from Japanese ones

A very tall building Coloful temples The Grand Palace

When we finished it was only noon but the sun and the humidity was beating down hard. We had a nice lunch and Burin joined us along with a couple of other very friendly and smiley people and then visited the National Museum. Unfortunately most of the buildings in this complex were not air conditioned. This made for a very uncomfortable stroll through stuffy buildings. I was too exhausted to even take pictures here. The artwork and historical pieces were very nice to look at but the only thing on my mind was, “get out of this heat”. We put up the white flag and asked Parinya if we could move on.

Monkey see... Those are toes

We had one last request before heading back to the hotel. There is a huge reclined buddha statue in Wat Pho - made famous by Streetfigher 2 (remember Sagat’s level?) and the many Japanese travel shows to Thailand. We just had to see this very comfortable-looking buddha.

A very suave guardian

Even though it was so hot it was well worth the visit. The statue is huge. You can see its toes just tower over me. There was also a ritual where you pick up a pot of copper coin-looking pieces and slowly but methodically throw a few of them into these pots lined against the wall. Your goal was to have enough

After that we were done. Parinya and Burin dropped us off at our hotel and we exchanged very fond farewells. I honestly felt my experience in Thailand was so fantastic because of these guys. Thank yous!

July 16

I've been in bigger buses

Waking up early again and enjoying another great hotel buffet breakfast, we make our way to the airport and get on a a tiny airplane, the smallest I’ve ever been in, with propellers instead of those big barrel shaped engines. The ride itself wasn’t too bad but turbulence really hit the plane. There were no cool personal entertainment units in each seat and I think there was only one washroom too. No matter! We were about to embark on the next leg of our trip: onward to Cambodia and onward to Siem Reap!

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Thailand and Cambodia: Introduction

July 21, 2007

Back in my living room now with all the creature comforts I take for granted and expect daily now, I’m trying to collect all my thoughts from this nearly one week trip. The lack of sleep yesterday-today, slight diarrhea, and a general sense of malaise after being in an airplane is not making it any easier.

I think this trip really opened our eyes to a part of the world that we’ve only ever heard about or seen in pictures or on TV. For me I think the way I see life and people will never be the same and I mean that in a very positive way.

Wat Phra Kaew
Wat Phra Kaew

Some folks in Thailand showed us a level of hospitality that I would almost never expect from people in Canada or Japan, without having them expect something back. Cambodia was definitely the poorest country I have ever been to. Even so, we visited Siem Reap, a fast growing city and I know people there probably have it better than people in the rural areas. There too, people seemed to treat each other, and treat tourists with a much higher level of respect than we would to them, I think.

Horsey rides!
Ad on a remorque-moto

Unfortunately we only had the chance to visit Bangkok and Siem Reap. Had we had more time and had the woman been more adventurous (and less reliant on her crappy Japanese guidebook), I would’ve loved to visit other areas that people keep touting about. In a way though, the two cities were opposite extremes and seeing the contrast made for a very interesting trip.

I’ll post more details on Thailand and Cambodia individually. I’m still sorting through all the pictures I took and looking for gems. The hardest part is trying to match the names of places with the pictures and remembering tidbits that happened there.

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We’re back!

July 20, 2007

Ta Prohm
Ta Prohm

Wow. What an intense trip. More to come.

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Thailand and Cambodia

July 13, 2007

Off to Thailand tomorrow and then Cambodia on Monday. Be back on Friday! Woohoo! 11 days of not working. Pictures and updates to follow.

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Ultimate Topdecking

July 05, 2007

That draw was worth $16,000!

Oh yeah, if you understand all that, you’re a geek. Wanna play?

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Banned!

July 04, 2007

As Doug reported, apparently, my little webpage is blocked in China!

This site (Thanks Dennis) confirmed it. Dennis is also blocked too!

This is one of my greatest accomplishments ever.

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