Most shops
open at
least Monday to
Saturday from
about 8am to
8pm, while
department
stores operate
daily from
around 10am to
9pm. Private
office hours are
generally Monday
to Friday
8am-5pm and
Saturday 8am-noon,
though in
tourist areas
these hours are
longer, with
weekends worked
like any other
day. Government
offices work
Monday to Friday
8.30am-noon and
1-4.30pm, and
national museums
tend to stick to
these hours,
too, but some
close on Mondays
and Tuesdays
rather than at
weekends. Most
shops and
tourist-oriented
businesses,
including TAT,
stay open on
national
holidays.
Thais use
both the Western
Gregorian
calendar and a
Buddhist
calendar - the
Buddha is said
to have died (or
entered Nirvana)
in the year 543
BC, so Thai
dates start from
that point: thus
2000 AD becomes
2543 BE (Buddhist
Era). Dates for
religious
festivals are
often set by the
lunar calendar,
so check
specifics with
TAT.
The most
spectacular
religious
festivals
include
Songkhran
(usually April
13-15), when the
Thai New Year is
welcomed in with
massive public
waterfights in
the street (most
exuberant in
Chiang Mai); the
Rocket
Festival in
Yasothon
(weekend in
mid-May), when
painted wooden
rockets are
paraded and
fired to ensure
plentiful rains;
the Candle
Festival in
Ubon Ratchathani
(July, three
days around the
full moon), when
enormous wax
sculptures are
paraded to mark
the beginning of
the annual
Buddhist retreat
period; the
Vegetarian
Festival in
Phuket and Trang
(Oct), when
Chinese devotees
become
vegetarian for a
nine-day period
and then parade
through town
performing acts
of
self-mortification;
and Loy
Krathong
(late Oct or
early Nov), when
baskets of
flowers and
lighted candles
are floated on
rivers, canals
and ponds
nationwide (best
in Sukhothai and
Chiang Mai) to
celebrate the
end of the rainy
season. The two
main
tourist-oriented
festivals are
the Surin
Elephant roundup
(third weekend
of Nov), when
two hundred
elephants play
team games, and
parade in battle
dress; and the
River Kwai
Bridge festival
in Kanchanaburi
(last week of
Nov and first
week of Dec),
which includes a
spectacular son
et lumière at
the infamous
bridge.