I love visiting abandoned places and Bangkok's airplane graveyard has been an insider tip among backpackers for a while. When I first heard about it a couple of months ago, I planned on heading there on my next visit to Bangkok, but when I visited Bangkok ten days ago I had totally forgotten about this place. All the better that I ended up there by accident!
But let me start from the beginning: Having just arrived from Copenhagen the day before, I was a bit jet-lagged on my second day in Bangkok. The beers I had had with @travelling-two and @worldcapture at our meet-up the evening before might have also been in play there, but when I finally woke up at noon it was raining outside and by the time the rain had stopped and I finally left the hostel, it was already 4 pm. Since I was staying in Bangkok only as a layover, I had chosen a hostel outside of the centre with a convenient connection to both airports. I have visited Bangkok's popular tourist sights on my last trip to Thailand in 2016 already, but since I had no other plans for the day, I decided to head to the touristy centre of Bangkok anyway.
With the bad traffic in Bangkok, it is best to avoid the streets and use other ways of transport. This is why I headed to the nearby stop of the Klang channel boat. I boarded the first boat that came by and with a look on my phone's GPS I realised that it was not moving towards, but away from the centre. I was curious to which parts of Bangkok the boat would take me, so I filtered my map app for "sights" and scrolled along the channel. I came across something interesting, a place marked as "airplane graveyard". I remembered reading about this place before in a #travelfeed post some months ago and how I had wanted to got here, so I staid on the "wrong" boat and got off at the last stop. After getting lost in the monastery adjacent to the boat stop, I found the way to the airplane graveyard after a few minutes. I could spot two planes over a fence, but was a bit disappointed when I saw a sign reading "No entry". Was it no longer possible to visit the airplane graveyard?
I should have known better. This is not Europe, this is Thailand, so I would not have had to worry and indeed a few seconds later a guy came to the gate and demanded an entrance fee bribe of 200 Baht (around 5€). He and his family live at the airplane graveyard in a barrack in quite poor conditions, but they certainly have my respect for recognising the opportunity of earning from tourism and so I paid the fee and went through the gate and found myself surrounded by airplane corpses as the only visitor.
The rain earlier in the day had turned the meadow into a muddy swamp. I quickly gave up trying to keep my feet dry and walked through the knee-deep grass to reach the smaller airplane corpses in the back of the graveyard.
When I finally left the airplane graveyard, the sun had already set and in the last light of the day I made my way back to the Klong boat station only to find out that there were no more boats running. I would have loved to fly back to my hostel in one of the abandoned planes, but since they didn't look like they would ever fly again, I realised that my only way of getting back to my hostel would be to make my way through busy Bangkok's traffic.
I asked some locals and they advised me to take a bus with a certain number, but when this bus came along, the driver denied going in the direction of my hostel.
Since I was staying near the BTS skytrain station Phaya Thai, I looked for the BTS station closest to my location and when another bus with a different number came along, I asked for this station instead and indeed I got lucky. On the bus, a Thai guy who spoke English asked me where I wanted to go and it turned out that the bus route had a stop just a couple of hundred metres away from my hostel where I arrived after some time in Bangkok's traffic that due to the public holiday was much better than I had anticipated.