Archive for the ‘Muay Thai Rituals’ Category

PostHeaderIcon Enjoying Your Phuket Thailand Vacations

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Phuket is a dream destination for travelers especially for those who are beach enthusiasts. If you are planning on your Phuket Thailand vacations, it is necessary to know the different exciting beaches where you can have the most enjoyable time ever. Beaches in Phuket are famous around the world.

Travelers from the world over have their Phuket Thailand vacations because of these beautiful beaches. Most of these beaches can be seen just along the coast of Phuket as well as on the island. If you want to experience an exciting nightlife, Patong is the best place to be. Patong is known for its fantastic nightlife as well as different activities whether during the day or night.

For people who want more solitude, the beach to go to is the Nai Thon beach, which has fascinating views. Nai Thon does not have the crowds compared to other beaches so you can enjoy the serenity it provides. Its unspoiled nature is perfect for every tourist’s Phuket Thailand vacations.

If you are in Phuket, you should visit the Wat Chalong or known as the Chalong Temple, which is full of Phuket culture and history. There was a legend that Wat Chaitararam was a place where miracles were performed and that the Wat had healing powers. You can see the world-famous Buddhist statues including Pho Than Jao Nonsi as well as the temples of Luang Pho Gleum and Luang Poh Chuang. A splinter of Lord Buddha’s bone is located at the Grand Pagoda that dominates the temple. As you walk through the area, you can see the paintings that hang all over the walls depicting the life of the Buddha.

Thailand is known for Thai boxing sport and you should not miss watching a Muay Thai match, especially if you are into boxing. Muay Thai originated in Thailand and it is one of the most popular sports in the place. You can go to the boxing stadium located in Phuket town every Friday night to experience Muay Thai boxing with rituals and accompanied by music.

Tourists can take a leisure walk along Khao Phra Thaeo National Park, which is one of Phuket’s virgin rainforest. It was transformed into a national park where travelers can enjoy the beauty of nature. Trekkers can go for an eight kilometers trek to the park that leads to the magnificent Tonsai waterfall.

You can visit the old Phuket where you can find the streets full of one hundred year old shops that were renovated into small beautiful hotels, shops and restaurants. The town gives you a different feel of Phuket with its old attractions.

Your perfect Phuket Thailand vacations will never be complete with your comfortable stay in luxurious hotels, holiday homes and villas. Different types of villas are located anywhere in the area. Choose from service apartments, luxury beachfront villas to hilltop villas that offer you with breathtaking views of the ocean. All these accommodations are available whether you intend to stay just for the weekend or even for the whole month.

To know more about Phuket Thailand vacations, it is necessary to check different websites to get the best deals of hotel accommodations, trips and vacation packages.

Watcharapat Yooyen
http://www.articlesbase.com/travel-articles/enjoying-your-phuket-thailand-vacations-687939.html

PostHeaderIcon What Exactly Happens on Mondays in Bangkok? (Multiple Questions)?

I’ve purchased my yellow shirt and I’m ready for Bangkok Mondays! Now I just need to know what I should be doing. Are there any rituals that Thai people go through other than wearing yellow to pay respect to their king? Do they make pilgrimmage to the Grand Palace? Do they make offering to the temples?

Someone just asked about Chinatown on Mondays so from the answer there I gathered that stores like MBK and Central are all open but small food stalls are closed. I would like to know if any temples are open on Mondays in Bangkok? What about tourist attractions like Muay Thai boxing? Will I be able to get a haircut on Mondays?
Thanks for your input Gerald J, but if you read my question carefully I never said the King lived at the Grand Palace. I already knew he didn’t but it was a former home of their Kings.

Just street stalls on sidewalks are closed on Monday. Other places are opened.

For yellow shirt, some Thai people wear it on Mondays.
But I and many people over here have not worn it since the PAD used yellow shirt as PAD’s symbol.
We always respect our king but don’t want to be yellow or red!

PostHeaderIcon Muay Thai (Thai Boxing) at Lumphini Stadium

An exhibition fight, plus the ritual dancing at the beginning.

Duration : 0:5:22

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PostHeaderIcon ritual dance 2

ritual dance 2

Duration : 0:0:44

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PostHeaderIcon ritual dance 5

ritual dance 5

Duration : 0:0:51

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PostHeaderIcon Wai Khru Ram Muay

At Lumpini Boxing Stadium, Bangkok.

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PostHeaderIcon Myanmar Lethwei boxer “Ali”

Myanmar has a tradition of kickboxing that’s said to date back to the Bagan era,
although the oldest written references are found in chronicles of warfare between
Myanmar and Thailand during the 15th and 16th centuries. Myanmar kickboxing
(Myanma Let-hwei) is very similar in style to Siamese kickboxing or Muay Thai.

The martial art’s status has raised perceptibly and nowadays occasional championship
matches are also occasionally held at Aung San Stadium and Thuwanna Indoor Stadium in Yangon.
Rules & Regulations
Anything goes in the ring. All surfaces of the body are considered fair targets
and any part of the body except the head may be used to strike an opponent.
Common blows include high kicks to the neck, elbow thrusts to the face and head,
knee hooks to the ribs and low crescent kicks to the calf. A contestant may even grasp
an opponent’s head between his hands and pull it down to meet an upward knee thrust.
Punching is considered the weakest of all blows and kicking merely a way
to ’soften up’ one’s opponent; knee and elbow strikes are decisive in most matches.

The structure and limitations of each match varies with its context
and with the calibre of the participants. Unlike Thai boxing, which has borrowed
a great deal from the Queensbury rules in international or Western boxing,
Myanmar boxing represents a more traditional form once shared by the two countries.
Rules tend to follow situational norms; fighters, managers
and judges get together before each match and work out time limits and scoring criteria.

In the simplest rural matches, fought in a dirt circle, there’s no time limit
and a fighter loses once he has wiped blood from his face or body three times.
In more organised amateur matches, boxers fight in square rings
(5.8 by 5.5 metres), for three to five rounds of three minutes each,
usually with two minutes rest between. Professional matches in larger towns
and cities begin with five rounds but may increase round by round to 12 rounds
when the scoring is tight - even longer if no clear winner emerges earlier in

The match When such extensions occur, boxers can request a five-minute rest period
for every seven rounds fought. At both amateur and pro matches, two referees
officiate in the ring, where there’s only one. At ringside are three judges
who score the match by pooling their impressions of stamina, skill and bravery.

Fighters bandage their hands but do not wear gloves; they fight barefoot
except for nylon anklets worn to absorb perspiration. Simple,
dark-coloured shorts rather than baggy boxing trunks are usually worn;
if the shorts worn by the contestants appear too similar in colour,
the fighters may sew coloured bandanas over the front to make it easier
for spectators to differentiate the opponents.
In championship matches Myanmar fighters wear big, gaudy trunks.

Before the match begins each boxer performs a dance-like ritual
in the ring to pay homage to Buddha and to Khun Cho and Khun Tha,
the nats whose domain includes Myanmar kickboxing.
The winner repeats the ritual at the end of the match.
A small musical ensemble consisting of drums, hne, cymbals
and bamboo clappers performs during the rituals and throughout the match;
the volume and tempo of the music rise and fall along with events in the ring.

There are no weight divisions in Myanmar boxing. Instead boxers are ranked
by skill into first, second, and third class. The best boxers are said
to hail from the Ayeyarwady Division, Mandalay Division, Kayin State
and Mon State. At present Myanmar’s most celebrated boxer is the National Champion
Shwe Du Won from Hpa-An, Kayin State.

Myanmar’s most famous Myanma Let-hwei teacher is Saya Pan Thu,
founder of the Institute of Myanmar Traditional Advanced Boxing
and one of three trainers at Yangon University. He comes from a teaching lineage
that emphasises Myanmar’s most traditional style of kickboxing,
but also incorporates a few grappling and wrestling techniques
from the judo-like Myanmar art of bando.
Due largely to Pan Thu’s steady promotion of Myanmar martial arts,
the country is on the verge of establishing the Myanma Traditional Boxing Federation,
an organisation that will regulate boxing rules,
introduce new safety measures to the ring and develop overall professionalism.

Duration : 0:8:18

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PostHeaderIcon Wanderlei Silva- UFC 99 pre-fight interview

Fight Nerd Correspondent, Conner Cordova, heads to Vegas to talk with Wanderlei Silva. The Axe Murderer discusses his motivation to fight, where he likes to fight most, his pre-fight ritual and his favorite cartoon. Wanderlei also demonstrates his patented Thai Clinch on Conner, but not before taking his glasses off first!

Duration : 0:9:50

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PostHeaderIcon Combate Muay Thai Chema Monje - Asalto 0

Ritual o Ram Muay del combate de Muay Thai en Sevilla, categoría amateur.

Duration : 0:2:42

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PostHeaderIcon Thai boxing

Muay Thai: pre-match ritual

Duration : 0:3:39

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