Trip to Thailand, airline food
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Trip to Thailand, airline food
My husband and I just got back from a trip to Thailand, where we spent Christmas with our son and his family, and met our newborn grandson. We had a really good time there, and of course, all three grandchildren are fabulous!!
I managed the entire trip, three and a half weeks, with no D. What a relief! I used Imodium as a precaution on travel days, but I think I could have done without it. My son did an excellent job of providing safe food for me, and when we ate out, I was cautious, ordering plain rice or a salad. My son speaks some Thai, but his vocabulary doesn't extend to grilling people on food ingredients and preparation. We did go to a seaside resort run by a French couple, and I talked to the kitchen manager there to determine what was safe. None of the curries contained gluten, dairy products or soy sauce, so I ate curry for almost every meal. Fortunately, I like curry.
For the air travel, I requested gluten-free meals. Had gluten been my only intolerance, I would have eaten well. I was impressed with how well they did the gluten-free meals. They were clearly labeled, and served first. I got quite a bit of fruit and salad, but also quinoa with corn and black beans, rice and fish, salmon and boiled potatoes. I ate only a little bit of the entrees, fearing dairy and soy. I did carry boiled eggs and morning glory muffins to supplement the airline food, and I was glad to have that.
Jet lag wasn't bad when we arrived in Bangkok, but it got worse over the days, until finally I realized that my headache, fatigue, and body aches were symptoms of eating soy, not of jet lag. But no D! I took some Tylenol to help with the achiness, and then I was fine.
Each of our flights on the way to Bangkok was delayed. We were an hour late leaving Dallas, necessitating a mad dash through the Paris airport to try to catch our next flight, only to have it leave one and a half hours late! That cut our 2 hours in Kuala Lumpur to 30 minutes, so all we saw of that airport was the floor, as we made another mad dash to try to make our flight to Bangkok. And it too was delayed. So we made all of our flights, but our luggage did not. It arrived three days later. I made a conscious decision to not feel stressed over this. My son loaned his dad some clothes, and he loaned me a shirt (he's tall but very thin, so I fit his shirts better than those of my tiny DIL), and my DIL's mom loaned me a skirt. And the stress did not aggravate my MC.
I rode an elephant on this trip--for fun, not for transportation. Our 4-year-old granddaughter rode with us. She was delighted, and did not see Grandma clinging for dear life to the seat back behind her. It was a very sway-y sort of ride.
Anyway, now we're home, and waiting for our luggage to be delivered by the airline, who somehow thought it would be fun if our luggage were to be lost on both directions of our trip. They have a great tracking system, so we know that the bags have arrived in Dallas, and will be delivered sometime this evening.
Bangkok is a modern city. The malls put the ones in the US to shame; they are so clean and shiny. There are many small play areas for children, there are special rooms for moms with babies, so they can nurse in privacy if they want, and the stores are pretty high-end. They even had a stall where you can buy dairy-free ice cream. You can still go to markets, of course, to get the more authentic Asian experience.
On our way home, we flew through Tokyo. This is the only place where I can unabashedly say that the toilets in the Tokyo airport are awesome! They have heated seats, and a control panel to the side, including controls for a bidet, a "buttocks washing spray", and music to cover any noises you might be making. *Contented sigh*
All in all, it was a great trip, and it's nice to know that it is possible to travel with MC, even if you can't eat what everyone else is eating.
Very belatedly, Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to you all.
Love,
Martha
I managed the entire trip, three and a half weeks, with no D. What a relief! I used Imodium as a precaution on travel days, but I think I could have done without it. My son did an excellent job of providing safe food for me, and when we ate out, I was cautious, ordering plain rice or a salad. My son speaks some Thai, but his vocabulary doesn't extend to grilling people on food ingredients and preparation. We did go to a seaside resort run by a French couple, and I talked to the kitchen manager there to determine what was safe. None of the curries contained gluten, dairy products or soy sauce, so I ate curry for almost every meal. Fortunately, I like curry.
For the air travel, I requested gluten-free meals. Had gluten been my only intolerance, I would have eaten well. I was impressed with how well they did the gluten-free meals. They were clearly labeled, and served first. I got quite a bit of fruit and salad, but also quinoa with corn and black beans, rice and fish, salmon and boiled potatoes. I ate only a little bit of the entrees, fearing dairy and soy. I did carry boiled eggs and morning glory muffins to supplement the airline food, and I was glad to have that.
Jet lag wasn't bad when we arrived in Bangkok, but it got worse over the days, until finally I realized that my headache, fatigue, and body aches were symptoms of eating soy, not of jet lag. But no D! I took some Tylenol to help with the achiness, and then I was fine.
Each of our flights on the way to Bangkok was delayed. We were an hour late leaving Dallas, necessitating a mad dash through the Paris airport to try to catch our next flight, only to have it leave one and a half hours late! That cut our 2 hours in Kuala Lumpur to 30 minutes, so all we saw of that airport was the floor, as we made another mad dash to try to make our flight to Bangkok. And it too was delayed. So we made all of our flights, but our luggage did not. It arrived three days later. I made a conscious decision to not feel stressed over this. My son loaned his dad some clothes, and he loaned me a shirt (he's tall but very thin, so I fit his shirts better than those of my tiny DIL), and my DIL's mom loaned me a skirt. And the stress did not aggravate my MC.
I rode an elephant on this trip--for fun, not for transportation. Our 4-year-old granddaughter rode with us. She was delighted, and did not see Grandma clinging for dear life to the seat back behind her. It was a very sway-y sort of ride.
Anyway, now we're home, and waiting for our luggage to be delivered by the airline, who somehow thought it would be fun if our luggage were to be lost on both directions of our trip. They have a great tracking system, so we know that the bags have arrived in Dallas, and will be delivered sometime this evening.
Bangkok is a modern city. The malls put the ones in the US to shame; they are so clean and shiny. There are many small play areas for children, there are special rooms for moms with babies, so they can nurse in privacy if they want, and the stores are pretty high-end. They even had a stall where you can buy dairy-free ice cream. You can still go to markets, of course, to get the more authentic Asian experience.
On our way home, we flew through Tokyo. This is the only place where I can unabashedly say that the toilets in the Tokyo airport are awesome! They have heated seats, and a control panel to the side, including controls for a bidet, a "buttocks washing spray", and music to cover any noises you might be making. *Contented sigh*
All in all, it was a great trip, and it's nice to know that it is possible to travel with MC, even if you can't eat what everyone else is eating.
Very belatedly, Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to you all.
Love,
Martha
Martha
I went to Thailand during my honeymoon and stayed at the fancy Peninsula Hotel.... they had to call in their visiting nurse when I got horribly ill with food poisoning!! I don't know how you made it through unscathed. Good for you!! I'm just a magnet for GI infections.
I've traveled overseas on Delta and Air France and despite my husband calling the airline way in advance and 24 hours ahead to reconfirm our need for GF meals, they often don't have them onboard, and we fly in business class!! They are now giving us free miles for all the times they've missed our meal. When they do have it, it's a horrible, recently thawed (still partly frozen) salad and chicken breast that are almost inedible!
I've traveled overseas on Delta and Air France and despite my husband calling the airline way in advance and 24 hours ahead to reconfirm our need for GF meals, they often don't have them onboard, and we fly in business class!! They are now giving us free miles for all the times they've missed our meal. When they do have it, it's a horrible, recently thawed (still partly frozen) salad and chicken breast that are almost inedible!
1987 Mononucleosis (EBV)
2004 Hypomyopathic Dermatomyositis
2009 Lymphocytic Colitis
2010 GF/DF/SF Diet
2014 Low Dose Naltrexone
2004 Hypomyopathic Dermatomyositis
2009 Lymphocytic Colitis
2010 GF/DF/SF Diet
2014 Low Dose Naltrexone
Glad you had such a marvelous trip, despite the double dose of lost luggage! I would be nervous for such a long trip at this point. I had a cold this last week, which threw me into a flare, I can only imagine such long travels. I do have 2 trips planned in the next month, but in the US, and will be thrilled to make it through them issue-free.
Lisa
Lisa
Hi Martha,
Thanks for the play-by-play details of the MC-relevant portions of the trip. As you mentioned, all-in-all it appears to have been a nice trip. Despite a few problems, things certainly could have gone much worse. When we're that far from home, we naturally tend to feel very vulnerable when things go wrong, but you seem to have handled everything well.
And I hope that the New Year that was already in progress when you got back homel has some good things planned for you.
Love,
Tex
Thanks for the play-by-play details of the MC-relevant portions of the trip. As you mentioned, all-in-all it appears to have been a nice trip. Despite a few problems, things certainly could have gone much worse. When we're that far from home, we naturally tend to feel very vulnerable when things go wrong, but you seem to have handled everything well.
And I hope that the New Year that was already in progress when you got back homel has some good things planned for you.
Love,
Tex
It is suspected that some of the hardest material known to science can be found in the skulls of GI specialists who insist that diet has nothing to do with the treatment of microscopic colitis.
- Gabes-Apg
- Emperor Penguin
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Yes the frozen special meals are a hoot (not)
on Air france it was a case of 'you got your special meal, what more do you want us to do?'
of course the only fruit they had were banana's - I am allergic.
Should I do international travel I will always carry rice cakes and apple juice and not rely on the airlines.
wonderful wonderful news that you had a great trip, good time with family, and no major eating/digestion issues! awesome!
on Air france it was a case of 'you got your special meal, what more do you want us to do?'
of course the only fruit they had were banana's - I am allergic.
Should I do international travel I will always carry rice cakes and apple juice and not rely on the airlines.
wonderful wonderful news that you had a great trip, good time with family, and no major eating/digestion issues! awesome!
Gabes Ryan
"Anything that contradicts experience and logic should be abandoned"
Dalai Lama
"Anything that contradicts experience and logic should be abandoned"
Dalai Lama
Martha, I loved hearing about your trip! So glad all went well for you.
Patricia, if you are looking for a safe first post-MC travel destination, let me suggest Ireland. I traveled there in fall of 2013 (my first international travel after diagnosis) without any problems. Every restaurant we went to had good options. Plenty of fresh fish, veggies, etc. Supermarkets were full of GF foods to carry along. They are very GF conscious. Pubs, however, are a little dicier.
Patricia, if you are looking for a safe first post-MC travel destination, let me suggest Ireland. I traveled there in fall of 2013 (my first international travel after diagnosis) without any problems. Every restaurant we went to had good options. Plenty of fresh fish, veggies, etc. Supermarkets were full of GF foods to carry along. They are very GF conscious. Pubs, however, are a little dicier.
Suze
Marcia and Suze,
Thank you so much for your encouragement!
I did take a short trip to Toronto the week before Christmas to visit a good friend of mine. Well....right before boarding in Pittsburgh I had to make a mad dash to the bathroom, luckily it was right next to the gate. The plane was one of these teeny tiny ones, 8 rows, 2 people on each side, and in the back a row of 5 seats (instead of a bathroom!). Once I was seated, I was wondering if there was a bathroom in the front. Had I passed it without noticing it? Had the flight attendant been standing in front of a bathroom or a wall? Or did those tiny commuter airplanes not require bathrooms? Luckily I made it on both flights without any issues. At my friend's house (she could not have been more understanding!) I had GF SF EF DF crackers for breakfast that I had brought with me. We shopped for fresh food and I only had grilled sweet potatoes or yams with grilled meat or fish, pure olive oil, salt, and pepper and once in a while a banana. I did spend two days out of the four days in her bathroom (and I was so grateful she has two bathrooms and I was not occupying the one and only). I was on such a careful diet that I was (and am still) wondering what was causing it. The crackers contained corn, rice, buckwheat, evaporated cane juice, apple fiber. The dinner before those two days both included salmon. I don't think it was wild salmon, and I wonder what they feed the fish in those salmon farms.
Having been a frequent traveler in the past, this short trip to Toronto made me realize that this is a whole new ballgame and that I really needed to figure out my other intolerances if I ever wanted to travel again without mad dashes and spending half the time in the bathroom.
I have never been to Ireland, but would love to go there. Most likely, I'll travel to Switzerland later this year to visit my parents, my sister, and my in-laws. I'll be staying with family, which makes it a lot easier (although, they'll have to get used to the new me!). But reading posts about international travel gives me hope that one day, a little more adventurous travel might be possible again
Thanks again for all the support, it means so much to me!
Love, Patricia
Thank you so much for your encouragement!
I did take a short trip to Toronto the week before Christmas to visit a good friend of mine. Well....right before boarding in Pittsburgh I had to make a mad dash to the bathroom, luckily it was right next to the gate. The plane was one of these teeny tiny ones, 8 rows, 2 people on each side, and in the back a row of 5 seats (instead of a bathroom!). Once I was seated, I was wondering if there was a bathroom in the front. Had I passed it without noticing it? Had the flight attendant been standing in front of a bathroom or a wall? Or did those tiny commuter airplanes not require bathrooms? Luckily I made it on both flights without any issues. At my friend's house (she could not have been more understanding!) I had GF SF EF DF crackers for breakfast that I had brought with me. We shopped for fresh food and I only had grilled sweet potatoes or yams with grilled meat or fish, pure olive oil, salt, and pepper and once in a while a banana. I did spend two days out of the four days in her bathroom (and I was so grateful she has two bathrooms and I was not occupying the one and only). I was on such a careful diet that I was (and am still) wondering what was causing it. The crackers contained corn, rice, buckwheat, evaporated cane juice, apple fiber. The dinner before those two days both included salmon. I don't think it was wild salmon, and I wonder what they feed the fish in those salmon farms.
Having been a frequent traveler in the past, this short trip to Toronto made me realize that this is a whole new ballgame and that I really needed to figure out my other intolerances if I ever wanted to travel again without mad dashes and spending half the time in the bathroom.
I have never been to Ireland, but would love to go there. Most likely, I'll travel to Switzerland later this year to visit my parents, my sister, and my in-laws. I'll be staying with family, which makes it a lot easier (although, they'll have to get used to the new me!). But reading posts about international travel gives me hope that one day, a little more adventurous travel might be possible again
Thanks again for all the support, it means so much to me!
Love, Patricia
Some of us react to buckwheat. A little apple fiber probably shouldn't be a problem, but a lot of it might.Patricia wrote:The crackers contained corn, rice, buckwheat, evaporated cane juice, apple fiber.
Love,
Tex
It is suspected that some of the hardest material known to science can be found in the skulls of GI specialists who insist that diet has nothing to do with the treatment of microscopic colitis.
- MBombardier
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Very interesting update and good news, Martha. I hope you and Michael have a wonderful year. Congrats on the the new grandson!
Marliss Bombardier
Dum spiro, spero -- While I breathe, I hope
Psoriasis - the dark ages
Hashimoto's Thyroiditis - Dec 2001
Collagenous Colitis - Sept 2010
Granuloma Annulare - June 2011
Dum spiro, spero -- While I breathe, I hope
Psoriasis - the dark ages
Hashimoto's Thyroiditis - Dec 2001
Collagenous Colitis - Sept 2010
Granuloma Annulare - June 2011