Further to your original post thebeargirl, the elevations in Thailand are very modest compared to anything in Yunnan. The highest mountain in Thailand is only as high as the western hills surrounding Kunming, so you won't need anything more than a light sweater.
The weather in Thailand in the dry season, covering all of northern, north eastern and central Thailand is superb. The chance of rain is almost nil, the visibility is superb and temperatures average around 28 degrees C in Chiang Mai, 31 in Bangkok and minimums are around 17 in Chiang Mai and 21 in Bangkok, although 25/33 even in December or January is not unknown in Bangkok. Basically, it's hot, sunny and less humid and cooler than other times of the year but that's it.
I doubt that the water quality in Thailand could be any worse than China. I would never drink tap water in China because that would make one very sick, and I would advise the same in Thailand. If you have a weak stomach, brush your teeth with bottled water only.
Thailand is generally safe, but as a freer country than China with less police control and far more tourists and expats, you'll find things a bit different especially in nightlife areas. While by and large safe, don't attract the wrong people or you could get in trouble.
As soon as you arrive in Bangkok, you'll see people from India, Europe, Africa and other places, whereas in Kunming you might see 3 foreigners roaming downtown, in Bangkok half of all people in the central shopping areas will be foreigners. The difference between Kunming and Bangkok in this respect is like night and day.
Finally, never ever lose your cool in Thailand. Nobody will help you or talk to you again if you do. Getting visibly angry might work in China, but it gets you nowhere in Thailand. You'll almost never see Thais get visibly angry, so I would advise you to heed this crucial piece of advice.
Riding into Kunming's future
发布者There's a flight from Kunming to Beirut? Wow...
Changshui Airport set to debut
发布者Some airlines, particularly international ones like THAI have not updated their systems to reflect the new airport. At the beginning, starting tomorrow, I'm sure there will be some passengers that won't know about the change and will thus go to the wrong airport and miss their flights.
Yunnan goes infrastructure crazy
发布者Yeah the Lijiang line is currently under construction, while the Ruili line is supposed to form part of a proposed Kunming-Myanmar rail link - it will probably also be constructed at some stage (as reported by GoKM last year) but I suspect it will take a little while.
Yunnan goes infrastructure crazy
发布者All of this is quite amazing, but even in China not everything goes to plan. Originally the proposed high speed railway from Kunming to Vientiane, Laos via Jinghong and Boten was supposed to be completed by 2015, but a number of issues will likely push back that project for another 10 or more years, though I do believe that it will eventually be built. Also, since the idea is to link south-western China with the south-east Asian coast, Thai and eventually Malaysian and Singaporean co-operation is vital to building this link in the first place; building a line only as far as Vientiane would likely turn out to be a white elephant project since the objective is to make most income from moving goods between SE Asia and SW China quickly via train rather than passengers and that requires linking SW China to a coastline - something which Laos doesn't have.
Regarding the Hekou line, they've been proposing that one for years now since trains stopped running between Kunming and Hekou in 2002. Finally this article mentions a new high-speed line is under construction, but this will be of little use unless the Vietnamese also build a complementary high-speed line on their side (sure, they already have an existing railway line running from Lao Cai via Hanoi down to Saigon, but it's rather slow). Also, the Vietnamese government recently turned down a proposal for converting their existing line into a high-speed line, citing the high cost and the low passenger volumes that would utilize the line.
Changshui Airport set to debut
发布者Wow, it's finally upon us. The new airport will finally open at the end of this month! Only thing is, I'd avoid non-essential travel in and out of this airport for the first couple of weeks since it will probably be more chaotic than usual and things may not go as planned (for example baggage claim may be unusually slow).
I like the statement "For travelers without cars, taxis are always an option." well of course they are. For starters, most people in Kunming still don't own a car despite all the cars on the roads these days. Secondly, even if you do have a car, who would drive to the airport in order to catch a flight and then park their car for the duration of their overseas or interprovincial stay there? I don't think long-term parking is well known in China so even a week's worth of parking could become very expensive and possibly more expensive than even in some western countries.
I am looking forward to the proposed direct Europe flights. Anyone have any idea about when these flights might begin and who which carriers will offer service (presumably Chinese carriers I would imagine)?