Tuktukpatrol 17 | 02 02 Mee Part 1 Meeting And Go...

If you encountered this keyword in a search or old database, consider:

Some urban police forces in South Asia use tuk-tuks for maneuverability in narrow alleys. “Patrol” fits. “17 02 02” as a date. “Mee” could be an officer’s callsign. Part 1: Briefing (meeting) then deployment (go).

| Time | Action | |------|--------| | 16:00 | Meeting at [location] – driver negotiation, payments | | 16:30 | Briefing & role assignment | | 17:00 | “Go” – depart for [first stop] | | 17:20 | Arrive [Wat Pho / Street food spot] – 45 min explore | | 18:15 | Regroup, head to [next spot] | | 20:00 | End of Part 1 – optional dinner |

If you’ve ever found a cryptic note like “TukTukPatrol 17 02 02 Mee Part 1 Meeting and go…” in your travel journal, you know it means one thing: adventure prep. This post breaks down how to turn that scribble into a smooth group tuk-tuk mission—whether you’re hunting for street food, temple-hopping, or just owning the night.

Early internet saw text-based roleplay on IRC or forums. A user named “Mee” posts “Part 1: Meeting and go” for a story where characters meet in a tuk-tuk depot.

The noodles are finished. The bill is paid (after a three-minute argument over 10 Baht). The Navigator folds his lanky frame into the back seat. The Passenger clings to their backpack. TukTukPatrol 17 02 02 Mee Part 1 Meeting and go...

The Driver turns the key. Clunk. Sputter. Roar.

"Go!"

They lurch into the afternoon traffic, a neon-green mosquito weaving between luxury SUVs and ancient buses. The wind tears at their hair. The heat rises from the asphalt. The first drops of rain begin to fall—because of course they do.

Part 1 ends here. The destination is not yet in sight. The problems are just beginning. The horn blares again: Bee-Bee-Borp—a war cry for the broken roads ahead.

To be continued… (Part 2: The Bridge, The Flood, and The Missing Brake) If you encountered this keyword in a search


Stay tuned for the next dispatch from the TukTukPatrol.

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Meeting
The camera (or log) begins shaky. Three tuk-tuks are parked outside the Hua Lamphong railway station. Four individuals – known only as “Patrol Leader,” “Mee,” “Sulin,” and “Tom” – stand around a map. Mee, a local driver with a blue scarf, points at a route along the Chao Phraya River.

Patrol Leader: “TukTukPatrol, this is Day One. Mee, you know the back alleys of Thonburi.”
Mee: “Yes. But after 9 AM, the floating market traffic is bad. We go before.”

The meeting lasts 4 minutes and 21 seconds (timestamp 17-02-02-0821). Objectives: reach three temples, avoid main roads, test fuel efficiency, and document pothole locations for a community report.

And Go...
Engines sputter. The tuk-tuks – one green, two red – pull into traffic. A child waves. The patrol’s first goal: cross the Memorial Bridge before 8:45. The video cuts to a mounted camera showing Mee’s vehicle taking the lead.