Archive for the ‘Phucket’ Category

South of Thailand – Ko Phi Phi

April 6, 2009

Phuket to Ko Phi Phi Island by boat, Thailand Day 47 (March-17)

Thailand Map

Southern Thailand Map

It’s another early 7 AM mini-bus pickup, and we ride to Phuket town to take the ferry to Ko Phi Phi. The Thais make Island hopping a breeze. At your hotel or any travel agent on the street, you can buy a boat ticket, which includes pickup at your hotel. Upon arrival at the dock, the hotel you reserved picks you up and transports you to your room free of charge.

Everyone seems to charge the same for transport, and there isn’t any real savings for doing it yourself. It’s so brainless, you would almost have to try to screw it up; and we almost did. While on the boat, we realized we left our luggage on the mini-bus. We scurried up to find it waiting for us at the top of the boat ramp.

ferry station

Ko Phi Phi here we come

Ko Phi Phi is beautiful and popular place. Ko Phi Phi island contains Ko Phi Phi Lee & Ko Phi Phi Don (Ko = Island). Ko Phi Phi Don contains two limestone islands connected by a strip of land with tourist village and beaches on both sides. It’s a small place, and there is no motorized transport on the island. There are a few resorts on the peripheral beaches, which are reached by walking paths, or long tail boat. The southern beach contains the ferry pier, and row of long tail boats. The northern beach contains a typical strip with umbrellas and beach chairs. We stay at the Don Chukit Resort on the south side, facing the working beach, We find the working beach with the boats is prettier than the tourist beach.

Ko Phi Phi map (click the photo to enlarge)

Arriving Ko Phi Phi

our hotel faces the working beach

working beach, long tail boats spot the rain coming in

Ko Phi Phi is one of the most expensive places in Thailand, so we choose another no AC and no hot water room to save money. As space on the island is limited, the price is double for the same accommodation in Phuket. The room is clean and functional, but with the metal roof and dropped ceiling, it’s a sweat box until 3AM, and we don’t get much sleep. On the plus side, we meet a lot of cool people setting outside of our room while waiting for it to cool down (since everyone else is doing the same).

The bathroom is a bit rough. As with most bathrooms in budget hotels, the toilet, sink, and shower are together in a small room. Most sinks leak, which then runs into the shower drain. In these rooms, they didn’t pitch the floor properly, so the bathroom turns into a puddle after your shower. (Vana: bad design – this will drive German engineers crazy) Also, as described by an English fellow a few doors down; “There’s no flush for the Jack!” I assumed the Jack must be the thing you use in the John, so I told him to use the hose or the bucket. From his confused look, I offered him tech support, but he said; “You don’t want to go in there now”! He asked me how it works, and I told him it uses gravity; just make sure you don’t lay a floater, eh?

For dinner we eat at an open air restaurant overlooking the working beach. The nightly entertainment is a lightning display which illuminates the surrounding islands and approaching clouds. With the first sign of a cool breeze, the staff indicates it’s time to change tables. It’s a complete downpour ten minutes later, which floods the streets, and takes 30 minutes to clear out. This turns into a nightly event around 8PM.

dinner on the beach

nightly entertainment between 8-9 PM

Ko Phi Phi Island, Thailand Day 48 (March-18)

It’s an even earlier wake up for our 6:15AM snorkel trip. We sign up for a special shark watch trip with the Adventure Club. The tour begins with a shark briefing, and then we head to the beach to take a quick long tail boat ride to a rock reef only a few minutes from our hotel. The sharks like this area because the current gives them a place to rest, since they have to constantly swim to breath. The local black tip reef sharks are between three to six feet long, and are not aggressive. Our guide is an English fellow who is way into sharks. There is a German couple in our group.

We enter the water above a shallow live reef, and then swim to a channel between two rocks formations. At the first sighting, the guide gives the signal, and we lock arms at the elbows and sit tight. The sharks are afraid of humans, and can sense every muscle movement in our group (Vana: it knows your weight, your size, and how many fingers you have the minute you enter the water). The idea is to make us look less threatening, and hope that a school of sharks will circle us out of curiosity. The sharks circle because they cannot see forward, only sideways.

The technique kind of works and we see a few sharks come by to take a look in groups of one and two; about three to four feet long. They swim slow along the bottom, and keep a distance of at least ten yards. Over an hour or so, we move around and spot sharks about four times. We never tried this kind of trip before and enjoy it; although we think it’s a bit boring waiting around compared with visiting a reef.

After some time a group of barneys arrive and the party is over. They chase the sharks and are yelling ever time they see one. You don’t see much chasing a shark, since they are infinitely faster swimmers. In the afternoon, we water log ourselves in the pool, trying to keep cool.

snorkeling site

Vana: okay, before you react, here are some facts to chew on: on average, there are about 60-70 shark attacks per year, most in a few feet of murky river water by Bull Sharks. Only 7-8 people die from the attack. All ocean animals only attack out of defense, and shark never attack divers. On the other hand, human kills 1 million shark per year. We cut off shark fin and sell it to Chinese, then throw the bleeding shark back into the ocean. The shark can not swim and slowly bleed to death. So, to my fellow Chinese shark fin lovers, PLEASE think twice before you order the shark fin soup next time. Because every shark in the ocean is endangered!

black tip reef sharks

We saw 3-5 sharks today! Including a baby shark!

very satisfied

chilling out in our hotel pool, still working on that tan

Ko Phi Phi Island, Thailand Day 49 (March-19)

Today, it’s an early, but more manageable 8:15AM snorkel trip to the Phi Phi Leh island. Today our guide is a young woman from Chile. We take long tail boat to the Phi Phi Leh Island. On the way we pass Viking Cave, where the island’s only inhabitants collect birds nest from sea swallows. The sea swallow creates the nest from its saliva, which then hardens. After the chicks are born, and sea swallows leave, the inhabitants perform a special ceremony before collecting the empty nests.


The Chinese use the nest to make the world famous (and very expensive) bird’s nest soup or desert. The nests cook down into a noodle looking thing, and are often served at weddings to induce fertility. The soup is also popular in Chinese medicine for rejuvenating the elderly.

our guide and boat driver’s son in the front of the boat

Viking Cave

The next stop is in a small bay for some snorkel action. The coral in the reef is not nearly as good as we expected, but the sea anemones are really cool. We found Nemo and took pictures! Also, it is really cool to swim outside the bay in the shade along the recess in water line of the limestone cliffs. Below the water line, the cliffs continue into a deep drop off, with soft and hard corals attached to the rock face.

There is a current here, and we can feel tingling stings on our forehead, top lip, and arms from tiny invisible sea lice floating in the current. At first I thought it was strange to wear short wet suits with the warm water temperature, but the sea lice (jellyfish) and sun protection works out well.

Next, we ditch our gear, grab our sandals, and swim to a cave in the bay. We walk through the cave which leads us to a small mangrove jungle area connected to a very large and impressive beach beneath towering limestone cliffs, on the other side of the island. Apparently, the movie “The Beach” was filmed here. The movie is famous, but we never heard of it (Vana: with Leonardo DiCaprio in it, of course it’s famous). I guess many other people saw the movie, because the beach is lined with speed boat day trippers from Phuket. It’s a zoo!

Our next snorkel is along another cliff wall on the other side of the island. We see lots of fish, and a few sharks. Again, it is pretty cool to swim besides the towering limestone cliffs. Debating if above or below the water line is prettier might be a tie.

sea anemones


Nemo!

False Clown Fish

blue fish with red fan coral

yellow fan coral along the wall

needle fish

we saw a lot of schooling schooling fish

Schooling fish

Did I mention that Ko Phi Phi likes to party?

Alcohol mixed with high levels of Nitrogen gets crazy!

CLICK HERE to see more snorking pictures

Ko Phi Phi Island to Ko Lanta Island by boat, Thailand Day 50 (March 20)

We take a beautiful late morning ferry boat to Ko Lanta. The water is glassy, and the horizon is filled with low clouds.

Ko Lanta is a long Island with 30 miles of beach coastline lined with small bungalow resorts. We stay at the Lanta Nice Beach resort. It’s a nice place; half empty, low season pricing, with very few people on the beach. For the same price we paid in Ko Phi Phi, our Ko Lanta accommodation includes full amenities. This works out great because Vana has several pronounced jellyfish stings which clear up almost immediately after rinsing with hot water. Neither the dive shop nor hotel in Ko Phi Phi included such luxury.

On the way to Ko Lanta

Picture of glassy water

reflection of perfection

our hotel room: return to comfort

empty at our resort beach

South of Thailand – Phuket

April 3, 2009

Chiang Mai to Phuket by plane, Thailand Day 45 (March-15)

two hour flight

We arrive at the Phuket International Airport, and take mini-bus to the Lucky Guesthouse in Kata beach. The minibus stops at a travel agent on the way to town, which is an annoyance for some, and tremendous convenience for others. We are happy to collect information and do some price comparison. We check in to the Lucky Guest house, and choose a nice basic clean and comfortable bungalow for $14; no AC, and no hot water. The cold shower feels great before bed, and the evenings are cool. We chat some Mandarin with a shy grade schooler in the lobby who is just learning.

The first thing we notice in Phuket is that our fellow travelers have suddenly put on an extra 50 pounds. The average age also go up from 20’s to 50’s. The sun crusted glory is hanging out in full force after dinner, with shirts unbuttoned or pulled up, allowing additional digesting room. Phuket has many large hotels catering to package tourists, who venture only a few mouse clicks from home. The public beach in north Kata is almost completely dominated by Club Med. Our hotel is on the main street right behind Cluc Med, only 10 minutes walk to the beach. Oddly enough we never make it to the beach, even for a look.

The T-shirt says it all about Phuket culture:

Phuket is a party town, also a popular place for lady boy to hang out. Be careful who you wake up the next morning 🙂

Phuket, Thailand Day 46 (March-16)

It’s an early 7:30AM mini-bus pickup for our full day trip to visit Ao Phang-Nga National Marine park, and it’s easy to pronounce “James Bond Island”. On the way we pick up two groups of Israelis. We wait while the first group finishes their breakfast. It’s a small family of three, and we can’t understand how anyone who is staying in a fancy 5-star resort with 24 hour AC and hot water can possible smell so bad. At first, I thought they must be French. Later on the boat, and Egyptian fellow Vana befriended points them out. As a passport agent in Egypt, he is an expert in these matters. Next the mini-bus heads up to Patong beach which is the party capital of southern Thailand; known for its Go-Go bars. We wait for a group of six Israelis to get out of bed. From their thick language, I thought they were Russian. (Vana: they smell pretty bad too)

These days I don’t think the Man with the Golden Gun would choose this National Park for his hide out, because day trippers now arrive by the boat load. We arrive in a dock in northern Phuket where we are stickered, and loaded on to one of three large boats, each holding 50 to 100 people. The tour company does an excellent job of moving people through, and making the trip very enjoyable, despite the volume of people.

Day trip to Ao Phrang-Nga National Marine park


After about an hour boat ride, we get into canoes, and our guide paddles through a cave in Hong Kong Island to a hidden lagoon. We have to lie down in the boat to get through several spots, and depending on the tide, the lagoon is not always accessible. The geography is similar to Halong Bay, Vietnam with large limestone cliff Islands, which are recessed at the water line, allowing shady spots to paddle and observe stalagmites and caves.

off the boat

onto the canoe

paddle into the hidden lagoon

watch for your head

lagoon

inside the lagoon

We run into a small fishing boat with full of horseshoe crabs in the boat

The next stop is James Bond Island. It’s very beautiful, although with a few hundred people, and a beach overrun with vendors selling tourist junk; 30 minutes is plenty of time to stop, take a picture, and return to the boat. After lunch on the boat, we stop in a bay, and take a canoe for our own paddling, and a swim. The water is a pretty emerald green color, which turns into a cool looking Jade later at sunset. The recess in the cliffs at the water line is really nice place to hang out in the heat of mid-day. The final stop is at bat cave. Our guide paddles us into the dark, and we use flashlight to see bats sleeping on the roof of the cave. Deep in the cave is are on our backs again in the boat, and I am glad there are no bats above my head.

Ao Phang-Nga National Marine parkbetter known as ‘James Bond Island’

vendors selling tourist junk upon arriving James Bond Island

green color water

KR enjoys the swim

final stop – bat cave

cave bat

There are thousands of them hanging on the wall (it’s hard to see in the pic, but they are these black dots)
stalagmites in the cave

On the way back, they whistle to eagles and throw chicken skin in the water. I am not so happy about the wildlife feeding, but the Eagles are cool looking.




A final bonus is a Lady Boy show, with one of the Thai staff sporting a blue wig, make up, and tissue stuffed bra. The show makes for some embarrassed husbands, and great pictures. We really enjoyed this day trip.

Happy Ending