Author: Sarah Northway

  • Motorbikoooo and mailoruuu

    Colin just got back from his first short trip on our new motorbike. It is red, and yes we have red helmets to match, although I think mine is several sizes too big. :/ For those of you who know anything about bikes, it’s a Honda.. something.. 100cc. I’m going to let Colin ride it around for awhile before I get on the back – it still scares me!

    Already looks like maybe a cell phone would have been a better idea than this GPRS thing.. I tried to sign up for an online account so we can add money to our sim card, and it sent my password to me by SMS! But I’m sure I’ll figure this out eventually. :)

    Colin is playing a ninja game (Tenchu) on the DS right now. I’m trying not to play the sims or sid meyer’s railroads and instead am sucking up our possibly finite internet time looking up the species of plants and animals I’ve seen around here.

    I think the key to living here is to simplify our lives more… because doing even things like going out, taking trips, shopping or buying services is much more difficult here than it was in Canada. It isn’t just the language barrier, it’s the less organized way things are done here, more easy-come-easy-go. People do what they feel like doing, when they feel like doing it.

    So, like, they have post boxes at the post office, but maybe none are available today, check back next week. And you could try addressing a package to your home, but there’s a moderate chance it won’t ever arrive because houses aren’t numbered so the post guy might not be able to find it. So the trick is to find an address, like a resort, that is well known to the post people, with a trustworthy resort owner who can notify you when the package arrives.

    Or, just don’t try to send mail! Simplification is the key to success I think. If only I wanted it to be that way! ;)

  • Online-ity!

    Ok we’re not bouncing off any satalites. Only cell towers for now. We have our backup connection in place!

    It’s a cell dongle we picked up in Thongsala for about 300 CAD. It costs us .03 CAD per minute to use. The speed claims to be 100 kbps and that feels about right. It’s not great but it’s alot better than being stuck in the dark ages. Actually it IS pretty neat that we’re connected to the intertubes at any given location in the populated world… or however far accepts this sim card.

    Expect better/more updates. In fact I am uploading a bunch of pictures taken over the last few days as we speak.

    Actually that was going to cost us a small fortune. Oh well got 6 up. A few of Chaloklum and a few of just stuff. I’ll get the rest up later and name/organise them all.

    Oh hey. I was trying to think of ways to give a more full picture of our day-to-day existance here and I thought mabey the contents of our fridge would help:

    Freezer:

    1 lemon cesame cookies (with frozen ants)
    1 cup sugar coated peantus (with frozen ants)
    1 ice cube tray (1/3rd solid, the remaining perma-liquid)
    1 bottle larios dry gin (mostly full)

    Fridge:

    1/2 block of cheese
    1 mini-hotdog
    1 lime
    1 & 1/2 toblerones
    1 Imperial choco artificial mocca flavored cocoa favoured confectionery (sic)
    1 pineapple
    1 loaf of extremely white bread
    9/10ths of a package of very stale extra flacky sugar biscuits
    1 bottle soda water
    1 unlabeled bottled (possibly banana vinegar)
    1 bag hot peppers
    some chives
    some basil
    1 & 1/2 large carrots
    smuckers red rasperry jam (yay)
    best foods margerine
    1 bottle purchased drinking water
    1/2 bottle fish sauce soysauce (yuck)
    bottle sangsom (thai whiskey)
    large tiger (beer)
    large leo (beer)
    1 panasonic brand plastic water jug filled boiled tap water

  • Snorkling is Snorl-KING

    MMMmm

    distracted by deep fried food.

    There is this thai girl who has taken to bringing us food! So we are eating some deep fried fish thing with chilli sauce, hey it has a stick in it… even the stick is delicious! I like this arrangement very much. Not least because we are both completely exhausted having just gotten back from two days of snorkling!

    AMAZING snorkling, in fact. From one of the coolest places ever: Mae Haad. Mae Haad is a bay (thats what the Haad signifies) with a big long beach stretching along the interior. It shelters a little island called Koh Ma (koh = island). What is completely awesome is that Koh Ma is linked to the beach at Mae Haad via a sand bar! And there’s a restaurant on Koh Ma! And the sandbar is romantically half-submerged at high tide! And we spent the night on the island on the other side of the sandbar! And set the exclemation points free because this was no end of cool!

    Yes I highly recomend Koh Ma resort to everyone I know under 30 and the restaurant to everyone. The price to staying on the island at the far end of a sandbar is not in baht (it cost us like 300 baht a night and they let us keep the room all today as well instead of enforcing some draconian check-out time). The price is in shackness. For those of you who have been to Thailand before you probably know what this place was like but this is the first night I’ve spent outside of our cosy house. Which now seems palacial.

    The bungalo didn’t so much have rooms, furniture, doors, elecricity, water, flooring, walling or ceilinging. Let alone stationary or a phone or a closet.

    It had the aboluste minimum. Which turns out to be: a bed with no bedding but a 1/2 inch mattress (with prints of scholastic looking bears wishing you ‘congratulations on your recent success!’) and a mosquito net. In a pinch we probably could have done without the bed.

    Yes we found the spiders! We spotted about 3 or 4 in and around our room. Various species, all of them about 15 centimeters accross. No tarantulas yet.

    Actually there was a small open-to-the-elements bathroom with a real-life eurpoean style toilet that even flushed between the hours of 7am and Noon. Which is when the water was running.

    And yes between the hours of 6pm and around 10ish we had electricity. So look at me being overly dramatic in my list of things the bungalo didn’t have. It even sort of had doors.

    So it wasn’t that bad. We didn’t suffer for the lack of bedding because this might be the middle of winter here but it’s still thailand. And in the end, of course, we didn’t spend that much time in the room. Pretty much just sleeping and napping between snorkling runs. I have no complaints about our time there. It was cheap and satisfactory.

    The bar was really cool. It seemed to be run by 3 or 4 young thai guys who where all very friendly and managed to bolster a kind of summer-vacation eat drink and be merry atmosphere to the place. The food was decent and the view of the afore exclaimed over sand-bar was great. Also, there where people there! Mae Haad in general was fucking packed compared to the rest of the island. We must have seen 100 farangs the whole time. And at least 3 other people snorkling. Well, unless you include the boat-laden tours of snorklers that came through. We did see a few kite-boarders, gah! so eagre to get my kite board on, I found a place with lessons and everything!

    We also had lunch in the worst restaurant yet. It was also the fullest we have yet seen. Coincidence? Not in my experience. Someone can tell Ae that his cuisine still reigns supreme. So far no thai food in thailand has been quite as good as his thai food. Although at under 2$ CAD for a panang curry the prices here are a wee bit better.

    On the beach near the bad restaurant Sarah made the novel discovery of some honest to god quicksand. I had the idea that quicksand didn’t actually exist… wasn’t there a myth busters on quicksand? Anyway it does. Sarah lost her leg up to the knee in the discovery. It just looked like oridnary sand, just sitting there on the beach in a shallow bowl. The only hint was a little pool of water in the middle of the bowl. I thought it was cool so naturaly I had to lose my leg up to the knee in quicksand. The first leg went in to the knee, the next one went in 1/2 way up my thigh. My heart went into my throat. For a split second I thought I was going to be killed by quicksand. Which would have looked good on the tomb-stone, admitedly. I didn’t die because it seems to have a definite bottom. You free-fall (not sink) however deep and then stand up and crawl out. I didn’t play around alot more with it but I bet if somebody’s kid leapt into the middle of it they’d be a gonner.

    I didn’t get a picture of the quicksand… it just looked like beach. I did try to take a bunch of pictures but obviously we didn’t get any of the best part: the snorkling

    Oh what the hell, the power just went out. This is new. I wonder how long it’s going to last. Colin is going to investigate so I (Sarah) will take over.

    Okay, so snorkling: OMG!! We clambered over the rocks by our bungalo and put our new fins and masks on (we got a couple decent sets that morning in Chaloklum). As soon as we put our faces in the water there were fish! The tide was in so it was a little murky, but there were little striped fish (Sergeants) swimming around in the rocks and sand.

    Colin says the neighbors are out too and these outages last 10min – 5hr. Yay for laptops! :) Also the weather continues to be cool (for here) and we got used to being without fan and air con during the bungalo stay on Koh Ma. When we came back a bottle of soy sauce had leaked and the place smelled of fish sauce, so we’ve opened all the windows to the great outdoors and a nice breeze. It’s wonderful. :)

    So, back to snorkling! We swam a little farther in; still just rocks and sand but we got a good view of those little gobies that are common at our beach too. Colin confirmed that they are shacking up with a kind of prawn who digs their shared hole while the fish stand watch over it. Symbiotic relationships are cool!

    Out in the shallows were gigantic black sea cucumbers too, about the size of my leg below the knee. Like diabolical sand filtering machines; they had a dozen little sticky feel bringing in sand at one end, and used-up sand coming out the other.

    We swam on through the murk and the rocks, some more sand and colourful little fish.. then the coral started and the big fish arrived. Out of the foggy water ahead of us was a flash of silver as an entire wall of butterfly fish 6 inches in diameter appeared then disappeared again several times. It was so surreal, I felt like I must have somehow fallen unconscious and was dreaming it. We held hands and swam slowly torward them until we were almost surrounded by another huge mixed school of silver fish with yellow stripes, and several kinds of parrotfish. They were nibbling away at the coral or something on it, filling the water with the electric snap-popping sound of their biting.

    We were just blown away by the size and number of fish, not to mention the amazingly diverse corals and the multitude of colourful little fish down below. We spent somewhere between half and hour and two hours out there as neither of us could tell how much time had passed. We must have seen a hundred different kinds of fish and corals. Totally wow! (Colin felt like he had to go in just to give his world view time to realign)

    Our night in the little bungalo wasn’t actually that bad at all, though I was very glad for the netting. Notsomuch for the mosquitoes and flies, which there were some, but for the spiders! Yes, finally, actual scary big spiders – I guess we had a bit of a Halloween after all. ^_^ We spotted nasty ones in the bathroom, and the light in there was broken so at night I had to go in the pitch dark with the possibility of menacing creepy-crawlies all around me (not to mention no tp or running water). When we woke the next morning there was a huge spider on the outside of the netting not one foot from my head, trying to figure how to get in no doubt!

    I make big about the spiders, but really, I’ve seen ones back home that could have given these guys a run for their money. We’ll let you know when we hit tarantula pay-dirt. Spider count now stands at 10 (tho the last three should probably count for 10 apiece)

    So, it was incredible. Today we snorkled some more, and got to see low tide and some sunlight streaming through. Saw some more beautiful fish and giant anemonies, worms and sea cucumbers and a shy spotted ray (colin, who didn’t get to see the ray, is wicked jelouse). We hung out at the restaurant and talked some more with the guys who ran the place. They had slept out on the restaurant porch under the stars as they do every night, with some incense burning to ward off the skeeters and nasty-crawlies. Seemed like a good life to me… if only they had a net connection. And power for more than four hours a day. :p

    We got a taxi back and man did that guy drive like hell. And the girl next door was here with a tasty meal for us! And the power came back on, just in time for the 6pm sunset over the water. Ahhhhhhhh – life is good!

  • Just a quick note

    We’re on the wrong side of the island!

    We’re up in the north in Chaloklum. We heard rumours that there where internets of great strength here so have come hunting.

    A conversation with a german shop-keep and the frankly abysmal state of this internet cafe suggest that we came in vain. Oh well we’ll just have to go snorkling instead. We have purchased some reasonably priced snorkle gear and we are off to Mae Haad where apparently the best snorkling on the island awaits.

    We where planning on going snorkling up here and getting a bungalo for the night but conversation with the german diver changed our mind. Apparently the snorkling here in the north (2nd best on the island!) isn’t so good this time of year. In fact we where all keen to stay in bottle beach which is pretty well accessable only by beach. The german fellow suggested that the typhoon warning in vietnam probably made this a sketchy idea. Tourists have known to be stranded for days. Which initially sounds pretty romantic but he says the resorts slowly run out of food as well. Which sounds less romantic.

    So I think we’re off to snorkling. I think Sarah’s caught you up on our last few days. Pretty chill. Very nice. We are very worried about the intertubes. It looks like we’re just going to have to pay for a year contract for a service that averages 25% uptime. Woot. That is if they don’t want to hold onto a passport for the year. Which they might (vague wording on malee’s note to us re:intertubes). If they do then we just can’t do it. We needs our passport to renew visas. We also have the option of moving into the thongsala-ban thai area where they have ADSL. I like our place and our location but needs drive the devil’s muster.

    Off to Mae Haad for snorkling! Sheltered from typhoon waves and resort prices at 1/2 of the high season rates! Wish us good snorkling.

  • There is no Halloween on Koh Phangan…

    We’ve been chilling out and swimming, eating out and stuff for a few days. The tide has been very high during the day, meaning we can actually swim just a few meters from the shore instead of having to wade out for 20 minutes. We heard high tide will rise even more when the rainy season really gets going next month.

    The weather has been very nice – a cool cloudy 25 or so in the morning (based on what our air con thinks “25” is, which may be meaningless as I think its thermometer is busted). So we can walk in to Sri Thanu for breakfast or early lunch (we are still waking up at 7). Everyone continues to hawk their motorcycles to us along the way, and suggest we must be excersize fanatics to be out walking when we could ride. It’s a freaking 20 minute walk people – jesus!

    So we’re probably getting a motorbike from Malee next time we see her. I’m totally against it but it does seem to be a requirement around here. I don’t think it will help us if we want to go on excusrions inland where the dirt roads are steep and windy, or when it is stormy. Even the decent cement road in front of our house becomes a three inch deep lake after just twenty minutes of hard rain. But renting a bike costs less than a taxi ride a day, and you don’t have to wait forever for one to come by.

    Now for bitching about the continuing lack of Internets:

    Malee should be coming by today to talk Internet with us. Hopefully she will have gotten address of our house from the owners, which is what we’re waiting for before we can order satellite internet. Unfortunatly we’re having second thoughts about it now. We’ve been visiting a cruddy little email-and-tickets shop in Sri Thanu whose highspeed connection was down the last few times. Colin spoke to one of the owners who had nothing but bad things to say about IPStar and their satellite service. He says 75% uptime is about what you can expect, despite their promises, and he isn’t even getting that anymore. So this is going to cost us 70 bucks to set up, 70 bucks a month, a locked one-year contract and possibly our passports or a huge deposit. If it’s going to be down for days at a time, we need another option.

    Cell modem would be cool as a backup, if I could find any bloody information about it around here. Also the busier south end of the island is wired for ADSL, and we’ve heard they’ve got a similar thing going up north in the fishing port Chalokum. We’re going to head up there today and maybe stay overnight somewhere to get a feel for the place. Our house here is cool but a house just can’t be a home without the nurturing teat of mother Internet.

    Now for cool stuff we’ve seen while swimming! There is so much neat flotsam and such out there during high tide, and though we don’t have snorkling gear yet the water has been clear lately. We’ve seen:

    – tons of tiny brown jellyfish with big stubby tentacles
    – one jellyfish 2 inches in diameter, totally clear, with long hanging tentacles
    – a stick encrusted with little white-shelled worms with red feathery mouth-feeler things that pulsate in and out of their shells
    – little yellow fishes that swim near the surface and dart between floating seaweed clumps; might be juvenile Three-striped Whiptails
    – little gobies that dart back into their holes in the sand when we swim by
    – what look like dead floating blue jellyfish with deflated bells, although they look more like anemonies from underneath
    – a snail floating on the surface, that seemed to be producing an egg sack consisting of a string of bubbles on top with purple dangly bits (the eggs?) on the bottom. I wonder if it was supposed to be floated up to the surface or if something had gone horribly wrong for the poor snail. Curious!

    Yesterday we adopted a group of 7 of the little yellow fishes; they followed us out for about twenty minutes, presumably because we were good cover from whatever they are hiding from. They looked so lost like they were trying to find the reef so I swam out toward it with them in tow. I was collecting floating stuff together to make a shelter for the little guys, when I picked up a plastic fishing float that had another yellow fish laying on top of it in an inch of water (why?? was he sunbathing?? suiciding??). He was about 1+1/2 times the size of the biggest of the school, and when he joined them they followed him around. After a minute the whole bunch promptly disappeared down into the water. A successful reunion!

    Colin has also identified many of the birds in the area, with the exception of these two that don’t seem to be in our book. His descriptions, so we can hopefully find them later on the net:

    A) Shape much like little heron. Colouring all brown. Series of stripes strong at the head fading down the body. Brown wings, green legs. Flesh coloured section of lower mandible. Longer neck, white underwings. In flight: all white but dark body.

    B) Looks like little cormorant but with longer more conical beak. Heron-like (very) green legs. Yellow eye. Body held at 45 degrees. No visible ‘wing hanging out to dry’.

    Oh, I’ve been playing the Sims 2 with the new Pets expansion. My first dog makes more money as a police dog than its owner does. Somehow I never imagined they paid those police dogs… ;) Also I successfully created a “crazy cat lady” with maxnum cats who hang out all over the furniture and attack visitors. My lappy actually runs the game better than my old machine!