Author: Sarah Northway

  • Second day of kayaking

    Another great kayak trip today! We went south this time and made it all the way to the start of Thongsala, although we opted for lunch on the beach rather than going in to town. On the way back we hit another storm with a surprisingly strong wind in our face, so we pulled in to the nearest bar to have drinks and watch the rain.

    The highlight was exploring the small river that feeds into our bay, Ao Hin Kong. We got surprisingly far through the mangrove-choked stream and saw, among other things, crabs that climb trees! Their shells resemble tree bark and they tuck their bright blue claws under them while they sit up in the branches over the water. If disturbed they quickly leap down with a loud plop – we thought they were frogs until we managed to sneak up on a couple for a closer view.

    Speaking of frogs, we saw a big frog cross the road by our house they other day, and up near Haad Yao there were tiny black frogs (smaller than my pinky nail) hopping all over the ground. Much more impressive than the spiders, which a few tiny sightings today bring the count up to 6. One had super long whispy legs and looked like it could probably walk on the water like a water-skeeter.

    Well, Colin is out cold but I should probably wake him up so we can go return the kayaks and get some dinner on our way back home.

  • Kayaking trip – looooong!

    The Kayak (which I have discovered, is how you spell it) Adventure

    So we found some Kayaks! We where in the tiny little town of Seethanu yesterday buying some food and eating breakfast at the Rasta Bar. We thought it would be a good idea to ‘inquire localy’ about some kayaks. The coolest named place in/around Seethanu is Chills, which is spelled with a picture of a reclining man for the i (If we had a net connection I’d have found a picture), so we followed the signs past the SeeThanu’s make-shift harbour and down a mud road and up a hill and down it again until we got where we where going.

    Oh my god this is going to be a long story. I can’t believe I haven’t even gotten to the kayaks yet. Or the day of the event.

    Sos we wander up and there’s this nice looking little bar and an english accent hollers something friendly in our direction. I ask about kayaks and he says they just got two all of four days ago and isn’t that amasing. He quotes me 150 baht an hour (about 4.50 cad) and 700 baht a day. I ask him about two days because I recon we can just pull them up to our house at the end of the day. He hums and hahs and comes up with 1250 which sounds good to me. So we book 2 of them (both of them) for the next morning (well actually we book them for a couple hours later on that day and then change our mind at the top of the hill walking back but this is long and pointless enough already).

    Skip ahead a day almost entirely spent swimming just in front of the house, a fairly restfull night, and a toast and tea breakfast. We have a date with Kayaks!

    Yes, so, after that skipping we wander up towards chills again at like 9ish in the morning. The bar is just as nice looking, no sign to either of the guys I was talking to last night (sorry, one guy got streamlined out). Anyway after trying and failing to get Kayaks from both a very clean cut guest and a very thai waitress we decide we need some more breakfast. Which turns ot to be a very nice bowl of muslii, fruit, and yogurt (my breakfasts haven’t been real thai) with one of these fruit shakes that everyone here makes and everyone makes very well (my favorite is cococut, this one was banana. A close second).

    Anyway the very clean cut american (it turns out) guest I tried to rent a kayak from decides he needs to watch That 70’s Show at 9 in the morning in an open air thai bar (I’m never going to refer to anothing eating establishment as ‘open air’ because I have yet to see one that isn’t). So we ate our tasty breakfast while realising certain things about western culture in general and that 70’s show in particular (omg! that short chick on that show totaly plays meg from the family guy!) until one of the english guys wandered down to the bar.

    He remebered us, remembered the deal and, promptly set his man on retrieving the kayaks. Which his man uncomplainingly did.

    I ended up chatting to the english guy who turned out to be really interesting and very cool, dispite ordering some thai dude to do all the heavy lifting when he himself was a bit of a free-loader at the time (remind me to edit this if I ever make friends with that guy and give him the addy to this). In fact he was far too interesting to attempt to discuss at this point in time, as his most interesting aspects are only tangentially related to kayaks.

    So yes, we obtained a couple of Kayaks! First kayak mission: to the house! we need a passport in order to rent the kayaks! Yes. He informed us that morning: “Huh, gee, I should probably get a passport or something off of you so you don’t just run off with the kayaks”. Of course it would be really inconvenient to walk all the way back to the house and then back to chills with a passport so he suggested: “why not use the kayaks to pick up the passport”? Genius! Why didn’t I think of that?

    So there we where in the water bobbing off towards the house, which wasn’t really very far away at all. So we bobbed between some rocks that buffeted the very small beach Chills is perched on, and past the clumps of very small mangrove (I think?) forests to our house. It probably took about as long as it takes to walk. Well the way there took much longer because we kept sneaking up on little flocks of Whimbrels (we checked three new birds off today!) trying to identify their whitish patch on the rump extending up the back in a V. Which we did. They have very neat curved beaks. And green feet! Which is actually pretty common here for waders.

    Yes so we got the passport and then b-lined it back to chills, dropped off the damper than expected passport, and continued on past, into territories unkown.

    Well actually we knew the territory at least poorly. We had walked all the way up to Haad Yao (you all have a map of Koh Phangan handy right?) where we spotted a used snorkling place. So we had walked past everything we where about to paddle past (altough in alot of places the road doesn’t follow the beach). In fact it was our informal goal to make it back to Haad Yao by Kayak to buy some used snorking.

    So we paddled past a very small wall of the gorgeous granite that the entire island seems to be made up. We paddled through the bay SreeThanu lives on. Past their port. The bay is very very shallow except for a narrow trench leading in to the docks. Sarah thinks the narrow trench might be man-made but that seems like a big job to me for a tiny fishing village. I think it is more likely the village exists because of the trench and not the other way around.

    We paddled past a floating… room. Made of bamboo right on the edge of the trench. Mabey for crabbing or fishing? It honestly looked like it was where the traffic guard stood when directing rush hour boat traffic.

    Past one cabana, two, cabana, three cabana, more. And then to the end of the bay. This felt like an accomplishment. Recounting it to you now it doesn’t seem very far but there are factors I have not mentioned. For one, I said kayaks but we did not get kayaks. We did not get what you get if you walk down to the water in BC and ask for a kayak.

    We got what tourists in the bay of thailand get when they walk down to the water and ask for a kayak. I think they’re called ducks? But I may be making that up. Anyway they are small (7 feet long?) and open. And being open they bob your centre of gravity around 20 centimeters over the water instead of a couple of centimeters beneath it. Anyway they where not like paddling a kayak. They where like paddling a log. A very admirably designed log, but a log none-the-less. Actually they didn’t act like a log in terms of the yawing with each paddle stroke. Each stroke brought the bow through something like 10 degrees so you kind of waddled back and forth. I just kept staring at the bow and cringing at all the energy I was expending to make that stupid little waddle happen. So keep in mind we where not doing this in an elegent vessel designed for nar-whale hunting, we are doing it in a chunk of plastic designed for drunked germans.

    It also doesn’t seem like very far to me because I just got back from doing it in the other direction. And let me tell you, with the current the way it is I barely had to be awake for the return trip. Even though I was paddling a duck.

    So yes, we where starting to feel the effects of that marathon 2km paddle as we rounded the head of Seethanu’s bay. And wow, we saw, weather. The darkest storm cloud we have seen to date filled the entire sky up ahead of us. It reached down to touch the water in places where it was raining, and it was moving towards us steadily. We were doomed!

    Luckily as we rounded the bend we also came upon a small deserted looking beach – shelter! We paddled down it for a bit and noticed all the fishing refuse and palm tree stumps. It really was a nice beach; deep fine sand and a tide line of broken coral bits and beautiful little shells. They must work pretty hard to keep the tourist beaches so clean. Sarah thought the garbage and stuff was actually pretty cool and set off to walk down the beach, and Colin climbed the sandy bluff to investigate our first small forest, made of these trees that look like giant horsetails, and big vines that hung off everything. Oh – and we got rained on, a lot. It was wonderful. :)

    But all the storms we’ve had so far last for about 10 minutes, so we were off again after some more tooling around and spotting some beautiful new birds (so glad we have the binocs again!). Around the next bend we could see what looked like a shipwrecked ship up on the rocks, with torn white sails flapping in the wind. These guys had their decor down – it was the famed Pirate Bar! With an entire wall of speakers and DJ booth – outdoors no less; can they do that? I can see why the bar is way out on the rocks a long way from nowhere. Dude from Chills said he did some DJing at the Apache Bar the next beach up; I wonder if he has been to any parties here.

    Speaking of parties! They’ve been building a house (or maybe a house/business) just up the street from us and are now celebrating it’s completion with a karaoke party. We’ve been wondering what the deal with the loud Thai music was; Colin just strolled up to take a look and met someone we knew from a nearby restaurant who explained it. I’m glad it isn’t just obnoxious tourists! :)

    We’re pretty wiped tonight after so much paddling and sunshine, we couldn’t even drag out butts back out for dinner so we’re dining on snacky odds-and-ends. I’m happy to say they have those little chestnut and bean paste cookies here that Sarah liked so much from Thriftys. Also sticky sweet rice wrapped in leaves – yum!

    So anyway we continued on past the pirate bar, and five-cabana-six (more like 20 at this point), to the fabulously clean Sunset Cove with resorts surrounding it on all the hillsides. The going had been pretty tough so far; there seemed to be a (wonderful, coolin) wind blowing in our faces and a current to fight against, so we stopped in for lunch at the clean clean beach. And found the most beautiful resort (all wood and gorgeous flowers, and wooden paths everywhere, like botanical gardens) which also had the best food so far. Even the bathrooms were super-wow with a sink and mirror carved out of a gnarly tree base. And TP! We’re keeping places in mind for those of you who will be joining us next year and this one is tops (although we were too polite to ask the price).

    We noticed the start of our sunburns at this point, and after re-lathering up with sticky white sunscreen we decided to head back. It had seemed much too far to go two more long beaches to Haad Yao, but as soon as we turned around and had the wind behind us and the current going our way, things were a breeze. We discovered we had much more time and energy to get back with so we took our time and poked around the rocks and stopped at the cool deserted beach again. We saw an amazing huge jellyfish with bright blue tentacles, numerous crabs, one very well-to-do hermit crab and a school of silver fish that jumped out of the water around our kayaks.

    There is a large grove of trees growing out of the water (mangrove trees (?) – at least three species) just north of our bay, and we spent a couple of hours trying to navigate our boats around inside the dense dipping branches (or are they roots?). The water in there was extremely still and shallow, and the only sounds were birds around making eerie hoop-hooop noises.

    Yes, the mini magrove forests where completely fantastic in the little ducks. It’s like being 12 again and wandering all through the woods. I hasten to mention again that these where small patches. I don’t want people all imagining these amasing mabgrove forests just to feel lied to when we finally get a picture out. The tallest trees in stand something about 5 meters and the largest patch is probably on the order of a couple of mabey a hundred meters to a side. But they are very dense and they are very cool. They are pretty much exactly as you’d imagine a tiny mangrove forest. Much like a normal forest of tall sapplings but all standing on roots as thick as thumbs arcing every which-way into about a foot of water with a sandy bottom. It is SO much fun navigating the maze of roots in the little ducks. I admit that a real ocean kyak would be completely useless here. Far too long and far too hard to manouver. I don’t know why but the huge tangle has these little sort-of-paths running through it. Paths where the tangle is just a little less dense and you could, if you layed down flat on your back and pulled your little faux-kayak along by the branches, sneak through the maze.

    We crept along inside the forest exploring and looking for unfamiliar birds (two of which I startled but did not get much of a look at). The sun was shining, the ocean was warm, there was a marine thicket in need of exploring and good god life is just really really good.

    Spider count for Erin: Sarah has now seen four. A second fuzzy little wolf spider has been sitting on our front door, and there were tiny tiny tiny little webs in the grove with equally tiny spiders in them. Sarah *thought* she saw a terrible ugly big spider nest in a bunch of hanging leaves, and actually capsized her kayak to avoid smacking her face into it. It may have actually been caterpillars of some sort but she was happy to leave that investigation for another day.

    Oh, and there were rocks in the middle of the grove that we climed up on to. What a view!

    Wheuf; exhaustion has hit both of us for reals, and we’ve checked off in our bird book what birds we could identify (the hoop-hoooper was a Greater Coucal which we spotted once). So I think we will both rest well tonight; despite the bass thrumming of the karaoke party down the street.

  • And then it was… like.. wednesday?

    I have no idea what day of the week or month it is. I do know we found a place that just costs 1 baht a minute though! hoho lucky us. Just down from the coolest furniture store ever.

    The furniture store had all this hand made stuff for pretty cheap. They had a whole set of a table and 4 chairs all made out of trees. Nothing as boring as boards but trees. Like they just upended a root system, looked at it until they saw a chair, cut away the non-chairy bits, and then varnished the whole thing. The whole set was 600 canadian. And let me tell you it was the heaviest furniture I have ever sat (satten? sitten? satted?) in.

    We’re trying to find a kyak to rent today but aren’t having alot of luck just wandering around in thongsala looking for resorts. I think I will have to use the intertubes to locate one. The shoreline is fantastically beautiful and I just need to get out there and explore it.

    It is a little maddening having all this new wildlife all around us without knowing what any of it is so we raided an english book store for guides. I found one on local birds, and fishes/invertibrates of the reefs but nothing on plants!

    The fish book was helpfull enough to identify that fish I mentioned last time not as a parot fish as I had guessed but as a puffer fish as Sarah had immediately known.

    Wait hold on… the woman next to me is having trouble getting her hotmail attachment downloaded in IE.

    Haha! yeah IE was hosed so question 1: is firefox installed? yes

    question 2: does the download work in firefox? of course it does!

    Wow firefox beats IE in HOTMAIL! Totaly rediculous.

    Although now I almost feel like an apostle bringing the light of firefox to the less fortunate.

    Internet Propreitor: Firefox is better than IE?
    Me: Oh yes

    Anyway where was I? Oh yeah my circuitous route to birding. I’m actually starting to get what people see in the passtime. Turns out there are birds everywhere. Alot of them, and alot of them look really neat. Plus they’re hard to sneak up on to get a good look at and require adventuring both to interesting locales (ooo mangrove forests) and into other people’s back yards (I’m not that bold yet so not much of a birder). So that might get it’s talons into me. Although I’ll need to fond a better birding book. The pocket guide I grabbed is, as advertised, very not complete.

    Well I think I’ll leave it at that for now. I think Sarah’s warpping up her post and I still want to see about kyaks.

    Cheers all

    Colin

  • Okay that was a reaaally long post I guess. Sorry! I wrote it when I was trying to stay awake past at least six pm (Colin had fallen asleep at like 4). And I never got around to writing about the day that followed, which ruled!

    We went in to Thongsala to get some food and stuff and a great time was had by all. Still no motorcycles although Colin keeps bringing it up and I’m quietly (and sometimes not so quietly) freaking out about having to ride on one of those death-machines. Taxis so far have been so-so in terms of how often they come by; I think it’s because it’s the off season right now.

    We walked north for about an hour yesterday to the nearest sandy beach. It was totally surrounded by resorts with restaurants, shops and a small diving school. We only saw about six other farangs in the whole place though, and had the very pretty beach mostly to ourselves.

    I posted some pictures from our house up on flickr. We’ll take more soon when I remember to bring the camera along with us. ;)

  • The lowdown from Sarah – backdated two days ago when I wrote it!

    Alright, now that I have a power bar with a ground I can relay a little more of our journey to get here. It has been an interesting couple of days…

    After officially vacating “House APES Victoria”, Steve put us up one last time in Vancouver while we sorted out the visas and last minute stuff. Colin’s laptop delivery didn’t go as smoothly as planned (big understatement – I hope we didn’t have to pay for the couriers’ totally botched “zoom zoom” delivery and the lying lies we got from their package tracking hotline). I hear it’s in Nanaimo now…

    We didn’t have any trouble with the flights to San Francisco, Tokyo and Bangkok. I had a Budweiser in San Fran and toasted the States, but the Tokyo airport was kind of a blur after another 10 hours of flying. Actually that flight was totally painless – all the seats had personal tv screens and we watched three or four bad movies at our leisure. I played some Sid Meyer’s Pirates! which was kind of disappointing.. I thought it was supposed to be like the pinnacle of the pirate/trader genre but it seems way too simplified to me. Maybe compared to Dwarf Fortress anyway. :)

    OK this was a first for me – I slept almost the whole six hour flight to Bangkok then another two or three in the terminal! Bangkok wins for most uncomfortable airport seats BTW.. my back and neck are still sore from the experience. But then in Bangkok – disaster – turns out our tickets for the hop to Koh Samui were for the 22nd, not the 21st. Egads! An off-by-one error understandable if we had booked it, but we went to a travel agent to avoid this kind of mixup. But this little hiccup was quickly fixed as we managed to squeeze in on standby. I was warming to the idea of spending a day in the city but Colin wasn’t looking too hot at that point. He has a low tolerance to airplane food and we’d forgotten to bring any of our own (not that it would have gotten past security – they took a total of 4 bottles of water from us, including sealed bottles from a duty free shop and one I bought at the gate a few minutes before boarding).

    So we got to Koh Samui, an hour and a day earlier than we’d expected. Oh, and we met this guy named Alan along the way who was as jet-lag-blasted as we were and heading to a resort just up the street from our place. He comes to Thailand every six months until he runs out of money, then heads back to LA to work his ass off so he can come back. He got us a taxi and the right ferry over, and gave us a lot of tips about the place. He didn’t have a high opinion of Koh Samui as we were heading through it – too much hustling and a lot of girlyboys (he used the Thai word for it).

    There are kids hunting for – I think – crabs right now in the shallow beach I can see through the sliding glass door. We’ve seen two kinds of crabs out there – ones with blue claws and ones with feathery legs that can burrow down in the blink of an eye. We saw bags of the blue-clawed ones for sale in town today. But there’s so small – if only I had the Internet to tell me how people cook with them!

    The airport in Koh Samui was a single runway with a little open-air terminal. The taxi-to-the-ferry driver went way too fast and kept passing despite the stream of oncoming trafic. It seems there are two kinds of vehicles on these islands: pickup trucks and motorcycles. Some of the pickups are taxis with benches in the back, that drive up and down the main roads and pick up passengers until they are packed full. On the bikes, people usually ride two or three per, and even kids and old ladies ride them. As I mentioned before – nobody walks here even though everything is very close by. I’m surprised gasoline prices aren’t prohibitively high out here where the average wages are… low. Gas stations here, BTW, are little covered stalls with clear glass bottles of gasoline, rubber hoses coming from them, and tin cans for you to put your payment in.

    We’ve been warned by every guidebook and by Alan-from-LA that the bikes are dangerous; the roads are badly paved and covered with sand and the other drivers are pretty reckless. I’m already terrified of motorbikes, even the little scooters you can rent in Victoria, so I’m growing a little ulcer here worrying about when Colin is going to decide we should get one.

    So today’s impression of Thongsala was completely different from the one I got when we arrived on Saturday after roughly 30 hours of traveling. The first thing that really hit me on Saturday was the smell… or rather smells of the town, each more horrible than the last. It was hot, and dirty, and we couldn’t find the travel agency we were supposed to meet Malee at. When we did find it, the woman there had no idea what we were talking about and didn’t speak much English. We waited around for a few hours until her boss came back and could straighten things out.

    Malee and another guy from phanganisland.com eventually found us (we’d told them we were getting in on the 22nd, not the 21st, having read the date off our flight tickets) and got us a taxi to the house. It looked just like in all the pictures! Right on the beach, all stone and wood and big windows. And air conditioning! Ah, heaven.

    The bathroom is really cool; it’s like one big shower all made of stone and tile. And has a really nice tub with a second heated shower. The toilet has a bidet spray gun thing as well as toilet paper. I think it’s genius, but it probably only works in places where you are dry again 30 seconds after using it.

    Ooh, it suddenly started raining hard. The sound of it on the roof is wonderful. The kids hunting with sticks for crabs are in retreat now.

    You’re supposed to boil the water here so we got to work with our thermoflask, which is just a fancy kettle. There was already some waiting for us in the fridge which was nice. Oh, and all the furniture was plasticwrapped when we got here. Apparently the last renters had their own furniture so they bought everything new for us. They did a good job! The only thing missing I think is a desk for the bedroom. I haven’t seen any place to buy furniture on the island yet but saw a guy carrying an end table home on his motorbike today.

    We basically crashed at that point but happened to meet Alan again as he was going by (see – I love living on the road like this!). Everyone waves back if you wave to them, and I bet I could hail a taxi or an ice cream bike by sticking my head out the window.

    We practiced our Thai a litte but so far I haven’t had much luck retaining anything but hello, thank you, yes, no, and cat (Maa-oo). We’ll probably be reading out of our phrasebook for awhile, assuming anyone can understand our accents. The tonal thing is pretty crazy; lots of words go high-low or low-high and they sound all singsongy when I say them.

    Yesterday (Sunday) we woke up at dawn and walked on the beach. Colin then waded way out to a place deep enough to swim, while I struggled with our front door for nearly 15 minutes (the sliding door is jammed and so far searches for the tools to fix it have failed). Then we realized we had no food, but Malee had said she would come by with a contract so we were hesitant to leave. When we’d eaten the last of the airplane snackies, we walked north in search of the phanganisland.com HQ and supplies. We passed several restaurants that were pretty much someone’s home with a couple tables outside, and it being the tourist off-season often noone was around. Half a dozen taxis honked to ask if we wanted a lift on our 20 minute walk, and we had to step over into the burrs and mud several times to let trucks pass. This was about the time I realized nobody walks around here.

    We made it to Seethanu but couldn’t find the place we were looking for, and the shopkeepers we asked had no idea what we were talking about. It was pretty hot at this point and I was starting to fade after half an hour in the sun. We visited a few convienience stores and I half-randomly grabbed things from the shelves. Luckily we got a bag of rice in the process; unfortunatly an eighteen-dollar bottle of gin and some soda water was the only other food.

    Okay, so the thing about prices in Thailand, or at least on Koh Phangan… rent is cheap, food and Thai-made booze is very cheap, and everything else costs the same or more than it would in Victoria. Bottle of shampoo: nine dollars. Guidebook to local marine life: fifteen dollars. Wraparound skirt made of paper-thin fabric: six dollars. Styrofoam flip-flops: seventy-five cents. So some things are cheap, but it’s because the materials are cheap, and they sell the same things in dollar stores back in BC.

    Luckily, the food is indeed both indexpensive and good. And there are restaurants just everywhere. I am keen to try cooking Thai-style, but if it requires more than a blender, a skillet and a rice cooker we’re going to need more supplies.

    So after discovering that there are no sidewalks and the prices are higher than back home and hardly anyone speaks English, and after walking around in the heat for an hour and hungry I started to feel pretty down about the whole place. We came back, made plain rice with fishy soy sauce for dinner and waited for Malee who never came. Also we were locked out of our bathroom for most of the day so the whole time I was thinking, how the HELL are we going to find a locksmith when we can barely communicate “I want to buy this thing”? I tells you, it was bad for a bit there. But it was just a bit jammed like the front door, and the back door come to think of it. I guess wooden doors, humidity and salt water are a bad mix – who would’ve thought??

    Okay, this thing that I really like about our bathroom: we never have to worry about humidity in there. It’s sealed off from the rest of the house and discreetly open to the outside (with bug netting of course). All the walls are tile and rock and the whole room is literally one big shower with drains in the floor. You can splash around in the bath and get water everywhere and it will all evaporate overnight. I felt like a kid messing around at bath time today. ^_^ I think I’ll leave the tub filled with cold water so I can go in there and read later before bed. Such a great design!

    Colin came down with a sore throat and a fever that night and I was still coughing my guts out (still not quite over that cold – god I thought my ear drums were going to burst on the first plane ride). So I was ready to call it quits if things didn’t start looking up soon. But he took some tylenol with a litre of water and was good as new the next morning.

    Hey – there’s someone out in the water with a flashlight now. It’s only a quarter to eight but the sun has been down for awhile now. I wonder what could be worth finding out there on a moonless night? This really is an interesting beach we’re on, if not the “beachiest” one ever. Colin thinks after a few months we should start looking for another place on a different beach; right now the water is right to our steps at high tide, but in the height of the dry season it will be almost a kilometer of muddy sand away. I’m thinking maybe I’ll learn to fish with a net while we’re here. Families seem to come do that in the afternoon although the fish they catch are pretty small.

    Okay, that’s all for tonight – stay tuned to hear how Thongsala actually rules when you aren’t dead tired and carrying a 300 lb laptop bag!