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| | Exploring
Andaman
Sea
Article from www.bangkokpost.com
Phenta
found a family shivering in the 40-degree evening air, and they stood in line to
each gratefully claim an article of clothing. Throughout our visit, the kids
recognized their clothing on happy children, and they knew that article would be
valued and passed down for many years. Sierra said to me, "I can't believe
how much we have compared to them."
The next day on our hike, our guide made bamboo hiking sticks for our kids,
bamboo pop guns using rolled-up wet newspaper as ammunition, and large thermoses
utilizing the two cross sections of the versatile plant. When the kids began to
wilt from the heat, he showed them a wide-leafed plant to use as a sun umbrella.
Eating Floating Lotuses
After our three-day back-country adventure, we drove to the Golden Cottage in
Mae Sot. Maesot Conservation Tour owners, Boong and Boon Kasomsan, have opened
their family farm for a taste of a traditional upper-scale Thai farm life. The
large bamboo house has a central eating place at large round tables with
wedge-shaped floor pillows. We ate little balls of sweet potatoes in coconut
milk called "floating lotuses,'' while wild lizards called chinchooks squeaked
in the night. Like every other night spent away from a hotel, whether camping or
in a guest house, we slept beneath mosquito netting. We rarely encountered the
pests, however, and did not get a single bite, for it was the dry season. So our
fear of contracting malaria was nearly nonexistent.
In the month that we traveled in Thailand, we also toured the fascinating
remains of ancient cities like Ayutthaya and Sukhothai historical parks, visited
Buddhist temples (with the monks in their saffron-colored robes and flip-flops),
hiked through their national parks, visited Susan in Chiang Mai and used the
centrally located capital city of Bangkok as our regrouping site. Baiyoke Sky
Hotel, the tallest hotel in Thailand
(88 floors), welcomes children, and
the breakfast buffet on the glassed-in 78th floor was always a delightful way to
start the day.
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There
is another whole world in the southern part of this long diverse country - the
sun-drenched tropical islands. We flew to the large island
of Phuket
and took
a high-speed boat to the remote Similan Islands
off the
west coast in the Andaman
Sea.
The
Similans are considered Thailand's gems
for there is no development and the string of nine islands is owned and operated
by the national park system. Only two have camping and bungalows and a tiny
restaurant where a few Thai women stir up delicious food in their woks (for
about $1 an entry). These islands are popular with divers for the coral reefs
are rated among the ten top dive sites in the world. But most divers charter
boats that remain close to the harbour. That leaves the islands virtually
deserted.
Our family does not dive, but the snorkeling is unbeatable, so we rented snorkel
equipment from our escort boat for the duration of our three-day visit. Some say
the
Similan
Islands
offer
better snorkeling than most scuba diving sites in the world. The reason for this
is the abundant and shallow reefs that allow natural sunlight to penetrate the
clear water (with a visibility depth of 30 metres!), so the colors of the fish
and coral are lit by natural light.
The
reefs and marine life begin only yards from the white sand beaches, so even
young children and novice swimmers can enjoy an underwater world usually
reserved for only divers. Todd and I kicked through the silent world with the
kids, pointing to giant clams, brightly colored parrot fish, eels, huge sea
turtles. At one point we swam right through a school of silvery blue fish.
The dozens of hermit crabs on the beach each evening, and giant 5-foot-wide
fruit bats hopping around high in the trees, along with the swinging gibbons
that hollered in the early morning, caused my son to remark, "This is my
favorite place in all of Thailand."
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Bizarre
Island
For Sierra and me, that honor went to our final destination, the Phangnga Bay on
the east coast of Phuket, made famous by Leonardo DiCaprio's movie, "The
Beach.''
Some 160 islands explode out of the sheltered Phangnga Bay. These
are not typical islands but limestone pinnacles that look like inverted
mountains. They stand like giant sentinels, row upon row, making this one of the
most bizarre seascapes on earth.
Many of the islands have hidden lagoons, called hongs, that are surrounded by
rock cliffs. The only way to get into many of them is through caves that open
and close with the tide. Some openings are so narrow you must flatten
horizontally in your kayak while the ceiling dramatically passes inches from
your nose.
Our tour operator was John Gray's Sea Canoe, a Thai-owned kayaking company
started more than 20 years ago. The company is founded on sound environmental
principles. The guides study the radically changing tides and pick the best
islands to explore; they are well-rounded naturalists as well.
We spent three days circumnavigating islands with limestone cliffs, overhangs
and undercuts. The extreme low tides expose table coral, sponges, giant
jellyfish and sea urchins. Endangered white-bellied sea eagles, with their
six-foot wingspans, worked the reef, diving for fish. We paddled up estuaries
and explored wild, rare mangrove forests, we studied rock paintings on
1,000-foot island walls and delighted over mud skippers, a strange terrestrial
fish. We stayed overnight on Ko Panyi, which has a Muslim village with a Thai
restaurant and bungalows run by locals.
When we kayaked the perimeter of the islands, we each took a child in our rigid
sit-on-top boat. But when we entered the caves, we used inflatable kayaks, and
our only job was to shine a flashlight on the glittering stalactites and the
thousands of bats on the ceiling. The guides do the paddling so the delicate
formations are not harmed.
Inside the hongs, the beautiful songs of the vibrant bird life hushed my
children. Then a family of young monkeys hopped down onto the lower branches of
a tree, eager to take a closer look while their parents scolded them high on the
cliff above us.
One monkey couldn't judge his own weight and bounced on a flimsy branch,
breaking it and plopping him into the water right by our boat. Another curious
monkey slowly spread the leaves apart with his little hands and peered down,
only a few feet from the kids' faces.
After the kayaking trip, we sped across the Phangnga Bay. The
islands receded in the mint green light; the full moon rose orange over the
water. The kids hung over the bow, squealing when they saw flying fish alongside
our boat - a parting gift from amazing Thailand
.
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