Author Archives: Damien

What A Difference A Day Makes – Part 1

 

Our first full day on Koh Lanta was one of the best days we’ve had in ages; our second full day was an absolute disaster in every sense. It’s amazing how quickly the times can change from sublime to scary…

 

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April 10th

Waking up that first morning we resolved that finding new accommodation on the island was the main goal of the day. We’d booked a place on the southern beach of Ao Kantiang, partly on recommendation from Lonely Planet and partly from our own research. We wanted somewhere quiet, beautiful and cheap, and on all counts Kantiang was supposed to hit the mark. But we could not help comparing it to Koh Kradan when we arrived, and Kantiang did not stand up well to the immediate comparison. Plus our beach bungalow smelled rather unpleasant – not bad enough that we turned it down on arrival the night before, but bad enough to want to move somewhere better soon.

Mollified a little by an excellent breakfast at the beachside restaurant, we decided that we would rent scooters to do our hunt for new digs. This was not a decision taken lightly, as neither of us had ever really ridden scooters on our own before. Plus Kristen had an unfortunate history with motorbikes in Thailand: 11 years ago she broke her shoulder while riding (as a passenger) on Koh Samui, an injury that required days in hospital, a couple of operations to fix and months of recovery. However we reasoned that the roads here were all sealed, traffic was very light, and the locals generally did not share the Thai tendency to speed as fast as possible wherever they go.

We hired one scooter each as neither of us felt confident being on the one bike, and cost was not an issue as full day rental for both was just $15! Our first hour was very cautious, and we travelled in short bursts of several hundred metres only for a while. But eventually our collective confidence was high enough to ride properly, and we got into it so well we had perma-grins plastered on our faces after a couple of hours 😀

After hunting around we found the perfect beachside area and a super-cheap guesthouse right on the beach for just $8 a night. The sea was literally at the back door, there were several restaurants nearby, and it had the lazy traveller vibe we were looking for (and which wasn’t at Kantiang, or so we thought). Signing up for the two nights starting the next day, we then had a great lunch at the spectacular cliff-top restaurant on Diamond Cliff. Our plan was to go to the beach below the cliff after lunch, and we raced back to our bungalow to get suitably attired for an afternoon in the sun. But the weather closed in as soon as we arrived, so we turned around and raced back to the hotel to try and beat the rain.

We spent the rest of the afternoon lazing around reading while the rain fell softly, then had tandem thai massages for the gloriously low price of $10 an hour. Suitably softened, it was off to the new Alama restaurant in Kantiang village for a superb dinner and some drinks. Feeling somewhat cheerful afterwards, we dropped in to the beachfront bar at our hotel and discovered a local cover band playing excellent and rather original versions of classic rock songs. This was right up our alley, so we grabbed a table and spent the next few hours enjoying the music. Afterwards we hung out with some locals, and eventually went to bed knowing we’d had one of the best days in ages.

Categories: Music, Thailand, travel | 3 Comments

A slice of paradise

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Warm crystal-clear turquoise waters on a shallow, sloping white sand beach – check. Panoramic vista of nearby islands and tall karst crags jutting from the sea – check. A vibrant coral reef so close to the shore you can walk to it at low tide – check. A handful of small, low-impact resorts along the beach, one of them offering the perfect combination of simple comfort and great value – check. An open-air restaurant serving great food just metres from the lapping waves – check. Koh Kradan has all of this and more, so why is no one here??

The dearth of tourists is part of the appeal, of course, and this island paradise has met our expectations so perfectly that we’ve decided to extend our stay to nine nights. Apparently it does get busy here, but the rainy season is not far away and at times we feel like we’ve got this island all to ourselves. For our price range there are only a few places to stay on Koh Kradan, and we’ve hit the jackpot with Kalume resort. It’s budget option is a comfortable bamboo hut near the beach complete with attached cold water bathroom, fan, balcony and hammock. The water is barely twenty metres away and the on-site restaurant even closer. Staff are very friendly and laid back, and there is even free wifi that extends to the bungalow. Conditions are perfect, repeat conditions are perfect…

The original plan was to spend just four nights here, followed by a little over a week on the much larger and more developed Koh Lanta about 30 kms to the north. But the tranquility of this spot has entranced us, and as we thought about the crowds, the traffic and the general hubbub we’re likely to encounter on Lanta our desire to move on simply evaporated. Today is our eighth day on the island, and we still have tonight and tomorrow night to go before finally moving on. We wanted to stay until we were sated with this place, and nine nights will be just right 🙂

Our days have varied considerably. Early on we visited The Emerald Cave, wanting to visit while the weather was still good (as it’s turned out it has rained frequently but almost always during the night, leaving the days dry and mostly sunny). We’ve kayaked around the entire island, and walked up and down the east coast several times to swim and take in the view. We’ve also walked out to the reef at low tide to snorkel around the coral, and will probably do this again before leaving.

Other days have been a bliss of relaxation: laying on the beach in the shade of the trees, resting between swims; testing out the hammock pavilion, a sturdy bamboo frame set up on the edge of the beach that houses two hammocks slung facing the water; eating the mostly excellent food at the on-site restaurant; spending time on the computer, catching up with posts, photos, or facebook; and always reading, reading, reading. Kristen will post about her readings elsewhere, for me our time on Koh Kradan has allowed me to finally finish Ken Follett’s excellent Pillars of the Earth which I started several weeks ago. I’ve also read Matthew Reilly’s ludicrous Area 7, James Hawes’ Rancid Aluminium and am currently on another Matthew Reilly book, the not-quite-so-ludicrous Temple.

Our days have become bounded by breakfast, lunch and dinner; and the tides. When we arrived the variance between high and low tide was large, but there was enough depth to swim or at least paddle at any time of the day. However as the full moon has approached the tides have become more extreme, and now at low tide the water recedes from the beach almost as far as the reef several hundred metres away! We’ve adapted, and now swim in the morning and early afternoon when there’s water and do other things when there’s not.

For us, Koh Kradan is the right place at the right time. We were looking for the archetypal Thai island escape, and we got it in spades. While it’s popular with daytrippers, the boats park a fair way down the beach and few bother to wander up this end. And it’s certainly not a party island which suits us fine. It’s a perfect spot that’s a bit off the beaten track, but not so far off that it’s a mission to get here. All of which adds up to a little slice of paradise, (almost) all to ourselves.

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The Emerald Cave

It’s the stuff of myth and legend.

Several miles off the southern Thai coast lies a small beautiful island. On the western edge of that island, facing towards the sea, a sheer rock wall rises from the water. In its base is a low entrance to a sea cave accessible only by boat. Swim for 80 metres through that cave, sometimes in complete darkness, and emerge to discover a towering hidden glade complete with sandy beach. Accessible only via the sea cave, in times past it was used as a hidden treasure cave by pirates. When the sun hits the water it glows a brilliant green, suffusing the whole glade with magical light. This is Morakot – The Emerald Cave.

Justifiably one of the highlights of Southern Thailand, we always wanted to visit this cave. As do many others, and hundreds of people a day arrive on a multitude of boats to do so. Given its small size the little glade can feel crowded with just a dozen people, so we heeded the advice of the guidebook and organised a private longtail to take us there early in the morning. As we were staying on Koh Kradan, just 20 minutes boat ride away, we could get there early enough to avoid the crowds but still have enough light to enjoy the experience to the full.

The gods were certainly smiling on us that day. The sun was shining and the water smooth like oiled glass. As we pulled up to the mooring point another couple were exiting – clearly they had the same idea to visit early as we did! We donned lifejackets and follow our guide into the cave, which was a little daunting at first as the entrance is very low. But it quickly opens up enough to be comfortable, and we paddle through the silence and blackness as our guide shines a torch weakly at the ceiling to illuminate some bats. Soon we spy the light of the end of the tunnel ahead to the right, and we paddle into the magnificent glade to discover no one else is there…

For the next ten minutes we scamper about like children, exploring the forest, the beach, the rocks, the water, all to the hum of insects chirping softly above. I take still photos while Kristen records some video footage, and we marvel at the wonder of it all and the fact that for these brief, surreal moments we have the entire cave to ourselves. Just as we finish our photos and videos we hear the sounds of a group coming through the cave, and soon a conga-line of smiling Chinese emerge from the cave singing cheerfully. For the next hour a handful of groups come and go, and we lay in the water watching it all and soaking up the beauty. Because we’re on a private charter we have about an hour there, whereas the other explorers were gone in as little as ten minutes and never stayed longer than thirty.

Eventually we get up to leave, and as we paddle again through the cave yet more groups are heading the other way. It’s only 10 o’clock in the morning and the larger daytrip groups have not yet arrived, suggesting that by midday the cave and glade must get pretty crowded indeed. We climb back onto our boat for the trip back home, utterly content that for a short, sweet time we experienced Morakot as it was intended. In solitude: quiet, serene, magical.

Categories: Thailand, travel | 1 Comment

Serendipity in Penang

Thailand has some tricky visa rules. If an Australian arrives by plane at any international airport in the kingdom, they will get a 30-day visa free of charge on arrival. However if that same Australian arrives by land, eg. from Malaysia or Cambodia, then they will only receive a 15-day visa. For any traveller doing an extended ramble like we are, roaming around Asia by land and intending to stay way more than two weeks in Thailand, the 15-day visa is a major inconvenience.

The intention I’m sure is to encourage foreigners who want to stay in Thailand indefinitely to obtain the appropriate long-stay visa – if they can. With the 15-day limit, anyone who wants to continue to stay in Thailand must do a “visa run” to the nearest border post to extend their right to stay in the country. That usually requires taking a minivan to the border, crossing over and then crossing back again, then another minivan back to home base… a visa run can easily consume an entire day when you add it up. And over-stayers can definitely be penalised; I deliberately overstayed my visa by four days the last time I visited Thailand, calculating that paying the fine was cheaper than getting a visa renewal. But if I overstayed more than a week the equation would surely have swung the other way…

There is an alternative option, if you’re organised enough. Thailand offers 60-day tourist visas (for a fee) provided that you arrange the visa prior to entering Thailand. When we finally turned our attention to this issue before leaving Sydney in February, we were so busy moving out of our home that we didn’t have the time to apply for the tourist visa. I seriously considered doing it during our short visit back in March, but given that it took at least two working days and would require two trips to the city for lodgement and pickup, it wasn’t worth the risk. We knew we probably weren’t going to go through Kuala Lumpur so we resigned ourselves to the likelihood of having to do at least two visa runs during our Thailand leg. Annoying, but there was nothing we could do about it. Until a serendipitous meeting in Penang delivered 60-day tourist visas to us – on the same day – just as we were about to enter Thailand. Magic 🙂

It began barely ten minutes after we checked into our guesthouse in Georgetown. It was early evening, and we’d just dumped our bags in the room and headed out for a meal after the seven hour bus ride from Melaka. Walking down the street towards us was a lone backpacker who’d just got dropped off, and he approached us to ask where “the street with all the guesthouses” is. Whaddya know, he’s Australian, and in fact he’s the first Aussie traveller we’ve met since we left for Scandinavia in February (we don’t count the guy who’s been living in Oslo for ten years as a “traveller”). After doing the obligatory swapping of origins (Geelong, Sydney) we explain that we don’t know where that street is because we’ve just arrived ourselves. However the place we were staying at was really good, and it was literally just down the road so we pointed it out to him, explained how nice it was, and wished him luck. Then it was off to dinner and an early night.

The next morning we head downstairs for the free and substantial breakfast (The Red Inn Court really is an amazing guesthouse, but more on that later) intending to eat and then head off for a day of sightseeing around Georgetown. We immediately get talking to a Brit, Mike, who’s at the tail end of a year off just like the one we are starting. He’s heading to Sydney soon and so we started answering questions and giving some tips, and within minutes we have his email address and an offer to stay with him when we get to London. Awesome! He’s still feeling the effects of the night before, which apparently was a raucous affair of booze and karaoke amongst new arrivals at the Red Inn Court, and some of his fellow carousers head downstairs over the next hour in various states of pain. There’s Peter, the computer guru from Hungary who’s job is so mobile that he can work from anywhere while travelling around Asia, as long as he has the internet. Then Bec, another Brit on a year off. And Tim, an Indian student from Singapore. They all look rather tender, to put it politely…

And then the man from last night, the Aussie, enters the fray. We didn’t even swap names last night, but we soon find out his name is CJ, he lives in Bangkok and he usually teaches English for a living. Although he wasn’t part of the previous night’s mayhem he slots into the group perfectly, and for almost an hour we’re all chatting away merrily. CJ is totally relaxed until someone points out to him that it’s nearly 10am, and he’s nearly an hour late for his trip to the Thai consulate – he’s still running on Thailand time. CJ starts to rush because, as he suddenly explains, the entire purpose of his visit to Penang is to get a 60-day tourist visa so he can stay in Thailand. What, I ask, you can get Thai tourist visas in Penang?? Yep, he responds, and on the same day too if you lodge them early enough. Kristen and I look at each other and nod, grinning, and we ask if we can go with him as that’s exactly what we’re after too. He says sure, as long as we can leave immediately as he was told there was a 10.30am cutoff for same-day applications. I race upstairs, grab our passports and within minutes we’re all in a cab to the consulate.

Leaving the confines of colonial Georgetown is a revelation. Coming from the beauty of Melaka’s charming streetscape, central Georgetown is frankly ugly by comparison. Supposedly the main attraction of the city, the strips of shophouses clustered around the old fort are dirty and faded, and the whole precinct has a vaguely derelict air. But just a few scant kilometres away the suburbs become freshly painted with carefully tended tree-lined boulevardes and modern shopping districts, and the Thai consulate is located in the middle of this wealthy zone.

Applying for a visa is quite straightforward, and there are some industrious folk set up outside to profit from the constant stream of applicants. If you’ve forgotten to bring along two passport photos (we sorted ours in Sydney before leaving), don’t worry: there is a mobile photo booth available that will print you some in minutes. Don’t have a photocopy of the details page of your passport either? Not a problem, just come over to this van sir where a photocopier is set up in the back (we did need this service). The only thing not available was an ATM, situated as it was in a residential suburb. Fortunately CJ was able to spot us the difference for our application fees. One final hiccup: CJ was wearing a singlet (a sure sign of an Aussie, according to Mike), and that was not allowed inside the consulate grounds. Disrepsectful to the King, presumably? After a bit of light banter, the guard offered him a too-small T-shirt to wear while lodging his application.

We had about four hours to kill until we could return to pick up our passports, so we all decided to hang out together back at the Red Inn Court before wandering the town a little in scorching 35 degree heat. During this time we swapped more stories, of course, and got to learn some more about CJ’s fascinating life over the past decade. As well as living in Bangkok for most of that time, he’s lived on a roof in Karachi, Pakistan, for three months because he was too poor to stay anywhere else. He’s hobnobbed with Karachi’s top actors and artists, because as a westerner in a largely shunned country he had easy access to the local elite. He managed a group of fast food restaurants on a military base in Afghanistan several years ago, a stint which ended abruptly and hilariously about a year later. And he is also now a film producer in Pakistan, successfully finishing one film that will shortly be released and about to start making another. Not bad at all for someone who’s only 35…

Anyway the afternoon flew by, and after we’d picked up our passports with their shiny new visas we returned to Red Inn Court for some well-earned beers. We’d been talking about alcohol on and off all day, so the subliminal urge to satisfy the thirst was irresistible. Chugging beer in the afternoon shade while watching a local road crew swiftly re-surface the road in front of the guesthouse was strangely fascinating, as was watching nearby shopowners lovingly watering down their patch of freshly laid bitumen. As afternoon turned to evening some of the morning crew returned and the beers kept flowing. By the time darkness fell the whole crew was re-united – us, CJ, Mike, Becs, Tim and Peter – plus a newcomer, Englishwoman Maria who we’d been spotting all day riding around town on a bike. We all decided that karaoke was in order, and after freshening up we headed to a local pub for a couple of drinks before hitting the same karaoke bar that the others had visited the night before.

Details from here are hazy, but the abiding memory we both have of the end of the night is the image of CJ, sitting with his back against the wall wearing Kristen’s wraparound sunglasses, microphone in hand, belting out a brilliant version of U2’s With or Without You and looking (and sounding) uncannily like Bono. It was the perfect end to an unexpectedly awesome day, not just for the new friends made but because we obtained the coveted 60-day visa right when we needed it. It’s made our coming adventures in Thailand all the more exciting, because we can now indulge our fantasy of spending several weeks bumming around the Andaman Coast’s beaches and islands without a care for such trivialities as doing a visa run. Serendipity indeed 😀

Categories: travel | 5 Comments

Return to Melaka

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When I embarked on my solo Asian journey in 2009-2010, Melaka was my first stop after arriving in Singapore. I was drawn by its long and fascinating history as a crossroads of cultures, and was captivated by the distinctive character of its narrow streets and laneways. And the food. And the fellow travellers you can meet along the way.

So when we were planning our shared journey, Melaka was high on the list of places to visit and of course it didn’t disappoint. We have already spent three nights there (I’m currently writing this from a hotel near KL’s airport), and we are about to return for two more nights for a special expedition which will be explained later. Because Kristen has not been to Melaka before we covered some ground I’d already seen, such as the Porto d’Santiago, the church on the hill, and Jonkers Walk night market. We’ve eaten up a storm, with highlights including chicken rice balls, top-shelf Indian at bottom-shelf prices at Selvam, a dim sum breakfast, my favourite chicken satay at Geographer Cafe, and plenty of stick food from the streets.

But the real highlight has been discovering the riverside walk north of the centre which has an amazing series of spray-painted murals on the walls of houses facing the water (many are shown in the slideshow above). It’s not mentioned in the guidebook, and I didn’t wander to this part of town last time; in fact we discovered it mainly because our guesthouse is actually on the riverfront and contained in one of the bemuraled houses. It’s been enchanting to sit outside on the edge of the river in the evening, watching the boats pass by as we read or blog or sort through photos. At some point the call to prayer from a nearby mosque breaks the silence, and when darkness comes waterfalls of tiny lights illuminate the far bank of the river. I’m looking forward to our return…

Categories: food, Malaysia, Melaka, travel | Leave a comment

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