Sunday 1 June 2008

Thailand

I arrived back in Colombo yesterday after two weeks holiday on Thailand. Whilst I was away a bomb exploded on a train very near to where I live (my host family "brother" regularly takes the same train into Colombo). It's really very scary and where as before I managed to not really think about it, I now get pretty nervous going on public transport (which unfortunately is every day). It feels like Russian roulette - there's no way of knowing what is going to be targeted next. On the bus home from the airport I saw soldiers on every street corner and even on the bus, all brandishing large guns. Far from finding this reassuring it just panics me more. Then the bus conductor tried to overcharge me four times the actual price (I felt like shouting at him "look, I'm working for free in your god-damn country, risking getting blown up on a daily basis and I have to pay extra for the privilege!!!". What a tosser.). This morning I got thrown off the bus to work as I refused to pay the conductor forty rupees instead of the usual eight. The weather is wet, wet, wet at the moment and there is bad flooding nearby. My host family are currently stranded in the hill country after going away for the weekend and I've been sent home early from work as the kids don't turn up in the rain! The mossies are loving it and are eating me alive. Moan, moan, moan!

Thailand was amazing and spending two weeks just relaxing was heaven. I went with another volunteer, Julie who is a midwife. We flew into Bangkok where I looked around wide-eyed at the enormous roads, flyovers, sky-scrapers and girls strutting about in next to nothing. An overnight bus took us down to Surat Thani where we caught a ferry to Ko Pha ngan. This is an island off the East coast where the huge full moon parties are held. The party was all a bit of a blur although I do remember spending a lot of time doing glow in the dark body painting! Before we knew it, it was dawn and we watched the sun rise from the beach which was still teeming with weary people. Unfortunately a girl I was with had her bag stolen so I spent several hours at the police station trying to help her sort it out. I felt so sorry for her as she had lost everything, even her passport.

Next stop was Ko Tao - a small island an hour North. We stayed in a very remote spot called Hin Wong on the east side. There was no beach but the water was crystal clear and the snorkeling was out of this world. I almost felt as though I was flying being able to propel myself forward with my arms, watching the fish dart around me. They were vivid colours - electric blue, yellow, football teams in black and white stripes and my favourite a large fish that had swum straight from the 80s with shimmering fluorescent yellows, greens and pinks. The coral formed amazing shapes, some looking like large brains and there were small multicoloured "Christmas trees", only a couple of centimetres high which shrank back if you ventured too close. There were also some "Nemo" fish which lived amongst the sea anemones, weaving in and out of their tentacles. One day we hired a canoe and paddled north around the coast. At one point we heard mysterious splashing all around us and joked that we were surrounded by sharks. It wasn't until we got back and mentioned this to the hotel owner that we discovered that sharks are regularly sighted around that particular headland....eek!

We got the overnight ferry back to Surat Thani, and interesting experience where I got to share my bed with fifty other people! Mattresses the width of my bum were laid side by side covering every square inch of the floor. One person looked familiar and turned out to be James, a volunteer I had met in Nepal....it's a small old world! We then headed over land to the west coast to a place called Raillay (in the Krabi province). This has to be one of the most stunning places I've seen in my nine months travelling. A short longboat ride transported us to a world of powdery white sand, warm turquoise water and surreal rock formations. The beach was completely enclosed by towering honey-coloured cliffs which had been sculpted into amazing stalactites. At night these were lit up and I floated on my back gazing up at it all. By day climbers spidermanned there way up impossibly sheer rock faces whilst I did a bit of body toasting! The sunsets were psychedelic, the sea turning to molten gold and pink clouds streaming across the sky .... a little piece of heaven on earth, one day I'll return - I have to!

1 comment:

George and Liz said...

Hi Pip, I love reading your blog to get me through a quiet night shift. But have not had many of those for a while so sorry not commented on your blog for ages. I have just read your adventures in Sri lanka and your holiday in paradise )Thialand) which makes me want to jump on a plane and see the world. If anyone has a spare few grand I would happily go travelling. But it does sound like you have been working hard too so makes me more respectful than just green eyed. Im glad your living in a more hygienic home now, as I was beginning to wonder about your sanity let alone your health. Keep up the good work. If you get to travel in Sri-lanka do go visit the golden/cultural triangle. We did the tourist traps of riding on an elephants back and safari to see the animals in the wild too, its a beautiful country which has gone through so much devastation with the tsunami and more recently political unrest too. Stick with it your a tough cookie. Love liz xx