(I was in cleaning up the blog in preparation for the next trip when I found this entry that never got posted, so here it is, better late than never)
Well the time has come for the vacation to end and it is back to Seattle for what we are told has been a very poor summer so far, but I am getting ahead of the story……
Our plan for the last part of the trip was to spend time at the beach and mostly just ‘hang out’ and relax, and we have been doing our best to keep our part of that plan on track. The weather in Kata has been very co-operative so we have spent most of our last days doing just leisure activities: sleeping in, reading by the pool, hanging out at the beach – well you get the picture.
Our last big adventure here was to go on a tour in Phang Nga Bay. Phuket hangs down a bit form the mainland and it’s east coast forms a large bay between Phuket and Krabi that contains 100s of small islands and karst outcroppings. Mrs Columbus and I did a boat tour of the bay last year when we were here and it was one of our favorite tours so I thought that Brooklyn and Russ would really enjoy it also.
We picked a different tour package from the one I did last year and instead of going out only on the bay the tour we selected went up into Phang Nga province by car with a couple of stops at some rather large caves that have eroded themselves in the limestone hills and then out onto the water to see the famous ‘James Bond Island’.
Our first cave stop is at Wat Suwan Kuha – the cave is part of a temple that is sometimes called the Monkey Temple because of the 100s of monkeys running around the grounds. You can buy some fruit from the vendors, but once you do that you are going to have a lot of new friends until some other tourist comes around with more fruit. The temple itself is inside what turns out to be a huge cave with several Buddha statues and a number of vast caverns.
After a brief lunch stop we head off to our 2nd cave on the tour. Phung Chang Cave (Tham Phung Chung), is one of the highlights in the tour brochure and luckily the reality matches the sales pitch. There is a large foothill that basically blocks off a deep valley and the cave runs through the center of the foothill. A creek runs through the valley and millions of years of erosion has channeled the creek through the foothill creating the cave. The water running through the cave means that our exploration is a little different than the other caves we have been to. For the first several hundred feet we get into a sea kayak and a Thai guide paddles us in, then the cave narrows so we transfer to a bamboo raft and gudes then walk through shoulder high water pushing us on the raft for a few hundred more feet before we finally get off the raft and then wade our way deeper into the cave. The locals are trying to keep the cave as natural as possible so there is no external lighting inside the cave, our only source of lighting is LED headlamps that we are all wearing. Our exploration takes us about 1km (about 0.6miles) into the heart of the foothill and the channel through the cave becomes to difficult for tourists to go much deeper. Our guide has us turn all off our headlamps and we get a feel for true 100% darkness and we spend a couple of minutes just appreciating the solitude and the gurgle of the water running through the cave. Then it is time to move on so all the lamps get turned back on and we turn around and make the whole trek in reverse back to the entrance.
From there it is off to the pier in Phang Nga town to get onto a boat for the trip out to Ko Panyi and Koh Tapu (James Bond Island). As expected the sights in the bay are sensational and I am quickly reminded why this is one of my favorite tours in southern Thailand.
My last trip to Ko Panyi was part of an all day boat trip of the bay and we stopped there for lunch at one of the huge floating restaurants that cater to the day trip crowds. Unfortunately during that trip we did not have much time to look around after lunch, so we only got to see a small part of the ‘Sea Gypsy Village’. This time however we are here with plenty of time to look around and it turns out the place is an interesting maze of homes, shops, schools and even a floating soccer field!
After about an hour of looking around and a bit of shopping for Brooklyn and Russ, it is off to James Bond Island. The little island is busier than the last time I was here, but we have a bit of time to look around and get the standard tourist photos of the island.
Back to our hotel in Kata and we have time for dinner, a massage, and a last walk on the beach. We have to pack up in the morning and start our journey back home. It has been a great vacation and a bunch of new memories have been added. It was fun to travel with the ‘young adults’ and hopefully they will have many more great adventure like this in their future.
Until next year (I hope)……





