But there are still stories that need to be told, and after finally finding my camera battery charger this morning, I sat down to try and cover some of them.
1. The Similan Islands
I organized a group trip with 10 of my favorite people and we headed out towards surreal beauty in a speed boat, jouncing along on the waves and avoiding the spiky bamboo fish traps.
The Similan islands are gorgeous. They are considered a Thai national park and efforts are being made to keep them healthy despite the daily plague of tourists (myself included) that are allowed to visit 7 months out of the year. The park closed two dive locations this past year due to coral bleaching, and even snorkeling, as we were doing, revealed a declining underwater landscape, BUT the fish are still beautiful and vibrant. We even saw a sea turtle and some box puffers. My favorite was an incredibly ugly and human-looking fish that I watched dig a hole with its big, human-looking teeth.
2. Last Weeks of School
As the semester came to a close and with different grades taking exams at different times, teaching became much less structured and to my joy I found myself spending entire periods hanging out outside with my students, chatting in English and Thai, reviewing, singing and playing volleyball.
A few weeks before I left I made a list of all the Thai foods and snacks I would miss and set out to have one last taste of every one of them. This was very enjoyable.
I visited my favorite mango sticky rice (khao niao mamuang) lady:
And my favorite papaya salad (som tam) lady:
4. Goodbye Beach
5. Octopus Hunting
Not for babies. I thought one of my colleagues had invited me to go crab hunting, but I misunderstood. We hunted on the Point at low tide in the evening.
High tide:
Low tide:
If we were lucky, the prongs would reappear with a pissed off octopus attached.
Live octopus suckers feel very strange on your skin and when you pull them off it sounds like popping bubble wrap. I thought my student and my colleague were selling the day’s catch at the market, but no, they were just bringing home the octopus for their families’ dinners.
love having you in sweden!
ReplyDeletedo you know what causes the coral bleaching?
and those pictures are breathtaking!
ReplyDeletelovely photography. did you fry the octopus???
ReplyDelete