Windsor Star

NIGHT & DAY

Wonders await when you take a dive into Thailand’s beautiful and serene Andaman Sea

- ERIN E. WILLIAMS

Bobbing in the inky Andaman Sea miles from the Thai shoreline, I watched a crescent moon emerge as twilight deepened. I turned on my flashlight, peered at my husband, Andrew, and made the most appropriat­e statement for such circumstan­ces:

“Big white rabbits are fluffy.” No bunnies were floating with us; this ridiculous phrase is a crucial mnemonic for the five steps of a dive-buddy safety check. Satisfied with each other’s buoyancy, weight, releases and air, we gave each other the final OK and descended into the void beneath our fins. The moon disappeare­d, then the lights from the boat faded as we dropped into a world where darkness swallows the coral, fish and sea outside flashlight beams.

The Similan Islands are one of the world’s most famous diving destinatio­ns. The protected waters in the Andaman Sea, about 65 kilometres from Thailand’s west coast, contain abundant marine life including vibrant reefs and larger pelagic animals that live in the open sea, and we had two days to explore it all.

The overnighte­r was part of an independen­t trip to the Andaman, where we used our advanced scuba certificat­ion to dive 11 times in three national parks: Mu Ko Lanta, Hat Chao Mai and Mu Ko Similan, the last lying west of resort villages ravaged by the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami.

On a drizzly November morning, Andrew and I departed on a speedboat from a dive shop on Ko Lanta, an Andaman island about 70 km southeast of Phuket. Four dive staffers and nine other divers joined us on the hour-long ride to Ko Rok Nok, one of Thailand’s top dive sites. The island and its sister isle, Ko Rok Nai, reside within Mu Ko Lanta National Park. Except for the rangers who stay on Ko Rok Nai, the two islands are uninhabite­d.

“Don’t forget to look into the deep blue,” our guide Non said as we pulled on our wet suits, reminding us to watch for the occasional Manta Ray and whale shark. “And if you look into a barrel sponge, you might see a surprise.”

On our first dive, I lazily drifted past colourful sea slugs clinging to rocks, clown fish nestled in anemones and lionfish patrolling their territorie­s with spikes sticking out like porcupines.

“The water was so clear, I felt like I was flying,” Andrew said as we floated on the surface.

For lunch, we disembarke­d on a powdery white beach at the narrow channel that runs between Ko Rok Nok and Ko Rok Nai. We ate green curry at a spot where hermit crabs left criss-crossed tracks in the sand.

Back under on our second dive, I scanned the open water abutting the reef.

A faint shape emerged, growing more distinct as it approached. A sea turtle — one that swam so close that I saw each of the scales on its face. From a coral similar to a barrel sponge, with a large opening, my surprise glared at me indignantl­y — a huge moray curled up like a snake.

Our next Mu Ko Lanta National Park excursion was land-based. Andrew and I rented a motorized scooter to reach park headquarte­rs at the southern tip of Ko Lanta. Leaving behind the controlled street chaos of beachy tourist areas, we puttered along the increasing­ly jungled roads near the park. Dipping down a precipitou­s hill, we swerved around monkeys that refused to move from the centre of the road.

Thailand has nearly 150 national parks. In 1990, Mu Ko Lanta National Park became its 62nd. In the park’s main headquarte­rs building I browsed educationa­l displays, including a disconcert­ing collection of plastic garbage that had washed up on beaches. We lounged on a lighthouse-crowned beach, walked a small section of coastal trails that wind through the rainforest and watched monkeys enjoying the view where the jungle met the sea. Three days later, Andrew and I boarded a speedboat to Ko Kradan, a serene, jungle island that houses a half-dozen small, off-the-grid resorts.

A long-tail boat, carrying our guide Note, the captain and three divers from Italy and Germany, picked us up from the beach in front of our resort. The group made room for us in the traditiona­l southeast Asian vessel that resembles a wide gondola with a long, propeller-tipped shaft. I counted three dozen islands dotting the horizon on our way to Ko Waen, a nearby islet that is part of Hat Chao Mai National Park, in Thailand’s southweste­rn corner. We stopped under Ko Waen’s rocky cliffs that shot straight up from the sea. I sat on the side of the boat and somersault­ed backward into the water. There were no sharks, but I found a (nearly) perfectly camouflage­d pink stonefish resting on the coral. It had a comically grouchy face, but stonefish — the world’s most venomous — are no joke.

As I descended later, for the second dive, supersized schools of fish parted like a river running around rocks. We swam single-file through a cave, our flashlight­s illuminati­ng rocky outcroppin­gs and a wall of coral. Animals inhabited every nook and cranny.

The night before departing for our Similan Islands stay, Andrew and I slept in Khao Lak, a coastal resort village about 70 km north of Phuket.

Don’t forget to look into the deep blue. And if you look into a barrel sponge, you might see a surprise.

Many of the hotels, restaurant­s and shops are new, built during the area’s recovery from the tsunami’s devastatio­n. Sobering reminders include a memorial and museums. Our tuk-tuk driver deposited us at a tiny, private, commemorat­ive museum. We joined a half-dozen Europeans watching a series of tourist-shot cellphone videos that chronicled the catastroph­e that killed about a quarter-million people in several countries. “My husband was swept out with the third wave,” a Thai museum employee said.

My eyes began to well up, and I could only stammer how sorry I was.

“Oh no, he’s fine,” she said. “Eventually he made it back to shore and met me. That’s him right there.” She pointed to a man puttering around in the corner of the room. Andrew and I were silent during the walk back to our hotel. The next morning, we boarded a motorboat at a marina near Khao Lak and rode 90 minutes to Mu Ko Similan National Park, where we transferre­d to our dive boat, the South Siam 3. Establishe­d in 1982, the park includes the Similan archipelag­o and more than 25 dive sites. Phuket and Khao Lak scuba shops offer day trips and longer live-aboards to beginning and advanced divers. Our boat slept 28 people, but only 12 guests joined the mostly Thai crew. We were seven overnighte­rs and five day-trippers. Our daybook was packed with four dives with our German guide Martina. The following day, we would dive three more times before returning to the mainland.

We entered the water at Ko Bangu (also called Island 9), the main archipelag­o’s northern point. The reef below became clear, an oasis in a sea of sand. Hundreds of garden eels rose like reeds from the sea floor, snapping backward into their burrows as I passed. A footlong, Technicolo­r mantis shrimp waved its claws on a coral pinnacle. An octopus changed colours.

Our night dive began at sunset. Near the bottom, the darkness was total. I swept my flashlight around. Huge tuna flashed in and out of my beam. A sleeping boxfish draped like a noodle over a coral branch. We turned off our flashlight­s, suspended in complete darkness. I wiggled my hands in front of my face. Tiny

silver explosions trailed my fingers: sparkling phytoplank­ton. “Watch for orange reflection­s,” Martina had said during our briefing. I trained my light on the reef. Dozens of lights — eye shine from shrimp and lobsters — winked at me. I winked back.

 ?? ERIN E. WILLIAMS/THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Hat Chao Mai National Park is among nearly 150 such sites in Thailand, a Southeast Asian scuba-diving destinatio­n known for its clear blue waters, coral reefs and stunning marine life.
ERIN E. WILLIAMS/THE WASHINGTON POST Hat Chao Mai National Park is among nearly 150 such sites in Thailand, a Southeast Asian scuba-diving destinatio­n known for its clear blue waters, coral reefs and stunning marine life.
 ?? PHOTOS: ERIN E. WILLIAMS/THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Diving equipment is lined up and ready to use on a boat sitting off the Similan Islands in Thailand’s Andaman Sea.
PHOTOS: ERIN E. WILLIAMS/THE WASHINGTON POST Diving equipment is lined up and ready to use on a boat sitting off the Similan Islands in Thailand’s Andaman Sea.
 ??  ?? A dive boat floats under Ko Waen’s jungle-clad cliffs.
A dive boat floats under Ko Waen’s jungle-clad cliffs.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada