We eventually landed on Koh Whai on the 9th December and have just spend a little over a week there. We’re now having a few days on Koh Change before returning to Koh Whai for Christmas.
Whai is a perfect place to stay if you fancy a remote getaway and don’t want a young crowd up for a party. The average age is probably 45, mostly well-travelled backpackers who tend to return to Whai every year. It is very popular with Germans and Austrians. Everyone we have met has been very friendly and good for a stimulating conversation.
The island is a very small jungle-covered hill with some north-facing narrow beaches. The beaches are not anything to get excited about. The attraction of Koh Whai is its sheer tranquillity. The electricity is only on from 5.30 – 10.30pm. After that the brightest light is the moon, and we were there during full moon so it was splendid, and the loudest noise is that of waves lapping against the sand, though during our stay in the regular northerly wind forced the waves and tore through the palms. The wind is supposedly a daily or nightly occurrence every November and December. It really cools the island down creating a very fresh temperature.
There are a few walks along the bays of the north coast, to the rubber tappers’ houses on the south and to a rocky sunset point on the south-west. The rocks here are some form of metamorphic or lava, dark red-orange bands forming pockets of grey rock with heat bubbles. I think the bands are formed as fissures formed in the rock, rapidly cooling thin plates of the rock while deeper inside the rock cooled more slowly.
Hot Rocks Cool
The attraction of Whai to us was the tranquillity, a great bungalow terrace for yoga, good company and some good snorkelling straight off the beach. The corals have died in many places but there is plenty of variety with many corals also coming back on the dead mounds.
We'll get some more photos of the island online when we get back to the mainland just before NYE
In which I have written a story
4 years ago
1 comment:
We just received an email from a friend, John Withington, about the rocks - The pretty rocks are probably basaltic lava with the orange bands resulting from weathering which forms iron oxide. We are going to Hawaii over xmas so may see some of the molten stuff if we're lucky.
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