Sunday morning arrives and the weather is just perfect, slight breeze off the sea, to keep the humidity down on a morning that is probably around the 28 to 30 degree mark, and a slight cloud haze screening the sun from making it really hot!
I shower and dress, downstairs for breakfast, yes, omelette, toast and bacon, juice and coffee and head off to find the harbour and the ferry that will whisk me away to a paradise island. Well, I am hoping for a paradise island......
Down onto beach road, flag a taxi, hop on and head south to Walking street. So named, because no vehicles are allowed on this stretch of night time entertainment after 7PM. This is my first excursion down the "World Famous or Infamous" Walking street. It is 10 AM and nothing is going on, probably because they all only closed at sunrise......
Speaking of closing, the law states all bars must close at 1AM with some varieties allowed to close at 2AM. Well closed means switch off the main light, leave the coloured lights on and continue to serve booze until your patrons stagger on home. This place is weird sometimes, like chemists dispensing antibiotic without a script, walk in tell the pharmacist your aliment and he will want to give you antibiotics. My experience, coz I have a cold at the moment and really just needed some med lemon or colcaps or the like.)
I digress……………
So I am strolling down Walking street, as Pattaya Port is at the end of Walking Street.
Bar, after Bar, after Bar, getting quite boring now..... until I pass a seafood restaurant........ I have taken pics of the place, but to describe it, the front is lined with tanks and "ponds" built on the floor. Each has a species of either lobster, crab or fish. So you would arrive for a meal and select the beast of your choice. I know this is common in good seafood places all over the world, but the sheer size and scale is amazing! 10 different crab species from big blue ones with red pinchers to "plain-jane" sand coloured toe biters, small, med, large and the outsize!
Further down I discover a row of about 10 stalls, where " copy" artists are hard at work, painting Mona Lisa's and replicas of other famous works in oils and watercolour. Quality is stunning, but I don't stop to ask how much! These artists will also copy any image you give them, portrait, scene etc....
I arrive at Pattaya Port and am immediately struck by how clean and modern it is. A lovely quiet, shady, well kept park surrounds the Port Building, a Thai Style design, but recently built, so very modern. I purchase I ticket for the ferry to take me the 7.5 km across to Koh Lan, for the princely sum of 20 baht (yes the princely sum of R2.98). I board the ferry with about 5 minutes to spare and eagerly await our departure.
Damned "falangs"! These tourists really are inconsiderate, the walk down the pier is a good 5 minutes, and the captain has already sounded the horn for departure, but they stroll! so we depart 5 minutes late and head out into the gulf of Thailand. A flat sea awaits us and we cruise along as if it were across the Vaal Dam. I am informed the Gulf is no deeper than some 50 metres at its deepest, so we never see waves here, but just a gentle swell, which lullaby's us along.
On the approach to Koh Lan, I see no white sand beaches, but rather just a village, a pier and sharply rising hills for the shore line.... I had been told that the best beaches are on the opposite side of the island. The ferry docks and I stroll down to find transport, I am eagerly met by at least a dozen taxi drivers and negotiate a rate, based on the beach the driver suggests is the best, though he probably gets a kick back from the restaurant / beach chair owners, so that’s his version of “the best”.

The price is reasonable at 30 baht, and off we go, a short stroll through a very narrow street, covered in cement pavers. I discover that all the roads on the island, not many, are constructed from cement pavers. Add to that, the bakkie taxi feels as though its shocks have been welded firm and so we bump and bounce our way out of the village and up a REALLY steep hill. From the top, the view back across to Pattaya and Jomtien and further south to Rayong are stunning, but my cheap camera just cannot quite capture the real beauty of the scene. Looking away from Pattaya, toward Samae beach I spot, for the first time, that see through blue water associated with exotic islands, a few speed boats moored just off shore and the white sands......

I arrive at Samae beach, am offered a comfy, cushion covered, recliner beach chair which I accept and settle in. T-shirt off, slops off and wade into the balmy waters of the gulf of Thailand.
Clean nam, warm nam, swim with eyes open in nam, nam. (nam = water) So in short, "Khun Alan Pai waai nam" Alan go swim in water. And so the day progresses, me reading my book under the shade of an umbrella, cooling off, reading......

Lunch is taken at the restaurant run by the family from which I have rented the chair, and lunch today is sweet and sour pork, steamed rice and a Heineken (3PM and my first beer , I am so good). I order a medium sized bowl of sweet and sour pork, ends up it would feed 2 adults easily and I end up wasting quite a bit, but finish the rice. Very tasty with big chunks of pineapple, and other cucumber type veg, thinly sliced pork strips and a cold beer.
The rest of the afternoon much the same as the morning, reading and swimming and I take a stroll along the beach collecting a few interestingly coloured and textured pebbles, polished by the constantly lapping wavelets. I find one which I would like to have a small hole drilled in so that I can hang it from a necklace.
The taxi, which brought me to Samae beach arrives at 4:15, we had agreed 4.30, so I pay my bill for the day, 3 beers, lunch, 1 drinking water, a cigarette lighter and the chair, 330 baht, take one last wallow in the big "nam", slip my t-shirt and slops onto a still dripping body. No need for a towel in this climate, and hop on the taxi with 6 other souls.
We head back over the hill, me filled with the satisfaction that Koh Lan had been all I had hoped for!
I board the ferry without a ticket, coz it is easier to pay on the ferry, R2.98, and head for Pattaya Port.
What had been a lullaby cruise across, soon turns into a “green gill” experience for some of the tourists, especially those who had been quaffing copious amounts of Heineken or Singha or maybe even Thai whiskey. The wind has freshened and the swell is sizeable, causing the ferry to arch, bow and roll from side to side. Occasionally we catch a large swell side on as the ferry lurches into the trough in front of it, sending spray through the open sides, drenching the unsuspecting. It becomes quite a game as we try to avoid the spray, dashing toward the middle of the ferry, followed by large smiles of relief for some and anxiety for others.
The sun is starting to set, directly over Koh Lan and I attempt to capture the images. I decide to use all sorts of settings on the camera, in the hopes of getting a good shot captured to my camera, which does not like taking pictures in low light, the dark or directly into the sun.
I think I succeed, risking spray and the lurching of the ferry, by hanging out over the edge to get the shot which is directly behind the ferry. Moderate success, I discover later, and with a little playing and enhancing with software, I get a few usable images of the sunset over the island.
We enter Pattaya Port and the waters calm down passing the breakwater. The taxis are lined up at the end of the pier, to whisk us off to our destinations.
The sun has now set and Pattaya has come to life....... We travel down Walking street a-ways, before turning up a side road, everything now bustling with activity, music and light, a remarkable turnaround from the decrepit, run down, hangover of earlier in the day!
I alight from the taxi at Soi 4, stop in at PIC Kitchen, a USA style diner-type restaurant and force down the most awful cheeseburger, with a not so bad chocolate milkshake. It does not really matter, because I am now feeling weary and I am looking forward to a shower, a quick call home to check on how things are going in Warmbaths and then to bed. A new week is about to start and I was sure it would be a long week........
It turns out to be just that, up at 5.30 every morning, and away from the office no earlier than 8.30 every evening. Given the 1 hour trip each way, we are getting in no earlier than 9.30 PM, must still grab a bite to eat, shower and into bed, unless I still have things to prepare for the next morning, in which case I set up the small table from my room, on my balcony and clatter away at the keyboard, preparing reports on the days progress, issues, or preparing action plans for the next day! Having had a cold has not made the week any shorter either.... but it is now Friday and we do not expect to have to work this weekend.
The effort is however paying dividends and the project is exceeding all stakeholders expectations at present, even with the snags we have been faced with, which have not been created by us!
I have been asked to start preparing a "brag" presentation, by GM Thailand, for presentation next week, highlighting how well the project has been delivered, on time! within quality! I think it is too soon to count the chickens, because we are in a critical phase right now......
I have not finalise my plans for this weekend, but I saw a package tour, at the hotel, to a place called " The Sanctuary of Truth". A very ornate, large Wat (temple). The tour includes a cultural dance show, ornate wood carving show, riding a horse around the sanctuary, a dolphin show and. wait for it, my personal attraction to this activity, "swimming with the dolphins"!
I think I will do it, just for the experience of a swim with the dolphins and maybe someone can take a photo of me with a dolphin. Package price is about R120, so very reasonable.....
Phom pai tonnee (I go now)