Island Hopping Part 2:From Phuket, we took a bus back to Krabi the following day (Phuket is connected by a bridge to the mainland). Then, we took a longtail boat from Krabi north to Railay, which is a group of 4 beaches surrounded by huge limestone cliffs – the climbing mecca of Thailand. While Railay is not an island, there is no road that connects it to the rest of the world – everything comes in and out on longboats. The whole place really caters to the traveling-climber type who loves Bob Marley – mellow man! We found a little $4/night bungalow on Tonsai beach that was worth about $2.50 with holey mosquito nets, things scurrying across the floor, and the electricity only on from 6pm to 3am. Good times, good times.


We went climbing on Thursday. Rented gear from Wee’s Climbing School – we just walked in and said, “we’d like some gear” and they said, “have you climbed before?” and we said, “Yep” and they handed it over! No signing forms, no proving skills…so we spent the early afternoon climbing along the beautiful cliff. I have not been climbing in TWO YEARS because of a wrist injury, so it felt amazing.
The limestone had awesome holds and the view was spectacular. The start of one of the climbs was best through the little hole in the picture here. The above picture is the view from the top of the climb (later that night we stood on the beach and watched 2 base jumpers jump from those cliffs – not very high!!!) My forearms died almost immediately, however…and it started to rain.This photo is the start of one of the climbs - best up and through a hole...I felt a little like a born again climber.
So, for the afternoon we went on a wet wet wet jungle hike between the beaches. Found an abandoned group of bungalows out in the middle of nowhere and picked a papaya from a tree…only to realize we were being watched by some guy in a yellow shirt across the clearing – creepy! We tried to hike to a hidden lagoon, but the sun was setting and the climbing was precarious (vertical rock in many parts, some fixed ropes, everything covered in red oozing mud), so we headed back down.

Watched the sun set from a very beautiful beach with a large cave to the left side, then swam/waded all the way home holding the backpack out of the water, as the tide was coming in. The camera stayed dry the whole time…
Friday was Deep Water Soloing! This is where you go climbing on overhanging cliffs above water. You don’t climb with gear, only your shoes, and when you fall, you drop into the ocean. We went out to some neighboring islands with about 10 other climbers in 2 longtail boats. Very fun to clamber around, wet hands, wet shoes, on the face of the rock. Then, when you get to high or you can’t hold on anymore, you just drop down and splash in! We ate lunch – fried rice in metal containers – hanging out on a beach, did some snorkeling, then went back out for round 2.When we came back to our bungalow we had been robbed - monkeys broke in, ate parts of the papaya, and went through the trash! Bad monkeys! Early the next morning, I heard scuttling in the wall by my head and looked over to see a giant claw coming through the wall! Bree suspects it was a scorpion - "They can kill you, you know?" - and I had no idea at the time, but we decided to switch bungalows.
As we were packing up, I carefully peeled a pumello to munch on and let it sitting out on the pourch. I looked over from the doorway and saw a monkey in the trash bin EATING THE REST OF MY PAPAYA and then, suddenly, a monkey scurried across the pourch and stole the pumello. The little jerk sat on the pourch of the next bungalow and ate it right in front of us! The nerve of some primates! I watched another monkey a few hours later sitting on a roof of another hut as a wooman sat below in a hammock. The monkey ran down the pole the hammock was tied to, stole her candy bar, and sat on the roof eating it - she never had a clue! Bad monkeys!

So we moved to a beautiful bungalow in the jungle and went for another jungle walk back to the lagoon. This time we made it (less rain & more sunlight) and were rewarded with a muddy hole in the ground surrounded by 200 foot limestone cliffs on all sides. ("The journey is the destination"). We spent the rest of the afternoon on the beach and drinking large bottles of Chang at one of the many reggae-themed beach bars. Talked to some interesting people we had met the days before while climbing. Ate cheeseburgers and green curry.
Then Sunday was upon us and we took a longtail boat back to reality, took the plane back to Bangkok...I almost had a panick attack when I stopped by the grocery store to get a few things and spent 1 hour trying to muscle my way through what seemed like millions of Thias aimlessly strolling around the store. Ahhhhh! And the pollution - the noise, the air...welcome home to Bangkok! So I skipped out and headed to the spa - had a great thai massage and went to bed happy.






















