We approached Koh Lipe, as we did with Koh Tarutao, by speed boat, and it was very obvious which of the islands Lipe was. It is the only island in the national marine park that has allowed private development to take place for accommodation, restaurants and bars. Where Koh Tarutao, Koh Adang and Koh Rawi only have park approved and owned accommodation, Lipe has been allowed to grow and develop. This can be looked at two ways; Koh Lipe is showing the others how successful selling out can be and they will soon follow suit, or, with only one island developed the others can be visited and appreciated without being ruined by the 7-eleven, happy hour army that have already had such an influence elsewhere. We had no idea what Lipe would be like, and after our time on Tarutao it might have been a risk to go and see, but with the promise of great diving I was sold.
The first impression of Lipe was not as obviously positive as with Koh Tarutao, we were both a little cautious of what we might find. But as we hopped from the speedboat to a longtail we could see golden sand beaches, coral reefs only a few feet below the rippling blue surface of the water. We could see the bright ribbons hanging from the noses of the boats and we could see coffee shops, dive shops, restaurants and bars. There was the sound of the water lapping at our longtails wooden body and the faint sound of chatter and laughter on the breeze. We were optimistic that this would be a good few days.
We settled into our hut on sunrise beach before setting out to find ways to sit and while away the days, relaxing in the sun under a palm tree reading or watching the world go by while reclined on an axe pillow with a coffee, beer or shake. It’s amazing how you can do so little all day and still find a way to justify ‘unwinding’ with a cold beer. Although Jill and I are not the best at doing very little, on arrival I made arrangement for a days diving the following morning and soon after we lined up a days snorkelling. I was keen to dive again as soon as possible, partly so that I could get some more experience, partly to make sure I hadn’t forgotten everything, but mostly because since my last dive I hadn’t stopped talking about it or thinking about it.
So the following day, after getting ourselves settled I headed out on a longtail with a dive master and a driver. We cut around the north of the island, passing beaches and jagged rocks, all overlooked by the thick carpet of forest beyond. Eagles soared above us on the currents and small fish leapt from the water in silver shimmering waves. We dropped anchor at a small bay near to top of Koh Adang and entered the water from the beach, not very gracefully it must be said. With a tank on my back and fins sinking into the sand I was a little unsteady, but I stumbled in and I think got away with making it look like I had intended to flop head first into the slightly too shallow water. Once in the water I was once again much more at home, we swam out no more than 50 metres between two large rocks at which point the bed dropped away into the black blue beyond. It was thick with coral and a metropolis of sea life, we dropped to 16 metres and let the current take us along the edge of the coral bank. It was beautiful. I saw giant puffer fish and a 2 metre long Moray eel, hundreds of fish of all different shapes and sizes. And for 45 minutes I watched the underwater world going about its business. I was transfixed by it all. After lunch I had another dive, again we rode the currents and again it was breathtaking.
Back on dry land and with the afternoon sun casting long shadows across the silver blue surface of the water, as still and calm as I have ever seen, I met up with Jill and we watched the sun set over the island. The sand between our toes and the warm dying light of the sun on our faces.
On our final day on Koh Lipe, and our penultimate day in Thailand, we went snorkelling. We were slightly restricted by where we could go as the Princess of Thailand had arranged to snorkel on the same day! But we managed to see a lot of the marine park and ate freshly caught squid on a deserted beach. It was a brilliant end to what had been a great detour. Koh Tarutao and Koh Lipe will remain two of the highlights, not just of Thailand but of our trip. We packed up our bags once more and began the longer than you’d expect, journey to Malaysia...
Relaxing at a bar on Sunrise beach Koh Lipe
Jill finds an enjoyable way to spend an afternoon
Snorkelling, it's anything but glamourous!
A perfect place to enjoy some lunch
LUNCH!
Jill enjoying the sunset
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