Overnight to Koh Larn

[singlepic id=39 w=320 h=240 float=left]Friday we joined our friend Jean and Mon for a trip to Koh Larn. They did a day trip and we did an overnight trip. For location information, take a look at this map file. (kml file for Google Maps, or your preferred GIS mapping application.) Here’s a photo page for Tien Beach.

We all met at the Bali-Hai Pier around 9 am to catch the foot ferry over to Koh Larn Island. There are lots of people trying to sell tickets at the top of the pier, but all you really need to do is walk down the pier to the ferries, and pay 30 baht (about $1 USD) per person for the 20-30 minute ride. The ferry will take you right into the main town on Koh Larn.

Once you get to the island, there will be a bunch of motorcycle taxis available to take you for some variable price. A better way though is to walk the short distance to the Song Tow (Two Seats) group taxi/pick-up truck and pay another 30 baht per person to get out to the Tien Beach trail head. Fortunately, or unfortunately, you cannot drive directly to Tien Beach; you need to either come in by sea, or walk along the foot bridge to get to the beach. If you enjoy looking at Wats, there is a small Wat just across from the taxi parking area.

[singlepic id=60 w=320 h=240 float=right]The beach area is a beautiful white sand beach. Beach chairs are available for rent. There are beverage and food vendors there. There is also a hotel at the far end of the beach. We like going to Tien since it’s a clean, and for the most part, quiet beach. The slope on the beach is very gentle, so you have a good amount of water before you get too deep to still be able to stand. The people who work at the beach do a very good job of keeping the water, and the beach area clean. Another nice thing is that unlike Pattaya area beaches, you don’t have someone walking by every fourteen seconds trying to sell you something. All in all, it’s a great place to go for the day to relax.

[singlepic id=81 w=320 h=240 float=left]If you decide to stay, there are plenty of places on Koh Larn. If you want to stay right on Tien Beach, there is a hotel at the far end from the foot bridge. The facility is simple; for a room with an attached bathroom it was 800 baht (low season). There are also rooms above the restaurant with a shared bath facility for 600 baht (low season). If you’d like something a little bit different, there are two land locked boats that have been converted to two bedroom hotel units. Be sure to bring a book or other entertainment option. The rooms don’t have televisions, and I was unable to get a data signal for True on the beach.

The other reason for bringing your own entertainment is that from about 6 pm to 9 am the next morning, you will probably have the beach to yourself, or nearly to yourself. Since you’re on an island, and the last ferry is around 6:30 pm, everyone who doesn’t want to get a room, heads off into town. Likewise, people don’t start showing up in the morning until after the ferries start running.

Leaving the island is the reverse of getting to the island. Take the foot bridge back to the end of the road. A Song Tow will be along at some point to bring you back to town. You also have the option of taking a motorcycle taxi back to town. When you get back into town, walk out on the ferry pier. The passenger fare is the same going back, 30 baht, payable right before you get on the boat. A short ride back to the Bali-Hai pier, and you’re back in Pattaya.

Here’s a full gallery of our stay, from Bali-Hai pier, out to the island, and back.

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Dinner with Jean and Mon

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Last night Bua and I went to visit our friends Jean and Mon in Jomtien. Jean is another volunteer at the school, who I met during last term. Right now, he’s splitting his time between France and Thailand–summer in France, winter in Thailand.

We got to Jean’s rented condo at around 6 pm, well before the evening rain storm. Jean owns a condo in the central portion of Pattaya, but he’s renting a studio with an awesome view of the bay out in Jomtien. I’d love to see the view sometime when it is sunny, I think it would be amazing.

[singlepic id=18 w=320 h=240 float=left]After some catching up and socializing, we set off for ‘the seafood restaurant’. I still don’t know the name of it, but there is a huge statue of a crab out in front of it. With the sky getting ready to open up we were fortunate enough to get an inside table after a short wait.

[singlepic id=19 w=320 h=240 float=right]The food at ‘the seafood restaurant’ is great, and not that expensive. We filled the table with selections, and the total was only 1400 baht for four plus one child. (about $46.00 USD) We had a hot and sour seafood (shrimp, squid, fish, etc) soup, stir fried seafood with glass noodles, steamed mussels, oysters on the half shell, gigantic prawns, grilled squid, curry crab, and some other dishes I can’t place on the other side of the table.

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We ended up eating through two separate rain squalls. By the time we finished, the roads were still wet, but it was no longer raining.

To get to ‘the seafood restaurant’ go out to Beach Road in Jomtien, and head south. The Soi numbers will be increasing. About Soi 15 or 16, the road will narrow. Keep going down Beach Road. Maybe around Soi 22 (at a guess) the paved road will turn into a dirt road. You are almost there. Look for a giant crab on the left side of the road. That’s the restaurant.[singlepic id=23 w=320 h=240 float=center]