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The Off Season, a great time to come to Thailand!
"Phuket in August! It's monsoon season! Why go all that way for rain?" When learning that we were returning to
Thailand
's tropical island, this time in off-season, our cynical world traveling friend slowly shook his head. "You're making a big mistake," he warned.
We arrived in Phuket in the evening and the night was a sauna; the hour-long taxi ride to the southwest of the island revealed many roadside puddles. About fifteen minutes before arriving at our hotel, the rain started again and the taxi's wiper blades slapped furiously. In the rear view mirror the driver smiled at two sullen jet-lagged passengers, each remembering our friend's admonition.
At reception, we were cautioned about swimming in the sea, "It is very dangerous during monsoon season. Please use the pools." Outside, the downpour overflowed eaves troughs; the sidewalks flowed like rivers. Then, abruptly, the rain stopped. "Tomorrow will be sunny," the porter smiled unconvincingly, as he showed us our room. We noted the umbrellas near the door.
From the balcony we could hear the heave and crash of fierce waves in the torrid darkness. Our sleep was filled with monsoon-haunted angst.
The morning sun rose over the mountainous jungle to the east of our hotel and the Andaman Sea to the west. With the fresh sweet smell of flowers in the air, breakfast in the open air dining room was ever so tropical! Just like home! (NOT)
By 9 AM, we were on the beach, sea-foam searching out our feet, our monsoon worries melting in the sunshine. Soon we were lost in the mad antics of the sideways scuttling sand crabs and lulled by the seas rhythm. Between each waves unfurling smash and seething retreat, there was a silence, and for a moment, the air whined with the electric buzz of cicadas.
We were located on Kata Noi Beach separated from big sister Kata Beach by a rocky promontory, The Kata Noi hotel is without doubt the most environmentally conscious hotel on the island. Every morning there was a cleanup crew of men and women, all hotel employees in the uniforms of their respective duties. Chefs, porters, reception workers, waiters and waitresses walk the beach with rakes and containers, removing the tides detritus.
There are no jet skis, no water skiers, banana tubes or Para sailors pulled by roaring high powered motor boats; such activities are considered by the management as sources of noise, air, water, and visual pollution.
The tranquility of Kata Noi Beach is reflected by the few shops and restaurants in town. Kata Beach, a short tuk-tuk ride away or 20 min walk has a bit more hustle-bustle. There are many restaurants, including quite a few small eateries many of which specialize in German, French and Italian fare; there are boutiques, pubs, internet bars, tailors offering made to measure suits at cut rate prices, bars and many shops and street stalls where vendors will not let you pass without inviting you into their stores or to peruse their displays.
It was at Kata Beach that happenstance brought us to The Boathouse Wine and Grill; subsequent visits were deliberate. It was difficult not to return to what is undoubtedly the finest restaurant in Phuket and one that has a growing well-deserved international reputation. Although it boasted a world class wine cellar with 360 labels from most wine-producing countries, and although the service was friendly, helpful, attentive and choreographed, it was the food, prepared under the auspices of the charismatic executive chef that brought us back again and again.
"I would describe the cuisine as Eurasian," the ever smiling chef explained. "I use French recipes combined with Asian flavors." The chef makes annual visits to different European regions and returns with new methods of preparation; he then incorporates a distinct Thai flavor with herbs, spices, and vegetables. The resulting synthesis is an exquisite taste that is sure to be savored again in memory.
The restaurant is in The Boathouse, a prestigious boutique hotel with thirty-three rooms and three suites that is owned and operated by noted architect M.L. Tridhosyuth Devakul. Known locally as Mom Tri, he not only designed The Boathouse, but also Le Meridien and Club Med on the island. Also managed by The Boathouse is the adjacent Lobster Square, a small group of specialty shops, galleries.
We were on the beach terrace of The Gung Café at sunset. Photographers clicked madly as the pale sun sank below the horizon, tinting the grey sky with splashes of yellow. Monsoon sunsets, however, are wily and mischievous; while some photographers walked away, unimpressed, the sky and sea flared orange and then erupted in crimson. The scarlet show was ephemeral; in a moment all was dark, the spell broken.
Karon Beach, where I had stayed five years ago, was barely recognizable; development has transformed a laid-back village into a bustling town. New hotels, condos, boutiques, malls, restaurants, and open air bars are sprawling back from the coastal road, usurping or hiding what used to be. Such is progress; such is success. The beach here, however, is definitely the best on the island; the white sand is as soft and fine as powder, crunching and squeaking as you walk on it.
At a beach restaurant during a lunch of tom yam goong - the popular Thai soup of rich broth, prawns, coriander, lemon grass, tamarind juice, shallots, lemon leaves, and chili peppers - a bird landed on top of my bottle of Singha beer. After belting out an a cappella tune, it bent its head and awaited a food tip, obviously having played this gig before.
As we crunched our way from the restaurant, the waitress came running after us. Although Thai restaurants routinely add tax and service, we had left a small additional tip that she interpreted as forgotten money. When she realized our intent, she beamed, and after a graceful wai, bowing with hands held together as if in prayer, she ran back, the sand squeaking.
Patong Beach, only fifteen years ago, was a tranquil Muslim fishing village. Now it is a hectic, sprawling, raffish, sometimes vulgar, always interesting honky-tonk of a town. Patong is a carnival, a circus, a zoo that can be experienced in microcosm in any of the busy open-air bars.
Along with a growing expat community, there is a large Hindu and Muslim presence as well as crowds of tourists who either do not know it is monsoon season or could not care less. Those same visitors also no doubt have briefly wondered why so many young Thai girls prefer much older foreign boyfriends.
The many seafood restaurants exhibit their freshly caught fare in small boats filled with ice; Phuket lobsters, rock lobsters, the largest prawns we've ever seen, red snapper, sea bass, squid and oysters are on display, awaiting your selection and cooking instructions.
Shopping in the hundreds of shops and stalls along the streets and alleys can be a delight or wearying depending on your tolerance for the monotonous imploring of desperation-driven vendors. Like side show barkers, they attempt to weave a spell: "Where you from? Where you staying? Where you go? First time in Phuket? How long you stay? Look at my shop. Very cheap price for you. I can discount. Look! Look! Cheap price!" The incantation becomes a refrain as you wander past the cajoling, beseeching sellers.
The haggling ritual can soon become tedious as feverish merchants enact the timeless bargaining drama performed on countless street stages.
"Where you want to go?" It’s the same line used by the tuk-tuk drivers who line the main drag of all tourist towns. After negotiating the fare, we left the town. After a short tour we bounced and sputtered into the blackness of the sultry night, our lives in the hands of a speed demon, ever grinning tuk-tuk driver.
A popular and very interesting side trip is to Phang Nga Bay on the mainland to view the remarkable limestone islands, some of which jut vertically over 900 feet. Declared a national park in 1981, the bay is sheltered and the waters are calm even during the southwest monsoon season. Sightseers tour the bay in long-tailed boats; powered by car engines adapted to drive a propeller at the end of a long shaft, these boats carry about forty passengers who sit right at the water line.
The boats roar through the olive colored waters, past mangrove swamps, through eerie grottoes dripping with stalactites, and around some of the 120 towering verdant islands where the elements seem to have been influenced by Salvador Dali in creating grotesque patterns in the limestone.
The major destination of the fleet of the tourist laden long-tailed boats is the striking Khao Tapoo, known locally as James Bond Island since it was a locale in "The Man With The Golden Gun" filmed here almost four decades ago. Most boats unload at a nearby island, which is usually teeming with sightseers. Here there are many souvenir stands selling seashells, T-shirts, ersatz pearl jewelry and other tourist trinkets. Dried fish, considered a delicacy by the Japanese tourists, is also sold; the strong smell permeates the entire island.
We took the afternoon tour but it was too overcast for a sunset; on our return, a brief rain shower filled the bay with haze. The islands stood like ghostly sentinels in the mists and fading light.
On another sunny, sweltering morning on Kata Noi beach, a vendor with an attaché case full of knock off designer watches pointed far out to sea at the bank of black clouds. "No business for me this afternoon," he lamented, shaking his head.
At noon, the deluge started. From our balcony, we watched the wind-racked palms bending in the lashing torrents. The unseen seas thundering anger was barely audible as the rain dropped like spears.
The storm provided an opportunity to write a few postcards, including one to our skeptical, monsoon-warning friend. His card was succinct and truthful: "It's pouring rain." We could already hear his smug, "I told you so."
Three hours later, the longest storm of our stay became a light shower and then the sun blazed. We sloshed and splashed like five year olds through knee-deep rapidly evaporating puddles. There were rainbows everywhere.

Peak Season vs. Low Season: Two Very Different Experiences in Thailand
With the streets of Kata and Patong, Phuket so packed. Maneuvering through all the motorbikes, people, and food stalls keeps you busy enough to forget where you were walking to in the first place. The beach reminded me of spring break in Miami. There are more foreigners in this area than Thai locals.
While I sat at a Internet café, I overheard a woman with her family ask a street tour agency if there were any beaches that were less crowded. The lady laughed and told her there really aren’t many options for her. The woman asked if Phi Phi was any less crowded. The lady continued to laugh. The woman didn’t want to believe her and repeated the question if there really wasn’t any beaches she could go to with her family that were less crowded. She got the same answer.
One year I traveled through Thailand during the low season months of July and August. I’m back in Thailand during the highest possible season during the months of December and January. There’s high season and then there’s peak season within the high season. (It’s Nuts) I feel like traveling in Banff or Lake Louise.
Low Season
- Bargaining anything was much easier than peak season.
- I felt people were more honest for my money.
- More of a relaxed atmosphere in places that are otherwise crowded.
- The locals are also more relaxed.
- Wasn’t rejected as many times from bargaining taxi rides.
- Streets were less nuts.
- Less line up for everything.
- The bars of Kata/Patong have less people.
Peak Season
- Prices for accommodation sky-rocketed. Sometimes 50% to 100% more.
- You have to book in advance or otherwise risk paying an extremely high price for a room you did not want. We have a few hotels that we book that are off the main roads.
- Nai Han Beach is my favorite beach for its desertedness but when I came back during the peak season, it was difficult to even find a spot to sit on the beach. You have to get to the beach by 10 am.
- When I arrived without a booked accommodation, some destinations took hours to find accommodation.
- I was rejected several times by taxis when bargaining because they know they could set a higher price from someone else and make their time worth it.
- It requires more time to find the less crowded areas.
While peak season does not mean the destination is any less amazing, it can impact our perspective of a destination when there are too many tourists. Travel has this weird thing of making places seem like there is less to see because of the amount of people that are there.
Many people are concerned about the rain during the low season. In my personal experience, it wasn’t much different in the low season than the peak season. In fact, I got more sun in the low season. I may have just been lucky though.
Overall, I think the low season is much better time to travel to Thailand. I’ll take my chances of a few showers rather than overcrowded attractions and highly priced accommodations.
High Season: October till April
Peak Season: December and January
Low Season: May till September
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