While this first experience at Sail Rock did win us over, we decided to wait two more days before our next pair of dives. The first day was a beach day; we basically just relaxed at the beach and on the porch of our beachfront bungalow (pictured above). For the second day, in light of our realization that we were still all miraculously under budget, we decided to take it up a notch and move back into the slightly more expensive but much more luxurious hotel that I mentioned in my last post. This turned out to be a fortuitous decision for me, because out of no where I seemed to lose hearing in my right ear for the entire day. I was a little bit concerned that this may have been due to a middle ear infection, since I had suffered from an outer ear infection in my right ear earlier in the trip (thank goodness antibiotics do not require a prescription in Thailand!). Either way, Jess and I indulged in a movie day (thanks to our hotel's cable TV), and I rested the day away, hoping that my participation in our planned dives the next day would not be compromised.
Dawn came abruptly and despite the fact that my ear did not feel 100% yet, I decided to give the dives a shot (for those of you who are not scuba divers, the concern with any ear/nose/throat affliction while diving is that it may inhibit your ability to equalize the increasing pressure experienced during a descent, possibly resulting in a busted ear drum). However, I had a strong feeling that if I did not go on this dive I would regret it.
Once we got to Sail Rock, we saddled up with high hopes for a great dive--hopes were especially high because the Half Moon Party on the south end of the island took place the night before. This translated to the number of divers at the site being decreased 5-fold, likely due to hangovers or worse conditions suffered by 90% of the island's tourist population. We welcomed this much more intimate setting, as can be told by the pre-dive photo below, with our divermaster Gabriel on the far left.
After the dive, we realized how lucky we really were, when Gabriel explained to us that this was the first whale shark he'd seen all year, a man with an average of 10 dives a week at Sail Rock. We definitely left the dive site with a sense of accomplishment. What a great way to end our time in Thailand!
But time is not up just yet. Tomorrow we finally leave for Bangkok, which means we have to say goodbye to Haad Yao beach and the island of Koh Phangan. We will definitely miss it, but I have high hopes for our four days in the city.
I will keep you posted, and thanks to those of you who kept your fingers crossed--it paid off!
Mike
1 comment:
Encounter with highly abnormal shark-like fish! Ten meters in length! Irregular markings! I tagged it dorsally with a homing dart!
...South was eaten!
Swallowed whole?
No...chewed!
^Glad this didn't happen. But that is pretty incredible. My jealousy meter continues to reach staggering levels each time I come to this blog. Cheers, friends.
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