Sunday, August 2, 2015

Feedback from Juergen

Thank you to Jurgen for your nice feedback at Tripadvisor!



 
Reviewed August 1, 2015

Ich komme immer wieder, um mit Franks Leuten tauchen zu gehen, hier stimmt einfach alles. Das Boot ist sehr komfortabel, hat jede menge Liegemöglichkeiten auch auf Deck.

Service ist super, die Crew ist nett und hilfsbereit, Technik auf dem neuesten Stand, Essen perfekt - was will man mehr. Frank bietet auch Ein-Tages-Touren per Speedboot an, auch das habe ich schon mehrmals gemacht und viel Spaß dabei gehabt. Weiter so!

Jürgen
Visited March 2015

Koh Phayam at Ranong in Thailand

Diving from Koh Phayam at Ranong

Since many years we pick up our guests at Ranong, Koh Chang and Koh Phayam for liveaboard diving to the Surin- and Similan Islands...


Location of Koh Phayam

The small island Koh Phayam is situated in Ranong Province in Thailand. It is the second largest island of the province (the largest being Koh Chang, which lies in near distance to Koh Phayam). Many describe Koh Payam as a last treasure, some compare Koh Phayam to Koh Samui in the seventies.



Is it Koh Phayam or Koh Payam?

Sometimes you'll find the name of the island written as Koh Payam, sometimes it's written as Koh Payam, Ko Payam or Ko Phayam, but the same island is meant here.

How to get to Koh Phayam?

You can reach the island Koh Phayam via boat, which depart regularly every day day from the island pier at Ranong. You can choose to take the slow boat (traveling time approximately 2 hrs) or to take a speedboat (traveling time approximately 30 min).

 

Accommodation at Koh Phayam

At Koh Phayam island you'll find lots of resorts. You'll have the choice between basic simple huts, varying moderate cosy bungalows and more luxurious villas. If you need some help with finding the right place for you, just let us know. We'll be happy to help you finding your right spot on the island.

Dining at Koh Phayam

At Koh Payam you'll find some lovely restaurants offering great food. We recommend you to try the dishes with cashew nuts, which are a local product of the island. The cashews are hand picked each year during the month February. The new harvest is yearly celebrated during the Cashew Nut festival.

Aladdin Dive Safari's dive shop at Koh Phayam

You can find our dive shop at Koh Phayam at the Crossroad, just at the intersection before the entrance to the beach of Ao Yai Bay.



Getting around in Koh Phayam

Ko Phayam has no roads suitable for automobiles, thus motorbikes are the chief means of transport. You can rent a motor bike at and near our dive shop and also at the pier. You'll find also many motor bikes taxis available at Koh Phayam island. Take care on the motorbike: tracks and trails are narrow at the island!

Beaches of Koh Phayam island

The biggest beach of Koh Phayam is called Ao Ya Bay. This beach is about 3km long and offers great views during sunset time. Ao Kao Kwai, or translated as Buffalo Bay is much smaller then Ao Yai Bay and is also definitely worth a visit. At both beaches you can find nice accommodation.


Sunday, July 19, 2015

Feedback from Joachim

Thank you to Joachim for your nice feedback at Tripadvisor!


 
Reviewed July 15, 2015

I did 2 trips with them to Surin and Similan Isands and to Hin Daeng/Hin Muang. Wow, I had such a good time in all respects. The boat is very nice, has very comfortable cabins with aircon or fan, shower and toilets and very nice places to spend time together. Food all over the day, good company with Frank, Dani and Isa. They know the areas so good, showed me in this two trips more than in my entire dive history...Whale Shark, Manta Rays, Reef Sharks, Turtles, Seahorses, Ghostpipes, and more...The water was also flat and the visibility amazing.
I will come back! Good value for what you get!

Visited March 2015
 

Tuesday, July 7, 2015

New website!

We've got a new website!

Check it out at https://www.aladdindivesafari.com! The site is also made for viewing on tablets and phones, let us know if you would have any issues when viewing the site!

 More info about the dive sites

We've added lots of info about the dive sites in Thailand and Burma. Read about lots of dive sites we visit, like Black Rock (a very remote dive site within the Mergui Archipelago of Burma), Koh Bon (dive site at the Similan Islands Nationa Marine Park in Thailand, where you can see very often manta rays!), about Richelieu Rock (one of the top dive sites in the world!), about Koh Tachai (known for spotting manta rays and whale sharks) and many more dive sites.

Read more about diving at the Surin National Marine Park, about diving at the Similan National Marine Park, about diving in Southern Thailand at Koh Phi Phi and at the dive sites Hin Daeng, Hin Muang and Koh Ha, about liveaboard diving around Phuket, and of course about liveaboard diving at the Mergui Archipelago in Myanmar (Burma).

Lots of new photos

We've added numerous new photos within the Photo Galery from the boat and from our latest liveaboard dive tours. Thanks to all our guests who always contribute with beautiful stunning photos during their participation on our liveaboard dive tours!

Let's go diving!

Of course you can find within our new website our schedule for the upcoming dive season 2015-2016 too! No time for diving in the upcoming season? You'll find also the schedules for the seasons 2016-2017 and 2017-2018 within our new site!


Have a look at the new website of Aladdin Dive Safari!

Tuesday, June 9, 2015

Diving at Hin Daeng in Southern Thailand

Liveaboard diving at Hin Daeng

During our Southern Dive Safari we visit also one of our favorite dive sites, called Hin Daeng. This dive site is closely situated to another great dive site Hin Muang.

About diving at Hin Daeng in Southern Thailand

Hin Daeng protrudes about 3 meters above the water, but below, it drops straight down to 60+ meters on the southern side. The dive site got it's name from the beautiful red corals that populate most of the dive site.

The south western side drops to over 60 meters, creating a steep wall of soft corals. Leopard sharks are often seen in this area. The eastern side has the best soft coral growth and two ridges that slope gently into deeper water. Jacks hang out often close to the rock.

In shallower areas moray eels are commonly found hiding in cracks in the rock face. Hin Daeng is also good for critters such as nudibranchs, cowrie shells and various species of shrimps.

During the end of the season, we usually have a good chance to see here whale sharks or manta rays.

Read more about diving in Southern Thailand and about the Southern Dive Safari.

Here you can find our schedule for the next dive seasons:
 
The route of the Southern Dive Safari with Aladdin Dive Safari

Thursday, April 2, 2015

About the Surin Islands

Surin National Marine Park in Thailand

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Surin Island National Park, Thailand
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surin_Islands

About the Surin Islands

The Surin National Marine Park (Thai: หมู่เกาะสุรินทร์, Thai pronunciation: [mùː kɔ̀ʔ sùʔrin]) is an archipelago of five islands of the Andaman Sea, 55 km from the Thai mainland. Administratively, the islands are part of Tambon Ko Phra Thong, Amphoe Khura Buri, in Phang Nga Province, Thailand.

Mu Ko  Surin National Marine Park (อุทยานแห่งชาติหมู่เกาะสุรินทร์) encompasses the islands and their surrounding waters. The park is home to one of the most famous dive sites in the world, Richelieu Rock. In addition the islands feature pristine reefs, making it home to some of the best snorkeling in Thailand.

Geography

The five islands are Ko Surin Nuea, Ko Surin Tai, Ko Ri, Ko Kai, and Ko Klang, with Ko Surin Nuea and Ko Surin Tai being the two main islands of the group. The Thai-Burmese oceanic border is a few kilometers north of the park. Christie Island, Burma's southernmost point, lies 18 km to the north of Ko Surin Nuea and about 100 km to the south is Mu Koh Similan National Marine Park.

"Surin Island National Park, Thailand" by User:Manop - I'm the owner taking this photo.. Licensed under CC BY 2.5 via Wikimedia Commons - https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Surin_Island_National_Park,_Thailand.jpg#/media/File:Surin_Island_National_Park,_Thailand.jpg

Sunday, March 1, 2015

Koh Chang near Ranong - from the 90's till today

Koh Chang from the 90's till today

 

Our first visit to the island in the 90's

Back in the 90's, during a first visit to Koh Chang island, things were all different and quite adventurous compared to today. There was basically only one resort, Cashew Resort, which had just been opened for a short time. Cashew Resort offered at that time 5 basic bamboo bungalows and a small cosy laid-back restaurant close to the beach.

The owner of the resort had some special arrangements with his friend in Ranong, who had a boat to bring us to the island. We met up in the friends' restaurant in Ranong and from there we started the long but beautiful boat drive to the island. The drive was like a fairytale, we had to pass numerous islands, an amazing view throughout the ocean.

During the stay at the island, the brother of the very friendly owner of Cashew Resort gave a tour around the island, including visiting the almost top of the hill of the biggest mountain of the island. A panoramic view of which several shots were made with an analog camera. Candles and starry skies gave light to the nights: there was no electrical on the island. All in all it was definitely a place to come back again.

Starting up the dive shop

In 1999/2000 we returned to Koh Chang and started our dive shop at the very same resort, Cashew Resort. Cashew Resort had by that time about 15 bungalows and would renew the restaurant short time after. The candles in the night were still used, but now also a generator was used to give lights to the bungalow- and restaurant visitors in the nightly hours. Longtail boats now ran fairly scheduled between Ranong and Koh Chang island, though sometimes you still may had to wait a while for the taxi boats to arrive. Besides Cashew Resort, quite some resorts had opened up in the meantime, like Sunset Bungalows, Contex Bungalows, Golden Bee Bungalows and Changtong Resort.

Koh Chang in 2015

Nowadays you'll find quite some accommodation at Koh Chang island. Along the main bay, Aow Yai Beach, you'll find resorts starting with Longbeach Bungalows at the west side of the bay to Crocodile Rock Resort at the east side of the bay. In between you can find basic bungalows, fancy bungalows and more expensive bungalows. A mini market offers all your basic needs on the island. Little restaurants give you the possibility to try another taste during your stay. Tracks and trails into the island invite for a long walk. Some years ago, a lake was dredged, which gives nowadays a nice possibility to enjoy a swim in sweet water on the island. A speedboat runs since 2015 every day during the high season from the island to Ranong and vice versa. For those who like to enjoy the authenticate rides to the island: longtail taxi boats are still the most common transport between the island and the main land. Koh Chang has developed over the last 20 years, but managed to stay a beautiful island in the Andaman Sea, where locals maintain the good vibes of authentic island living in Thailand.     

Saturday, February 14, 2015

About Boxfishes (Trunkfishes)

About Boxfishes (Trunkfishes)

Scientific classification

Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Tetraodontiformes
Family: Ostraciidae

Ostraciidae is a family of squared, bony fish belonging to the order Tetraodontiformes, closely related to the pufferfishes and filefishes. Fish in the family are known variously as boxfishes, cofferfishes, cowfishes and trunkfishes. It contains about 23 extant species in 6 extant genera.

 

Commonly seen during diving in the Andaman Sea

Boxfishes, or also called Trunkfishes, are commonly found throughout the Andaman Sea. We can see them during virtually every dive site and often see several types of Boxfishes during the dives.

About the Boxfish

Boxfishes are solitary animals and are rather rectangular in cross-section with a downward pointed small mouth with thick lips: their teeth are cone-shaped. The eyes are placed high on the head, which is large on the short body. These fishes have quite a whimsical appearance. Cowfish add to this illusion by having a pair of very bovine horns above their eyes.

They have a toxic mucous covering, to which they add under stress. This toxin can kill other fish and, in the confines of an aquarium, can kill the trunkfish itself, which is not immune for its own poison. When this toxic mucus is released from the fish, it quickly dissolves in the environment and negatively affects any fish in the surrounding area.

Boxfishes eat worms, sponges, molluks and algae.

Males have harems and defend large territories. Boxfishes are hermaphroditic (organisms that have reproductive organs normally associated with both male and female sexes), with females maturing first and later becoming males.

The Yellow Boxfish

The Boxfishes almost every diver likes most to see, is the Yellow Boxfish. This fish is very much box-shaped and when juvenile, it can has the size of 2 matchboxes and is bright yellow in color, with a little black dotted pattern. As it ages, the brightness fades and very old specimens will have blue-grey coloration with faded yellow.

Inspiration for Mercedes-Benz

Mercedes-Benz bionic car by Ryan Somma
In 2006, Mercedes-Benz unveiled its Bionic concept car, which was inspired by the shape of the yellow boxfish. It was assumed that due to the extreme agility with which boxfish maneuver, that their shape was aerodynamic and self stabilizing. However, analysis by scientists suggests that boxfish agility is instead due to the combination of an aerodynamically unstable body and the manner in which the fish use their fins for movement.


Sources:
  • Aladdin Dive Safari
  • Robert Sklar Cogen
  • Wikipedia