Here’s a hodge-podge post about Ko Pha Ngan. We’ve been working and exploring this little island for the last three weeks, but our time here, sadly, is about to come to an end. This is a kind of highlight reel.
First and foremost we’ve been working, volunteering, WWOOFING, for a couple of guys who are building a luxury eco resort. They’ve got a million ideas, and we were set to work (mostly independently) on a few projects – two of them took up the majority of our time:
Our other big project was kind of ambitious, and probably not very well thought through. One of the luxury bungalows was almost complete, and eventually there would be a private infinity pool attached to its deck. Right now, however, there wasn’t enough cash in the war chest to create this infinity pool, and so Guillaume had the idea of hanging a huge safety net from the deck, and attaching it to the surrounding trees to act as a gargantuan hammock-thing. He showed us the net, gave us some steel cable and fasteners, gave us a tyre (so the steel cable wouldn’t damage the trees), and then went to Bangkok for a week, leaving us to it.
No, we didn’t really know what we were doing. No, we didn’t really have proper equipment (you’d need a trained monkey to hang some of those cables – to operate the cherry picker). No, we have no idea what the safety regulations are in Thailand for this sort of thing.
Thus:
Other than working, we mostly drove around finding amazing places to eat.
And when we weren’t eating or working or sleeping, we entertained Maja.
I finally got behind a drum kit again, during a jam night at a bar called ‘One Love’. That’s right. Hippies. Hippy beach jam. Filthy children running about. Poorly executed ‘funk-lite’ tunes that lasted far too long. Band members that didn’t make any eye contact with each other (with the exception of one balding guitarist). Admittedly, it was really fun while it lasted.
And lastly, when we weren’t really doing anything useful, we were gaping at the breathtaking scenery around the island.
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Cementing the pit of a very old man
The Sapa Valley’s Bamboo Bar
Accidentally teaching English
Beautiful! I’m hoping to get a chance to try WWOOFing here, though my complete failure at keeping plants alive and a minor fear of spiders mean I’m the worst person to even try..
We sometimes walk down the jungle path from the road to our house at night with head torches. One evening Caroline noticed little glowing dots everywhere on the ground, illuminated in our torchlight like bicycle reflectors. She bent down to see what was causing the reflection. Spider eyes.
If you touch you index finger and thumb together to make a circle, that circle is smaller than these spiders were.
But that’s here. I think Italian spiders are too busy gesturing wildly and cooking tomato sauce to bother people. You should definitely try WWOOFing!