Showing posts with label sunset. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sunset. Show all posts

Thursday, May 15, 2014

Missing Barcelona sky

Usually just a backdrop for more attention-deserving subjects, the sky is so underrated. Time to bring the background into the limelight, it oh so deserves it.

This series is a product of a day-long skywatching, a day-long awe and astonishment with the breathtaking transformations on the blue canvas.




















Thursday, February 9, 2012

Thailand: Good Luck for You. - Day 9 (Ao Nang and Railay Beach)

The Peninsula is even greener than the islands, meaning both land and water. The road cutting into mangrove swamps, followed by selva between the mountains leads to Ao Nang, a small coastal town in the Krabi province. We got there in a colorful wooden songthaew. Its driver was a typical Thai man - short, tanned, with just a couple of hairs sprouting from his upper lip and scarce long hairs right beneath the chin. He first called out desperately for people going to Ao Nang and then stuffed all the white sardines into the truck (the truck’s physical capacity didn’t matter much). An already usual procedure was to stop in the middle of the way and nowhere and trying to figure out where everyone was going. It turned out more than half of the present didn’t have an idea and were immediately kindly provided with suggestions. The fun part though started when English-speaking people pronounced in an oh-so-English way the absolutely not English-sounding place & hotel names and usually got 2 possible answers:’ Eh????’ or ‘ No no!’ The most reassuring was to see the driver recognize your place name and give you an outrageous kind of smiles, with the teeth in his mouth pointing in all directions.
Ao Nang, however, is not a sort of place where you can get lost easily, as it’s virtually (without understatement) two perpendicular roads, one of which runs along the beach. That’s pretty much a typical Thai place.
Coming to Ao Nang, I realized that apparently the only buildings with proper walls can be mostly seen in hotels and 7elevens, while here too, regular Thais apparently live in makeshift(-looking) hovels.
Something different about this town was a new kind of tuk-tuk, which, unlike those in Bangkok and in the North, are normal motorbikes with a sidecar to fit up to 4 people or, if needed easily convertible into a footstall!

The most beautiful beach isn’t exactly in Ao Nang, but on a small peninsula not far away, called Railay Beach. It’s just a 15-minute ride in a longtail boat to reach the western part, lined up with seemingly expensive resorts. From where you can take a kayak to the eastern part and relax on a lovely virgin beach and marvel extraordinary limestone cliffs.

Haeding to Railay Beach

West Railay


Tropical shower

East Railay

CRAB ART

Finally, Ao Nang is without doubt a great place to see the sunset or walk along the monkey path on the side of a mountain right on the beach.

Sunday, February 5, 2012

Thailand: Good Luck for You. - Day 7 (Koh Phi Phi Lei & Co.)

Today we finally got to discover the long-longed-for postcard-style (wait, this is where those postcards come from!) places. We took a boat to go around little islands and Phi Phi beaches. The first two stops included an absolutely calm and tranquil paradise of Bamboo Island, and an inaccessible but beautifully shaped Mosquito island (I guess no need to explain how it got its name). I had enough luck to get stung by a jellyfish. But it wasn’t as bad. Phew…


Bamboo Island


We later made a stopover at the famous white-sand Monkey beach, surrounded by rocks ‘sawn’ by the waves at the bottom. Logically enough, it gets its name because of the presence of the monkeys, so loved by the tourists who, despite all friendly advice and numerous caution signs, still keep feeding the creatures and get regularly bitten. It turned out this place was just perfect for snorkeling: it was the first time I saw some many beautiful marine life up so close and sea urchins and corals right below my feet!
A couple more beaches and we finally reach the famous Maya bay at the Koh Phi Phi Leh island. Too famous now. As it happens with far too many beautiful things…

Floating in the water not far the beach watching the sun going down, the picture got complete when a boat passed by having ‘THE BEACH’ soundtrack heard all around. 



On return to Koh Phi Phi the best end of the day was to discover a nice ‘Hippies Bar’ with shisha, cocktails, mats instead of chairs together with a small stage for live music and an awesome fire show! What can be better than to lie down with a drink on a beach at night and watch the stars?


Monday, October 10, 2011

silence

that's when beauty silently takes your breath away.  sweet dreams