Saturday, January 4, 2014

Elephant rides and cave kayaking!

A belated Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to all!

I had a very eventful holidays... and I got a great Christmas present! My parents turned up late at night Christmas Day, so we postponed Christmas and celebrated on the 26th. We tried to cram as much Thailand fun as we could into the week they were here, and we were pretty damn successful.

It started out with elephant riding and ATV riding. We drove ATV/dune buggy type vehicles up one of the mountains to see big Buddha and along the way did some serious 4-wheel driving. Mom and Dad were in one and Mike and I were in the other. I let Mike drive the first leg, which may have been poor decision making on my part, since Mike doesn't drive 4-wheeled vehicles. I understand my parents fear of teaching me to drive!! He does much better on a scooter. But we survived, dusty and bounced around. After that we headed up to the elephant camp!

Mom and Dad on their elephant! 

Elephant family photo! 



There was also a baby elephant named Lucy at the elephant camp... we bought bananas to feed her and took some photos as well... but those were on Mom's camera. When she hugged you, she wrapped her trunk around your head and made very silly fart noises on your neck. I'm glad Mom went first, so we got to see her scream a little bit and were more prepared! Riding the elephants was really cool. We had a bit of a wander around the camp, and contrary to the photos, our elephants did have drivers. But at one stage I did get to sit on his head and walk around while our elephant driver was on the ground. Mom and Mike also had a chance to try elephant-head-sitting, but Dad wasn't so game for the idea! 

Our next days adventure took us out on the high seas! We booked a sea kayaking and caving adventure that turned out to be a lot of fun. The best part was, just like the elephants, we had a kayak driver as well! It was the best kayaking I've even done! I didn't have to paddle once! It was a beautiful area up north of Phuket. The first cave took us into a protected lagoon area only accessable by the one small cave.
Entering Cave #1
We spent about an hour paddling around looking at the wildlife and gorgeous rock formations. We saw monitor lizards, lots of birds including a hornbill! The cliffs were amazing and the photos don't do them justice.
Pretty cliffs and islands!
Our second cave, they warned us, was going to be darker and smaller than the first and may require that we lay down at one stage to make sure we can make it into the next hidden lagoon. They certainly weren't joking. The second cave's entrance was about as big as the first, but it quickly got much much darker. There was a sizable family of bats living in the cave as well. When we got to the other end of the cave, we thought it was a dead end. The other opening of the cave was so small, our inflatable kayaks had to be partly deflated and we had to lay on the bottom. The ceiling of the opening was nearly touching my face.

Mom and Dad sqeezing out of the tiny cave opening

We spent some time exploring this secret lagoon as well and saw a couple of monkeys running around. During this time, unknown to us, the tide was slowly rising. We nearly didn't make it back through the cave! Our kayak had to be so deflated that we started taking on water and when we got halfway through the opening, I had to inch-worm my way through to get to the more open area. A couple people chose to get out of their kayaks and just swim through, but my parents made it through the same as Mike and I did! We survived the cave!

Mike and I also showed my parents the chaos of Phi Phi Island. We spent one night out there. The first day we took a tour of some of the beaches around, including Monkey Beach, where the monkeys stole my Pringles. We took Mom and Dad to the nightly fire shows on the beach as well as the amateur boxing ring in one of the bars, but I couldn't talk Dad into signing up (not enough beer, I think). The next day we did two dives in the morning on some of the local sites nearby. We had some pretty eventful dives... no sharks like we were promised, but some cuttlefish, a turtle, lots of scorpionfish and nudibranchs. And it's always lots of fun to dive with my parents. Since I got certified at such a young age, most of the diving we've done together my parents have been more worried about me, but now that I've become an instructor, the tables have turned! Now I'm checking up on them! We had some great dives and got back to Phi Phi just in time to get lunch and catch our ferry back to Patong.

We spent New Years Eve day recovering from all the fun we'd been having. Lots of early morning tours and late nights of drinking, we were pretty beat. So we lounged around all day like bums to prepare to New Years Eve. New Years in Patong was hectic! We had dinner and then went down to the beach for the fireworks, it was packed and there was a DJ just on the beach so their was some silly drunken dancing. My dad initiated Mike into the family by waltzing with him. Mike hasn't run screaming yet, so I think he wasn't too scarred. We light off paper lanterns over the sea for good luck in the New Year. My parents retired shortly after the countdown and midnight fireworks, so Mike and I ventured down infamous Bangla Road... the home of all debauchery in Phuket. It was pure chaos. There was silly string everywhere and I spent most of the night picking it out of my hair, but it was definitely a wild place to be for New Years.

Unfortunately Mom and Dad had to leave us late at night on New Years Day, but not before first taking a ladyboy show. It was a cabaret show with only men in the cast, but you would never know it by looking at them. Many of them have had lots and lots of plastic surgery and look more beautiful than some Thai women. Case in point, Dad didn't realize they were all originally men until AFTER the show.

It was sad to see my parents go, but we had a really awesome week and I'm so glad they were able to come out to Thailand and explore this crazy place with me!

Now, as soon as my parents left, Mike and I had to go on a border run. His visa was up on the 3rd and mine expired on the 6th, so we decided to go together so we were on the same schedule. We booked a visa run with a company that organizes millions of these things, but that doesn't mean they explained what was happening to us. We got on a minibus with six other expats and drove about 5 hours to the border of Thailand and Myanmar. When we got there, we were met by about 10 other minibuses full of people. We got in line and they took our passports off of us and ran away. What? Where are you going with those? Come back! Meanwhile, we waited in line for AGES until they finally brought our passports back... they had been photocopying them to help expedite the process later on, apparently. They laughed at all our pictures. We waited in line forever and ever and ever and were stamped out of the country. We were then supposed to climb on a boat and motor over to Myanmar. We were literally climbing. There wasn't a proper dock, so we were climbing over all the longtail boats and other ferrys stacked in like sardines. When we got on the boat, they stole our passports AGAIN without telling us why or where they were going with them. It was rather stressful. I've found I get separation anxiety when my passports not in my hand. We puttered over to Myanmar (or Burma, whatever you'd like to call it), about a thirty minute drive. When we got their we were ushered in to the immigration room (literally just a room on the dock) and had our passports stamped again and handed back. We then had ten minutes to wander around before we went back to Thailand. Let me tell you, my Myanmar experience was very extensive, haha! We went back to Thailand, walked over 47 more longtail boats, got stamped back in to the country and finally all piled back into the minibus for another 5 hour drive. All that for another month on the visa! Phew!

Hopefully we'll be spending that month working! Today we took another long bus ride and a ferry over to Ko Samui in the Gulf of Thailand on the other coast. We're going to start seriously looking for work, since Phi Phi and Ko Lanta didn't pan out so well. We're on Ko Samui for a couple days before heading over to the dive mecca, Ko Tao, where there are about 40 dive shops on a tiny island, so hopefully we'll find something! Off on a new adventure!

Love and fishes!


Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Merry Christmas and Mantas!

Hello and Happy Holidays!!!

A very Merry Christmas from Thailand (maybe a day or two early... depending on where you are!)

So for the last two weeks, we've been holed up in Ko Lanta, checking out another island in the beautiful Andaman sea. It's been amazing. As soon as our ferry moored up to the dock, we knew it would be an awesome laid back kinda place.

The first few days were spent renting scooters and zooming around the island, checking out beaches and running up and down rainforested hills. The island is beautiful. It's a lot bigger than Ko Phi Phi, but smaller than Phuket, so its perfect for scooter rides around the island. We're staying up in the northernmost bit of the island in a little town called Saladan. There are some really beautiful beaches down the west coast of the island and on the east coast you can find Lanta Old Town, where some of the wooden buildings are nearly a hundred years old.

After a day or two of land exploration, we hopped into the water. Our first day diving was off Ko Ha. Ko Ha means "five islands", all massive limestone cliffs. The first dive, I had some serious fish-nerd moments and saw some wild new fish... including a fish called an ornate ghost pipefish... a mouthful of a name for a fish only a few inches long. But they're related to seahorses and not terribly easy to find, so I was pretty pumped. One of our other sites was called the Cathedral. You entered a little cavern and after swimming for a little while, you can surface inside a cave under the island. There's a huge air pocket, so tall you can't see the top of the cave, but there's light coming in from the water below giving the water a luminescent green color. Very very cool dive.

Our next dives took us to a place called Hin Daeng and Hin Muang... allegedly some of the best dives on this coast. Can't say I disagree. The first site was just beautiful... lots of bright purple and red soft corals and millions of fish... The second dive we had a couple of manta rays!! There's only been a couple manta-free dives for the last few weeks, so after our first dive was lacking mantas, we were starting to get a little bummed. 5 minutes into our second dive, a big 4m manta cruised by. That was enough to get my manta fix, but they just kept coming! There were at least 3, maybe 4 different mantas that came by, including one big female. She was nearly 5m/20ft or so and she wasn't shy at all. At one stage, she swam straight at me, cruised underneath me and plopped down on the reef so all the cleaner fish could give her a good cleaning. It was one of the most amazing experiences... she was so close I could see her eyes and I really felt like she was looking at me just as much as I was looking at her!!

I got loads of video on my gopro, and as soon as I get motivated, I'll edit it all up and hopefully be able to share it!

On a drier day, we took a scooter down to the national park at the southern tip of the island. A beautiful spot, really nice beach hiding in some rainforest and infested with monkeys and monitor lizards. I've already had a bad track record with monkeys and this adventure certainly didn't help. I bought a couple of Cokes from the park's store. The women at the cashier warned me that the monkeys might try to steal my drinks, but I wandered back into the nature anyway. Within two minutes I was chased back into the store by two monkeys that were really after a caffeine fix. I used to think monkeys were cute! Not so sure anymore... they're too clever for their own good.

Ko Lanta has been a really great adventure... we've been passing our resumes around the dive shops here and on Ko Phi Phi as well, hopefully we'll find some work around these parts.

But before that happens I've got some silly parents coming to see me!!!! Mom and Dad are flying out in a few hours to come to Thailand!!!! I'm really excited, we've got some fun adventures planned. Elephant riding and sea cave kayaking and what not, so expect some stories from there! Also... Dad will be in a town full of ladyboys, so that should be entertaining.

Until then, HAVE A MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A HAPPY NEW YEAR!


LOTS OF LOVE! (and fishes!)

Friday, December 13, 2013

Phi Phi, Patong and Island Hopping fun!

Hey all!

After a couple days with Mike in Phuket, we ventured off to the islands. Phuket is very touristy, loud and in your face, so we though heading to the islands would be the right speed.

We headed to Phi Phi. I spent a couple days there when my friend Mark came to visit a few weeks ago. This time Mike and I were planning on staying for longer, to really check out the scenery and see if it was somewhere we could work. Obviously, the most important scenery was underwater, so just about as soon as we got there, we booked in for some underwater time.

The first dives we did were fantastic. We did three dives, the King Cruiser wreck and two reef dives, Anemone reef and Shark Point. The King Cruiser wreck was a vehicle ferry that sank mysteriously with no cars or passengers on it, just the captain, in the 90's. It was probably an insurance job, but they decided to leave the boat there anyway... made for a good dive spot. And now it is! There were SO many fish inside the wreck, thousands of little yellow snapper and other schooling fish. Lots of big buys, like baracudas and jacks, were cruising along the outside of the wreck. Our next dive was Anemone Reef, which was my favorite site of the day. It's named because the coral pinnacle that makes up the reef is literally coated in anemones and in most of those anemones there are a couple little nemos cruising around! We also saw a bright yellow seahorse, some really neat little eels, lionfish, scorpionfish and lots of squid! The last dive was called Shark Point, named because the reef come out of the water in the shape of a shark fin, not because there are any sharks. Another really cool site... saw some more creepy crawly guys... mantis shrimp, lionfish and eels!

On of our land days on Phi Phi, we went up to the viewpoint up on the top of the island, you can see the whole tourist village area. It's a beautiful spot, but holy hell does it take some effort to get there. Of course we took the long way accidentally.  

 Worth the hike! 

Another day, we rented a kayak and decided to explore the "quiet" beach nearby. It was called Monkey Beach for exactly the right reasons.... it was full of monkeys! So therefore, also full of tourists. "Quiet" beach, my ass! But it was still a beautiful little cove, the water was gorgeous and clear, the sand was white and fluffy and there were monkeys roaming wild! Some of the tour operators were throwing them bananas to get them closer to the beach and out of the trees. After checking out the beach, we went on kayaking for a bit more before returning to the monkey beach for a healthy snack of Pringles. We pulled the kayak up on the rocky end of the beach where there were no primates of any sort. I sat clueless on a rock, eating some chips where out of nowhere, one of the biggest monkeys jumps on my lap and tries to steal my can of Pringles! I threw a chip at him and ran in knee deep water. Even though they can swim, they don't seem to get in the water very much. The hungry monkey had brought along his family and before we knew it, there were eight or ten monkeys in our kayak looking for more food! Eventually they got bored and wandered back to the tour boat operators with the bananas.  

After our stint on Phi Phi, Mike and I had to venture back to Phuket... he needed to get his visa extended and I needed to hop on a plane to do my very first border run to Malaysia and back. We stayed in Patong, which seemed to have the cheapest accommodation. Patong is the Las Vegas of Phuket... it's loud, it's neon and it has no rules. Anything goes. We went out for a night, just to see the spectacle of it. Mike was terrified, because he couldn't tell if the people hitting on him were women or ladyboys... and it really is hard to tell! Some of the ladyboys are beautiful!!! It was a very weird night in a very weird town. Literally anything goes and everyone wants you to be a part of it. Let's just say there are some things in life you can't un-see. Although, I did get to hold an animal called a slow loris... google it. They're adorable. 

 My border run and Mike's visa extension were successful, so now we've hopped over to Ko Lanta, another island in the area, a three hour ferry ride from Phuket. So far, its awesome. It's slower paced than Phuket and Phi Phi and has some really beautiful beaches. We're off to check out the underwater world tomorrow, so hopefully that proves equally as beautiful! 


Love and fishes!!


Monday, December 2, 2013

The (second) beginning of the Thailand adventure!

I finally feel like my Thailand adventure has begun!

So since my last post, I've mostly just been hanging out in Kata Beach on Phuket by myself. It's a bit pricy out here, so I've mostly just been sticking to the beaches... I've gotten very very brown. My days have been rather uneventful... mostly have been sleeping in, going to the beach and reading for a couple hours then taking myself out to dinner. Not a bad way to spend time but I gotta say... there's only so many times you can eat dinner alone before the company gets a little monotonous, haha!

But that's all changed now! Mike has finally joined me out here in jolly old Thailand. He flew in a couple days ago and we've had a busy couple of days! We've been up to Patong, the crazy tourist town having a joyous time sorting out visas and passports and all kinds of fun things. We met up with his best friend from England, Sam, who's been in Phuket teaching English for almost two years. We had a blast with her. We met her for dinner and went out for some drinks... had a blast in Rawai... a little beach town just over the mountains from where I've been staying. She showed us some awesome beaches and we drank Malibu rum and coconut out of coconuts... doesn't get much better than that!

After popping back and forth to Rawai a couple times, we realized that cabs are not a financially viable way of travel when you're poor backpackers. There was only one other thing to do. Rent a scooter. I've said before that the traffic here is insane. Yesterday, Mike and I rented a scooter and went to go check out Big Buddha and some other spots around Phuket. I drove, since I've had extensive scooter experience (read: I've ridden one once....) I was never worried, but by the time we got up the mountain to Big Buddha, Mike was as pale as a ghost. Apparently he didn't have as much faith in my scooter driving skills as I did. Spent some time checking out the giant statue of Buddha and the other shines around and then we headed off on more adventures. The way down the mountain was a little better, I think Mike realized I wasn't going to kill him. Either that or he had a religious experience with Buddha and had accepted his fate. We drove around Phuket and wound up at the botanic gardens. Actually a really beautiful place... very quiet and peaceful with some beautiful flowers and plants.

Adventures in botanic gardens!



SO MANY PRETTY ORCHIDS! 






We decided to keep the scooter today, and I decided to suck it up and let Mike drive the scooter. At this point, whoever is on the back of the scooter is just terrified and clinging for dear life. Haha, but in all fairness he probably did better than me. He managed to navigate through Patong without getting us hit by a tuk tuk and that in itself is a great challenge.

Tomorrow we're heading out to Phi Phi island. I'm excited to go back and look at all the awesomeness again, and hopefully we'll be able to get underwater for a while. We're heading out for 5 days... going to check it out, hopefully find out if its a place we want to work! I'm not going to forget my camera on these dives... so I should have some good footage of Thai fish soon!

Love and fishes!!

Saturday, November 16, 2013

Thailand is stupid.

Thailand is stupid.


Stupid beautiful. Like seriously, look at those colors. Stupid, stupid beautiful. 

So anyway! I've been in Phuket for a little over a week now. It's been pretty good... spending a lot of time on the beach being a giant bum, but I've had a couple of adventures, mostly with the help of my friend Mark. Mark and I were housemates in Cairns, and he was out in Phuket taking a tec diving course. On his days off, we would get together for some adventuring around Phuket. He's brave enough to drive a scooter, thank goodness for that. Although after riding around town with him, I have realized there is some method to the traffic madness. It DOES make sense somehow, despite the lack of apparent traffic laws. If parents will take their three year old children on scooters, I can certainly figure one out, right? 

Well, one of our adventures was to Big Buddha. Big Buddha is a gigantic statue of Buddha sitting on the highest point on Phuket so you can see him from all over. On the way up, are some beautiful rainforests and lots of elephant trekking places... those awesome places where you ride elephants around. 

Baby elephant on the way up to see Buddha! ISNT HE THE CUTEST???

Meet Big Buddha. 

Going up to Big Buddha was pretty awesome. It was the first religious sort of area I've been in since being in Thailand and it was really neat. There were lots of smaller statues and religious figures around underneath Buddha. There were monks chanting and you could even get blessed by one of the monks. Really a neat experience. Hopefully I'll be able to check out more temples and things around Thailand! 

One our adventure day we also went beach hopping. Mark showed me some of the beaches he'd been diving off of, much more scenic and less crowded than Kata beach. 

Nice little patch of sand tucked away in the jumgle

But mostly our adventures consisted of drinking lots of cheap cocktails :) Can't beat a beachside bar serving up pina coladas for about $3 US. But it was really nice to get out of the city and explore some of the areas off the beaten path. One of these days I'll work up the courage to rent my own scooter and head out on the road. 

Now for the last three days, I've been off Phuket. We went to Ko Phi Phi for a couple days, its an island just off the coast (two hours by slowwww ferry) and it is incredible. One of the prettiest places I've ever been (where the first picture came from). The water there is so turquoise and beautiful beaches and really dramatic cliffs. Our first day on Phi Phi, was just spend walking around speechless. It's stunning. It's a big island, but there's only a small area that you can live on because there are so many cliffs and mountains. There are no cars or motorized vehicles, just some bikes. The streets are narrow and lined with shops selling knock off Ray Bans and designer purses and neon "I Love Phi Phi" tank tops. There's street food and nice restaurants and lots of shady bars. It's paradise. There's also about 15 dive shops on this teeny tiny island, so I finally got underwater in Thailand. 

The diving was really beautiful. Different than anywhere I've ever been. We dived around two of the smaller islands off the coast of Phi Phi. 
THIS was our dive site. If you look in the water just in front of the island, you can see the teeny tiny heads in the water. 

We started our first dive in a shallow lagoon and worked our way into the deeper water just off the island. There wasn't much in the way of coral, but lots and lots of fish. Thousands of small snappers and fusiliers. We saw lots of the weird little creatures that were always pretty rare on the GBR. Lots of eels, scorpionfish, lionfish, and nudibranchs (kind of like sea slugs). We also saw a couple of turtles and a black tip reef shark. The second dive we did just around the corner from the beach from the movie "The Beach" starring Leo DiCaprio. Many of the same critters, but this site had some awesome swim thrus and small caves to check out. We went through one swim-thru to find a hawksbill sea turtle sleeping on the other side of it. At the end of the dive, when we had moved up into shallower water, we found this really neat little cave going underneath the island. We spend a few minutes poking around in there, found another eel and then surfaced. IN A CAVE. It was a really cool experience, coming up from a dive and being under an island. We weren't far into the cave, but enough to get that experience. 

Hopefully once Mike gets out here in about 10 days, we'll head over to Phi Phi to look for some work. Its just starting to be the dive high season over there, so hopefully we'll be able to find something... even just some freelance stuff. Mostly the only reason I want to work at the moment is so I can keep doing those awesome dives for free... haha. Or even better, get paid for them :)  Until then, I'm just going to keep being a beach bum and enjoy napping on the beaches and eating tasty tasty Thai food! 

Love and fishes! 
 




Thursday, November 7, 2013

Mangoes in Thailand?

I suppose I should really rethink the name of my blog now, huh?

That's right. I made it to Thailand!

But first, a few pics from the Sydney adventure

Ta-Da! 

View of the skyline from the water

The harbor bridge with the opera house in the background

And also, as always, I went to the aquarium. :) This is a dugong, Australia's manatee. Don't tell the Florida manatees but I think this guy might be cuter. 

Sydney was fun! I did the touristy things, as you can see and finished up all the stuff I needed to get done before leaving Australia. I stayed on Bondi beach, which was very beautiful until it got cold the second day I was there. Good thing I did the beach thing on the first day! But aside from getting good pictures of the opera house and getting to see a dugong (and a platypus that wouldn't pose for a picture) up close and personal, Sydney was pretty uneventful. A couple of relaxing days to play tourist and get ready for Thailand. 

Which brings us to... drumroll please! Phuket! Where I'm currently staying! It was a long day of travel: an 8 hour flight, Malaysian immigration and customs, a three hour layover, an hour and a half flight and finally Thailand immigration and customs. When I got to my hotel, I immediately crashed out. I did not pass go or collect any food or souvenirs. I was beat. 

Day two in Thailand started out much better. I wandered down to the beach, which is beautiful and covered in tourists. Mostly from Russia, which I find slightly odd, but I guess Russians like to holiday in Thailand too! Then, culture shocked as I was, I made the mistake of leaving quiet Kata beach and heading to the tourist mecca of Patong. Now, Thai is a completely different written language, leaving me pretty much clueless with street signs. Also, my mode of transportation to Patong was also pretty alienating. I got into a tuk-tuk (which is actually pronounced duk-duk. Go figure. This is a weird little vehicle, like a mini truck. The back is enclosed, with benches, except where the tailgate would be. Now, driving in Phuket, ALSO terrifying. There are no real street signs, no speed limits and no real rules. Awesome. So I shell out 400 baht to get inside a weird little truck and careen around skinny mountain roads with about a million scooters, going about a million miles an hour. So then I get to Patong and things just got crazier. My first impression was taking the seediest parts of Key West and New Orleans (think sketchy girlie bars, sex shops and bars) and adding the chaos of downtown LA and then throw in a different written and spoken alphabet. I think we need to spend a few more days in the quiet bits of Kata before we venture back to Patong. A little overwhelming. 

Other than that, I've just been cruising around trying to get mt bearings. I'm staying in a little guesthouse on Kata beach, which is a nice name for a crappy hotel. But it'll do for the week or so I'm here! It's got air con and wifi, I'm happy. I'm going to be bumming around for 3 weeks until Mike gets out here... but hopefully I'll find some fun adventures to keep me busy. Look for pictures soon! 

Love and fishes



Friday, November 1, 2013

A bittersweet farewell...

Well, the inevitable finally happened. I'm writing this post from a hostel in Bondi Beach... a three hour flight from my beloved Cairns. It's the end of an era, folks. 

When I first moved to Australia, I planned on going to spend a bit of time in Cairns, check out the Great Barrier Reef and scoot on down the east coast over the course of three or four months. I told everyone that I'd be home in February (that's February 2013). What really happened went more this this: 

-Move to Cairns
-Realize Australia is freaking expensive and if I need to stay for more than three weeks, I need a job
-Got a job on Reef Experience

And it all went downhill from there. The crew I met on Rexy were/are amazing. I met so many incredible people who are now some of my best friends/family. Even when I stopped working there, I still found myself at the Pier Bar at least two or three nights a week hanging out with all the blue shirted Rex crew. I've seen a lot of people come and go from that boat, and from the other boats in Cairns. I've met some of the most amazing people from all over the world and I'll remember them forever and ever. I love Cairns and the dive life there... I love knowing that if I show up at the Pier Bar any day of the week around 5 or 6 when the boat crews get off, I'll find a couple people I know, if not a million. Now, maybe that makes us alcoholics, but where else can you find something like that? 

I can't wrap my head around that my time in Cairns is over. The people I lived with and worked with and met along the way have just been incredible and I love you all to bits. I've been lucky enough to have the best work mates and house mates ever... even if my work mates throw me in the marina or dye my hair blue and my house mates turn all my bedroom furniture upside down. Haha. I've had some great adventure days... It's hard when you have to decide in the morning which waterfall you want to go on any given day. I'll miss so many things about Cairns, but it's the people I'll miss the most. My heart aches because I know it will be a long while until I make it back, but I know I'll bump into everyone along the way. Thank God the diving world is so small :)  

My last week in Queensland was brilliant. Mike and I roadtripped down to Townsville to (finally) dive the Yongala, a passenger ship that sank in a cyclone in 1911. They call it Australia's Titanic... it was a fancy pants ship and all the passengers died at sea. Since it's been down there for more than 100 years it is COVERED with creatures. I've never seen so many fish in one place in my life. Not to mention the sharks, sea snakes and giant Queensland gropers. Beautiful dives... I took lots of video with the GoPro, so stay tuned for an youtube masterpiece.
Me and Mike hanging out on the Townsville Strand

We hung out in Townsville for basically three days. But got to stay with my friend Heather again. We met long long ago in the Turks and Caicos and we managed to hang out in Australia! Like I said, the diving/marine bio world is very small, so I know I'll bump into all these amazing friends somewhere else crazy in the world. Madagascar or Bali or South Africa or maybe even Florida ;) We also checked out the aquarium in Townsville (where I have been before, but Mike hadn't so I gave him the grand tour).

I may have had too much fun at the aquarium....

On my second to last day in Cairns, I went out on Mike's boat, the Falla, an old wooden sailboat where he works as an instructor. It was an absolutely idyllic day. Really doesn't get any better than that. AND I saw an octopus. :) 



So the Cairns leg of my adventure might be over, but I'm on to new and exciting things, I hope! Sydney for the next few days, then off to Thailand. Flying into Phuket on Tuesday and bopping around for a couple weeks until Mike meets me out there! I'm really sad to leave Cairns, it's been such a good home to me for the past year, but I'm also excited about the new adventures to come. To my Cairns family, I love you to pieces and I can't wait to see you on another journey. Thanks for an amazing year guys. 

Love and fishes.