Days 129 – 133: Closing Out Bali In Canggu

Are you tired of reading about us going to the beach yet?  I’m not sure we will ever tire of being at the beach, and Canggu in Bali was certainly a beauty.

I will attempt to keep this post pretty short because a.) I’m behind like whoa on posts, and b.) we were total beach bums. Let me try to see what is worth sharing about being super lazy for five days in a beach town in Bali!

Day 129: Travel from Ubud to Canggu in Bali

We really loved our time in the hills of Ubud, Bali and were excited to see what going to the beach looked like in Bali.

I’ll spare you the details, but Ubud is decidedly anti-Uber.  Apparently, there is a really strong taxi, umm, union, and we cancelled our Uber after our driver gave us the sketchiest instructions: “Go into a cafe to wait for me.  Tell me your names, and when I come in, act like you have known me for a very long time.  Very long.  Do not, under any circumstances, wait on the street for me.  THIS IS VERY IMPORTANT.”  Umm, we’re good.  Thank you, next.

After about an hour drive in a taxi, we arrived at our beautiful villa!  This AirBNB is owned by a woman from New York, and we had a bedroom and bath that walked out on to a pretty pool and courtyard.

Yes.  So Bali– this mural was in our villa’s driveway.
Pool in Canggu
At our villa in Canggu

For lunch, we walked down the street to a yummy Thai place called Bangkok Hustle.  And here I’m going to share what was probably our biggest frustration with Canggu: the sidewalk situation.

Bear with me.  We really do not have the budget to rent a car or bike or pay for taxis except for very infrequently.  We also love to walk and find it to be the best way to ensure we get enough exercise.  When walking turns out to be dangerous or difficult, we get really frustrated because it makes getting around that much harder.

Canggu was filled with twenty-something kids on holiday who all rent motorbikes, to the extent that there is motorbike traffic.  We also watched a very intoxicated woman run her bike off the road.  Seriously.  So being a pedestrian on these bike-filled roads was not our favorite.

For dinner, we found a place that served authentic banh mi.  Well, authentic in taste; they were delicious.  At about $3/sandwich, it was the cheapest meal we could find and at least twice as much as we paid while we were eating them in Vietnam.  Vietnam spoiled us for authentic, inexpensive, delicious street food!

Banh mi!

Day 130: Rich’s Third Haircut 

(Of the trip.)

We ate breakfast cooked for us at our villa, and then Rich walked to get his haircut, and I read by the pool.

His hair looked good! The barber left it a bit long on the top, so we’ll see how it does for the next six weeks…Stretching the time between haircuts is one more way to stretch the budget.

Rich’s haircut in Canggu

We spent the rest of the day blogging and planning and spending time at the pool.  If I were to name the place on the trip where we realized we were just worn out, it was definitely Canggu.  Being on the move for the past five months caught up with us!

For lunch, we ate our second banh mi and ate dinner at Bangkok Hustle…again.  It was during this dinner that we watched the young lady run her bike off of the road, and we bonded over the experience with an Australian couple next to us.

Bangkok Hustle in Canggu
Yummy Thai food at Bangkok Hustle

Joel and Jane, our new Australian friends, shared that many Australians treat Bali, and Canggu in particular, as their playground where they head to let loose.  We really enjoyed chatting with them and sharing experiences of long-term travel.  Joel and Jane are taking close to a year to explore Australia in a van.   As in they are living out of a van.  Hard core! Check out their blog if you are interested in learning more about what that’s like!

Day 131: Visiting the Beach at Canggu

We weren’t total beach bums; before breakfast, we jumped out of bed and did a couple of body weight workouts on my Aaptiv app.

We then enjoyed the breakfast provided by the villa and spent a few hours by the pool.  We ate lunch at a nearby cafe.  Bali has a plethora of amazing restaurants serving fresh, healthy food from around the world.  Our budget limits where and how much we eat, but if you are looking for a vacation where you enjoy a smoothie bowl for breakfast, a huge warm pumpkin quinoa bowl for lunch, and practically anything you can imagine for dinner, I highly recommend finding a way to get to Bali.

Healthy lunch options

Late in the afternoon, we walked to the beach to see it and catch a sunset.  Our walk was a good thirty minutes– remember, the sidewalk situation– but it was worth every step.  The beach was beautiful, with huge, powerful waves.  And there were so many surfers!  There were easily 50-75 surfers trying to catch a wave  when we arrived.  It was rather magical; I had never seen any kind of surfing scene like that.  It could have been in a movie.

We enjoyed walking the beach, and watching the sun set over the water.

For dinner, we ate at a great pizza place called Luigi’s Hot Pizza.  They had plenty of outdoor seating, white bistro lights, and lots of young male servers who clearly had a lot of fun working with each other.  We split a tiramisu for dessert, and it was divine.  Pizza + beach = great day

Day 132: Football + Work

The Georgia Bulldogs are enjoying a great season, and we woke up at 3:30 AM to cheer on the Dawgs against Kentucky.  Thankfully, Georgia won, and then we kept watching football to see the beginning of the Alabama v. LSU game.  Alabama quickly went to work against LSU, and we went ahead and ate breakfast.

And then, of course, we enjoyed our UGA victory nap.

We spent the rest of the day:

  • By the pool,
  • Followed by banh mi for lunch (again),
  • Followed by blog posting/trip planning,
  • And culminating in another dinner at Bangkok Hustle.
Smoothie Bowl at our villa

We are nothing if not consistent.

Day 133: La Brisa Beach Club

We spent our last full day in Bali– and in Asia!– at the beach.  Bali has a number of beach clubs.  Each club has a minimum spend on food and drinks, but then you get access to beach chairs, a pool, a pool deck, restrooms, and a restaurant and bar.  Finn’s Beach Club is probably the most well-known, but we decided to head to La Brisa as it opened pretty recently, and we liked its aesthetic.

The amount you have to spend is a little lower if you arrive earlier in the day, so we made the sidewalk-less trek over at about noon.

The set up was perfect!  We had chairs on the deck above the beach and were able to put our feet up on the ledge and take out our books.  We enjoyed a beer, read for several hours, took a quick swim in the pool, and then ordered lunch.  It was so relaxing and easy as all days at the beach should be!

 

For dinner, we grabbed, you guessed it, banh mi for dinner.  Our new favorite restaurant had a loyalty program where when you bought five banh mi, you got your sixth free.  In five short days, we had earned ourselves a free sandwich.  Hot dog! Did I mention we are budget travelers?

Final Thoughts on Canggu

Don’t get me wrong, Bali is pretty amazing.  It is one of the most visually stunning places we have visited, there is an abundance of delicious food, and it is really easy to navigate, even if you have not traveled abroad extensively.

We were pretty worn out by the time we made it to Canggu though, and one impression we had of Bali was just that everyone was trying to out Bali each other.  It’s a place where you hear sentences like, “Surfing brought such fulfillment to my inner small child while also empowering me as a fearless boss woman.  I really worked up an appetite so I cannot wait to devour my chi seed hemp milk with a side of raw organic sprouts.  But it also dried my skin out so let me apply this new placenta coconut oil lotion I just picked up.”

It is totally cool if you have that kind of energy, but at that point in our travels, wearing the same clothes out of the same backpack and living on a budget, we just did not.  We had a great five days, really, but we have come to realize that our favorite places are places that don’t try too hard to be who they are, or rather where the people who visit do not feel pressure to fit a certain mold and check off extravagant bucket list items.  We enjoyed Canggu for what it was for us: five more days to rest and re-charge together, surrounded by beauty.

 

Our FOURTH 30 Days Abroad: By the Numbers

These posts feel a bit like the monthly baby photos– we should have brought some sort of cute stuffed animal to mark our time away!

Not to compare our travels to raising an actual human child, but I will admit to feeling a little #proudparent -ish of how we are growing as travelers.  These posts may not mean as much to our readers as they mean to us, but Rich and I really enjoying spending time together reflecting and crafting these every thirty days.

Amanda has an unhealthy obsession with Gritty, the new Philadelphia Flyers mascot. He’s ugly, but he’s our ugly. It was only a matter of time before she slid him into the blog.

Without further adieu, our FOURTH 30 days!  And if you like this post or want to see the progression of thirty day reflections, be sure to check out our first , second , and third thirty day review posts too.

Dates Included: September 24 – October 23, 2018

Countries Visited: 4 (Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia)

Cities/Towns Visited: 9 (Chiang Mai, Bangkok, Phuket, Krabi, Koh Samui, Penang, Kuala Lumpur, Singapore, Yogyakarta)

TRANSPORTATION

As you can see, our modes of transportation varied greatly in these 30 days!  It’s not just planes, trains, and automobiles for us.

Flights: 7

Bus Rides: 1

Taxi/Uber/Grab Rides: 28 (22 Grab rides)

Van Rides: 3

Tuk Tuk Rides: 1

Funicular Rides: 1

Ferry Rides: 1

Train Rides: 1

Long Boat Rides: 2

Rich boarding the ferry to Koh Samui, Thailand
LODGING

AirBNB’s: 5

Hotels: 4

FOOD

Percentage of Meals Eaten Out: 60% (41 meals)

Percentage of Meals Eaten In: 21% (14 meals)

Percentage of Meals Eaten in Airport Lounges: 15% (10 meals)

Percentage of Meals Provided by Hotels or AirBNB’s: 4% (3 meals)

PHYSICAL ACTIVITY

If you are a frequent reader of these posts, you know that while Rich and Amanda spend most of their time together, walking what you would assume to be the same distances, Rich consistently records many more miles than Amanda.  Will the tide turn?  Or will Rich continue his walking dominance?

Rich

  • Total Distance: 342,795 steps (158.40 miles)
  • Average Daily Distance: 11,460 steps (5.28 miles)
  • Daily High: 22,434 steps (10.30 miles)
  • Daily Low: 1,676 steps (0.77 miles)

Amanda

  • Total Distance: 296,857 steps (133.22 miles)
  • Average Daily Distance: 9,895 steps (4.44 miles)
  • Daily High: 20,759 steps (9.07 miles)
  • Daily Low: 132 steps (.06 miles)

Rich wins.  I am also confident that the day I only had 132 steps was a day that I had my FitBit off, if only because we have not stayed anywhere where I could have only gone 132 steps and still eaten food.

INTELLECTUAL ACTIVITY

We had a tough time finding anything to read where you would want to read the most: the beaches of Thailand!  As you can see, Rich and I both continued to love Kevin Kwan, the author of megahit Crazy Rich Asians.

Rich

Amanda

Reading at the beach in Koh Samui.
OVERALL COSTS AS PERCENTAGE OF TOTAL BUDGET

Flights: 16% (12% decrease)

Other Transportation (Buses, Trains, Ferries, Taxis, Funiculars): 10% (5% increase)

Lodging: 41% (1% decrease)

Food:  21% (5% increase)

Sightseeing: 3% (same)

Other (Books, Haircut, Laundry, Toiletries, Massages, Yoga): 9% (3% increase)

FAVORITES:

Favorite Meal:

  • Amanda: Rich’s birthday dinner at Akira Back in Bangkok.  We had the best sushi of my life.
  • Rich: My birthday meal at Akira Back in Bangkok. Amazing sushi.
The aforementioned sushi. It was so delicious, we forgot to take a picture of it until after we had eaten a few pieces already.

Favorite AirBNB:

Favorite Hotel:

  • Amanda: I really loved the Grand Sunset Hotel, our hotel in Phuket, Thailand.  There was a beautiful rooftop pool, and they had all kinds of little free treats throughout the day: coffee from 3-4 PM, popcorn and a cocktail from 6-7 PM, and free ice cream from 8-10 PM.
  • Rich: I loved our boutique hotel in Singapore, Hotel Yan. It was stylish, sleek, and perfectly located. They had the best toiletries and mini bar with free Cokes, M & M’s, and chips replenished daily.
At Hotel Yan!

Favorite City/Town:

  • Rich: Singapore
  • Amanda: Singapore

Favorite Beach/Pool: 

  • Amanda: So many beaches!  I really liked Railey Beach in Thailand.  Runner up goes to Phuket where we got the amazing sunset pictures.
  • Rich: Railey Beach was beautiful, but so hot! We lasted maybe 30 minutes before we were covered in sweat and retreated to the water, followed by a couple of Tiger beers with a view.

Favorite Mode of Transportation: 

  • Rich: I really enjoyed the rawness of traveling in the long boat to Railey Beach and back. It was exciting wading into the water and climbing in and out of the boat. There was a real authentic feeling that made me feel like a local.
  • Amanda: I did not enjoy the long boat because I thought we might drown.  I don’t have a specific flight, but I loved anytime we flew and got to go to an airport lounge.  It is so nice to be able to eat as much as we want and drink an extra latte without worrying about costs.
In front of two long boats in Krabi, Thailand

Favorite Book:

  • Amanda:  I weirdly read two books (Truly, Madly, Guilty and The Slap) about adults behaving badly at backyard barbecues in Australia.   Me Talk Pretty One Day was the first David Sedaris book I had ever read, and it was both hilarious and touching.  So it wins as my favorite book for these 30 days.
  • Rich:  Crazy Rich Asians. If you have not noticed yet, I…love…Kevin…Kwan… Almost as much as Amanda loves Gritty.

Least Favorite Moment:

  • Rich: We landed in Yogyakarta and our hotel was only a 23 minute walk from the airport according to Google Maps. We decided to tough it out and walk, can’t be that hard right? WRONG! We had to go a different route than what Google Maps stated due to airport security, and it added about 10 minutes to the walk in 90 degree heat with 20 and 25 lb backpacks on. When we arrived at our hotel, we were tired and drenched in sweat. FAIL!
  • Amanda: Trying to hike to the Big Buddha statue in Phuket and failing because the blog directions I followed were terrible.  I should have done more research before leading us down the wrong road in really hot weather.  Not finding a statue is really not that bad, but Rich and I got cross with one another, so that moment stands out as being my least favorite.  If you are going to argue, you should at least be able to do it in air conditioning.

Most Favorite Moments: 

  • Amanda:  I loved the day in Singapore where we walked and walked and walked and saw the SuperTrees and then had a drink at the top of the magnificent Marina Bay Sands.  It helped that we had seen Crazy Rich Asians in Singapore the night before– on our long walk, we passed so many places from the movie.  I also loved getting a Thai massage in Krabi, Thailand, and I loved our routine in Kuala Lumpur, especially getting to go to the amazing gym in our building.  On our last morning in KL, we got up to go to the gym but it didn’t open until 7 AM so we headed to the building’s putting green (yes, the building had a putting green) to do an Aaptiv strength training workout in the dark.  Right as we finished, the Call to Prayer came on softly in the background, and we were surrounded by all these huge skyscraper buildings– it was a moment where I really felt like I was a world away from home, experiencing something I never could have scripted if I tried.
  • Rich: I loved the sunsets at our rooftop pool in Phucket. I also loved our Thai massages in Krabi. But my favorite thing was EVERYTHING in Singapore. From seeing Crazy Rich Asians to eating at the hawker stands to the beautiful SuperTrees to the drink and view from the Marina Bay Sands, it was everything I imagined.  One day, I will swim in that infinity pool.
Enjoying Singapore and being on top of the world at the Marina Bay Sands.

DELTAS:

Looking back on the last thirty days, here are a few things we might have done a little differently.

  1. Eating out so much has been tough.  I think we have been to three grocery stores in Southeast Asia.  There are frequently 7-11’s or small local markets, but if I were to try to cook a whole meal, I’m not sure I would know where to start.  Eating out occasionally is nice, but Rich and I are both pretty introverted and so we find eating in way more relaxing.  And I miss cooking and eating what I have cooked.
  2. We would not have gone to Iceland.  Wait, aren’t you supposed to be talking about Southeast Asia?  Yes, stay with me.  We were looking at the budget last night, and we have done a pretty decent job staying on budget in Southeast Asia.  And yet, we are still over budget on the trip…for almost the exact amount of money it cost us to go to Iceland.  Iceland was pretty but was SO expensive, especially when viewed in light of how far the money for those 6 days would go in Southeast Asia (read: it would pay for everything for 19 days).  And we slept in a tent in Iceland and ate hot dogs.  We should have saved Iceland for a trip of its own versus including it in our around-the-world trip.
  3. We wish we had picked a better AirBNB location in Bangkok.  As I think about how much we loved Kuala Lumpur and Singapore and how meh we felt about Bangkok, I have to think that if we had been in walking distance of the things we wanted to visit in Bangkok, we would have liked it more.  Bangkok traffic was insane (makes 75/85 traffic in Atlanta and 676 traffic in Philly look light) and so it took forever to get anywhere.  And Rich and traffic are not friends.

LOVES:

  1. Our new planning routine.  Since Phuket, Rich and I have dedicated time to meet with each other to calendar out our time in each new location.  This facilitates a discussion about our priorities for what we want to see and do in each place so that we are on the same page from the jump.  If I am being honest, sometimes it is hard to really tune in and listen to Rich, not because he isn’t charming and interesting, but because we spend all of our time together and sometimes he’s talking to me, but I am daydreaming or playing on my phone or am just otherwise distracted.  During our meetings though, I can totally tune in, focus, and pay attention.
  2. The balance of beaches and cities in the last 30 days.  We had a lot of beach and pool time in Thailand, but we also spent a significant amount of time in some of the largest cities in Southeast Asia in Chiang Mai, Bangkok, Kuala Lumpur, and Singapore.  The balance was nice.  We could chill in the beach towns, and then enjoy walking and moving as much as we did in the big cities.
  3. Being together!  Nope, not sick of each other yet.  In fact, the longer we are gone, the more common experiences we have to compare and share with one another.  Rich was organizing our Insta stories the other night, and just watching videos of everywhere we have been and all we have done was so fun.  Remember when we watched the World Cup in Croatia (but left because the fireworks were scary and the fans were throwing beer bottles!), and then we were in Malta and we ended up at Friday Happy Hour with the St. Vincent Retirement Community, and then we were in Hanoi, Vietnam exercising with thousands of people in the early morning hours? All of our experiences build and build and build.  This is truly a trip of a lifetime, and we love sharing all of it with each other.
Sunset in Phuket

Days 106 – 109: Koh Samui, Ultimate Chill

Sawasdee!  Koh Samui was our last stop in Thailand, and let’s just say that our time here was relaxed.  Relax with us for a few minutes, and read about what life on this Thai island is like– or at least, what it was like for us for our four days there.

Day 106: Travel to Koh Samui from Krabi

Koh Samui is an island so our travel from Krabi was by bus, then ferry, then taxi to reach our Koh Samui AirBNB.

The ferry travel reminded me a lot of our time hopping between islands in Croatia, which seems like three years ago and was actually just in July!

Rich getting on Koh Samui ferry
Boarding the ferry for Koh Samui.
Our Koh Samui AirBNB

Our AirBNB in Koh Samui was this adorable glass house.  We took lots of video– you can see it in our Thailand Insta stories— but weren’t smart enough to take photos of the house.

Our favorite part of the AirBNB was not the gorgeous styling or the big porch or the $40/night affordable price tag.  Nope.  It was that the generous host provided snacks on snacks on snacks on snacks.  We are talking cereal, chips, instant noodles, cokes, coffee, cookies, crackers– do we sound like budget backpackers yet?  Ha! We were in heaven!

Italian for Lunch + A Private Pool

Once we checked in, we ate lunch at the most amazing Italian restaurant.  Yes, you read that right.  Italian.   In Thailand.

A gentleman from Rome owns and runs The Food Lab , and he made us delicious roast pork sandwiches.  As a Philadelphia native with an Italian grandmother, Rich has a serious love of roast pork, and this hit the spot.  Watch out DiNic’s— you have some competition!

Food Lab in Koh Samui
Rich with his roast pork sandwich at Food Lab

Because everyone obviously wants to put on a swimsuit immediately after eating a roast pork sandwich, we headed to the pool for a few hours after lunch.  Our AirBNB was about 100 yards from a cute little hotel.  For a charge of about $3/person, we were able to pay to use the pool.  No one else was there so $6 bought us our own private oasis!

private pool in Koh Samui
Private pool day!

Day 107: Work, The Grandpa Rock, and Rich Receives Cheers

We decided to use a quiet island to get as caught up as possible on blogging and planning.

The biggest pro of working from our sweet AirBNB: An American drip coffee pot!  I do not want to attempt to calculate the number of Nescafe coffee packets we have consumed in the last 100+ days.  I carry them in my backpack, in my purse, they fall out as we go through security.  Don’t get me wrong– we need them to get an inexpensive caffeine fix.  Still, having actual coffee while we worked greatly enhanced productivity.

The biggest con of working from our AirBNB: We had to pay for electricity separately, which included aircon.  We didn’t want to accidentally run up a huge bill by running aircon all day so we tried to get by during the day with just fans and ocean breezes.  It was sweaty.  This was a mistake.

Visiting Hin Ta and Hin Yai Rocks

The Hin Ta and Hin Yai, which translates to Grandpa and Grandma, rocks are one of the most famous landmarks in Koh Samui, Thailand.

I like to keep the blog g-rated and family friendly, keeping in mind that my mom and stepdad are two of our most devoted readers, so I’m struggling a bit for the words to describe this unique rock formation.

I’ll include a few pictures below, share that the rocks are 100% naturally formed, and note that we were quite surprised, particularly by grandpa rock, when we arrived.  Once you see Hin Ta, there is no unseeing him.

Oops

For dinner, we walked to Emporio, a different Italian restaurant, also owned and run by a Roman chef, across the street from the Food Lab.  We ate unbelievably well-prepared carbonara, enjoying a wonderful meal together.

Sicily? Nope. Koh Samui. Totally authentic and delicious carbonara.

A quick explanation: when we were in Cambodia, we transitioned from using our American wallets to using a small coin purse to keep up with our money as we hardly ever are able to use credit cards and we often have a lot of bills and coins to keep track of at any given moment.  Elephant patterns are ubiquitous across southeast Asia, so clearly our coin purse is decorated with an elephant design.  As a result, we just call this coin purse “the elephant.”  We almost always leave our other wallets in the safe at home.

It came time to pay at Emporio, we opened the elephant, and we didn’t have as much Thai currency as we thought we did with us.  We also didn’t have an ATM card, just a credit card.  And of course, Emporio didn’t take credit cards.

We didn’t have money to pay our bill.

For those of you that know us outside of our lives as travelers, you know that this is one of the least Team Mitchell things we have ever done.  We are super conscientious, super organized, super type-A.  I guess in Koh Samui, we were just super relaxed!

So the only course of action was to go home, get a debit card to tap the ATM, and get more Thai bahts.

My Koh Samui Hero

Home, of course, was a mile and a half away.  Rich did not love the idea of leaving me sitting by myself in a not-very-crowded restaurant in Thailand for long and the place was going to close soon so he decided that this predicament required that he run home while I stayed behind.

What I should also mention about Koh Samui Thailand is that, umm, it’s a little less conservative than other parts of Thailand we visited (see: pictures of the most popular landmark above).  There are many older ex-pats with younger Thai women, you see much more revealing clothing, and there are bars with names like “The Sexy Sex Bar.”  Seriously.

So my handsome husband started running down the main street through this relaxed beach town, and the women working at the Sexy Sex Bar started cheering.  And then the women at the massage parlors started clapping and shouting encouragement too.  Then the ex-pats a few beers in started urging on their mate too.  To hear Rich tell it, running the mile to our apartment was like running the last mile of a marathon.  A very spirited marathon.  With no other runners.

My handsome, sweaty American husband returned with the money a bit sheepishly about 25 minutes later.  Rich received considerably less attention and fewer cheers (read: no cheers) walking back home with me!

Day 108: Crystal Bay at Silver Beach in Koh Samui, Thailand

About Koh Samui

More context: Koh Samui is a beautiful island, full of glamorous world class resorts: the Ritz, the W, etc.  There is a plethora of restaurants, boutiques, and spas, which clearly have the economy to support them during busy season.

We were not there during the busy season, and Koh Samui felt like a luxurious ghost town.  Beautiful, but a bit creepy.  Rich made a comment that it felt like everyone there was running away from something instead of running to something.  We liked Koh Samui, but that description felt right to me too.

Crystal Bay

Still, Thai beaches live up to every wonderful description they receive.  We walked about 45 minutes to get to the Crystal Bay at Silver Beach and found clear water, mountains, tall rocks, and soft sand.  We had a great afternoon reading, sleeping, taking pictures, and being together.

Does it get better?
My little mermaid.
Hi from Thailand!
Beach hair, don’t care.
Smiles in Koh Samui!
Rich climbs.

Day 108: Football, Work, Pool

We enjoyed our last day in Koh Samui which looked like:

  • Getting up at 1:00 AM to watch the defending world champion Philadelphia Eagles defeat the New York Giants 43-13.  Go Birds!
  • Going back to sleep, clearly.
  • Waking up much later and working most of the day.
  • Heading back to the hotel pool to lounge in the late afternoon.
Rich reads at the pool.

Rich and I had had enough Italian (ha!) so we tried a vegan place nearby for dinner, and it was amazing.

Acai bowl at the vegan restaurant

Final Thoughts on Koh Samui

Spending twelve straight days at the Thai beaches of Phuket, Krabi, and Koh Samui was a true treat.  We left with a complete understanding of why so many people move to Thailand for a slower, more relaxed life, full of beauty and rest.

Twenty total days in Thailand was just right for us.  Koh Samui provided an incredible opportunity for us to rest and work, allowing us to get  caught up on blogging and planning.  At the same time, by the end, we were pretty ready to explore somewhere else and visit cities where tourism is not the main industry. We wanted to blend back in in a crowd.

On to Malaysia!

Days 102 – 105: Kicking Back in Krabi, Thailand

Like Phuket, Krabi is a beach in Thailand.  So since our action in Krabi was a bit limited, I would like to start this post with something that has been on my mind a lot since we have been in Thailand.

In the fall of 2009, I moved to Washington, DC to start graduate school.  I grew up in Nashville, Tennessee, went to college at the University of Georgia, and then taught high school for three years in Arkansas and Georgia.  The south is where I am from and what I knew.

A dear friend who is a few years older than me gently pushed me to apply to graduate schools outside of the south.  Not because the south is bad or because I could never go back but just to get a little perspective and to try living somewhere else to see how it fit.

In my first month in DC, I went out to dinner with grad school friends at a Thai restaurant.  I had eaten Chinese food occasionally growing up and sushi in college, but I had never eaten Thai.  What does it taste like? What should I order?  Will I like it?

The answers: Delicious, anything, and yes.

More likely than not, the friends I ate Thai with for the very first time in DC circa 2009.  Also: what am I wearing?

I share this because as I write, I have now spent over twenty days in Thailand.  Less than ten years ago, I had not lived outside of the southeastern United States, and I had never tasted Thai food.

Life is long.  The world is big. Given time and opportunity, people develop and change and grow in incredibly unexpected ways.  There is no way that twenty five year old me ever could have imagined that thirty four year old me would love eating Thai food in Thailand and would travel to as many countries as we are going to visit this year.  Thinking about that fills me with awe and gratitude as well as curiosity about what more the future may hold.  Be patient.  Give yourself and other people a chance.  Possibilities are boundless.

Day 102: Goodbye, Phuket!  Hello, Krabi! 

Travel from Phuket to Krabi was the easiest.  A van picked just me and Rich up at our hotel in Phuket, and three hours later, the driver dropped us at our hotel in Krabi.  Amazing.

We spent the afternoon tackling a little work and planning out our next few days.  We found a fabulous restaurant, Ton Ma Yom Thai Food Restaurant, for dinner and crashed hard.

Putting the YUM in Ton Ma Yom.

Day 103: Work Out, Pool, Work

One of the advantages of staying in a hotel versus an AirBNB is having a gym.  As we shared in our last thirty day post, our physical activity is WAY down in Asia, so we enjoyed a chance to get in a workout.

Another advantage of staying in a hotel, which may be at odds with the last advantage, is having breakfast provided.  We went straight from the gym to the buffet, eliciting a few looks for being so sweaty, and enjoyed being able to eat as much as we want.  These days we are not so much counting calories as counting bahts (the Thai currency) as food can eat (ha!) away at our budget quickly.

From breakfast, we showered and then headed to the pool for a couple of hours.  Neither Phuket or Krabi had bookstores so I had been without any pool or beach reading for days.  I decided to download a podcast to fill the void, and I landed on Slow Burn Season 1 which details how Watergate unfolded. I’m a nerd, but I thought the whole season was fascinating.

We got a bit of work done in the hotel in the afternoon and then walked on the beach in Krabi to get some pictures before heading back to Ton Ma Yom Thai Food Restaurant for our second night of delicious Thai dinner.

It started to rain when we left the hotel so our pictures have a slight melancholic feel with the boats and the rain.  Still, the landscape was really beautiful and watching the boats return from the islands was neat too.

Rich with boats.
Water and waves
Watching the boats come back in.
Is there anything more relaxing than being by the water?
Amanda with boats
Sunset selfie in Krabi
Rainy Krabi
Ao Nang is pretty even in the rain.

Day 104: College Football + Visit to Railay Beach

Go Dawgs!

The University of Georgia’s homecoming football game against the Vanderbilt Commodores was played at 7:30 PM in Athens, Georgia which meant a 6:30 AM start time for Thailand’s truest Dawg fans (me and Rich).

This was glorious!  Instead of waking up at 1:00 AM or 3:30 AM, we we able to wake up at a time that humans are intended to wake up.  We sipped our coffee, we ate buffet breakfast at halftime, and the Dawgs won.  Brilliant.

Coffee + Morning Football = Winning. What 2018 Homecoming looked like for me. Go Dawgs!
Getting to RailAy Beach

We stayed in Ao Nang in Krabi.  To reach the other nearby beautiful beaches, you take a quick 15 minute boat ride through the Andaman Sea.  Rich and I had heard wonderful things about the beach at Railay Bay and decided to take a boat there for an easy day trip.

I had never been in a boat quite like the boat we took to Railay Beach.  First, to board it, you wade about 3 feet into the water from the beach, and climb up a small ladder to climb in.  That was new.

The boats are all wooden, and all look like they could probably lose a plank or two at any minute.  I was giggling to myself that when we took the cruise across the Halong Bay in Vietnam every time we got on the small, sleek boats for an excursion, the crew insisted on everyone wearing life jackets at all times.

However, I had to look pretty hard to even locate life jackets on these boats in Krabi.  I eventually found them, up front by the captain, neatly packed away out of reach.  The captain didn’t exactly do a safety demonstration for us before jetting out across the sea!  Thailand: not so big on regulation.

But I obviously arrived safely enough since I am here to write today.  Being on the water was really pretty– Rich said the ride was one of his favorite moments of the whole time we were in Thailand!

Our TOTALLY safe boat.
Boat selfie.  I’m looking a little incredulous before we arrived safely.
We arrive at Railay Beach!
Beach Day!

So we arrived, and Railay was, of course, beautiful.  It felt like being in a Corona commercial.

One quick difference between Rich and me in terms of our beach going preferences: I could stay at the beach all day, without moving, and be the happiest.  Rich needs a little action.  “Okay,” he begins, “I think we apply the sunscreen.  Then we lay for 30 minutes.  Next we get in the water.  After that we come back and towel off and eat our snack.  Then we lay for 10 minutes, then…”  You get the picture.

I should also add that the sun was HOT.  In about 5 minutes of laying, we were both as sweaty as we have ever been in our entire lives.  We are soaked, the towels are soaked, the sand under the towels is soaked.  Puddles of sweat.  You get the picture.

So we did a little bit of lounging, followed by some picture taking, followed by some splashing in the water, followed by some sand art, and then we retreated to the town for a nice, cold drink.  We were on the beach itself for maybe an hour.

Marketing.
Railay Beach in Krabi
So blue and clear! This. Beach.
Rich would regret this move.
Railay Bay

Railay Bay is super chill as evidenced by every bar being named after or dedicated to Bob Marley.  We wandered around, got a mango smoothie, and then found seats with a killer view of the sea to enjoy one iced cold beer.  Heaven.

Then we waded back into the ocean, climbed in a rickety boat, and headed across the sea back to town.

I can think of no better spot for a beer.
Unclear what this move is.
Heading back to the boats.
We like each other.

We, of course, ate dinner with our friends at Ton Ma Yom Thai Food Restaurant for the third night in a row.

Day 105: NFL + Thai Massages

The Birds Lose.

The Philadelphia Eagles were not kind enough to start their game against the Minnesota Vikings at a normal hour in Thailand, so we were up at 3:25 AM to watch more football.  They were also not kind enough to win.  Watching your team lose before 8:00 AM is not the way to start your day!

We went to breakfast to eat away our sorrows and then went back to sleep.  Rich and I love football and are passionate fans, but trying to watch all of the football we want to watch has really done a doozie on our sleep schedules.  We can’t give football up, but I think we are both going to feel a little relieved– and a little healthier!– when the season is over.  When we were working in the States, we loved college football on Saturdays and NFL on Sundays.  Now it is brutal.

Thai Massages Are the Best Massages

If we made one mistake in Thailand, it might be that we only got one Thai massage.  After our post-game nap, it was rainy so we spent most of the day working from our hotel room.  In the late afternoon, we headed out for a glorious Thai massage at Massage Corner in Ao Nang.

Only getting one massage was a mistake because the massage was both wonderful and cheap.  Of the 10+ massages I have had in my life, the massage I had in Krabi was a.) the best and b.) only 250 Thai Baht which translates to $7.69 USD.  For one full hour.

Rich and I both felt gloriously zen when we left.  A Thai vacation with ten straight days of massages could easily be in our future.

Post-massage. Not a care in the world.

Closing Thoughts on Krabi

It is funny to me that the area is called Krabi because if we were anything in the four days we were there, crabby was not it.

Krabi was one of the easiest places to relax I have ever been.  If conflict and overcoming challenges make for an exciting blog post, well, this one is probably on the boring side.  We were total beach bums.

Several years after I tried Thai food for the first time, my best friend from high school, Alexis, visited Thailand.  I thought she was super brave and adventurous to travel across the world.

I’m not saying now that she wasn’t, but I am saying that if you are reading this thinking that Thailand and/or Asia are outside of your travel comfort zone, I really think you could do it too! Imagine: great food, affordability, beaches, massages, paradise, etc.

Sometimes a nudge to step past your comfort zone pushes you way farther than you could have ever imagined.  Consider this my paying that nudge forward.  Trust me, after the best massage of your life, you’ll thank me.

Days 98 – 101: Oh Phuket, Thailand

Ah, Thailand beaches.  Great for our tans and our moods, maybe not so great for content for the blog.  But hey, Phuket, let’s go.

Day 98: Travel from Bangkok to Phuket

As you can imagine, the trail from Bangkok to Phuket is well traveled.  We hopped in our Grab (Uber’s SE Asia cousin), and the driver said, “Let me guess: you are headed to Phuket.”

Getting to the Airport

Our Grab ride to the Don Muang airport had us grabbing for a reason anyone would want to live in a city with so much traffic.  What is a twenty minute drive on paper took us well over an hour.  We had also stayed up until 4:00 AM watching the Philadelphia Eagles lose to the Tennessee Titans and then had to be back up by 5:30 AM to pack and catch a cab.  Eeek.

We Heart Airport Lounges

Rich and I got to return to one of our favorite lounges in Bangkok, our airport BFF, to work on our THIRD thirty day post, in the same booth where we wrote our second thirty day post.  What beautiful, unplanned symmetry!  Also, unlimited free coffee.

Then we almost missed our flight when it got delayed, according to the display board, and then moved back up to its regular time according to a hard-to-understand PA announcement.  I thought I heard them say Phuket the first time (Rich: “I didn’t hear it.”), and then Rich and I both definitely heard them say it the second time, followed by “final call.”  We sprinted out of the lounge and to the gate to be greeted by a long line of other people who still needed to board.

The flight to Phuket was really stunning as we landed over green islands and deep blue water.  From the airport, we took about a thirty minute long shuttle to our hotel and got checked in.

We stayed at the Grand Sunset Hotel, and as advertised, its pool had killer sunset views as well as a free sunset cocktail with free freshly popped popcorn.  It’s the small things.  Settling in at the pool felt just right.

sunset cocktail in Phuket
Enjoying my sunset cocktail. It’s orange. Like the sunset. Super clever.
Rich reads on the rooftop.

Day 99: We Went to the Pool

Umm, it rained in the morning so Rich and I did some work, and then we went to the pool.  Then it rained some more so we had a “meeting” where we calendar-ed out how we were going to spend our days in Phuket, and then we showered and went back to the pool for our sunset cocktail.  Then we walked out to the beach for a minute and on to dinner.

So nice.
Let’s just swing by the ocean for a minute on the way to dinner.

A note about Phuket: there are a lot of Russians.  Most of the signs for restaurants were translated into English, and they were ALL translated into Russian.  In almost all of the other areas of Southeast Asia we have visited, there have been many Asian tourists and many Australian backpackers.  In Phuket, we just saw Russians.  It struck us as interesting, so I thought I would share.

Day 100: We Tried to Visit Big Buddha, Failed, and Got Epic Sunset Pictures

About PHuket

I have done a terrible job describing Phuket.  Most importantly, it’s beautiful.  We stayed across the street from a large wide beach with tan colored sand.  The water is super blue, and there are huge white waves that roll in.  It is exactly what you want a beach to look like.

Secondly, Phuket is surrounded by rolling, incredibly lush, green hills.  I think if you planted a seed in Phuket today, you would have a giant blooming plant next week, that’s how fertile the environment is.  The green of the hills is just as majestic as the blue of the sea.

Trying to Visit Big Buddha

At the top of one of these green hills is a huge Buddha that you could see from the roof of our hotel.  Since I knew we would mostly spend our time in Phuket by water not exercising and not seeing sights, I thought hiking to it would be a good plan.  We could see it, take some pictures, get some exercise, and enjoy the hike together.

I came across a blog with step-by-step directions of how to easily hike to Big Buddha.  Awesome.  The directions included everything except an address of the starting point.  Maybe you see where this is going.

Long story long, we got up early, put on workout clothes (long running tights for me so I would be fully covered to go in the temple), walked the twenty five minutes in 85+ degree tropical heat to where we thought the starting point would be…and the starting point wasn’t there.

I’ll speed things up: we walked around looking some more, got very, very cross with one another, and sulkily walked home (Amanda) having not found the trail or seen the Big Buddha.

We did some apologies, and then we went to the pool.

getting lost in Phuket
One large hill we walked up on our way not to the big Buddha.
I’m probably going to have to write about this epic fail on the blog so let me take this terrible selfie.
Taking Epic Sunset Pictures

We lucked into an incredible sunset that night and were able to take really just the best sunset pictures we could have imagined.

It was fortuitous because it was DAY ONE HUNDRED of our trip, and we could do a whole big, beautiful Instagram spread of this gorgeous sunset, looking just the happiest.

As I type, we received 598 LIKES on Instagram on this post.  That is clearly the most likes we have ever received, and obviously means one day we might be internet famous.

And the funniest part is that we were as annoyed with/frustrated at/bothered by each other that day as we have been since we left the United States.  We are fine now, but getting lost looking for Big Buddha was not a high point of our marriage.

So, enjoy these beautiful pictures, and remember: social media is not real.

Sunset Selfie
Wow. Phuket.
Rich examines his bicep. He does this at least once every day. Yep.  Still there.
Heaven.
The winning Insta shot
Same sunset, from the roof of our hotel.
Does it get better?

Day 101: It Rained

Sometimes a rainy day at the beach is okay!  Here’s how we spent the day:

  • We walked to breakfast and home before it rained.
  • I blogged.
  • Rich finished reading Crazy Rich Asians and started China Rich Girlfriend.  The man is obsessed.  He thinks author Kevin Kwan is his best friend and that all of the main characters are people we actually know. We have big plans to go see the Crazy Rich Asians movie in Singapore where the books are set– we will keep you posted.
  • Rich and I took a nap.
  • We ran out in the rain to get dinner and then ran back home (somewhere along our travels Rich lost his rain jacket).

As I’m sure you can surmise, Phuket was really low key.  No temples.  No tours.  Just beach and pool with a sprinkling of rain.

The only picture I took on our rainy day. Coffee + Yogurt.

What we loved about Phuket:

  • The amazing beach
  • Our hotel.  They did a great job of providing small treats that really helped budget travelers like us.  They served free, GOOD coffee from 3-4 PM, provided a yummy sunrise cocktail and popcorn from 6:00 – 6:30 PM, and offered ice cream from 8- 10 PM.  The pool was also really fantastic.
  • Phuket was pretty walkable, and our hotel was centrally located.
  • Karon Beach, where we stayed, was family friendly.  No wild backpacker parties (you know you are old when this falls in the loved section).
A sunset cocktail and our free popcorn
A great hotel pool.

What we didn’t like/felt meh about in Phuket:

  • Phuket is a town that seems like maybe it peaked about 10 years ago.  Restaurants are a bit dated/cheesy, and unless you eat street food, are definitely overpriced.
  • Coffee in the morning was really hard to come by.  The earliest any of the coffee shops near us opened was 10 AM– although they then stayed open until at least 10 PM.
  • The signage was really bad. Big Buddha is a major attraction.  Would it kill you to have a sign?
  • We couldn’t find a bookstore.  I am out of books to read.  You are a beach town.  How does a beach town not have a bookstore?  Unfathomable.

If you want hip and modern, go to Chiang Mai.  If you just want to sit in the sand and look at beautiful sunsets, well, Phuket.  You’ll be glad you did.