The next day, we booked a kayak tour of the Ang Thong National Marine Park. The Park is actually an archipelago of 42 islands, some of them very small, so the actual number varies by how you define an island. We spend two hours by boat getting there, enjoying the tropical weather and salt-water breeze on our faces. This felt like such a vacation. Then it struck me that coming to Thailand in the first place was a vacation from our vacation. So really, this short trip to the islands was a vacation from our vacation from our vacation.... 555!
The boat anchors off one of the bigger islands and we're off to do some kayaking!
Some of the interestingly shaped islands in the Ang Thong Park
The park is about 50 square kms and the islands are really these huge limestone formations that jut out of the water. Time, weather and erosion have carved amazing nooks and crannies in the rock above the waterline, and kayaking into these naturally-formed grottos, shelves and hidden lagoons is a popular tourist activity.
Neda paddles out of one of the caves while I take a picture of her strange hat. I made her paddle in and out until I got the shot just right...
Neda paddles our kayak under these neat shelves that the tides have cut into the limestone while I take more pictures
Neda paddles out to one of the more unusual rock formations. I take a picture of the cool sharp jagged edges right at the top.
The boat anchors off one of the bigger islands and we're off to do some kayaking!
Some of the interestingly shaped islands in the Ang Thong Park
The park is about 50 square kms and the islands are really these huge limestone formations that jut out of the water. Time, weather and erosion have carved amazing nooks and crannies in the rock above the waterline, and kayaking into these naturally-formed grottos, shelves and hidden lagoons is a popular tourist activity.
Neda paddles out of one of the caves while I take a picture of her strange hat. I made her paddle in and out until I got the shot just right...
Neda paddles our kayak under these neat shelves that the tides have cut into the limestone while I take more pictures
Neda paddles out to one of the more unusual rock formations. I take a picture of the cool sharp jagged edges right at the top.