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The Tarutao archipelago consists of 51 islands
near the Thai - Malaysian border in Thailand
´s deep south off the west coast in the emerald water of the Andaman
Sea.
The gateway to
Tarutao is Ban Pak Bara at the end of highway 4052
in Satun province southern Thailand. This
highway is a branch of 404 and 416 coming down from Trang. Ko
Tarutao is about 1 hour with the ship from Pak Bara. The ship for Ko
Tarutao and Ko Lipe, is the same for
both islands. The passenger for Ko Tarutao leave this ship for a
long tail boat about 300 meter offshore near Ko
Tarutao.
At Pak Bara pier departure for Ko
Tarutao and Ko Lipe is every day at 1.30 pm. During high season
one more ship is operating but only in the morning around 10 am.
At Pak Bara one can also find a small ship
leaving for Langkawi Island in Malaysia.
The Tarutao Archipelago could
geographically be
seen as 2 parts.
One are the islands around the main Tarutao Island (Ko Turatao)
and the second the islands scattered around Adang (Ko Adang) and Rawi (Ko Rawi) island.
Declared a national park in 1974 Tarutao was the Kingdom's
first marine national park, its a clean, pristine environment full
of beauty above and under the water surface, it's great outdoor
adventure. |
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Limestone formations and
huge granite boulders form a dramatic environment. Beaches are
plenty and you probably will easily find one for you only.
It is very exiting to snorkel or just swim around the smooth
rocks.

Tarutao
island Ao Molae beach Thailand
 
A typical Tarutao beach
scene, Ao Sane at Ko Tarutao
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The Tarutao islands are covered with dense thick jungle all
the way down to the beach where they form a natural boundary
to the light fine sand of the beaches. On one of the islands
a community of "sea gypsies" offer to stay in some "home
made" bungalows. A nice atmosphere, somehow becomes a bit
boring after some days. This "sea gypsies" are practically
the same people who live also in the
Myeik (Mergui
Archipelago) in southern
Myanmar (Burma). |
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Tarutao islands beach
in front of the National Park HQ

Ko Tarutao main island |
Ko Tarutao was used as a prison for political and
other prisoners during the first democratic attempts
in Thailand until the 1940s.
On Ko
Tarutao is the national park headquarter
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with a
couple of bungalows run by the forestry service. The
adventure hungry can explore caves - crocodile cave
on Ko Tarutao -, waterfalls - Lu Du waterfall is
about 1 hour walk and Lo Po waterfall about 1
hour and a half -. |
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Tarutao islands are covered with dense jungle |

Tarutao island Beach |
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beaches and jungle treks through virgin rain forest. It is
one of the few places in Thailand without human
intervention. |
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Tarutao sunset at the national park headquarter Thailand |
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Ko Tarutao Pier of the
National Park HQ |
Try to avoid to stay in the houses of the park headquarter,
if you do stay there you must bring your own soap, toilet
paper and towel with you, this items are not supplied, they
tell you on request.. go and buy it in the shop !
Electricity is only on from 6 pm to around 12 pm, no
ventilator before and after.
The “self service” restaurant is very average but the prices
are top, around the same like in Patong Beach, Phuket.
It looks to me as if the boss there use this place to
get money into pocket and that's it.
If you have a problem, the guy |

Ko Tarutao Sunset |
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at the reception - the one with the moustache - tells - you are a stupid farang - etc.,
strange philosophy anyway. It looks to me that here are some
people trying by any means to milk the foreigner. |

Ko Tarutao Island
Bungalow Cluster on the Beach

Ko Tarutao Beach |
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There are a few bungalow cluster at the other beaches,
but to go there is a problem, the park headquarter
controls the long tail boats to go there,
they charge the foreigner 800 baht for a 20
minute ride. |
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The usual price elsewhere in Thailand is
about 300 baht. If one complain they
tell, their engine is a car engine and this
consumes much more petrol than the usual
diesel engine, their problem is they think
unfortunately all others have a similar
peculiar thinking pattern like they have.
I really hope that someone from the
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Pier at Ko
Tarutao National Park Head Quarter

Approaching Ko Tarutao |
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forestry service in Bangkok brings this
people under control before they can do more
damage by running wild, this is ugly ! |
Tarutao
Something
squirmed past my foot. Something wriggled under my armpit.
And what was that nibbling at my calf? Treading water in a
turquoise pool at the foot of Lu Du waterfall on Tarutao
island, I pulled on a mask and snorkel to investigate.
I was surrounded by large, black fish " a few at first,
then
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Sail Ship off Ko
Tarutao |
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scores,
multiplying as they emerged from shadowy corners. Soon the
pool teemed with slippery, inquisitive life.
A snake " thin, brown, about a metre long " glided
into the water from a limestone ledge.
The dip that had
seemed the perfect antidote to a two-hour hike through the
steamy jungle was fast becoming a reality TV show trial.
Enough was enough: I scrambled ashore.
Any island that has been a political prison, a
hideout for pirates, a heavily-policed National Park, and a location for
the American reality TV show Survivor, was bound to hold a
few surprises.
It certainly took the Hindus by surprise
in the 1st century AD
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on their sea migrations from India into
Southeast Asia.
They decided that Ko Tarutao, 22km
off the south-west coast of Thailand and cut
off by monsoon seas for half the year, was
cursed. Those who entered its thick jungles
tended to go mad, or die. What they didn't
know was that the delirium and death were
brought on by malaria, which no longer poses
a threat. However, it's still advisable to
bring plenty of insect repellent and a
mosquito net.
Just in view to the south is the Malaysian holiday resort
island of Langkawi, yet Ko Tarutao feels a million
miles away from it, shielded from encroachment by its Thai
National Park status. |

Tarutao beach panorama Thailand |
This 26km-long island with its palm- and casuarina-fringed
beaches, mangrove swamps and jungles is one of the 51
islands that make up the Tarutao National Marine Park, three
of which have ferry connections to Pak Bara on the mainland.
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Koh Adang and
Koh Lipe, the other islands within a ferry ride of Pak Bara,
are surrounded by pristine coral reefs. The Tsunami Reef
Action Fund, set up by the Sustainable Ecosystems
Institute, has cited the archipelago's sheltered position behind the
Sumatra peninsula as the reason why last December's tsunami,
which slammed into resorts further north around Phuket,
caused 'little or no damage' here.
Even though Tarutao let in the reality TV cameras in 2002,
the park keepers have successfully held the private resort
developers at bay, and only a few in-roads have been carved.
Rough roads and dirt tracks link the National Park
headquarters at Ao Pante on the north- west coast to four
other ranger stations at Ao Sane, a favourite egg- laying
site for turtles on the west coast, Ao Ma Kham further
south, and the former prison sites of Ao Talo Wao and Ao
Talo Udang on the east coast.
Tarutao's formidable reputation made it the perfect
choice to house political prisoners during the early 1940s.
The island's perils were hyped up by the guards, who
deterred the convicts from escaping with tales of shark and
crocodile attacks. Very little remains of the prisons today,
just some rusty relics in the visitor centre at Ao Pante,
including an enormous wok, a cannon, some leg irons, and
photographs of the more important political prisoners "
leaders of two coup attempts from the 1930s. Among them were
So Sethaputra, the author of the first Thai-English
dictionary; the grandson of King Rama VII, Sittiporn
Gridagorn, who developed a new cucumber strain during his
captivity and became minister for agriculture after his
pardon; and Luan Sarapiwanit, who called the guards' bluff
about the sharks and crocodiles, swam out to a fishing boat
and escaped. He later became minister for education; imagine
if Ruth Kelly had had to undergo such trials.
Supplies of anti-malarial drugs and food to the prisons
dried up during the Second World War and in 1944 wardens,
jailors and convicts turned to piracy, raiding ships in the
Straits of Malacca. The attacks became increasingly frequent
and ferocious as necessity turned to greed and the booty was
smuggled to the mainland and sold.
After the war, British troops were sent in from Malaysia
" then British Malaya " to root out pirates hiding in the
estuaries and creeks. Little time was wasted in closing
down the prisons after that, but pirate attacks continue to
this day.
It was easy to imagine the prisoners' fear of crocodiles
when my girlfriend and I took a long-tail ride with a
boatman named Hat up the mangrove-fringed estuary of the
Pante-Malaka river to 'Crocodile Cave'. Hat was one of 15
boatmen from poor villages around Satun province selected by
the National Park to spend the November-to-May dry season
transferring tourists from the ferry to Ao Pante's pier at
low tides.
A sea eagle took flight from a rocky islet as our long-tail
clattered up the river, and we moored near the cave mouth.
Braving the rickety floating walkway by Hat's torchlight, we
half expected scaly torsos and gnashing teeth at any moment.
Hat's words, 'No crocodile, not for 20 year!' did little to
calm our nerves as he cranked up a generator and a row of
bulbs blinked into life, waking bats. The cavern walls were
corrugated like a pipe organ, and in our guide's imaginative
patter stalagmites became 'a camel' and 'an old man's head'
as he led us up to our knees in cool, squidgy clay. On the
way back to Ao Pante, Hat pulled the boat in by some
mangrove roots, and whispered 'monkey come, monkey come!'
and sure enough, a crab-eating macaque clambered tentatively
through the mesh of roots and leapt on board to steal a
strategically placed biscuit.
It was easy to see why Tarutao was chosen by CBS as the
location for Survivor: the proximity of the fauna on the
island is alarming. Cicadas in the evergreen canopy chirped
as loudly and incessantly as car alarms. Wild pigs foraged
under the cabins while we slept. An enormous king cobra
slithered into a river bank behind Ao Jak beach on the way
to Lu Du waterfall " a route that writhes in the memory for
its abundance of serpent life.
The 3km trail to Lu Du starts at Ao Sone, marked out with
tags tied to trees. You can easily lose the trail, so
you may find yourself clambering up the river for much of
the way, which can add hours to the hike. Green snakes bask
on rocks and flee across the river with frightening alacrity
as you approach. You reach a small waterfall with a deep
pool before you get to Lu Du, which is more pleasant to swim
in than the larger, fish- and snake-infested pool I found
myself in at the end of the trail.
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Tarutao small island beach Thailand |
By the time we clambered back down from Lu Du to Ao Sane,
the thought of walking the 8km road to Ao Pante was too
daunting. You can camp at Ao Sane, but we flagged down a
passing fisherman in a long-tail boat, who ferried us up the
coast. En route, a grey
inflatable speedboat passed us carrying five men in army
fatigues clutching rifles.
They were park rangers patrolling
for illegal trawlers and dynamite fishermen. Our humble
skipper posed no threat with his nylon fishing line and
battered cooking pot. But the rangers' appearance was no
sham: in 1981, 10 rangers in a long-tail boat were
surrounded by illegal trawlers, and came under heavy
gunfire. They had to be airlifted to safety. Since then
they've raised their game, and have learnt to behave like a
small army.
Ever since Tarutao was declared a National Park in 1974, the
rangers have fought battles on many fronts. First, it was
with farmers who had moved from the mainland to cultivate
rubber plantations and coconut groves. Two rangers were
killed in ambushes, and the richest settler only agreed to
leave once he'd clinched a handsome pay-off.
The coconut palms are still there, providing shelter
to a newly built row of smart two-bedroom National Park
bungalows, which visitors can rent for 2,000 baht (pounds
27) a night.
Balancing tourism and conservation is now the chief concern
of the National Park. As many as 10 private bungalow resorts
have sprung up on Koh Lipeh. The National Park must prevent
further encroachment while
Tarutao small island beach Thailand
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maintaining the tourist trade,
and protecting the local Urak Lawoi people.
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for you |
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