I love these guys:

I forgot to mention, we've rented a wee manual moped for getting around the island.
Tis gas
craic. 3 euro to fill the tank from empty,which doesn't seem to b going down at all as I drive!
Your average street in the built up part of
Koh Tao:
Kids having the craic:
- water temperature is like a warm bath here. Wetsuits aren't necessary for dives up to 20 metres. Madness!
Jammin' on the beach:

A couple of views from restaurants around the island:


Here's one of the dawn pics from the boat dock in
Chumphon, back on the mainland:

The bar where Ass works: (Read on for that one...)

An arty
farty pic by Soupy Dave (Formerly Dave
Disprin)

Ahh yes, it's veerrry hot here now, so this time I don't think the mossies will eat me alive!
My first two dives went great, it had been two years since my last dive, so I was rusty. You usually perform a 'Buddy Check' before you dive, but as I'm a Rescue Diver(For all that that means! I can't even
feckin' swim properly and have forgotten pretty much everything about CPR etc) my instructor, Des, obviously felt it wasn't
necessary, as when I turned around to do it, he was already in the water!
Suffice to say, I was about to jump in, when I put the reg in my mouth... 'Sure we'll give one quick inhale to make sure...' - lucky I did, my air was off, and I had none in the BCD( the inflatable jacket a diver wears to keep buoyancy) so I would have sunk 20 metres like a stone, with four lead weights and heavy equipment. A bad dose of the bends at best I'd say...
Dave called it 'A bad day for Bean's skin' as I had cut my leg on dead reef, got bitten all over by mossies, burnt my forehead and shoulders, and ants were making little treks on me as well. But twas gas craic anyway.
Here's a few funny pics, note the hair:


We had a great night of encounters these last few nights. We befriended a few locals, one of which is a bit of an activist, Ass was his unfortunate name, and he explained a bit about what is going on politically. Riots in Bangkok broke out the day after we left, so that was good for us!
There was also a young fella, about 22 or so, working where we are staying. Goh was his name, we got to talking outside as he played guitar and had heard us playing. Later that night he came down to us in the restaurant, where we were busy making plans still.
It was then we found out the shocking truth of how he came to work there. He works 14 hour days outside in the sun, general garden maintenance etc. He is actually from Burma(Myanmar)
He learned to speak English on the sly in Burma, reading a dictionary over and over, as the government(which is a military regime) don't like their own people learning English as it generates money, so they're the only ones who are aloud to use it freely. Bastards.
He had no visa so he was put into a container with 70 people and snuck across the border into Thailand, of the 70 people in the container, only 40 survived the trip. With a smile on his face he told us he was one of the strong ones. His Uncle was also working somewhere else on the island, and I was afraid to ask had he any more family in the container, just in case they had been one of the ones who didn't make it. The Thai police regularly chase them down(When the tourist season is low, and bribes from tourists are hard to find) to get bribes for staying in the country. He works out on the island as the the police bribe here is cheaper. Doesn't it just boil the blood.
Here's a picture of Goh:

Today so far has been spent looking into our plans for getting further down south, and eventually across the equator into the southern hemisphere. Dave is busy on the other PC here, finding out about Indonesian Visa shtuff and flights in this neck of the woods. It sounds as if everything is going swimmingly. The plan is to boat south from here, to Surat Thani. Get a train down through southern Thailand, that will continue down through Malaysia, and end in Singapore. From there, we will head out to Borneo, and see East Malaysia, Kalimantan and Brunei.
- Whale bones.
Wow a serious storm as just hit the island in the last few minutes....the roads are already filling up with water. This is a satellite internet connection, so I better post this before the clouds cut me off.
Bye!