タグ: Beach

  • Thailand Travel Guide: What to Pack and When to Go | 20 Years of Hard-Won Lessons

    Thailand Travel Guide: What to Pack and When to Go | 20 Years of Hard-Won Lessons

    After 20 years of traveling to Thailand, I’ve learned what to bring, what to leave behind, and when to go. This guide cuts through the noise and tells you what actually matters.


    Thailand Has Three Seasons

    Cool Season (November - February)
    └ Best season for travel
    └ Less rain, comfortable temperatures
    └ Clearest sea conditions
    └ Higher prices for flights and hotels
    
    Hot Season (March - May)
    └ Hottest time of year, up to 40°C
    └ Songkran water festival
    └ Brutal for daytime sightseeing
    
    Rainy Season (June - October)
    └ Daily heavy downpours, usually 1-2 hours
    └ Cheapest time to travel
    └ Lush scenery and great fruit
    └ Roads can flood
    photo by Evan Krause on Unsplash

    The Biggest Trap: Different Regions Have Different Rain Seasons

    Thailand is long and narrow, so the weather varies dramatically by region. This catches many travelers off guard.

    Bangkok (Central)
    └ Hot year-round
    └ Rainy season brings evening downpours
    
    Chiang Mai (North)
    └ Cool season mornings can drop to 15°C
    └ February-April: smoke and PM2.5
     from agricultural burning
    
    Phuket (Andaman Sea side)
    └ Rainy season: May - October
    └ Many beaches closed to swimming
    
    Koh Tao, Koh Phangan, Koh Samui
    (Gulf of Thailand side)
    └ Rainy season: October - December
    └ Sunny in July and August
    └ Better choice than Phuket
     during summer holidays

    This is crucial. Travelers who visit Phuket during summer often hit the rainy season. The Gulf of Thailand islands are the smarter choice in July and August.

    photo by Ibrahim Rifath on Unsplash

    The Four Things You Actually Need

    After all these years, it comes down to four essentials.

    └ Passport (minimum 6 months validity remaining)
    └ Cash (Thai baht)
    └ Credit card with cash advance function
    └ Smartphone

    Most other things can be bought locally. Thailand has pharmacies everywhere. Travel light and buy what you need when you need it.


    photo by Noppon Meenuch on Unsplash

    Do This Before You Leave

    TDAC (Digital Arrival Card)
    └ Register online up to 72 hours before arrival
    └ Free and mandatory
    
    Check your passport validity
    └ Must have 6+ months remaining
    
    Sort out your mobile data
    └ Check if your current plan covers Thailand
    └ If not, get an eSIM before departure
    └ SIMs are also available at Thai airports
    
    Install Grab
    └ Register your credit card in advance
    └ Makes getting around dramatically easier
    
    Travel insurance
    └ Check if your credit card includes coverage
    └ If not, take out a policy before departure

    photo by Julia Kicova on Unsplash

    For Beach Trips

    └ Swimwear
    └ Beach sandals
    └ Reef-safe sunscreen
    └ Motion sickness medication
     (essential for speedboats to islands)
    └ Waterproof phone case

    Motion sickness medicine is not optional on island ferry routes. The boats can get rough. Bring it regardless of whether you think you need it.

    UnsplashThe DK Photography

    Things People Forget

    Something warm to wear

    Long-distance buses and trains in Thailand run their air conditioning at arctic levels. Bring a light jacket or cardigan regardless of the season outside.

    Temple-appropriate clothing

    Temples turn away visitors in sleeveless tops, short shorts, miniskirts, or ripped jeans. Pack a light cover-up and long pants.

    photo by Brenton Williamson on Unsplash

    Wet wipes

    Street food stalls and public toilets often have no paper. Wet wipes earn their weight every single day.

    Reusable bag

    Plastic bags are no longer provided free at convenience stores and supermarkets.


    Watch Out on the Plane

    Neck pillow
    └ Useful for long flights
    
    Inflatable foot rest
    └ Some airlines including Thai Airways
     do not permit these
    └ Check the rules before packing one

    Never Bring These

    E-cigarettes (vapes)
    └ Illegal in Thailand
    └ Confiscation and heavy fines
    └ Leave them at home, no exceptions
    
    Shisha pipes
    └ Also prohibited
    
    Regular cigarettes
    └ These are fine

    E-cigarettes are illegal in Thailand. This surprises many travelers who use them at home. Do not bring them under any circumstances.


    Money and Exchange

    Exchange money in Thailand, not before
    └ Rates at home airports are poor
    └ Bangkok exchange booths offer
     far better rates
    └ Look for Super Rich (green or orange signs)
    
    Always carry cash for
    └ Street food stalls
    └ Tuk-tuks
    └ Small local shops
    └ Tips
    └ Keep small bills handy (20 and 100 baht)
    
    Credit cards work at
    └ Mid to large hotels and restaurants
    └ Shopping malls
    └ Grab ride payments

    Don’t Worry About Food

    If the local food isn’t working for you, McDonald’s, Burger King and other fast food chains are everywhere. There’s always a fallback option.

    photo by Andrew Ly onUnsplash

    When Exhaustion Hits

    Thailand is hot year-round and sightseeing drains energy fast. Every convenience store stocks energy drinks including the original Thai Red Bull. It works. Keep one handy on long travel days.


    Suitcase or Backpack?

    Suitcase makes sense for
    └ Bangkok and Chiang Mai city trips
    └ Hotel-based travel
    └ Buying lots of souvenirs
    
    Backpack makes sense for
    └ Island hopping
    └ Koh Tao and Koh Phangan involve
     boats, beaches and sandy paths
    └ A suitcase becomes a burden fast

    Leave These at Home

    Too many clothes
    └ Laundry services are cheap and everywhere
    └ Buying a local t-shirt is part of the fun
    
    Heavy guidebooks
    └ Your phone handles everything
    
    Heeled shoes
    └ Bangkok pavements are uneven
    └ Sneakers and sandals are all you need

    photo by Sumit Chinchane on Unsplash

    Final Thoughts

    The most important decisions in Thailand are timing and region. Get those right and everything else falls into place.

    For everything else, the four essentials cover you. Travel light, buy what you need locally, and enjoy the fact that Thailand makes everything easy.

    Just leave the e-cigarettes at home. Every time.

  • Full Moon Party on Koh Phangan | Dancing Until 7AM Under the Full Moon

    Full Moon Party on Koh Phangan | Dancing Until 7AM Under the Full Moon

    Koh Phangan is the island that appeared in the movie “The Beach.” Though the film never mentioned it, this island became world famous for its monthly Full Moon Party. Often called one of the world’s three great raves, it’s a legendary beach party held on the night of the full moon.

    I’ve always loved club music, and I first learned about Koh Phangan from a book by a traveler who toured outdoor raves around the world. I have to go there someday. That thought stayed with me for years, until the night it finally came true. This is that story.


    Getting to Koh Phangan

    I traveled from Bangkok by sleeper train to Surat Thani, then transferred to a ferry. Since it saves on accommodation costs, this is a popular route among backpackers.

    Route 1: Fastest and most comfortable
    └ Flight to Koh Samui + ferry
    └ About 4-5 hours
    
    Route 2: Budget-friendly
    └ LCC to Surat Thani + bus + ferry
    └ About 5-6 hours
    
    Route 3: For atmosphere and lowest cost
    └ Night train/bus + ferry
    └ About 11-16 hours

    Since it’s close to Koh Tao, flying to Koh Samui and transferring to a ferry is the easiest option.

    photo by Sotiris Savvides on Unsplash

    I Arrived a Week Before the Party

    I’d heard that accommodation gets hard to book right before the Full Moon Party, so I reserved a cottage and stayed from about a week before. This turned out to be the right call. Popular places fill up two to three months in advance around the full moon, so early booking is essential.

    It let me enjoy the days leading up to the party at a relaxed pace. Koh Phangan has many beaches, so I spent my days lounging around or exploring the island on a rented motorbike.

    photo by Eirik Skarstein on Unsplash

    How I Ended Up Covered in Blood

    The island has songthaews (shared taxis), so getting around isn’t a problem. But renting a motorbike gives you total freedom and amplifies that sense of island liberation.

    This is where I messed up. I didn’t have much motorbike experience, and I crashed in town, ending up covered in blood.

    Fortunately I only had a few scrapes. The real problem was something else. The rented bike was brand new, so I had to pay a hefty repair bill. Honestly, the damage to my wallet hurt more than the damage to my body.

    Koh Phangan has very steep roads and tourist scooter accidents are common. If you’re not confident riding, just use the songthaews.

    photo by Casper Westera on Unsplash

    Waved Through the Police Checkpoint on the Full Moon Night

    On the night of the Full Moon Party, I headed to the venue by motorbike around midnight.

    There was a police checkpoint along the way. Since Koh Phangan is famous for parties, drugs circulate here and police crackdowns have intensified. The car of Western tourists ahead of me was stopped and subjected to a drug check.

    I wasn’t carrying anything, but perhaps because I was mistaken for a local Thai, I was simply waved through. My sun-tanned face may have worked in my favor.


    The Beach Transforms into a Massive Outdoor Club

    When I arrived at Haad Rin Beach just after midnight, it was packed with people. The roughly 800-meter beach had transformed into a giant outdoor club.

    There were countless outdoor booths and bars, fire dance shows blazing everywhere, and the whole atmosphere was overwhelming. It lives up to its reputation of drawing 20,000 to 30,000 young people from all over the world.

    The scene
    └ More than 10 stages
    └ EDM, techno, hip-hop, reggae, trance
    └ Neon body paint everywhere
    └ Spectacular fire shows
    └ The iconic "bucket cocktails" sipped through straws

    Each booth plays a different genre, so I claimed my spot at the trance area.


    Dancing Until 7AM, Fueled by Beer

    At the trance booth, I danced fueled by nothing but beer. Before I knew it, it was 7 in the morning.

    What amazed me was that even without any drugs, the music and party atmosphere alone had my brain flooding with natural highs. Dopamine must have been pouring out. I felt no fatigue at all and danced until dawn, genuinely surprising myself.

    As the sun rose, the party ended and I returned to my room to sleep. That sense of unity and euphoria was more than enough of an experience without resorting to anything artificial.

    photo by Danny Howe on Unsplash

    Never Touch Drugs

    I want to say this firmly.

    The danger of drugs
    └ Thailand is extremely strict on illegal drugs
    └ Undercover stings and random urine tests happen
    └ Worst case can mean the death penalty
    └ Even recreational cannabis use in public is illegal

    As I proved by dancing until morning, the music and atmosphere alone are more than enough. There’s no reason to risk throwing your life away.


    Other Safety Tips

    Drink spiking (sedatives)
    └ Never accept drinks from strangers
    └ Never leave your bucket cocktail unattended
    
    Clothing and belongings
    └ Always wear shoes (broken glass on the beach)
    └ Minimal cash, leave passport at your hotel
    └ Use a waterproof case and strap for your phone
    
    Fire rope (skipping)
    └ People get severe burns trying it drunk
    └ Just watch, don't participate
    
    Don't go in the sea at night
    └ Drunk drowning accidents happen
    phtoto by Yoav Aziz on Unsplash

    Daytime Koh Phangan Is Wonderful Too

    Koh Phangan isn’t just a party island. Its rich nature is a major draw.

    Daytime activities
    └ Bottle Beach Viewpoint (scenic trekking)
    └ Sri Thanu area (world-famous yoga and healing hub)
    └ Ang Thong National Marine Park tour
    └ Zen Beach (sunsets and chill vibes)
    └ Mae Haad Beach (walk to an island at low tide)

    The Sri Thanu area in particular is renowned as a yoga mecca. The coexistence of wild parties and quiet yoga is, I think, the strange charm of Koh Phangan.


    Thailand’s EDM Scene Is Hot Right Now

    Thailand’s EDM scene is on fire at the moment.

    Belgium’s world-famous EDM festival “Tomorrowland” is reportedly holding its first Thailand edition near Pattaya this December. Tickets are apparently already sold out, so if it returns next year, I want to try for it. I’m personally a big Avicii fan, and surely his tracks will play.

    Thailand has also seen outdoor EDM events heat up during the Songkran water festival. The stage blasts huge amounts of water over the crowd, everyone gets soaked, and it’s an absolutely incredible time.


    Best Season

    December - April (dry season)
    └ Most stable weather, peak high season
    
    July - August
    └ Coincides with European summer holidays, huge crowds
    
    Avoid
    └ October - November (monsoon, heavy rain and high waves)

    Final Thoughts

    The Full Moon Party on Koh Phangan exceeded my wildest expectations. Under the full moon, 20,000 people dancing wild on an 800-meter beach. I surrendered to the rhythm of trance and danced until 7AM, fueled by nothing but beer.

    Without relying on anything artificial, music and a sense of unity alone can lift a person that high. That night taught me this firsthand.

    If you love club music, go to Koh Phangan under a full moon at least once in your life. Just be careful with the motorbike and the drugs. The former hurts your wallet, the latter your entire life.