The Clean Up Day was a massive success at Ao Nang Beach yesterday! A big thank you to Projects Abroad, British International School and and all the divers who joined us to make a real difference.
Monthly Archives: June 2012
Diving in Khao Sok National Park
In the year 1982 the Pasaeng River was closed off. As rain fall filled the Rachabrappha Dam, Chieow Larn Lake was created over the area of 165 square kilometers. Today, the edge of the reservoir provides one of the best places to spot wild animals such as hornbills, gibbons, barking deer, wild elephant and boar.
Chieow Larn lake lies 2 hour drive from our Kon-Tiki Krabi Dive Center and 1 ½ hour away from our Kon-Tiki Khao Lak Dive Center. We reached our destination in the midst of the lake, a rafting village where we could have lunch and kit up for the dives. The accommodation here is basic but tranquil and you have a 28 degree freshwater pool at your doorstep. After the lunch, wetsuits where on and it was time to go diving.
Diving from a long tail is a great way to get close to the cliffs and in to the smaller lagoons. We kit up and make a back roll in to the water by the wall. As we are descending you can start to see the outlines of tree branches and bushes that once were covered in leaves. Now they stand naked like a winter forest in a green fog. Visibility is around 4-5 meters and we keep close to each other. The lake seems to be bottomless and as you go deeper the darkness comes rapidly. The decision is to stay shallow to have more natural light during the first part of the dive. We come across a large cave opening and we are drawn to investigate this a bit further. Large limestone stalactites spiral down several meters from the ceiling, with diameters wider than a diver.
The karst stone ledges are resting spots for big cat fish, and as we shine our torches in to the cave their curiosity leads them up to us. Some cat fish here are up to a meter long and with the white “whiskers” gives an impression of a great river monster. They are harmless and after a quick look they float away in to the darkness. We spent the remaining time of the dive around the entrance of the cave. After surfacing we make our way back to the rafting village after spending some time exploring the surrounding area together with “Em”. As the sun sets over Khao Sok the dinner is served and exhausted from the day’s adventure we call it a night early.
The next day we packed up and left the rafting village bound for a morning dive after breakfast. We choose to do another wall dive with sunken trees, caves and karst formations. Visibility is a bit better on this dive giving the stalactites and stalagmites beautiful color. As time passes quickly underwater, once again we are limited to the cave opening and the surroundings.
We pack the car as we moor up by the Rachabrappha dam and continue to the other entrance of the park in Klong Sok, a 45 minute drive away from the lake. The Sok River runs through this little village and this will cater for our next adventure, Tubing!
After a lunch with traditional Khao Sok herbs, ferns, leaves and other vegetables we are handed a tyre inner tube and started a journey down the river. As we are floating through the rainforest our guide points out and tells us about different species of vegetation, reptiles, monkeys and birds. After the previous dives in the morning, tubing feels like a nice and relaxing way of exploring the rain forest.
One and a half hour later we arrive at a sand bank and we get a ride back to the starting point where we can get changed for our onwards journey. With a fresh Latté in the cup holder we start our drive back to Krabi. Arriving back in civilization in time for dinner and a cocktail, the impressions from these two days of adventure is slowly sinking in leaving memories for life.
Kon-Tiki is now introducing a new Khao Sok Excursion for this upcoming season. Would you like to explore the National Park of Khao Sok under as well as above water?
Contact us for a lifetime experience!
Kon-Tiki Krabi recieves the PADI Green Star Award
On behalf of the PADI Retail & Resort Associations, they would like to commend us for our commitment to conservation and the aquatic environment.
In recognition and appreciation of our conservation initiatives and effort to reduce the environmental footprint of our business, Kon-Tiki Krabi receives the PADI Green Star Award.
Through our achievements we help confirm green initiatives both environmentally and commercially and helps to promote green initiatives among other organizations. PADI would like to congratulate Kon-Tiki Krabi for the outstanding performance in initiating green business practices; exhibiting conservational responsibility!
In the future we plan to do even more project as we have in the past, so please keep yourself updated, should you wish to join us on one or more projects.

Malene Jensen
General Manager
Kon-Tiki Krabi
Weird Creature of the month – June
Razor fish also known as Shrimpfish belongs to the Centriscidae Family which consists of dozen species. They have a unusual appearance as their name indicates.
Most of them species are found in deeper tropical, subtropical southern oceans but we also get some species shallower in the Indo pacific are. In Krabi we get them as a nice treat around the Ao Nang Islands.
Their bodies are thin and long, the biggest species are up to 34 cm long, the ones we found here are usually around 10 to 15 cm long. They swim around in a head down position and are usually seen in groups of up to 10 individuals, as they hide close to seaweed or coral trying to blend in with their environment.
Their snout is long and narrow and has no teeth, but then they don’t need teeth as they feed on zooplankton.
A tribute to a Kon-Tiki Instructor!
Kristin Bergdahl arrived first time in Ao Nang 2006 to visit her sister Linnea, already a Dive Master with Kon-Tiki. At this time she then did her open water course with Instructor Elin Edlund.
Since then there has been no stop to Kristin’s diving career. She went to Australia for a year, sailing around the Great Barrier Reef and working her way to become a Dive Master.
Kristin couldn’t resist the warm, sunny Thailand and when she got a job offer a Kon-Tiki Krabi, she immediately returned to the land of smiles. After a season of guiding divers around the Andaman Sea, she also earned the prestigious Open Water Scuba Instructor rating.
The interest for life underneath the surface sat deep in Kristin. She spent the summer of 2009 on a marine research base in Indonesia assisting scientist collecting data from the reefs. Inspired by the sea, she returned to Kon-Tiki Krabi once again to teach as an instructor.
Now thinking it is time to grow up, she has left Thailand and will finish her bachelor’s in Global Studies at the University of Gothenburg. Still haven’t forgotten about the corals, she stays true to the ocean and we are proud to present one of her articles here.
Please enjoy!!!!


