Showing posts with label south-myanmar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label south-myanmar. Show all posts

South Myanmar Diving & Island Tour

South Myanmar Diving & Island tour between Myeik and Kawthaung.

About 800 Myanmar Islands are in the south Andaman Sea. Only a few are inhabited during monsoon time by the Salone or Sea Gypsies which only live on them when the weather is very bad. Usually they stay on their house boats. The start of our trip was at Yangon harbor.



yangon port
Yangon port


Myanmar islands in the Myeik Archipelago
South Myanmar island tour in the Myeik Archipelago

South Myanmar Island Beach
Southern Beach
South Myanmar Islands
Southern sunset










making dugout
Making dugout
dugout finished
Dugout finished










The spots in the Andaman Sea are the homes of the Salones or "Sea Gypsies", they haven't chanced since colonial times. They still live on their houseboats and during monsoon partly on the islands.

Their specialty are dugouts (Einbaum) they carve out from appropriate trees.

Visiting Myanmar's Elephant Island,


Myanmar Island Beach
South Myanmar Beach

and other bizarre limestone spots in the ocean but that is a name bestowed by a stranger from afar. There is nothing of an elephant about this place at close quarters. 

Every time I look into the night and see its sinister pinnacles and revetments outlined against the stars, I am assailed by their awful suggestion. 


Tropical Andaman Sea
Tropical Andaman Sea

Even the wash of the Andaman Sea is real pleasant, from a geographical point of view this is already the famous south-sea which includes the even more famous pearls which has been collected by the Salone pearl diver for a long time and today they are cultures.


The Salone or Sea Gypsies and their house-boats
The Salone or Sea Gypsies and their house-boats

The archipelago and the Salone or Sea-Gypsies
The archipelago and the Salone or Sea-Gypsies

away in the heart of this smiling archipelago and the Salone or Sea-Gypsies living there. Who would suspect its existence if he were not told of it.



The Yacht waiting for clearance at Kawthaung
The Yacht waiting for clearance at Kawthaung


Last night our yacht untiring in adventure, 

Salone or sea gypsies hunting
Sea gypsies hunting


Salone boy harpooning
Salone Village Beach Sunset
Salone Village Beach Sunset













on our tour in south Myanmar sailed away through the night in search of a Salone camp, whose fires shone like pinpoints in the dark. For it seemed probable that they could pilot us by an easier route to the lake whose existence we had discovered. 


Salone Camp at the Beach
Salone Camp at the Beach
Travel in south Myanmar
Travel in south Myanmar











The first light of dawn showed me a boat lashed under the bows of the launch, and I am sorry to say, its owner lying on its bottom trussed like a fowl. He made no protest. Taking him with us we climbed once again up the sharp pinnacles, and looked down upon the hidden waters ; but descent to them from there was impossible. 


Sea gypsies and beach life
Sea gypsies and beach life

We turned back, somewhat torn as to our hands and feet, and rowed away to the cave, as interesting as it was the night before, but less tragic now in the light of day. The  hoarse lapping of the sea still echoed there, but the sun, stealing in under the stalagmites, counteracted these dark suggestions. 


Kawthaung Trip
Kawthaung Trip


local yacht
Local yacht 
Kawthaung yacht immigration clearance
Kawthaung yacht

immigration clearance












This is between Kawthaung the former Victoria Point and the Myeik Archipelago.



The water was now a translucent green, and its roof was lit with dancing water-gleams. The Salone informed us that through this cave at low water I could enter the hidden lake. In the direction of the passage, still invisible, there was silence ; a roar came only from the blind walls where the Andaman Sea could find no entry. Through this passage the sea enters and retreats. 


Island vacation in the Andaman Sea
Island vacation in the Andaman Sea

Island and Andaman Sea
Island and Andaman Sea

At spring tides the mouth of the cave is filled to the roof, and there is no passage. Coming away, till the ebbing of the tide should serve our purpose, I made a tour and entered another cave called Gwa Chee Boh. It lies outside the perimeter on its eastern face, and is overhung by sheer and tragic cliffs from which great stalactites depend, threatening to fall upon an intruder. Long ropes of rattan, leading up into secret places, and now rotting with half a year's disuse, show that the cave is visited. 


Salone houseboat
Salone houseboat
Myanmar island beach
Busy beach












The Salone on being questioned disclaimed, 


People from Myeik
People from Myeik
with a sort of awe, their ever exploiting these cliffs for birds nests. They were too ignorant to find the nests, and too fearful of falling down from the great heights to attempt to do so. But the Malay come twice a year from Penang and climb up. 

They bring torches with them and remain within the inner cave ten days, getting shut in there by the sea ; and they collect six big bags of nests. It is a fearful place, where men fall and are killed. 

Formerly it was worked by peoples from Myeik, and the cave is named after one who fell and broke his back here.
Andaman Sea
Andaman Sea

Coastal Speedboat
Coastal Speedboat

Myanmar island cruising
Cruising in the archipelago
South Myanmar Trip
South Myanmar Trip











Sea gypsies houseboats
Sea gypsies houseboats
Andaman Island Living
Andaman Living











South Myanmar pearl diving


Local Pearls at Bogyoke Market
Local Pearls at Bogyoke Market
Myanmar Pearl Diver
Myanmar Pearl Diver













Andaman Sea Diving

New places to go underwater as Myanmar Encourages Tourism. Are you tired of crowded reefs and inconsiderate divers stirring up a silt storm just as you enter the water? Fed up with the same old reefs and
wrecks of the Red Sea or the Caribbean? Or maybe you would just like to be in warm water with crystal clear visibility, instead of cold green waters you have to dive in a dry suit. 

Myanmar is blessed with a 1,930 kilometer (1,197 mile) coastline that stretches from the mouth of the Naaf River on the border with Bangladesh, to Kawthaung at its southern tip where it meets Thailand. Included in her territories are some of the 325 Andaman Islands (most of them are Indian) which are a few hundred kilometers west. In Burma are around 900 more home to natives called the Salone or Moken people with a huge affinity to the sea, diving as deep as 25 meters (80 feet) without equipment.

The modern diver is eco-aware and scuba has become a hugely popular sport since Jacques Cousteau gave us the aqualung, with millions of people certified by PADI, the largest, although by no means the only, scuba organization. Although this has been a fantastic way for people to experience the wonders of the oceans for themselves, there is a destructive element to hoards of people kicking up sand, touching and breaking corals, and the environmental impact of thousands of day boats and liveaboards. We have learnt a great deal since the early days of diving, and dive centers and scuba divers in general are far more aware of the impact they make on the delicate ocean environment.

For some places, this awareness has come too late, and huge tourist numbers have already made a negative impact on dive sites which are struggling to recover. For the keen scuba diver, new territories are sought, but with these explorers come new eco-conscious attitudes and a real desire to ensure the sustainability of virgin reefs.

The benefits of a liveaboard


The tourist industry as a whole is still at fledgling stage in Myanmar, and scuba is no exception. Liveaboards and day boats have traditionally run from Thailand.

The advantages are many: diving starts early and can end with a night dive, so clocking up four dives a day is manageable; you can get to the more remote dive sites that are difficult for day boaters to reach.

Dives are interspersed with surface intervals that can be spent eating and drinking, reading, gentle sunbathing plus a lot of napping on board, along with the opportunity to take embarrassing photos of snoring victims. It is also a great opportunity to meet new people on your boat who share your passion for the ocean and her inhabitants, and to swap dive stories.

However, as the tourist industry grows, there will be greater opportunities for dive centers to open up. Already, there is a PADI dive center on Kayin Kwa, in the southernmost province of Myanmar, and it is hoped that inland centers will follow suit and with it, a hyperbaric center. At the moment, the nearest one is probably in Phuket, Thailand, although any hospital can treat decompression sickness symptoms.

The best time for divers to visit is between October and May, outside the rainy season, or November to April if you really want to make sure your diving will not get blown out. The water is between 26°C to 30°C, (79°F to 86°F), so a 3mm or 5mm shorty should suffice. Although there have been problems with dynamite fishing in the past, such practices are strongly discouraged, so the big pelagics, including mantas and whale sharks, are making a comeback. Visibility ranges from 10m after a storm to 150m. There are few wrecks to explore in this area, so concentrate instead on the multi-colored, underwater wildlife. 

Trip to Bago south Myanmar

A trip to Bago south Myanmar is probably the best short one when in Yangon


The city is the capital of Mon State and was quite important for several hundred years under the name of Pegu. Until around the 19th Century most foreign trading went through this port city. The Bago River filled the bay with silt over time and nothing was done to get rid of the sand and stones coming down from the "hinterland". Today only a small city is left without any importance.


Lake Monastery at Bago south Myanmar
Lake Monastery at Bago south Myanmar

In the city is the tallest Pagoda of the country, that's the Shwemawdaw Pagoda

Shwemawdaw Pagoda
Shwemawdaw Pagoda




Beside of the Pagoda the other interesting destinations are Kyaik Pun Buddha group and  Shwethalyaung Buddha, both are a couple of kilometers when coming from Yangon.

Myeik Archipelago Coast and Islands

The Archipelago in south Myanmar.

This part of the Indian Ocean changed ownership several times between Myanmar and Thailand in the last few hundred years. Since colonial times the English took it into British India and integrated this part into Burma.

The area in south Myanmar is one of the great places of the country, that makes it prime area for travel and leisure and geographically good connected to south Thailand but to create something out of this the bureaucrats at Naypyidaw would need to relax visa regulations, they just don’t let the people in, although they pretend the opposite. 


Myeik Archipelago in south Myanmar with Salone or sea gypsies on the main island
Andaman sea islands with Salone or sea gypsies


Here are the best Myanmar islands in the south near Thailand, places of natural beauty and interesting native people, the Salone who came in from south sea about 2000 years ago. The potential in travel development has definitely been noticed yet or just ignored by a lazy bureaucracy who do nothing for the people they elected them, but that is nothing new. 

South Myanmar is dotted with around 1000 or even more remote islands along the south coast all the way down to Kawthaung. This is the former Victoria Point, at the Thai border opposite Ranong and 300 km north of Phuket.


Unlike many of the isles of their southern neighbor these remote spots in the Andaman Sea islands have been empty since ever only when the British were around there some activities happen. At that time the ships of the East India Company sailed between Madras and Penang in today Malaysia. Since there are also no accommodations on the islands it’s difficult. 


trip to Myeik on house boats
Trip to Myeik on house boats

Some people make a trip using Myeik as a base but this is extremely cumbersome because in and out must still be via Yangon Airport it is not possible to exit or enter through Kawthaung.
These isles have been cut which also had a positive effect since they were left alone. 

This was not like that since recently because they sold fishing license to Thai trawler and they are very know of don’t caring about anything destroying the aquatic life with dynamite and cyanide fishing plus using illegal nets. They blocked out Thais and afterwards it went better. Thai’s do everything for money; they even destroyed all their own coastal regions with illegal tactics.

The diversity of wild animals on these islands was great but in the last hundred years they killed everything bigger than a grown up wild boar. The marine life is still quite ok now again and every week liveaboard yachts from Phuket come in for scuba diving trips. Currently this is the only possibility to explore these places in the Andaman Sea.

Indigenous to this island world are the sea gypsies or Salone who live here on houseboats and when the monsoon season is to turbulent they build palm huts on the beaches, these is a seafaring tribe who came from east of the islands of Indonesia, ethnically they are negritos of the same stock as the people south east of Mindanao in the Philippines.

Today they still do fishing, boat building, pearl diving and gathering amber and other materials on the islands.  Many are drug addicts, especially; alcohol and opium, both of them were introduced by the British who made them addicts in exchanges their pearls for.  Actually the British of that time were worse than the plague.