Phuket Deja Vu. A quick, general overview
By Mick Cooper

Phuket revisited. Who says you can't go back?
Deja vu is defined as the illusion that the present situation has already been experienced.
So it was deja vu I was feeling as I surfaced from a shallow dive and stared at the small deserted beach around the northern point of Patong.

I had definitely been here before. Fourteen years before, in fact. I had often wondered about the location of the small beach where I and a companion had spent an idyllic ten days all those years ago. The name was written in a diary (I was a serious traveler in those days, every event and location conscientiously recorded) .The diary had long been banished to the depths of my parent's basement and I really had no idea where on Phuket we had actually stayed.

In 1975, Phuket had been discovered by tourists, but only just. My friend and I had heard about it from another traveler in a Youth Hostel in Kuala Lumpur. "There's this island off the southern coast of Thailand" he said. "It's called Phuket you gotta go there." So it was, that we found ourselves in Phuket town after a two-bus two pickup ride from Hat Yai. Another truck took us the last dozen kilometres, bumping and bouncing along dirt tracks, over hills to a small beach, deserted except for a small thatched hut and a water well.

Somewhere beyond the fringe of scrub bordering the clearing was a fishing village. The thatched hut served as a restaurant, where a villager and his family served fried rice, fish and cold drinks. We frolicked in the water by day, slept on the sand at night.

Each morning brought a vista of sea and a distant beach, long and gently curving with a few odd souls dotted here and there, and what appeared to be a house or two.

This was Patong, and it held no attraction whatsoever. We were happy where we were, swimming, eating and sleeping, all for about a dollar a day. Backpacker heaven. One day we hitched a ride into the town, hired motorbikes and toured the island, visiting beach after beach, marveling at the views from headlands and wondering how on earth we could bring ourselves to leave this island. Which, of course, we eventually did. It was ten years before I summoned the courage to return, the 'you can never go back' was a motto to live by and when I did eventually return there were hotels and condominiums, landmarks that made it impossible to gain bearings. I suspected our beach had become a private venue.

Now, another half decade later, I gazed at the shore, head just above the water, just as I had done all those years ago when I had swum out to meet a returning fishing boat and looked back land ward, grasping the gunwale of the wooden vessel.

Amazingly, the only change I could discern was a pile of thatch where the hut had been. I marveled again at the beauty of this spot and at the fact that Phuket, for all its development could still throw up hideaways like this.

Jump on a bike or hire a jeep and explore the coves and inlets, the nooks and crannies of the coastline. Find your port of refuge, even if it's just for a day. It may be a beach, it may be a restaurant, a village or temple compound.

Chances are, when you return (and statistics suggest you will) your hideaway will be intact, Fact is, you can go back.

go to top