Koh
Samui is Thailand's
third largest island and the largest in the south-east
of the Gulf of Thailand. Koh in the Thai
language means island and there are around eighty islands
surrounding Samui: Koh Pha Ngan, Koh Tao and Koh Tan
are the closest and also inhabited. Samui is more than
280 sq. km. in area and has a population of approximately
34,000.
The most popular beaches are Chaweng, Lamai, Bophut
and Maenam beach. The Samui interior is a tropical jungle
with hills up to 600 metres high.
History
Perhaps you have friends or family who have visited
Thailand and told you of their experiences. If Samui
will be your introduction to the Kingdom, bear in mind
there are some similarities and some differences between
islanders and city folk. To compare residents of Bangkok
with those of Samui would be like comparing big city
dwellers from any country in the world with those in
the villages.
Samui is home to about 40,000 full-time inhabitants.
Like the surrounding islands, it was first settled
by ethnic Malay fishermen from the mainland, as well
as immigrants from Southern China; at a time when
the surrounding waters teemed with fish. Maps dating
as far back as 1687 have the island identified as
"Pulo Cornam," from the Malay. Little written
history of the island exists, and most of the knowledge
we have has been passed down through generations.
There are two theories as to how the island was named.
The first suggests that the name of a commonly-found
tree called "mui" was lengthened at some
point. The second, and probably more likely notion,
is that "Saboey" which is a Chinese word
for safe haven (certainly an apt description of the
island's largely protected waters) was adopted by
Chinese fishermen, and later become the name we use
today.
Vestiges of the once thriving fishing communities
can still be seen in villages such as Nathon and Maenam.
Lucrative coconut and rubber farming industries also
developed, and harvesting of these crops still takes
place in the hills of the island's interior. Samui
is home to more varieties of coconut palms than any
other place on earth.
Until not much more than a decade ago, folks on Samui
had scarcely seen foreigners. With the influx of tourists
an industry sprung up, and thousands of jobs were
created. Foreign currency flowed in, benefiting many.
These former fishermen and farmers now suddenly competed
to fulfill Western tastes and demands. But the well-known
patient and adaptable nature of Thais, and the new
opportunities that tourism represented, made it easy
for them to accept the oddities of their new visitors
with mostly good grace. Their entrepreneurial spirit
helped compensate for their limited knowledge of other
cultures, and many have succeeded remarkably well.
Most Thais are Buddhist, though a small percentage
of the population is Muslim. You may wonder about
the role religion plays here. In fact, the philosophy
of Buddhist thought is more significant in the life
of the average Thai than is the dogma of the religion.
Most people don't allow themselves to get too worked
up over the problems and minor inconveniences of this
life, after all, it is only a passage into another
one! Consider this, and the island's benign climate,
its history of bountiful harvests from the land and
sea, and the almost complete absence of the kind of
strife that has devastated so many of the world's
peoples, and it becomes easier to understand the "take
life as it comes" approach which continues to
astonish and perplex visitors.
Weather
December to February (main season) it can
get up to 30C(86F). Sometimes brief tropical rain, mostly
in December.
March to June, it becomes very hot, up to 40C (114F),
rarely raining.
July to September (main season) is hot, but some days
it also rains.
June, October, November are rainy seasons, but it does
not generally rain every day. In contrast to other regions
of Thailand, Samui does not really have a well defined
rainy season but sometimes there are sunless periods
of 2 or 3 days, especially during November (monsoon).
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