Photo Gallery Updates
| Aug 10 - A brand new Portfolio added showing select photos for 2007 and 2008.. |
| Jul 27 - New images and gallery showing the Namtok Pha Charoen National Park in Tak added. |
| Jul 11 - New images and gallery showing the Chaloem Rattanakosin National Park in Kanchanaburi added. |
| Jun 29 - New images showing the murals of Wat Khongkharam in Ratachaburi, Thailand added. |
Articles
- Uthai Thani's prehistoric paintings
- Flatid Planthoppers (Flatidae) in Thailand
- Tak and Mae Hong Song
- Buddhist Cave Shrines in Kanchanaburi
- Insects in Khao Yai - a Muek Lek sidetrip
- Caves of Phetchaburi and Ratchaburi
- What does the Nikon D3 and D300 mean for a Nikon D2x user
- Pollution in the Gulf of Siam
- Khao Ang Rue Nai Wildlife Sanctuary
- Plea to assist the protection of bears in Thailand
- Wild Thailand, a highly recommended book
- The weather in Thailand - rain, leeches and insects
- The new Nikon D3x, what should it deliver?
- Website Updates for June 2007
- Review of the Sigma 500 HSM EX (2006 Model)
- Welcome to Images of Thailand
- Wat Khao Tam Talu, Ratchaburi
- Khmer Temples in Thailand
- Sukhothai, the weather and waiting for blue skies
- PhotoShelter - online sales of licenses, images and prints
| Pollution in the Gulf of Siam |
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Last week I had intended to travel to Chonburi, Rayong and Chantaburi to view the Thai fishing boat fleets that traditionally remain at port for the Queen's birthday celebrations. I made the trip but the opportunities for photography were not so good as the weather, which is inclement at best during this time of the year, did not really serve up suitable conditions. So a weekend of photographing fishing boats turned into weekend for relaxing by the sea and sampling the absolutely fabulous east coast seafood. Or so I thought.
What was supposed to be a relaxing weekend trip turned into quite an educational trip but for altogether the wrong reasons. The Queen's birthday weekend coincided with a particulary high tide and what was left on the beaches after the high tide was quite shocking. Serious pollution in Thailand. Scuba divers know the scurge that is the plastic bag and the blight on dive sites it causes underwater. With help from its cousins the tire, the rubber shoe, and their other non bio-degradable family members, beautiful dive sites soon resemble city dumps. But waste snagged on dive sites and coral outcrops represents only a tiny fraction of what is floating around out there in the big blue. This is the waste that no one normally sees. That is until there is an abnormally high tide and a lot of it is swept back ashore. What was supposed to be a trip that took in the beauty of the east coast turned out to be a trip that displayed the ugliness of human waste and a lack of respect for the environment. So who is to blame? All of us, every single last one of us because the source of these bags and waste is not necessarily localized. Think! A plastic bag is discarded from a car window in Bangkok, it's light, it gets blown around by the wind, it gets blown into a klong or stream, the stream takes it to a river, the river to an estuary, the estuary to the sea. And on a high tide some of the debris comes full circle and is washed back to the land. Only then can we see the destruction and ugliness we cause - when its maybe too late. And its not just discarded waste. In many places shoddy and short term construction practices are also a major pollutants delivery. Take the example in the photo which is on Kung Wiman beach. Soil pipes and storm water delivery pipes are feeding pollutants straight onto the beaches and polluting the sea directly. Polluting the source of the food we eat, the marring the scenery of these natural places we want to visit. What I saw, and the photographs here show, was in Chonburi and Chantaburi. But its all the same sea, the Gulf of Siam, be it Hua Hin, Koh Samui, Koh Samet, Koh Tao, Koh Chang or Sihanoukville. Where will be next? Is this the future of Asia and Thailand's beaches? Read more on Thailand's coastal water quality |
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Last week I had intended to travel to Chonburi, Rayong and Chantaburi to view the Thai fishing boat fleets that traditionally remain at port for the Queen's birthday celebrations. I made the trip but the opportunities for photography were not so good as the weather, which is inclement at best during this time of the year, did not really serve up suitable conditions. So a weekend of photographing fishing boats turned into weekend for relaxing by the sea and sampling the absolutely fabulous east coast seafood. Or so I thought.





















