Diving in Trang
Diving overview
Diving instruction
Dive sites in Thailand
The
Andaman Sea overview
The Similan Islands
Krabi
& Phi Phi Island
Trang
The Mergui Archipelago
Shark point and
Anemone reef
The Wreck
Playing safe
An
exciting new frontier
Located half way between Phuket and the Malaysian
border. Trang is the newest province to open to
divers in the Andaman Sea. Although not as developed
as some of the other sites around the country-which
makes it more difficult to get to-some of Trang's
diving spots are decidedly world-class. Certainly,
when conditions are right, the pinnacles of Hin
Daeng and Hin Muang triumph over anything in the
Similan Islands. There are four principle places for
diving in this area: Ko Ha Yai, Ko Rok, Hin Daeng,
and several inland islands just south and east of Ko
Lanta.
Ko Ha is a small group of islands almost directly
west of Ko Lanta. These tiny islands, separated by
channels over 50 meters deep, jut straight out of
the Andaman Sea. The highlight of diving here is a
series of caverns which are safe to enter, even
without a light, as the entrances are large and
there is only one way in and one way out. The best
part of entering these caves is that you can surface
inside the island to view stalactites hanging down
from the ceiling 30 meters above the surface. Ko Rok,
about 25 kilometers south of Ko Ha. are two
sister-islands separated by a narrow channel about
15 meters deep.
These islands. Nok and Nai (mean
outside and inside) have some of the prettiest
beaches in Thailand and are part of Thailand's
National Park Authority. The diving here is
relatively shallow, with the best corals and marine
life living above 18 meters. The bottom is composed
of mostly hard corals, with small areas of soft
corals at deeper depths. Approximately 25 kilometers
southwest of Ko Rok are Hin Daeng (red rock) and Hin
Muang (purple rock) offering everything a diver
could want, from dramatic walls and big fish action,
to lush tropical underwater gardens covered with
anemones and soft corals.
Hin Daeng is easily found since it protrudes about
three meters above the surface. The southern side
descends-straight down-to over 60 meters forming the
most radical vertical drop in Thailand's seas. The
wall is dotted with a light growth of soft corals
and sea fans. On the eastern side where the slope is
more gentle, two long ridges descend into the blue.
Here the soft coral becomes more lush and tall, and
huge schools of jacks sweep past the ridge,
surrounding the diver with a shimmering wall of
silver.
Hin Muang (Purple Rock) located just a few hundred
meters from Hin Daeng, lies completely submerged.
The name derives itself from the thick purple growth
of soft corals that are everywhere. What's
surprising is the incredible amount of marina life
that cling to the rock. It is as iitr»a-*ock were
located in another ocean and not just a short
distance away from the relatively barren Hin Daeng.
The walls are decorated with large sea fans of red.
white and orange. Crowds of glass fish school around
the fans and rocky out-croppings. Carpets of
anemones cover the shallower sections of the
pinnacle.
Whale sharks are one animal that we see repeatedly
around these pinnacles and some years they are seen
on 70% of the trips!
For deep water diving, vertical walls, and exquisite
soft coral, the areas in the Province of Trang are
unforgettable.
How to get there:
Boats can be chartered or
individually booked from several dive companies in
Phuket and Phi Phi. Day trips are available from Ko
Lanta.

