Half Day Forest Kayaking Ban Bo Tho (Private)
Highlights
Highlights:
• Pay a little visit to the tiny fishing community of Bor Tor
• Muster the courage to venture into the Pee Hua Tor cave
• Try to find the numerous cave pictographs in Pee Hua Tor
This tour is perfect if you like: Caves, Cave Art, Kayaking, Fishing and Exploration
Itinerary
ITINERARY:
08:30 am. - 08:45am: Pick up you from your hotel.
09:30 am: Arrive at the pier. Enter the kayaks and enjoy padding through the mangrove forest and sea cave. Continue paddle to thum Pee Hua Toe (famous for its ancient cave paintings). At the end of programmed. Paddle back to the pier.
12.30 pm: Transfer back to your hotel
included with
Cave entering permission fee
Round trip transfer by boat & canoe
Experienced escort guide
Round trip transfer from hotel
Life jacket
Insurance throughout the trip
Fruit and drinking water
excluded by
Other services not stated above
Essential
Information
What to Bring : Beach footwear, Sun protection, Swimming gear, Towel, Camera & films and a sense of fun
Detailed Description
At the head of Phang Nga Bay is where you'll find the tiny fishing community of Bor Tor. It is slightly closer to Krabi than Phuket, and one may get there by road from any of those two places. You can find limestone karsts near the pier, in the middle of the mangroves.
The cave's limestone walls are full of indigenous palms and cycads for a stunning look.
Onward and upward from Thom Lod, we have the "Pee Hua Tor" cave, also known as the "large-headed ghost cave," which can be reached by canoe in just a few minutes. Because of the abnormally colossal size of the human skull that discoverers found here, this location got its name.
You may see more evidence of ancient occupation in the cave's roughly one hundred pictographs distributed around the cave's roof and walls. Richochre is used to illustrate both historical figures, fantastical creatures, and humans in yellow and black pigments. Additionally, large amounts of shells are in the sedimentary rock and littering the cave floor. Some of these shells may be part of middles, which are the rubbish and refuse left behind by prehistoric cave dwellers