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Patong Beach
The most
famous beach here is the centre of entertainment, restaurants, shopping and
hotels...
Patong
is indeed a famous beach with beautiful soft sands and warm clear water. But
right behind the beach is the hustle and bustle at the centre of Phuket’s
tourism business. Here the hotels, restaurants, entertainment and bar areas,
street bazaars and shops are crammed in a colourful and lively mix that
typifies a Thai tourist beach town.
This is not your pristine, untouched paradise, nor is it like the rest of
Phuket. Here the boisterous activity of a colourful outdoor lifestyle
attracts thousands of tourists, particularly singles and couples looking for
a beautiful beach by day, great food in the evening and some rolicking
entertainment to finish it off. Patong is particularly famous for exotic
nightlife of a kind not found in many other places.
Most other tourists staying at quieter beaches up and down the west coast
also come to Patong for at least one evening’s entertainment, during their
stay. Some just can’t stay away.
Even though Patong is crowded with tourists each winter season from mid
December to April, the beach and water here is generally in pristine
condition. Each time the tide falls and rises the deep clear waters of the
Andaman Sea refresh the beach. Every year during the monsoon season big
waves break on all of the beaches along this coast, cleansing and restoring
the soft, coral sands.
The
nightlife is bawdy, loud and lots of fun for those looking for this.
Most activity is concentrated around open-air beer bars, which are well
stocked with pretty hostesses. The restaurants here are varied and generally
of a high standard, while the shopping is often bargain-basement.
Hotels in Patong:
There are plenty. They range from cheap bungalows (cheap here now means
about 1,000 Baht per night [US$25], to 5-star luxury that costs about
US$200. Many of these can be booked on-line. Click below to see our complete
list of accommodation in Patong.
Note that very, very few hotels here are right on the beach, for a road runs
most of the length of Patong. But directly across that road, only a few
metres away and facing the beach sit many hotels. Check carefully if you
want proximity to the beach, for there are some that are set way back from
the beach, with a long walk to the sands. Phuket Cabana, at the northern end
of the beach, is the only up-market resort set right on the sands of Patong.
Eating in Patong
Patong is crowded with restaurants serving food of almost every nationality
one can think of. But of course Thai food and seafood are most common, with
many large open-air restaurants lining the beach road. Here one can stroll
in the evening and inspect the displays of fish, prawns, crab, shark and
other seafoods set out in beds of ice.
While prices here are higher in tourist areas than in other, more Thai
areas, they are still very low compared with those in most developed
countries. For US$25 one can have a seafood feast here. And if you want to
save money the many small restaurants serving simple Thai food are
exceptionally cheap, serving tasty, filling meals of rice or noodles for
less than US$1.
One of the finiest dining experiences in Phuket is to be found on the first
little hill just beyond Patong s northern-most sands.
Baan
Rim Pa is an up-market experience of fine Thai food in exceptional
ambiance, and is something not to be missed when visiting Phuket. It s one
of the favourites for the staff of PHUKET MAGAZINE, and we can often be
found at the beautiful piano bar here talking to owner Tom McNamara and
other expatriates who also hang out here.
Eating
in Thailand is simply the best in the world, and Patong offers a good
sampling of this.
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