When I was in Bangkok three weeks ago, I got nostalgic, remembering how I came to Thailand for the first time in 2011, how cool this journey into the unknown was. After escaping a flood in Bangkok, I arrived in long-anticipated Krabi Town without a booking and searched for a place upon arrival. I lived in a basic room with a fan, enjoying every breath of hot, humid air. Every day was filled with anticipation for a beautiful future, and every day was a discovery...

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This memory prompted me to search for a new destination somewhere in southern Thailand, although I had originally thought about revisiting Krabi, Prachuap Khiri Khan, or Ko Samui. And that's how I found Songkhla. Saying right away - I made the right choice.

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On March 7, I arrived in Songkhla without booking but I had the name of a small plank guesthouse you couldn't find on booking sites, and that's where I rented a super lovely room for 6000 baht (180$) a month.

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The city isn't large, with only around 60,000 people and 4,000 monkeys 😮 according to mass media reports.

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This colony was another reason why I made the final decision to try Songkhla.

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Living on a mountain, they travel through the city, walking along wires.

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Funny and curious but wicked - not that different from people, lol.

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Check out my post about a group of monkeys on a foraging expedition in a residential area.

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Monkeys really add a flavor to photography as soon as you don't focus on the animals themselves but try to combine them with the urban environment.

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Besides the monkeys, Songkhla has many bird species, including ones I never saw in Bangkok - Asian glossy starlings, red-breasted parakeets, and Brahminy kites. Great mynas (in the image below) surprisingly outnumber even pigeons in Songkhla.

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The variety of birds and their accessibility for observation is impressive – perhaps it's even cooler here for a birdwatcher than in Bangkok. Read my post about my first birding impressions in Songkhla.

Songkhla has a beach. Its quality depends on the weather: when it's windy, large waves come, making the water unpleasantly yellow and swimming uncomfortable (although it's fun to play a fight against waves).

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On calmer days, the water has nice shade and waves aren't disturbing.

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What I love the most: the shore is not shallow – the depth reaches my shoulders about seven meters from the surf.

However, nobody swims at the beach (except for sometimes local kids splashing by the surf) since Songkhla isn't a beach destination, and there are no foreign beachgoers in the city except for unusual characters like me or this kitesurfer.

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3 weeks passed but I feel many things are undiscovered in this area so thinking of staying in this city for another month or two. Feel very comfortable in this city, absolutely love it.

As a soundtrack to the post, I offer you to listen to a cover of a famous Thai song Made in Thailand by Carabao; they had it in White Lotus 3; the performer is a charismatic farang, I like his version better than the original. Enjoy:

I took these images with a Nikkor 70-300mm on a full-frame DSLR Nikon D750 on March, 2025, in Songkhla, Thailand.