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Koh Samui Hotel map and travel info

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Getting there

Planes
Largely open-air and with a flower-lined runway, Samui’s teak-beamed airport is certainly one of a kind. Operated by the hip, Hawaiian-shirt-wearing people at Bangkok Airways (www.bangkokair.com), it receives the airline’s regional jets from Bangkok, Phuket, Singapore and Hong Kong, among others. Thai Airways also flies from Bangkok (www.thaiairways.com).

Boats
If you have time to spare, you might want to take a Seatran Ferry (www.seatranferry.com) from the mainland to one of three ports on Koh Samui, but be prepared for confusing timetables and a rather long trip (it takes between one and three hours in dry season, depending on the boat). Once on Samui it’s easy to get ferries and longtail boats to neighbouring islands.

Trains
There’s a comfortable sleeper service, with two-person first-class cabins, from Bangkok to Surat Thani, which links up with a bus-and-boat connection to Samui (www.railway.co.th).

Automobiles
A car or jeep is essential if you want to explore; the Tawee Ratpakdee ring road follows the island’s perimeter, so getting around is child’s play. If you prefer two wheels, there are plenty of cheap motorbikes to hire, but there are also plenty of injured tourists: get a helmet, don’t wear flip-flops, and take things slowly.