Bird Flu - Koh Roi, Phang Nga Bay, Thailand

Harmonie
Don and Anne Myers
Thu 10 Mar 2011 14:52
08:11.562N  98:36.623E
 
February 16th - another day, another hong - this time on Koh Roi where aside from a few tourist toting longboats, only cruising or charter sailboats venture.  It was nice and peaceful with good swimming as long as someone you could trust kept a watchful eye out for giant jellyfish.
 
Our view of Koh Roi while at anchor.
 
 
Three sailors near a state of heat exhaustion seeking a bit of shade under the overhang.  Note the hong entrance to the left.
 
 
Kathie, Don and I inside Koh Roi's sand-filled hong.
 
 
Kathie and I inside the hong looking out through the entrance at a serious Don caught contemplating life.
 
 
A rare photo of Bill the photographer posing on Koh Roi's beach.
 
So, what's all this got to do with Bird Flu?  You might have noticed that Kathie is in several of the above pictures, looking if not exuberant and sprightly, then at least mostly bright-eyed and bushytailed.  Not only did we explore Koh Roi's hong for an extended time, but swam several laps around the boat later that afternoon in a useless effort to keep cool.  It wasn't until later, after opting out of the usual day-ending gin and tonic, and then proclaiming herself not up to eating dinner, we realized Kathie was sick.  Really sick.  Why is it that health professionals refuse to let on when they are feeling lousy?  They are the first to make a fuss over other under-the-weather individuals, but the last to accept fuss-making over themselves.  When Kathie indicated she wasn't up to eating dinner and finally admitted to feeling "a little shaky", we suddenly realized it wasn't just the holy humid hotness that was causing her face to look so red-hot flushed. 
 
Out came the thermometer.  It should be mentioned here that in four years of sailing, the thermometer has come out of the emergency first aid kit only twice - once for Bryan during his night of ten thousand trots to the head in Malaysia, and this time for Kathie.  Why is it that our guests are always falling ill?  At least in the case of Kathie, we knew she was a little sick when she came aboard.  She picked something up in Vietnam that caused coughing, a little shortness of breath and a runny nose.  A simple cold, we thought.  Wrong.  Kathie removed the thermometer from her mouth, and read it.  "103.9", she reported calmly.  103.9!  Holy crap!  We made Kathie repeat the process to be sure the reading was accurate, and Don confirmed the reading the second time, 103.9.  Later, Don checked his own temperature, just to be sure the thermometer was calibrated correctly.  He measured a normal 98.6.  Geez, a temperature of 103.9 and most of us less stoic people would have been moaning and thrashing around in bed all day - not exploring hongs, swimming boat laps and politely declining dinner.  We hustled Kathie off to bed where she downed some Motrin with a glass of water while we turned on the generator and air conditioner to cool the cabin down from its high of 95.  She lay quietly in bed while Bill, Don and I ate a quick dinner and tried to act like we weren't worried.  Don, while continuing to act unworried, plotted a course back to Yacht Haven Marina just in case we decided to make a dash for it in the night.  With Bill looking over his shoulder still trying hard not to act worried, Don searched the internet for information on how best to treat a fever of 103.9.  To make ourselves feel better, we also looked up the symptoms for avian (bird) flu (after all, Kathie and Bill did just come from Cambodia and Vietnam where chickens tend to run amok).  There were at least three bird flu symptoms we didn't think Kathie had, but Bill trotted up to the bow to ask her, just to be sure.  Kathie confirmed a 'no' for all three.  We three breathed easier and agreed we would make a decision to head back to Phuket based on Kathie's next temperature reading.  Ten o'clock rolled around and the report came in: 101.3ish.  I don't remember what the reading was exactly, I just remember all three of us heaving a sigh of relief.  I've never known anyone to have a fever of 103.9 and certainly not while on a boat anchored in the middle of Phang Nga Bay, a good four-hour motor away from civilization and good medical care.  The next morning Kathie's temperature was even lower, though still not quite normal.  If we didn't know better, we wouldn't have guessed Kathie was the least bit sick that next morning.  Us lesser folk would have laid around a good twelve hours more.  Several days later Kathie proclaimed herself cured.  We still don't know what it was, but thankfully it wasn't bird flu or any of its nasty flu cousins.
 
Hopefully the thermometer will stay undisturbed in its emergency first-aid kit home for several more years before its services are needed again.  We are just happy to say once again that all's well that ends well. 
Anne