We stayed here for four nights at the end of a cycle tour. The brick-built bungalows have air-conditioning. We stayed in No. 9, which faced the garden and the end of the restaurant/bar area about 75m away. There is a road that runs alongside the resort, but the traffic was not a problem as there wasn't that much, especially at night (No. 10 is nearer the road, so may be a little noisier). The room has huge windows, but for privacy you need to keep the curtains closed. The air-conditioning worked well and there was a fan too, and the bathroom had a shower with hot water. The bed was vast, with the usual hard mattress, but you get used to it. Each little bungalow had a semicircular patio with a couple of high-backed plastic chairs, very nice for watching the world go by with a good book and a gin and tonic ( Gin from the wine shop in the local town, tonic from the small store a couple of minutes walk away). Don't walk under the coconut palms!
We had most of our breakfasts in the resort, excellent fried eggs and toast and jam, muesli, fruit and yoghurt or even fresh milk. The barman was very amenable to making various cocktails and we had a whole evening of YouTube Queen songs on his laptop, which after several mojitos and a few tinnies of Heineken, was perfect for a singalong. Thankfully the bar is far enough from the bungalows that you can barely hear the music.This is pretty much all you get for nightlife - Phuket it is not, which suited us just fine. Just the other side of the road, the sandy beach is lined with pine trees under which are several shack kitchens serving decent variations on seafood, noodles, rice, fried fish and so on, and a good line in banana-coffee shakes. There are several more eating places more substantially built on the land side of the road, and Sabai Corner is just 5 minutes stroll away, an excellent place for a plate of Pad Thai for lunch. We hired motorbikes to visit the Good View Restaurant for an excellent fish supper one evening, and to do a tour of the island. There's not much traffic, and though obviously I would advise anyone doing this to have a motorbike licence and wear a helmet, this is not the norm here - there was no paperwork, just 'here are the keys, petrol stations everywhere, 50 baht a litre'. One of us had the requisite licence but no-one fell off and 40km an hour felt very fast and was rarely attained, what with the potholes and corners. Staff were friendly and polite, and we would be delighted to go back.