Nothing unusual in Laos, I followed the "tourist road" if I can say it this way. As written in my previous article, I started the journey in Laos with 2 days on a slow boat going down the Mekong River from the Thai border to Luang Prabang (LP).
It was the third time I take a boat in my Asian Trip and I love it. The boats are usually basic with one toilet from everyone (sometime NO toilet), but this slow and you have time to see landscapes, take pictures, read, write, meet & talk to others travellers, and sometimes exchange fews words with locals. The only thing is even if you don't do anything but seat, you are quite tired at the end of the day ;-)
I then spent 2 days at LP visiting differents wats (buddhist monasteries), a great night market, Kouang Si Waterfalls, and seeing the morning giving alms for monks: Here in Laos, monks are walking around town in the morning (6AM) with their bowl and devotees give foods to them.
After 5 hours driving, I arrived in the busy Vang Vieng where I found a very cheap but noisy Youth Hostel (Chilllao YH, 18000 kips per bed in a 8 beds dorm: 2,25 dollars). Busy because many young tourists stop there and do "tubbing": they rent a tube and go down the river for 3 kms making a couple of stops along the journey to drink some beers in one of the several bars standing here and there. I didn't experience this, but walked a lot around the rice paddies, admiring beautiful landscapes.
One and half day was enough for me, and I then left to Vientiane, small Asian capital (200000 inhabitants). Accomodation is a bit more expensive here but I found a nice & very clean hotel (Mixay Paradise, 65000 kips in a single: 8 dollars) who provides a classic but good breakfast (tea/coffee, 2 toasts, 1 fried egg, some fruits). Again I visited a couple of wats. Nice to see the difference between the countries. In Laos, there are king of fish-dragons at the entrance of the wat. I also went to the morning market where you can buy almost whatever you wish and also every single part of chicken or fish!
Laos Arc de Triomphe |
Time to leave again for a long journey: 600 km to reach Pakse. I took a sleeper bus, and even if I didn't sleep a lot, it was confortable. Arrived in Pakse around 6AM, I walked 2 kms to reach down town and spent some time before I find a guest house: many of them where full or a bit too expensive. Pakse is not really attractive but is the strating point to reach Boloven Plateau: lots of coffee and tea plantations, some tribes villages, and a couple of waterfalls. I don't regret to have been there.
Coffee! |
This woman needs between 20 and 30 days to finish a scarf, selling about 10 dollars |
I love this pic! |
Where are the dolphins? |
Don Khon |
1 comment:
Very beautiful pictures!
That seems to be great!
And cheap..! ;D
Did you see the manufacturing of coffee/tea? Or just coffee/tea plantations?
Oh! Thanks for your tea! I received your "colissimo" the last week... I thought that it was my Christmas present... lol
I'll try your tea, maybe this week!... hummm!
Have a good festival!
Bye
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