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HOME > Laos   

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Looking for a certain place? click directly on the underlined towns in the map!

 

ABOUT THIS TRAVEL

THAILAND-LAOS-CAMBODIA

26 days   summer 03

INTRO ABOUT LAOS


Kind of travel: alone in a wholly independent travel

When: heart of the wet season (2003 summer)

How I moved: by minibus, by bus, by pirogues and by moped

Where I slept: in dormitories and huts

How much: few countries in the world are as cheap as South Asia. If you come from the western world everything'll be just peanuts. 10$ each day can be enough for a low budget travel. But watch out for the visas: they're expensive (Laos 15 days, 40$)

Baking or freezing?: baking and sweating, this'll be the worst.

Dangers: I would say that Laos is quite safe, even the capital Vientane seemed a calm place. I read about some guerilla in the north, but I didn't have problems.

What I liked: "not pushy at all" attitude of the people, feel a laid-back country, its safety, the low clouds on the green montains, tubing on the rivers, bathing in the waterfalls, hanging out by moped, the fellows I met....

What I dislike: the f...ing superhumidity and hotness, that made my brain melted.

What you do need: nothing more than few T-shirts, some pants, and, if you wanna enjoy the travel, don't bother for the hygenic local conditions and for the water snakes!


THE TRAVEL IN LAOS

I don't really know why it's years that the idea of hanging out in Indochina buzzes in my mind; attracted by this cluster of nations so known as stages of some past human madness (from the '65-'73 war to Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge), on the opposite so few mentioned in their actual situation.
At the beginning I was mainly focused on Vietnam and Cambodia, but then, for several reasons, despite already handing an expensive Vietnamese visa, I swapped the Hochi Min country with the earth of the elephant: Laos.
To fly to Bangkok rather than directly to my goals was the only way to save bunches of euros and if you add  I had to wait the Laotian visa for 5 days in the north of Thailand you figure out why part of my travel passed through the former country.

 

PREPARATION

I prepared this trip for months before leaving: first of all reading pages and pages of funny reports to plan my itinerary and at the end I completely changed my way following my instinct and some funny fellows known on the road (thanks Leigh, thanks Enn). But this is the fun of travelling. "Travellers don't know where they are going, while tourist don't know where they have been"
Moreover I straived to carry just the indispensable stuff on my shoulders encompassing gears for my daily fight against supposed mosquito swarms.

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But evidently they were on holiday somewhere else and, as every travel (maybe even more than others), I utilised just a part of my 19 Kg bag... this freaks my out every time I come back!!!!! (equipment tips)
I've promised myself next travel just two pairs of slip and a toothbrush (I'll borrow the paste) in a plastic bag ;-))

 

ITINERARY IN LAOS

[In Thailand]

In Chiang Mai I spent some relaxant days waiting for my Lao visa and getting my feet massaged (read the funny story). My passport wandered through Thailand for four days before coming back to his  worried daddy in Huay Xai (the Lao border) at 7 am brought by a moped-boy coming from "whoknowswhere". Right here I crossed the Mekong river getting in Laos and experiencing a 30 years gap of development in 500 meters of water. No more roads here in Laos, in particular in the rainy season! That's why I had to get packed for two days in a crowded (and touristy) slow boat to reach Luang Prabang. But I had fun, especially because most of the guys on the boat where travellers plenty of interesting stories experienced around the world. And what about the nice village of Pakbeng where the boat stops for the night?
No way to describe the charming Luang Prabang and the sublime noodle soups I had for breakfast, lunch and dinner. Definitely it's not the most off-of-the-beaten-track place I've ever seen, it's really worthwhile though! I think it's here I had my best days during this travel. In fact I knew Leigh (canadian no-fear guy) and Enn (dutch tough girl) who I travelled with for the next two weeks. Me and Leigh tasted every sort of thing was sold as food: the "snake juice" and even the unchewingable fried hen legs; but the point is that we appreciated most of them.. uhm. left alone the stinky dried rats; frankly I felt to throw up just glancing (and smelling) at them (read the funny story). The three of us decided to get to north to the Muang Ngoi Neua village where we sweated for some days, tubing down the river, swinging on the hammocks and watching the village kids playing,. I mean such things like hunting 3 m long water snakes ;-)) (read about our life there). Then back to the civilisation, namely to the "built just for tourist" Vang Vieng and the nice Vientane. And south again till the four thousand island arcipelago at the border between Cambodia and Laos, where we settled down on an island for a bunch of days.
Here my travel fellows got caught by the idleness of sucking coconuts and drinking Lao Lao whisky laying down on a hammock overlooking the Mekong. If I had time. I'd be still there.. but Cambodia was waiting for me (bye bye dudes, I'll miss you). It has been an hassle to cross the border and I immediately experienced how these two countries differ...

[In Cambodia]
[In Thailand]


IMPRESSIONS ABOUT LAOS

"Laid back": definitely it is the right word to define Laos. When I crossed the border with Thailand in Huay Xai I felt to live a thirty years gap back to the past. The Thai tractors to cultivate the rice fields were substituted by the plough pulled by an ox, the well paved road by the rivers and the soft seats of the buses by steel benches fixed in the back part of the camions, but unliked Cambodia there was no confusion in all this.
While the north part of the country is characterised by steep and impenetrable mountains, the south is as flat as Cambodia. I think generally the north being wilder is more charming, but in the south there're place like the four thousand islands archipelago that is worth to be visited. I was impressed by the safety of this country despite its poverty: I've never had or heard any problem as concerns stealing or scams, and the attitude doesn't lead you even to suspect about it. Also the capital, Vientiane, that usually is the less safe place of the country, is calm and pleasant. Further the country is so cheap that hardly you'll have to bargain like hell to save money, unless you are broken.
My best memory is the tubing, I mean floating down a river by the inner tube of a tractor, in a wild tributary of the Mekong in the north of Laos.
In conclusion to enjoy Laos you must go there with the purpose of admiring the atmosphere more than looking for some highlights, otherwise the risk is to get disappointed, instead of being charmed, by the simplicity of the country.

 

Alby

PS: If you've planned to go to Laos or to the North in July or August I hope you like sweating as hell. I mean that kind of humid hot that doesn't let you to sleep unless a fan blows on your body the all night. Good luck!  

Note: the paragraphs   INTRO, PREPARATION and ITINERARY are equal to those in the Thailand and Cambodia chapters since the travel was the same, while the last one about the IMPRESSION differs for the three countries

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