Stung Treng is the least attractive of the three and has the fewest western visitors. When I arrived on the minibus from Laos there seemed to be something of a hostile atmosphere. The Psar is dirty and piles of rubbish litter the streets. All in all I was wondering whether it was a great decision to rile against the masses and stay in Stung Treng. I found a nice guesthouse to stay in for $5 (double bed and hot shower ensuite). I can't remember the name of the place but there are a number of faceless cake tower guesthouses. I looked in the ones mentioned in the Lonely Planet, they were more expensive and falling apart. In the afternoon I wandered around the town and along the riverbanks and other than stepping over the rubbish it seemed much more pleasant than during my arrival. I caught the bus to Kratie in the morning which only took a couple of hours and cost $5.
Thursday, February 28, 2008
SE Asia XXV - Into Cambodia
Stung Treng is the least attractive of the three and has the fewest western visitors. When I arrived on the minibus from Laos there seemed to be something of a hostile atmosphere. The Psar is dirty and piles of rubbish litter the streets. All in all I was wondering whether it was a great decision to rile against the masses and stay in Stung Treng. I found a nice guesthouse to stay in for $5 (double bed and hot shower ensuite). I can't remember the name of the place but there are a number of faceless cake tower guesthouses. I looked in the ones mentioned in the Lonely Planet, they were more expensive and falling apart. In the afternoon I wandered around the town and along the riverbanks and other than stepping over the rubbish it seemed much more pleasant than during my arrival. I caught the bus to Kratie in the morning which only took a couple of hours and cost $5.
Monday, February 25, 2008
SE Asia XXIV - $1 Bribes
SE Asia XXIII - Si Phan Don
Monday, February 18, 2008
SE Asia XXII - Same Same but Different
My journey into southern Laos took me through some extremely relaxed towns. In the midday sun it appeared only mad dogs and Englishmen roamed the streets. The locals were getting drunk in the shade. The towns along the Mekong don't seem to have suffered the bombing that some of the towns towards the Vietnamese border have so a great amount of French architecture has survived. Although it seems to be decandently crumbling and in Pakse, where there is money, development priority is with the ugly cake towers rather than renovating what the colonialists left behind.
Thaket sits on the Mekong and is 6 hours southwest of Vientaine by bus. The road there is the straightest I had come across in Laos (all the roads along the Mekong are long and straight). The bus station is 6kms north of the town. I stayed at Thaket Lodge which is handerly only 3kms from the bus station but 3kms from the town centre on the Mekong. It is in a new busy charmless part of town. Travel Lodge appears to have fallen into the classic Lonely Planet trap. Once recommended as the best place to stay in town it lives on the guaranteed customers coming its way and lets itself fall to rack and ruin. I had a dorm bed for 25,000 Kip, which was fine although whether the bed linen was changed between users is open to question. The shared bathrooms were falling apart and the staff couldn't keep up with the number of guests. The main reason to stay there is that it is the only independent traveller friendly place in town (and there aren't many backpakcer styled places to stay in Laos in general). It is renowned for the Lodge Book where travellers write about their experiences travelling in the surrounding countryside. It is a great source of information, and you don't have to stay there to have a read of it. It is also the only place to hire a bike, a fact I discovered after walking around town for an hour trying to find somewhere cheaper. They charge 25,000 Kip for rabbit eared bikes, twice as much as anywhere else in Laos that I encountered.
The journey to Savannakhet from Thaket was another experience. We left on time only to drive at walking pace for twenty minutes, at which point the bus turned round and picked up a full bus load of passengers from what appeared to be a bus that had broken down. Needless to say the fact that the bus was already full wasn't a hinderance. The plastic stopols appeared and the new passengers were squeezed in as well as their luggage. At one point we pulled over, and with everyone packed in, the rear engine cover was opened spewing exhaust fumes straight into the bus gasing us. Sitting next to me were some Thais who seemed much impressed by my ability to say Sawadee, so impressed that they took photos of me and had their picture taken with me.
Pakse is much larger than Thaket and Savannakhet but this does not mean that you are cofnronted with hustle or bustle. It has french buildings but they are few and far between, new development has taken their place. Even so the relaxed atmosphere was attractive especially with the temperatures picking up. The journey to Pakse was an experience even by Laos standards. When I arrived at the bus station at 6.30am I found myself on the most decrepid bus I have seen in Laos. It was rusting to pieces before my eyes. I assumed it couldn't possibly be the bus to Savannakhet so attempted to board the gleaming bus next to it, every Westerner tried to do this. When we left the bus station the bus wasn't full, this was only a brief respite. The benches on either side of the aisle could fit two people side by side, before long there were three or four crammed on to each. The roof was full of passangers worldly belongings and a motorbike. The aisle was packed with bags of rice. The 'never full' Laos bus policy is amazing because even when you think it isn't physically possible to squeeze anyone else in they somehow manage to do so. Laos would not be impressed by the Tardis. We pulled up for lunch and the chicken on a stick women attacked. If you didn't want a chicken stuck up your nose then you had to hold your window down. Once we left the bus station I discovered the only thing keeping my window in place was my weight and when I leaned forward it duely fell on top of me which everyone on the bus found hilarious. We finally arrived at the northern Pakse bus station and piled into a tuk-tuk for the journey into town for 10,000 Kip each. Although this may be a scam depending which bus you are on. I met a Norwegian couple in Pakse who said they stayed on their bus and it then drove them into the centre of town.
We had dificulty finding accommodation in Pakse so I shared a room one of the guys from the bus. We got a triple room at the Great Wall Hotel (next to Larkham Hotel) for $13 with hot ensuite and cable TV. It was the nicest room I have stayed in in Laos. The second time I stayed at Nin Nao for 30,000 Kip for a cold ensuite which was probably the worst place I stayed in Laos, although apart from the smell of rotting rubbish outside it was OK.
I had originally intended to spend a few days in Tat Lo. However the reaction I received when I walked into the village made me feel uncomfortable. Everyone turned away and didn't make eye contact. An unusual reaction in Laos and one that made me wonder whether the locals appreciated the few tourists they were already receiving. When I walked to Tat Suong I went through a couple of small villages and found the people there to be much friendlier. I stayed at Siphaseuth Guesthouse right on the river. I paid 60,000 Kip for a double ensuite with hot shower (there wasn't a sink, though there were taps).
When I returned to Pakse from Tat Lo I arrived at the southern bus terminal and got really irritated by the tuk-tuk drivers hassling me. I decided to walk the 8kms into town. I did it without a problem. My victory over the tuk-tuk drivers didn't achieve a great deal other than confirming that falang are weird. I had tuk-tuks pulling up next to me every 5 minutes or so trying to get me on board.
Friday, February 15, 2008
SE Asia XXI - Vientaine
The visit to Kaysone Phomvihane's house just north of Vientaine was a highlight of my stay in Vientaine. Kaysone was the leader of Lao People's Revolutionary Party from 1955, and then Prime Minister of the Lao People's Democratic Republic and then president until his death in November 1992. He lived in the old CIA headquarters from 1976 until his death. The house and his office next door are the picture of understatement. They have remained largely untouched since his death, a time capsule of a communist leader. His shoes are lined up neatly by the door. The whiteboard with his diary for the coming days remains untouched. His winter jacket and suits hang in the wardrobe. The buildings are just bungalows and the interiors do not appear to have been updated since the 1970s. When you walk through the house the only trappings of statehood are gifts from other communist states which appear out of keeping with the rest of the decor. The guides were hugely excited to see me arrive. They were immaculately turned out. They unlocked the buildings and gave me cotton socks to put over my shoes. They were desperately pleased that I signed the guestbook, which was placed on a podium. Both of the guides were thoroughly charming and hoped I would come back soon (they plan to open some more buildings in the compound). The house is a great tribute to Kaysone but it isn't that easy to find. There are no signs from the main road and on my first attempt to find it I cycled passed the entrance. There is a guardhouse with a boom gate where some very nice communist guards looked after my bike. Just around the corner from the house is the bombastic museum built in his honour. There could not be a greater juxtapostion of style.
The museum is fronted by a huge staue of comrade Kaysone. The building is huge and they have only managed to fill most of the second floor. The ground floor is completely empty. The second floor isn't even full of Kaysone displays, one section is taken up purely by photographs from communist party meetings, a large amount of the content is borrowed from the revolutionary war section of the national museum. There are a great number of communist guards hanging around the building. I had one guarding my bike outside. The architects managed to work in one of those 'god' circles which magnifies sound when you stand in it. It is at the top of the stairs to the second floor and a large statue of Kaysone watches over it. I amused myself clapping my hands and stamping my feet, which didn't seem to surprise any of the guards watching on. I was of course the only visitor, much like the forgotten busts of Kaysone Phomvihane in every town in Laos, the capital city and country seems to have forgotten there is a huge museum (and a small house) waiting to be revered.
Vientaine is in many ways a nondescript sort of a place. Vientaine represents the rest of the country very accurately, it is relaxed, quiet and without crowds of people. While war did not touch it (it was considered neutral by both sides) modern development has. It looks like any other small town in Vietnam or Thailand. It could be Quy Nhon or Krabi. What sets Vientaine apart is just how quiet and relaxed it is. I've not come across a capital city like it, other than Canberra. Canberra isn't so much relaxed as lacking in people. Unlike Canberra it doesn't have the excuse of two much larger cities to draw attention. While Luang Prabang is the epicentre of tourism with the architecture and scenery, Vientaine is the political and business capital and is the largest city in Laos.
While Vientaine is quiet, tuk-tuk have still descnded upon it like nowhere else in Laos. When our bus arrived from Vang Vieng at Talat bus station they were lined up at the entrance watching the buses drive in. When they caught sight of western faces a stampede developed as they chased the bus. By the time the bus doors opened at least 30 tuk-tuk drivers were swarming the entrance shouting 'where you go, where you go'. The only thing that stopped this chorus was when I got off and whacked my head on the door frame, which was greeted by a group 'oh'. (I was surprised it wasn't greeted by a chorus of laughter, the typical response in South-East Asia). We walked the short distance into the centre of town. Tuk-tuk drivers are parked all over the city (and the city really isn't that big) and you are constantly asked 'where you go'. Alot of the tuk-tuk drivers speak English quite well and you wonder whether they could not put their skills to better use. It shows that either other opportuntiies do not exist or the money made being a tuk-tuk driver outweighes other occupations.
While Vientaine isn't eye catching there are some sights worth seeing. Wat Si Saket is the most beautiful temple I have seen in Laos. It rivals Wat Phra That Lampang Luang (near Lampang in Thailand). Wat Si Saket feels old and unique. A cloister surrounds the Sim with large buddhas lined up and tiny buddhas sitting in niches in the walls behind them. The Sim is even more beautiful with a large seated buddha surrounded by smaller buddhas and the walls are again filled with niches and tiny buddhas. There are about 7000 buddhas in total. Pha That Luang is a stunning sight from afar. It is a giant golden stupa and against a pefectly blue sky it really shines. Admittedly there isn't a great deal to see once you get up close. Xieng Khuan (known as Buddha Park) is another place well worth visiting. It is the eccentric fusion of Hindu and Buddhist religious thought in the form of sculpture. There is a giant pumpkin sculpture which you can climb inside, depicting hell, earth and heaven. If you climb up the inside you appear out of the mouith of a sculpture on the top of the pumpkin. The park is only 20kms from the city centre but most of the journey takes place on pot-holed dirt tracks filled with clouds of dust. It seems that the money for the Friendship Bridge (border crossing into Thailand) paid for the road up to that point and they haven't got around to finishing the rest. I've not come across a capital city where only 20kms from the centre you come across a well used road in this condition. Our bus was packed to the rafters. On board was a US-Lao citizen who had left the country in 1976 after the communists had taken power and has only been back in Laos for the passed two years. A sight you cannot miss is Patuxai the Laos equivalent of the Arch de Triumph built with concrete the Americans intended for a new runway at the airport. From afar it looks quite impressive, but the closer you get the uglier it appears. An apt label has been painted on its side, "From a closer distance, it appears even less impressive, like a monster of concrete".
The national museum in the centre of Vientaine is a clear example of changing times in Laos. The museum used to be called the Lao revolutionary museum. The exhibits dedicated to the revolution are dated and talk of the American imperialist and his puppets or stooges. There are weapons lying around, including rifles that brought down jet fighters. There are personal artefacts including Kaysone's 'chest expander'. The newer exhibits relate to historical discoveries and ancient cities. There is also an exhibit on Gerrit van Wrysthoff who visited Vientaine in 1641 as an envoy of the Dutch East India Company, the most modern exhibit paid for by the Dutch government.
Accommodation in Vientaine, much like Luang Prabang, is overpriced compared to the rest of the country. Also like Luang Prabang most of it seemed to be full. I stayed at Joe's Guesthouse on the riverfront for 50,000 Kip for a single room with shared bathroom. It was a very small room, but it was clean (so were the shared bathrooms) and the staff were friendly in an abrupt manner.
Vientaine's southern bus station is 8kms north of the city. It is apparently 60,000 Kip to hire a tuk-tuk to take you there. I booked a ticket, including a tuk-tuk to the station, with DD Travel (on a side street from Wat Mixay near the riverfront) to Thaket for 115,000 Kip (the bus journey alone should cost 65,000 Kip). I was picked up at 5.30am. In typical Laos fashion we were rushed onto a bus as it was pulling out of the station only for it to drive out of the bus station and pull up 5 minutes down the road where we waited half an hour while being assaulted by food and drink vendors.
Monday, February 11, 2008
SE Asia XX - Vang Vieng
Tubing is what Vang Vieng is famous for on the backpacker circuit. The journey down the Nam Song is lined with bars and people get watsed as they make their journey. The majority don't make it to the end so get picked up by tuk-tuks after the sun has set. We didn't do the ubing ebcause we got back to late from the caves. Unfortunately Van Vieng takes on the atmosphere of Albufiera in the evening with drunk westerners staggering down the streets bellowing loudly to one another. While this is fine on Southend High Street it doesn't sit with Lao culture. It seems that Vang Vieng has fallen prey to satisfying a lowest common denominator, getting people drunk cheaply in an attractive environment, and been very successful at it.
One night we dined along the strip. We found what appeared to be your typical cheap Lao cafe. They produced a menu which looked incredibly similar to every other menu along the strip. Henry and I ordered off of their chalk board (noodle soup and a rice dish), Jenna ordered tofu from the menu, The staff were greatly confused and after some mobile phone calls a chef appeared from down the street to cook her order. I don't know whether he worked there, or whether he just went from kitchen to kitchen following the orders off of the same menu.
While the old town of Vang Vieng has been lost, the over-development has so far been contained in the town and not affect the countryside. Henry, Jenna, and I visted Tham Chang cave with its interior of bridges and a balcony with a great view over the valley. We also walked the 6kms to Tham Phoukham cave. It involves a steep climb to the cave entrance. Once inside you are greeted by a large chamber with a Buddhist shrine. It is possible to hire a guide, however, we had a couple of torches and went off wandering. It was good fun even though in the darkness we managed to get disorientated a couple of times. In the afternoon we waded up the Nam Song river, the more traditional way is to float down on a tube.
It is possible to escape the negative aspects of Vang Vieng. We stayed at Riverside Bungalows. It is a quiet spot (apart from the dull thud from Don Khong island) with great views over the river. They have a variety of bungalows and huts to choose from, starting at 38,000 Kip for a basic hut, to 58,000 Kip for a bungalow with ensuite. If you stay in bungalow 16 you may find a foot long lizard living in your bathroom. I thought it was a model at first, but then it disappeared and reappeared the next day.
The bus station sits on a legacy of the Second Indochina War, a CIA landing strip (Lima site 27). The travel agencies in town will try and sell you the more expensive VIP buses or a minibus. We jumped on a public bus for just 25,000 Kip for the four hour journey to Vientaine. They seem to run every hour on the half hour (in the morning at least).
Friday, February 08, 2008
SE Asia XIX - Plain of Jars
What makes Phonsavan interesting is that it isn't a touristy place. While I was there it was very cold (due to the elevation) and cloudy often with spurts of drizzle. The town after being flattened in the war has been rebuilt and reflects the conformity of new design in South-East Asia. After we finished our tour of the Plain of Jars we went in search of the war memorials. For many nations war is a defining feature of their nationhood, their war memorials are given pride of place. In Phonsavan, a place so clearly defined by war, has its war memorials on a couple of hills 3kms south of town. There is not any obvious way to reach them and no sign that people regularly visit them. We wandered south and then through a maze of streets before deciding that we would have to climb the hill to reach the Vietnamese War Memorial (which was out of sight by this stage). Generally walking up a hill is not a major concern, however, the thought of UXOs concentrates the mind. We made it to the top of the hill without incident and stumbled upon the Vietnamese War Memorial, which was locked. Out of nowhere a very old man appeared who we concluded was the caretaker. He spoke French and charged us 3,000 Kip to go inside. I can only assume that it is his only source of income as he seemed to live in a hut in the corner of the memorial. The memorial is impresive, two soldiers stand side by side pushing forward against their common imperialist foe. The Lao memorial is a complete contrast, it is simply a stupa, again it was locked, and the only sign of life were the kids playing football outside. Our journey back from the Lao memorial involved climbing through a couple of barbed wire fences. On my walk back into town I came across a couple of locals one of whom had a jacket with USA emblazoned across the back. The Second Indochina War has undoubtedly shaped how the people of Phonsavan live their lives but outside of the danger of UXOs they all seem to want to forget it ever took place. A testament to Laos never really wanting the war in the first place.
When you finally arrive in Phonsavan you are greeted by a scrum of touts, they at least save you the money of a tuk-tuk into town. I choose Phoukham Guesthouse with Henry and Jenna who I met on the bus. We got twin with ensuite for 40,000 Kip. Phoukham Guesthouse was a fine place to stay, however, I met other people who stayed there downstairs and they said the rooms were appalling (check before you commit). We also booked a tour of the Plain of Jars through Phoukham. The price started at $19 which sounded a bit steep. I wandered down to Diethlim Travel who quoted $13 per person which Phoukham then matched. I don't think there is a great deal of difference between any of the tours. We were lucky that we were the only ones in our minibus. When we left Phonsavan we got up at 5.30am to find only a sangthaew in the main street. We were able to hire it for 30,000 Kip between the three of us. When we got to the bus station the bus was half full so unlike the rest of Laos you do not need to worry about getting their early. The bus to Vang Vieng cost 75,000 Kip and took nine hours. The bus from Luang Prabang cost 110,000 Kip (although I bought my ticket the night before in Luang Prabang so it included the tuk-tuk to the bus station) and took ten hours. The bus was packed.
Tuesday, February 05, 2008
SE Asia XIIX - Luang Prabang
Kwang Si Falls is stunningly beautiful. If you can only do one trip in Luang Prabang I would recommend this over Pak Ou caves. There are a number of small pools and rapids. The main attraction are the very high falls broken by pools midway down. It is possible to climb up to this first of pools. It is also possible, and well worth, climbing to the very top of the waterfall. From here you can walk across the top of the waterfall (probably not the best idea in the wet season). I did an afternoon trip in the back of a packed Jumbo for 45,000 Kip.