Archives

All posts for the month December, 2013

On these long bus rides, the driver stops at little roadside shops so you can get some food. This is what was on offer at our ride up to Vientiane.

On these long bus rides, the driver stops at little roadside shops so you can get some food. This is what was on offer at our ride up to Vientiane.

We’ve spent a lot of time over the last few days in buses. The trip from the Bolaven Plateau into Thakhek was seven or eight hours. The stop there was in part just to break up the trip to Vientiane (capital of Laos), but there was also a day trip we wanted to do. What we didn’t realize was that the day trip consisted of a total of about six hours in a van to and from a cave. Then the next day it was another eight hours on a bus to Vientiane. Now we’re settled here for a few days before continuing the trek north through Vang Vieng and Luang Prabang.

At other stops, local women and girls bring their food offerings right onboard. These little cuties were selling some form of meat on a stick, but were fascinated by Mark's Kindle...

At other stops, local women and girls bring their food offerings right onboard. These cute girls were selling some form of meat on a stick, but were fascinated by Mark’s Kindle…

Arriving in Vientiane last night was quite the experience. After weeks bumming around Cambodia and 10 days or so in southern and central Laos we were feeling quite the rubes. “Look at the lights! The colors! Wow – did you see that bar? And that restaurant?!?” Vientiane doesn’t have a great reputation as a tourist stop, but after these last several weeks the big city seems pretty exciting to us. And we found a fabulous tapas restaurant, run by a Spanish woman and her Lao-French husband. Such a night!

As for that day trip out of Thakhek. Kong Lor cave puts most other caves to shame. Basically the Nam Hin Bun river goes through a national park in central Laos, but for seven kilometers it runs underground, creating a huge cave – at some points apparently nearly 100 meters high. So they put you in a long wooden boat with a driver and guide, strap a miner’s light on your head, and out you go. It’s very cool, completely dark except for the artificial lights. According to our guide, even the locals didn’t know the river ran all the way through until 1995; during the Vietnam war, soldiers carried weapons and gear up and over the huge karst hills instead of going through as we did.

This was the karst scenery through the Phu Hin Bun national park on the way to Kong Lor cave

This was the karst scenery through the Phu Hin Bun national park on the way to Kong Lor cave.

On the Nam Hin Bun river at the entrance to the cave

On the Nam Hin Bun river at the entrance to the cave

Part of the boat trip was outside the cave through gorgeous scenery

Part of the boat trip was outside the cave through gorgeous scenery

Our boat driver

Our boat driver

After you go through the cave and continue up river a bit, you stop and take a break at a small Laotian village. Mark caught these kids taking their cat for a walk.

After you go through the cave and continue up river a bit, you stop and take a break at a small Laotian village. Mark caught these kids taking their cat for a walk.

Then he taught them how to properly honor a cat.

Then he taught them how to properly honor a cat.

Along with the cave, our day trip included an hour-long hike through the woods out to a great little waterfall with a perfect little pool to swim in. Other than that, though, the last few days have been travel days.

Reading Doris Kearns Goodwin's newest book in our little hotel room in Thakhek. At $26 a night we couldn't complain about much!

Reading Doris Kearns Goodwin’s newest book in our little hotel room in Thakhek. At $26 a night we couldn’t complain about much!

Oddly, we didn’t see much of Thakhek except our hotel. We caught a tuk-tuk the five kilometers from the bus station to our hotel. Our hotel had the best restaurant in town, and the tour company that we used to go to the cave and to get bus tickets out of town was in the hotel, too. So it was a late arrival on Tuesday and dinner at the hotel. Then an early departure for the long day out to the waterfall and cave, a late return for dinner, and out early the next morning. In other words, we didn’t walk so much as one building away from the hotel. Strange.

Jim gets a little reading in near the Tat Fan waterfall

Jim gets a little reading in near the Tat Fan waterfall

This stunning Tat Fan double waterfall dropped 360 feet into a pool we couldn't quite see

This stunning Tat Fan double waterfall dropped 360 feet into a pool we couldn’t quite see

We just got back down to the Mekong river after a couple days in the highlands of the Bolaven Plateau. The cool mountain air was a welcome escape from quite a few weeks of pretty intense heat.

Coffee is one of Laos’s biggest exports and we were surrounded by coffee plantations. Since we are getting into the coffee harvesting season, the plants were really loaded down with ripe fruit. This begs the question: Why on earth did our hotel’s breakfast offering only include instant coffee??!!

We felt pretty cut off for a couple days with no internet available in any hotels or in any of the very limited area restaurants.

Transportation options were pretty limited as well. When we left the Plateau for our next stop in Pakse this morning, our best option was to take a sawngthaew, which is a pickup truck converted with benches to cart lots of people between villages. Since we were the last of the 30 people to cram into this one, we had to a squeeze onto a metal rack sticking out of the back — standing room only. Good thing the ride was only an hour!

Surrounded by coffee plantations filled with trees bursting with ripe coffee berries, you kind of had to wonder why we were served instant coffee at breakfast

Surrounded by coffee plantations filled with trees bursting with ripe coffee berries, you kind of had to wonder why we were served instant coffee at breakfast

Jim gets into position for our journey from the Plateau to the Mekong town of Pakse

Jim gets into position for our journey from the Plateau to the Mekong town of Pakse

Hold on, Jim! (You, too, Mark, who at this moment is holding on for dear life with one hand while the other fools with the camera)

Hold on, Jim! (You, too, Mark, who at this moment is holding on for dear life with one hand while the other fools with the camera)