travel

Welcome to Cambodia

I was sitting still in Si Phan Don for so long partly because it was so lovely, and partly because I didn’t have any urge to move on for a while. In fact the thought of travelling further was very off-putting for a few days there, but I knew that the urge would return if I simply waited long enough. Well it came back with a vengeance on Tuesday, which is the first day for a nearly week that I’ve felt lively and active. Suddenly the idea of lazing in a hammock staring at the water held no further attraction; not that I regretted all the downtime I’d spent there so far! One of the greatest benefits of this kind of travel to me is that you can sit still for days if you want to. It may be many years before I return to that idyllic part of Laos – and when I do it will no doubt be quite different – so I wanted to leave there because I’d had my fill, not because I had to be somewhere else. It turns out one week was the perfect length of time 🙂

After exactly fifty days in Laos I was keen to get over the border to Cambodia and see a new land. But I have plenty of time still and don’t want to rush it, so my first goal was always going to be Stung Treng just an hour over the border. It’s where transport to the remote north-east departs from and is a decent-sized town, so surely it was worth at least one night. Besides I didn’t want to spend a whole day in a bus which is what the vast majority of other travellers were planning to do. Being on Don Det in Si Phan Don exposed me to many more budget travellers than I’ve seen in the one small place so far, and it came home to me how different my mode of roaming is on this trip compared to most people. For example of the forty or so people on my bus over the border (who were all westerners), exactly one person got off at the first stop: me. All the rest were carrying onwards to Kratie or Kompong Cham, but mostly to Phnom Penh. Another bus had gone ahead of us aiming directly for Siem Riep – more than twelve hours away. Even in this age of mass travel, it’s remarkably easy to avoid the hordes if you’re prepared to take just a few more steps along the beaten track than the rest.

And anyway I had an inkling that crossing the border would take a while, so the idea of suffering a long bus journey afterwards seemed nuts to me. And I was right: the border is less than 25 kms from Don Det, yet it took us almost four hours to hit the road again on the Cambodian side… things started simply enough at 8am with a short boat journey from the island to Ban Nakasang on the mainland, where a bus was already waiting. And waiting. And waiting… for no obvious reason it was nearly an hour before we set off for the border, arriving there a little before 10am. Exiting Laos was straightforward, and to my surprise I was not charged for overstaying an extra day. I don’t think they noticed: the Customs guys were too busy extracting a US$1 “fee” from everyone on the bus. We all knew it was a self-imposed bribe but few grumbled and noone refused that I could see, we just wanted to get the process over with. We then had to grab our bags and walk a hundred metres across a paved no-man’s land to the Cambodia side, where the circus really began.

First up was a Quarantine desk where we filled in a short form, had our temperatures taken with an infrared ear thermometer, and were explained in atrocious english what we should do if we showed symptoms of H1N1 flu (is that still a problem?). And we were clipped another US$1 for the privilege of listening. Then to the Visa Office where visas on arrival are obtained. We all knew that it should cost US$20 each, but here it was US$23. I am convinced the extra $3 was because there were three guys in the booth, honestly. Another US$2 if you’d forgotten your passport photo (I got a dozen made up in Sydney so I’d never be caught by that one!). Then to the third and final booth where your visa was stamped and you were officially allowed into Cambodia. After coughing up another US$2 there, that is. By this stage there were loud and mutinous rumblings from some people – almost all of them Europeans, if you’re interested to know. A German guy simply refused to pay the last bribe, saying he was a cop and he knew what was going on. He was waved through; he’s actually a bus driver.

Once through, we waited. Again. For nearly two hours we sat in the stifling heat, waiting until the bus had filled up enough with new passengers for the bus jockeys to decide they could move on. For two unlucky sods there was a final hassle. They were cycling from China to Thailand, but had decided to take the bus for this stretch because it was supposed to be unscenic (which is true). They had bought their tickets on Don Det, confirming first that their bikes would be allowed on the bus all the way. Just as the Cambodian bus was about to depart – in other words almost two hours after they’d first shown their tickets – they were forced to pay again if they wanted their bikes to be loaded. They knew they were being screwed and eventually paid up, but one of them sat next to me for my short trip and he was openly calling it extortion. Which it was, of course. Or you could put it another way: “welcome to Cambodia”.

Categories: Cambodia, travel | Leave a comment

Best of Laos

Now that I’m at the very bottom of Laos about to head south into Cambodia, I’m encountering numerous travellers heading the other way who want to know what I think are the ‘must-see’ parts of this country. And to be honest, when I think about it there aren’t that many. But this place has a calming influence that permeates every aspect of life, and some of my best times here have been spent in smaller out-of-the-way places simply existing at the local pace.

Laos has its problems. It’s not a democracy: it’s a single-party State that combines low-level capitalism with high-grade cronyism. Transparency International ranks it as one of the most corrupt countries in the world, more corrupt than Sierra Leone, Bolivia, Pakistan, Indonesia or Ukraine. Only failed or pariah states like Somalia, Myanmar, Iran, Afghanistan and the other ‘Stans rank lower. That crudest measure of wealth, per capita GDP, at approximately US$850 per person per year places it within the forty poorest nations in the world (Australia measures around US$48,000 a year).

But it doesn’t feel so poor when you travel around. The majority of the population live in small rural villages and produce or gather all of their own food, selling what surplus they can for some cash, and generally this fact is not represented in official economic stats. Most kids go to school, even though the schools can be as simple as some chairs set up underneath a thatched awning. I’m not saying people don’t want more – I’m sure everyone would like some better mod-cons to make their life easier, or a new tractor, or scooter, or whatever. Better services such as health care are definitely needed. But there is unmistakably a joy of living and a generosity of spirit here that many “richer” countries lost long ago. And guilt-free enjoyment of the simple art of doing nothing: taking a daytime nap or lazing in a hammock is commonplace and unremarkable, and they haven’t even bothered to formalise it into a rigid siesta time…

So for me, with all the time that I’ve had to indulge, it’s been the quiet, local, relaxing places that have appealed as much as the obvious highlights. But for those planning a trip here (and I highly recommend it), this is my personal list of ‘must-see’ places:

Luang Prabang – an exotic mix of French colonial architecture, temples, the Mekong and high quality restaurants and bars. Not remotely like the rest of Laos because it is completely devoted to tourism, but definitely a highlight

Nong Khiaw – a tiny village north of Luang Prabang, best accessed by slow boat up the Nam Ou. Slow and lazy with guesthouses spread along the eastern shore so you watch the sun set from your balcony, there are some nice short tracks into nearby hills if you want to get active. Much nicer, so I’m told, that the nearby Muang Noi Neua which used to be idyllic but is now touristed to death

Vang Vieng – you have to pass through here when travelling between Vientiane and Luang Prabang, so why not stay a night or two? Great karst scenery, many caves to explore and tubing or kayaking on the river is available too. It’s known as a party town and you can have as big a night as you want here, but it’s easy to keep it quiet if preferred

Vientiane – the sleepiest capital in the world, spending a few days here soaking up the atmosphere is great. Dining on the banks of the Mekong at sundown, have a cheap but quality massage or spa treatment, an excellent range of local and international style restaurants, bars ranging from Lao-style beer barns to backpacker joints to classy nightclubs where jeans are out and cocktails are in… this place certainly hasn’t got it all but that’s part of the charm

Kong Lo cave – a seven-kilometre journey by boat underneath a mountain, passing through low tunnels and cathedral-like caverns on the way. I don’t know if it’s the largest cave in the world you can travel through without special equipment, but it certainly feels like it. Stay near the village for an even more exotic experience – almost everyone else comes here on a day-trip

Pakse – if you have time to come down south, Pakse is the perfect base to see an increasing range of great sights. The waterfalls and coffee plantations of the Bolaven Plateau, Wat Phu near Champasak, the elephants of Ban Kiet Ngong, loads of multi-day treks in every direction, all are available from here and the town’s got a sedate feel about it too. Make sure you have at least one drink or meal at the rooftop bar of the Pakse Hotel at sundown, the view there is spectacular

Si Phan Don – only a couple of hours south of Pakse, this is still a paradise-like island despite the increasing numbers of backpackers. Every famous tourist place like Waikiki, St Tropez or Phuket was once upon a time just home to a handful of villagers and the occasional traveller, and Si Phan Don feels like those places must have done before the hordes came. I would not be surprised in thirty years time to find it dominated by soulless hotels and resorts, for the time being there are still rice paddies and pigs and chickens and most locals don’t rely entirely on tourism to survive. It’s basic but that’s part of the charm, and it won’t stay like that forever

I have not been to every corner of Laos, so there may be other gems that I can’t talk about yet. There’s apparently great trekking around Luang Nam Tha in the northwest, and The Gibbon Experience up that way gets very strong support from everyone’s been there. Then there’s the Plain of Jars near Phonsavan, the wartime caves near Sam Neua, the elephants of Hongsa, truly remote trekking east of Attapeu… all good reasons for me to return too!

Categories: Laos, travel | Leave a comment

Stunned in Si Phan Don

I received one of those life-changing phone calls the other day. One of the ones that you just know, instantly, will become a crucial pivot point when looking back along your life’s arc. After more than twelve years working in the same job, the only one I’ve ever had since leaving university, I suddenly don’t have a job to return to. They are getting on so well without me that my job has been restructured out of existence while I’m away.

To say that I didn’t see this coming is something of an understatement. I’m floored, shocked, flabbergasted, stunned like a mullet. I had always intended to return to work refreshed after this big break, and had no inkling that that might not be possible. In fact I have structured my life over the past year around the fact that I would have a job to return to when I got home. So I’ve spent the last two days alternating between swinging from a hammock deep in thought, sleeping, or wandering to the very expensive internet cafe to get the support of friends. I’ve had no appetite, but I’ve forced myself to eat. When my mind is calm enough I read, choosing between the lyrical beauty of Haruki Murakami’s short stories or Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s epic One Hundred Years of Solitude. Often I just stare into the distance.

At least I’m in the perfect place for such a crisis: Si Phan Don really is the paradise it’s made out to be. Arriving on Don Det island mid-afternoon four days ago, I ignored all the cheap places near the boat landing and headed straight for the Sunset side of the island. From my kayaking trip last week I knew this side has the best views: sweeping vistas of the Mekong and a clear view of the hills of Cambodia beyond. I wandered along the dirt track looking for something suitable, and literally stumbled upon Tena Guesthouse. With just five simple bungalows, all with spectacular views and a couple of hammocks, I got lucky as four of them were vacant (it’s been full since then). The shared bathrooms have western thrones, the showers are almost warm and the food onsite is very good. There is no need to worry about reservations, or giving notice, or anything. Now that I’m here I can stay as long as I want and simply pay the $4 a night it costs to stay when I leave. Perfect.

The only thing I have to decide soon is when to leave. My Laos visa expires on Tuesday and I have to decide whether I stay here beyond that or head to Cambodia as planned. There is a fine of US$10 a day if you overstay, but I really don’t have the urge to move on just yet…

Categories: travel | 2 Comments

How to ride an elephant

When I told Kristen I was going to learn how to ride an elephant she said that I’d reached the point where “you’re just trying to do the most random crazy shit now, aren’t you?” And she was right: a one-day mahout training school was about as out-there an idea as I could come across, and that’s exactly why I wanted to do it. I mean how often do you get the chance not just to take a ride in a buggy on an elephant’s back, but actually sit up the front and direct the beast? Not often I reckon, so I was into it like a shot!

Ban Kiet Ngong is located about 60km south of Pakse, and along with Hongsa is one of the very few places in Laos where elephant rides are possible. The village still has 14 working elephants – far fewer than it used to – that these days are mostly engaged in offering rides to tourists. Most commonly they take people up to the mysterious archaelogical remains of Phu Asa, and the whole experience is a model of modern eco-based tourism that benefits the local villagers while protecting the area’s ecological and historical significance. You can stay in the village too, either as a homestay or at the very basic but cheap village guesthouse (A$5 a night). Or you can stay at the rather more luxurious Kingfisher Lodge on the village fringe, which has two levels of accomodation on offer. No prizes for guessing which I chose…

Kingfisher Lodge is a genuine eco-lodge, not just in (much-abused) name but also in practice. All the bungalows are constructed of local materials and have been carefully designed to maximise natural light and ventilation, thus reducing electricity usage greatly. Solar heating and lighting reduce demand even further, and all the rooms have a very spacious, airy feel. I chose the budget option with shared bathrooms, but as there are only four rooms at this level it’s very comfortable. The only drawback is that the walls are paper-thin, and in the still black night you can (and I did) hear someone farting from twenty metres away. Overall it’s a very relaxing place and the central lodge with bar and excellent restaurant looking out over the protected Xe Pian wetlands makes you feel like you’re in Africa, complete with elephants roaming in the distance.

The other key attraction of Kingfisher Lodge – and this is what drew me there – is their range of activities that are available exclusively to Lodge guests. You can do a two-day trek to remote villages, go mountain biking and more, but the one that caught my attention was the “Elephant Rider School”. Over two two-hour sessions you learn how to direct the elephant and practice your skills by taking a couple of trips through the local area. The “lesson” part of it was incredibly short, as it turns out. The day before I was given a sheet with explanations of the basic commands, and I assumed the first session would largely be spent off the elephant as you (and the elephant) got used to giving the commands. Nope. Upon arrival I was directed to climb up: the instruction “song, song” made the elephant raise one of its forelegs so it was like a footstool, and by hauling myself up with a rope I was soon perched precariously on her neck, almost on her head really. The real mahout and the english-speaking Lodge guide climbed into the buggy that was already strapped on behind me and away we went!

It’s not that complicated to ride an elephant, as it turns out, but definitely requires practice. The command “hoooaay, hoooaay” means go, “how, how” means stop, and you turn left by pressing your right knee to her right ear and turn right by pressing your left knee to her left ear. Simple, eh? It would be if this was a machine, but it’s not. It’s a five-ton animal with food on it’s mind, and lots of it: your average asiatic elephant eats 200-300kg of vegetation a day and drinks 150 litres of water. Once we left the village grounds I spent a lot of time yelling “hoooaay!” while she stood still munching away on the nearest patch of grass, occasionally flapping her ear against my leg as I frantically tried to nudge her in the right direction. But with a bit of perseverance and considerable help from the real mahout we got going, and headed off for a lumbering tour of the wetlands. I gradually refined my voice commands by mimicking the mahout, and over time he had less need to “enhance” my ear nudges with strong prods from his feet. Towards the end of the first session I was told that I was doing really well, but I couldn’t avoid thinking they were just humouring me.

Still once I got used to it it was a load of fun, and rather surreal. There is no saddle at all for the rider, you simply sit on her neck with your legs dangling as low as possible to keep upright. It’s okay to put your hands on her head for support, thankfully, but even so I was still gripping with my thighs for grim life the whole time. After two hours they were on fire, and my bum was thoroughly kneaded by the constant grinding from the top of the elephant’s shoulders as we plodded along. I gradually learnt to nudge left or right by raising my foot and placing it on her shoulder to push her ear in the right direction, and that got good results. My voice commands improved, and by the end of the first session I was more confident but still feeling very much a novice.

Fortunately I had over two hours to go back to the Lodge, have a shower (it was another hot day), eat a sedate lunch and read for a while before session two. Normally this is a tour up to Phu Asa along a wide dirt track, but as they are currently paving the road that was off limits. Instead we headed into the forest, something they very rarely do with newbies like me. Apparently I really was doing okay, because this time around the mahout barely said a word and rarely had to aid my directions. I had a much better feel for my mount and she was responding more readily, and the diversions for a snack were blessedly few. There was a real sense of adventure heading into the forest, and even though we were following well-trod elephant paths I was pleased that my increasingly subtle commands were followed promptly – well, mostly. I even got to the point where I could balance without using my hands, but I kept them close to her head just in case a sudden lurch threw me sideways as it’s a long way down from the top of an elephant. My legs were thoroughly sore though, and it was only with a solid clenching of the buttocks towards the end (no gratuitous jokes here please) that I was able to carry on until the end. Once again my marathon training pays dividends…. At the start I was told that whenever I got tired I could relocate to the buggy to rest up but I never did, and that almost never happens so I’m told. Older people especially find it very hard on hips and thighs, and even the Lodge guide said that he had to take a break after forty minutes when he had his first ride!

School over, I headed back to the Lodge to rest and reflect. And decide that I really like this place and would stay another day – this time in one of the luxury stand-alone bungalows. I simply wanted to have a quiet day afterwards, partly to rest my legs but also just to kick back and relax on the very inviting industrial-strength hammock on the bungalow’s private balcony while reading some Murakami. The budget rooms are nice but not very private, and I was in the mood for some genuine peace. I also needed time to write these posts, something I haven’t had the desire to do for a while. I justified my indulgence by saying that this night was the exact half-way point in my long journey, and surely it’s appropriate to celebrate it in style? But those who know me well will know that I really don’t need much encouragement to splash out on some luxury 😛

Categories: travel | Leave a comment

Kayaking to Cambodia

Si Phan Don (literally “four thousand islands”) is an idyllic part of the Mekong at the extreme south of Laos, on the border with Cambodia. There aren’t actually thousands of islands here but dozens, and the pace of life is dreamily slow. It has a reputation as a backpacker haven, a place where in the words of Lonely Planet life is “so laid back that you could imagine the islands just drifting downriver into Cambodia with barely anyone rolling out of their hammock in the process”. That might have been true five or ten years ago when it was difficult to cross the border, when coming to Si Phan Don required lots of time to get down here and then back up again after you’d had enough of chillin’. But now that through travel to Stung Treng and beyond in Cambodia is rididculously easy, it’s become an almost-mandatory start or end point for those visiting Laos for any length of time. The ‘Lonely Planet Effect’ has transformed the most popular islands of Don Det and Don Khon into what is effectively a giant backpacker resort: now there are dozens of small properties each with a few bungalows on or near the river, distributed up and down the banks of each island. It’s still a very peaceful and beautiful place, but it’s no longer as remote as when there were just a handful of simple shacks available for as little as a dollar a day.

I’d always intended to finish my trip to Laos there, and I still will, but I was expecting it to be quite crowded so I was also keen to find a different way to visit the area. When I discovered that the eco-tourism outfit Green Discovery offers two- or three- day kayaking trips to Si Phan Don I signed up as soon as I got to Pakse. To make it affordable I had to wait for some others to join the trip, and in the end the only people who were interested wanted to do a two-day trip instead of the three-day version I preferred. But it turned out two days was plenty, and along with the unique perspective offered by floating downriver we still got to visit all the highlights of the area and spend a night on Don Khon, so I now have a much better idea what to expect when I arrive there again tomorrow.

After a three-hour minibus ride to the boat landing that heads to Don Khong, by far the largest island in the area, we packed our gear into drybags and mounted up. Our party was small: just myself, Australian couple Tom and Belinda, and our guide Don (also known as Tigerman). Initially Don wanted he and I to share a kayak, but I was keen to paddle alone so I insisted on one by myself. After making it clear that it would be quite an effort as the kayaks were large and designed for two or three people, Don relented and he and I both had separate vessels while Tom and Belinda shared. I think Don was hoping I’d prefer to share too; now he had to paddle all the way by himself as well! The sun was bright and strong as we set off, and I quickly revelled in the freedom of paddling my way down the Mekong to Cambodia. Our first day involved a lot of paddling: close to 20 kms in fact, much of it into a stiff headwind, and I experimented with different strokes, rhythms, and grips throughout the day trying to find the most efficient way to move. The two-in-one kayak of Tom and Belinda had “turbo power” as Don said, and they set a strong pace that was an enjoyable effort to keep up with. I’ve never kayaked so far or so exotically in my life and I was loving it 🙂

Past riverside villages, a car ferry, kids playing in the water, people bathing or washing clothes, all under the penetrating glare of the unforgiving afternoon sun. Lunch on a small beach in the middle of the river was a picnic affair of sticky rice, noodles, vegetables, and most contentiously an array of cooked meats that probably flouted every food hygiene standard imaginable back in Australia. Lao sausage (essentially little balls of pig fat in small casings), diced chicken, strips of the popular local dried beef jerky, a large “fresh” pork sausage that looked rather uncooked in parts, and dried fish – all of which hadn’t seen a refrigerator for at least seven hours (if at all). It was an extensive but very typical Lao picnic and I hoed into everything except the fish. Tom and Belinda avoided all the meat, as they’re naturally cautious and had suffered food poisoning only the week before. My fingers were metaphorically crossed behind my back but I was hungry, and if it was good enough for Don it was good enough for me. I survived.

We pulled into Don Det late in the afternoon after more than five hours of paddling, and headed off to a lovely outdoor bar-restaurant to watch the sun set over the Mekong while our kayaks were towed away for the night. The sunset was spectacular and much better than the one in Vientiane; here you could see the sun descend all the way down into the hills of Cambodia without it getting lost in low hazy clouds. I will definitely return to this spot at least once before I leave Laos. After a hair-raising bike ride through the dark with little illumination and no brakes we arrived at our bungalows for the night on Don Khon, and the welcome relief of a shower and change of clothes. Before dinner Don treated us to a special ceremony called baci. This Lao tradition is performed whenever people arrive from or are about to set out on a big journey, and involves a shaman saying prayers and lighting candles before tying a number of white threads around your wrist. Before tying they are waved up and down your forearm while he intones words to the effect of “out with the bad energy, in with the good”. You wear the threads for at least three days, after which you can remove them but only by untying or pulling, never by cutting. It was a simple but special ritual, and Don said afterwards that in two years of working for Green DIscovery he had never before done this with foreigners. He felt we were a very good group of people, and I was humbled to be honoured in this way.

The next day we visited a famous temple on Don Khon, and were given a lengthy and detailed explanation of the life of Buddha before he became Buddha. Then to the massive Li Phi waterfall complex, a huge expanse of numerous rocky canyons and falls down which a good proportion of the Mekong tumbled. The French attempted to blow it up almost a hundred years ago pursuing their dream of creating a boat passage upriver, but one glance at the sheer extent of the rocky falls could tell you the plan was futile. It’s even more impressive in the rainy season, apparently. We put our kayaks into the river just below Li Phi, into a narrow chasm that still had quite a swift flow. Unlike yesterday we were instructed to wear our lifejackets and helmets and keep a good distance between the kayaks to avoid pile-ups, and I was the last to set off. Round the first bend was a small but fast rapid, and as I turned the corner I could see immediately that Don and Belinda had capsized. They were still hanging on to their craft and were floating to a large overhanging rock that formed a small and partially sheltered pool to the right. Don was trying to paddle back to them as I came through the gorge, and seeing what had happened I furiously moved to the right and came up beside their overturned kayak as they bobbed at each end. I held on to their kayak to see if I could help, but I soon noticed that my craft was being pulled towards the strong current of the main river flow. As Don pulled up and began to help Belinda out of the water, my kayak overturned and I was plunged into the river.

It happened so quickly that I barely had time to grab the cord that ran the length of the kayak, and all I knew was that my lifejacket would propel me to the surface as soon as possible. However the current had pushed me along and I surfaced underneath the kayak, unable to get clean air. I scrambled to be free, flailing, and cleared the kayak only to come face to face with the steep overhanging rock, still underwater. Suddenly a hand grabbed the back of my lifejacket and I was pulled to the surface, and I wrenched my headgear off in panic and gasped for breath. I was wearing a wide-brimmed hat underneath my helmet which was great sun-protection when floating on the river, but which hung wetly over my face when soaked and contributed to the feeling of drowning. I was probably only under for a couple of seconds but it was terrifying, and I calmed down only when I got a decent purchase on the rock and knew I wouldn’t be submerged again. Don was a champion in the crisis, and he herded Belinda and me and our two kayaks around the rock to a more protected area further down while he chased after a discarded paddle. Returning to us, he tied his kayak to ours and then swam upriver to rescue to Tom who was still clinging to the large rock. Don later explained that I should not have tried to help, instead I should have continued downriver until it was safe to turn around and wait for the others (or try and pick up anything that broke free and floated my way). It’s a lesson I have learnt the hard way and certainly will never forget.

It took another twenty minutes or so for us to collect ourselves and remount the kayaks, as we were all quite shaken. Fortunately our drybags remained lashed in place and we paddled carefully for a short while before pulling up to the rocky shore for lunch. We ate in almost complete silence, still processing what had happened. Don explained that there was only one more section that would be tricky, and he went as far as drawing a map to explain how best to approach it. The current would try to take us around to the right but we wanted to go straight on, so we had to keep left and paddle like mad to break free of the flow and head in the right direction. Our kayaks were designed for calm waters not rapids, so they were much more likely to tip than usual. As we’d found out… this time we were all extremely careful and made it through without a problem, and we could then focus on the highlight of the whole trip that was an hour downriver: the very rare Irrawaddy dolphins.

There are now less than a hundred of these creatures in the world, and they only live in this stretch of the Mekong. Distinguished by their short noses and very short stubby dorsal fins, at least a few of these are almost always visible in the afternoon at a particular spot just south of Don Khon. Tourist boats take sightseers to a couple of vantage points on the river, but neither of them get you anywhere near as close as we went. After a tough hour’s paddle including some broad low rapids we entered the dolphin zone, and Don ordered us to keep silent and paddle as quietly as possible as we approached. After a few minutes his eagle eye spotted a pair in the distance, and we slowly headed towards them. It was a good five minutes before I could see anything, but eventually I saw first one then another dolphin’s back arc over the water. For the next forty minutes we gradually crept towards them, floating in silence and wonder as they continued to surface every minute or two with a gentle pfffft of air. Drifting on the river, we got as close as 100m to the Cambodian shore before finally setting off again to our final stop. It was much more special than I expected and the best moment of the entire journey.

After disembarking and somehow loading all three kayaks in a vertical stack on top of our minivan, we drove a short distance to the spectacular Khon Phapheng waterfall. Billed as the largest waterfall in south-east Asia by volume, tens of thousands of litres of water a second gush down a large horseshoe-shaped waterfall and several side falls in an imposing demonstration of nature’s force. Apparently the three-day kayak trip has you paddle near the edge of the TOP of the falls; I was even happier that we were on the two day option after I heard that! We were all tired by this stage and running quite late, but the late afternoon light was perfect and I managed to get a couple of good photos before returning to the van for the long trip home. Despite the mishap and the very tired body afterwards, this tour was the best two-day period I’ve had on the entire trip so far 😀

Categories: Laos, travel | 2 Comments

Create a free website or blog at WordPress.com.

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started