Archive for November, 2008

Luang Prabang

Saturday, November 15th, 2008

After spending two days cramped on the long boat, we were glad to arrive in LP. We docked (ha ha!) late afternoon so after settling into our guest house (which is probably one of the worst yet, but cheap!) we headed out for a bite to eat and once again were reunited with Cat & Adam, and half an hour later Liam & Lizzy, who we met on the elephant trekking in Chiang Mai.

20081110-122310  20081110-122818

LP is a fantastic town! Small, very chilled out, tuk tuks riding around, monks walking down the street. The town is “Unesco Heritage Listed” which bans all buses and trucks and makes the place feel so much more relaxed than previous cities/towns we’ve been to; it also has a curfew of 11.30pm, so its early to bed and early to rise – we can definitely vouch for this, each morning we were woken at 6.00am by the monks beating the drum in the temple opposite, not to mention the bloody cockerels.

The first day we decided to chill out, get to grips with the town and spend time with the guys. We all met for breakfast and afterwards started out with a bit of sightseeing then headed off to experience some local Lao massage – a past time LP is renowned for. Thankfully the place we went to could accommodate all 6 of us;  the majority of us had traditional Lao massage (similar to Thai massage but a little gentler), Dan & Adam however got in touch with their feminine sides and opted for the “Body Polish”. After my 40 min neck & shoulder massage was up, I walked through the ‘boys’ room (which I had to do to exit) to find Dan & Adam laid out with only their boxer shorts on, which were pulled up their arses and female masseurs rubbing their feet – interesting – what’s been going on here?!?!

20081110-142358

Fully relaxed we headed for a cheeky beer in the sun on the river front, where we bumped into Vinney and Tom – say no more, the afternoon/evening ended up being a bit of a drinking session with us nearly burning the restaurant down when the Lao BBQ flames got a little out of hand. A great day, although I felt terrible the following morning.

20081110-170220  20081110-172614

The second day we had all arranged to go to the waterfalls, 20 odd km out of town. The waterfalls were impressive (again not quite Niagara, but better than those in Chiang Mai). We had read in the book that most people stay at the bottom rather than trek up to the top – I can now see why, what a climb, although it was fun walking through the mud at the top – not quite sure if the view from the top was worth it but was good all the same.

20081111-141142  20081111-144546

With not much time on our side now, the following day we got the bus from LP to Vang Vieng, which is halfway to the capital city Vientiane, and a place famous for tubing. 

Bookmark and Share

Huay Xia to Luang Prabang (Mekong River)

Thursday, November 13th, 2008

Our next leg of these closing weeks was north from Chiang Mai to cross the border into Laos. We took a direct bus from Chiang Mai to Chiang Khong (thai border side) and probably came even closer to Matt & Rian in distance terms, but so close, yet so far…

Once we had reached the border town, a short tuk-tuk whisked us down to the border which was basically a shed on one side of the river, then a little boat across the Mekong to the Laos side. Here we had visa formalities to take care of (i.e. pay!), then we had the task of finding accommodation, in what is basically a through town where people only stay one night – it showed.

Now, even though we were in Laos everything was priced in Thai Baht. There was a moment of excitement when we went to the Laos ATM, worked out the pound -> Lao Kip exchange rate then tried to withdraw a MILLION kip and be a millionaire – but that was short lived as the maximum withdrawal was 700k :-( We paid for a room and then went to book our slow boat tickets to Luang Prabang hoping we could save on the 1000 Baht price the guesthouse manager was quoting – we couldn’t – the official pier prices were 950 :-( The guesthouse we did stay in however had a fantastic balcony where we got these stunning (if I say so myself!) sunset photo’s from…

20081107-175108 20081107-175746 20081107-175946

The next day we arose and set off for the slow boat, I was really looking forward to two days drifting down the Mekong, to relax and take in the scenery…well, once we were aboard we could certainly enjoy the scenery as the boat was very open, but the seats, were, er, like church pews! Very upright and with 8” of leg room! They then proceeded to fill the boat so that every 2-seater pew was full, then added three more for those without a seat! But we were away and the river & scenery were all that I expected – time to get out a good book, pop the iPod on and sip a cold beer!

comfy!

comfy!

juice of Lao life

juice of Lao life

day 2...

day 2…

We arrived in Pakbeng for our overnight which is described quite interestingly in the Lonely Planet: “rat infested place”. With our expectations quite low we had a pleasant night with Tom & Vinney (i.e. several beers), some good food and a mossy-free night – thanks to the mossy net provided! The room was only 3 quid too!

Next day we were aboard a different boat and being early we managed to get a couple of 1st class seats out the back of a Fiat Panda (or something similar) and we were off again! After an eight hour cruise we arrived in LP to the usual hustle & bustle of guesthouse touts and here we are.

Bookmark and Share

Chiang Mai

Wednesday, November 12th, 2008

We arrived at our hostel in Chiang Mai to be welcomed by Adam & Cat, once again nice to see familiar faces! After a quick freshen up we headed out for some food and a few beers. We went to the “Night Bizarre” part of town which was fantastic, I could have spent all night there! Basically it involved streets lined with stalls selling clothes, bags, jewelry, you name it – Debs, again we would have needed empty suitcases! One thing we quickly learnt is bartering in Thailand is not as easy in China; the Thai’s have been exposed to tourism for years and are streets ahead, when you start walking away over the price they aren’t as quick to concede as they are in China.

Day one in Chiang Mai we went to cookery school. This had been on the agenda before we left as Dan really wanted to learn to cook (and give me a break – he he only kidding!) It was great – we learnt how to make Spring rolls, Thai Green Curry (which as it turns out is hotter than Red Thai curry), Chicken Coconut soup, Deep Fried banana – which I have to say was the best dish of the day! I soon learnt that the Thai’s love their food hot, when making the Chicken Coconut Soup, I put two chillis in mine, normally they would put in 15! Being with Cat & Adam made the day fun, especially when Dan threw more red chilli’s into Adams Panaeng Curry, which was then so hot he couldn’t eat it!

Rambo! Kazza's spring rolls! yum yum!

Day two, we had a full day of activities – visit to an orchard farm, elephant trekking, waterfalls, white water rafting and visiting a local village, the first and last of which were totally rubbish, the others were brilliant. The elephant trekking was good, we had the biggest elephant out of everyone which ate pretty much the whole way round. The elephants are pretty smart and have cottoned on to tourists giving them bananas, as soon as we got on he threw his trunk back to us as if to say “banana please!”

20081105-104424 20081106-180638

After the elephants we trekked out to the waterfall. The temperature was really hot so after a 40 min trek through the jungle we couldn’t wait to reach the falls and go for a paddle. The force of the water is something else (obviously nothing in comparison to Niagra), I couldn’t go under the falling water otherwise I would have lost my bikini!

20081105-130532 20081105-130840

The best bit of the day was the white water rafting. I’d been really wanting to do this since Yangshou in China – it was a massive adrenaline rush although definitely not long enough. We started at a real choppy bit in the river so straight away were into it. We got completely soaked and I nearly fell out the raft at one point – great fun!

20081106-180714

We decided to stay on an extra night in Chiang Mai, which I’m really pleased we did , not only for the lie in but to have a lazy day getting to know the city. Tempeled out from Russia, Mongolia and  China we visited one main temple in Chiang Mai and wandered round the rest of the day. In the evening we treat (not sure that’s the right word) ourselves to a Thai massage – ow lord, I thought massage was supposed to be relaxing -  I thought I was going to snap. Not sure whether you can call it a massage, prodding, pulling  and stretching is more appropriate I think, overall it was fab and my neck and shoulders felt the best they have for months!

Bookmark and Share

Koh Racha Yai Island

Monday, November 3rd, 2008

Since our last blog we have had c. 40 hours of travelling (non-stop), c. 36 hours of rain but more importantly c. 72 hours of thai hot weather! :-)

We left Yangshuo by a 1.5 hour bus to Guilin, where we then caught an overnight (soft!) sleeper to Shenzhen which is just over the mainland boarder to Hong Kong. From here we caught a train into HK, then a ferry over the waterway to HK central! At this point we wanted to go no further – we certainly have an affection for HK! Once we checked in, 10 hours before our flight (that’s early even by Karen’s standard!), at the in-town centre we had our boarding cards and our bags were on their way, supposedly along the longest conveyer belt in the world, to the airport. Without a thought of the bags Karen headed to Toni & Guy and I to Starbucks (having bought a UK-US travel plug!) to search for some accommodation on some Thai island somewhere near Phuket airport! Well, Karen’s hair took 4 hours and my search took 4 hours, 3 cappuccino’s and one frappuccino! My 4 hours researching paid off and we decided on a bit of Darren luxury (a little above our normal “flashpacker” status!) and opted for Ban Raya Resort!

Once Karen was back with blonde STRAIGHT hair we then had food and headed to the airport. I had already received an email from Ethiopian Air that our flight was delayed, and so it was. After a flight from HK -> Bangkok, then a flight from Bangkok -> Phuket, we then caught a bus to Chalong Bay for a longtail to Koh Racha, however…the skies where dark and rain was imminent. After convincing the longtail owner we would only pay an agreed amount, he summoned his son (wise choice is turns out) and we were off for a c. 1 hour crossing. After about 20 minutes I was soaked (with water dripping off my nose), Karen was soaked, the bags soaked and rain imminent – bugger!

20081029-122916  erm, raining?

Once we arrived at Koh Racha we were soon upon our accommodation and smiles returned to our face. The crossing in hindsight was quite amusing! So after almost 48 hours without accommodation we had arrived at our bungalow that had electricity only 18:00 – 08:00 and only a cold shower! Brilliant! No, truly, it was :-)

there's a resort up there somewhere!  our bungalow, #24!

For the remainder of that day and the next it basically rained. But upon the second morning the skies were blue and the suntan lotion was out! I had arranged to dive in the morning, so Karen took up position at the pool and I went diving – guess who I found? Nemo!!! The dive was great and I arranged for a second dive the following day. From this point forward we spent life like an islander, minimum of 12 hours sleep a night, great food (especially the seafood!) and cold beer :-)

20081102-095858  20081102-110138

Now we are travelling once again. We longtailed back in far superior weather, taxi’d to the airport and now have two flights ahead of us to Chiang Mai where we meet up once again with Adam & Cat and have already booked into Thai cookery school!

Hope you enjoy the pictures, sorry if they do not match those back home, but trust us that we are soaking up as much of this good weather as we can for one and all back home!

Bookmark and Share