a travelogue for a solo cross-country motorcycle road trip from Tampa, Florida to San Diego, California in 2008 and an overland attempt from Singapore to Morocco from November 2004 to August 2006
Thursday, August 18, 2005
Back in Laos
I left Bangkok yesterday morning, saying good bye to some excellent friends from Mae Sot, and I took a 10-hour bus trek heading east to Ubon Ratchathani. It was a dark rainy night when I got there, but it was good to see that I was the only tourist around. Ubon Ratchathani is a large town 90 km from the Thai-Laos border. I had to visit five banks until I found a place that would let me buy US dollars. After taking care of business, I took local transport to Chong Mek, the border town in Thailand. Once again, I was the only tourist on the bus. I felt like I was in Indonesia again.The Chong Mek border is supposed to be the only border where you need a Laotian visa before showing up, so it tends to be avoided by the backpacker tourists. At the border, I had to pay 100 BHT to the Laotian immigration officers for "overtime" since it was after 4pm. I tried to bargain it down, but I couldn't.Laos is beautiful. The sun was setting during my hour sawngthaew ride to Pakse from the border. Both sides of the road had rice patty fields in different shades of green with water buffalos grazing. It was so beautiful to see the mountain reflections in the still water. Quite a few stilted homes had their ground floors flooded underwater. I passed some lakes that had expanded and the elevated resting areas that you see in SE asia that once lined the shores were also underwater.The Laotians squeezed into the sawngthaew with me seemed amused with my presence. They made room for me on the benches and were constantly stealing glances at me. It's great to be a novel tourist again.Pakse is a town on highway 13 (the north-south road through Laos). There are some tourists here as it is a long day's journey from Vientiane and on the way to Si Phan Don, Four Thousand Islands. I will be headed there tomorrow, I think. The Mekong River widens there and harbors four thousand islands, apparently.
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