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<title>kez &amp;amp; hay travels 06 - laos</title>
<description>round the world trip</description>
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<title>Sabaidee</title>
<link>http://kezhaytravels06.blogspirit.com/archive/2006/06/01/sabaidee.html</link>
<author>noreply@blogspirit.com (KEZ&amp;amp;HAY)</author>
<category>Laos</category>
<pubDate>Thu, 01 Jun 2006 07:55:00 +0200</pubDate>
<description>
&lt;p&gt;Leaving Chiang Mai we headed up to the north crossing into Laos at the Chiang Kong crossing.&amp;nbsp; We then took a 2 day trip down the Mekong river on a slow boat (slow being the optimum word!)&amp;nbsp; So for 2 days we sat on the boat floor watching the beautiful scenery of rolling peaks.&amp;nbsp; We stayed overnight at a small fishing village which had the biggest insects we've ever seen, (we were very calm and cool about this - honest).&amp;nbsp; We arrived in Luang Prabang on the eve of Hayley's birthday, so we decided to treat ourselves to a night in a colonial style hotel with sky tv and en suite.&amp;nbsp; The town itself&amp;nbsp;stretches along the river Mekong and is a beauiful relaxed small town, where the&amp;nbsp;locals are very friendly and everyone says &quot;Sabaidee&quot; to you.&amp;nbsp; On Hayley's birthday we pampered ourselves: went to a spa for a Laos massage and then in the evening we ate at a French restaurant - filet de boeuf with blue cheese sauce and a carafe de vin - Beautiful!&lt;br /&gt; Next couple of days we became very good at doing nothing except drinking fruit shakes and chilling!&amp;nbsp; on our last day Hayley got up at the crazy time of 05.30 to see the Monks of Luang Prabang receiving alms from the locals - Kerry thought better of it!!!&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;Next stop was Phonsavan and a gruelling 8 hour trip on bumpy roads to get there.&amp;nbsp; This 20 year old town is home to the &quot;Plain of Jars&quot; a cultural phenonomen of massive 200 year old stone jars believed but not confirmed to be some sort of crematorium.&amp;nbsp; This is also the area that suffered the worst bombardments during the 2nd IndoChina war, where the Americans bombed the equivalent of 177 bombs every 8 minutes for 9 consecutive years.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;Another 8 hour journey on a tiny bus with even bumpier roads to Xam Nua, although the fantastic scenery kind of made up for the lack of comfort.&amp;nbsp; This country seriously needs some&amp;nbsp;steam rollers!&amp;nbsp; Stayed at this town for 2 nights, and visited the market where the surrounding hill tribes venture down everyday to sell their goods.&amp;nbsp; Also visited the network of caves which sheltered the Communist Pathet Lao's parallel government during the 2nd Indochina war.&amp;nbsp; Thousands of communists lived there for 9 years as bombs rained down around them.&amp;nbsp; Caves were set out like houses with seperate rooms, offices, and even emergency chambers in case of chemical weapon attacks.&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;We also experienced Laos nightlife at this small town as we were invited to a local nightclub, where we showed yet again how westerners dance (or more likely how Hayley and Kerry bob along), and where we partook in some Laos karaoke - don't ask!&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;Next day we were up at 06.00 for what was to be a journey from hell to Hanoi...&lt;/p&gt;
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