Lovely
Laos...
Laos
is a tremendous country. It has a beautifully scenic landscape
and is homeland to smiling friendly faces. Best of all this quaint and
peaceful land has not yet being too tarnished by tourism, high rise
buildings, extensive infrastructure and pollution. Let's hope it will
remain innocent for another few years at least though there is a tourism
campaign by the Government at the moment similiar to Visit Nepal
98 and Amazing Thailand, campaigns.
The
country population is only 4.8 million for the 200,000 sq km (compared
with Thailands' 58 million living in an area only 2.5 times the size).
The population is well dispersed around the country so rush hour in
the captial (480,00 people only!) is a doddle to jay-walk through the
sandy main boulevards. To top it off Laos is also extremely cheap to
travel and has numerous french restaurants and bakeries with tremendous
food. Lack of comfortable transport is the only annoyance.
$1 US = 12,5000 Lao Kip
$1
US = 58 Thai Bhats in a bank in Laos!
Saturday
17th Janauary 1998
Hotel; Santisouk Hotel, Vientiane
Room Type: 3 bedded room at 12 US$
Verdict: Superb, clean crisp whie sheets, ensuie bathroom with
shower, bath and Hot Water,chairs, bedside lights, wardrobe and table.Fantastic
and the cheapest around this ity.
We crossed over the Friendship Bridge from Nong Khai in North-east Thailand
and took a tuk tuk - now called a jumbo if they are the larger version
of the samlor (a 3 wheeled motorbicycle) to Vietienne without much bother.
Arriving in the capital city one immediately notices the French influence
with houses romanitcally nestled behind bursts of flowers, serene shuttered
windows, and of course french translations on signposts. Laos was a
colony of France from 1893 (or rather was uder the protection of France)
until the Franco-Laotian Treaty of 1953 granted full Independance to
Laos and thereafter internal tensions between royalist, neutralist and
communist factions ensued.
During
our walking tour of Viantienne we sat by Buddha in many Wats, strolled
along sandy main roads, greeted locals and received warm smiles in return.
Chldren ran up to us asking 'What is youor name?", Buddhist students
bade us "Good Morning ' and conversed in english with us. Spie
was a 15 year old chap dressed in is bright orange robe and holding
a London black umbrella above his shaved smiling head to shade out the
sun. After snapping his image with his permission, at the Sacred Stuppa
he waited for us to chat as we walked down the 3 km stretch towards
the Victory Memorial - Arc de Triomphe. He would finish studying in
his monastery next year and would go to New York where he lived when
he was younger and where his father still resides. His aim was to study
drama in New York, although it was quite difficult imagine how this
placid looking buddhist student would fit in waiving his arms to Shakespeare
unashamedly on the big stage. We all love Laos and plan to stay longer
than our original few days depending on which areas are accessible and
not in too much danger from rebel geurillas which tend to cause disurbances
on the aptly chosen Route 13.
>
on to Vietnam