Vietnam Road Trip: Day 2

Getting better!

6 hours, 180 kilometers, 24 hours behind schedule.

Vietnam is truly a land of smells. Food, manure, fish, ocean, manure… did I say manure? The country side is beautiful. It is also erratic and incongruous.

We managed, with Michelle’s marvelous translation services, to find a truly award winning metalsmith who refashioned my kickstand/footpeg assembly. Dodge is no longer Popeye.

Michelle came up with a name for her bike, eschewing my choice of “Uncle Ho.” Her bike was christened “Jenky” today, for reasons no human will ever understand.

Jenky is also a one legged victim of a day in the country with Michelle. Michelle waved me over about 40 kilometers outside Pan Thiet complaning of a strange grinding noise from the rear of her bike. I, estute observer that I am, was quick to point out what I thought might be causing the problem.

We slowed it down and make it to Mui Ne for the night and have resolved to make it to a suspension shop tomorrow and see what can be done.

I chose these old Honda Wins for the trip as they are popular everywhere and spare parts are cheap and plentiful.

Looks like it was sound logic.

Vietnam Road Trip: Day 1

7 hours, 130 kilometers, and we are a day behind schedule.  They have a word for people like us: Overachievers.

Dodge, my filthy conveyance, managed a flat tire to start off with, then towards the end of the day, the left footpeg and kickstand completely broke off the bike. Jenky, Michelle’s bike, started leaking oil and began having problems with the starter.

All in all, it was a good day. noone crashed, noone was injured, and we stayed at a pretty decent hotel called the Tropicana. This was because noone in the next 5 towns could tell us where a hotel was. It was such a foreign concept that we eventually turned around and drove back to one we had seen hours earlier.

Directions to anything are pretty interesting here. It is either 20 minutes or 100 meters. If it is within 5 kilometers, a local will tell you 100 meters. if it is more than that, you will be told it is 20 minutes. by this measure, one could walk the 100 meters in 20 minutes and drive the 20 minutes from Saigon to Hanoi in about two weeks. I think I am going to write an article about debunking Asian ethnic stereotypes… they are all wrong.

Saigon Sunrise

It’s late.

I’m tired. I’m watching the ants run around my screen, keyboard, and mirror and I’m just sitting here lacking any great volition.

This week, I’ve been beaten, massaged, arrested, and robbed… I’ve been in three different countries, bought motorcycles, got a flat tire, been in three accidents, and toured a foreign city with a local who learned English by watching porn.

Yeah, I’m tired.

I’m in Saigon, my new number is +841217683864. This is the second phone number I have acquired in Vietnam as my first simcard, along with my gallant and enduring Motorola Q9 were stolen today by *drumroll* a taxi driver! You will be missed, old friend.

Just checking in. Much love, everybody. More stories to come.

Back to Tiger: Crossfit

After getting in touch with the softer side of things for a couple weeks at the Shivagakomarpaj Thai Massage School in Chiang Mai, I decided it was time to go back and beat people up again. Tiger Muay Thai was more than happy to have me back.

This time, instead of straight fight training, I decided to mix it up, start doing some more weights and taking part in their Crossfit/Bodyfit challenges; like Beach Day.

Beach Day is a 2 hour montage of pain sprinkled with humiliation.

First off, we load a van up with a bunch of these tires attached to ropes.

Then we drive to this picturesque beachside cliff.

Then we all lose our minds.

We begin the exercises by doing backwards pushups up 5 flights of steps; 2 larger and three smaller. We do this 4 times. We sweat a lot.

Sometimes we take breaks.

It kinda looks like this…

Afterward, we form up in groups of 3. We take turns running up and down the 2 larger sets of stairs carrying one of these lovely tires overheard, and doing 10 squats at the top and bottom of the flight of stairs, handing it off to a partner each time we come up or down. After one has done 10 squats at top and bottom, then drop to 9 squats, top and bottom, then 8, and so on until you reach 0.

Then tourists decide they want to act the part…

Then we sweat some more.

So, that was a pretty good warm-up for the real monster exercise of the day… The Hill.

The Hill doesn’t look like much at first glance. It’s about 200 meters downhill to a 90 degree bend in the road where it goes out of sight. We are supposed to split up into teams of 3, grab a tire and run up and down the hill twice performing hundreds of various exercises at the bottom, midway, and top.

What you don’t realize the first time, is that the 200 meters of the road is just the beginning. The road is roughly 1 kilometer each way. Thankfully, traffic is light and usually just the occasional scooter, so if you do fall down from exhaustion, you probably won’t be killed by oncoming vehicles.

This is where most of the “first-timers” walk away. From the stairs to the top of the hill, somehow half of the people disappeared. That left myself and Joe as a 2 man team to drag the accursed tire rather than 3.

I wish I could say I was more of a help than a hindrance, but Joe took the tire almost 90% of the way. He was a powerhouse.

Finally, after buckets of sweat and a handful of “I Quit” moments, we dragged our tire and tired bodies to the top of the mountain. We would have celebrated if we had any energy left. As it was, we just lay there for a while, baking like roadkill in the sun.

After everyone could walk again, we made it to a little beachside bar and got a round of fresh coconuts to rehydrate and laugh about how crazy we all were for doing this willingly.

Tiger is one of those places in life where you can work as hard or as little as you like. The half asses sort of sift to the bottom of the pile, and the people who really go for it form a fantastic friendship through the blood, sweat, and tears of it all. I’d like to say this will be an annual vacation for me, but I’ve no idea what’s in store for me after this trip. I do know this; I will be back again. This was just too much fun.

Wrap-Up:

Tiger Muay Thai and MMA

http://www.tigermuaythai.com/

tmtphuket@gmail.com

TMT Office:+66 (0)76 367 071

TMT Office (alt. nr):+66 (0)76 367 072

Night Office:+66 (0)86 596 9090

Bookings:+66 (0)80 519 8234

BlackBerry Messenger:310208FD

Survival Guide to Chiang Mai

Stories of Chiang Mai were some of the first things I ever heard about Thailand. I knew the city existed before I knew anything about it.

Anyone can get along here just fine. Like most of Thailand, Chiang Mai is set up to allow tourists the ability to do anything their little heart desires with the greatest of ease. There are, however, some very special things that happen her.

Chiang Mai is renowned for classes. There are a number of universities and specialty schools here that teach everything from the remedial to the spiritual. Unfortunately, they are not all in the same place.

Chiang Mai is something of a rectangle. There is a wall ( or sorts) surrounding the inner city with 4 gates. These gates provide easy navigation points for directing taxi and tuktuk drivers.

One of the most important things to know about getting around this town is the red and yellow trucks. The red trucks will drive around and take anyone to anywhere for 20 baht, or about 65 cents. The yellow trucks drive along relatively fixed routes through the city and will take passengers for 10 baht. Flag them like a taxi, state your destination to the driver who will then accept you or not. Do not ask how much it costs, because the driver will then seize the opportunity to make some extra money off of you; just jump in. When you arrive at your destination, pay the man the correct amount and go on your merry way.

If the driver asks for a different amount, simply correct him before getting in or find another truck. they come along often enough.

Chiang Mai is home to the largest amount of proper motorcycles I have seen since I was at the MotoGP race in Brno last year.

Chiang Mai is very geared towards the tourist. You can rent bikes, motorbikes, ride elephants, play with tigers, or attend classes in almost anything you can imagine. My primary reason for being here was learning Thai Massage, but I managed to squeeze in some cooking classes too. The cooking classes in Chiang Mai are a fraction of the cost of the classes in Phuket, fyi.

One thing I missed out on that I hope someone will do and inform me of how cool it was, is the Jungle Survival Cooking Course! You can schedule it with the booking agent at +66-53-208-661, but in order for the class to run, they need a few people interested in it, or you have to pay for 2 spots. When I checked the class was 1200 baht; less than $40 a person.

There are plenty of great places to eat in town; Fat China Man’s BBQ, Jerusalem Falafel, Starbucks… take your pick. Odds are, if you wander into any restaurant in town, you will get a great meal at a decent price. Fair warning, the owner of Jerusalem Falafel is never in a good mood, but the food is definitely worth it!

Breakfast…

Don’t plan on being an early riser to catch the proverbial worm. Nothing seems to open here until after 8 a.m. Not even the coffee shops. The Starbucks in town doesn’t open until 10 a.m.

If you are looking for a unique treat, head to the Chiang Mai Gate (south gate) market and find the sticky rice vendors. They cook sticky rice inside bamboo tubes that you can peel like a banana!

While in Chiang Mai I attended an insect riddled classical music performance, I saw tiny motorcycles, met all kinds of wild people, and generally enjoyed myself. That does not mean that Chiang Mai is a particularly enjoyable town.

Chiang Mai is something of a funnel, designed over time, to draw as much money from tourists into the local economy. This is not necessarily bad, it’s just what happens when enough tourists come to a town with money. It’s a great place to enjoy a couple of days off, book a tour somewhere, or learn some new skills, but if you are going to be based here, try to get out of the city as much as possible to really enjoy the area.

Hopefully, this short guide will give you a few things to do and see and make your life a little easier while you are in town. Cheers!

Wrap-Up:

Chiang Mai is great… for tours and classes.

There is a ton of good food here. Look around.

Red trucks are the best way to get around town. Yellow Trucks are a little more difficult to work with, but are half the price.

There are so many tour agencies here that any question you have about almost anything can be answered in a very short time just by asking around.

Protip: I am told that The Tiger Experience is awful; don’t waste your money by helping those people profit off their poor treatment of the animals.

Chiang Mai Rubdown

Old Medicine Hospital, Chiang Mai, Thailand. That’s my new address.

I’m tired. I’ve been crawling around on the floor a lot lately. I enrolled in a massage school in Chiang Mai Thailand to absorb a couple weeks worth of training in the healing arts before I go back to getting bashed in the face at Tiger Muay Thai.

It’s been interesting.

Well adjusted people

Thai massage is something of a mix of wrestling, yoga, and chiropractics. Add in some basic chakra points and energy lines and you have the lovely art that I have been practicing lately.

I am thrilled to be in Chiang Mai. This is one of the first places I ever knew existed in Thailand. Koh Samui and Chiang Mai were the two places I was told I had to visit in Thailand. I haven’t made it to Koh Samui, yet.

The Old Medicine Hospital houses the Shivagakomarpaj Thai Massage School. I still don’t know how to accurately pronounce that.

The establishment itself is great. They have a fanatical security guard on duty all night, good wifi coverage, and plenty of instructors. Some of which are retired ladyboys… like I said: Interesting.

The part about this place that grabs your attention is that lodging is included in the 6000 baht a week price, and there is a discount for booking ahead. The lodging is extremely basic, but not bad. There is also a great penthouse at the top of the building that you can rent for 380 baht a night, about $12, which is well worth the money.

The crew here have been astounding. People from all over the world (the only Americans all seem to be from the Bay) and everyone is so easy to be around 12 hours a day.

The day starts about 8 am with a call to prayer, some chanting and singing around an ornately decorated statue. Fresh flowers, food, water, and (what looks like) alcohol are placed out for the spirits every morning.

We then head to the classroom (no cameras allowed) and watch the instructor bend, twist, and grope one of her coworkers for a couple hours. Afterward, we get a couple hours to practice and are released for lunch. After lunch the afternoon session is similar and the classrooms close down around 6 p.m.

Everyone grabs some dinner and then finds areas to practice the new moves into the night.

Some nights are different: Linda throws a dinner party at her tiny apartment, Cameron performs for a new bar on opening night.

My instructor, Fai, is always smiling. Even when she is telling me I am doing it wrong; which is pretty often.

At the end of each week, there is a 2-part exam on the material learned that week; both hands on and written.

At the end of the second, third, or fourth (etc) week, when people are graduating, they hold a special ceremony where your spirit is bonded to your body with a white string; something like the Sou Khuan in Laos. They put a dob of paint on your forehead and offer a prayer over you, but I don’t know what all that was all about. Good fun, though.

I passed my exams; flying colors and all that. But I need to keep practicing. If I am going to be in your neighborhood, beware; I will need practice dummies!

Wrap-Up:

Shivagakomarpaj Thai Massage School.
Phone  : 66 53 275085
Fax : 66 53 201663
E-mail : info@thaimassageschool.ac.th
Office hours are 9.00 a.m. – 6.00 p.m. Monday thru Sunday
Office address: 238/1 Wuolai Road (Across Old Medicine Culture Center)
Chiang Mai 50100 Thailand.
Website: www.thaimassageschool.ac.th

Saint Valentine in Laos

First of all, before you look at any of these pictures, let me assure you that I am a total dork.

I am sure I will try to deny this at some point in the future when I have children and finally need to appear to be an authority figure, but here it is in writing.

Luang Prabang was a cool little town. It’s easy to get there by plane; one of the better flying experiences of my life actually. It is relatively well connected by bus, though Laos bus trips are prone to excess adventure. It is also where I spent Valentine’s Day this year.

You don’t need to book a place ahead of time. There are dozens of places everywhere; several of them named “Merry.” It can get expensive, anywhere from $20-$50 a night for a guest house and the amenities vary somewhat, though they all seem to be quite clean.

There is a lot to do in town; eat food, watch monks, read books. A fantastic way to kill some time is to go and be an English tutor with the Big Brother Mouse people. Depending on their projects, they can use all manner of help with their book and literacy projects, but this is an easy way to start getting involved; every monrning 9-11 a.m.

There is a cool mountain covered with temples nearby named, rather tragically, Phu Si. It’s a great place to catch the sunset, talk to Buddha, or ride a dragon.

While the city is full of restaraunts, I found Lao Lao Garden had a certain charm. Check it out if you get a chance. Try the Water Buffalo.

As all good things must come to an end, Zsofi left to head back to Thailand and I was left with a couple days to kill before I went south to Vientiane. I did what may stand as the best thing I had done in Laos. Yes, even better than the elephants.

Asian Valentine Mugshot

I went for a walk.

I just picked a direction out of town and started walking until roads disappeared and were replaced by dirt tracks. I saw all manner of great people doing everyday stuff that I would never have had a chance to see otherwise. I met children mostly, and cackling old ladies. The day was simple and awe inspiring.

I sat in a bamboo hut on the edge of the river and relaxed while locals played and fished.

I walked down the road and followed an old woman with a machete and an umbrella for a while. I simply watched life happen around me.

As it was Valentine’s day, there were random flower stands set up along the way, though those disappeared with the roads. My hotel owner, a strange local man who had acquired some decent English skills and lost most of his hair, had given me a rose and a small box of chocolates earlier in the day. I stopped at the first little girl who waved at me (she was probably 3) and gave her the flower and candies. She was completely unimpressed. Her mom thought it was hilarious.

My Unimpressed Valentine

Towards the end, I found myself watching the sun fall out of the sky from the porch of a strangers home, surrounded by kids and their moms, sipping an indiscernible drink and eating food of some unknown substance and laughing ceaselessly. This went on for some time as we traded snacks and reaffirmed our complete inability to communicate using spoken words. This kid even gave me a handful of whatever egg/bread substance he was eating. I didn’t actually try it, but it’s the thought that counts, right?

My ninja!

At the end of the day, I realized that everyone I had met had been happy (except for my little Valentine.) Everyone I had met had almost nothing. Sometimes, I am confused by this. How can they have nothing and be so content?

That’s when I realize that they are looking at us and wondering why, when we already have everything, do we still want more?

Mending...

Wrap Up:

Luang Prabang is an easy flight from most places, or an all day bus from the capital, Vientiane.

There are so many places to stay, you really don’t need to book ahead. Also, the restaurant Utopia is not all it is hyped to be. Nice decor, poor food, drink, and location. Don’t sweat it.

The town is easily walkable, so the only time you should ever need a tuk-tuk is when you are trying to find an elusive ATM.

Again, get out of town. Rent a scooter, take a walk, ride a bicycle; do whatever you have to to get out into the villages and interact with people. They will love you.

Training: Muay Thai and Massage

Quick update: I’m back in Thailand for more training. I’ll be here for about a month between Chiang Mai and Phuket Thai; massage, Reiki, and Muay Thai practice. Thai number is still the same:

+66833922967

While we are all going about our lives, please, everyone who knows the Gonzales family, spare a moment of prayer or a phone call to let them know that even now we remember them and the light their son brought to our lives.

Dirtbikes, Monkeys, and Elephants: All in a days work

The stuff that dreams are made of…

Step 1: dare to dream

Step 2: procure motorbike

Step 3: hit the gas

Well, something like that.

First off, Pakse is a really cool place to spend some time. The city is down tempo and provides a good deal of delicious food and interesting people to talk to. Second, you can rent dirtbikes. Third, nature is just a short ride away.

For the relatively low price of $30 US one may, if one so chooses, rent a Honda XR 250 or FTR 223 from the Lan Kham hotel in downtown Pakse. This is nothing less than the key to the kingdom. Within easy reach of Pakse are ancient ruins, monkeys, waterfalls, jungles, things to swim in, and elephants.

Great Success!

Starting off from Pakse in the morning, one can expect to experience any or all of these things depending on gas money. Map interpretation skills are helpful, too.

By the end of the 220 kilometer day the tally stood at 1 collision (minivan), 2 waterfalls, the coldest swim ever, an adventure meal, and 2 hours with an elephant. Take a look:

My Jungle Love
The road less traveled
Zsofi leads the way
Pictures in the mist
Almost Eden
Looking up
My favorite game
Elephant Antics
View from the top
Casting a large shadow

I’ve purposely not given you a detailed account of where all of this was found, because finding it was part of the quest. This was like a “Choose your own adventure” book. The area around Pakse, similar to most of the country of Laos, is simply filled with things to see and experience.

All of this was packed into one day. It was a long, full day. This was due to equal constraints of money and time. If you are here, and you can spring the $30 a day to rent the bike, go for it; take as much time as you can.

The brilliance of this day was as much the countryside and seeing peoples lives unfold as it was the stops to experience some natural wonder. I cannot recommend this highly enough; it was a day I’ll not soon forget.

Wrap up:

Laos is full of wonder. Go find it.

Lan Kham hotel in Pakse rents all kinds of bikes for decent rates. You just have to leave your passport with them while you have the bike.

Get a map and some general directions from the Lan Kham staff. Some people speak more English than others so make sure you talk to the right people.

Elephant rides, monkey farms, and swimming in freezing waterfalls were just part of the magic of the day. If you have the bike for it, follow the dirt roads and trails into the surrounding areas. You might find towns, schools, buffalo, or any number of wonderful people that want to share some laughter with you.

In search of Laos

It’s no secret I was ready to leave Cambodia. After the gnarly tourist bubble hassle I had been caught up in, I was looking for something else.

Before I left on this trip, I talked to a friend who had been to much of South East Asia. The description I was given of Cambodia was full of praise while the description of Laos was, “filthy dirty.”

While in Asia, whenever I have talked to fellow travelers about Laos, I was painted a very different kind of picture: that of a calm, serene land; unhurried, and largely unconcerned. I was told there were beautiful landscapes, lovely rivers, kind people and open hearts. I couldn’t wait to get there.

Hopping a bus from Phnom Penh to Laos is pretty easy. You can buy a ticket almost anywhere, and they pick you up at your hotel. The ride is ok, depending on how much your bus breaks down and how long they take to get started. Our ride went ok, but the reports I heard from others ranged from having to sleep at the border to having to get out and changing the tire because the bus driver was content to just sit on the side of the road for hours. This last story came from a couple Americans from the Bay Area; Trent and Nick.

Our bus took a while to get started, but once it was under way, things ran relatively smoothly by SE Asian standards. Most of the scenery was what I had come to expect from Cambodia; shanty gatherings with huge piles of garbage strewn about and animals foraging through it for food. We did get to see a spaceman, though.

The border was less imposing than I might have imagined, because after building the official border building, Cambodia apparently decided not to use it. So they switched to a little shack by the roadside.

Finally across the border into Laos, I didn’t have long until we stopped for our exit at the 4000 Islands. Peace and quiet was ours at last! As soon as we stepped out, we met the shuttle bus driver who would take us to the boat to head to Don Dhet.

The shuttle bus driver immediately began shaking us down for money. This wasn’t what I had hoped for.

We made it to the boat, only paying perhaps $1 US more than we needed to, and launched for the islands. This was to be it, an island paradise with sunsets you could taste and the quiet sounds of nature to put you to bed.

This wasn’t what we found. The beach we landed on was little more than a sandy slope up to shacks pumping out all manner of western music. The island was infested with dreadlocked hippies in ruined clothing who smelled worse than they looked. They wandered around with glazed eyes and a shambling walk that probably had something to do with each restaurant advertising magic mushrooms, pot brownies, and even opium. Don Dhet was a disaster area.

Sunset bungalows, the place I had been told to stay, was full. As was nearly every other habitable looking hotel on the island. Finally, after some walking, Zsof and I found a place with an opening. Little more than 4 walls, a bed and a mosquito net. Total cost: $5 a night.

Depositing the bags, Zsofi noticed that she had left her small bag on the bus after it took off. If only we had thought to get contact details for Trent or Nick, we might have had them snag it. Observing a moment of silence for her lost clothes, we took off in search of real food.

Being sequestered on a bus all day can make one a little hungry for real food. Interestingly enough, half of the actual food on the menus was unattainable. For some reason, many of the restaraunts had not bothered to restock their food items. Basic things like beef, salad, bread, and noodles, were not to be found. Eventually, we settled on splitting some Chicken Pad Thai and pretended for a moment we were in Thailand instead of a waterlocked drug addled looney bin.

That night, I got marvelously ill and slept very little. This allowed me the pleasure of being awake most of the night to listen to the populace of the island yelling to one another through all hours of the night. Oh yes, and the toilet stopped working.

The next morning, we walked over to the Sunset side of the island where we were told things were a little more relaxed. It was definitely more scenic, though there was no better room to be had and as the morning wore on and more of the populace arose from stupor we realized the island was not going to get any more enjoyable than it had been the prior night. It was time to go.

At 11 a.m. sharp we were gathered in a shuffling mass of backpacked strangers huddled up in what shade could be had on the derelict beach where we had been deposited the night before waiting for a boat to pick us up. This took about an hour, and required me and another passenger actually getting out to push the boat off the shore, but we made it back to land and the filthy grouping of hovels strung around the dock.

Now it was our turn to sit around for another hour and a half while the bus company decided what to do with all the people who were waiting for a ride to Pakse, the nearby city. This is what they decided.

The bus ride was wonderful. We had some people who had been left at the border, others who had been waiting for hours with no hope of a ride, and all manner of wild stories. The highlight of the trip was the trio of North Americans who had been drinking all morning (continuing through the bus ride) and kept everyones spirits aloft.

After a rather long day, we arrived in nearby Pakse and took stock. The place was quiet. The tuk-tuk driver took us to 5 different hotels before we found an opening and didn’t charge us any more than the original price he had quoted for the single trip. Around town, there was plenty of food to be had and no opium in sight. Things were looking up.

After wandering through the streets of Pakse, we piled into an Indian food restaurant that was rather highly recommended. I ordered the only Indian food I like; Tikka Masala.

In walked Nick and Trent like the were scripted. Heralds of a new era, they brought smiles and news of the missing bag of clothes. They had almost taken the bag with them, but had left it with the bus driver. So close, yet so far away.

The food was great, the conversation was excellent, and following dinner we rolled out to the bus station to see what would happen when we asked about the missing bag.

I love sidecar tuk-tuks.

A Cambodian gentleman, Seyla, informed Zsofi that he knew the drive of the bus and would contact him the following day about the bag and gave her his telephone number.

I was tired and decided to retire, having had a pretty decent day, I thought I would end it on a high note.

The next day, I coasted. Walked around, chatted up the locals, looked for a gym that didn’t exist, even found a store called Icy Poo.

Everyone was great. The tuk-tuk drivers would occasionally say hello, but never harass me. The kids in the street would smile, but never come running up to beg for money. It was a good day.

Finally, the time came to call Seyla and discover the fate of the missing bag. Seyla had good news. The driver had found the bag. He had kept it with him on the bus and would be returning to Pakse with it that night around 9 p.m. and Zsofi could pick it up at any time.

In my estimation, this would be unlikely to happen in the USA. It would be unlikely to happen most places, and probably near impossible in others.

Night fell.

I’ve already mentioned that Laos is a bit slower than Cambodia. No one is hustling, it’s just chill. This means people get up a little later. This means people go home sooner. This means tuk-tuk drivers turn in early.

Faced with empty streets and a 4 kilometer stretch of road to the bus station, this means we are walking.

After a kilometer, we turned up a huge hotel, the Champasak. I figured we ought to give it a shot, so we asked the desk and he called his tuk-tuk friend and in minutes we were zooming off to the bus stop.

Once there, Seyla was nowhere to be found and his phone was busy. The man working the desk asked Zsofi what he looked like, and she replied, “He looks just like everyone else.” This got some laughs.

Soon, though, we found him and true to his word, he had the bag with all of it’s contents.

This is where it gets even better.

Seyla wouldn’t take any money as a finders fee. He wouldn’t even take it to pass it on to the bus driver. His only response was, “That’s not necessary.”

I don’t know how these two countries, Cambodia and Laos, can coincide; can be neighbors.

In Cambodia, the pervading feeling was one of unease. Each time I walked out of the hotel, I was uncertain of whether I would return with my shorts.

Here in Laos, beyond the border regions of the 4000 Islands, no one seems to care that much. People do their jobs, people smile and have fun, but there is a feeling of mild languor around everything. The intersting part is that this country is clean; free of the ceaseless piles of rubbish that choked Cambodia.

This is how I found Laos. Calm, safe, welcoming, a little under-stimulating on the surface but that is a welcome change from Cambodia and the manic attempts to wrangle yet another dollar from the foreigner. I’m ok with being quiet for a while.

I think I’ll stay here a few days and check things out. See the country side, meet some people; I saw a Honda XR 250 for rent down the street that looks promising.

If things go as planned, I’ll may even track down some elephants. 🙂