Thursday, June 11, 2009
Go speed racer!
the monk who put my mind at ease.
Getting to Luang Prabang was an unforgetable journey. In South East Asia the one thing you can always depend on is the unexpected. Adventure always creeps up on you when you least expect it. We had decided to take a boat to Lao from Thailand in order to enjoy the breath taking scenery on the Mekong River. When you go by boat to Laos you have two options: the speed boat or the slow boat. We bought a ticket in Thailand for the "speed boat" naively thinking that this was the more rational choice because you arrive in Luang Prabang in seven short hours opposed to the "slow boat" which takes two excruciating days. Now the term "speed boat" conjures up the blissful image of a small but sturdy ski boat that you take out on the river, or lake every summer. Rooz and I thought we were making a wise decision, believing that the "slow boat " was some kinda tourist trap for families and old people. How naive we were....
Here in Laos the "speed boat" is a wooden canoe with a Toyota motor haphazardly strapped to the back, that is filled to capacity with people, luggage and random animals (fish, muskrats, the usual) that the driver decides to transport for a fee down the river. When this "speed boat" pulled up Rooz joked "there is our boat!" chuckle, chuckle. Then the driver motioned us to get in. The blood drained from my face, "Oh freaking A, that is the speed boat!" We rode for seven hours in the blistering sun wearing old deteriorating life jackets and helmets (as if these safety precautions were supposed to ease our worry) bumping up and down on the hard wooden seats. Fifteen minutes into the ride, Rooz screams to me over the deafening motor, "This is why everyone takes the slow boat!" Live and learn. Our only consolation was that our boat had a Buddhist monk riding with us. The whole time I just kept saying, "the boat is not gonna flip over, there is a monk on board!" Seven hours later we arrived in Luang Prabang, my knees and shoulders looked like slabs of red meat thanks to the lack of shade and my throat was so dry from the wind I thought I was going to die. Still we had made it to Laos wiser and stronger, and more thankful to that Buddhist monk, for the comfort he provided, than he could ever know. Hello Laos, good bye speed boat.
Our second day in Luang Prabang (the cutest little city colonialism ever created) we hopped in a pick up truck taxi and headed to the luscious waterfalls twenty five km outside of the town. We swam in the turquoise water and got pelted by amazing waterfalls. We even jumped off rocks with monks, who are ubiquitous here, in serene Laos. It was so picture perfect, I had to keep pinching myself. Good times.
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Mike! omg i am loving these pictures! this is the best blog ever! what great travels you are having and rooz looks phenomenal as usual. Miss and love you tons!!
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