We passed the Pak Ou Caves where you can see over 1,000 Buddha figurines and where villagers hid out while the US was bombing them during the Vietnam War.
We got to Pak Beng just as the sun was setting and on the steep climb up for the boat, touts started offering us "wonderful" accommodations. I agreed to see the Sivongsack Guesthouse for only 50,000 kip which had wifi, hot showers, and a fan, and looked from the pictures, fairly clean.
It's amazing how exhausted I was from doing nothing all day. I took a nice hot shower after I figured out that they had reversed the hot and cold water knobs---reminded me of what the Inn at Loreto Bay also had done.
I headed to their restaurant and had a cold BeerLao along with a bowl of delicious rice, chicken, and cashew nut dinner. I sat with Crystal, from Germany, who was heading downriver to Luang Prabang. She was following some vision that she had that she was supposed to talk to a monk there for life guidance. I told her that with over thirty monasteries full of monks, it would be very likely that she would find what she was searching for.
I am still not sure how the boat ticket onward to Huay Xai will work. The guesthouse folks just told me to be down there by 8am and I could purchase the ticket on the boat. After about thirty minutes of sitting on this boat people had told me was headed to Huay Xai, the group of Chinese tourists showed up along with the Laotian daughter, Mai, Mom, and Aunt. This confirmed for me I was headed in the right direction.
We passed more villages where some of the passengers got off. We continued to see craggy peaks, jagged rocks, and swirling water along the way. Many fishermen were trying their skill with a variety of nets and even single poles to catch the fish out of this chocolate-colored water. At the villages, clusters of kids and adults could be seen swimming in this murky water of the Mekong.
During one heavy downpour, we had to lower the storm curtains and everyone pitched in rapidly to keep the downpour out. About an hour later, the sky was blue, and we raised the curtains.
I am relaxing with an ice-cold BeerLao as we cruise up the Mekong River toward Huay Xai.
Once again there was a curious little girl who was the ship's captain's daughter who spent much of her time either sweeping the place with a duster or visiting with others.
After landing in Huay Xai, I walked south until I spotted the immigration office and the boats that would take me over to Thailand the following morning since immigration was closed for the day.
They told us that they were given just €1 per day so they had to hitchhike a lot to get from one place to another. They did not know where they were going next, but they were allowed a couple days every week to eat as much as they wanted. During the race days, they could not use cell phones nor watches. One of the two brothers said that he had already lost 15 kilos and his brother likewise and that this was the most extreme thing he had ever done. The two models looked like cadavers, they were so skinny.
The Chinese tourists and I shared a boat over to Thailand, but they were held up a bit because Ranchie had to go get a photocopy of his passport. I headed down to the bus station by taking a 30 baht tuk-tuk but stopped at the first ATM.
While I was in Luang Prabang, my ATM card never worked despite trying about 5 different banks and 15 machines. Good thing I was carrying some emergency USD and Thai Baht that got me through. I was worried that the magnetic strip had gotten demagnetized by my iPad cover.
When I used the first Thai ATM machine, that one too refused to give me any money and suggested that I contact my bank---easy to say, but hard to do. Yikes! This is not good. Next trip I will take two ATM cards.
Even though the Lonely planet guide indicated there was just one ATM in this small town, I spotted a number more just down the road a bit. In the second one, I put in my card and fortunately it gave me 10,000 baht. What a relief.
When your ATM is either lost, stolen, or no longer works, my options get reduced to staying and eating at places that take credit cards or use your credit card to get a cash advance--- these cash advances can be quite costly at least a 3% charge at both ends of the transaction. Both choices are much more expensive. The use of a credit card is at least a 3% charge unless you get one that reimburses you for these charges. Some stockbroker companies offer this as well as some credit cards. You can see which ones do by going to www.frugaltravelguy.com.
I waved goodbye to the Chinese tourists as they got on their bus to Chiang Rai and then I went to find a coffee shop with wifi to while away the time before my 3 pm night bus would arrive. I ended up getting the 2nd class bus to Bangkok for just 535 baht. After a Thai ice tea followed by a green iced tea, I moved on down the road back toward the bus station.
I stopped at another wifi restaurant and talked a bit to two European travelers who were touring Thailand by motor scooter. One was Polish and the other a Slovak and both had finished a Master's program in tourism management in Spain. They were now getting some actual on the ground experience in their travels through Asia.
I was getting hot and sweaty so I decided to get a massage where when finished I could freshen up with a shower. It was really an enjoyable hour for 400 baht. Refreshed I headed toward the bus station with the thought of finding a wifi restaurant. No such luck, instead it was a street stall for a bowl of soup, rice, and chicken along with a Leo beer for 75 baht. At least I was able to recharge my iPad there.
With 15 minutes to spare I hit up the 7/11 for some honey green tea and a Magnum toffee chocolate ice cream bar.
Through the maze of the Mo Chit bus station, I found the local buses that were going to the Mo Chit sky train station. It cost me just 13 baht instead of a moto-taxi for 60 baht.
Front seat view.
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