"You've taken every other form of transport!" hollered one chum. "Another bus would just be boring for us to read about."
"Grr, then," I grumbled, and fearfully hopped aboard.
Today, however, emerging from an absolutely delicious two days on the water, I bless you, oh prophetic souls, for your forceful mandate!
Why? Let's see what flowed over the past few days...
November 12th:
8:20 am: I climb onto the honey-colored wood boat and instantly befriend the most lovely British-Australian couple on earth. We realize joyfully that, while most of the boat consists of hard benches to sit on, the front area contains ten cushy airplane-style seats! There is no extra charge for this derriere comfort; you just need to show up early.
10:00 am and beyond: Utter bliss. Being on the slow boat is essentially like spending two days on the patio of an airy cafe with a stunning view that keeps changing. As a trio, Rebecca, Luke and I devoured five novels, thirty crossword puzzles, and a whooole lot of bananas over the two days. Yum!
2:00 pm: I take my first trip to the "toilet", and it's no fun. There is "water" and "dirt" all over the floor next to the hole in the ground, and I don't have my shoes. Squish squish! When I tell Rebecca the situation she puts her bladder on lock and miraculously remains pee-free for the rest of the ten-hour voyage.
Luke and Rebecca take mercy and pass me Oreos and "Artificial Chicken Namtog" flavored chips. "Mmm, taste that Namtog!" purrs Luke, "...whatever it is."
4:45 pm: We stop to let a woman off at a beach where there are ELEPHANTS cavorting! "Well, that was unexpected," gasps Rebecca in her poetic English accent.
November 13
7:30 am: I thoroughly repress the fact that I am going up a river for ten hours on Friday the Thirteenth and proceed to spend a ridiculous amount of Laotian Kip on all the food I WISHED I'd packed yesterday: most importantly, a giant dragonfruit.
1:00 pm: We are becoming friendlier with everyone on the boat, and I get derided up and down the deck for stuffing a mammoth Dragonfruit in my mouth, in its entirety. I pass around bananas and the Scotsman dying of hunger blesses me.
2:00 pm Onward: We nap, we read, we chat, we take photos, we watch the changing sun and how it paints the colors around us... we ponder existence. The sun blazes the orange of the life jacket in front of me into neon. Happiness!!!
In the morning we exchanged emails and went our separate ways across the border, but I have already run into two people from the boat on a sidewalk here in Thailand! We shared a special two days together, we did, and it was bonding.
1. You're doing the right thing! It is such a fantastic change from the bumpy, crowded bus.
2. Bring plenty of snacks (both sweet AND savory, because I began to crave salt after so many packed cakes), water, toilet paper, and hand sanitizer.
3. Arrive early to get the best (cushy) seats.
5. Make sure you have enough Laotian Kip to pay for three days without an ATM, and have some Thai Baht, too, if you can.
6. See if you can plan your journey to take the riverboat in the upstream direction rather than downstream, as the Laos to Thailand route is much more wonderfully uncrowded.
5. Enjoy! I certainly did!


Love that dragonfruit! Actually I don't love dragonfruits, I always felt like they don't have much flavor. But I love the picture of you with your dragonfruit.
ReplyDeletewater and dirt. yuck.
ReplyDelete