Jagged limestone mountains reach skyward behind five internet cafes in a row.
Laotians hand wash clothes in the river in front of Germans eating "Hawaiian-Style" pizza on a restaurant veranda.
I had never before heard of Vang Vieng, Laos, but now that I'm deeper in the tourist trail than the ubiquitous "yogurt, fresh fruits, and muesli" breakfast, the town has been all over everyone's tongue and t-shirts.
In the tourist circuit, Vang Vieng's main attraction is TUBING. What is tubing? Easy: pay $5, take a tuk tuk a few kilometers upstream, then hop into a giant puffy donut inner-tube and travel for five hours down the Nam Song River, stopping multiple times along the way at each restaurant that throws you a rope and pulls you in.
I was terrified dive into tubing first, given that I was physically weak from three days of illness and given that crazed tourists frequently die on the rocks and the rope swings, but my friends assured me, "No worries-- People only kill themselves when they do stupid stuff. Go easy and you'll be fine. Besides-- you CAN'T go to Vang Vieng and not go tubing!"
As dusk fell, we drifted tranquilly under the mountain-graced sunset into the pebbles of the town. Tiny Laotian boys scurried out to help us to shore, hoping for tips, and we all embraced and agreed it was a wonderful, wonderful day.
That said, if you were an eight year old Laotian monk looking down at the scene, what, oh what, would you think??


He's probably thinking "I gotta' get m'self one of them damn tubes!"
ReplyDeleteI agree with your sentiments. I have never felt as uncomfortable in an Asian town as I did here. I just couldn't get my head around the contrast between stunning scenery and "Friends" on TV! I love to hear as many other people's views as possible to try and understand the place!
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