Navina im Dschungel
Navina im Dschungel
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Tag 135: 4000 islands in the Mekong and a tourist hotspot

Atejade: 13.02.2019

About crossing the border in Eastern Thailand, we travelled to Laos. Our first thought was: Back to Myanmar! So many things reminded us of this country, because in Laos too, the streets seemed dustier than in Thailand and what you need to live was more reduced. The public buses were adventurous vehicles that transported their cargo on the roof.

With the Songthaew to the south

Sellers on the way 

Rice sacks and containers of fish were piled up between the seats, a rooster was pushed under a seat and pecked Silke on the foot during the ride. We bumped through the dry landscape for four hours and were soon engulfed in hot air and dust. Our destination was Don Det, one of the 4000 islands located in the far south of Laos in the sprawling Mekong River. But by the time we arrived there, it was already dark and the boatman navigated the boat through the black Mekong with his flashlight.
Don Det was like Bullerbü in Asia. 

Sunrise at the front door

Bike tour through the village

Laos children

Shaky wooden huts stood by the river and water buffaloes grazed on the banks. Chicks hopped around in groups wherever the view fell to the ground. Small dogs and cats romped along the path and large herds of cows grazed on the already dry fields. Don Det is a real animal kindergarten.

The pirate
Away from the herd

Every second day we spent in our hammocks, had Shakshuka for breakfast, an Israeli dish made of tomatoes and eggs, and went for walks on the island. On the other days, we zipped across the Li Phi waterfalls on a wire. At first, I saw rapids and a fisherman below me, standing waist-deep in water and grinning up at me. And suddenly, far below me, there were huge rocks and waterfalls plunging deep down. I had actually expected my body to be full of adrenaline and excitement because of the height, but there was nothing. Instead, I simply enjoyed the landscape and the natural spectacle, and trusted in the Petzi equipment and the grumpy zipline guides.


Zipline over the Li Phi falls


On the Mekong near the Cambodian border, there are still three of the rare Irrawaddy dolphins. We went there with a fisherman, crossing swirling rapids to the spot where the dolphins usually frolic. You had to look closely to see them because they don't jump out of the water like other dolphins, but only slightly raise their heads or dorsal fins. We even saw them several times and up close. Later, the fisherman stopped at a bathing place. But the current was so strong that we always kept our feet on the floor of the Mekong to avoid being swept away to Cambodia.

Halt at the bathing spot

Luang Prabang was our next stop and the opposite of Don Det. This city is a UNESCO World Heritage Site because of its beautiful old town, but this designation has also made it a tourist magnet. At the time we were there, crowds of Thais and Chinese extended families were celebrating the Chinese New Year in the city. Their flashy SUVs were parked in front of the old houses, but even otherwise, the city was a bit too polished for my taste. The charm that Luang Prabang must have had at some point had somehow disappeared. However, the surroundings are very authentic and beautiful.


Lunch break at the roadside stall 

On the mud slide into the Mekong

Wat on top of the hill


In Luang Prabang, we also met Robert and Bene, two old traveling friends, with whom we now traveled together.

During the day, the four of us walked across a bamboo bridge that connects Luang Prabang to the surrounding weaving villages. This bridge is built every year at the beginning of the dry season and dismantled again at the beginning of the rainy season, when the Mekong carries a lot of water and would wash away the bridge. The bamboo, cut into thin strips, looked very fragile in some places. The beautiful crunching sound of bamboo on bamboo accompanied us until we safely arrived on the other side. The Asian, always very improvised style of construction and stacking always works, even if at the beginning you have no confidence in the adventurous structures.

Bamboo bridge 

In the evenings, the tourist masses in the city would move from the barbecue restaurant on the Mekong to the night market, where you can buy handwoven scarves.

Something special, albeit particularly shocking, is the vegetable and meat market in the city. At the market of cruelties, I saw bundles of live bats, chopped buffalo legs with hair and hooves, skinned buffalo skins, live frogs tied together by the legs, grilled rats on skewers, and goose heads on the grill. Because it shook me so much inside, I didn't photograph all that (except for the goose heads). The vegetables were more relaxing.

Goose heads on the grill and...

...relaxing vegetables

Idahun

Laosi
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