Wednesday, 17 April 2013

Sydney

Our flight landed into Sydney at about 9am, and Amy's uncle, Rob,  

picked us up from the airport and took us back to his house where we  
would be staying for a few days. On the way back he took us to a  
viewpoint to see the opera house and Harbour bridge, and the view was  
absolutely amazing! After drawing us some maps and explaining the bus  
routes, Rob left for work and we went to explore the city for the  
afternoon! After a macdonalds for lunch we headed to the opera house  
for a few pictures, and explored the town centre. When we got back to  
the house that evening Rob and Vicki cooked us a lush BBQ and the  
kids, Zoe and Jade entertained us! 





 The next day, we took the bus to Taronga zoo, where we took the sky  

safari (a cable car over the zoo), saw kangaroos, koalas and lots of  
snakes! We also went to a spider talk, which was supposed to help Amy  
with her arachnaphobia, but might have just made it worse, especially  
when a huntsman spider, which looks just like a tarantula was handed  
round in a jar!




That evening, we went to Balmoral with Rob, Vicki and the kids, which  
is a lovely beach near their house, and we all had fish and chips as  

the sun set, and took the girls to play in a park overlooking the harbour!




The next day, we moved to a hostel near all the nightlife, and we  
spent the afternoon exploring the area, ending up in a posh bar  
overlooking the opera house, and bought a very expensive beer each!  
After that we decided we should start saving our money, so we bought  
our first box of goon for our night out... 10 dollars for a 4.5 litre  
box of wine (apparently made with fish eggs and milk)... Needless to  
say it was horrible, but as the night wore on it became more  
drinkable! We went to a bar in Kings Cross, luckily it was really near  
our hostel as we got refused entry as we were wearing thongs (flip  
flops) so we went back for a quick change into trainers and we were  
off! The nights events are pretty hazy due to the box of goon we drank  
but from what we remember it was a pretty good night! Luckily we  
weren't too hungover the next day, as we had our mammoth bus ride to  
Byron Bay!


Chiang Mai


We took a five minute boat ride across the Mekong River from Laos to Chiang Khong in Northern Thailand. The border crossing was a breeze for us, while there were hoards of travellers in huge queues waiting to cross the border in the other direction. We jumped straight onto our bus headed for Chiang Mai.

Our first task was to find a Thai meal and a bottle of Chang - we missed Thai food while travelling in the rest of Asia, so it was definitely good to be back in Thailand! Our entertainment for the rest of the night was Thai Boxing. We paid a bit extra for VIP front row seats and placed our bets. There were 5 matches in all, including a comedy interval match where there were 10 blindfolded contenders, all fighting it out at the same time!



After the fighting was over the arena bars stayed open til late, so we had a few more Changs and played some pool, before Steven and Marc jumped into the ring for a Thai boxing match of their own. Both came away a bit bruised!

We spent the next day exploring the city with it's plethora of Buddhist temples.The whole city centre was surrounded by a moat and ancient city walls, so it was a really picturesque place to stay.






In the evening, Gareth and Amy went for a plush three course meal, whilst Steven and Marc  played drunken connect four at an Irish bar, before going back to the Thai boxing bar to booze it up with the bar staff from the night before.





The following day, we met a fellow Cardiffian who we strolled around the city with for the afternoon. In the evening we decided to book ourselves into a Thai cookery class where we learned to cook Pad Thai, Panang curry, Massaman curry and Tom Yum soup. The only downside with learning to cook so many dishes was that we then had to eat all four! We spent the rest of the evening walking around Chiang Mai's huge night market and buying souvenirs.





The next night was our final night in Chiang Mai, so we decided to book ourselves a night in one of the fancier hotels in the city and went for an amazing fish dinner in the restaurant opposite:







After dinner we went for a few drinks at a rooftop bar in the city center. When the bar closed at midnight we were left standing outside with an American bloke trying to decide where the remainder of the night should take us. We ended up returning to the Thai boxing bar, where the staff were so happy to see us again that they gave us free shots of  LaoLao and "Sandy's Special" which was a shot of Sangsom mixed with sodawater that you slam on the table for an exploding effect. Shortly after, we realised that the American guy who'd been tagging along was actually batshit crazy, so we hastily escaped his company.





As in Vietnam, clubs in Chiang Mai have a curfew, so the next place we headed for was a place (we heard on the grapevine) that flouts the laws of the curfew! Unfortunately  as we approached the bar, we saw flashing blue and red lights, followed by the barman shouting "run!", so we made a speedy exit, admitted defeat, and headed back to the hotel for the night.

We spent our final day in Chiang Mai lounging by the pool before catching the long overnight coach back to Bangkok for our last two days in South East Asia. In Bangkok we visited the world's largest outdoor market where we bought lots of nice new clothes, and then went out for one last night out on Kaoh San Road. At midnight we watched the Six Nations live final from a bar with an eccentric woman from Llanelli, which made the Wales win even more enjoyable!



The next day we said our goodbyes to Asia and boarded our flight heading Down Under!

Wednesday, 10 April 2013

Luang Prabang, Jewel of Asia

Our journey from Vang Vien to Luang Probang was a six hour ride in a cramped minibus with little leg room . It would have been a horrible journey if not for the amazing scenery of Loa mountains dotted with traditional villages.

The whole town of Luang Probang has been listed as a UNESCO world heritage site for its picturesque architecture surrounded by rolling mountains. Upon arrival we took a short tuk-tuk ride to our guesthouse before heading out to a restaurant overlooking the Mekong river with some lovely Thai food. Within an hour or two we knew we wanted to extend our stay in Luang Prabang, so we booked an extra night at our hotel.



That evening we explored the night market for a while and had a tipple in a nearby wine bar and then headed back to the hotel at the 11.30 bar curfew.

The next day we headed into the countryside for a tour of a small village and to spend some time with some elephants! We rode an elephant through the jungle, with him rummaging through the overgrowth for a snack along the way, and then went for a swim in the river while he bathed.










On our final day in Luang Prabang we chartered a tuk-tuk for the day to take us to Quang Si National Park. There's a bear sanctuary in the woods for bears that have been rescued from the black market for wild animals. We've never seen so many bears before! They had plenty of room to roam and had a stimulating environment, so it was a really good cause.

We trekked through the rest of the National Park where there were stunnning waterfalls and natural rock pools with bright blue water where we went for a swim. We stayed there for a few hours and then went for a Chang beer before reconvening with our tuk-tuk driver and heading back to town.








That night, facing another night of an 11.30 bar curfew, we were left with one other option - bowling. It's the only place in Luang Probang where the music and beer keeps flowing until 1am, so we hopped into a tuk-tuk and went for a bare-foot game of bowling or three.




The following day we started our long journey back to Thailand, and in doing so we found the best way to travel in Asia - on a slow boat down the Mekong river. The boat was only half full, so there was plenty of room to sleep, and the views were amazing. After 8 hours we had an overnight stop in a little town called Pak Beng before doing the second 10 hour leg of the journey the following morning, all loking forward to being back on Thai soil again!






Vang Vien

Even though it was cloudy, Vang Vien was an enchanting place to arrive into, with low mist hanging over the mountains and the Mekong River flowing at their feet.  This town was infamous for the backpacker activity of tubing, which was basically a pub crawl down the Mekong in a rubber ring.  However, last year the police closed down almost all of the riverside bars due to the high death rate of travellers from drunken accidents in the water.



The much safer option of tubing minus the alcohol is still available, and we booked a day trip for our second day in Vang Vien, which included tubing into caves and kayaking along the Mekong.

So, we had another early start to catch a minibus to the site of our cave tubing. When we got off the minibus, we walked through a little village to get to the cave entrance on the water. We were given headlamps and we got into our rubber rings in the freezing water and dragged ourselves into the cave using the rope attached to the cave walls.  We pulled ourselves for 500m through the pitch black waters and then we turned around and pulled ourselves back, which provided quite the arm workout!


The cave that we tubed into
We then sat in the riverside village where we were served barbecued chicken skewers and rice for lunch followed by fresh pineapple.  

Our food being cooked
Lunch!

It was then time to get back on the minibus for a short journey to the place that we'd start our kayaking.  On the way back through the village to the bus, the guide stopped to show us a temple in a cave.  Asians will take any chance to sneak a cheeky temple into a daytrip.

Temple Cave, AKA Elephant Cave

The kayaks were two people to one kayak, so Steven and Marc got in one and Amy and Gareth got in another.  In total, we kayaked for about an hour and a half, which again proved quite tiring on the arms, especially for little Amy, but she refused to stop rowing and let Gareth do all the work!  After 40 minutes of rowing (and Gareth and Amy crashing into some rocks and getting stuck!), we stopped at one of the remaining riverside bars for a rest and a beerlao, before continuing down the river for another hour or so.


 
That evening, we soaked up the scenery at some bars in the town. There's no shortage of bars in Vang Vien, with it being a fully fledged backpacker town, but there is an 11pm bar curfew throughout the whole of Laos, so no wild nights out for us here!


Friday, 5 April 2013

The shocking truth about Laos

The flight to Laos was really quick- we were so glad we picked it over the the other option which was a 30 hour bus journey! We landed at 6pm in Vientiane, probably one of the smallest and quietest capital cities we've ever visited. We stepped out of the airport to 36 Degree Centigrade heat(!) although little did we realise that the temperature would drop into the 20's in the next few days, accompanied by some rain.

There isn't much to do in Vientiane, so after seeing a few Temples (standard) we headed to a place called COPE, a centre set up to help those affected by unexploded bombs (UXO's) in Laos. We knew very little about this and had only heard about it from our Lonely Planet guide, but by the end of our visit we were pretty shocked by what had happened to this tiny country.






A little history lesson (info borrowed from various sites):

Between 1964 and 1973, the United States flew more than half a million bombing missions over the country in an attempt to block the flow of North Vietnamese arms and troops through Laos, despite the country being declared a neutral zone by the UN to avoid being drawn into the war in Vietnam.

As a result, Laos became the most heavily bombed country, per capita, in history. A planeload of bombs dropped every 8 minutes, 24 hours a day for 9 years on a neutral country!!

'Bombies', which are the bomblets or submunitions from cluster bombs are the most common cause of UXO incidents in Laos.  Roughly a third of all of the patients who are provided with prostheses through COPE are UXO survivors.

The failure rate of these bombs is thought to be as high as 30%, meaning that threat of unexploded bombs is still alive today: it is estimated that there are 300 new casualties from UXO incidents every year in Laos, nearly one everyday.

In 2010, 108 nations from around the world signed a treaty to ban the use of cluster bombs because of the devastating effect they have as well as their unreliability rate, however the US (along with Russia and China) have yet to sign it and continue to stockpile the bombs for possible future use.

We were pretty shocked at learning all of this, especially as we'd never heard about it before.

The next morning we had a typical Laos breakfast for backpackers: a baguette and an omelette. We left Vientiane and headed to crazy Vang Vien!