On June 14th it was time to leave Indonesia for two months. Our next
destination was Laos. After Lembongan, Kuta and Tanah Lot we flew from Kuta to
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia and had to wake up at an inhuman hour at 3.30 a.m. for the
flight! After a few arrangements our taxi finally arrived at four a.m., but we didn't get the desired taxi company, the Blue Bird. Instead our driver was one of those asking way too much
money from the ride to the airport. In this case it was 100,000 IDR, which is not
much (about seven euros), but when you're travelling long you have to be cheap.
We got the price down to 60,000, which was also too much from a ten minute
drive knowing what the real prices are. Our flight left at six o'clock and
was just three hours. It took an hour more to get to KL city by
bus.
The bus station was located neatly close to our hotel
near the Brickfields area. We walked to our hotel in ten minutes, although moved
slowly, because we had so much to carry. The metro station was also close to our
hotel and we used that a few times. The ticket cost about 2,10 MYR depending
where you were heading to, and the bus ticket from the airport was cheap too.
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Monorail in KL |
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Bukit Bintang station |
Because I can't sleep at the airplanes I had a
rough day. As we
couldn't get our hotel room immediately after arrival we couldn't have a rest after flight, so we decided to head out
into the city in the meantime. We spent some three hours there in our sweaty
clothes. It's so frustrating when you can't
freshen up before you head out to see the sights. We had been to KL before, but still wanted to see more of it.
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Brickfields, the little India. |
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Our most visited shopping mall in KL, Berjaya Times Square, which had a huge capsule vending machine now at the lobby. This place has a great supermarket, a cinema and an indoor theme park (formerly known as Cosmo's World) with a great rollercoaster.
http://www.berjayatimessquarekl.com/ |
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The pleasures of being in a big city, sweets! |
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Berjaya Times Square theme park. |
The KL sunset was at 7.45 p.m., which was nearly two
hours later than in Lembongan, although the timezone is the same. It was so weird
having all that light after being used to steady sunsets at Lembongan around
six o'clock every evening. Being Finnish I always miss the summer sunsets and
more so the midsummer, when the sun goes down for about an hour. Finnish summers
are the best in that way, we have so much light. Winters of course are completely
different. You might not see the sun at all during the winter, depending where
you live in. You go to work and it's dark and after work it's dark! But it's
kinda exciting too.
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Shopping at Petaling street. |
KL is one of our favourite cities, mainly because of the
many cultures that bring so much colour into it. KL also offers so much for a
tourist, there are great restaurants and sightseeing and the city is easy to
travel in. Our favourite Middle Eastern restaurant Tarbush is located right in the tourist
area close to the big shopping malls in Jalan Bukit Bintang. Tarbush doesn't serve much vegetarian food, but we've been able to ask them to make us dinners to our wishes. Also Simple Life
Healthy Vegetarian on the same street is good. Radhey's Heavenly Delights is
also a good restaurant near Brickfields, at 6 Lorong Padang Belia, but it's
pure vegetarian/vegan.
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Vegetarian dinner with falafel. |
Having dinner in an Arabic restaurant is sometimes a bit
troubling, as some men stare at a European woman for whatever reasons.
Sometimes the stares can seem annoyed.
I try to ignore them and I'm quite used to it - being a blonde in Asia -
but I still don't like it. On this
dinner we noticed a family whose dinner was completely decided by the dad. I
wouldn't like someone deciding on my behalf what I'm going to eat.
Another early wake up was ahead, as we had to leave by
bus at 5 a.m. We reached the airport at six and our flight left at 7.30 a.m.
after the plane had been refueled. We were on board while refueling, which is
usually not allowed due to safety
reasons, so that was exciting. My imagination was running wild again; the plane blowing
up and our body parts scattered all around the area. Not that I was too worried, but my imagination keeps my head busy all the time with cartoonlike pictures. The flight took 2,5 hours, so
we reached Laos and Vientiane's Wattay airport at ten o'clock.
With a little panic in mind we entered the country. We
had read various stories from the internet on how you have to pay for your visa
with the exact right amount of dollars
and none other currency is excepted. You also had to have extra passport
photographs with you with the exact right size and fill out a whole bunch of
forms. We had the photographs as we'd printed different sizes for different
countries before leaving and also had them on our memory stick, but we didn't
have enough dollars, as Kari had lost his somewhere. We ended up filling two
forms and gave the photographs which we actually wouldn't have needed, as they
scanned photos from passports from the people who didn't have extra photos with
them. As for the money, we offered the dollars we had and the rest we tried with
euros. We were a bit nervous on how it all would go, but look at that, they
accepted our euros! Our visas cost us a bit more than normally though, but now
we had a full month ahead to explore the country.
We took a taxi from there, they all have fixed prices.
Our fifteen minute drive cost 75 000.- KIP, which is about 7,5 euros.
Our internet was working again, after we bought our own card.
The hotel internet was very louzy, so we bought a seperate card for it. We
actually mostly paid for the internet ourselves during the year trip, because most
of our hotels didn't have any, or had a louzy connection you couldn't use.
Well, the paid internet wasn't very good either, but the best from all choices. Even the cafes had terrible connections.
Vientiane is the capital city of Laos and sometimes
capitals aren't what you expect them to be; huge, busy, noisy and convenient
for shopping for all your needs. Vientiane's first impression showed ghostly
empty streets by daytime, which I didn't mind, and strangely large amounts of
butterflies everywhere. I can't remember a city with that much butterflies. You
could make a movie from this city with its surreal environment.
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Not a butterfly, but a parked car in a quiet daytime. |
Kari wasn't too impressed by the city, but I found good
things from it; that deserted feel to it, the butterflies, beautiful temples in
every corner, the local park is nice and there's other sights. Also the local
dogs are actually owned by someone and are in great shape and well looked
after! I saw a beautiful husky and a pug at least. Sadly we also saw a dead cat right on the street. Maybe it had been buried and some other animal had dug it up, because it was half buried in the sand.
In 2010, to coincide with the 450th Anniversary celebrations of Vientiane, the Lao PDR government created Chao Anouvong Park. Located at the tourist area and the central district of Chanthabouly by the river, people gather to the park on a Saturday evening for group aerobics! There are all ages and
men, women and children.
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Group aerobics by the Mekong river. |
A nice night market is kept at the park, but the
prices are high, and they don't want to bargain them down much. We bought a
lock to our hotel rooms drawer, because there was no safety box anywhere.
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Night market. |
The
park is a nice place to walk in and see the sunset and look across the Mekong
river to the other side to see Thailand. It's so close that you could probably
swim there in no time.
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Don Chan Palace hotel on Laos side. |
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Mekong was quite dry in June. Thailand side isn't showing in this picture, it's on the right side. |
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Balloon vendor by the river.
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A building in the park. |
We spent four nights in Vientiane. First two were spent
in Mixay Guesthouse near the river and cost 15 euros per night. We had AC, TV
and an own bathroom. A shared balcony situated right behind our room facing the
street, but luckily not much people spent time there, otherwise we couldn't
have slept much. It was hard to sleep well though, because some ladyboys
gathered every evening below our room on the street and they were very noisy.
Because of them and the non-working internet we decided to change the hotel, as
we needed the internet badly to plan our China trip.
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A ladyboy below our room. |
Around the corner from our
hotel we found Paradise Guesthouse and because their internet worked we changed
hotels, all in ten minutes.
Laos quiets down around 11 p.m. and the places close down
then, even hotels. That's probably the reason why our hotel also close down at
11.30. Our internet connection was still working after that though. This
closing down can sometimes be tricky. People haven't been able to access their
hotels for the night, if they arrived too late. A
couple we met later in Laos told us they had to sleep one night at a local
hospital, because they arrived too late to their hotel. There's a good side to
this too; the hotels do get very quiet after this. These hours may change
depending on the place though. The island of Don Det closed down at ten p.m. And then there's the ladyboys of course, they work through the night!
We had a really good dinner at an Indian restaurant one
night. Vegetarians easily find food here. There are even vegetarian
restaurants, although Vientiane isn't a big city. Another Indian dinner we had,
at a place called Fathima on the main street next to Mekong river, wasn't so
good. The service on both restaurants wasn't very good. People in
Vientiane seemed inexpressive and unkind, but this only seemed to be the case
here, everywhere else in Laos we met very nice people. We also ate at a French
owned restaurant Via Via, which was expensive. Their falafel was good, but the
artichoke pizza was tasteless. Unlike in Thailand, the Lao people haven't yet discovered the importance of spices, herbs and sauces. Everywhere in Laos the food lacked these and they are very important for food to taste good. Not being born a vegetarian I know this also applies to meat dishes.
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Chokdee Cafe, Belgian beer bar. |
Vientiane is a nice city to rent a bike or a motorcycle
and do sightseing that way. Cycling in the city is nowhere near as crazy as in
Kuta or Lembongan in Indonesia. Funny how a small island such as Lembongan can
be more crazier with traffic than the capital of one country!
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Cycling in Vientiane. |
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First stop was That Dam, black stupa, in the roundabout and center of Vientiane. Many Laotians believe it is inhabited by a seven-headed nāga who tried to protect them from an invasion by the Siamese army in 1827. Nāga is a deity or class of entity or being, taking the form of a very great snake—specifically the king cobra. |
We rented bikes for two days. Before that we had already
walked around in the center, but with bikes we saw the main sights in three
hours, taking some breaks at coffee shops and a cooldown at a Talat Sao
shopping mall for cold drinks. We tasted durian waffle for the first time,
and it was surprisingly good. The heat outside was unbearable, so we had to
drink a lot. There's a lot of dust in the air cycling next to the cars
and your skin gets very dirty from it, not to mention it dries your mouth too.
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Durian waffles at the Talat Sao shopping mall. |
We saw the Pha That Luang stupa from outside (you see
enough of it from outside), the Unknown Soldiers Monument close to it, Patuxai
Victory Gate, the Presidential Palace and a whole lot of temples.
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Patuxai Victory gate.
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We planned to get our visas to China from Laos, so that
was one thing to do here. It's not easy here, but we had to get them, as
China was our next destination. When we finished our plans for China and had
our passport and photocopies made we cycled again, now to the Chinese embassy a
little out of the city, some twenty minutes away by bike. When you get your
visas for China you also have to show them your flight booking out of the
country. We first planned to leave China from Shenzhen by ferry, but couldn't
book the tickets from the internet and the embassy said you need flight bookings. We
wanted to try and see if we could get the visas without the tickets, but they
demanded them. So we cycled to the closest internet cafe to book flights out of
China. The embassy didn't have no clue where the closest cafe would be, so we
searched and found it in ten minutes. Now we had flights from Shenzhen to Kuala
Lumpur.
Back to the embassy and the rest went smoothly, although
we were waiting for them to ask more questions and forms we had with us;
account balance was one of them. What they actually needed was the travel plan
with hotel bookings and ticket to and out of the country, visa form, photos and
passport. The visa form had some peculiar and even funny questions. We had booked hotels from
China for the whole month, but weren't sure about using all of
them and on those dates, as we wanted to leave some space for improvising. We weren't too
sure about all what we wanted to see in China and sometimes you might come across something unexpected you want to see. But you still have to have
your hotels booked for the whole stay. When we didn't use a hotel we just cancelled the booking before having to pay from it. The internet bookings can usually be cancelled without pay, if you cancel in time. The lady at the counter was really
nice and informative. We were gonna pick up our passes after returning from
Don Det, Pakse and Thakhaek in about a week.
Next we travelled to Pakse, which is located 685 km away
South from Vientiane. The bus left outside of the city and we were picked up by
a minivan from our hotel at 6.30 p.m., also picking up other customers after us
to the bus station. We reached the sleeper bus in an hour and again drove to
another bus station in that. We finally left at 8.30 p.m. It was frustrating to
wait all this time knowing that we could've taken our own ride to the station
later and not sit that extra two hours in the bus for nothing.
We picked some food from the station while waiting and went back to the bus, where we just sat somewhere and didn't
notice they had seat numbers in the tickets. This seat was good for Kari's
broken leg with room to stretch it. But soon a local girl came demanding her
seat and even when we asked her nicely to change seats with us because of
Kari's leg, we again were faced with a very common thing in Asia; the locals
are very keen on having the seat booked for them, even if it's a bad seat. It
applies to many things. Maybe it's superstition or something else, but I never found out the reason behind this. They don't really care if you can't sit well
on your seat, while they would fit just anywhere, being small like me, and be nice enough to change
seats.
Our seats were upstairs. I liked being upstairs, you could see the views
better, but even that we had a bed there I couldn't sleep at all during the
twelve hour drive on the bumpy road. The time still went fast while watching
the scenery and a movie from the laptop. Also having a comfy bed and the toilet
in the bus eased the trip. You don't always get as comfy busses such as this.
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The bus aisle. |
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Our beds. Kari was not able to fully lie down. I was. That's one good thing in being small. |
More stories about Vientiane coming in the future, as we return to the city within the same month.
Next destination: Pakse.