an extended round-the-world honeymoon

Archive for March, 2010

Mobile Internet Settings for South East Asia

Monks with Camera phones, Luang Prabang, LaosMonks with Camera phones, Luang Prabang, Laos

Throughout South East Asia, we've been purchasing local SIM cards to use in our iPhones. Obviously using data roaming on our UK mobile contract is out of the question due to the prohibitive cost. If you've got an unlocked phone, using Pay-As-You-Go Mobile Internet is one of the cheapest and easiest ways of getting online.

Another great reason to use it is security. Some of the internet cafes you’ll use have got the dodgiest computers imaginable, full of viruses, key-loggers and who-knows-what-else. Every time you type your email, banking or Facebook login details into one of these PCs you’re opening yourself up to attack.

We’ve found that purchasing and activating SIM cards very easy to do. International airports will always have excellent choice for buying a SIM as will border towns. Unfortunately language barriers and the relative newness of 3G in some countries means that getting all the details you need to get online can sometimes be difficult.

For that reason, we’ve compiled a list of all the mobile service providers we’ve used and (nearly) all the details you need to connect, in that hope that other people may find them useful.

Click through to get all the settings!


The Thakhek Loop, Unlooped

Our ride: A Honda XR250 Baja Our ride: A Honda XR250 Baja

From Vientiane, our next destination was Thakhek, a town in central Laos. Thakhek is fairly well known for "The Loop". This is a motorcycle trip which takes people anywhere from two days to a week, exploring some of the wonderful back roads of central Laos and usually starting and ending in Thakhek. Instead of catching a bus to Thakhek and then doing the loop from there, we decided to kick off our own "Unloop" from Vientiane and ending in Thakhek, while still taking in most of the same sights. This adventure turned out to be one of the highlights of our time in Laos and we would highly recommend it to anyone travelling from Vientiane to Thakhek who's considering doing the Loop.

We hired a Honda Baja XR250 from Jules Classic Company which was definitely the best motorcycle rental outfit that we’ve come across in South East Asia so far. The bike came with full insurance and good quality, new helmets. Owner Thierry has even had the pillion foot pegs on his bikes lowered to make the ride more comfortable for passengers. We arranged with Jules Classic to have our luggage shipped to Thakhek for a small fee and agreed to drop the bikes off with their agent when we arrived in Thakhek.

For the first day was a long day’s riding at around 280km and took us to Na Hin. We rode as much as we could off Highway 13, using a good condition dirt road which runs alongside the Mekong for some of the way. Head for Buddha Park and continue straight along this dirt road. Eventually this joins back onto Highway 13, a fairly boring ride until you reach Highway 8. Riding eastwards on Highway 8 was spectacular. We wound up and down steep mountain passes on an excellent quality road, passing amazing mountain views and strange karst limestone clusters.

Once we reached Na Hin, the guesthouse that we planned to stay at was full and they directed us to the excellent Sainamhai Resort where we stayed in a very nice new bungalow. The resort is very new, and is not yet in any of the guidebooks, but we highly recommend staying here. Free coffee, excellent food with fabulous portions and very friendly staff made for a perfect rest stop. Ask a local in Na Hin for directions to Sainamhai, as it’s fairly tricky to find.

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Getting ready to travel through Tham Kong Lo Getting ready to travel through Tham Kong Lo
Stalactites in Tham Kong Lo Cave Stalactites in Tham Kong Lo Cave
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Buddha Park: It’s concrete and it’s wierd.

Buddha Park, or Xieng Khuan, is located about 25km outside of Vientiane, the capital city (or town, really) of Laos. To get there, we hired a tuk-tuk from the centre of town. The journey took about 45 minutes or so.

The park was built in 1958 by Luang Pu Bunleua Sulilat, a priest-shaman who attempted to integrate Hinduism and Buddhism into a single religion. After the communist revolution he fled to Thailand where he built another sculpture park in Nong Khai.

To put it mildly, Xieng Khuan is one of the most bizarre collections of statues we've ever encountered. Amongst the reclining Buddhas and three headed elephants you'll find all sorts of crazy monsters, some with multiple heads, some multiple tails. Others with abducted maidens in their hands. Everything is made from concrete. Unfortunately we didn't have a guide; it would probably make much more sense if you did. As it was, we didn't have a clue about what it was that we were looking at. It was puzzling but still extremely interesting to visit, and we would highly recommend visiting it.

Buddha Park Buddha Park, Vientiane, Laos
Reclining Buddha at Buddha Park Reclining Buddha at Buddha Park, Vientiane, Laos
Three Headed Elephant at Buddha Park Three Headed Elephant at Buddha Park, Vientiane, Laos
Buddha Park Buddha Park, Vientiane, Laos
Statues, Buddha Park Statues, Buddha Park, Vientiane, Laos
View of Buddha Park View of Buddha Park, Vientiane, Laos
WTF? WTF?
Statue at Buddha Park Statue at Buddha Park, Vientiane, Laos
Statues at Buddha Park Statues at Buddha Park, Vientiane, Laos
Kate at Buddha Park Kate at Buddha Park, Vientiane, Laos
Want to see more photos or want to see bigger versions of them? Visit our Vientiane Photoset on Flickr, or view a Slideshow.

Vientiane, capital of Laos

Vientiane must be one of the most laid back capital cities in the world — like the rest of Laos everything seems to happen slowly there. We spent four nights in Vientiane where we treated ourselves to a fabulous guesthouse called Hotel Khamvongsa. The fast internet connection allowed us to spend some time catching up with the rest of the world and planning the next steps of our trip.

Vientiane does not have a huge number of sights to see, but it does have some great restaurants and the laid back atmosphere makes it a good place to chill out for a few days. One of the highlights for us was a visit to COPE which is an excellent and very moving exhibition on unexploded ordinances (UXOs) - definitely worth a visit if you are passing through. There are two rather strange sights to see around Vientiane. The first is the oriental Arc de Triomphe known as Patuxay (Victory Gate) which was built using cement donated by the Americans to be used to build a new airport. Not quite as impressive as the original, it is still worth a walk up to see the city views. The second is Buddha Park (aka Xieng Khuan) which is about 25km outside of Vientiane. The park was built in 1958 by a priest/shaman who wanted to integrate Hindu and Buddhism and contains of a collection of rather bizarre concrete Hindu and Buddhist statues.

We hired bicycles to get around, which was very easy as it is pretty flat and the traffic is minimal and slow. On these, we could venture a bit further a field to Pha That Luang, a massive golden Buddhist stupa of great importance to the Laos people, which was unfortunately closed, but from what we could see was quite spectacular.

One of the highlights of Vientiane was definitely the food — we had a lot of excellent international food (French and Italian), but also some great Lao food at the stalls along the Mekong. Great for visiting at sunset, these stalls sell a huge variety of food and walking along them you can see all sorts waiting to be eaten - live frogs and fish in buckets and all manner of vegetables.

VW Beetle, Vientiane, Laos VW Beetle, Vientiane, Laos
Tuk-tuk, Vientiane, Laos Tuk-tuk, Vientiane, Laos
Market Vendors, Vientiane, Laos Market Vendors, Vientiane, Laos
Vientiane Night Market, Vientiane, Laos Vientiane Night Market, Vientiane, Laos
Lao-style Deep Fried Fish Lao-style Deep Fried Fish
Beerlao Beerlao
Street Food, Vientiane, Laos Street Food, Vientiane, Laos
Buddha Statues at Wat Si Saket, Vientiane, Laos Buddha Statues at Wat Si Saket, Vientiane, Laos
Buddha Statue at Wat Si Saket, Vientiane, Laos Buddha Statue at Wat Si Saket, Vientiane, Laos
Damaged Buddha Statues at Wat Si Saket, Vientiane, Laos Damaged Buddha Statues at Wat Si Saket, Vientiane, Laos
Wat Si Saket, Vientiane, Laos Wat Si Saket, Vientiane, Laos
Tourist Monks Tourist Monks
Buddhist Monks with camera phones, Vientiane, Laos Buddhist Monks with camera phones, Vientiane, Laos
Patuxay, Vientiane, Laos Patuxay, Vientiane, Laos
Pha That Luang, Vientiane, Laos Pha That Luang, Vientiane, Laos

Want to see more photos or want to see bigger versions of them? Visit our Vientiane Photoset on Flickr, or view a Slideshow.


Vang Vieng

Last Tubers of the Day, Vang Vieng Last Tubers of the Day, Vang Vieng

We arrived in Vang Vieng after a rather hairy seven hour minibus taxi ride from Luang Prabang. The trip was advertised as four hours, but our busted up transport was definitely past it’s sell by date. It was old, cramped and very slow.

If the bus was old and tired, the driver was even more so. Never before has there been such a perfect match. If it hadn’t been for Anne, who was sitting up front talking to him in Northern Thai, he would certainly have fallen asleep. As it was, his eyes would shut for moments until Anne politely prompted him with a question or comment and he would wake up. At least it wasn’t possible to go fast in the old banger, which allowed us to enjoy the spectacular views from the numerous mountain passes.

Set on the Nam Song River amongst a series of grand karst limestone peaks which dominate the landscape, Vang Vieng is a dusty collection of concrete guest-houses, woven bamboo bungalows, bars, restaurants and backpacker amenities: internet cafes, travel agents and the like. Bamboo bridges, which are rebuilt seasonally after the rains, crisscross the river.

We found some nice accommodation at the Other Side Bungalows, across a rickety bamboo bridge from the main drag.

In the evening, the whole town feels like a festival. The muddy streets are lined with dozens of bars, each trying to outdo its neighbours with the number of blinking lights on display and the volume of the music blasting out – no matter how few customers they have. At our bungalow, the lights would flicker, seemingly in time to the distant beats rolling across the river from the louder bars. Its as if the towns electricity supply (available most of the time) has been overloaded by the bar sound systems, causing the synchronicity between our pulsing lights and the music.

Occasionally you’ll bump into stumbling, laughing, crazy-eyed gap-year students falling around the streets: they’ve had a bit too much from the “happy” menu available at the bars.

Set further back from the river you’ll find lots of restaurants with TVs prominently displayed, most playing the US TV series Friends day and night. A few play Family Guy. Its bizarre in the extreme: in Laos, in this incredibly beautiful setting, people are spending their time watching crap American TV.

Tubing in the Vang Vieng

Vang Vieng’s main attraction is the tubing. This involves hiring a large tractor tyre inner-tube and traveling by tuk-tuk to a point several kilometres upstream of Vang Vieng on the Nam Song from where you can float back to the town.

If you think it sounds like a serene, relaxing way to spend an afternoon you couldn’t be more wrong. The river is lined with dozens of bars, each with a pumping sound-system, a zip-line, swing or water-slide for the amusement of drunken patrons and possibly also a dance floor full of people cutting rug in their costumes. Most of the bars also offer free shots of Lao-lao, a brutally strong moonshine and also have the ubiquitous happy menu.

Within minutes of floating out onto the river, Richie had nearly had a drunk Japanese guy fall out of the sky on him – he fell from a swing and landed inches from where Richie had serenely been floating along. Some of the swings actually cross paths, so if you or the other swinger (er? I’m guessing that’s not the best name for someone using a swing?) are not paying attention, you could easily have a nasty mid-air collision.

In fact, the whole place is a bit like a scene from one of those silly Health & Safety training videos. You can almost imagine the scene on video with a voiceover in 1950’s BBC-english saying something like: “As you can see, several major health & safety violations are occurring. Can you spot them?”

Very soon you’ve had too much to drink for someone who’s supposed to be swimming 4km down a river (even if you have got a floatation aid).

As the afternoon rolled on, we began to realise that we hadn’t made very much progress back to town. There is a late-fee if you return the tube later than 6pm and in four of so hours we had only made it about one-third of the way. In the ensuing rush, I managed to loose a pair of Oakleys. Kate also managed to loose my shirt. We only made it back into Vang Vieng with minutes to spare and with the sun long gone. Top tip: if you’re planning on going tubing, make sure you keep track of the time!

Other than the wonderful disregard for any health & safety, there is nothing about this town that has any of the laid-back character of Laos. The town has sold its soul for a quick buck, which is such a pity because it could be so much more than it is, although if I was 12 years younger and closer to the average age of the visitors here, I would probably absolutely love it.

The Nam Song River, Vang Vieng The Nam Song River, Vang Vieng
Riding a scooter across bamboo bridge, Vang Vieng Riding a scooter across bamboo bridge, Vang Vieng
Vang Vieng by Night Vang Vieng by Night
Getting my ducks in a row, Vang Vieng Getting my ducks in a row, Vang Vieng
Eating a Sandwich with Chopsticks Eating a Sandwich with Chopsticks
Harvesting Clovers, Vang Vieng Harvesting Clovers, Vang Vieng
Happy Menu, Vang Vieng Happy Menu, Vang Vieng
Anne & Richie, Vang Vieng Anne & Richie, Vang Vieng