Tag Archive: slow boat


Well although we had worked on getting a wake-up call, we didn’t get one. I downed my breakfast, and booked it to get some cheap water before leaving on the next part of our journey. We all loaded onto the second bus leaving for the border and we realized how easy it actually would have been to get our exit stamps ourselves… I guess technically this is the first time we were “duped” or “taken advantage of” as dumb tourists on our trip. ‘Oh well’ we say as we move on, at least it is only 180 baht, and we are on our way to Laos…

We ferry across the Mekong is some iffy little wooden boat and then it is into the flurry of people bunching up at the visa window praying to get their passports back. The system is: they take the passport and visa from people and groups, do their little approval process, and then show it to a window. If you are lucky enough to see yours before it disapears back into the pile, or if some english speaking guy is able to read and call out your name and you can pile yourself to the window in time, you get yours back (after you pay of course.)

We realized soon however, many people were paying for “friends” or “girlfriends” or whatever. You could, with 30 USD go to the Laos border, and essentially buy a passport from whatever nationality you want, and the border crew could care less who they hand it over to. Needless to say I had my butt right up at the window and didn’t move until all three of ours were accounted for.

Then it was to annother window for a little more approval, then a gate for more approval, then what looked like a popsicle stand to fill your name out on a list and to have one more chance to buy a rip-off pillow for the slow boat.

We eventually got a tuk-tuk (instead of a mini-bus like most others) and we were brought to where the slow boats depart. We were instantly kept separate from those there already, taken aside, and then given a talk “for our own saftey.” We were told already the river was low, but now were being told it was so low, that boats cannot make it and if we try, we MIGHT need to sleep in the sand, or under a bridge. Not sounding great, and after some “why wasn’t this mentioned at any point before” and some dodging and hiding behind lack of english language skills, we as a group decided we paid for the slow boat and we will stick with it, and not pay the extra 500 baht for a mini bus (which is what the saftey talk was trying to sell us.) A couple german girls were going to settle for the bus, but then after finding out that as the only two, they would need to pay for the whole thing themselves, they decided boat as well.

After a new guy came out and tried to sell us accomidation at Pak Beng (our expected over night village along the way.) We said “why would we” and he explained that it was a 100% that we would make it there. Too many alarm bells for us, we figure we will just get a room when we get there, as was the plan the whole time up to this point. Not everyone had that sense though. After being forced to wait 1.5 hours at this restaurant by the slow boats, they figure we have spent all we plan to there so they finally start loading us on the slow boat. After about 30 of us get on, some guy pops back out and starts telling everyone to not board. There was supposedly no more room, and if we don;t refuse they will just keep cramming more and more of us on until it was unsafe.

This delayed the process for a long time, I went on to check it out and we were able to get seats, so we all boarded and stayed on, but not everyone after us was so lucky. More and more people kept showing up and eventually a second boat was brought on. Ours was no doubt more crowded, but people got to drinking, and it really quickly became more like a fun party than being cramped on a small uncomfortable boat. Four or five hours later we arrive at a beach.

“This is not Pak Beng, this is a sandy beach.”

To be continued… there is an 11:30 curfew here in Luang Prabang (yes, we eventually made it) and I need to be travelling tomorrow… more entries to come :D

Lao Jer Gun Chiang Mai

Well it’s our last real day in Chiang Mai. We had a fairly hefty list of things to do before leaving. Firstly, having slept in a different spot every night, I wanted to keep that alive, so I wandered off in the morning to see if I could get into the guest house next to a hotel with a pool which we enjoyed before. We had been trying here for a long time and finally we were able to get a room. Roughly 10-12 bucks for all three of us in a nice room, access to a pool, en suite washroom, free water bottles in the room… crazy good deal.

After we moved over we got some breakfast and then it was off to get a scrape on Jen’s leg checked out (she got it on the trek.) A short tuk-tuk ride to the hospital and I think we had probably the best experience you can have in a foreign hospital. The waiting room had 4 seats, and that was all it needed. Jen was in getting checked out in a flash and after a shot and some antibiotics, all done right there, the total bill was only about 30 bucks. I don’t know how they do it over here.

We got our stuff figured out for Laos. We will be taking a bus ride to the border. Sleep for a night there, cross in the morning, take a river boat down (2 days) while spending the night at a village along the river. At that point we will be enjoying all Laos has to offer until Amy’s visa kicks in for Vietnam. There is some fun stuff to do along the river, and apparently some trekking like adventures to be had as well. My understanding is the road system is horrible in Laos, so train and water will be the way to move around when possible.

We got set up with books, and some US currency (apparently that is the smartest one to get for Laos) and now I am just making sure the ol’ blogeroo is in order before I enter the land of the unknown. Internet might not be so easy to come by. I might need to buy myself a note book to keep track of what happens and do another one of these blog assaults when I get back to civilization. After a dip in the pool it will probably be bed time… maybe a late night snack could get squeezed in there too :D

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