
rainy morning in vangvieng. word on the street that monsoon season is just starting in these parts of southeast asia. i tell people that it is due in about three months more in malaysia. promote negara sendiri wei…!
our story begins on a nice and stormy morning in vangvieng. vangvieng, as i was saying, comprised mostly of two roads, both were under heavy development, resulting in red dugout earth everywhere.
so you can imagine walking on the roads of vangvieng. there wasn’t exactly a walkway, because it was filled with hills after hills of pebbles or more red earth.
my. jeans. are. ruined!

an extra row of seats in the bus from vangvieng to ventiane. i am so grateful that we got to the bus early!
we got on a bus to veintiane at 10am because we wanted to save a measly 5000kip for a 9am bus. the bus was penuh giler dengan manusia. mostly other travellers. how full was the bus? there was a row of plastic chairs in the corridor of the bus to create an extra row of seats. that full.
vientiane was a large city. i agree with the longly planet on this one. it is a hard city to love. lots of cars. not so high rise but dirty buildings. yelling tuktuk drivers.
oh my god, the tuktuk drivers. we walked right past one and ignored this guy who was offering us a ride, and then he clapped his hands behind us and started screaming for us to ride with him. i yelled back some not so polite things in malay. i had an incredibly bad morning so far. it shut that guy up, but just then, another tuktuk driver drove right up to us with an exorbitant offer to go to friendship bridge. 80,000kip he says. 50,000kip or nothing, david said. the driver relented. we hop on the tuktuk and midway, it started to rain.

in a tuktuk at ventiane. it rained. our poor tuktuk driver got completely drenched. kesian giler wei… dah la we all tawar kow-kow for the ride… we did tip him in the end tho…
rain poured into the tuktuk in every direction. depan. belakang. tepi. the driver unravelled these sheets of plastics which only minimised the rain gushing into the tuktuk. he himself got terribly drenched. i felt bad when we arrived at a bridge, so we gave him the remained of whatever kip we had left as a tip.

crossing friendship bridge which borders laos and thailand. friendship bridge is the second bridge ever built across the mekong river. the first one links laos to china.
we crossed the border on a 10B shuttle over friendship bridge, linking thailand and laos, the second to have ever been build over the mekong river, the first linking laos to china. it was still raining.

arriving in nongkhai. sa wa dee kaa…!
we arrive in nongkhai. took a tuktuk over to udonthani. bought an 8pm bus to chiangmai. it was somewhere around 6pm at the time. we went for lunch.
i think it is universal to say that the best place to eat is where there are lots of locals eating. in the case of yesterday evening, the place where plenty of locals were eating also had owners who smiled a lot, but did not speak english. at. all. we ordered food by pointing to what other people were eating.
we had about one hour to spare after that. kawan kita ni nak pegi jalan2 tengok the town. aku pulak not so sure because town ni bukan nya besar, tapi kalau nak tengok semua tempat yang ada pada papan tanda pelancungan yang ada kat sini, memang tak sempat. dia nak pegi jugak. dia pun pegi lah suba menawar harga dengan pembawa tuktuk. dia tunjuk tempat this and that and pembawa tuktuk pun bagi lah harga. masalahnya bukan saja pada masa, tapi juga dengan cara dia menawar harge dengan orang warganegara sini. saya mendapat impression yang dia fikir semua orang nak mengambil kesempatan because dia orang kulit putih.

night falls on udonthani. i am at the back of a tuktuk.
anyway to cut a long story short, kami mendapat tuktuk dari luar because orang kat station bas tak nak bawak kami. aku rasa mereka pun rasa terhina sikit dengan cara orang asing ni. udonthani adalah pekan yang kecil. banyak kenderaan. banyak lampu. tapi masih pekan yang kecil yang menjadi medan transit bagi pelancung2 yang nak ke bangkok atau chiangmai.
our bus was supposed to reach chiangmai at 7am. it reached here a little after 2pm. it rained like crazy in the night. the bus leaked. can you believe it? it fucking leaked. i had water dripping all over me. all. night. long. the rain was so heavy, the roads flooded. the bus tried to go through the flood but could not, so had to turn back and stop at one of the terminals along the way and wait it out. as a result of the bus trying to brave the flood anyway, all over backpacks which the disallowed us to bring onto the bus and was stowed on the cargo compartment was drenched. my poor lonely planet guide is all tattered. my clothes all wet. my paper lantern that i bought from luangprabang rosak.
i forgot to mentioned that we travelled from udonthani to chiangmai with a lao monk. cool, eh? he’s from the north but has been studying at a monestry in vientiane for years now and now wants to pursue buddhism in chiangmai now.

good morning, chiangmai. good to see you again.
i am in chiangmai tonight. i’ve got three more days and two more nights left to my trip. i fear that i might not have time to go to maehonson and pai – eight hours away via bus – to see the hill tribes. there is an event starting here tomorrow though, some sort of festival at wat chendi luang, so i guess i’ll go and see that that’s about. i’m also thinking of going to go climb a mountain a coupla hours from here – thailand’s highest peak – but i can’t remember the name of the mountain. 2,000 over meters je… something like halfway up the kinabalu – boleh buat day trip=)