Blog Fail. Also, AUSTRALIA!

So I've been a slacker and not blogged for ages.


It's been a ride. We've been through several countries. On the one hand, we've had several kinds of lurgy, and my face got infected. On the other hand, we've eaten the most spectacular food and seen some amazing scenery.

There's a whole load of stuff I've not written about - Kuala Lumpur, Otres Beach, Koh Samed, Penang and the Cameron Highlands. to name a few.

Alice is much more efficient and has already blogged about most of the above. If you haven't checked out her blog already, check the links above for pic and ting. Yes... yes... cop out.



We're currently in Hervey Bay, having landed in Brisbane. We're living in a camper van and driving up Australia's east coast. Every few nights we're stopping in at a camp site and having a shower an filling up on water for our portable kitchen. The rest of the time, we're trying to stay in free rest stops. Australia is EXPENSIVE and apparently nothing is free. I'm facing up to the certainty that eating out will be a very rare occurrence. I'm loving cooking out of the back of a van though - we had homemade burgers on the edge of a field full of cattle last night. They didn't seem to mind.

Spending time in a country where the natives speak English is a great feeling, as is being able to drive around. When we picked up our camper van, we had to wait about an hour in the reception, so the staff threw in a free GPS unit. This has been a life saver and, combined with the sensible road system and signs, driving around Oz has been a breeze.
 
Because we're in the van, Internet access is hard to come by and I'm not sure that I'll be able to upload photos and catch up with all the old bloggage. In fact, just accessing AC power is something of a luxury. 




We're off to visit Frazer Island tomorrow and then to explore some more of Oz by road, before hitting Sydney some time between Christmas and New Year.

As soon as we've managed to charge Alice's camera we'll take loads of photos and do a big update, promise.


The Path to Enlightenment

Aloha and namaste.

So on the way to enlightenment there's this plane crash, right, and a bald bloke playing backgammon on the beach. There's a polar bear that nobody really, properly explains. We have to type this code in every 24 hours. Then, after a load of faffing about we're suddenly, inscrutably in the 70s and everyone loses interest.

Finally, after exhibiting superhuman endurance and sticking with it until the finale, we're punched in the eyes repeatedly and left to wonder what just happened.



Siem Reap and Angkor Wat

**We've been without fast Internet for a while and uploading photos has been slooow. I've got so much to catch up on. So I'm just going to crack on with the words and upload the pics later**

When we reach a new location, emerging blinking from a bus or train, there are two good rules of thumb. Walk or take public transport when you can - I always feel better orientated and get a much better sense of place, plus I don't have to bargain with local drivers from a position of ignorance. If walking's not possible it's best to approach a taxi driver rather than go with one who approaches you.

A Holiday In Cambodia

After just over a week lazing by the Mekong it was time to leave.
We booked transport across the border to Cambodia, less than an hour away, and onward to the first enclave of civilisation following, Kratie.

There were some shenanigans at the border. Some bribes were avoided by paying a little extra to have someone process our visas in advance. It would have worked out about the same either way. The actual border crossing was made on foot. As we shuffled uncertainty from Laos to Cambodia, between immigration roadblocks, a group of Western tourists passed us coming the other way. The scene was reminiscent of a 60s Cold War spy exchange.

Don Det

Vang Vieng to Don Det was a bit of a haul. We took an initial coach to Vientiane, caught an overnight connection to Pak Se, rested for an evening before jumping on a minibus and then a ferry to Si Phan Don, the Four Thousand Islands. All in all the journey was the best part of a thousand kilometres.

What can I say? We could have travelled twice as far in one stretch and it would have been worth it. Don Det is beautiful.

Vang Vieng


Vang Vieng: infamous Laos party town; home of tubing; site of numerous drunken tourist deaths every year.

I'd heard terrible things about Vang Vieng. I visualised an endless, bobbing procession of Western kids, smacked up on opiates and buckets of Lao Lao whisky, floating on inner tubes, vomiting into the Nam Khong. Last year 27 tourists died tubing, from drowning or leaping into the river from a great height and breaking their heads open on rocks.


Whether it was a low-season lull or the fact that most of the riverside bars had been closed due to tourist deaths a few weeks before, we saw very little evidence of Vang Vieng's seedier side.

We saw was a quiet, if very tourist-centric, town on the banks of the river, surrounded by beautiful countryside. We found a nice guest house on the Southern end of town, called Jammee, and ended up staying for about week.

We were keen to get out and soak up some of the natural beauty that Vang Vieng is also famous for. Just ouside of the town, across the river, extends green countryside and limestone mountains. A few days after we arrived, we rented a couple of shoddy beach cruisers and attempted to the Phou Kham caves, site of the locally famous "blue lagoon". Our bikes were awful, the sun was blazing, and the road was atrocious. I think we managed to get about 4km out of town before we had to admit defeat and turn back.

Resolving to try again with better gear, we settled for Xang caves - a small set of caves extending into one of the surrounding mountains - just down the road from our guest house.

The climb up

The interior - best I could get with my camera phone
After a lengthy climb, the caves themselves were blessedly cool if a little small and underwhelming. A quick three minute walk from the entrance brought you out into the open air again.


The view from the top
At the base of the mountain, a river flowed out of the cave system on its way to the Nam Khong. The water was wonderfully cold. Shoals of fish nibbled at my toes.



My cave lust not quite sated, the next day we saddled up on some proper mountain bikes and made for Phou Kham once again. It was raining heavily most of the way there but the improved gear and temperature made all the difference and, after about an hour's ride past several places purporting to be Phou Kham, we found the real deal.

Unlike Xang there were no stairs and no lights in the caves. We rented head torches at the bottom and hoisted ourselves up a cliff face to the entrance.



The cave itself was very dark but large - no hand rails, no walkways as in Xang, just dripping limestone. It was excellent. My camera phone was woefully inadequate at taking photos in the dark but this video might give you an idea...




The Blue Lagoon

No... upper.. body... strength...

On the way back, the weather was lovely and I managed to take a few pics, along with a video. Feel free to mute before playing it.









Journey to Vang Vieng


Our guesthouse offers private minibus transport to Vang Vieng for 120,000 kip. This is marginally cheaper than the public coach, or VIP bus, from the coach station across town and leaves at a more sociable hour in the morning. We've found that tourist minibuses in SE Asia tend to be a bit more cramped than the coaches but where you can find them at a good price, compensate for the lack of space by picking you up and having fewer stops en route.

As we clamber into our transport at just after nine in the morning, we see a smattering of other backpacker types already seated. There are three Dutch girls, one English and two Aussies blokes, with a Japanese couple in the back. I'm pretty sure I'm the oldest in the vehicle by at least five years.

Our driver slides the side door shut, swings into the front seat. He wears enormous sunglasses, a CK tshirt and has his hair slicked back. We start our journey to Vang Viene. I'm pretty comfy. Alice and I are kitted out with cake purchased from the Luang Prabang night market the previous evening, egg and bacon sarnies from our guest house, and bottles of water. I settle into the seat and begin to read as we leave the town behind us.