Two Postcards from Laos

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lao1.jpgLaos is a jungle country of rural villages with wooden stilt houses and smoky cooking fires. Karst hills obstruct the journey, jutting up like horribly broken teeth, unbrushed and moss-covered. Distances are not great, but winding roads make journeys into marathons. The highway between Vientiane and Luang Prabang is like a footpath that--over time and purely by default--became a highway. Modernization goes no further than the edges of the pavement.

 

 


lao2.jpgIn the small-town streets of Vientiane, the French colonial legacy survives in baguettes and strong black Lao coffee. Eleven hours by winding bus to the north, this foreign influence fades like a song. Luang Prabang, the ancient royal capital, drowses beside the muddy Mekong River, where gilded temples with low swept roofs dream quietly in the side streets. Nothing much happens in Laos. The French colonizers said: "The Vietnamese plant rice, the Cambodians watch it grow, and the Lao listen to it grow." The Lao proverb is more direct: "Too much work is bad for the brain."

 

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3 Comments

hello,

coach murdock, the lao proverb seems to have a bit in common with cst! more isn't better... better is better!

hahahaha!

thanks

Too many silly blogs are popping up left 'n right every single day - contributing to an infinite amount of total garbage on the web we all have to sift through. Bluh. It's nice to finally come across a website such as yours - it's like a breath of fresh air! Thanks :)

Love reading your blogs Ryan!

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About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by Ryan Murdock published on April 15, 2009 5:15 PM.

By Freighter Down That Lazy River was the previous entry in this blog.

The Road is My Guide is the next entry in this blog.

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