Showing posts with label 127 THAILAND (16). Show all posts
Showing posts with label 127 THAILAND (16). Show all posts

Saturday, 9 June 2018

126 - 127 CYCLE TOURING - LAOS (8) & THAILAND (16) - VIENTIANE TO PATTAYA WITH EMIEL

 A Visa Quest that Turned into a
 1,635-Kilometre, 29-Day,
 Unintentional Bicycle Adventure 


LAOS (8) & THAILAND (16) - Emiel
1,635 Kilometres - 30 Days
10 May – 8 June 2018

 


THAILAND (15.3), LAOS (8), THAILAND (16)


 

Prelude

It began innocently enough: a short ride, a sensible idea, the sort of plan that sounds entirely reasonable when discussed over beer. From there, things progressed in the usual manner: trains were boarded with bicycles that clearly objected, rules were encountered and quietly ignored, and a visa process unfolded that suggested bureaucracy is less a system and more a personality trait.

What followed was a steady sequence of heat, rain, villages, rivers, minor logistical misjudgements, and an impressive ability to turn “a short ride” into something considerably longer. There were good decisions, questionable ones, and several that only made sense at the time.

There were also beers. These played a central role in morale, recovery, and, occasionally, planning—though not always in that order.

 

 

 THAILAND (15.3)
 Settling Down Briefly (and Failing at It)

 

Bangkok – Maps, Memories and a Farewell

On Janice’s last day in Bangkok, we embarked on what can only be described as a slightly doomed mission to find the perfect precision tool for her art. After combing through shops, stalls, and what I suspect was someone’s living room, we found absolutely nothing.

But the universe, clearly feeling guilty, handed me a prize: a beautifully detailed map of Thailand and Southeast Asia. I had been searching for one for ages, so naturally, I was unreasonably excited over a piece of paper.

Then Janice casually upped the emotional stakes by gifting me a camera backpack. A good one. The kind that says, “You matter, and also please take better photos.” I felt equal parts touched and awkward—like when someone sings happy birthday to you in public. I wore it proudly all day, because if you don’t parade your gifts around, did they even happen?

That evening, Janice and Chris hopped into a taxi to the airport, marking the end of their epic cycling journey. Meanwhile, I stayed behind, already plotting my next questionable ride.

Bangkok is dangerously addictive. You think you’ll stay a few days, and suddenly it’s been a week, and you’re seriously considering opening a street food stall.

After farewelling my friends, I cycled to Bok-Bok Bike, the holy temple of touring bikes. I may have spent more time there than necessary, pretending to “inspect” things I had no intention of buying. I do things like that in bike shops.

Eventually, I retreated to my “emergency bunker” in Jomtien—essentially my personal recovery zone after too much adventure and not enough rest.

 

Jomtien - When ‘Let’s Cycle to the Border’ Sounds Like a Reasonable Plan

After ten years on the road, having a condo without a checkout date felt unsettling… like I’d forgotten to leave. I kept expecting someone to knock and say, “Ma'am, it's check-out time.”

But as always, the itch returned. During a casual conversation with Emiel—who coincidentally needed a visa run—I suggested we cycle to the border. He agreed far too quickly, which in hindsight should have been a warning sign (he later admitted he was under the impression we would only cycle part of the route).

Plans shifted (as they always do), and instead of cycling to Laos, we decided to take a train there and cycle back as Emiel was out of visa time. Genius. Flawless logic.

 

Pattaya to Nong Khai - Beer, Bunks, and Breaking the Rules Like Nervous Teenagers

When D-day arrived, we cycled a heroic six kilometres to Pattaya station—enough to justify how many snacks we brought.

Loading our bikes onto the train was… an experience. Imagine two people trying to fit oversized metal contraptions through a doorway clearly designed for normal-sized humans. We blocked entire carriages, and the conductor basically had to perform an Olympic vault just to get past us.

At Bangkok station, things got even better. Emiel’s bike was halfway out the door. At one point, I considered giving it a gentle push and claiming insurance.

Then we discovered the next train didn’t allow bicycles. Of course it didn’t. Why would it?

Eventually, we found another train on which our bikes would arrive two hours after we did. Not ideal, but by then, we had given up expecting logic.

We settled into sleeper bunks, opened our beers, and promptly learned that alcohol was forbidden. Naturally, we dealt with this like mature adults: by hiding behind curtains and drinking like teenagers, avoiding a teacher.

 

Delayed Bikes, Buddha Park and Crossing Borders

We arrived in Nong Khai (the border town) to discover our bikes were late. Great start.

Not wanting to waste time, we explored the town and visited Buddha Park—a surreal collection of statues that look like someone dreamt them after eating too much spicy food.

Returning to the station, I found my bike with a broken gear cable. The odometer suggested it had gone for a solo adventure while we were out.

After sorting the mess, we crossed into Laos and cycled into Vientiane under what can only be described as a personal relationship with the sun. Thankfully, the guesthouse had air-conditioning, which felt like stepping into heaven.

 

Vientiane – Food, Heat, and Mild Confusion

Evenings became our salvation. Riverside strolls, massive portions of food, and the kind of relaxed atmosphere that makes you forget you’ve spent the day melting.

We later visited the COPE visitor centre—informative, sobering, and deeply moving. The organisation supports people with mobility disabilities, mostly injured by unexploded ordnance. Laos remains the most bombed country per capita in history, yet COPE’s work has helped countless survivors reclaim their lives. To balance the emotional weight, we searched for SIM cards—always an adventure in itself.

At one point, I got a flat tyre with no tools. Emiel brilliantly suggested a tuk-tuk, clearly fearing I might suggest pushing the bike for several kilometres.

 

Visa Adventures (AKA Bureaucracy: The Sequel)

At the Thai Consulate, I was informed my photo was “too sexy” and needed replacing. I still don’t know whether to be offended or proud.

Between holidays, queues, and general bureaucracy, getting that visa felt like completing a side quest in a video game.

 

CYCLE TOURING LAOS (8)
 -Mythical Serpents and Questionable Markets

 

 

Vientiane to Thabok (98 kilometres) Escaping the Capital, Entering the Heat, and Overshooting the Plan

At long last, the moment arrived to escape Vientiane and actually start cycling—because up until now, we’d mainly been practising the highly technical sport of eating and waiting for visas.

Surprisingly, the day turned out rather pleasant. A gentle tailwind made the predicted 35°C feel less like a punishment and more like a mild inconvenience. Before long, we cleared the city and entered rural Laos, where kids enthusiastically shouted “Sabaidee falang!”—which, I suspect, loosely translates to “Look! Foreigners on bicycles again!”

Although this stretch wasn’t exactly postcard material, it had its charm. We passed temples, rice fields, and markets selling woven goods, as well as the occasional broken-down truck that looked like it had given up on life several years ago.

It was rice-planting season, so farmers in straw hats carefully sowed seeds in tiny fields by their homes, while kids pedalled to school and vendors sold fish—either in plastic bags or, for reasons unknown, in individual bottles. (Decorative? Portable pets? Emergency snacks? The mystery remains.)

At one point, we encountered a Buddhist funeral procession marching through the blazing heat. What started as a modest group steadily grew as villagers casually joined in, giving it the feel of a very solemn—but suspiciously expandable—parade.

Meanwhile, Emiel absolutely flew on his first day. In fact, he was so enthusiastic that he completely overshot our planned stop and only decided to stop 20 km later. Apparently, “let’s go a bit further” is a dangerous phrase.

We eventually ended up in Thabok, where accommodation was simple, clean, and—most importantly—right across from a restaurant serving food and beer. Priorities: perfectly aligned.

 

Thabok to Pakkading (100 kilometres) Rivers, Buffalo Philosophers, and the Three-Step Evening Routine

We left Thabok accompanied by what I can only describe as “two-wheeled tractors with ambitions.” These contraptions pulled wooden carts full of cheerful ladies in conical hats, looking far more relaxed about transport than we were.

The landscape gradually became greener and more lush as we crossed river after river feeding into the mighty Mekong. Water buffalo lounged about like retired businessmen, and canoes lined the banks as if patiently waiting for something exciting to happen.

Every now and again, the road hugged the river, then wandered inland like it had changed its mind, only to reconnect again later. Along the way, roadside stalls offered dried fish, smoked fish, and possibly fish that had been through some kind of emotional journey—all neatly wrapped in banana leaves.

Children acted as early warning systems: one shout of “falang!” and the entire village would appear, waving enthusiastically. However, if you dared to stop for a photo, they’d scatter instantly, as if you’d just turned into a tax collector.

By the time we reached Pakkading, we had settled into our routine:

Find accommodation

Locate cold beer

Make the beer disappear at an alarming rate

 

Pakkading to Vieng Kham (45 kilometres) The Yuri Gagarin Bridge, Water Serpents, and a Mercifully Short Ride

A shorter day, which meant our legs got a break—and more importantly, Emiel’s backside received much-needed mercy.

We crossed the Pakkading River via a Russian-built bridge dedicated to Yuri Gagarin, the first human in space. A fitting tribute, really—cycling in this heat sometimes feels like entering another atmosphere altogether.

This bridge also came with a local tradition: truck drivers light a cigarette before crossing and toss it into the river to appease a mythical water serpent. We considered it, but decided our contribution to the serpent would be not falling into the river ourselves.

The road was lively, shared with everything from buses and trucks to goats, carts, and children riding motorbikes in configurations that defy physics.

Snack options were plentiful—watermelon was peeled and sliced roadside for pocket change, which frankly felt like the best deal of the entire trip.

Our accommodation for the night wasn’t exactly luxurious (let’s call it “authentically rustic”), but it worked. The beds were arranged in such a way that your feet didn’t face the door—because apparently, that’s unlucky. Comfort, clearly, takes second place to supernatural etiquette.

 

Vieng Kham to Hinboun (53 kilometres) Breakfast Confusion, River Crossings, and the Art of Not Melting

Breakfast brought one of the classic challenges of travel: ordering food without speaking the language.

We ended up with one shared plate of rice, pork, and eggs—perfectly logical in Southeast Asia, where meals are communal. However, we responded stubbornly and ordered a second plate, much to everyone’s confusion.

Well-fed, we pedalled on, crossing wide rivers and enjoying the rare sight of people actually cleaning the riverbanks—something you don’t often see.

As usual, kids treated us like a sporting event, cycling alongside at high speed until one inevitably lost a flip-flop or pedal, which somehow made the entire experience even more entertaining for everyone involved.

By midday, the sun became unbearable, and we wisely retreated to roadside lodging to avoid spontaneous combustion.

That evening, we tried “Seendat”—Laotian barbecue. This involved cooking your own food over a small dome grill with broth bubbling around it. It was part cooking class, part social event, and part survival test.

You grease the grill with pork fat, cook thin slices of meat, toss vegetables into the broth, and somehow end up with a delicious meal while sweating profusely. Highly recommended.

 

Hinboun to Thahek (53 kilometres) Markets of Questionable Protein and the Great Wall of Laos

We started the day at a market selling… everything.

Cockroaches, frogs, squirrels, and pieces of monitor lizard were all on display. Emiel did not cope well. In fact, his appetite resigned immediately.

It didn’t help that shortly afterward we encountered a soup stall where a buffalo carcass was being cleaned while food was prepared. This was apparently too much authenticity for breakfast.

Further along, we encountered the “Great Wall of Laos”—a geological formation surrounded by myths involving giants, traps, and ancient engineering projects. In reality, it’s natural—but far less fun to explain it that way.

Reaching Thahek, we celebrated with Beer Lao and dim sum. Emiel bravely tried a “100-year-old egg,” which looked terrifying but tasted… surprisingly normal. A triumph of courage over appearance.

The following day was a rest day—aka laundry, eating, coffee, eating again, and generally recovering from everything.

Thahek itself was charming, with old colonial buildings and riverside views. The only interruption to our peaceful evening was a storm that chased us indoors, reminding us that the weather here also enjoys surprises.

 

Thahek to Savannakhet (120 km) The Accidental Century Ride and the Mango-Strewn Road South

We set off expecting a relaxed two-day journey. Naturally, that plan collapsed.

The road was littered with mangoes blown down by a storm—a fruity obstacle course that kept things interesting.

Village life along the Mekong was simple and fascinating: stilt houses, animals underneath, and small plots of rice. People seemed both curious and delighted to see us, often encouraging photos—quite the contrast to big city anonymity.

However, accommodation proved elusive. None. Anywhere.

So we kept riding. And riding. And riding some more.

Eventually, slightly exhausted and very motivated by cold beverages, we reached Savannakhet. The first order of business? Beer.

The second? The night market—because clearly, cycling 120 km means you’ve earned the right to eat everything in sight.

 

Savannakhet - Colonial Streets, Tiny Chairs, and the Joy of Doing Very Little

A well-deserved rest day.

Savannakhet turned out to be a charming town with shady streets and colonial buildings. The day was spent doing very little (an underrated skill), while the evening brought lively riverside scenes—people eating, chatting, playing games, and enjoying the sunset.

Tiny chairs, massive portions of food, and a relaxed atmosphere—it’s safe to say we settled in quite comfortably.

 

 

THAILAND (16)
Rain, Ruins, and the Road Back to Pattaya

 

 

Savannakhet, Laos to Don Tan (67 km) Ignoring Instructions and Hunting for Breakfast

Our leisurely departure was justified by the gloriously short distance to the Laos–Thailand border. The plan—rather sensibly—was to cycle across the Friendship Bridge. Reality, however, had other ideas.

First came a five-kilometre detour to the immigration office, during which we heroically attempted breakfast. The result: coffee. Just coffee. Everything else—food, hope, and possibly dignity—was apparently lost in translation.

Stamped out of Laos, we were informed that cyclists must cross the bridge by bus. Naturally, I declared this outrageous nonsense. Emiel, who is normally the sensible one, briefly misplaced that trait, and we promptly ignored the rules like two fugitives from Bureaucracy Kingdom. Off we went, pedalling furiously across the bridge as if paperwork might catch us.

Having successfully smuggled ourselves into Thailand under the guise of “people on bicycles,” we made a beeline for civilisation: 7-Eleven. There, breakfast was finally secured, and our Thai SIM cards revived. Truly, modern miracles come in plastic packaging.

The route south began promisingly on a cycle path… which then vanished completely, dumping us back onto the main highway like an afterthought. By evening, we found a bungalow overlooking the Mekong, which drifted past with the unhurried confidence of a river that knows it will eventually reach the sea and is in absolutely no rush to do so.

 

Don Tan to Ban Kaeng Hi (75 km) Of Rain, Rice, and Being Thoroughly Soaked

Morning drizzle gifted us a blissfully cool ride—about as close to “cycling nirvana” as Southeast Asia gets without air-conditioning on wheels.

We passed water buffalo, temples, and rice paddies, with Emiel in excellent form and pulling us along like a human tailwind. A roadside noodle soup sighting triggered immediate emergency braking—always a sign of good priorities.

Further on, rubber plantations told a rather gloomy story: latex hanging uncollected because it now costs more to harvest than it’s worth. Meanwhile, farmers were busy planting rice—an operation involving mud, patience, and the kind of organisation that would shame most corporate meetings.

As the day progressed, the sky gathered itself into a threatening mood and promptly proved its point. We attempted to outrun the storm and were utterly defeated—arriving soaked to the bone with the dignified appearance of damp laundry.

Ban Kaeng Hi greeted us with accommodation—and a complete lack of electricity. The entire village had gone dark, presumably in solidarity with the rain.

Hunger led us to a small restaurant where our arrival caused immediate local fame. Within minutes, the entire village seemingly knew: two foreigners, arrived by bicycle, staying at the “resort” (a term used generously). Despite language barriers, food was communicated through the international dialect of enthusiastic pointing.

Dinner appeared: noodle soup, fried rice, and Beer Chang—because hydration matters. When rain resumed, the owner kindly offered us a lift for the 500-metre journey back. We declined (naturally), borrowed umbrellas instead, and returned them the next morning.

Conclusion: rural Thailand is absurdly lovely and dangerously charming.

 

Ban Kaeng Hi to Khong Chiam (95 km) Chillies, Climbing, and a Strategic Lack of Food

After a night cool enough to make air-conditioning unnecessary (a rare and noteworthy event worthy of certificates), we returned to our now-familiar restaurant—partly to return umbrellas, partly because they already knew how to feed us.

Emiel, mysteriously, claimed not to be hungry. I took this as an opportunity to order a fiery omelette with a quantity of chillies sufficient to alarm small mammals. Antacid was consumed preemptively.

The ride through Pha Taem National Park was glorious: forest, shade, hills, butterflies, dragonflies—and just enough incline to make us question our life choices.

Predictably, when Emiel finally got hungry, there was absolutely no food anywhere. This is a universal law of cycling.

We arrived in Khong Chiam starving and slightly offended by reality. After food and a shower, we visited the meeting point of the Mun and Mekong rivers, where the two streams flowed side by side without mixing—like relatives politely avoiding each other at a wedding.

 

Khong Chiam to Ubon (85 km) A Region Indecently Green

Welcome to Isan: flat, vast, agricultural, and extraordinarily green. The rice paddies glowed with such intensity that one suspects nature might be showing off.

Roadside stalls ranged from fruit-laden abundance to what could only be described as two pumpkins and quiet optimism.

There were also an astonishing number of shops selling temple items—gongs, drums, and everything one never realised was in such demand until encountering several dozen shops dedicated to them.

Bodhi trees were everywhere—sacred, spirit-filled, and not to be cut down without due warning. Frankly, this seems fair. If I lived in a tree, I’d appreciate a polite heads-up too.

Ubon welcomed us with cheap accommodation directly opposite a night market—effectively removing any remaining self-control over food consumption.

 

Ubon to Kantharalak (75 km) Traffic, Superstition, and Deeply Judgmental Cows

A straightforward ride—slightly too straightforward, in fact, and busier than anticipated. To compensate, we invested in flower garlands for good luck. At 10 baht each, they seemed like an absolute bargain for something that would (in theory) prevent disaster.

The day required closer attention—like diving in poor visibility. Highlights included scrawny cows with long ears who looked quietly judgmental, as though deeply unimpressed with our cycling technique.

Kantharalak provided air-conditioning, affordable rooms, and a Buddhist holiday, which meant no beer. Except in restaurants. A loophole so appreciated it nearly deserved a toast.

Dinner ordering became a game of “No have” until we landed on fried rice and spicy mango salad, which—fortunately—did have.

 

Kantharalak to Phu Sing (70 km) Temples Built from Beer and Other Good Decisions

Breakfast at 7-Eleven (as tradition demands) was followed by a visit to the Temple of a Million Bottles—a structure made entirely of empty beer bottles.

Whether this is a triumph of recycling, devotion, or sheer persistence is unclear—but it’s impressive either way.

The ride itself was suspiciously perfect: light traffic, easy access to food and water, and a gentle tailwind. Suspicious because perfection tends to make one nervous.

Phu Sing offered charming timber bungalows and the added bonus of being mildly fascinating to locals. Two cyclists = instant entertainment.

 

Phu Sing to Chong Chom (80 km) Ruins, Roads, and the Excellence of Not Planning

Leaving the bungalows required emotional strength. After one last 7-Eleven stop, we ventured onward through more idyllic countryside—temples, rice fields, and cows clearly convinced they owned the roads.

We visited Prasat Chumphon, an ancient Khmer sanctuary—completely free and blissfully empty, aside from cows.

By evening, we reached Chong Chom, a border market selling everything imaginable, including many things nobody needed but someone clearly decided to buy anyway.

 

Chong Chom to Prasat Muang Tum (94 km) Pineapple, Heat, and Sensible Avoidance of Culture

The road hugged the Cambodian border, passing mushroom vendors with displays worthy of art exhibitions.

A pineapple stop resulted in one of the sweetest pineapples imaginable—further proof that roadside fruit stalls outperform most global supply chains.

We slinked into Prasat Muang Tum, housing a 1000-year-old Khmer temple at around 14h00. Muang Tum is one of the temples built in Angkor style when the Khmer empire controlled large parts of Thailand. It’s situated along an ancient road between Angkor Thom (present-day Siem Reap in Cambodia) to Phimai in Nakhon Ratchasima province (further North West).

Already late but still blistering, we considered it best to visit the temples in the morning.

 

Prasat Muang Tum to Non Din Daeng (41 km) Ancient Empires and the Power of a Good Breakfast

Breakfast was served at our abode, consisting of rice porridge with added ginger, chillies and coriander. I absolutely loved it. The meal was served with a few side dishes, including steamed palm cake in banana leaves and fried dough or doughnuts.

The temple visit was equally impressive—ancient, mysterious, and full of historical intrigue about empires rising, shifting religions, and general instability (which, frankly, history seems quite fond of).

Marvelling at these magnificent ruins, took a while and after a few pics, we got underway. Tiny Non Din Daeng was reached after a mere 40 kilometres, but it offered comfortable-looking accommodation. Upon closer inspection, it turned out even better than envisaged, with ground-floor, motel-style rooms, a restaurant, and a substantial, beautiful garden.

 

Non Din Daeng to Aranyaprathet (87 km) Speed, Gravity, and Questionable Confidence

Armed with fresh garlands (safety first), we hurtled downhill at speeds that suggested we had temporarily abandoned wisdom.

Garlands flap magnificently at high velocity, by the way.

At the bottom, maturity returned, and we continued to Aranyaprathet, where the “Garden Hotel” had no garden, which felt bold but acceptable.

 

Aranyaprathet to Khao Chakan (76 km) Stairs, Storm Threats, and Sleeping in Buses

With a pannier full of clean clothes, well-rested legs, and a belly full of food, we set out in the direction of one more ruin known as Prasat Khao Noi. Prasat Khao Noi was inhabited around the 12th – 13th Buddhist century. Today, the ruins sit atop a small hill roughly 80 meters high and are accessible via a stairway with 254 steps. A lintel and inscription unearthed on-site date to 637 AD, but were most likely reused.

From the ruins, a beautiful ride led through the countryside toward Khao Chakan. The weather looked threatening, and even though a strong wind picked up and dark clouds gathered, we miraculously never got wet and arrived in Khao Chakan bone-dry. That night’s accommodation was a fascinating set-up known as the Bus Resort, where old buses were converted into overnight accommodation – an absolute novelty. At Khao Chakan, a near-vertical staircase led to a massive hole in the mountain, offering views of the countryside.

 

Khao Chakan to Sronlai (94 km) Plenty of Elephants, None Actually Visible

Through elephant territory we rode, seeing none—but plenty of evidence they’d recently been very, very present.

Sronlai Homestay was situated on a dam and offered camping and bungalows. I opted to camp while Emiel took a room, as he had no tent. I liked camping at the dam as the availability of canoes made pleasant rowing at sunset. Suggesting this to Emiel, he laughingly claimed he’d no intention of becoming sportsman of the year and preferred having a beer. My rubber arm was easily twisted.

 

Sronlai to Pluk Daeng (90 km) Rolling Hills and a Soup with Opinions

A drifting day through farmland, featuring cashews that look permanently confused about their own design.

Supper was from a nearby restaurant where (quite understandably) not a word of English was spoken. Thank goodness, the menu included pictures one could point to. When the food arrived, it appeared that we had ordered soup in which floated a strange-looking head, complete with eyes. We burst out laughing and ordered fried rice. On second thought, it could’ve been eel, as it didn’t “taste like chicken”.

 

Pluk Daeng to Pattaya (46 km) Back to Civilisation, Ready or Not

A gentle drizzle carried us into Pattaya—a startling return to civilisation after weeks of rural calm.

We celebrated at Glenn’s bar, marking the completion of 1,635 kilometres of cycling.

Well done, Emiel. You survived, thrived, and provided excellent company—plus occasional questionable support for decision-making.