Arriving in Laos
Frankly I was a little bit nervous to leave our last bastion of western influenced civilization. Two factors left me uncomfortable. First, though it had made considerable improvement, was the condition of my right eye. The swelling was down substantially but there are still two itchy little lumps in the upper lid. And, second, I still hadn’t found new spokes for the broken and damaged ones in the rear wheel. I don’t know if I’ll be able to trust Laotian eye and bike doctors, we will see…
In advance of our departure we didn’t manage to leave our elegant $20/night Thai hotel until well after the standard checkout time. And although I’d cleared our late checkout with the front desk everyone in the housekeeping staff had come by to find out if we were ready to leave every few minutes after noon. Something told me that they were ready to be rid of the BikeBrats. We started to wonder what hotels think of us, especially the ones that house us as we frenetically put together our website. On those days we usually lock ourselves in the room for two nights and a day or more, ordering room service. The maids usually have to fight their way in to clean the room while we type away and bicker over which pictures to include. God forbid one should stumble in while I have the telephone in a hundred pieces while I try to connect to our ISP.
We finally loaded up the bikes and got on the road about 2:30, plenty of time to ride 24k, cross the border, find a hotel and meet our friend Ly and her sister Caroline. After just a few cranks we reached the Thai border. There seemed to be a general confusion as to where bikes should go to exit Thailand. We were pointed in one direction and then the other until we finally found a booth with no on inside. A bored looking Thai-guy in uniform finally shuffled over, stamped our passports and waved us through. Just as we were about to pedal off another complication arose. This time a non-uniformed customs officer raced up and said “bridge not for recreation like bike.” We looked at one another and back at him and told him this wasn’t recreation, this is transportation and started off. More insistent this time and with the back up of a small army of uniformed and non-uniformed border officials, he told us that we must take the bus. We’d have to exit the border, cross into Thailand, go to the bus station, buy a ticket, load the bikes, cross the border on the Thailand side and ride over the “Friendship Bridge” on the bus to Laos. This sounded too inconvenient to us so we paid the next bus driver a bribe, loaded the bikes on his bus at the border crossing and boarded the sweltering tin can for our ride to Laos.
Upon reaching the Laos border crossing we wondered why we had needed to get a visa in Bangkok. There, at the border, plain as day, was a sign that said “Visa at Border”, next time we’ll know. Before we knew it we were in Laos and I was mugging for the camera in front of the “Welcome to Laos” sign that looked as though it had seen better days. The Laotian border guard had a chuckle when I demonstrated that there were huge holes in the sign by putting my arm through it. We were a little surprised at the lack of activity on both sides of the boundary. This was, after all, the primary land entry point to a nation. There were only about ten people crossing over at the same time as us and there was virtually no traffic on the Laotian side.
As we rode towards the Laotian capital people waved and smiled seemingly more ingenuously than in Thailand. There were a number of immediate differences between here and our last destination. First of all the traffic seemed to move like a very viscous liquid slowly and steadily towards its objective, oozing around obstructions and never in a hurry. Another subtle change was in the text of the signs for businesses (and there were very few until we reached the city limits); all had English and Laotian—unlike in Thailand where Thai was king and queen. Perhaps an even more important cultural indicator was that the stores sold Pepsi almost exclusively whereas in Thailand Coke ruled the fizzy soft drink market. Was the owner of the Pepsi bottling company in Las a party member?
The streets got progressively more busy as we reached the center of Vientiane. Complicating matters further, paving was still just a concept on many of the downtown avenues. Still there wasn’t enough activity to evoke the image of a capital city. What few vehicles there were traversing the city were moving at speeds that betrayed the hour. It was five in the afternoon on a Monday. Before long we’d negotiated a room for the night and were ready to set off to meet our friends. While I was waiting for Andy to check out one of the potential hotels I sat on the street and watched naked little kids play in mud puddles across the street. Imagine that in Paris, Washington or any other capital city in the central business district?
We’d set a rendezvous for 6:00 in the swankest hotel in town, the Westin-equivalent-unit of Vientiane, the Lao Plaza. As we waited in the cavernous, elegant (compared to our modest digs) and empty lobby Andy sipped a Mai-Tai and I slurped an ice cream sundae. We grew a little worried as the time passed and it was suddenly well after six. Andy and I both knew Ly to be especially prompt so we were more than concerned as the clock ticked on to thirty past. Just as we were about to give up, Ly and her sister Caroline arrived and all was well.
Our first priority became dinner and we sought an appropriate place to sate Andy’s hunger (he hadn’t eaten anything all day). I wasn’t so hungry, my stomach was just settling down after a few days of twitchiness. Caroline was suffering from the same, so we were a little overwhelmed when Andy ordered one of everything from the menu. At the end of the meal there was more left on the plates than we had eaten and the bill was a whopping 36,000 agoutis (nearly ten dollars). After dinner we decided that drinks were in order so we adjourned to the cocktail lounge and restaurant of the nearby commie Lane Xiang hotel. In a rattan-lined dining room a cheesy Lao lounge act performed traditional dance and music. There were two dancing couples in Laotian drag and we had difficulty distinguishing the boys from the girls for their attire and movements. After the show one of the band members began to croon in accompaniment of the orchestra. The rotund leader beckoned for some audience participation and a Japanese man headed for the stage to sing a number. He nearly fell over on the way to the stage, tripping over everything in his path before belting out a rather blurry tune. A Chinese man was the next victim, but he had stage presence and talent and closed to a hearty round of applause. The mistress of ceremonies kept him on stage and the two entertained the largely Asian crowd as though the Sonny and Cher of Laos. Soon we were all ready to call it a day and head for our respective beds.







