saisouk is very pleasant guest house with wooden floors, single rooms and is incredibly cheap. They were a bit strict on the noise level. I droped a tube of toothpaste in my room one evening. And they came to knock on my door to keep the noise down???? It was also the first guest house that I stayed in where there was a curfew. We had to be back in by 11pm. Spent the first day exploring the centre and along the Mekong with with Felix & Elvin, the previously mention dutchman and dane. Savannakhet lies on the bank of Mekong and is a border town. Thailand is on the other side. A second bridge, a few Km out of town links the two sides.
I have to admit, I liked Savannakhet. The first town in Laos which does not pander to the tourist. They caterd for us but did not depend on us. A pleasant change.
The second day I followed the French Colonial architechtural heritage route through the town. These building in most cases have not been preserved. I think there is a program to renovate this building. Less for historical reasons more, like in Luang Prabang, to appeal in the future to the tourist trade.
That day, at the guest house, met Severine from France - the guest on the previous video post - who proposed we go on one of the tours outside the town on a hired moped. I hear all the screams that I was let loose on the roads o Laos in charge of a motorised vehicle. No panic. We hired only one and I went as a passenger.
The day itself, after a nice strong Lao Coffee, we headed on our day excursion around the province. Vising lakes, villages, temples monkey forest and a major buddhist library/temple. We crossed a river - Through the river to be precise. Near Monkey Forest, I bought a bunch of banana. A bargain. At the time I did not realise that i would be sharing them with the monkeys. This was not out of choice. We stopped to ask direction near the (first) temple. Whilst we were distracted, a monkey sneaked up to the scooter's basket and stole my bananas. NOBODY STEALS MY FRUIT. A little chase ensued. A couple of metres after he dropped them. It got away with a few. I got most of them back. As we went through the forest, the monkeys started to come out of the forest, They are used to being fed by visitors. They could smell the bananas. We had something in comon. We both wanted my bananas. So being a grown man, i tried to eat them all as quick as possible. Fruit is fruit. I had to throw a couple of them to the monkeys int he end because they really wanted these bananas...
We arrived back to Savannakhet just after the sun set. A bit chilly but a day of first. My first day on a scooter - i don't count the 10 min journey in the South of Thailand. The only casualty was my backside. A bit sore after 6 hrs sat on a scooter. And Severine, thanks for driving. The photos here tell the story.
The following day a trip to the market, chicken and sticky rice - yes food again - and eve of Xmas meal with Severine in the evening - as seen in the video blog.
I spent 4 nights in Savannakhet and was sad to move on. A very relaxing town.















5 comments:
You riotous wildchild... dropping tubes of toothpaste recklessly!
Love the monkey-thief story - laughed out loud.
brave monkeys! they didn t know who they were picking a fight with! ... i would not dare steal bananas 4 u!!!
i am sure have beaten the Guinnes world record for number of bananas eaten in a minute (only 3!?!)
:-)
hilarious!!! ;-)
i'm hoping upon hope that you managed to catch some of the monkey capers on video!
and the toothpaste incident! a top post, dan.
Ha haa haaa!!! Very funny Dan. Like Lena (Hello there!), I laughed out loud. And I've just read it out to Ramon and he's laughed out loud!
xx
ah ah ah very funny! Please try to keep quiet with that flying toothpaste :-)
We liked the story of bananas, poor monkeys they did not know the danger they faced by attacking your bananas!!!
Love
Rosi and Rajesh
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