Luang Prabang, Laos

Pat Dunlap alms Giving Luang Prabang Laos Buddhist Monks
Pat Giving Alms to Young Buddhist Monks
 - Luang Prabang, Laos
Alms Giving Luang Prabang Laos Buddhist Monks
Alm Giving - Luang Prabang, Laos
Buddha Statures Pak Ou Caves Luang Prabang Laos
Buddha Statures at Pak Ou Caves
on the Mekong River - Luang Prabang, Laos
Main Street Night Luang Prabang Laos
Main Street at Night - Luang Prabang, Laos
Sunset Phu Si Hill Luang Prabang Laos
Sunset from Phu Si Hill 
- Luang Prabang, Laos
Nam Khan River Luang Prabang Laos
Nam Khan River 
- Luang Prabang, Laos
Buddhist Temple Bell Luang Prabang Laos
Ringing Buddhist Temple Bell Next to Our Hotel
 - Luang Prabang, Laos
Royal Palace Temple Luang Prabang, Lao
Royal Palace Temple - Luang Prabang, Laos
Luang Prabang, Laos (10/26-29/2009) - We fell in love with Luang Prabang. We are so glad we came here!

Luang Prabang (City of the Buddha of Peace) is a Buddhist spiritual center and former royal capital of Laos. It was suggested by numerous travel agents. Amazingly, the whole town of Luang Prabang has been declared a UNESCO World Heritage site.

Sleepy, temple-filled Luang Prabang is truly a jewel of Asia nestled next to the legionary Mekong River. With its eventful history, mountain scenery, strong Buddhist religious nature, and a well preserved mixture of both French and Lao Buddhist architecture, it is wonderful to wander Luang Prabang's streets and along the two rivers. 

Especially beautiful at night, Luang Prabang has a calm quaint feel with many wonderful and very affordable restaurants as well as a half-mile long night market (see photos).
Laos Sandwhich Night Market Luang Prabang
Being Served a Laos Sandwhich
in Night Market - Luang Prabang

Boatman Mekong River Laos
Boatman on Mekong River - Laos
In Luang Prabang, you encounter lots of smiling faces and every neighborhood has its own Buddhist monastery and Wat (temple) - more than 40 temples with swooping roofs, inlaid gold doors, and large Buddhas.

Arriving by tuk-tuk from the Luang Prabang airport, we stayed next to a Buddhist temple and heard the chants and bell ringing each morning (pretty cool - see photo). We visited a couple of the largest temples: Wat Mai and Wat Xieng Thong (The Golden City Temple), a 400-year-old royal monastery complex.

Getting up one morning at 6 AM, we witnessed a moving spectacle that embodies the essence of traditional Southeast Asia - long lines of young barefoot male Buddhist monks with heads shaved walking silently along the streets carrying a small bowl on their morning alms rounds. This is not begging. It is a chance for the monks to learn humility and allow residents to do good deeds earning merit to come back in a better life next time. Pat was very busy attempting to offer alms to all of them (see photos) - she earned lots of ‘merit’.

We also visited the former Royal Palace in Luang Prabang, made into a museum in 1976 after the communists achieved power. It includes a moon rock (a gift from Richard Nixon ironically just as U.S. bombing of Laos reached its peak).

Meeting up with a young Belgian couple in Luang Prabang, we took a ‘slow boat’ up the Mekong River to the Pak Ou Caves (see photo), where for centuries, kings, merchants, and farmers have come here to worship, leaving behind more than 3,000 statues of the Buddha. 

We stopped along the way at a tranquil hamlet inhabited by the traditional Khamu people and bought a bottle of homemade rice whiskey. At bit of an adventure... our boat ran out of gas and we had to drift back to a petro station.

We also climbed the 330 steps up the Mount Phu Si hill to view the beautiful sunset over the Mekong River and Luang Prabang (see photo) - well worth the climb.




Sad point of history... in the United States' effort to contain communism in Southeast Asia on the Ho Chi Minh Trail, Laos was the most bombed nation on earth with more bomb tonnage (2 million tons) dropped on northern Laos between 1964 and 1973 than the total amount dropped all over Europe by all sides during WWII - hard to image!
 
 

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Angkor Wat & Siem Reap, Cambodia

Angkor Wat Cambodia
Angkor Wat - Cambodia
Bayon Angkor Thom Cambodia
Bayon - Angkor Thom, Cambodia
Traditional Cambodian Costumes Angkor Thom Cambodia
Traditional Cambodian Costumes
- Bayon, Angkor Thom, Cambodia
Cambodian Taxi Angkor Wat Cambodia
Cambodian Taxi - Angkor Wat, Cambodia
Ta Prohm Temple Tomb Rader Cambodia
Ta Prohm Temple (Tomb Rader)
- Cambodia
Monks Angkor Wat Cambodia
Monks at Angkor Wat - Cambodia
Apsara Dance Performance Siem Reap Cambodia
Apsara Dance Performance 
- Siem Reap, Cambodia

Cambodian Boy Fishing Siem Reap Cambodia
Cambodian Boy Fishing - Siem Reap, Cambodia

Ta Prohm Tomb Rader Temple Cambodia
Ta Prohm (Tomb Rader) Temple - Cambodia

Ta Prohm Tomb Rader Cambodia
Ta Prohm (Tomb Rader) - Cambodia
Angkor Wat & Siem Reap, Cambodia (10/24-25/09)

The city of Siem Reap is the gateway to Angkor Wat, the world’s largest sacred building, a UNESCO World Heritage site, and one of the former 7 wonders of the world. OK, people think Angkor Wat is cool and we do too.

Actually Angkor Wat (see photos) is just one of several fabulous temples in a huge complex including a capital city built for Khmer King Suryavarman II in the early 12th century. Because better stones were used in Angkor Wat's construction, it is the best preserved and most famous. 

Angkor Wat originally was a Hindu Temple. About 150 years later a king was deposed by his a son-in-law and it was changed to a Buddhist Temple. Angkor Wat's classical Khmer architecture reflects both religions. It took 25,000 workers more than 37 years to complete it.

Our favorite temple near Siem Reap was Ta Prohm, the temple recently made famous by the movie Tomb Rader. Built in 1156, Ta Prohm Temple's halls have been mostly untouched by archaeologists and remain covered by the jungle tree roots. Ta Prohm emanates an aura mystery (really neat! - see the photos).

Near Angkor Wat, Angkor Thom (the “Great City”) was the last capital of the Khmer Empire. In the 11th century, more than one million people populated Angkor Thom when at the same time it is estimated that London had a population of only 35,000.

At the heart of Angkor Thom is the Bayon (see photo), the last great temple built at Angkor. The Bayon rises three imposing levels with numerous towers featuring multiple carvings of massive serene faces at the top.


Recent satellite images shows Angkor Thom’s actual grand scale to be comparable to present-day Los Angeles, making it the largest city on Earth dating from the pre-industrial era. 

For this reason the Angkor Thom complex and Angkor Wat are placed in significance alongside Machu Picchu in South America or the pyramids of Egypt (click here to see) as a testament to the greatness of a continent’s lost civilization.

The city of Siem Reap has a definite French influence from the French occupation of about 100 years during 1860-1960. With a population of only 140,000, Siem Reap now hosts almost two million tourists a year with with a busy market. 

Siem Reap has a wide range of accommodations ranging from 5-star hotels to budget guesthouses. Our family run hotel was close to the center of Siem Reap where we walked to Pub Street for dinner and shopping. 

We also attended an Apsara Dance performance of traditional Cambodian dances (see photos). The word 'apsara' translates to 'nymph' or 'celestial being', and they are meant to be graceful, youthful, and supernatural beings skilled in the art of music and dance.

Some history... The former city and temples of Angkor Thom represent six hundred years (802-1432) of Khmer civilization - one of Asia's greatest kingdoms that extended into present-day Thailand, Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia.

See our other travel blog post on Cambodia's trendsetting beach town:

Sihanoukville (Snookyville), Cambodia
 
 
Please enjoy 250+ wonderful places around the world, with award-winning photos, from our BLOG ARCHIVE on the right ---->


Travel for half the cost for all levels of travel from budget to luxury and 100's of other unique travel tips! From a former Economic professor, experienced traveler (106 countries), award-winning travel photojournalist/blogger, featured speaker at large travel shows, host of the travel TV show Plan Your Escape® TV aired on the CW network, and travel columnist for the Huffington Post, our popular 5-star customer rated groundbreaking and comprehensive how-to world travel book Plan Your Escape, Secrets of Traveling the World for Less Than the Cost of Living at Home reveals secrets how you can travel and see more for half the cost for all trips from weekend getaways to longer vacations and trips, experience more adventure and romance, safely realize your travel dreams with comprehensive planning tools and checklists, travel the world for less than $100/day for a couple, and much more!
Buy this popular book on Amazon.com (also available as Ebook for $9.99), CLICK HERE