Fried (or boiled) Babe, Bambi, and Lassie
Items from the menu of a Chinese restaurant in Luang Nam Tha (no joke!):
Fry Chicken Inside
Boiled Pig Liver
Fried Pig Bowel
Boiled Pig Bowel
Deep Fry Pig Intestine
Steamed Turtle
Steamed Dog
Fried Dry Deer Meat
Bamboo Insect
Deep Fry Cow Intestine
Pig Liver Soup
Boiled Pig Knuckle
Pig Knuckle Soup
Weed Vegetable Soup
Fry Pig Liver
Roast Eel
Fry Eel
~and I still managed to eat there!! (They had the coldest beer in town.) I ate pumpkin and fried eggplant with garlic.
Back in Luang Nam Tha after 2 days of trekking.. I am showered and just had a beer with Dave, an American guy I met on the trek, so I am feeling GOOD. Yesterday we left for the hills surrounding Luang Nam Tha - it was an’eco-tourisn sensitive trek’ (whatever that means) and quite pricey at $26 but it had been recommended to me by other travellers.
There were 7 in our group - 5 from Holland, 2 Americans (Dave and me), and then our two local guides. A good group of nice people, but the 5 from Holland tended to speak Dutch among themselves (as you would) so truthfully I would have preferred a more diverse group of people. But you take your chances when booking such a trek.
Anyway yesterday we all met at the trekking office in the a.m. and set out by pick-up, 20km out of town, for the start of the trek. Started hiking up, and up from one village into the mountains. It was a very nice forest but a very, very muddy trail. We hiked for a few hours and then stopped for lunch at one of the thatch huts in the hills. Lunch was served on giant banana leaves and consisted of fried chicken, fish, vegetables, and, for the more daring adventurers, fried silk worms. Gross! Actually a few in our group did try them, but not me. I could barely eat the vegetables with the site of a pile of fried grubs sitting right next to them. A real taste of local culture I guess.
Everything was going well after lunch, that is until I mindlessly wiped out on the trail and sprained my knee! Oh, could I express the level of pain in words? NO. It hurt! Somehow I slid, fell, and twisted my knee, and man I was in pain, thinking that I even broke my knee. I layed on the trail waiting for the pain to pass, hoping I’d be able to stand, wondering how the HELL I was going to get out, while everyone stood around and watched me with anticipation. After several minutes I tried to stand (ouch!) and started hobbling down the trail again. David kindly offered to carry my pack, and if you know me at all, you will know that I MUST have been in serious pain if I let someone carry my pack. I was. I couldn’t believe how much it hurt with every step, but THANKFULLY we only had just over 30 minutes before reaching our destination village for the night.
I immediately layed down on the porch of our hut and put my foot up. David kindly (again) offered me pain killers and anti-inflammatories and I gladly popped them all. I spent the entire afternoon laid up like that, still wondering how th hell I was going to be able to walk the next day for seven hours. I mostly passed the time talking with Dave, who, at 42 years old (from Connecticut), has managed to maintain a travelling lifestyle through his adult life and of course I was fascinated to know how he’s been able to do it (mostly computer consulting). He’s travelled much more than most Americans I know for sure.
Dinner in the village was with the village chief, who’s been the chief of the village since he was 18 years old (he’s now 40). We found out that there are 150 people living in the village and that only one week ago a woman died in childbirth from a breached birth. There is no doctor in the village and Luang Nam Tha is a 7-hour walk away. A different world. No electricity in the village, although the’tourists’ house has solar-powered light. Can’t help but feel the so-called’eco-sensitive’ tourism is more like full-on exploitation of these people. The only thing’sensitive’ about it is that the villagers have been told not to beg so they don’t. Anyway we were in bed at 8pm.
Woke up the next day at 6am, had breakfast, and started hiking out by 9am. My knee felt stiff and sore in the morning. I was worried big time about getting out. I popped a bunch more pain killers and hoped for the best. It turned out to be ok once I strated moving and warmed up the muscles. I managed to get through the day with only minor discomfort which is much better than I had hoped for.
The walk was nice, first flat in the forest along a river, then up a mountain with great views of the valley below, and finally down into Luang Nam Tha. The temperature wasn’t bad either; thankfully a lot of clouds were protecting us from the heat of the sun so we weren’t sweating too bad.
David so kindly offered to carry my pack again for the day but this time I refused, determined to walk out on my own with my own bag. And I made it, with no permanent damage I hope.
Back in civilization (at least their version of it in Luang Nam Tha), I had a hot shower, put on clean clothes and then had some cold beers with Dave. That brings me up to date, back at the beginning of the story.
Tomorrow heading north to Muang Sing.

The start of the trek from Luang Nam Tha

The start of the trek from Luang Nam Tha

A modern bridge in Lao

Ah, the views
Add comment October 24th, 2002