
George W. Stone
Luang Prabang, Laos
Hidden in the hills of northern Laos, treacherously accessible
by
truck and terrifyingly accessible by high-speed riverboat (imagine a
12-foot [3.7 meter] butter dish propelled by a high-octane, horizontal eggbeater),
Luang
Prabang shimmers at the confluence of the Mekong and Nam Ou rivers. It is an
oasis of gilded temple roofs and multiethnic marketplaces.
Tiny by
Western
standards, this UNESCO World Heritage site conceals its 20,000
residents
and flaunts its French colonial nuances. Mornings are for croissants
and
cocoa, dark as the Mekong, along Thanon Phothisalatthe sleepy main
drag,
all wooden shutters and bicycles. An afternoon excursion could take you
to
a traditional village weaver, who spins tie-dyed silk into elegant ikat
shawls, or to the local Lao Red Cross, where you can unwind (from what?)
in
a traditional herbal sauna. Dine on fish-sauce curry served with
sticky
rice, green papaya salad, andif you wisha flaky baguette and the
ubiquitous Beer Lao.
Sleep in silence under an indigo sky and rise with
the
roosters (a bit annoying, I grant you) to meander down a dirt road and
begin the cycle anew.
George W. Stone is an assistant editor at TRAVELER.
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