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The Plain of Jars

Phonsavan, Laos


Early-ish start for us this morning trying to haggle down a tour as much as possible, but as usual, we didn’t have much luck and the cheapest we could find was about £30 including everything. Too much for stingy backpackers on a budget! So we took a motorbike instead although the weather was not on our side and instead bucketing it down, so armed with a stolen umbrella from the guesthouse and a poncho kindly given to us from Gill our friend we hung out with a few days before, we headed on our way.

Luckily, the rain did ease up a little by the time we made it to Site 1 of The Plain of Jars so we could walk over half way round before it started again. It was in fact a really nice and peaceful place with great views and the jars themselves are very bizarre.

No one really knows why they are there, many suggest they were for keeping ‘Lao Lao’ in, which is a local whisky, but to me it just reminds me of a huge gravesite and when reading up a little more on them when we came back, there are many theories that agree.

They are estimated to be about 2000-2500 years so no one really has a clue. Nevertheless, it is pretty impressive just to walk around and see them, and even more impressive to see that so many of them survived when Laos was bombed severely in that area.

You cannot even walk everywhere in the site as some of the areas haven’t been cleared and checked for old bombs, but we stayed between the white markers (safe areas), so we were ok. We spent about an hour walking around but made a run for the shelter when the rain got too much where we waited for another hour for it to die down a bit before we went on our way to Hmong village (Bomb village) about 40km away.

This village is famous because the villagers there made the most out of the old American bombs and used the remains to help build their houses!

It was quite clever and very resourceful we thought! It was a really cute village, and we think it they don’t see many tourists there as it had such a nice local feel to it, really basic and yet everyone seemed so happy and smiley although they didn’t seem to speak any English or even Laos, but seemed to have their own local dialect.

After the village, we decided we had had enough of riding around and being wet so we took the bike back having ridden over 80km today.

In the evening we went to the local MAG (Mines Advisory Group) office who show videos about the bomb clearance, it was very sad to see the effect the bombs have on the local Laos people and they weren’t even involved in the war?!



permalink written by  chrischarly on August 3, 2011 from Phonsavan, Laos
from the travel blog: Chris and Charly's Passage through SE Asia
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permalink written by  mayank on August 6, 2011


Good to see you made it there! Im in Chiang Mai now, what a contrast to sleepy villages in Laos....enjoy the rest of the country. xxx

permalink written by  Kara on August 7, 2011


Nice snaps,,thanks for uploading,,hope to get more in future..:)

permalink written by  Seajay Dealer in NSW on August 7, 2011

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