Yesterday we made the journey from Luang Prabang to Vang Vieng in Laos. There are only a few ways to make this journey: local bus, ‘VIP’ bus, minivan, or hire a private van. We quickly rule out the local bus because no matter what our level of style and comfort is, it will always be higher than what the local bus can deliver. The discussion then comes down to the other three – I am fully prepared to pay the 800,000 kip for a private car but Mrs. Columbus thinks that is way too much money and not nearly the adventure that the bus would be so we opt for the ‘VIP’ bus as a compromise, sacrificing a little speed for hopefully a little extra leg room over the minivan.
Our pre-book arrangement includes a pickup from our hotel, and we are told the trip is 5 hours. We choose the 9:30am bus thinking that we would get to Vang Vieng in time to settle in and then do a bit of exploring before dinner. It is worth noting that the distance to cover is only 275km (170 miles) so 5 hours seems like about twice the time it should take, but we have seen the winding roads already so we know we won’t be setting any speed records. Our friend Ian had told us some stories about how it never really is on time, and how the bus driver would have a wander around the bus, have a smoke, start the bus, stop the bus, have a smoke, etc., and we had a good laugh about that before we left Thailand, so when a tuk-tuk arrives at our hotel promptly at 8:30am to pick us up for the transfer to the bus station we decide maybe he was exaggerating a little for effect and think things are off to a good start!
Well that is were the story gets laughable. We get to the bus station just before 9am, plenty of time to get our tickets and a seat on the bus. Our bus is there waiting, and while it says VIP on the front, I suspect that maybe the last VIP to ride on the bus was Ho Chi Minh because it is definitely starting to show it’s wear. Never the less, at 9:15am they announce that we should all get on the bus to prepare to depart. The bus is about half full and I am thinking this is actually pretty good we will be able to spread out and there will be no-one sitting in the isles (we have actually seen this before in Thailand on a VIP bus). Just before 9:30 the driver steps on and starts up the bus, the air conditioning comes on and it looks like we are getting ready to go, then the driver walks off the bus – to have a smoke. Then smoke finished he goes for a slow wander around the bus and I suddenly realize that Ian had described what was actually happening! I laugh to myself and think OK, this is SE Asia after all and stuff like this really does happen, so we are going to be 15 mins or so late and then we will get going.
Nope! We sit on the bus for about 30 mins while there is a heated debate outside between some tourists and some locals, we think it about some confusion between what they thought they purchased and what they were being offered, but anyone who has traveled here should know that it is tough to win an argument with the locals. As 10am approaches it looks like that argument has dissolved (all the Laos people involved have just walked away) when another bus pulls into the station and a bunch of people start getting off – we know there is not a 2nd bus from here going to Vang Vieng, and it is too early for any incoming buses to be arriving so this is a little puzzling, but when a 3rd bus pulls in beside us it gets even more odd. After about another 10 or 15 minutes the driver of our bus steps in and turns the bus off, and therefore the air conditioning, and another 15mins after that just as it gets fairly hot on the bus we start to hear rumors that we are transferring to another bus (the 3rd one that arrived). There is some mumbling about our bus not having the right driver or something, so we start to move our bags from the first bus to the 3rd bus – in the meantime the people from the 2nd bus have also all been moved onto the 3rd bus, and the result is that the bus is now actually too full, so they find some local people to kick off so that everyone has a seat. It is now almost 2 hours after when we were supposed to leave, and we have gone from a nice spacious half full bus, to a very full and somewhat crowded bus, but to cap it off for good measure we notice them loading what looks like a few spare parts into a junk drawer in the front of the bus – traveling with extra wheel bearings is normal right?!?
Between all the waiting around and loading, unloading and reloading buses we have met a few people here including a couple from Australia traveling with their daughter and have at least passed the time away sharing stores and having a laugh at the whole situation as there is nothing else you really can do.
Finally, the driver gets onto the bus (he must be done both of his cigarettes by now), closes the door and the bus starts moving! I am seated next to a girl from New York who is spending a couple of months here traveling around a few countries and we start to pass the time talking about the various places we have been and things we have seen, so at least the next 5 hours are hopefully going to pass quickly.
There is a good part to the trip though, and that is that the scenery is breath-taking. There is really no way to describe the view as the bus winds it’s way up and down the mountains, valleys and switch-back turns. I can only imagine that this is what it might be like to drive through the Andes or something as the country side does not really resemble any place I have seen before.


After a stop for lunch at a place quite literally in the middle of nowhere and then another stop as we pop out of the mountains to cool the brakes on the bus down (yes, we really stopped so that they could pour cold water on the brakes) we make our way into Vang Vieng – the trip has taken about 9.5 hours including the delay at the start so I guess we are just a little off of the 5 hours we were told it would take 🙂

If we had not met some interesting people to talk to and the scenery had not been so fantastic we would have been much more disgruntled, but we manage to take it all in stride and head off to our hotel to get settled in for the night. The hotel we are staying at is right on the river, and our room is on the top floor looking right out over the river, some rice fields, and some spectacular limestone karst formations!
