Blistered & burnt |
The following week, I was cooking some fried potatoes to eat
with some Lao style scrambled eggs and like an idiot managed to splash water
into a pan of hot oil, resulting in some nasty blistered burns on my
forearm. In case you’re wondering, Lao
style scrambled eggs are the same as normal scrambled eggs but without benefit
of butter and only a drop of UHT milk.
Recently, all my eggs have had double yolks, which never fail to excite
me, so I’ve been eating more than I normally would.
Then, to top it off, my watch stopped. It had been losing time all month, probably
weakened by its run in with the ant and finally gave up the ghost at the
beginning of this week. So, all in all,
it’s been a bad month for my left arm.
In other news, I finally made a trip to see Wat Phu and
Buddhist Lent came to an end.
Looking towards Wat Phu |
Looking down from Wat Phu |
http://whc.unesco.org
Despite lingering scepticism about the impact of UNESCO, I had a smashing day, while my
friend charmed the drinks sellers, confused a Cambodian, smoked an
extraordinary number of cigarettes and tried to convince everyone he met that
he was from Laos.
That evening in Pakse it was unusually quiet and the only moment of hilarity came when we were eating at one of the floating restaurants as it was being hauled off the muddy bank by a diesel belching tug boat, which filled the restaurant with fumes in minutes, much to the chagrin of the Thai party on our left.
With hindsight, the evening was probably so quiet because
everyone was anticipating the festivities to come. That evening in Pakse it was unusually quiet and the only moment of hilarity came when we were eating at one of the floating restaurants as it was being hauled off the muddy bank by a diesel belching tug boat, which filled the restaurant with fumes in minutes, much to the chagrin of the Thai party on our left.
The Wednesday following my diesel tainted meal was officially the end of Buddhist lent, so to celebrate I ate a curry and had a couple of beers with the volunteer from Paksong who had come to see the boat racing festival to be held the next day.
The entire area around the river was transformed with stalls
and stages and more people than I have seen in Pakse in the last six months
combined. There were colourful lights,
fireworks, Chinese lanterns and the release of small plant based floating
displays onto the river surface. It was
all fairly spectacular and another example of how well organised things in Laos
can be.
The next morning it was pissing with rain and with some
hesitation we managed to drag ourselves back down to the river for the boat
racing. When we arrived we had posh
coffee and pastries to prepare ourselves and then spent the next few hours
walking around the bank watching the brightly coloured boats and teams indulge
in some frantically competitive dragon boat racing. A dragon boat may be an insanely inefficient
way to travel but it certainly makes for an engaging spectacle. As I have something of a penchant for boats I found it to be a highly entertaining and
celebratory day despite the rain, which became almost inevitably beer soaked as it wore on.
I’ve decided that I definitely want to be in a boat for next
year, so if any sporty types are thinking of visiting, the middle of October would be
a good time. Hopefully my left arm will
be back in shape by then.