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August 1

  • By Jane Henninger
  • 02 Jan, 2024

Why fly when you can drive and experience the country?

Our first encounter with terraced, rice paddies near Vien Vang, Laos
The low maintenance, unpowered, ferry to cross the Nam Song River, Vang Vieng, Laos, to reach the Tham Chang caverns.
Jane pauses while climbing the almost 300 stairs to Tham Chang cavern. After climbing 267 steps to Batu Caves,, she thinks this will be okay.
BFF's! This 80-year-old insisted on helping Jane, 75, the last several flights to Tham Chang caverns.
Inside the Tham Chang caverns. These are now a tourist attraction and a natural site used for Buddhist worship. During the Laotian fight for independence, the Lao forces used them to hide from the invaders.
View from insider the caverns overlooking the Nam Song River valley.
Fishermen ply the Nam Song River with cast fishing nets still today.
By Jane Henninger March 2, 2024
By Jane Henninger March 2, 2024
By Jane Henninger January 7, 2024
Often tone, volume, and non-verbal clues can increase your understanding of the local activities as you travel.
A composite of several encounters in our first 6 months of this yearlong adventure. 
By Jane Henninger January 2, 2024
The pillars and center cap are reminders of the Buddhist sacred elements: Earth, Water, Fire, Air and Space. Earth - the large rectangular base. Water - the lotus petals. Fire - the flame tips at the corners. Air - the vase shape. Space - the tapering peak. 
By Jane Henninger January 2, 2024
This really was on the way from Vientiane to Luan Probang, Laos. This ferry is built with empty, plastic storage drums and uses the flow of the Nam Xong River to push it from shore to shore along an anchoring cable.  No fuel needed. No moving parts. And low exterior maintenance.
By Jane Henninger January 2, 2024
Due to technical and timing conflicts, we have fallen woefully behind in our posting. 
Therefore, we are changing out postings to almost exclusively show photographic images with short captions while seeking to post more days to make up for our almost 2 month backlog.
For those wishing to view narratives, please, friend and/or follow Jane on Facebook as  https://www.facebook.com/jane.henninger  
By Jane Henninger December 20, 2023
Today is Don’s Birthday!
I had bought a birthday card for him that I actually knew where it was and had it for the trip, but it was about camping and it was supposed to be when were in New Zealand or Australia. I bought it a good year before the trip. At least I had a card for him.
Today we are taking a Thai cooking class at a farm where they grow some of the produce. We are going to a market before to learn what the local products are. Don loves taking pictures at markets so this will be a good start to his day.
By Jane Henninger December 10, 2023
Don woke and returned to the Plaza of the Three Kings for the early morning sunlight to best light the statue. To his surprise a worker was busily placing flower leis and golden sash belts on the statues. This helped bright the scene greatly
After our now standard noodle breakfast, we engaged a local taxi driver to take us outside the ancient city walls with their protective moat to both Wat Umong, the Tunnel Temple, and Wat Sri Suphan, the Silver Temple. After breakfast there were two other Wats I wanted to see. One was the silver wat and the other was outside the old city in caves on the outskirts of Chiang Mai. We got a cab to take us to the cave one and had him wait so he could take us to the one in town.
By Jane Henninger September 22, 2023

We cleaned up after playing with the elephants in the river and went to check out several local Buddhist Temples of interest.

On the way back to the hotel yesterday, July 20th, we had discovered Wat Inthakhin Sadue Muang almost in the middle of the street, but Don had been too tired to appreciate it and he did not take any pictures, then. 


By Jane Henninger September 21, 2023

I had been looking forward to this day for at least a year, when we started looking at experiences along our chosen route! We had an early morning pick-up for the tuk-tuk trip to the elephant sanctuary. We seemed to be the only guests for this morning visit since no others were picked up from nearby hotels. An hour and a half drive into the jungle-covered mountains and through hamlets of a few huts brought us to the sanctuary camp. We crossed the small stream on a rickety bamboo and cable footbridge, took a right turn at a small, local wat, and walked about a half a kilometer to the small discovery and rehabilitation center. We were given tunics to wear over our clothes, as protection for both us and the elephants, before we met our first pachyderm BFF’s (Best Friends Forever.) 


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