‘That will be $2.’
‘Can I have a receipt please?’
‘You can have the stamp for $1.’
‘Can I have a receipt please?’
‘OK. You can go.’
Border crossing in Laos.

My first glimpse of Khmer script on this trip
I have left my favourite place in Laos – Don Det. It just exudes ‘chill’ and I love it. On my day off I explored the islands of Don Det and Don Khon, ate, and hung out with a group of Belgians, and also with a German and Australian (from my home town Adelaide).

Little path on Don Khon

Sunset on Don Det

Kids playing at sunset, Don Det
Today I visited the largest waterfall in Asia (by volume), bribed my way through the Laos/Cambodia border crossing famous for its corruption, and sped along an often dusty road to the Cambodian Mekong town of Stung Treng (passing 23000km on the way).

Phapheng waterfall

My lovely frangipani

23000km

The dusty road

Crossing the bridge to Stung Theng
Tomorrow a change of plan. A detour to a secret homestay on a secret island in the Mekong. The marketing people haven’t done a good job at spreading the word. I’m very excited about it.
For the record: Bribery and crossing from Laos into Cambodia.
– Laos exit stamp. They wanted $2, but on insisting I get a receipt, I got the stamp for free.
– Medical check. I was tested for malaria by having a little machine pointed in the vague direction of my head, and waiting for it to beep. I don’t have malaria, and was able to reduce the bribe amount from $2 down to $1 by smiling and acting stupid (not too hard for me).. ☺
– Cambodia visa. I paid $35 (it should have been $30). No receipt was possible, and no discussion was possible. It costs $2 more if you don’t have a passport photo. No further bribe for the entrance stamp.
I just wondering, how big is the waterfall (the size; distance between here & there side)?
Not sure. From the viewpoint it only looked about 100m wide. The whole Mekong is very wide at that point though spanning across many islands.
It looks beautiful there, yet very warm for biking! The waterfall is stunning.
The corruption at the border is disconcerting, but they kind of have you over a barrel, don’t they?
There’s not much you can do about it.
I’m interested in your Cambodia leg because I gave up a month in Cambodia right now to make a life at home.
My trip has been nice so far. 🙂