When we first turned up in, what in those days was the small town of Vang Vieng, (must have been 92 or 93?), it was as close to paradise as anywhere else we’d come across on our backpacker trail across S. E. Asia. Idyllic, bustling little market town supplying the surrounding Hmong villages and set on the banks of the Song River opposite some of the most picturesque karst scenery to be found in this part of the world.
Locals were all very friendly though they obviously weren’t used to tourists yet since several of them spoke to us in Russian! In those days Vang Vieng was nearly the end of the road – the ‘highway’ from Vientiane running out of macadam at Muang Kasi a few clicks further on at the head of the valley – and from there it was an arduous and potentially dangerous dirt track all the way to Luang Prabang.
Ok maybe it wasn’t totally paradise then since we’d been warned about venturing too far into ‘Indian country’ across the river and trucks heading on to Luang Prabang, (no buses back then), had to form up into convoys with military escorts in Kasi before venturing any further north. (There were problems with anti-government Hmong guerrillas at the time.)
Seem to remember there being a choice of 2 guesthouses in Vang Vieng at the time and during a stay of 2 days in high season we met an English cyclist, (hi Ian), one Aussie (hey Matt) and a Japanese couple.
The security situation might have been a ropey around the edges but the town and surrounding landscapes were certainly paradisaical yet it seem these days that the scenery’s taken a back seat to the ‘scene’ itself. Backpackers don’t necessarily go there for the limestone features they go there to paaaarty! They don’t go to discover Hmong culture they go to share buckets of ‘vodka Red bull’ with like-minded ‘travellers’ (sic) from Tel Aviv, Toulouse, Munich or Manchester. Forget the caves – let’s go tubing! Get the t-shirt, get stoned, get drunk and get laid. If the Gallagher family travelled to Asia they’d go to Vang Vieng!
Ok even cynical old us were backpackers once and who doesn’t like a bit of a party, (and of course everyone has their own perceptions of what paradise should be like), but go and do it somewhere else less idyllic that can’t be ruined – like Pai or Ibiza?
Sure a lot of money has flowed into the town along with the tubers but in other ways Vang Vieng has paid dearly for being pretty and will certainly never be the same again.
If you are backpacking around Laos you’ve got to go there – it’s a rite of passage – but just try and bear in mind the local culture, don’t forget to check out the scenery a bit, play safe and show some respect! (Last time we were there we felt compelled to say something to 2 English girls we came across about to ‘visit’ a Hmong village in their bikinis!?)
A sliver lining to the over-popularity of Vang Vieng cloud is that it takes the pressure off other small, picturesque, northern Lao towns, so whilst we gave up including VV in our Lao itineraries a long while ago, (primarily due to customer feedback), we now include a 2 day stay in the equally spectacular surrounds of Nong Khiaw, so check that out whilst it remains idyllic!
Cheers and sabai dee!












Not just in Laos, but in Isaan and everywhere else for that manner
I have to agree. The place is stunning but the sight of drunk europeans with their shirt off stumbling about the place ruins it. The locals now barely tolerate you and are as unfriendly as I met in Laos. Such a shame. Nong Khiaw and Muang Knoi are much more idyllic, but I hope they don’t share the same fate as Vang Vieng.
Hope so too but last time I was in Muang Singh it was getting pretty bad too. Pax with locks and bare-feet wandering down the main street – ‘hey man where’s the opium?’
Cheers.
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