We arrived at Vang Vieng in the afternoon, and as we were eating lunch, we noticed some rockets and explosions in the distance. After eating, we headed upstream to see what was going on.
What we found was a local festival. There were all these villagers, with canisters of explosives tied onto long bamboo poles – giant homemade bottle rockets. The largest ones were twenty feet long! Some of the teenager boys were dressed up like women, and everyone was going around comparing who had the biggest rocket and whose went the farthest and/or highest.
There were two launching ladders, where they shot off the rockets in some sort of contest, while children frolicked in the stream below. Occasionally the rockets exploded right on the stand. It was delightfully dangerous and everybody was having a good time.
We discovered later that the town was celebrating the annual rocket festival, to ask the gods for rain. We really enjoyed watching an actual cultural event (one not staged half-heartedly for tourists); we were extremely lucky to have stumbled upon it, as it only occurs during the full moon in May.
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great views at lunch
a boy waits on the bridge while a rocket goes off in the distance
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U.S. airstrip in Vang Vieng |
An interesting thing about Vang Vieng is that it’s just this little town in Laos, but right in the middle there’s an airstrip that was built by the U.S. We don’t know why it was built, but it probably wasn’t a humanitarian effort. Laos, it turns out, is the most heavily bombed country in the world, courtesy of secret American efforts to eradicate the North Vietnamese carting guns down the Ho Chi Minh Trail during the Vietnam war.
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