Indian buffet breakfast, 8:30 ride mostly flat and downhill through tea plantations, a tea factory with one of the oddest lectures we’ve ever heard.
First day of biking in Kerala
One ferry, one flat, another stop at Decathlon, the changing of the pedals, and a drive out of town over the Periyar River to ride to Horn Bill Camp
With our guide at the Elephant park:
Toddy:
Touring Cochin with Dominic
A leisurely exit, the Jewish Quarter, our first Indian meal in India, banana snacks, cuttlefish at the seafood market
Last day in Laos
Yesterday morning we decided to get serious about planning the Kerala portion of our India trip. We had been planning to leave LP on Friday, but found that the only really good flight left only on Thursdays and Saturdays, so we suddenly decided to cut our Laos trip another day short and fly straight to Cochin the next morning. It all came together amazingly quickly and by 1 PM we were renting motorbikes and heading to the waterfall, about 45 minutes away.
That night, our best meal in ages at le elephant.
At the movies in Luang Prabang
One of the first documentaries ever filmed and drinks two for one! What’s not to like?
In 1925, eight years before Merian C. Cooper and Ernest B. Schoedsack unleashed King Kong on the moviegoing public, they began filming a very different movie, mostly deep in the jungle between Laos (then Lan Xang) and Thailand (then Siam).
Chang: A Drama of the Wilderness, a silent action-adventure film masquerading as a documentary, was made without actors or trained animals. The cast was made up of Lao villagers and untamed jungle animals, including a tiger, a leopard, and a herd of elephants.
The 60-minute film focuses on the life of a Lao carpenter named Kru, his wife Chantui, son Nah, and daughter Ladah, and their daily struggle for survival. (The actors weren’t related but became a family for the movie.) We see Kru and his people hunting tigers, luring leopards into hidden pits, and trapping and attempting to domesticate a herd of elephants.