As always, Hannah and I had two options to reach our next city.
Option #1: Take a bus from Vang Vieng to Vientiane.
Option #2: Kayak from Vang Vieng to Vientiane...with a tuk-tuk driving us the last two hours.
Hannah and I went with the kayak.
For the most part, because it was the dry season, the rapids were tiny. However, there was one stretch where the rapids were pretty substantial. Our guide told us that 75% of kayaks capsize during this one stretch of rapids. In our group there were four kayaks. The first two capsized. The third, the one our guide was in, made it through without a problem. I'm no math expert but that seemed to guarantee that Hannah and I would be going for a swim. And well, we did. I think we made it about 60% of the way through the rapids when Hannah and I both started to go, "Whoah! Whoah! Whoah!!!." The next thing I knew we were floating downstream.
We ended up stopping for lunch right by the rapids and I thought to myself, "I'll get someone else flipping over so people can see how hard it was for Hannah and I." Well, I videotaped the next kayak to go down the rapids...and they made it without a problem. Okay I thought, statistically the next kayak will surely flip over. Well, I recorded the next group...and they made it too. And so did the next group. Apparently Hannah and I are just really bad kayakers.
Here's some footage of what we went through:
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
1 comment:
no, that didn't look easy! it didn't even look like something that skill would help with. granted, i've never kayaked, but that looked more like the overwhelming odds would be to capsize and not capsizing is just luck. also, did you have all your earthly possessions with you, or did someone else have those so they don't get wet?
Post a Comment