Tribasia Blog

Thursday, January 7, 2010

Phongsali: a Jewel in the Tribal Crown


(Picture by Californian Em/Flickr)
We hope you got a great start to this new year :))
2010 started for us with well-worn shoes and wide-opened eyes. We just spent 6 days in the province of Phongsali, the northernmost corner of Laos. We could not keep up with the number of ethnic groups (Akha, Hor and Lue) and their sub-groups (Akha Meuo, Akha Pixor, Akha Nuquoy and more) we met as there were so many.

We went trekking really REALLY far and wide this time. We trekked jungle paths where we could not see much ahead of us except a maze of greenness. We got our heads and feet entangled in creepers, creeping plants of all kinds and first view on weird creepy crawlies. We crossed streams and creeks, climbed steep and narrow paths and enjoyed wonderful views of pristine jungle.

On our last day, we even ended up walking two hours in the dark back to Ban Phonsa-At where we were staying. On the plus side, we could enjoy an unspoiled view of the Orion constellation and wished upon a few shooting stars. On the down side, we had to go up a dusty and windy mountainous road that seemed to never end and we always got a tad-too-warm welcome from dogs in the rare hamlets we came across.

It was all worth it in the end. We better understood the diversity and differences among Akha people. We spent time with these ethnic groups in their natural setting.

We are now in Luang Nam Tha province. We will post further news shortly to tell you about this new 'tribal' chapter ;0)

Labels: , , , , , ,

Thursday, November 12, 2009

Trekking in southern Xishuangbanna: Bulangshan to Guangming via Yako


We left the comforts of Jinghong city (Xishuangbanna area, southern China) to go trekking alongside the Burmese border.
We started off with the usual few hours' ride on a local bus followed by an overnight stay at the small bricked town of Bulanghsan (literally meaning: the mount of the Bulang), where we indeed met many Bulang people.

Rather than folk lullabies at bedtime, we were treated to the blasting sound of overzealous karaoke singers.
In the early hours, we were awoken by the town's speakers relaying news from the national radio (propaganda starts at home!). With bags under our eyes and sore ears, we were ready to leave Bulangshan.

It took us another 20 minutes and a dozen enquiries with locals to find the path leading towards Yako, our intended destination. We were finally on track!
Our enthusiasm got crushed when 5 minutes out of town, we were stopped by soldiers at a military checkpoint. With our smattering of Chinese and their abysmal English, we quickly understood that they would not let us go through. When I asked them 'Why?', the answer was '"No why'. It made sense, we were in China after all!
We then opted, with a bit of hesitation, to become strategic and bypass the checkpoint.

How? We sneaked through by hiding in the fields behind trees and bushes besides the military station. Our strategy was risky but it paid off. We were able to come back on the dirt path at some point and free to trek -although we did watch our backs.
We first went through a traditional Bulang village with houses built on stilts still made of wood. We had little time to explore it as we still had another 7 hours' walk ahead of us.

We then went up and up and up until we reached a viewpoint overlooking a luxuriant valley with a wall of mountains in the distance. Behind these mountains laid Myanmar/Burma. We were that close to it but not up to some illegal border crossing. Instead, we kept on the track for another 2 hours before meeting a Hanni man and thereafter a group of Akha women in the fields pointing us to a shortcut. It took us another 2 hours to reach a village, which we believed was Yako.

Instead of it, we realized by conversing (or shall we say hand talking?) to a local woman that we had landed in Bupa, a village from the Hani minority. Luckily enough, we were only 5 minutes away from our intended destination. We went to Yako for a walk around the village but in the end we preferred the atmosphere of Bupa.

Besides, the lady we had met had offered us to provide us with accommodation for the night. She was a 55-year old Hani lady with three grown-up married daughters and a house spacious enough to welcome us. Her husband came back from working in the fields just before night fall.
We spent a lovely evening in their company. Our dinner consisted in bowls of boiled rice, pickled vegetables, fried greens and sweet pumpkin.Yummy!

The following day, we left our hosts after breakfast to trek onto our next destination: the village of Guangming. We walked again up and up and up. Our shoulders were starting to feel the weight of our bagpacks quite badly.

Fortunately, this time the trek was a shorter one and we arrived three hours later in what we thought was Guangming. It wasn't! We were instead in a beautiful Akha village surrounded by the jungle on one side and vegetable patches on the other - shame about the dogs!
Luckily again, we were only a short stroll from our final destination: Mengshuo. From there, we rode to Damenlong and then onto our starting point, Jinghong, for a nice shower.
We cannot tell you how good it felt to walk without a bag pack the following day! :))

Labels: , , , , , , , ,