Showing posts with label Laos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Laos. Show all posts

Friday, 1 January 2010

Lonely Planet - Laos (Free Download)


Laos Lonely Planet Books (6th Edition August 2007)
(Free Download)








01 of 10 - Pg 013-014 Contents.pdf (81.77KM)

http://www.mediafire.com/?ooknnmznwnu


02 of 10 - Pg 015-026 The Authors, Itineraries, Getting Started, Snapshot.pdf (1.63MB)

http://www.mediafire.com/?buxozujgy4t


03 of 10 - Pg 027-084 History, Culture, Environment.pdf (514.48KB)

http://www.mediafire.com/?nyfyuly2jk0


04 of 10 - Pg 085-131 Vientiane And Around.pdf (779.65KB)


http://www.mediafire.com/?di4ako0dm5z


05 of 10 - Pg 132-225 Northern Laos.pdf (1.16MB)

http://www.mediafire.com/?nixdzdjm24m


06 of 10 - Pg 226-252 Central Laos.pdf (602.91KB)

http://www.mediafire.com/?jxjnwmw4iyy


07 of 10 - Pg 253-297 Southern Laos.pdf (828.28KB)

http://www.mediafire.com/?yd2dcjnlgoi


08 of 10 - Pg 298-341 Directory, Transport, Health.pdf (559.38KB)

http://www.mediafire.com/?rqcc5ltkzyt


09 of 10 - Pg 342-352 Language, Glossary.pdf (239.08KB)

http://www.mediafire.com/?3iyrznolyuq


10 of 10 - Pg 362-369 Index.pdf (105.1KB)

http://www.mediafire.com/?zjoominii1z



Whole Folder (10 Files):

http://tinyurl.com/y9bygso






Wednesday, 15 April 2009

Happy New Year (Songkran Festival)


HAPPY NEW YEAR...
Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand...



The Thai New Year (สงกรานต์ = Songkran in Thai language) is fixed every year from 13 to 15 April. The Burmese New Year Thingyan is announced by the traditional calendar of Myanmar Team and normally falls around 13 April. Cambodia celebrates from 13 to 15 April as the Cambodian New Year on the full moon of the eleventh lunar month, at the end of Cambodia's rainy season. The Lao New Year is celebrated every year from 13 to 16 April.



The Water Festival (Thai:Songkran:สงกรานต์) is the form New Year celebrations take in Southeast Asian countries such as Thailand, Myanmar (Burma), Cambodia, Laos and the Chinese province Yunnan on the day of the full moon of the 11th month of each year. It is called the 'Water Festival' by Westerners because people throw water at one another as part of the cleansing ritual to welcome the new year.

Traditionally people gently sprinkled water on one another as a sign of respect, but as the new year falls during the hottest month in South East Asia, many people end up dousing strangers and passersby in vehicles in boisterous celebration. The festival has many different names specific to each country, such as Songkran in Thailand and Pi-Mai Lao in Laos (translates as "New Year"), Chaul Chnam Thmey in Cambodia, and Thingyan in Myanmar.


The New Year is celebrated in other south asian countries, based on the astrological event of the sun beginning its northward journey. Traditional dance, singing and cultural shows are performed together during the festival. Religious activities in the tradition of Theravada Buddhism are also carried out at both Pagoda and Monastery. Young people visit elders to pay respect during this period.












So, i am having a looooong holiday, because in Laos where i am now, the government has declared a week long holiday... No government offices activities, no banks, no school... so, sleep and eat and play water... LOL!!










Wednesday, 26 November 2008

Giant Mekong Catfish (Part 2)










Giant River Stingrays Found Near Thai City

Giant Mekong Catfish (Part 1)

I just back from this area last two days after attending a friend's marriage ceremony. I been staying at his house for four days and taking this opportunity to visit the area. The island tour is simply great! This is my first time i have been to this area (Khone Island) which is about 800KM from Vientiane, the capital City of Laos where i am staying, and is only about ten or less KM to the border of Cambodia. I will share with you some story later in the blog...

BTW, the pictures shown here is nothing to do with my trip. Credit to National Geographic in where I got those pictures from.




Children pose with a Mekong giant catfish caught at Khone Falls in Laos, near the border with Cambodia. While the weight of the fish in the photo is unknown, the species holds the world record as the largest freshwater fish ever caught, weighing in at 646 pounds (293 kilograms). The Mekong giant catfish is listed as critically endangered by the World Conservation Union. But a new dam project planned for Khone Falls threatens the migration of this so-called megafish

A fisher returns to shore with a Mekong giant catfish caught at Khone Falls in Laos. The huge species is illegal to catch and is generally caught accidentally. Today there may only be a few hundred adult giant catfish left in the entire Mekong River system. The group of fishers who caught this giant catfish initially hoped to sell it. But when they could not find any buyers, they ended up distributing the meat among people in their village.

A fisher at Khone Falls in Laos holds a large Bagarius catfish. His basket trap, known as a Lop in the Lao language, is also used to catch fish such as the pa se ee, a carp native to the area. Scientists say the Khone Falls area supports at least 201 fish species, including many endemic or endangered species. It also supports one of the few remaining concentrations of freshwater dolphins still living in the Mekong.


A child poses with the head of a Mekong giant catfish caught at Khone Falls in Laos. The giant catfish was once plentiful throughout the Mekong River system, but in the last century the population has declined 95 to 99 percent, according to Hogan of the Megafishes Project. Last year only one giant catfish was caught at Khone Falls. "Everyone heard about the catch, and hundreds of people showed up to look at it," said photographer Suthep Kritsanavarin.


A young boy uses a rope to drag himself across the raging Sahong channel at Khone Falls in Laos. The Sahong channel is the only channel in the area without a waterfall—and is the proposed site for a hydroelectric dam that environmentalists say will cut off a vital migratory fish route. So far the Mekong remains almost untouched. Only China has dammed the main stream of the river at two locations. But there are now plans for a dozen dams to be built on the Mekong in China, Laos, and Thailand. "The Mekong River is the most productive river on Earth," said Hogan of the Megafishes Project. "The damming of the river could have devastating consequences for fisheries."


A man named Samnieng traverses Khone Falls in Laos holding a basket trap for catching fish. Barefoot fishers use bamboo ladders to reach the middle of the falls to jam the trap between rocks to hold it in place. "It takes a lot of skill, and it's very scary," said photographer Kritsanavarin. "There have been tourists who have fallen into these waters and died."


Bamboo filter traps stand in the raging waters of the Sahong channel at Khone Falls in Laos. The fishing contraptions force fish up angled bamboo ramps where they land at the fishers' feet. "The way the fish is caught is totally in sync with the environment," said Hogan of the Megafishes Project. "Water goes up and down according to the flood cycle, so the fishers have very specific, efficient, and elegant methods of fishing based on the season." Conservationists warn that a proposed dam on the channel will devastate the fisheries there.





Giant Catfish Faces Dam Risk in Asia
(Giant Mekong Catfish = Pangasianodon gigas)
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