Male gay massage in laos
Now why did I become a little bit embittered after a while, one might ask. Be prepared to deal with scams, double pricing and kickbacks.Don't think you have any rights, this is NOT a Western society.Be prepared to leave the country on short notice, leaving everything behind.Be prepared to lose everything you invest (financially and emotionally) in the relationship.I have the following advice (probably valid for Thailand as well as Laos) : And yes, like in Thailand falang cannot own property in Laos. We were thinking of buying or building a small house and looked around everywhere for land (btw, a decent piece of land on the outskirts of the capital can be had for about 200,000 baht, a new 8×10 house for about 400,000 baht – very cheap compared to Western Europe). To cut this long and possibly boring story short, I went back to Laos in August of this year with the thought of marrying and possibly buying some property. I thought about it hard, and yes I have an English degree and teaching experience (with adults and not for English though), but still haven't decided, the money has not run out yet. I was fed up with my job back home and thought about taking up a teaching career. Again we had a good time and I told her I was thinking of settling down in Thailand or Laos.
I returned a bit early from South America and went back to LOS and Vientiane in April 2003. But that's another story and another website. Afterwards I went on south overland to Bali, Australia and South America. Does it strike anyone as odd that people here need two visas for travelling, the first from their government to be able to leave your own country…? We travelled all around Laos and Thailand and had a great time. We got her a passport, a visa and off we went. I wanted to travel to the South of Laos and back into Thailand. Somewhat to her astonishment, partly due to the fact that her niece had told her that falang are nothing but no-good liars and cheaters, I turned up one morning on her doorstep unannounced six weeks later, after having toured Chiang Mai and Myanmar. By the way, I had a whole year off, so time was no problem. Looking back on things, she was right and I was probably too suspicious.Īfter that I went alone by slow boat to Thailand and she returned home. At this point I was still not convinced she wasn't a working girl, although she repeatedly told me she wasn't. Everyone has to pay the price… so stop complaining about the 2 AM closing time in LOS.Ī few days later I travelled on to Vang Vieng and Louang Prabang and asked her to join me. Did you know that last year all bars closed around midnight and a few nightclubs remained open until very late, but since this year EVERYTHING CLOSES AT 11 PM ! This is supposedly to keep the youth from going out and drinking (as if they don't have any parents to keep an eye on them). Later it turned out that the birthday girl was up for more partying and that her friend was in fact her niece, someone who hardly went out, except on special occasions.Īnyway, we hit it off, went on to a disco called Chess Cafe (nowadays a place apparently teeming with ladyboys, homosexual falang and working girls), then to the house of a long termer we got acquainted with until the morning light. Me and an English guy I was travelling with at the time ended up in Samlor Pub, talking to a girl that was having a birthday party. I have to admit that you have to be extremely lucky to find a good girl without investing too much time or money).
By the way, Thailand is not a sex tourist destination, but more about that in a later submission.Īnyway, after a couple of months I ended up in Laos, Vientiane, where I met this very nice and friendly girl, a non BG (there are no such things as bars in Laos). I didn't get stuck in the LOS because of some lady of the night, above all because I didn't meet one. I had a RTW-ticket, and yes, I used all of my flight coupons. I'm a somewhat over aged backpacker, upper thirties, that started travelling in June 2002, starting in Asia, Bangkok. Relaxed atmosphere, very friendly people, good and cheap food, almost everybody has more than a good time over there. It's about what I experienced, unfortunately firsthand, in the country almost everybody is raving about, Laos. This submission could also be titled "Think twice”.