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Vang Vieng

Vang Vieng (Lao: ວັງວຽງ) is a tourist-oriented town in Laos in Vientiane Province which takes about four hours through bus from the national capital Vientiane. The town lies on the Nam Song River. The most notable feature of the area is the karst topography surrounding the town.[1]

Vang Vieng
ວັງວຽງ
Vang Vieng viewed from a hot air balloon
Vang Vieng
Location in Laos
Coordinates: 18°56′N 102°27′E / 18.933°N 102.450°E / 18.933; 102.450Coordinates: 18°56′N 102°27′E / 18.933°N 102.450°E / 18.933; 102.450
CountryLaos
ProvinceVientiane
Population
 • Total25,000
 • Religions
Buddhism
Time zoneUTC+7 (ICT)

History

Vang Vieng was first settled around 1353 as a staging post between Luang Prabang and Vientiane. Originally named Mouang Song after the body of the deceased King Phra Nha Phao of Phai Naam was seen floating down the river, the town was renamed Vang Vieng during French colonial rule in the 1890s.[2][3]

Significant expansion of the town and its infrastructure occurred during the 1964-1973 Vietnam War when the US constructed an air force base and runway that was used by Air America. The airstrip was then called "Lima site 6". The runway has not been built on and can easily be seen via aerial or satellite images located between the main street and the national highway (Route 13). American plane shelters also remain in the area.

Since Laos opened up for tourism in the late 1990s, the town has grown substantially due to the influx of backpacker tourism and associated business development. The town became an established tourism center due to the opportunities for adventure tourism along the Nam Song River and in the spectacular limestone karst landscape surrounding the town.[1]

Climate

Vang Vieng has a tropical monsoon climate according to the Köppen climate classification, with a distinct dry season and a lengthy and rainy wet season, totalling about 3300 millimeters a year. The wet season lasts seven months, from April to October, and is characterized by high amounts of rainfall, which peaks in July with an average of 840 millimeters. The dry season spans November to March, and features cooler temperatures than during the rest of the year. The weather in Vang Vieng is coolest during the months of December and January, and hottest from March to May. Overall, the temperature ranges from an average low of 13.5 °C in January to an average high of 34 °C in April.[4]

Climate data for Vang Vieng
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 28.1
(82.6)
30.5
(86.9)
32.6
(90.7)
34.0
(93.2)
32.9
(91.2)
32.3
(90.1)
31.1
(88.0)
31.0
(87.8)
31.4
(88.5)
31.0
(87.8)
29.5
(85.1)
27.5
(81.5)
31.0
(87.8)
Daily mean °C (°F) 20.8
(69.4)
22.8
(73.0)
25.2
(77.4)
27.5
(81.5)
27.8
(82.0)
27.9
(82.2)
27.3
(81.1)
27.2
(81.0)
27.1
(80.8)
25.8
(78.4)
23.6
(74.5)
20.8
(69.4)
25.3
(77.6)
Average low °C (°F) 13.5
(56.3)
15.2
(59.4)
17.9
(64.2)
21.1
(70.0)
22.8
(73.0)
23.6
(74.5)
23.6
(74.5)
23.4
(74.1)
22.9
(73.2)
20.6
(69.1)
17.8
(64.0)
14.2
(57.6)
19.7
(67.5)
Average rainfall mm (inches) 9
(0.4)
18
(0.7)
49
(1.9)
174
(6.9)
369
(14.5)
489
(19.3)
840
(33.1)
662
(26.1)
508
(20.0)
115
(4.5)
44
(1.7)
23
(0.9)
3,300
(130)
Source: Climate-Data.org

Transportation

The city is served by the Vientiane–Boten Expressway since its opening in 2020; previously the only major road access was through Route 13. It is served by a station on the Boten–Vientiane railway.

Tourism

 
South view from the top of Mount Nam Xay during the monsoon
 
Landscape from the top of Mount Nam Xay, early morning

Vang Vieng has become a backpacker-oriented town, with the main street featuring guest houses, bars, restaurants, internet cafes, and tour agencies.[5] Attractions of the town include inner tubing and kayaking on the Nam Song River, which, until 2012, was lined with bars selling Beer Lao and Lao-Lao, and equipped with rope swings, zip lines, swimming and diving into blue lagoon, and large decks for socializing.[6]

Vang Vieng locals have organised themselves into a cooperative business association to sell tubing as an activity, in a system in which 1,555 participating households are divided into 10 village units, with each unit taking its turn on a ten-day rotation to rent inner-tubes to the tourists.[2]

Thanongsi Sorangkoun, owner of an organic farm in Vang Vieng, says that tubing inadvertently began in 1999 when he bought a few rubber tubes for his farm volunteers to relax on along the river.[7]

During the wet season, the river can be a series of rapids.[1]

Other activities include trekking and rock climbing in the limestone mountains.[5] There are also numerous caves, such as Tham Phu Kham half an hour north of Vang Vieng by tuk-tuk or the Tham Non and Tham Jang caves closer to Vang Vieng.[8]

A market five kilometres north of town sells Lao textiles, household items, and foodstuffs. The town is on the main north–south highway, Route 13 from Luang Prabang to the capital, Vientiane. It is about eight hours by bus to Luang Prabang and four hours to Vientiane (152 km).[6]

Just a short walk from town are many ethnic Lao, Kmou, and Hmong villages, while Vang Vieng Organic Farm is around 4 km north of the town in the village of Phoudindaeng. There are opportunities for community involvement such as teaching, while it is also possible to stay in a house made of mud bricks at the organic farm.[9][10]

Wat Done Hor is the oldest of the five temples in Vang Vieng, built in 1903.[3]

Impact of tourism

Due to the influx of backpackers, Vang Vieng locals have seen drastic changes in their community.[11] In recent years, Vang Vieng has become a stop on the Southeast Asia backpacker circuit and the main street has many guest houses, bars, restaurants, internet cafes and tour agencies.[11]

There are concerns that the town is in danger of losing its charm as it becomes full of tourists, mushroom shakes, and episodes of Friends, a US sitcom shown in many bars.[12] The New Zealand Herald wrote, "If teenagers ruled the world, it might resemble Vang Vieng".[13] Safety measures for the tubing have been described as "non-existent". Tubing combined with heavy drinking has resulted in tourist drownings.[14] It was reported that 22 tourists died on the river in 2011.[15]

The Lao government is planning to put more controls on the urban sprawl of Vang Vieng,[16] while the Laos National Tourism Administration has "awareness programs" that ask tourists to "respect and strictly follow the rules, regulations, tradition and cultures of the Lao people", while also educating local people to maintain the Lao identity, way of life, tradition, and culture and not imitate tourist behaviour.[17] Vang Vieng is known to have a problem with drugs, which are easily accessible to both tourists and local children.[18]

Locals have said that tubing and tourism are destroying the town's culture and encouraging crime among children, while loud music destroys the area's tranquility.[19] A report on the future of tourism in Vang Vieng found that many budget tubers were "oblivious to, or uncaring about, the types of social, economic and environmental impact they are associated with."[2] A master plan for Vang Vieng notes that local grievances include pollution, inappropriate behaviour of tourists and environmental damage.[20]

Brett Dakin, the author of Another Quiet American, a chronicle of two years in Laos working for the tourist authority, said, "Each time a young Australian woman strolls down the street in a bikini, a bearded American smokes a joint on a guesthouse terrace, or a group of Koreans tumbles drunkenly out of a restaurant, it saps a little more of the essence of a town like Vang Vieng."[17]

Crime

As of June 2014, the US State Department says that although Laos generally has a low rate of violent crime, "some tourists have been robbed and sexually assaulted".[21] Many restaurants in the Vang Vieng area offer menu items, particularly "pizzas", "shakes", or "teas" that may contain unknown substances or opiates. These products are often advertised as "happy" or "special" items. These unknown substances or opiates can be dangerous, causing serious illness or even death.[21]

Tourist deaths and injuries

Vang Vieng's hospital recorded 27 tourist deaths in 2011 due to drowning or diving head first into rocks.[22] Most fatalities occur on the same bar-heavy stretch of river that's less than 1 km long. In a 2012 interview with The Guardian newspaper, a senior doctor at the Vang Vieng Hospital, Dr Chit, said the overall figure is higher because "many fatalities are taken straight to Vientiane".[22] In early 2012, two Australian backpackers died within a month. Dr Chit said 5 to 10 backpackers a day arrive at the local hospital with injuries such as broken bones or infected gashes, or sickness caused by alcohol intoxication or other drugs. "There are no safety measures or supervision, no helmets," says Dr Chit. "We're not equipped to treat anything serious."[22]

The Guardian reported that tourist deaths have brought a sense of bad karma for Laotian villagers living near the river. Today, local people avoid the river, once a part of everyday life for bathing, playing, fishing, and washing clothes. "We don't want to swim in the river any more," explains La Phengxayya, 25, a primary school teacher in Phoudindaeng, the village closest to the tubing area. "We believe there are evil spirits in the water because so many young foreigners have died.".[22]

Government crackdown

In the third quarter of 2012, the Lao government carried out a crackdown in Vang Vieng, pulling down all the riverside bars. Tubing is still going on, but in a much more controlled fashion.[23]

One climbing instructor was reported to have said that visitors are now spending more time participating in activities such as climbing, kayaking, and mountain biking. "Vang Vieng has come back to us again… it's like it used to be", he was quoted as saying.[24]

The Bangkok Post reported that although the number of Westerners has dropped, visitors from Japan, China, and South Korea are on the rise, making up for the loss. The changing trend posed a new problem as tourists from Asia did not favour cheap accommodation and preferred more upmarket places, the report added.[25]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c . VangVieng.org. 2011. Archived from the original on 1 July 2014.
  2. ^ a b c . STDP Laos. August 2009. Archived from the original on 29 August 2011. Retrieved 12 October 2011.
  3. ^ a b Phouangsava, P (n.d.). "History of Vang Vieng". Visiting Muong Lao. Retrieved 15 June 2020.
  4. ^ "Vang Vieng Climate". Climate-Data.org.
  5. ^ a b . Lao Travel Guide. 2008. Archived from the original on 2 December 2013.
  6. ^ a b "Vang Vieng tubing". goseasia. 2011.
  7. ^ "Down the tube". The Sydney Morning Herald. 30 June 2011.
  8. ^ "Vang Vieng ... as it used to be". Lao.co.uk. 2007.
  9. ^ . Travel to Teach. 2008. Archived from the original on 28 July 2011. Retrieved 15 February 2011.
  10. ^ . Green Traveller Guide. 5 January 2009. Archived from the original on 2 April 2013.
  11. ^ a b . The Sydney Morning Herald. 12 April 2012. Archived from the original on 15 April 2012.
  12. ^ "Paradise Lost". The Sydney Morning Herald. 26 August 2009.
  13. ^ Kennedy-Good, Matt (22 September 2009). "Vang Vieng: A tragedy waiting to happen". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 15 December 2014.
  14. ^ "Bournemouth man died after river 'tubing' in Laos". 14 September 2011.[dead link]
  15. ^ "Man dies 'tubing' in Laos river". The Age. 12 January 2012.
  16. ^ . Vientiane Times. 16 June 2009. Archived from the original on 19 August 2011.
  17. ^ a b "Laos threatened by sex and drugs". The Daily Telegraph. 17 March 2010.
  18. ^ Dhiradityakul, Kris. "The decline and fall of Vang Vieng". Chiang Mai Mail. Retrieved 15 December 2014.
  19. ^ "Down the tube". The Sydney Morning Herald. 30 June 2011.
  20. ^ "Vang Vieng Town and Environs Master Plan, 2010 -2020" (PDF). Hansen Partnership. December 2009.
  21. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 5 September 2015. Retrieved 25 June 2017.
  22. ^ a b c d Haworth, Abigail (12 April 2012). "Vang Vieng, Laos: the world's most unlikely party town". The Guardian-The Observer. Retrieved 15 December 2014.
  23. ^ "The Party's Over". SBS Dateline. 16 October 2012.
  24. ^ "On my bike in lovely Laos". IOL Travel. 30 October 2013.
  25. ^ "Backpackers shun Vangvieng in Laos". Bangkok Post. 11 October 2013. Retrieved 15 December 2014.

External links

  •   Vang Vieng travel guide from Wikivoyage
  • Lao National Tourism Administration 16 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  • Tourism in Vang Vieng: Strategy for Staying Longer – Spending More - Dr Paul Rogers, Lao National Tourism Administration-Asian Development Bank, GMS Sustainable Tourism Development Project, August 2009
  • Vang Vieng Town and Environs Master Plan, 2010 -2020 - Hansen Partnership, Lao National Tourism Administration-Asian Development Bank, GMS Sustainable Tourism Development Project, December 2009
  • Vang Vieng Travel Guide 2 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  • Ultimate Vang Vieng Travel Guide 31 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  • Tubing Vang Vieng Guide 30 December 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  • community-based development programs.

vang, vieng, ງວຽງ, tourist, oriented, town, laos, vientiane, province, which, takes, about, four, hours, through, from, national, capital, vientiane, town, lies, song, river, most, notable, feature, area, karst, topography, surrounding, town, ງວຽງcity, viewed,. Vang Vieng Lao ວ ງວຽງ is a tourist oriented town in Laos in Vientiane Province which takes about four hours through bus from the national capital Vientiane The town lies on the Nam Song River The most notable feature of the area is the karst topography surrounding the town 1 Vang Vieng ວ ງວຽງCityVang Vieng viewed from a hot air balloonVang ViengLocation in LaosCoordinates 18 56 N 102 27 E 18 933 N 102 450 E 18 933 102 450 Coordinates 18 56 N 102 27 E 18 933 N 102 450 E 18 933 102 450CountryLaosProvinceVientianePopulation Total25 000 ReligionsBuddhismTime zoneUTC 7 ICT Contents 1 History 2 Climate 3 Transportation 4 Tourism 4 1 Impact of tourism 4 2 Crime 4 3 Tourist deaths and injuries 4 4 Government crackdown 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory EditVang Vieng was first settled around 1353 as a staging post between Luang Prabang and Vientiane Originally named Mouang Song after the body of the deceased King Phra Nha Phao of Phai Naam was seen floating down the river the town was renamed Vang Vieng during French colonial rule in the 1890s 2 3 Significant expansion of the town and its infrastructure occurred during the 1964 1973 Vietnam War when the US constructed an air force base and runway that was used by Air America The airstrip was then called Lima site 6 The runway has not been built on and can easily be seen via aerial or satellite images located between the main street and the national highway Route 13 American plane shelters also remain in the area Since Laos opened up for tourism in the late 1990s the town has grown substantially due to the influx of backpacker tourism and associated business development The town became an established tourism center due to the opportunities for adventure tourism along the Nam Song River and in the spectacular limestone karst landscape surrounding the town 1 Climate EditVang Vieng has a tropical monsoon climate according to the Koppen climate classification with a distinct dry season and a lengthy and rainy wet season totalling about 3300 millimeters a year The wet season lasts seven months from April to October and is characterized by high amounts of rainfall which peaks in July with an average of 840 millimeters The dry season spans November to March and features cooler temperatures than during the rest of the year The weather in Vang Vieng is coolest during the months of December and January and hottest from March to May Overall the temperature ranges from an average low of 13 5 C in January to an average high of 34 C in April 4 Climate data for Vang ViengMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage high C F 28 1 82 6 30 5 86 9 32 6 90 7 34 0 93 2 32 9 91 2 32 3 90 1 31 1 88 0 31 0 87 8 31 4 88 5 31 0 87 8 29 5 85 1 27 5 81 5 31 0 87 8 Daily mean C F 20 8 69 4 22 8 73 0 25 2 77 4 27 5 81 5 27 8 82 0 27 9 82 2 27 3 81 1 27 2 81 0 27 1 80 8 25 8 78 4 23 6 74 5 20 8 69 4 25 3 77 6 Average low C F 13 5 56 3 15 2 59 4 17 9 64 2 21 1 70 0 22 8 73 0 23 6 74 5 23 6 74 5 23 4 74 1 22 9 73 2 20 6 69 1 17 8 64 0 14 2 57 6 19 7 67 5 Average rainfall mm inches 9 0 4 18 0 7 49 1 9 174 6 9 369 14 5 489 19 3 840 33 1 662 26 1 508 20 0 115 4 5 44 1 7 23 0 9 3 300 130 Source Climate Data orgTransportation EditThe city is served by the Vientiane Boten Expressway since its opening in 2020 previously the only major road access was through Route 13 It is served by a station on the Boten Vientiane railway Tourism Edit South view from the top of Mount Nam Xay during the monsoon Landscape from the top of Mount Nam Xay early morning Vang Vieng has become a backpacker oriented town with the main street featuring guest houses bars restaurants internet cafes and tour agencies 5 Attractions of the town include inner tubing and kayaking on the Nam Song River which until 2012 was lined with bars selling Beer Lao and Lao Lao and equipped with rope swings zip lines swimming and diving into blue lagoon and large decks for socializing 6 Vang Vieng locals have organised themselves into a cooperative business association to sell tubing as an activity in a system in which 1 555 participating households are divided into 10 village units with each unit taking its turn on a ten day rotation to rent inner tubes to the tourists 2 Thanongsi Sorangkoun owner of an organic farm in Vang Vieng says that tubing inadvertently began in 1999 when he bought a few rubber tubes for his farm volunteers to relax on along the river 7 During the wet season the river can be a series of rapids 1 Other activities include trekking and rock climbing in the limestone mountains 5 There are also numerous caves such as Tham Phu Kham half an hour north of Vang Vieng by tuk tuk or the Tham Non and Tham Jang caves closer to Vang Vieng 8 A market five kilometres north of town sells Lao textiles household items and foodstuffs The town is on the main north south highway Route 13 from Luang Prabang to the capital Vientiane It is about eight hours by bus to Luang Prabang and four hours to Vientiane 152 km 6 Just a short walk from town are many ethnic Lao Kmou and Hmong villages while Vang Vieng Organic Farm is around 4 km north of the town in the village of Phoudindaeng There are opportunities for community involvement such as teaching while it is also possible to stay in a house made of mud bricks at the organic farm 9 10 Wat Done Hor is the oldest of the five temples in Vang Vieng built in 1903 3 Impact of tourism Edit Due to the influx of backpackers Vang Vieng locals have seen drastic changes in their community 11 In recent years Vang Vieng has become a stop on the Southeast Asia backpacker circuit and the main street has many guest houses bars restaurants internet cafes and tour agencies 11 There are concerns that the town is in danger of losing its charm as it becomes full of tourists mushroom shakes and episodes of Friends a US sitcom shown in many bars 12 The New Zealand Herald wrote If teenagers ruled the world it might resemble Vang Vieng 13 Safety measures for the tubing have been described as non existent Tubing combined with heavy drinking has resulted in tourist drownings 14 It was reported that 22 tourists died on the river in 2011 15 The Lao government is planning to put more controls on the urban sprawl of Vang Vieng 16 while the Laos National Tourism Administration has awareness programs that ask tourists to respect and strictly follow the rules regulations tradition and cultures of the Lao people while also educating local people to maintain the Lao identity way of life tradition and culture and not imitate tourist behaviour 17 Vang Vieng is known to have a problem with drugs which are easily accessible to both tourists and local children 18 Locals have said that tubing and tourism are destroying the town s culture and encouraging crime among children while loud music destroys the area s tranquility 19 A report on the future of tourism in Vang Vieng found that many budget tubers were oblivious to or uncaring about the types of social economic and environmental impact they are associated with 2 A master plan for Vang Vieng notes that local grievances include pollution inappropriate behaviour of tourists and environmental damage 20 Brett Dakin the author of Another Quiet American a chronicle of two years in Laos working for the tourist authority said Each time a young Australian woman strolls down the street in a bikini a bearded American smokes a joint on a guesthouse terrace or a group of Koreans tumbles drunkenly out of a restaurant it saps a little more of the essence of a town like Vang Vieng 17 Crime Edit As of June 2014 the US State Department says that although Laos generally has a low rate of violent crime some tourists have been robbed and sexually assaulted 21 Many restaurants in the Vang Vieng area offer menu items particularly pizzas shakes or teas that may contain unknown substances or opiates These products are often advertised as happy or special items These unknown substances or opiates can be dangerous causing serious illness or even death 21 Tourist deaths and injuries Edit Vang Vieng s hospital recorded 27 tourist deaths in 2011 due to drowning or diving head first into rocks 22 Most fatalities occur on the same bar heavy stretch of river that s less than 1 km long In a 2012 interview with The Guardian newspaper a senior doctor at the Vang Vieng Hospital Dr Chit said the overall figure is higher because many fatalities are taken straight to Vientiane 22 In early 2012 two Australian backpackers died within a month Dr Chit said 5 to 10 backpackers a day arrive at the local hospital with injuries such as broken bones or infected gashes or sickness caused by alcohol intoxication or other drugs There are no safety measures or supervision no helmets says Dr Chit We re not equipped to treat anything serious 22 The Guardian reported that tourist deaths have brought a sense of bad karma for Laotian villagers living near the river Today local people avoid the river once a part of everyday life for bathing playing fishing and washing clothes We don t want to swim in the river any more explains La Phengxayya 25 a primary school teacher in Phoudindaeng the village closest to the tubing area We believe there are evil spirits in the water because so many young foreigners have died 22 Government crackdown Edit In the third quarter of 2012 the Lao government carried out a crackdown in Vang Vieng pulling down all the riverside bars Tubing is still going on but in a much more controlled fashion 23 One climbing instructor was reported to have said that visitors are now spending more time participating in activities such as climbing kayaking and mountain biking Vang Vieng has come back to us again it s like it used to be he was quoted as saying 24 The Bangkok Post reported that although the number of Westerners has dropped visitors from Japan China and South Korea are on the rise making up for the loss The changing trend posed a new problem as tourists from Asia did not favour cheap accommodation and preferred more upmarket places the report added 25 See also EditBanana Pancake TrailReferences Edit a b c Vang Vieng VangVieng org 2011 Archived from the original on 1 July 2014 a b c Vang Veng Staying Longer Spending More STDP Laos August 2009 Archived from the original on 29 August 2011 Retrieved 12 October 2011 a b Phouangsava P n d History of Vang Vieng Visiting Muong Lao Retrieved 15 June 2020 Vang Vieng Climate Climate Data org a b Vang Vieng Travel Guide Lao Travel Guide 2008 Archived from the original on 2 December 2013 a b Vang Vieng tubing goseasia 2011 Down the tube The Sydney Morning Herald 30 June 2011 Vang Vieng as it used to be Lao co uk 2007 Volunteer Laos Vang Vieng Travel to Teach 2008 Archived from the original on 28 July 2011 Retrieved 15 February 2011 Vang Vieng s little big man Green Traveller Guide 5 January 2009 Archived from the original on 2 April 2013 a b Party town The Sydney Morning Herald 12 April 2012 Archived from the original on 15 April 2012 Paradise Lost The Sydney Morning Herald 26 August 2009 Kennedy Good Matt 22 September 2009 Vang Vieng A tragedy waiting to happen The New Zealand Herald Retrieved 15 December 2014 Bournemouth man died after river tubing in Laos 14 September 2011 dead link Man dies tubing in Laos river The Age 12 January 2012 A plan to keep Vangvieng tourism alive Vientiane Times 16 June 2009 Archived from the original on 19 August 2011 a b Laos threatened by sex and drugs The Daily Telegraph 17 March 2010 Dhiradityakul Kris The decline and fall of Vang Vieng Chiang Mai Mail Retrieved 15 December 2014 Down the tube The Sydney Morning Herald 30 June 2011 Vang Vieng Town and Environs Master Plan 2010 2020 PDF Hansen Partnership December 2009 a b Laos US State Department retrieved June 2014 Archived from the original on 5 September 2015 Retrieved 25 June 2017 a b c d Haworth Abigail 12 April 2012 Vang Vieng Laos the world s most unlikely party town The Guardian The Observer Retrieved 15 December 2014 The Party s Over SBS Dateline 16 October 2012 On my bike in lovely Laos IOL Travel 30 October 2013 Backpackers shun Vangvieng in Laos Bangkok Post 11 October 2013 Retrieved 15 December 2014 External links Edit Vang Vieng travel guide from Wikivoyage Wikimedia Commons has media related to Vang Vieng Lao National Tourism Administration Archived 16 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine Tourism in Vang Vieng Strategy for Staying Longer Spending More Dr Paul Rogers Lao National Tourism Administration Asian Development Bank GMS Sustainable Tourism Development Project August 2009 Vang Vieng Town and Environs Master Plan 2010 2020 Hansen Partnership Lao National Tourism Administration Asian Development Bank GMS Sustainable Tourism Development Project December 2009 Vang Vieng Travel Guide Archived 2 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine Ultimate Vang Vieng Travel Guide Archived 31 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine Tubing Vang Vieng Guide Archived 30 December 2011 at the Wayback Machine FruitFriends community based development programs Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vang Vieng amp oldid 1133760586, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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