TS:
CONTEN
Features: 22:
ANIMALS! All Creatures Great & Small of South East Asia
34: PHOTOS: Photography & Consent. 39: DON’T MISS! Event Pick - The Bali
Cover Photograph: By Mike Rowbottom (www.phong-nha-cave.com)
26:
Local Portraits: Leng Chana, Tailor at the Russian Market, Phnom Penh
41: Soul Searcher: Changing the Game. 52: Traveller Thoughts, Stories, Tips 66: VOLUNTEER: Teaching in Laos 68: INFO: Visas, Exchange Rates & more!
Spirit Festival, Ubud, Indonesia
42:
South East Asia Faces & Places: Interview with Yoga Guru, Chiang Mai
58:
ARTS: 10 Must-Reads for Intrepid Travel Writers
60:
FOOD: Off the Beaten Plate Cambodia
Rock climbing in Krabi, Thailand... 16
Destination Spotlight: 16: KRABI: Rock Climbing Paradise 28: The Perhentian Islands, MALAYSIA: Perfect beaches, Carnivorous Flowers & Swimming with Sharks
44:
Perhentian Islan
ds, Malaysia...
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Phong Nha, VIETNAM: The World’s Biggest Cave & Amazing Adventures!
54: WHERE NEXT? Trekking in Nepal 62: OFF THE BEATEN TRACK: The
Mongol Rally - Overland Route to Asia
Regulars: 8: South East Asia Map & Visa Info 10: NEWS! The Aftermath of Typhoon Haiyan, the Philippines
14:
S.E.A Backpacker Pinboard: The Best of your Letters & Photos!
20: Word on the Street: Culture Shock! 36: Festivals & Events: What’s On Guide 40: GAMES: Crossword & Sudoku
Amazing Phong Nha, Vietnam...
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[email protected] Backpacker South East Asia is Published by Backpacker International Limited. Managing Director & Editor: Nikki Scott. (Email:
[email protected]) Deputy Editor: Karen Farini. Web Editor: Tyler Protano-Goodwin. Design & Layout: Nikki Scott. Web Manager: Nicholas Baron-Morgan. Contributing Writers / Photographers: Nikki Scott, Karen Farini, Lois Yasay, Joe Astall, Amy Burbridge, Tyler Protano-Goodwin, Deidre Appel, Regin Reyno, Chase Berenson, Charla Allyn Hughes, Ben Turland, Thomas Matthew Kellar, Jaclyn Hartnett, Ceiri O’Douglas, Paul Simon Abbott, Simon Bond, Zach Dumyahn, Diana Reyes, Kilee LeBlanc, Ligia Batista Fradinho, Melanie Swan, Christophe Cappon, Penelope Atkinson, Kael Ando, Georgie Ando, Eliza Arsenault, Andrew Bond, Alex McAdam, Christina O’Sullivan. Advertising enquiries: Email:
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DESTINATION SPOTLIGHT:
PHONG NHA PHOREVER - VIETNAM -
hong Nha Ke Bang National Park in the Quanh Binh province of north-central Vietnam is exhaustingly rich with natural wonders, most of which have only recently been discovered – so recently, in fact, that it wasn’t until 2003 that the Park was listed as one of UNESCO’s World Heritage Sites. And for what, you may be asking? For the caves…
have been discovered by British cavers (from Bradford), Debbie and Howard Limbert since 1990 alone – and with a whopping eighty per cent of this region still yet to be explored, there are no signs to indicate this rate is slowing down.
And when I say ‘caves’, I mean ‘CAVES’.
the planet, easily surpassing the former record holder: Deer Cave in Sarawak, Malaysian Borneo. The six-day trek through Hang Son Doong is by all accounts majestic. During one stretch of the cave, I’m told, sunbeams stream through the huge gaping daylight window at a height of almost 250 metres. This is the reason for all the vegetation; for the jungle in the cave that takes almost an hour to walk through.
Incredible Discoveries... Phong Nha Ke Bang is home to the most majestic cave systems in the world – some over four million years old – that have been formed due to the purity of the limestone here, and the multitude of
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Just three years ago, in 2010, Debs and Howard fully completed
Wording by Karen Farini. Photography by Mike Rowbottom, Phong Nha Farmstay
It’s almost spellbinding to think that Son Doong opened up for tourism just six months ago in July 2013. Film-makers, journalists and experts aside, the trek has been completed by only 15 members of the public to date. And there’s now of course a waiting list. Unfortunately for the adventurers all reading this and salivating, But, since the 2011 edition of the Lonely Planet plonked Phong Nha Ke Bang World Heritage National Park out of nowhere as the third most essential experience to be had throughout the whole of Vietnam (with number four being ‘food’!), travellers have now begun arriving here in droves. So much so, in fact, that to say that Phong Nha is on the cusp of a tourist boom seems almost like more of a joke than an understatement. Hang Son Doong may well be Vietnam’s Everest – but just like Nepal’s own prize, this sits at the
top of a multitude of other attractions in Phong Nha that we’re only just beginning to hear about. more, Ben and Bich Mitchell – owners of both Easy Tiger Phong demand) and also the original Phong Nha Farmstay – are intent that I should come and experience some for myself. Well, what can I do? What can I say? Of course, it’s is a total nobrainer. I email them a ‘yes, please, and thank you!’ – and I brace myself for the cold. Then I actually take the step outside the café I’ve been hiding in all day, and go shopping for a puffa jacket. Because apparently, you see, life’s about to get colder…
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