Phongsali Travel Information - North Laos
Phongsali Province travel Information
‘Laos Top End’ Information about travels to the far north of Laos
Farthest
north in Laos is Phongsali, which shares borders with Yunnan (China) and Dien Bien
(Vietnam). Most of Phongsali province lies at a high altitude. Its capital, Phongsali
town, is the highest city in Lao P.D.R. at 1400 m above sea level. Up there the
climate is pleasant and refreshing - a perfect trekking destination! The forests
of Phongsali are the most remote in northern Laos covering the endless mountains
down to the canyon of the Nam Ou River, biggest tributary of the Mekong. The population
is made up of officially 28 different ethnic groups, of which the majority being
Khmu, Phunoy, different Akha, Tai Lue and Hor.
Several Eco-trekking tours have been established by the Provincial Tourism Office Phongsali in Cooperation with the German Development Service (DED).
Our
volunteering program
in north Laos, Phongsali province
Most visitors of Phongsali province get a feeling of ‘no longer being in Laos, not
yet having reached China’. History tells fascinating stories, though much
of it still lies in darkness. Between China and Laos the territory of north-western
Phongsali and southern Yunnan once was the independent Tai Lue kingdom of Sipsongpanna.
In 1895 the French colonialists drew new boundaries along the watersheds of the
Nam Ou River, claiming Sipsongpanna’s eastern part to Phongsali incorporating it
into French Indochina.
Its bigger part went into Yunnan province, China.
Fair Trek Trekking programs in Phongsali
Unless many other cities in Laos, Phongsali town has not been destroyed in the American war.
It features a remaining old quarter with Yunnan-style wooden architecture now rare to find in Yunnan itself.
Most of the people living here belong to the Hor ethnic group, speaking a Chinese dialect. Until the 1970s there has been a Chinese consulate in Phongsali town, now the ‘Phu Fa Hotel’. In the ‘Museum of Ethnic Groups in Phongsali Province’ you can admire the various local cloths, artefacts and handicrafts.
The town of Phongsali itself is surrounded by rolling hills and is built into the side of Phu Fa Mountain (1625 m). The 45 min hike up to its stupa on top offers spectacular views of the town from above and the mountains in the far distance.
Although
a bit off the main tourist circuit, visitors can spend plenty of time in Phongsali
province trekking to remote villages around the provincial capital, Boun Neua. Muang
Khoua at the Nam Ou River has own trekking programs as well as trekking in ‘Nam
Lan Conservation Area’ around Boun Tai. In the northernmost district of the
country, Gnot Ou, visit Vat Luang, a magnificent Tai Lue style Buddhist monastery
dating back to 1445 AD. In the future ‘Phu Den Din National Protected Area’
along the border with Vietnam will be opened for boat trips. Wild animals like monkeys,
elephants and tigers still claim it their territory!
The province offers a delicious variety of Lao and Yunnanese cuisine that consists of wild forest ingredients such as fragrant herbs, bamboo and rattan shoots. After dinner try a shot of the local Lao Lao, smooth, strong and tinted green! During the final stage of the distillation process this rice-whisky is running over fresh picked raspberry leaves absorbing the green color.
Chinese-style
green tea of Phongsali receives worldwide recognition for its highest quality and
superb taste. Tea leaves are picked by Phunoy minority women from up to 400
year old tea trees, standing 6 m high with a stem up to 30 cm in diameter. These
precious tea leaves are compressed in bamboo cylinders and sold in cigar-shaped
tubes. In this wild tea grove fertilizers and chemicals have never been used. Drinking
a daily cup keeps the body in good health, reduces fat and preserves a clear mind.
