Home UpLuang Prabang Environs

We look here at an assortment: first the Tham Ting Buddha caves upstream from Luang Prabang; then at local horticulture around the city; then at Henri Mouhot's grave.

The Tham Ting Buddha caves are set into a cliff around which the Mekong curves some 15 miles upstream from Luang Prabang.

Looking out from one of the caves.

Thousands of such figurines fill the caves, dark except for the camera flash.

There's an agricultural-research station near the Mekong at the south end of town.

The tributary Nam Khan also supports intensive gardening along its moist banks.

Some miles up the Nam Khan, at Ban Aen, villagers prepare to bring vegetables to market.

They set off.

Farther back in the countryside, rice paddies in the dry season.

Manicured landscape.

We're in the same neighborhood, and we're looking for the grave of Henri Mouhot, who put Angkor Wat on the map for Europeans. He later came up here, where malaria found him and took him. Where is he?

Finding the tomb is no longer a challenge.

Just follow the distinctive signs.

There.

Dead at 35.

The tomb was erected a few years later by Ernest Doudart de Legree; the tomb was rebuilt in the next generation by Auguste Pavie, the French administrator largely responsible for establishing French rule over Laos.

Mouhat's hometown has added its own memorial to its son.