Wat Phu Champasak
Wat Phu
Buddha image in Wat Phu
Wat Phu up on the hill
The Australian friendship bridge to Laos
Wat Choom Khong
Monks at the Phu Si hill
View down the Phu Si hill
Haw Kham Palace
Boarding for a ride to the Pak Ou Caves
Along the Mekong river
The steps to the caves
Tham Thing
Inside the cave
Buddha images in the Tham Pak Ou
Tham Theung (upper cave)
Buddha images in the Tham Theung (upper cave)
At the river bank near Pak Ou Caves
Noisy long-tail-boats running upwards the Mekong
Villager brew an hootch from sticky rice
Mekong fisher in Ban Xang Hai
Children in Ban Xang Hai
Kuang Si Falls
Debris of the Wat Phu
Russian constracted bridge over the Se Don River
High way vendors selling snack food ...
The border to Cambodia
Vegetable vendor girls at the market in Pakse
Waterfalls in the Muang Pak Xong area
Simple machine to dry tea leafes
Fisher village on the Mekong riverside
Fisher on the Mekong riverside
Way to Wat Phu
800 years old heap of rubble
Wat Phu down the hill
View to the Wat Phu complex
Obeisance to Buddha before entering Wat Phou
Lao women selling herbal drinks in front of the wa…
A former palace used as hotel
At the Mekong riverside
Lao village Mueang Không on the Mekong river
Young Lao girl guides us on the river
Don Det village on the river side
Don Det village
Khone Falls
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View from the hill to Baan Nongsa


In this photo, looking east from the sanctuary partway up the mountain, we see the temple's causeway, which runs east-southeast and terminates in two grand barays (excavated reservoirs). The "middle baray," seen end-on in this photo, measures 200x600 meters. Its great length recedes much further into the distance than one can accurately judge here, being approximately equal to the distance from its near bank to the base of the mountain. The north baray (photo left) is wider, and lies due east of the sanctuary. The barays were probably built by Suryavarman II (1113-1150).
One asks why the axis of the temple is south of due east, and why the two barays are situated as they are. The answer lies in astronomy: the barays were designed to reflect the image of the sun, from the middle baray at the vernal equinox, and from the north baray at the summer solistice.
One asks why the axis of the temple is south of due east, and why the two barays are situated as they are. The answer lies in astronomy: the barays were designed to reflect the image of the sun, from the middle baray at the vernal equinox, and from the north baray at the summer solistice.
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