Video | Agriculture | Confidence | Economy | Energy | Employment | Finance | Media | Property | RBNZ | Science | SOEs | Tax | Technology | Telecoms | Tourism | Transport | Search

 


Stray launches in Laos and Thailand

New Zealand Company, Stray, launches in Laos and Thailand

Stray, New Zealand’s top rating* backpacker bus company has announced that from October it will operate the first ‘hop-on hop-off’ travel network in South East Asia.

Stray has spent a year working with the Laos government to become a fully licensed tour operator in Laos – a first for a Western Company they believe. The license now means that they can operate their own buses and employ their own drivers and guides in Laos.

”We are hugely excited about our new Asian offer,” commented Stray Director Neil Geddes. ‘We’ve had a Stray crew based in Laos and working with locals for the past 18 months to better understand the country and to create unique itineraries.

“The communist government in Laos only really welcomed travellers since the early nineties. There is now a bit of a tourist track between the two best known cities of Luang Prabang and the capital Vientiane, but because public transport is so poor, outsiders still rarely visit much of the rest of the country. It is also very difficult to access without your own vehicle and even harder to find places to stay without local contacts. We’ve done all the hard work and now Stray customers can see the amazing untouched scenery, wildlife, history and experience the Buddhist culture that Laos has to offer off the beaten track.’

The Stray route starts in Asia’s hub, Bangkok, heads up through northern Thailand on trains then across to the top of Laos, before travelling down through to the south of Laos on Stray’s own buses and a long boat and then back across to Bangkok.

Geddes said: “The trains in Thailand can get very busy so we reserve seats for our clients in advance. Our guides also travel on the trains so we provide guidance on the attractions and book accommodation at the stops as well. We have our own buses in Laos, which allows us to provide unique access to the amazing culture and attractions of the country.

“The itineraries include exploring caves which loyalists lived during the Vietnam war; a stay in a remote village where they have rarely seen Westerners and can only be accessed by traditional boat, as well as the better known activities such as a pub crawl down a river in an inner tube,” added Geddes.

Customers can buy passes covering the whole route (the full circuit takes 17 days) for approx NZ$1125, or passes for smaller sections of the route for as little as NZ$200. They then have the freedom to get off and on anywhere over the route for up to twelve months. Stray reserves beds at the night stops (with prices from US$5 per night) and customers just pay for their accommodation as they go.

The reputation of Stray and its sister company Spaceships rentals’ existing products, the attractions of Thailand and Laos and Stray’s unique access to them, particularly in Laos; combined with being the first ‘hop-on hop-off’ travel network in South East Asia has meant that there is great interest in what the Company have been doing from the industry. Geddes says ‘Stray has managed to sign up a number of the key distributers in the world for the market before we’ve even had our first Asian departure so we are really excited about the potential of this new product.’”

For more information and bookings visit www.straytravel.asia.

-ends-

 
 
 
 
 
Business Headlines | Sci-Tech Headlines

BUDGET 2012:
Parliament Debate Live - Video Of Budget 2011
Keith Ng Interactive Graphic: How the Budget Breaks Down
BUDGET 2012 - FULL COVERAGE: Reports / Analysis - Press Kit - Reaction (from everybody) - Previews (from everybody) - Pre-Budget Announcements

Gordon Campbell: On the Budget’s Spreadsheet Victories

It wasn’t as if expectations were sky high, exactly. Chances are, it was always more likely that we’d be seeing Bigfoot rampage through the Beehive lock-up than catch a glimpse of a credible growth agenda from this government. More >>


Sludge Budget Report - Short The Dollar! MEMO: To international bankers FROM: C.D. Sludge Please short the dollar! It'll be good for both you and us. And you know you want to. Greexit, Eurogeddon... watch out... flight to quality and all that. Follow your instincts. The NZ Debt Management Office has been so surprised at the unprecedentedly low interest rates that it can borrow at that it has already entirely pre-funded the 2013 fiscal deficit - all $8 billion of it! More >>

Pattrick Smellie Comment: Doddling along the best we can hope forCriticising Budgets for lacking vision or imagination is like shooting fish in a barrel, but even so, this year's Budget again feels like a missed opportunity. Perhaps it's the intrusion of real world needs that means the government couldn't make better political use of the $558.8 million it expects to gather in its first partial asset sale. More >>

 

BusinessDesk: NZ dollar hits 6-mth low, revives, as EU meets; budget looms
The New Zealand dollar climbed from a six-month low as European Union leaders meet amid talk Greece could leave the euro zone and ahead of the budget locally which is expected to chart the route back to fiscal surplus. More >>

Also:

EARLIER:


Media: Quickflix welcomes probe of Sky TV content deals
ASX-listed Quickflix has welcomed the New Zealand antitrust regulator's probe into Sky Network Television's content deals with internet service providers, saying the issues raised by the Commerce Commission are "serious and real."

Sky's shares sank 8.3 percent to a two-and-a-half month low $5 after the regulator said it will investigate the pay-TV operator's contracts with ISPs and potential barriers to accessing content. The announcement was made after the commission approved a joint venture between Sky and state-owned Television New Zealand to launch a budget pay-TV platform, Igloo.More >>

ALSO:


Fruit FlyMPI: No Fruit Fly Outbreak Detected to Date as Actions Continue
The Ministry for Primary Industries (MPI) reports that testing on samples from fruit fly traps in the Auckland Controlled Area has so far shown no sign of further fruit flies.

However as a precautionary measure, the Ministry continues a large field effort to ensure that if any of the pest insects are present, they are not able to spread from the Avondale area where the one male fly was found last week.
More >>

ALSO:

 
 
 
 
 
Business
Search Scoop  
 
 
powered by newsagent
NZ independent news