Luang Prabang occupies the confluence of the Mekong and Nam Khan rivers, a UNESCO-protected town where saffron-robed monks collect alms at dawn and French colonial villas house boutique hotels and cafés. The former royal capital moves at a deliberate pace: temple visits, riverside walks, night markets selling textiles and street food. It’s Laos at its most accessible, with enough polish to feel comfortable but not so much that it loses the slower rhythm that defines the country.