Menghai 勐海 xishuangbanna 西双版纳 yunnan Province云南省
![Menghai Market 勐海市场 Yunnan Province](https://holachina.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/Waiting-796x1024.jpg)
Menghai Market Yunnan Province (勐海市场) is a large agricultural produce market in Yunnan’s Xishuangbanna province.
Thwarted by the Monsoon
Our attempts to reach the Sunday market at Menghun 勐混 were thwarted by the monsoon: due to heavy rain the new highway between Jinghong 景洪 and Menghai 勐海 had collapsed and no buses were running that Sunday morning.
![sellers Menghai Market 勐海市场 Yunnan Province](https://holachina.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/Dai-Ladies.jpg)
When we eventually headed to Menghai 勐海 a few days later the buses were running again, but only on the old road, turning the normally smooth 45- minute journey into a four- hour crawl .
![Menghai Market 勐海市场 Yunnan Province](https://holachina.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/Lorry-Jam-1.jpg)
Chaos leaving Jinhong
The most chaotic scenes occurred at the exit of Jinghong, as lorries, buses, tractors and private cars leaving the city fought with those vehicles trying to enter the city to either get on or leave the old road.
![bad traffic jinghong to menghai](https://holachina.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/jam3.jpg)
The chaos was such that there were kilometres of traffic jams in each direction and not one person of authority was there to put some order to the mayhem.
![A rain sodden trip to see markets in Xishuangbanna 西双版纳, Yunnan China.](https://holachina.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/jam2.jpg)
With so many vehicles stuck with nowhere to go, local entrepreneurs ran between the traffic, selling anything from boiled eggs to grilled meats and soft drinks.
![Menghai Market 勐海市场 Yunnan Province](https://holachina.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/River1.jpg)
Overturned lorries and their spilt loads only further aggravated an already desperate situation.
![Menghai Market 勐海市场 Yunnan Province](https://holachina.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/Tofu-Seller-932x1024.jpg)
Olympic games taking place in Beijing on T.V
In the evening as we settled into our clean but rundown hotel in Menghai we watched the well-organized and meticulously planned Olympic games taking place in Beijing on T.V and wondered if we were really in the same country.
![menghai surroundings an old bridge](https://holachina.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/bridge1.jpg)
Our first destination from Menghai 勐海 was Gelanghe, a Dai 傣族 and Akha / Yaozu 瑶族 settlement, some 30 kilometres southeast. We took the lazy and wrong option and hired a car and driver for 200 Yuan to take us to Gelanghe.
![Menghai Market 勐海市场 Yunnan Province surroundings](https://holachina.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/Landscape.jpg)
The road starts climbing into the jungle clad hills only a few kilometres outside Menghai affording stunning views of the valley below.
![Menghai Market 勐海市场 Yunnan Province](https://holachina.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/Countryside-1-683x1024.jpg)
Stuck in the Mud
Unfortunately due to torrential rains the road had become a quagmire. Our van slid and skidded its way up and up. Twice we had to release it from the mud with stones and planks of wood until the van eventually succumbed to the inevitable and got completely bogged down.
![stuck in the mud near Menghai](https://holachina.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/stuck1.jpg)
We now became the spectacle. The passing Akha / Yaozu 瑶族, who we had gone to see, stopped to gawp, comment and laugh at our predicament until a tractor, the only type of vehicle able to navigate the road, and its friendly driver pulled us out of the bog and turned our van round.
![help is on its way menghai](https://holachina.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/Aka-1.jpg)
Defeated we headed back.
![old bridge near menghai](https://holachina.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/bridge2.jpg)
Manlei Buddhist Temple at Mengzhe
To compensate for the aborted trip to Gelanghe, we visited the Bajiao Ting (The Octagonal Temple) at Jingzhen 20 kms from Menghai and the Manlei Buddhist Temple at Mengzhe, a few kilometres further along the road.
![dai pagoda near menhai](https://holachina.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/Dai-Temple-1-683x1024.jpg)
Although both temples are pleasant, they are reconstructions of originals destroyed during the Cultural Revolution.
![temple near menghai](https://holachina.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/mural2.jpg)
The Jingzhen Octagonal Temple Bajiaoting 景真八角亭,had some pleasant Dai style Buddhist murals that depicted gentle rural Scenes.
![temple painting near menghai](https://holachina.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/mural1b.jpg)
However, the new paintings at the Manlei Temple, painted by young Dai artists are quite striking and the hell scenes are pretty gruesome.
![temple near menghai](https://holachina.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/temple1.jpg)
While the outside of the temple looks rather plain, it’s interior is a riot of colour and the paintings are not for the squeamish.
![hell near menghai](https://holachina.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/Hell-1.jpg)
You can see more of the murals from the Manlei 曼磊佛塔 Temple on our photo video: Buddhist Hell.
![Menghai Market 勐海市场](https://holachina.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/paying.jpg)
Menghai Market Yunnan Province
Don’t miss Menghai’s morning Market just behind the Main road near the post office.
![Menghai Market 勐海市场 Yunnan Province](https://holachina.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/Menghai-Market2.jpg)
It has a real buzz and you might catch a few Akha, Dai and Lahu dressed in their finest.
![Menghai Market 勐海市场 Yunnan Province](https://holachina.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/Menghai-Market4.jpg)
Unlike the Menghun market 勐混 市场, the Menghai market 勐海市场 is a market for locals and people from the countryside around. The market gets underway at the crack of dawn and is heaving by 9.00 a.m. By midday it has fizzled out.
![Menghai Market 勐海市场 Yunnan Province](https://holachina.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/Menghai-Market5.jpg)
The next day we headed out to Xiding Market (See Article).
![Menghai Market 勐海市场 Yunnan Province](https://holachina.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/Menghai-Market6-777x1024.jpg)
Menghai 勐海 Coming and Going:
![Menghai Market 勐海市场 Yunnan Province](https://holachina.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/Menghai-Market8.jpg)
It should be a brisk 45 minute to 1 hour zip along a new highway from Jinghong 景洪 to Menghai 勐海. That is if the monsoon rains haven’t washed the highway away.
![Menghai Market 勐海市场 Yunnan Province](https://holachina.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/Menghai-Market.jpg)
Buses run continually throughout the day from both Jinghong’s bus stations. From Menghai’s bus station there are regular buses to Jinghong, Menghun 勐混, for the Sunday market.
![Menghai Market 勐海市场 Yunnan Province](https://holachina.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/Menghai-Market3-1.jpg)
There are inconvenient buses for Xiding and its Thursday market (see article). If you are heading to the Burmense border there are buses to Daluo. For the route to Ruili there are plenty of buses to Menglian and Langcang.
![pagoda near menghai](https://holachina.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/dai-temple2-683x1024.jpg)
This was our plan but the rains made the trip a travel nightmare. Eventually we had to back-tract and head to Menglun and Laos. Outside the wet season this westward journey would make a great trip.
![temple near menghai](https://holachina.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/Dai-family.jpg)
Accomodation:
We stayed at the post office hotel. A clean double cost 80 yuan. Staff were extremely friendly.
![statue near menghai](https://holachina.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/statue1.jpg)
Food was a bit limited in Menghai to say the least. Simple restaurants can be found along the main street and some noodle stalls set up at night near the main square.