Show Navigation
All Galleries
Add to Cart Download

Making Salt in Laos

11 images Created 16 Mar 2013

Salt is made in Boten, Laos, by hand in hot, humid workshops. Briney water is boiled in shallow flat pans. After the water is boiled away, the salt is scraped out of the pan.

Loading ()...

  • 14 MARCH 2013 - BOTEN, LAOS:  Salt works in Boten, Laos, sit in the middle of a construction site that will soon be a parking lot for cars from China. Salt in Boten is made by boiling briny water and collecting the salt that is left behind. The salt wells in Boten, Laos, just south of the Chinese border, have brought a measure of fame to the area for centuries. French forces asserted French dominance over the region in 1894 to control the salt trade. Some of the salt works face an uncertain future because of economic development from China. The area is being developed into a huge parking lot to accommodate truck and tourist traffic into and out of China.PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ScenesOfLaos049.jpg
  • 13 MARCH 2013 - BOTEN, LUANG NAMTHA, LAOS: Charcoal stacked up in front of salt workshops in Boten, Laos. The fires that boil the brine are charcoal fueled. Salt in Boten is made by boiling briny water and collecting the salt that is left behind. The salt wells in Boten, Laos, just south of the Chinese border, have brought a measure of fame to the area for centuries. French forces asserted French dominance over the region in 1894 to control the salt trade. Some of the salt works face an uncertain future because of economic development from China. The area is being developed into a huge parking lot to accommodate truck and tourist traffic into and out of China. PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BotenSaltWorks013.jpg
  • 13 MARCH 2013 - BOTEN, LUANG NAMTHA, LAOS:  A worker checks a tray of boiling brine in a salt workshop in Boten, Laos. Salt in Boten is made by boiling briny water and collecting the salt that is left behind. The salt wells in Boten, Laos, just south of the Chinese border, have brought a measure of fame to the area for centuries. French forces asserted French dominance over the region in 1894 to control the salt trade. Some of the salt works face an uncertain future because of economic development from China. The area is being developed into a huge parking lot to accommodate truck and tourist traffic into and out of China.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BotenSaltWorks003.jpg
  • 13 MARCH 2013 - BOTEN, LUANG NAMTHA, LAOS:  A woman scrapes salt out of a pan of brine at a salt factory in Boten, Laos. Salt in Boten is made by boiling briny water and collecting the salt that is left behind. The salt wells in Boten, Laos, just south of the Chinese border, have brought a measure of fame to the area for centuries. French forces asserted French dominance over the region in 1894 to control the salt trade. Some of the salt works face an uncertain future because of economic development from China. The area is being developed into a huge parking lot to accommodate truck and tourist traffic into and out of China.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BotenSaltWorks007.jpg
  • 13 MARCH 2013 - BOTEN, LUANG NAMTHA, LAOS:  A man shovels salt into a basket in a salt factory in Boten, Laos. Salt in Boten is made by boiling briny water and collecting the salt that is left behind. The salt wells in Boten, Laos, just south of the Chinese border, have brought a measure of fame to the area for centuries. French forces asserted French dominance over the region in 1894 to control the salt trade. Some of the salt works face an uncertain future because of economic development from China. The area is being developed into a huge parking lot to accommodate truck and tourist traffic into and out of China. PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BotenSaltWorks012.jpg
  • 13 MARCH 2013 - BOTEN, LUANG NAMTHA, LAOS:  Salt on a shovel in a pan of boiling brine in Boten, Laos. Salt in Boten is made by boiling briny water and collecting the salt that is left behind. The salt wells in Boten, Laos, just south of the Chinese border, have brought a measure of fame to the area for centuries. French forces asserted French dominance over the region in 1894 to control the salt trade. Some of the salt works face an uncertain future because of economic development from China. The area is being developed into a huge parking lot to accommodate truck and tourist traffic into and out of China. PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BotenSaltWorks009.jpg
  • 13 MARCH 2013 - BOTEN, LUANG NAMTHA, LAOS:  Baskets of salt in a salt factory in Boten, Laos. Salt in Boten is made by boiling briny water and collecting the salt that is left behind. The salt wells in Boten, Laos, just south of the Chinese border, have brought a measure of fame to the area for centuries. French forces asserted French dominance over the region in 1894 to control the salt trade. Some of the salt works face an uncertain future because of economic development from China. The area is being developed into a huge parking lot to accommodate truck and tourist traffic into and out of China. PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BotenSaltWorks010.jpg
  • 13 MARCH 2013 - BOTEN, LUANG NAMTHA, LAOS: A woman scrapes salt out of a pan of brine at a salt factory in Boten, Laos. Salt in Boten is made by boiling briny water and collecting the salt that is left behind. The salt wells in Boten, Laos, just south of the Chinese border, have brought a measure of fame to the area for centuries. French forces asserted French dominance over the region in 1894 to control the salt trade. Some of the salt works face an uncertain future because of economic development from China. The area is being developed into a huge parking lot to accommodate truck and tourist traffic into and out of China. PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BotenSaltWorks005.jpg
  • 13 MARCH 2013 - BOTEN, LUANG NAMTHA, LAOS:  A worker piles up salt in a workshop in Boten, Laos. Salt in Boten is made by boiling briny water and collecting the salt that is left behind. The salt wells in Boten, Laos, just south of the Chinese border, have brought a measure of fame to the area for centuries. French forces asserted French dominance over the region in 1894 to control the salt trade. Some of the salt works face an uncertain future because of economic development from China. The area is being developed into a huge parking lot to accommodate truck and tourist traffic into and out of China.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BotenSaltWorks004.jpg
  • 13 MARCH 2013 - BOTEN, LUANG NAMTHA, LAOS: A woman scrapes salt out of a pan of brine at a salt factory in Boten, Laos. Salt in Boten is made by boiling briny water and collecting the salt that is left behind. The salt wells in Boten, Laos, just south of the Chinese border, have brought a measure of fame to the area for centuries. French forces asserted French dominance over the region in 1894 to control the salt trade. Some of the salt works face an uncertain future because of economic development from China. The area is being developed into a huge parking lot to accommodate truck and tourist traffic into and out of China. PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BotenSaltWorks002.jpg
  • 13 MARCH 2013 - BOTEN, LUANG NAMTHA, LAOS:  A worker in a salt workshop shovel water out of a pan of boiling brine in a salt workshop in Boten, Laos. Salt in Boten is made by boiling briny water and collecting the salt that is left behind. The salt wells in Boten, Laos, just south of the Chinese border, have brought a measure of fame to the area for centuries. French forces asserted French dominance over the region in 1894 to control the salt trade. Some of the salt works face an uncertain future because of economic development from China. The area is being developed into a huge parking lot to accommodate truck and tourist traffic into and out of China.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BotenSaltWorks015.jpg
View: 100 | All
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

Jack Kurtz, Photojournalist & Travel Photographer

  • Published Work
  • Photographs
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area
  • Jack on Instagram
  • About
  • Contact
  • My Occasional Blog
  • Portfolios on Behance
  • Portfolio