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The Happy Couple


242 Blog Entries
3 Trips
3968 Photos

Trips:

Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
Michael's Lonely post-Honeymoon
Joanne's Round the World Honeymoon

Shorthand link:

http://blogabond.com/shedden




Great food and freaky Buddhas

Vientiane, Laos



We woke approaching Vientiane nicely rested, because the night bus was a huge improvement on the Vietnamese torture machines. At last something that is better than Vietnam! Lao night buses having you lying down properly in two layers, like bunk beds. The only potential draw back is that they are all double beds, so you don't know who you are going to be sleeping with if you are on your own. Of course, as a couple, this was much nicer for us.

According to the books Vientiane is actually pronounced something like Wang Chan, but because the Roman transliteration was done by the French, it doesn't really come out right if you say it as if it's an English word. The LP says that it starts with a "V" because French does not have letter "W", although I'm sure I remember a letter called "doobleh-vay" so I don't know what they are talking about. Maybe it's a recent introduction into the French alphabet, because of imported words from English. "Whisky" comes to mind. The same goes for the "ch" sound: does not exist in French, so they chose "tia" as the next closest sound in French. Anyway, everything in Lao seems to have several different spellings, because there is a move to the Royal Thai method of transliteration, which the LP assures us is much more understandable by everyone, although I think it just makes it easier for English speakers. Having said all that, I only ever heard people saying itas
it looks in English, so maybe the spelling has led to a difference in pronunciation between the Lao and the English versions of the city name.


Our main goal in Vientiane was to obtain a Thai visa. We had only recently discovered this would be necessary due to a recent rule change which means that, while people arriving by air get the usual thirty day visa on arrival, people arriving overland are only given fifteen days, which is nothing like enough for what we want to do. Apparently it's something to do with the airport protests last year and they are also trying to discourage people from doing the Thai "visa run" where people spend a day just over the border in Burma, for example, simply so that they can get another thirty days stamped on their passports when they return. Well not any more they can't! Only when we arrived did we discover, to our delight, that for a limited period only, they are giving away sixty day tourist visas and waiving the fee. I think they must be trying to make up for the additional inconvenience they are causing people. Despite this good news it was still a real
painto get the visa. It was very hot and humid, there were hundreds of people waiting, and it took more than half-a-day just queue to hand our passports in and then queue again for the receipt. I sneaked off for a quick beer while Joanne was waiting for our number to come up and ended up the only person in a strange biker bar (I think), playing old French music. The town seems to be a bit more French than anywhere else in Laos so far, and it shows in some of the architecture.

On the way back from the Embassy, we stopped in at the post office to get information regarding our other mission in Vientiane, which was to post home some of the stuff we really should not have brought with us. The post office appeared to be in the middle of being built, but we managed to find a way in anyway. The prices for posting a parcel was far more than we had anticipated: about 10 quid a kilo. After an unsuccessful attempt at finding a shipping company instead, we returned to our hotel to estimate which of the items we wanted to send were worth enough more than a tenner a kilo to send rather than bin. Most things passed, so items like my linen suit, which I hadn't worn since the wedding despite huge intentions of playing the colonial part, we put aside for parcelling up. Also on the list were my jeans, my second, thick fleece, and loads of other stuff that seemed to be taking up far too much space, but not tooo much weight.


That evening we had dinner overlooking the Mekong at a place that seemed lovely until all the insects from the reeds started closing in. Despite that, the food was excellent: I had a local speciality, naem I think, a dish consisting of fish fried with balls of cooked rice then broken up and served like a salad with greens on the side. After dinner when we went for a drink, it started to rain again. And it rained very heavily with another huge electric storm. I started to think that monsoon had started early. It would have to be about two months early, but March only gets about three days of rain on average and we'd already seen more than that.

The following day we spent another half day collecting our passports from the Thai embassy, complete with our brand new (free!) Thai visas. Later in the day we got chatting to a couple from Australia, who were heading towards Cambodia: in the opposite direction from us. They had just come from Vang Vieng and had had to part company with a friend, so he could be flown to Bangkok on account of the injuries he had sustained while "Tubing". Since Vietnam people had been telling us about the injuries that they or their friends had endured whilst involved in this activity. I still wasn't very sure exactly what it was, but it involved floating down a river in a big inner tube (the type we'd seen people floating in, in Don Det we reckoned), stopping off at various pubs for drinks, then returning to the water via various flying foxes and shutes. So a watery pub crawl. The dangers are obvious, but the sheer number of injured people we had seen was unsettling. We had initially decided to give Vang Vieng a miss as it just sounded like the gap year crowd going wild but, despite all the injuries, everyone we'd spoken to told us it was not to be missed. This Oz couple were no exception, even though their friend had been having seizures two days after cracking his skull off some rocks, and now appeared to have fluid building up in his increasingly swolen head and face. Not nice! We had initiated the converstation by asking whether the girl's obvious nasty scrapes were down to Tubing, but apparently it was only a moped accident. Her boyfriend had allowed her to drive for once and they had both come off, so I learned a lesson there from them.


It was a terrible day for blogging. This website has some problems with drafts of blog entries going live without the bloggers say-so and I had noticed that my mum commented on an entry that was supposed to be a draft and therefore hidden to everyone but me. Clearly it was no longer a draft, but when I logged in and reset the (really quite long) entry to be a draft again, the whole thing disappeared. Completely! That night I dreamt of the death of a friend and my unborn child and the difficulties in getting their remains shipped home. Both fictional characters, but it was a very unpleasant dream. The following day I discovered that Google had cached my lost page and I copied it all to a draft email in Yahoo mail (where I now write all my post now). Praise be Google! I spent the day trying to catch up on lost blog time while Joanne posted home our items worth more than a tenner a kilo.

We had another storm that day and I started to worry about the warm clothes I'd just sent home, as it seemed much cooler and we actually felt cold. I asked a few people, but everybody said that this was not too unusual and it was still months before the monsoon. The following day it still felt cold. A quick check online confirmed that it was indeed much colder than we'd become accomstomed: only 30 Celsius! We found a really good value foe (noodle) place for breakfast, where they seemed quite surprised to have falangs turn up, but then we had to go for coffee and ended up in a falang orientated coffee place and blew all the gains we'd just made on coffee, but when we were tempted into buying a brownie we'd effectively spent our lunch money as well!

Our third and final mission for Vientiane was to visit the strange sounding place known as Buddha Park, so we got the very cheap local bus out to the location, but just as we got off one of my flipflops came apart. This was the same pair I'd had repaired in Siem Reap, although the guys repair was still good: now the strap had separated from the base. Some people would admit defeat at this point but in the interests of sustainability, the environment, and stinginess, I was determined to keep the shoes going. I tried the same trick as the shoe repair had done, by setting fire to the rubber, then pressing the loose bit in place. It lasted long enough to get us round Buddha park, but I was no expert and it was clearly not going to last much longer. I still had a pending repair to my hiking trainers after the trek in Cambodia, so I was nearly running out of shoes. Anyway, the Buddha park was indeed strange. I think only pictures can adequately describe it.

When we returned to town, we bought superglue, which worked much better in the shoe repair department. That night we re-discoverd a restaurant we'd stumbled on a couple of nights previously. It described itself as modern Lao cuisine, which I fancied the sound of, and this time we noticed that it is also a community action project, run by Friends International (http://www.friends-international.org/whatsnew.html#makphet), so we could feel ethically warm whilst indulging ourselves, which we wanted to do since we decided that we were leaving Vientiane the next day. The idea seems to be similar to Jamie Oliver's restaurant Fifteen. The food was outstanding, easily the best we'd had thus far in Laos, even though the food has in general been excellent. If anyone reading this is ever in Vientiane you must go to this restaurant. Amongst our orders were buffalo and vegetable rolls, lao-lao marinated steak, and a durian and coffee shake (I couldn't help it -- Joanne said I would get no kisses for the rest of the day).

We were very pleased with our meal, after all it could have been our last; the next day we were going to Vang Vieng for Tubing!


permalink written by  The Happy Couple on March 26, 2009 from Vientiane, Laos
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Waterfalls and coffee on the Bolaven Plateau

Ban Pakthon, Laos



In the morning in Pakse, we tracked down some nice "foe" for breakfast, which is very similar to the Vietnamese "pho" (although not quite as good). We hired a moped and headed off to the Bolaven Plateau. I was a little bit worried about the distance as I'd never driver that far before on a bike. It turned out to be no problem getting there and the first waterfall, Tat Fan was certainly quite a drop, although there wasn't all that much water in it and we didn't fancy the long hike down the side to the bottom where we'd presumably have got a full view of it. The second waterfall, Tat Yuang, was actually much nicer, although to as high. People were swimming above and below the falls, and there was a lovely picnic area at the top.

After the waterfalls we wanted to go to a tea or coffee plantation, but we didn't really know what to look for. In the end we just kept on driving until we got to the town of Paksong, hoping we'd be able to get a decent cup of coffee. The town seemed to be tiny, but we'd spotted a "fresh coffee" sign on the way in, so we stopped off. It was a very nice little coffee shop run by a dutch guy called Kofee. His coffee wasn't actually much use, but he apologised for it being weak and explained he couldn't grind any more becuase the electricity was down now, so he gave us it for free. He also ran tours of coffee plantations from there, but we didn't really have the time for a full tour now, because we had to get back in time for the night bus leaving, so he showed me what a coffee plant looks like so that we could look out for them on the way back. It turned out that almost all the plants we'd been pasing on the way were coffee or tea, the one exception being moonflowers, which seem usually to be planted next to the road infront of the coffee. I wondered if it was for the same reason as the roses planted at the end of grape vines i.e. to give early warning if the plants are in need of attention, but I've not yet found out. We made it back in plenty of time for the night bus to Vientiane.


permalink written by  The Happy Couple on March 22, 2009 from Ban Pakthon, Laos
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Pork in Pakse

Pakxe, Laos


We left Don Det for Pakse, our livers only just intact. We had been looking forward to the coffee in Laos, as the guide book said they were very proud of their coffee, believing it to be the best in the world. After the fantastic Vietnamese coffee this sounded plausible due to their proximity, but unlikely it could be better just becuase the Vietnamese stuff was so good. We expected it to be a massive relief anyway after the very disappointing Khmer coffee (whch they are also very proud of), but in Don Det anyway it had been very poor so far. So, we headed to Pakse in search of good coffee, as Pakse is meant to be the coffee capitol of Laos. It is very close to the Bolaven Plateau, where most of the coffee is grown.

When I tried to take a couple of photos in Pakse, I realised that the beer I spilled on my camera in Don Det had actually done a bit of damage. It had seemed OK at first, but now it had dried off it seemed like all the mechanisms were a bit sticky.

There's not really anything to do in Pakse. It seems to be full of people just using it as a base for trips to the Bolaven Plateau, so we decided to do the same. Wandering around the streets, I spotted someone selling more banana leaf parcels, and not being able to resist unusual things, least of all surprises wrapped up in banana leaf, I bought one, maybe expecting pickled fish again, but not really sure what to expect. I unwrapped it and it still wasn't obvious what it was, but it looked a bit like raw pork. I bit into it and, yes it seeemed to be raw pork, wrapped around some herbs, spices, and a big chunk of raw chili. It tasted very nice, but I couldn't help worry about worms, although the meat did taste like it might be cured, which I hoped would take care of any parasites. Oh well! I finished it off. I had read that the Lao have a taste for raw meat. Their main national dish, laap, is traditionally made with raw minced meat of fish, but it is usually cooked these days.

I tracked down a half bottle of lao-lao in the hope it would kill anything not killed in the curing process nad we finished the day in an indian restaurant, which was packed with falangs, probably more of them than we had previously eaten with.

permalink written by  The Happy Couple on March 21, 2009 from Pakxe, Laos
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Lazy in Laos

Ban Dondet, Laos


The day after out disappointing trek, we got the bus into Laos. Several people had advised us that Si Phan Don (Four Thousand Islands) in the south of Laos should be our first stop, and of the four thousand, recommended Don Det to relax for a couple of days. Si Phan Don is just across the border so it makes sense. At our guesthouse we had got chatting to a nice Cypriot-German doctor called Thalia, and she was also going to Don Det, so we sat next to her on the minibus. She is one of several people we met who said that they thought Cambodians were lovely, but they found the Vietnamese really cold and unfriendly. I don't understand it all, because I thought the Vietnamese were very nice as well: always having a joke with you, or maybe at you who knows, but it's not unfriendly.

They really crammed us into this minibus, and stopped to pick up some locals after it was already full! One by one, the bags from inside the minibus we taken up onto the roof and tied with rope. In Stung Treng, we stopped for lunch, where we swapped minibuses and Thalia noticed that one of her bags was missing. Stolen? Fallen from the roof seemed most likely, but the other minibus was called back to search it. It wasn't there, and after phoning the guesthouse we found out that the bag was there. Apparently it had got left behind at the market where one of the locals got off, or it hadn't made it onto the roof or something. Somehow someone knew to take the bag to the Tree Top guesthouse, so Thalia had to stay overnight in Stung Treng and wait for her bag to come on the next day's minibus.

For those of us who continued to the border, we had to pay a bribe of $1 to each side of the border, as we had been told we would have to by countless travellers. One Israeli couple had refused to pay, and the Lao side let them through anyway, whereas the Cambodian side had kept them waiting there for about five hours before letting them through. We had all decided that $2 wasn't worth a five hour wait so just paid it when they asked us to. A German couple, coming in the opposite direction, were being asked for $20 to get through, on top of the visa fee. Apparently they alter the amount depending on how wealthy you look, and they were on quite fancy-looking motorbikes. Luckily for me, it's never been that hard for me to look scruffy, so it was only $1 per side as expected.


The Israeli guy we'd been arguing with about the relative merits of dog meat versus pork a few days earlier had given us some advice on Don Det: when you get to the Island turn right instead of going straight on because this takes you to the side of the island where you see the sunsets, rather than being on the side with the sunrises, getting woken early by hot sun filling your room. Seemed to make sense, so we found ourselves a shack on the sunset side: in Sunset Bungalows. The accommodation is all shacks: bungalows on legs mosly made of bamboo, and they all have little verandas with hammocks. Very chilled out. So to get relaxing we thought we would get stuck into the drinks which seemed incredibly cheap after Cambodia: 6000 Kip for a Lao Lao mojito and 10000 Kip for a (640ml) bottle of Beerlao. There are about 8500 Kip to the US$, which we were still thinking in after Cambodia. Beerlao is quite nice and apparently has about a 95% market share; it used to be 99%, but the market seems to be getting penetrated very aggressively by Tiger at the moment. Lao Lao is the country's other national drink, which is rice spirit and only costs 10000 Kip for a 75cl bottle. Anyway the result of coming into the cheap abundance of alcohol and beer in bigger bottles is that we both ended up very drunk and then very hungover the next day. We did see a fantastic sunset, as did all the other people who had come over from sunrise side for a drink in the bar at our guesthouse.

Lao Lao just means Lao spirit in the Lao language. Coming into Laos [note the adjective relating to the country is Lao and the country is Laos, where the "s" is pronounced in English -- sounds a bit like louse] meant that we were back in a tonal language speaking country again, so it would be tricky to learn much. Anyway, the two words "Lao" in Lao Lao are different because they have different tones. After a while and some time with my phrasebook I realised that Lao is really quite easy: there are six tones which is at least easier than the nice Cantonese has, but not as easy as the four in Mandarin. But aside from the tones, which I think are pretty tricky to master, there is the alphabet, which is very strange if you are used to Roman characters. Apparently it's derived from the original Thai alphabet, which in turn is derived from the Khmer alphabet, although Thai had since been redesigned, so Lao is closer to the original Khmer now. Anyway, once you've learned the alphabet it gets much easier because Lao is phonetic. Apart from that, the language structure is very simple: the verbs have no tenses, they don't change depending on the person, or if plural; the pronouns are the same whether subject or object; nouns are the same whether plural or not, in fact all the time, so the adjectives never change either. There is more, but I can't remember now. Mostly the language is trivial, but there are one or two areas where there is extra complexity, like knowing how to address people: older sibling, younger sibling, aunt, uncle, etc etc, and a specially respectful address for monks and people in high office.


Apart from the booze and the language, other first impressions are that the money all looks the same: most of the notes are greeny-blue and if you don't have the note the right way up and the right way round, you can't see the arabic numerals most of us are used to; the pigs were all tied up, although I've since discovered that this is not generally true in Laos, so I wonder if they don't trust their neighbours in Don Det, or maybe they just don't trust their pigs. Anyway, the pigs looked very unhappy on the island. Another strange thing I noticed quickly is that Lao people sweat; certainly no more than falang such as myself, but after Cambodia, where nobody sweats it was really noticeable. Another thing I noticed here is that the backpacker food had remained unchanged from place to place since the start of the trip. As we'd been travelling round we were watching the local culture shift slowly from one to another, meanwhile, I realised, backpacker culture is static: everywhere does banana pancakes (the pancakes all seem to taste like omelettes in Asia), everywhere does burgers and pizzas (usually very badly), and everywhere does shakshuka. Anyway this was a very backpaker-pitched place, so there was a lot of this food. Also, curiously, most restaurants seemed to do a pumpkin burger, which seems to be a local speciality peculiar to Don Det. I didn't notice any pumpkins growing, so I'm not sure why. The backpacker food was as it always is, but very quickly I realised we were in for a treat with the Lao food, especially after how disappointing the food had been in Cambodia.

On our first morning there we were woken before 6am by some cocks crowing very loudly and persistently. Given the hangovers we had we were not particularly grateful for this service and wondered what difference the sun can possibly make on sunrise side, considering you are woken before it anyway. So we spent a lazy morning becoming accostomed to our hammocks, taking a dip or two in the Mekong. Later in the day we discovered the mistake we had made. After about midday the sun beats down on the hammocks on the sunset side, making it nearly impossible to tolerate, whereas the people on the sunrise side are in the shadow of their bungalows, having been woken up at the same time by the cocks, the morning after watching a beautiful sunset by simply buying a drink on the sunset side.

Quite quickly we noticed that the Lao are as obsessed with rice as Cambodians: rice, usually sticky rice, is offered with whatever you order from the menu. Burger: would you like sticky rice? Sandwich: would you like sticky rice? Ice cream: would you like sticky rice? Another odd thing we noticed is that the cats had no tails; not like siamese, but apparently docked. And a nice difference from Cambodia is that all the kids, who are just as cute, say "sabaii dii" everywhere you go, which is the usual greeting in Lao, instead of in Cambodia where all the kids say "hello". On the third day we met up with Charlie from Somerset, who had now arrived, and got very drunk again. It seemed like Laos was not going to be very good for our health. But at least we were absorbing the culture: Lao are known for being very laid back. The Lonely Planet says in the introduction that the collonial French used to say "The Vietnamese grow the rice, the Cambodians watch it grow, and the Lao listen to it grow". Apparently the Laos was always a loss-making venture for the French.

The following day was my birthday! But I was really hungover and didn't feel like doing much, however since we'd not really done much since we arrived I persuaded myself and Joanne to hire a bike and cycle around, and to the neighbouring island, Don Khon, which is connected by a bridge. In another nicer-than-Cambodia moment, we realised that foreigners only have to pay three times as much as locals to cross the bridge, a massive improvement on the forty times we had to pay in Kampong Cham. Don Khon was quieter and dearer than Don Det, but the same idea: bungalows on legs, although mostly made of wood here. We visited the water fall there, but it wasn't very impressive; too dry at this time of year probably. We cycled back a bit uninspired and still hungover. I managed a few drinks for my birthday, we went to an indian restaurant, and Joanne gave me a krama, which is a Cambodian scarf, used, for example, for protecting your face from dust when on a motor bike in the dry season; also some nice incense we'd been smelling everywhere in Cambodia, an incense holder, and a bracelet, which I'm sure will grow on me ;-)

That night there was a massive electric storm and the island was lashed with rain. A bit odd, I thought, since the dry season still has quite a while to go, but I suppose you do get occasional downpours. After the storm eased off we were woken again by a couple of English guys two bungalows along, who arrived back really drunk. We'd chatted to them a bit over the previous days. They were biking over the difficult roads in Laos on dirt bikes, neither of them ever having riden even a moped before. They both had several injuries from the journey, and one had a really nasty burn from the exhaust pipe (apparently known as a "Thai Tattoo"). Anyway, after a while the dutch girl in the bungalow between hours and theirs spoke up, in a bid to quieten them down. Instead she just roused their interest: "where are you from?"; she replied "Holland"; then a few minutes later, "where are you from?"; "Iceland", she said. "We're from England" they responded; "oh really we can't tell" was the last thing she said.

The next day we watched from our hammocks as the female owner did our laundry in Mekong. I wasn't too worried, since everyone washes in it, as had we since we arrived there; and I think what came out the communal shower (which I never used) was just Mekong water anyway. The Mekong seems really quite clean and fresh. Later someone in our bar told us that the cats were missing their tails because baby cat tail is a delicacy and the Lao remove them when the cat is still young. That night loud music was blasting out long after most places close, and most have turned their generators off (there is no mains electricity on the island). We thought it must have been where the English boys had been so late last night, so we tracked the place down to have a look. It was locals having a party, being true to character as we'd been told: drinking Lao lao and dancing to loud music with very loud bass being played by a band playing music that sounded quite like ska. That night there was another huge storm and downpour. We decided we had to leave the next day, as we were becoming too lazy and drinking too much there.




permalink written by  The Happy Couple on March 20, 2009 from Ban Dondet, Laos
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Trekking near Ban Lung

Banlung, Cambodia


We fancied doing a bit of trekking in Cambodia, so from Kratie we waited for the bus to Ban Lung in Ratanakiri province, where we had heard there is some good trekking. Waiting for the bus was also a French guy called Fabrice, who we got chatting to. He was taking lovely pictures of some children who were hanging around the bus stop. He had a truly impressive looking camera. For some really nice photos of Cambodia have a look at his photostream on Flikr: http://www.flickr.com/photos/travelspics . I kept myself busy by photographing a praying mantis on a nearby bush. It turned out that Fabrice was also interested in a trek, so we agreed to keep in touch once we got to Ban Lung.

The bus was a bit overloaded, which meant that my bag and Fabrice's had to come inside and roll about the aisle, and I was squashed in at the back between loads of children. I was expecting Ban Lung to be as hassle free as Kratie and Kampong Cham had been, but as soon as we got off the bus there was a massive scramble for the "barang" by the moto dup drivers, each of whom pushed one or two guest houses. Surprisingly this was the most hassle we had yet endured, but the guest house owner in Kratie had recommended a place called Tree Top, an "eco lodge", which we soon found a driver for. At $4 for a double room it seemed like a good deal as well. When we arrived there, after a rather scary journey on the back of a bike with my thirty kilo rucksack still on my back, Fabrice was already there, and had taken the last double room, leaving us with a choice of a twin room (not suitable for a honeymoon) or a bungalow which, at the massive price of $7 we decided we
couldn't afford on our Cambodian budget. We really wanted to stay there though, as it looked lovely, so we were very pleased when Fabrice agreed to swap for the twin room. The eco lodge was a little out of town, so we just ate in their restaurant, which was a little over-priced, and got chatting to an Israeli guy, who seemed to be a mine of travel information, largely related to money saving; he scoffed at our $25 per day per person. He was trying to get by on $10. He had just arrived from Laos and I didn't think he'd be able to do it in Cambodia. After a bit the conversation went down hill when he told Joanne she was ridiculous for not eating dog when she is happy to eat pigs which, he insisted, are much dirtier animals than dogs. What a silly discussion!

We were woken at 7am by the building site, where they are building the lodge owner's house. It seems like everywhere we stay in Asia there is a buliding site just outside our window, which starts at 7am. In Banlung it was much cooler than the lowlands of Cambodia. When we went into the restaurant in the morning, Fabrice was sitting with a Canadian guy called Bobby, saying that they had been in town and found a trek that was cheaper than the one offerred by the lodge and they were going to meet the guide later to go over the details. We had arrived too late to organise any trekking for that day, so we hired the worst condition moped so far, from the lodge owner and zipped off to take in the local sights, stopping in town to have a baguette. Baguettes are for sale from street vendors everywhere in Cambodia, but this was a national speciality we had somehow hitherto missed. We hadn't been missing much, but they were OK.


First stop on our moped trip was a waterfall, up to which we hoped to be able to get a trip on an elephant. Somehow we missed the village you catch the elephants at and ended up right at the waterfall, which we had to pay to look at. I mentioned that we were looking for elephants at the little shop next to the waterfall and he told us he'd organise it for us, so he phoned around to find out where the elephants were. Apparently these elephants are normally working elephants so giving the tourists rides is a nice break for them. "The elephants are in the jungle" he said after a couple of calls, so he said we could get on his moped to the elephants, and they would bring us back to the waterfall. So the three of us, me in the middle Joanne at the back, crammed onto this little 100cc moped, over quite a rough, rocky road. Heading up a hill on the road, the driver lost it on some loose rocks and spilled us on to the road. Well it wasn't serious, but it was
pretty sore; my knee was badly scraped and a bit bashed; Joanne had bruised he inner thigh; and the driver was complaining of sore ribs. We just got back on the bike and continued to the very small village where we were meeting the elephants. "Elephant not here yet," he told us, "I go fix bike. You wait."


We had no idea how long we were going to have to wait, but the family who seemed to be in charge of the elephants were very friendly and I got a couple of nice photos of them while we waited. Eventually the elephants arrived and we were off. The moped driver told us we could get two elephants for the price of one, if we wanted. I hoped it was because he was feeling guilty about injuring us. The elephant ride wasn't much fun: rather uncomfortable and the poor elephants were hit hard on the head (with the back of a hatchett) any time they strayed to the edge of the path, usually to try and eat; so after just a few minutes I was feeling very sorry for my elephant who was getting it much more than Joanne's, whose was allowed to eat the occasional leaf. At one point the elephant appeared to get so annoyed with being hit, or maybe just with not being allowed to eat, that I thought it was going to throw us off; it seemed to be rearing up a bit and it was
trumpteting quite a lot. I thought, "Great! First a moped accident and now I'm to be thrown from an elephant". However it calmed down again and there was no major incident. My elephant handler was smoking a pipe for the length of the journey and when he noticed my scraped knee he very kindly offered my a wad of tobacco which he spat in, then indicated I should rub it into the wound. I politely declined. When the ride ended I was glad that people had previously warned us not to go for a long ride because of the discomfort. One hour was more than enough, especially with all the elephant abuse. The ride ended at the shop where the guy had driven us from on the moped. When his wife realised that the injury on my knee was caused by him losing control of the bike, she gave him a severe dressing down.


Our next stop was at a lovely volcanic lake, where lots of Cambodian children and teenagers, as well as a few foreigners, were all splashing around and having fun.


When we got back to the lodge, the trek guide was there. Bobby quite quickly decided it was too expensive for him and pulled out, but Joanne, Fabrice, and I decided to go ahead with it. We agreed one night sleeping in the jungle and one night "homestay" in a minority village. He was a bit vague about what we would see or do on the trek, but I didn't worry about that. I was sure he knew what he was doing. His name is Mr Keo Sona. Do not go trekking with this man!

That evening we had some drinks with Fabrice and a girl from Somerset, called Charlie. She had been working in Botswana in conservation, and wanted to live in South Africa. She had an aeronautical engineering degree, but hated it and completely changed careers. The next morning she was leaving for Don Det, where we planned to go next, so we agreed to bump into each other there.

The guide picked us up at 7.30am as agreed and we got driven to a ferry port. After we crossed the river we would be trekking. The guide, a guy he called his brother, and the car driver all sat around in a cafe at the ferry port having lunch, even though it was only about 10am when we arrived. Just when it was reaching the hottest part of the day we caught the ferry, which had been going back and forth for the whole hour and a half we sat there. The three of us had been sitting asking each other what on earth is going on -- after all didn't we have some trekking to be getting on with. Then when it was time to pack the bags I really started to wonder if they had any idea what was going on themselves.

The previous day when we had discussed the trek, we had asked the guide what we need to take with us and he had said not to worry, that they would carry everything; all we need to carry is clothes and our own water. We didn't need to take any mosquito nets or food, because they would organise all of that. We had decided to take one bigger bag to take turns with just in case. But when we got it out he put all the water in the one bag, then he put a huge bag of food, then he put another big bag of food in on top. I picked it up and said "it's very heavy", meaning that we could perhaps share the weight around; or at least the water, but he said "ok I'll take it" and put on the big rucksack, "you take this", and handed me a large, heavy, nylon sack. Fabrice was also given a sack to carry. Keo set off without tying the waist strap of the large rucksack as the midday sun beat down on us.

By now I was convinced they had no idea what they were doing. I'm no expert in hiking, but the last thing you want to do is carry anything in your hands, least of all an awkwardly shaped, heavy, nylon sack, which was dripping something slightly slimy from one corner; it really tires you out, puts strain on your back, and puts you off-balance. As for Keo not doing up the waist strap, he can't have known how the gear works, after all it's only the waist strap that really makes rucksacks sit where they should and takes weight off your spine. I don't think you need to have the highest tech gear to go trekking, but Keo was just wearing an ordinary pair of leather shoes, which seemed odd. Finally, setting off in the middle of the day, after sitting around doing nothing for nearly two hours was crazy, especially when the path turned out to be more of a road than a forest track, so there was almost no shadow from trees, most of which anyway had been cut down,
and the land burned. So we were walking along a large path through a scorched wasteland in baking sun. Not exactly a great start.

Soon it because clear that Keo and his brother weren't even very fit. OK, Keo's bag was heavy, but the two of them stopped and sat down for a rest every fifteen minutes, while the customers stood around waiting for them to get on with it. Surely the guides are supposed to be really fit and able to cope with carrying a heavy bag? Keo's brother didn't even have that excuse and seemed to need the rests just as much. Eventually we reached a section where the road narrowed and some of the forest had been left alone, and it started to look a little bit pleasant, however we were still being passed quite frequently by vehicles. Finally it narrowed even more, so that only mopeds were able to drive along the path. Which is about when we stopped at a clearing with a couple of wooden structures. Our home for the night! It was actually quite nice, so I started to cheer up. Keo got the hammocks we would be sleeping in out of a bag and tied them up under our shelter.
That was when things got worse! Joanne had gone over to inspect the hammocks, which had integrated mosquito nets. One of them had a huge hole in it, the zip did not work at all on one, and the last one had lots of small holes. When we complained to Keo, he told us not to worry, he has repellent spray and there anyway is no malaria in Cambodia! Needless to say we were not very happy, because we could have brought our own.

Keo and his brother lit a fire and cooked the fish that turned out to be the thing leaking from my bag in the hot sun all day. It tasted OK, if not exactly delicious, but it made me worry how fresh the following day's meat would be. The meal was cooked with loads of rice; "Cambodians don't feel good unless they have rice in their stomachs Keo explained to me". When the sun set, the two Cambodians lit a fire for us and went to their hammocks to sleep, at about 7pm, leaving us wondering what to do with ourselves, and also we realised, nowhere to sit, because it was the tree trunks we were using as benches while we ate that were now the fire. Eventually I volunteered to take the zipless hammock in exchange for Joanne getting the best one and we also went to bed. I've tried to sleep in a hammock once before and found it very uncomfortable, and this one was no different. After drenching myself in mosquito repellent, I realised that the hammock was a bit short for me and it seemed like it would only be comfy if my knees bent the wrong way. I may have got two hours sleep, but when I gave up trying to sleep, it was actually really nice just lying there in the jungle, listening to what sounded like an elephant rustling around, although it really couldn't have been, listening to hundreds of gecko calling, listening to all sort of birds and millions of cicadas, and watching loads of fireflies floating past our shelter. All night an electric storm rumbled around us, although it only rained on us for a short time and the shelter kept us completely dry. Even if the hammock had been comfortable, I think there was actually far too much noise for me to sleep! It was a very interesting experience, though, just not much use if you want rest because you are hiking the next day.

The following morning, I discovered that neither Fabrice nor Joanne had slept either; I had seen Fabrice got up in the middle of the night and sit in the other shelter for a while. Apparently he had given up sleeping and intended to read, but when he put on his headtorch he was attacked by lots of insects, which is why he returned to bed shortly afterwards.

This day's hike seemed to consist of us following Keo around, visiting people living in the forest so he could have a long conversation with them, while we just stood around, waiting. He also took us to a clearing to show us where he used to work for an international gem company as a local expert and advisor, prospecting using lots of wooden aparatus that was still lying there, abandoned to the jungle. Apparently the company had pulled out of Cambodia at the start of the economic downturn. After this diversion, we walked to the village where we were to stay the second night (Etop), again carrying stuff in sacks, and the guides resting every fifteen minutes or so. It was about halfway back along the route we had walked the day before. We had taken so long to get going in the morning that it was already late afternoon by the time we arrived.


Keo explained to us that the villagers were mixed Lao and ethnic minority, "half-bloods" he called them. He went on to say that they are very lazy, have too many children, and all they care about is drinking rice wine and dancing. It was all sounding very racist until I asked him about his own ethnicity: the same, he said, but this one was not his village. The village stay was the highlight of the trek. The villagers were very friendly, and spent most of the time we were there standing around and looking at us, particularly the children, which Fabrice took full advantage of by taking loads of lovely photos. I didn't take many because I felt a bit embarrassed taking photos of strangers and Fabrice was making such a good job of it, I thought I would just look at his photostream instead.


There was a little shop in the village, where the three of us bought up the entire supply of beer (seven bottles). People kept buzzing in and out on mopeds, and someone in the village had a generator, so some of the houses had televisions. So this village, although in the forest, isn't really remote at all. One woman asked Keo why these rich westerners want to sleep in the jungle and sleep in their poor village; if she was rich like us she would live in the city and own a car. They all seemed to agree: we were mad. So it seems like this village is something akin to a "trailer park" in the US now: people only live there because they can't afford to live anywhere else; there traditional village life has gone, really, and they are only ten minutes away from a small town on a bike.


It was a village elder and his family we were staying with, who cooked for us in their house, although we didn't eat with them because guests get to eat first. We also slept there, although we had to ask for mosquito nets, rather than Keo organising them. The one thing Keo did do for us was procure a bottle of their local rice spirit, which we sat around in a circle taking turns to have shots. Apparently this is the Lao way: you drink fast until you fall down. Keo did not join us, because he said he can't work if he's drinking. We managed to polish off the bottle without him. About four in the morning Joanne and I woke up shivering and couldn't get back to sleep, but as we'd gone to bed about eight the night before we weren't too tired. Only when the sun came up did we realise that everyone else had a blanket except us; Fabrice and the two guides!


This time we told Keo that we wanted to get going early to back to Ban Lung at a reasonable time. It seemed to work because we set off fairly sharp without the usual sitting around for hours, and they even walked almost without breaks, although they did both complain frequently how tired they were. When we got back to Ban Lung, we were able to book back into Treetop, and finished the day with a few drinks with Fabrice. During the trek, I'd enjoyed spending much of the time chatting to him. I even got to exercise my French a little, something I had thought there might be an opportunity for in Cambodia with so many French people around. We had quite a lot in common politically, and he frequently ranted about Sarkozy, who he seems to believe is responsible for everything wrong in France today. At one point I said to him I thought French supermarkets are not what they used to be: less fresh produce, more microwave meals and processed food, unripe fruit and cheese on the shelves; "what's happening to your country?" I asked -- "It's the fault of Sarkozy!" he replied.



permalink written by  The Happy Couple on March 15, 2009 from Banlung, Cambodia
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Dolphins in Kratie

Kracheh, Cambodia


The main draw of Kratie is the chance to see the endangered Irrawaddy Dolphins, so we hired a moped to go and find them. They seemed very relaxed about renting bikes here. "It's no problem not to have a helmet," he told us, "because you are foreign the police won't stop you". I wasn't convinced, but we decided just to drive very carefully instead of finding another shop where we might have been able to hire one. In Vietnam they had said to me "Just start in third gear because first and second will be too fast for you"; the implication being that foreigners are too stupid to start in such a "powerful" gear -- that in turn reminded me of Thailand where I was constantly told that the food would be too hot for me (just a farang).

It was nice to be on a bike again (and even nicer to have wind blowing through the hair), and we found the dolphin place without too much difficulty; there are wooden carved dolphins for about half-a-mile in either direction from the parking spot. We paid more money for the boat trip than the Lonely Planet says we would need to, but they seem to have suspended the free market and set up a new system where there is a fixed price which gets shared among the boatmen, instead of being able to haggle them down. It also said that some of the money is going towards protecting the dolphins too, so I can't complain. We didn't have to wait long for the dolphins; almost as soon as the boat pulled away from the edge, the boatman cut the engine and pointed. Considering there are only supposed to be about one hundred of these creatures left, we saw a very large percentage of the total population. They were constantly coming to the surface, and came fairly close to our boat a few times. They're quite strange looking dolphins compared to the bottle-nosed ones I'm used to; these have a snub nose and a big grin. Unfortunately they only come to the surface briefly, so I completely failed to get any photos of them. I do have a few short video clips, which I'll upload at some point. The boatman asked us if we wanted to go to the rapids, just upstream of the dolphin play area, for another dollar each, so we decided we might as well. When we got to the rapids he just parked the boat on a sand bank and said "now we swim". So, leaving poor Joanne on the sandbank as she didn't have any modest enough clothing to swim in, the boatman and I stripped down to our pants and splashed about in the Mekong. The water seemed really nice and clean.


On the way back to town we bought some more sugar cane juice and then I spotted a stall selling a local speciality I'd read about: sticky rice, mixed with beans and coconut, cooked in sticks of bamboo; it's an on-the-go snack. Clearly we had to stop for some. I noticed that they also had strings of banana leaf parcels hanging up, which I thought might be the other speciality I'd read about i.e. spiced pickled fish, wrapped in banana leaf. I love banana leaf parcels, because without speaking the language, you are never sure what you're going to get. Anyway, before I had a chance to buy anything, some spoiled VIP brats drove up in a black Toyota Hilux and bought every one of the banana leaf parcels. Luckily I found some more back in town, and discovered that they were indeed pickled fish and chilli, wrapped in a holy basil leaf, then the banana leaf. Really delicious! And the rice was quite nice as well.



permalink written by  The Happy Couple on March 10, 2009 from Kracheh, Cambodia
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Koh Paen, agrarian paradise

Kampong Cham, Cambodia


We were up early to catch the bus from Siem Reap to Kampong Cham. There's not a huge amount to do there, but it was a massive relief not to be constantly harrassed by people trying to sell us stuff, or otherwise extract money from us. I had read another blog post about the town, saying that it has the "only bridge" across the Mekong. I've since seen plenty more, so I now know this is rubbish, but maybe it's the only one in Cambodia. Since the bridge has been built the ferry trade has apparently nearly completely died out and Kampong Cham has become an important transit town.


The bridge is pretty ugly. However, walking to the other side of it, there is also an old French lighthouse / look-out, which we climbed to the top of. On the way back from the tower, a woman threw a corn cob at Joanne, from the back of a truck. It hit her quite painfully in the chest and gave her quite a shock. We had read that people are much more conservative away from the main tourist areas, and that they object to tourists wearing overly revealing clothing. In preparation for this, Joanne had bought a pair of long baggy trousers before we left Siem Reap, but she was still wearing a vest top. This is the only explanation we could come up with for the attack, but it left Joanne with a rather negative impression of the town. I loved it though.


The town itself was nothing to see, but there is an Island in the Mekong, called Koh Paen, just as the river passes Kampong Cham. Connecting the island to the town is a bamboo bridge, which we walked across to have a wee look at the island. The bridge seems pretty rickety, but people were driving cars and (mostly) motorbikes across it. The bridge is rebuilt every year after the rainy season ends. During the rainy season the island is accessible only by boat, once the rain sweeps the bridge away. In fact it seems like the bridge may be under continual repair while it is up; some guys were trimming bits of bamboo and laying new strands down as we crossed. When we got to the other side if the bamboo bridge there was a ticket booth where we were charged $1 each, which seemed a bit excessive to me considering we were on foot. Other people on bikes were handing over what looked like smaller notes, but I didn't get a good look. We had a brief look at the island, but it was getting dark so we headed back to town.


The next day I returned alone on a bicycle so I could see more of the island. Again I was charge $1 on the other side, but this time I decided to question it. "How much are they paying?" I asked, indicating some people on a moped. "You are foreign" was the response. I watched someone hand over a 100 riel note. So tourists pay forty times as much as locals then. This is the kind of rip-off I objected to in Cambodia. Some people complain in Vietnam they rip you off, but I never found that; they might start with an outrageously high price, but they are very willing to drop it a lot, if you just play the haggling game a little. I don't think tourist pay much more than locals in Vietnam if they are just willing to put the effort in. In Cambodia, though, most prices seem to be fixed and the price difference for tourist is "official", so there is no way of arguing them down; that's just what the price is for foreigners.


Anyway, it was well worth the dollar. The island is absolutely gorgeous. Everywhere I cycled, there were children shouting "hello" and running after me. Everyone on the island was very friendly and smiley -- with the exception of the older women; most of them are sour-faced and shaven-headed. I mentioned this to someone later, who said "well the older women in this country have had a pretty rough time", which is fair enough I suppose. I didn't find out why their heads were shaven; it may have been permanent mourning, or it may have been that they were nuns. The island is very rural, all the buildings are traditional wooden stilts bungalows, and it just has such a lovely remote village feel to it, which is all a bit strange when there is a regional capital town just over the bamboo bridge. Much of the island is given over to agriculture: tobacco, sesame, and bamboo seem to be the main crops, but most people seem to have jack fruit trees in their gardens too; all over the island chickens, pigs, ducks, and cows wander freely. I wondered how anyone knew which chicken were whose; it seems possible that they are living in the kind of agrarian collectivist utopia which Pol Pot had envisioned. Maybe he visited this island at some point. Mind you, he probably wouldn't have been very impressed with the two schools and one college I passed on the island.


On the way back I stopped off at a press, where people squeeze sugar cane juice for you. I'd seen a few of them before, but never bought any. I ended up waiting around for ages while a woman cleaned and re-assembled the equipment, and her husband shaved the bark off several sticks of sugar cane; meanwhile loads of children gathered round to laugh at and watch me, and wait for their juice. The guy had to work pretty hard to turn the press, which works just like a mangle, and for the first time I saw a Cambodian sweating. It was very hot, and I was glad for the crushed ice they filled my glass with from a cool box, before pouring in the sugar cane juice. Surprisingly it's not that sweet. I was expecting something clawingly sweet, but in fact it must have less sugar in it than most of the soft drinks it goes into once it's refined. Ridiculous!

The island left me with a nice warm glow, before we headed off to catch the bus to Kratie.


permalink written by  The Happy Couple on March 9, 2009 from Kampong Cham, Cambodia
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Recovering in Siem Reap

Siem Reap, Cambodia



The day after we finished the temples of Angkor (and lots of buckets) we were extremely hungover. Joanne swore she was never going to drink buckets again. So we just took a couple of days off, since we'd worked so hard seeing all those temples. For two days we just hung around Siem Reap not doing very much. On the same road as our guesthouse I noticed a KFC was going to open soon. Lookalikes? Or maybe it was just the hangover.

During our gruelling three days of temple stomping, my flipflops had started to come apart, but I paid a dollar to have them repaired, when a shoe-repair guy happened to walk past at just the right moment. I'm sure I could have bought a new pair for not very much more, but it seemed like a good idea at the time.

After a couple of days of hanging around Pub Street, where we bumped into Marty and Jochem, for definitely the last time, I really wanted to get out of this super-touristy Cambodia and try to get a sense for what the "real" Cambodia is like. So we booked transport for Kampong Cham.

permalink written by  The Happy Couple on March 7, 2009 from Siem Reap, Cambodia
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Angkor What!?

Siem Reap, Cambodia


Having been thoroughly depressed by the current wealth gap and the former
brutality of the Khmer Rouge in Phnom Penh, we were glad to be escaping the next
day to the rich cultural landscape of Angkor, Siem Reap being the nearby town
where we stayed.

Siem Reap is the tourist capitol of Cambodia. It is obvious that many people who
go there see nothing else of the country, and IF my memory serves me correctly,
someone or other told me that indeed 50% of the country's tourists go only to
Siem Reap. The town itself was OK. Nothing special. Houses on stilts, which we
hadn't seen much of further south, but now we were in the environs of Tonle Sap
(Lake), which acts as a massive backwash when the rainy season comes and the
flow Mekong reverses into the Lake due to the extent of the rains. I read that
90% of the water in the Mekong drains out during the dry season. I'd love to
return to the area during the rainy season and see what the river having 10
times as much water does to the landscape. It made me think that people in
England should maybe start thinking about building their houses on stilts, so
that they don't have to ask for disaster relief every year when their houses
flood.

At least here there were some local food stalls where we could save some money;
much needed after paying the pass to see the temples at Angkor at $40pp for 3
(consecutive) days, and the tuktuk driver to take us around: $12, $15, and $25
for the three days, respectively. Our budget was bust again in Cambodia. And the
beer was dearer than Sihanoukville.


I really don't know what I can say about the temples we spent three days
visiting: they are incredible. Visiting each one on its own would be a fantastic
experience, but we saw 16 in three days. We really needed about a week with rest
days, becauase by the end, we were thinking "yeah yeah bas relief. Again! Blah
blah Shiva blah blah nagas". Not one of them was boring, but it's too much to do
three full days of fantastic ancient temples in a row. The number of photos we
took is testament to how impressed we were. I've uploaded only a modest selection
of the best ones... I don't know whether you all know, but there are more photos than those embedded in the blog. Just click on "photos" at the top page of the blog (or else follow this link http://blogabond.com/Photos/PhotoBrowse.aspx?UserID=4545) where you can bore yourselves silly with the extra photos than couldn't appear in the text!

Our tuktuk driver (Rak) told us that (in another triumph of capitalism) the
temples were operated by a Korean company. Originally Cambodians were charged to
visit "their" temples until crowds protesting persuaded them to change the
rules; now they get free entry, although the still have to pay about 300 Riel to
use the toilets, although this is much less than the 2000 Riel tourists without
tickets have to pay.


For the record, our first day took in: Angkor Thom (Bayon, Baphoun, Phimeanakas,
Terrace of the Leper King, Terrace of the Elephants, Ta Keo, Ta Prohm, Banteay
Kdei, and Prasat Kravan). Joanne ran out of batteries near the start of the day and those we bought showed "running out" as soon as they went in her camera. "Copy" batteries are apparently as much of a problem in Cambodia as copy everything else.

Anyway, after our first day of temples we discovered happy hour in "Pub Street",
but had terrible food in the only place we could afford, since we hadn't yet
discovered the local food stalls.

The following day we had an early start: Angkor Wat for sunrise, somewhat
confusingly on Rak's advice, since the previous day he'd told us that the light is better in the
evening. Sure enough it was very disappointing! Angkor Wat was supposed to be
the ultimate in temples, but as the sun rose behind it, rendering it in total
silhouette, the disappointment in the (obediently at the proscibed place) crowd
was palpable. I'm sure it would have looked much more impressive for sunset.
Some people paid to go up in a balloon which I decided we should do for sunset
one evening. It's on a fixed line, so not a "real" balloon flight, but I've
never been in a hot air balloon before, so it seemed like a nice idea, which we unfortunately never got around to doing. The rest
of Angkor Wat was, of course, incredible, but the sunrise was a real letdown.

The rest of that day: Preah Khan, Neak Pean, Ta Som, East Mebon, and Pre Rup. Luckily for everyone my camera ran out of batteries shortly after Angkor Wat, and I'd been reserving them even at Angkor Wat, so there are probably a few thousand photos less than there outherwise would be. It
was 37C that day and about 60% humidity. Walking around in those tempratures was
not particularly comfortable, and every time we got back in the tuktuk, Rak took
the time to pause, turn around, look concerned, and say "are you alright" with
real feeling. It was all I could do not to respond "I would be if you got this
f-ing thing moving instread of acting so concerned". Not very charitible I
confess, but every second the cool breeze from the tuktuk's movement was delayed
seemed like a second closer to boiling point. He kept it up though, every stop;
he seemed to think it was dangerous for him to drive while we were so red-faced
and obviously uncomfortable. It was about that day I noticed that Cambodians
don't sweat. I actually asked Rak about it and he said, yes, if he was doing
heavy work in these tempratures he would sweat, but other than that 37C is just
normal for him.

Everywhere you go around Siem Reap there are people trying to sell you things;
more often than not they are children. It was there in Sihanoukville and Phnom
Penh, but here, where the tourist concentration is highest, it is incessant.
Cambodian kids are incredibly cute, and those hawking things have learned to
emphasise those aspects with expect precision. It's very hard to say no, and the
Lonely Planet emplores you to say no as they should be in education instead of
earning money, and the money probably goes to some VIP boss figure, not them.
I'm not sure about the bosses, but it's hard to see how working is depriving
them of schooling if there is no state-provided education anyway. Rak thought
that they probably were going to school, but only if they earned enough money
each morning (or the previous afternoon) to pay for school they next half-day.
Apparently this is difficult for them to do bcause the police extort bribes of
$3 per day from the kids to ensure they are not moved on from the tourist areas. Nice.

Not wanting to break with tradition (erm annoy their shady spying superiors I
mean) we bumped into Jochem in the supermarket in Siem Reap. The regularity of
this was now passing unfeasible, so to celebrate we agreed to have dinner the
next night. We had more luck with the food that night and discovered Cambodian
street food for the first time: cheapish and OK, but not a patch on Vietnam...
more luck at the supermarket where I discovered a litre of pastis for only $4.

The last day of temples consisted if Kbal Spean ("the riverbed of Lingas"),
Banteay Srey, Banteay Samre, and Phnom Bakheng for sunset. We also managed to
fit in the Landmine Museum, which is a small museum full of deactivated mines and bombs of
various sorts, kindly left there by the Americans. Why is there not some international treaty
obliging the nations responsible for the mining to be responsible for the clean-up and care of
the injured? - oh yeah, because there would be no point as the Americans wouldn't sign up to it,
just like they haven't signed up to the current Mine Ban Treaty (along with China, India, Russia, and so on).
During the day I asked Rak a little bit about the
politics in Cambodia. He didn't know what Socialism was, but when I tried to
descibe it, was fairly certain that the CPP governing Cambodia were not any such
thing (as they claim to be); in fact he said "government is to keep the rich
rich". When trying to explain why people (apart from the rich) vote for the CPP
he cited peoples fear of change; since the time of Pol Pot things in Cambodia
have been better, and it has been the CPP in power, so they are scared to change
anything in case something like Pol Pot happens again. They know things are not
great; they could be better, but they really know how bad things can get, so the
CPP will do because they are not that. Confusing he then went on to tell me
about his own politics: "I like the idea of Pol Pot", which rather surprised me.
He went on to explain further than he likes the idea i.e. everyone is equal, but he agrees there
were a few problems with the implementation, like killing lots of people. I'm sure it can't be a very
common view in Cambodia (surely?).

Naturally, we bumped onto Marty, Jochem, and Marty's cousin at the top of Phnom
Bakheng, where we had all gone for sunset, just a couple of hours before we had to meet them for dinner.
We met up for cheap market food again, then went on to "Angkor What?" bar, where they have a happy hour(s)
special of 50 (US) cent beer and cheap buckets (buy two get a free t-shirt). A fun night was had by all,
during which we managed to secure three free t-shirts.




permalink written by  The Happy Couple on March 5, 2009 from Siem Reap, Cambodia
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Back in Phnom Penh

Phnom Penh, Cambodia


Before we left Sihanoukville we (of course) bumped into Marty and Jochem again, who were (of course of course) staying in the same hotel again. This time we weren't staying in a place reccommended by the Lonely Planet, in fact this place wasn't even in the LP; it was well out of the way and not somewhere you would easily stumble across. Now I had all the proof I needed: Jochem and Marty were spies! Now I just had to work out who they were working for and how best to kill them.

Anyway we returned from Sihanoukville to Phnom Penh, where we retrieved our passports complete with (expensive) Laos visas. [Excuse any excess of typos above average; many of the keys don't work reliably on this keyboard]. This time we stayed at the cheaper, grungier, backpacker part of town where the lake is. "The Lakeside" to me sounded quite upmarket and romatic, but in fact is seems only to have been developed at all recently; as backpackers' accommodation, and also somewhere for large international corporations to dredge sandy silt to use as (I assume) building materials. I later read in the Phnom Penh Times (I think it was) about the scandal of international companies doing this (surprise surprise) without Cambodians seeing any benefit, despite the ecological damage it causes. Anyway, it seems until recently, the Lakeside was substanard housing with quite a lot of Indian immigrants. We took advantage of this by having a rather nice Indian meal the night we arrived back in PP. The guesthouse we stayed in (Number 9 Guesthouse, for anyone thinking of staying there) was absolutley disgusting.

Later research revealed that we should have given Sihanoukville a miss and headed for the less touristy beach resort of Kep, then spent as little time in Kampot. Oh well, next time!

The following day we moved to a much nicer hostel (Number 9 Sister Guesthouse) then organised a day of culture around Phnom Penh. Culture here, it turns out, is quite depressing. First we stopped off at a shooting range, where I declined the $40 fee to shoot 30 rounds from an AK47; even when he offerred me half a clip for just $20 I wasn't even half tempted. I don't really know why we went except it was part of the standard tourist route and I was curious. The LP claims you can possibly maybe shoot cows with AK47s, or indeed shotguns or anything else you are willing to pay for, after all in Cambodia money is king.

The above reminds me... I forgot to mention before, I think, one of the reasons I suspect Cambodia is so expensive is that everything is in dollars. At first I thought, OK, this is just to make tourist feel comfortable, so I'll just draw some local currency and get the "real" prices. The ATMs dispense dollars! Apparently you can choose if you have dollars or Riel if you have a Cambodian cash card, but a foreign card dooms you to dollars. I even went as far as working my way through the menus in Khmer to see if it would give me the option, but it wasn't my choice of English that had been deciding the currency. Now, when dollars are the currency, most things seem to cost one dollar minimum; in Vietnam we rarely spent a dollar on anything.

Which, in turn, reminds me about the Khmer language. Vietnamese had been a relief after Cantonese: roman script and only 6 tones instead of 9. Khmer was a mixed blessing. And to my shame I did not make it any easier by deciding not to get a phrasebook; I hadn't used it much in Vietnam, so why get one here? A mistake! It's worth it even for the few times you use it. Khmer is unusual in the region in that it is not a tonal language, however it uses its own script. The script is quite similar to Thai, although it predates it by some time (the Thais copied Khmer), the Khmer culture being the oldest of the dominant cultures in Indochina. Anyway, back to difficult to read, easy to say in theory. In practice, tourism is all they have in Cambodia, so everything that needs to be for tourists is in English; and it's not that easy to speak: the language is full of elisions and glottal stops (aspirated according to wiki). The roman translitteration contains loads of dashes and apostropes, which mean you have to sound like the power is cutting out on your microphone. Compared to the surrounding languages it sounds much harsher and truly weird. Anyway, I was lazy with Khmer and didn't bother at all.


So after the shooting range (which the driver had advised us to go to before), the Killings Fields, which is as depressing as you might expect: a large monument full of human remains, surrounded by the pits from which they were recovered. I don't know if they've done it for dramatic effect, out of respect, or just because the clean up would be far too much work, but all around the area where the mass graves have been exhumed, there are raggy old worn out clothes, half-buried in the earth. Nowhere did it say why, but I assumed that these were the clothes of the dead. In the monument they had a small pile of clothes recovered from the graves and these looked just the same. In a triumph of capitalism, you now have to pay to see this genocide monument; the money does not even go to the Cambodian people, or relatives of the victims, but (presumably) to the highest bidder, who in this case is a Japanese company. As far as I could gather they are doing none of the things you might expect in return for patronage of such a site; just pocketing the money I think.

As if not depressed enough, we carried onto the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum, which is just the Khmer Rouge's Security Prison 21 (S-21), preserved as a museum. It was previously a high school then, when everyone was evacuated from Phnom Penh to work in Pol Pot's communist agrarian utopia, they converted it to a place of torture and imprisonment. Respect for the dead prevents me from making any comparisons to its previous use. Bizarrely they have "no laughing" signs everywhere. I woudn't have seen anything funny under normal circumstances, but a no laughing sign is about the best thing I can imagine to get people laughing; especially in a school.

So we spent half the day finding out about how the French screwed things up, then the Americans made everything worse, then took communism as the signal to commit human rights abuses and atrocities galore. A familiar story in the region, although in this case they would have had a better case against the regime than in Vietnam, were it not for the complete hypocrisy displayed by fact they (and the rest of the UN) then went on to support the Khmer Rouge after they were defeated and forced into the bush by the Vietnamese army. Apparently they were afraid of communist expansionism. Well it's clearly much better to support the brutally genocidal communist than the liberators from that, isn't it?

Back in Phnom Penh we met a couple of South African girls who had been refused visas for Vietnam. We couldn't work it out.

permalink written by  The Happy Couple on March 1, 2009 from Phnom Penh, Cambodia
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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