Andy Brouwer's Cambodia Tales
March 1998 - Trip overview
Flying
in from Bangkok, I parted with US$20 and emerged from the scrum
with my visa, passing through immigration and into the waiting
throng outside Pochentong Airport. I stayed at the colonial
Renakse Hotel for a night, directly opposite the entrance to the
Royal Palace. A bit run down, the atmosphere was so laid back
that the staff were either asleep or absent, with regular power-cuts,
whilst outside the streets were alive with the hustle and bustle
of motos, cycles and four-wheel drives, as well as scores of
picnicking families on the lawns directly in front of the Chan
Chaya Pavilion and along the nearby Tonle Sap riverfront. I took
a 6.30am flight north to Siem Reap the following morning and from
the aircraft window, the ground below looked brown and dusty,
apart from the murky waters of the Tonle Sap lake. The familiar
scrum of taxi-drivers waited outside the arrivals lounge. The
trip into town was notable for the number of new hotels
undergoing construction along the route. I stayed at the homely
Stung Siem Reap Hotel in a quiet back street near the indoor
market. After chicken saltimbucca at the Continental Cafe around
the corner, I took a leisurely stroll to Wat Prohm Reat and Wat
Dam Nak, along the river and visited the crocodile farm before
finishing off with a chicken curry in coconut at everyone's
favourite eatery, the Bayon restaurant.
A 4.30am
start the next day and onto the back of Soydy, my guide's moto to
watch the sunrise over the towers of Angkor Wat - my three-day
temple pass had cost me $40. A torch would've been handy as I
stumbled up the causeway in the darkness, completely alone for an
hour until a tourist bus disgourged its tour group just before
the 6am sunrise, heralded in by a deafening dawn chorus of
cicadas. After breakfast, we visited a host of tourist-free
temples inside the walls of the old city of Angkor Thom,
outstanding among them the incredible Bayon and the restored
Leper King Terrace and its recently revealed secret passageway (right).
We stopped at Wat Thmey and its memorial to the victims of the
Khmer Rouge on our return to the
hotel
for lunch and a lie down. Spent the whole afternoon at Angkor Wat
- a truly remarkable place - and struck up a friendship with 12-year
old Duong, an adorable krama seller at the foot of the steps to
the temple's upper tier. At 6pm we finished off the day watching
the sunset from the top of Phnom Bakheng (above) and dinner at
the Greenhouse Kitchen restaurant.
Day three started at
Prasat Kravan - get there early to see the brick bas-reliefs
inside the towers - and onto a batch of other ruins including the
mysterious Ta Prohm, where nature has been left to wreak its own
destructive damage. After lunch at the Ang Krapeu restaurant
opposite the crocodile farm, we stopped off at Angkor Wat (below)
to see Duong and her family before another round of temples, the
pick of the bunch being Preah Khan. At Neak Pean, I gave Somaly a
photo from my last visit - she was selling souvenirs in the same
spot twelve months earlier. Next day, Soydy collected me at 7am
for the dusty drive out to Banteay Srei and later, Banteay Samre.
All alone at Banteay Srei was a big thrill until a couple of
tourist buses arrived just after 9am and we
moved
on, stopping many times on the way back to mingle with the locals
going about their daily business - it certainly helps if your
moto driver speaks passable English. Banteay Samre was a little
gem and is rarely-visited. Covered in red dust, a shower, change
of clothes and lunch at the One & Only bar, preceded another
temple tour. At Pre Rup, we detoured to visit a group of stilt
houses along a bumpy track to hand out some more photos from a
previous visit - it was great to be made so welcome by the whole
village - and on our return to Siem Reap, we veered off the main
road to view the 12th century towers behind Wat Preah Einkosei
and dined at the Bayon restaurant. An early morning trip to the
Tonle Sap lake to see the activity in and around the Chrong
Kniesh floating village and a long, hot trek up Phnom Krom to
view the 9th century temple was finished off with a walk back
through Banteay Chey village. In the afternoon, we took a bumpy
car ride along Route 6 to the 9th century Roluos group of temples.
Sunday was less strenuous and was spent cycling leisurely
alongside the Siem Reap river to Wat Athvea and its four 11th
century towers and joining in a game of foot shuttlecock and flip-flop
throwing with some eager kids.
The
next morning, sad to leave Siem Reap, I said my goodbyes to my
guide Soydy and to the hotel staff - for a few days I was their
only guest - before my 7.40am flight back to Phnom Penh. Back in
the capital, lunch at the Foreign Correspondents Club (FCCC) was
followed by a visit to see the valuable work of the Cambodia
Trust Centre at Calmette Hospital, where I was made to feel a
welcome guest by the expat and local Cambodian staff. Back at the
Renakse, I met up with a small tour group who'd arrived at the
hotel and we had dinner at the Rendezvous along the riverfront.
Up at 6am to photograph the sunrise over the Mekong river, my
motodub, Onphum, took me to the sombre Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum
(right) in the morning and out to the killing fields mass grave
site at Choeung Ek after lunch. On the way back we stopped at a
few temples including Wat Stung Meanchey where the kids were an
absolute delight and at the offices of the Irish charity Concern,
who invited me to their St Patrick's Day party. My evening meal
at the Ettamogah Pub was followed by refreshments at the DMZ and
Heart of Darkness bars.
Next morning, after breakfast at
the FCCC, I began my day at the National Museum - it really needs
a major overhaul - and moved onto the Royal Palace/Silver Pagoda
complex (although the Throne Hall was off-limits). Lunch at the
FCCC preceded visits to Wats' Botum, Langka and Moha Montrei
before an appointment with the Director of the Documentation
Centre of the Cambodian Genocide Project to get a better
understanding of their work. A visit to the disabled workshops of
Wat Than rounded of the afternoon which ended with dinner at La
Taverne on Sisowath Quay. Oudong, the former Royal capital some
40 kilometres north of Phnom Penh, was my destination the
following day. My guide, Sothy was an excellent companion as we
made countless stops before arriving at the Khmer Rouge victims'
memorial at the foot of the Oudong hills. The stupas containing
the ashes of former Cambodian kings were on top of the ridges
which also housed a collection of shrines. We stopped at Tul Mau
and Svay Pak on the return journey, where one noticeable feature
was the number of new temples being built en-route. Back in Phnom
Penh, Onphum took me across the Japanese Friendship bridge to the
Chrouy Changva Peninsula, its three wats and a considerably
slower pace of life.
Next
on the itinerary was a car ride to Tonle Bati and Phnom Chisor,
some 50 kilometres south of the capital. We visited the 11th
century temple of the Black Virgin at Prasat Neang Khmau before
the hike up the 348 steps to the top of Phnom Chisor and its
deserted 11th century temple, which was in surprisingly good
condition with a gorgeous panoramic view of the plains below.
Back along Route 2, we took a left to the Ta Prohm temple at the
popular weekend retreat of Tonle Bati, which was also very well
preserved and finished off our visit with a picnic on the shore
of the nearby lake. My evening meal back in Phnom Penh at Bopha
Nakry was excellent. Next day, Onphum (right) moto'd me around
Phnom Penh on a whistle-stop photo tour of the capital before a
trip out along the busy Route 1 to Kien Svay, where we eventually
tracked down a Khmer Rouge victims' memorial at Wat Champuk Kaek
but not before we'd had a minor moto accident on a dusty trail
miles from anywhere! Dinner at the Ponlok restaurant along the
riverfront and then onto the St Patricks' Day bash at the Concern
offices was a great way to round off my hectic week in the
capital, as I left for Bangkok at 10.30am the following morning.
I arrived back in England thoroughly satisfied with my two-week
trip, having made lots of new friends, considerably enriched by
my experiences and with a promise to myself to return to the Land
of the Khmer in the near future.
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Travelogue Glossary
The following words appear in my Cambodia Tales travelogues and I feel a definition may help your understanding of the text:-
anastylosis - restoration of a monument by dismantling and rebuilding using the original method and materials
angkor - royal city or capital
apsara - celestial female dancer, born of the Churning of the Sea of Milk
baluster - circular window pillar
balustrade - a railing in which stone posts or pillars are covered by a stone beam, usually the body of a naga
banteay - fortress, citadel or temple with an enclosing wall
baray - artificial lake or reservoir
bas-relief - sculpted wall carvings, much in evidence at Angkor Wat and the Bayon
colonette - decorative column either side of a doorway
devatas - female deities, usually found as guardians
fronton/pediment - triangular upper portion of the wall above a door or window; richly decorated with narrative scenes from Hindu mythology
garuda - mythical creature with human body and bird-like wings and beak
gopura - elaborate gateway or entrance pavilion to a city or temple
kala - a grinning demon commonly sculpted on a lintel over a doorway
krama - checked cotton or silk scarf worn by most Khmers
laterite - a red, porous mudstone, used for foundations and internal walls
library - isolated annexe usually found in pairs either side of the entrance to a temple
linga - a representation of the male organ and a symbol of Shiva
lintel - crossbeam resting on two upright posts above a door and directly below the fronton, often elaborately decorated with mythological creatures and floral motifs
makara - sea monster with the body of a reptile and an elephant's trunk
naga - underworld serpent-god, generally seven or nine-headed in the form of a cobra
phnom - hill or mountain
pilaster - square or rectangular pillar projecting from a wall
prasat - tower-sanctuary or shrine
preah - holy or sacred
sandstone - durable quarried stone, ideal for carving: replaced brick as the main building material
sampot/sarong - garment worn as a lower body covering
stucco - a mixture of lime, sand and clay plaster used for fine decoration over brickwork
stupa - Buddhist dome-shaped monument enclosing relics
wat - temple
This is not an exhaustive list and if you spot a word that you feel requires a definition, then please let me know.
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