Entered Cambodia 14th November.
Exchange Rate: 1USD= 3800 Rial
Fuel: 1 Litre= 3000-3550 Rial
Pension: - US$10 a double,
but very good quality room with A/C. Cheaper rooms are available.
Road conditions: - Bad,
bad, bad.
Speed limits: - Hardly
relevant.
Border crossings from the west: -
Only at Poipet.
Toll roads near border crossings: -
They are lucky to have roads.
Food & Drink: - 500ml
Water 500Rial, 285ml Bottle of Coke 1000-1500 Rial, 660ml bottle of beer
8000Rial, Noodle soup 4000 Rial (a meal in itself). Meat dishes 10-20,000 Rial.
Note: Most photos can be clicked on to see a bigger image.
Since we planned to go to Vietnam, we were supposed to have come through Cambodia from the south, via Phnom Penh. Time was against us, so we decided to just go to Siem Reap, where the remarkable Angkor Watt temple complex resides.
Cambodia has gone through much of what Laos has, but to a higher degree. The people here have suffered from the Vietnam war, as well as Pol Pot with the Khmer Rouge. Cambodia is the scene of the infamous killing fields, where the Khmer Rouge systematically murdered millions of their own people. Mainly the educated, monks, political opponents. Even if you looked intelligent or wore glasses, you were murdered. The reasoning is hard to follow, but basically Pol Pot wanted to keep Cambodia an agrarian society (ie all farmers). He didn't want the country to modernise, and to do so, he wiped out everybody who was a threat to his goals.
Pol pot is long gone now, but Cambodia still suffers his legacy of millions of land mines. People are still being maimed every day, and they say it could take 50 years to clean the countryside. It is also a very expensive exercise, and this is a poor country. There is evidence of land mine casualties everywhere, you just can't miss them begging. Land mines are one of the most hideous things ever created, and all countries should stop making them now, but the fact is they are still being churned out by the millions by well known companies such as Fiat. Australia fortunately has had the ethics to refuse to use land mines for many years. Now if we could get all the other countries, and western nations are the worst, to stop using them, the world will be a better place.
| 0439. The road conditions were abysmal. This pothole ripped the axle out of the truck. | ![]() |
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0436. Here, they are trying to shore up something to get the utilities through. |
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Animal rights groups would go ape about this. To the left, two pigs are alive and screaming for all they are worth. To the right, there are 6 rows of 4 chickens on each side (48), alive, and getting their heads wacked in every pothole. Fortunately, this was a rare section of smooth road, so I could take the photos one handed.
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It
can take days to see everything here, but being Philistines, and having
our own transport, we saw all we wanted to see in a day. We did actually
see the majority of it. |
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0470. |
| 0486. These bass reliefs are in remarkable condition. Even though they were done some 400 years are the original construction, and were by then Buddhist, these scenes are derived directly from Hindu mythology. They include the gods Vishna, Shiva and Krishna. |
| 0487. This scene depicts the Ramayana, which a Sri Lankan prince goes to battle with his monkey army to retrieve his wife Sita. | ![]() |
| 0499. It doesn't take much to amuse these kids. |
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0504. The village in the middle of the huge Mekong river. |
| 0501. These boats are actually houses for entire families. | ![]() |
| 0506. Again, we were a real novelty. Kids came out of the woodwork, and were all coy with us. |
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