Thursday 30 December 2010

Okay, Siem Reap temples - our quick round-up

DAY 1

We left our hotel with guide and driver at 6.30 as the light was dawning. We stopped at the Angkor ticket booth for our pass - it's $40 per person for a 3 day pass with your picture and everything like they do on a ski pass.

First stop Ta Prohm - our guide book describes it perfectly: Abandoned to the elements, a reminder that while empires rise and fall, the power of nature marches on, oblivious to the dramas of human history. Left as it was discovered by French explorer Henri Mahout in 1860, the tentacle-like roots here are slowly strangling the stones. This is where Raiders of the Lost Ark was filmed.






Next stop Ta Kev which is far more like a pyramid with steep small steps but thankfully not as small as the ones of Wat Arun in Bangkok - those are positively scary. We then went back to our hotel for a bit of R&R by the pool until 12.30 when we were picked up again and taken for lunch at Reahoo Restaurant which belongs to Hanuman our guiding company. Lunch was a feast and in a lovely garden setting. Dessert was mmmm - oh so good, pumpkin in coconut milk.






Back to serious matters the third temple was Preah Khan built by King Jayavarman VII in the late 12th century and is a sister temple to Ta Prohm we saw earlier. This was a very beautiful temple with long corridors, wonderful carvings, more monstrous roots invading the stonework.



Next was Neak Pean. Totally different to the other temples and not really a temple at all but more of an ornamental fountain and pond with 4 smaller fountains one of each depicting lion, horse, human and elephant. Very restful area and a nice walk across the reservoir to get there.




I think we did Ta Som and or East Mebon but there the day blurs until we got to Pre Rup. This is distinctively different - it's older and made of red bricks. It's synonymous with sunset in Siem Reap. We clambered to the very top just before 5.30 and then wondered about get down those almost vertical steps at dusk with hundreds of other people. Instead we nipped down and took a photo of the temple itself from ground level and it looked so pretty in the dusky pinkish light.







DAY 2








Angor Thom, the Terrace of Elephants which used to be the viewing gallery for the King to preside over celebrations and traditional sports. At the centre is the Bayon Temple - where colossal heads bear down - it's quite overwhelming and one of the temples where I'd be happy to spend hours and take hundreds of photos in the hope one of them I'd be proud to place on the wall at home.






Finally Angkor Wat - huge in size and grandeur - it's size has to be seen to be believed. It apparently took 300,000 people and 40,000 elephants to build - but sooo crowded. Thousands of people. I think lots of people must come to Siem Reap and that's all they see.






Our next adventure was a boat trip on lake Tonle Sap, we purchased our tickets and boarded our small bespoke boat.We motored up the lake and after a short while a number of floating houses appeared. The scene was like something  between Mad Max & Waterworld, home made water craft with large engines bolted on to iron frames whizzed between the wooden shacks, tiny children bobbed around in large aluminium cooking pots in the caramel coloured waters.

We stopped to drift for a while and within no time, a dugout canoe was heading our way, Mum & two tiny kids on board one of which had a huge Boa Constrictor writhing around his tiny body. Debs has a major snake phobia and as you can imagine with no where to run this was her version of hell. Using a mixture of hand and facial expression I managed to relay my urgent message to our new friends and they quickly paddled away.

Our guide asked us if we would like to see the Crocodile (one? we presumed) We tied off to a large floating market and clambered aboard, climbed some rickety steps and peered into a large wire enclosure below deck half submerged,there lay maybe sixty or so Crocs all intertwined, panting and rather smelly.

Time to go and so off we motored back to relative reality on shore!











Nearly New Years Eve.

Siem Reap - and the temples

What a really fun place Siem Reap is. As our taxi drove us from the airport to the hotel through the centre of town it seemed to be just full of restaurants and bars. Looks promising we thought but at the same time were all those bars going to be full of karaoke?! Our fears were totally unfounded - yes, there's loads of atmosphere and choice for where to eat and drink but nothing at all resembling the Costa del Sol!

Obviously the main reason anyone comes to Siem Reap is to visit the temples. We started our first day of sightseeing with our guide Smei picking us up at 6.30am ensuring that he'd get us to the first temple before the crowds - so worth it. Breakfast in our hotel starts at 5am daily so you can see the seriousness of going 'templing'.


Our first temple was the one that starred in Raiders of the Lost Ark where if you remember huge rather ominous looking tree roots had enveloped the temple ruins. Quite unreal they look. We spent the day clambering up, over, in and out of temples, mostly pretty large and actually quite different from each other. All are in various states of decay and have received internationally funded renovation by France, the US, Czech Republic, Japan etc. Haven't seen England mentioned.

We shan't describe each temple in detail or by name as a) we can't remember one from the other really and b)as you were'nt there you'll be glazing over anyway by about temple 2 (probably as you will be when we attempt to show you photos). If you haven't been to Siem Reap put it on your list though it is truly amazing.

We're staying at an extremely beautiful hotel called Residence d'Angkor a very short walk to where all the restaurants and bars are but far enough away to be tranquil. We learned it's an Orient Express hotel so that would no doubt be why we think it's so splendid. It's entirely build of wood which has that lovely evading ceder smell everywhere. The staff are so gentle and polite and never seem to stop smiling and opening doors. We do think though the girl who cleans our room has OCD. Everyday absolutely everything is in its place and in a straight line when we come in, including the two complimentary post cards from the information wallet which David wrote on day one and which each day end up back in the wallet!

Tomorrow we have no guide and have booked a couple of bicycles to go exploring on our own. We did get our guide to drive us an anticipated route before he abandoned us this evening so hopefully we'll not get lost. If it's as hot as it's been today though I doubt we'll be out for very long. Don't want to go wearing ourselves out and miss New Year. The intention for our cycle ride is to go in search of paddy fields, see some of the local people living in the countryside and if perchance we come across a local eatery en route we shall stop, if not make our way back to the plethora of choice in town. There's also a plethora of massage shops in SR where you can have an hours massage for $6. On a daily basis we have chosen this option over our hotel spa option which is $60 an hour. Would be nice to try as voted by Conde Nast as one of the best in Asia, but evenso.

You'll notice I've mentioned dollars. These are US dollars. Strangely USD seems to be the common currency in Siem Reap and we've not even seen any Cambodian Riel. if you go to the ATM it even churns out dollars and nothing is quoted in Riel either. Consequently everything does seem to be more expensive than you'd expect,or maybe Cambodia is just more expensive than Vietnam and Laos which as we've been there before is our natural comparison.


New Year should be wild as revellers are arriving in their thousands. Main street is called Bar Street and advertising a street party. Our hotel has an obligatory evening of entertainment and gourmet eating planned which we will partake in but as champagne at midnight is $165 a bottle (cheapest) we may find ourselves heading for Bar Street just before the magic hour.
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Before I get bitten to death by mozzies (as I haven't put the oil on yet) may David and I wish you all a fun New Year and a very happy and prosperous 2011. Be back soon.

Monday 27 December 2010

First day

Everything's great. To start with it's 30 C - that's always great in our book. Bangkok is as busy as ever, even moreso at this time if year. Our little hotel the Arun Residence is as well located as we remembered. With only part of a day we tended to go over old ground. Went to take I hoped an improved photo of the Wat Arun last night. Chose the spot, unleashed my brand new tripod only to find we didn't have the plate to fit the camera onto it - must have been in the camera bag that was stolen during the burglary - but with the equally new iPad we quickly sourced camera shops in an easy to get to shopping centre and that was our first stop this morning. It also gave me an opportunity to buy plenty of cold remedies as having fought it off for 2 weeks with a croaky voice it has now arrived with a bit of a wallop. We don't really have any other news as yet but this more a way to pass some time as we're back at Bangkok on our way to Siem Reap in Cambodia this evening and they've just cancelled our flight. The good news is we will still fly tonight.


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Location:Phikun Kaeo,Sisa Chorakhe Noi,Thailand

Thursday 23 December 2010

Will we get away

2 days before we fly and following travel havoc created by the snow it looks as if the airports have returned to some sort of normality - hurrah

For those of you who followed our blog last year it was commented you had no idea where we were - so here's a map for this year's trip!

Have a wonderful Christmas and look out for blogs from us (wireless permitting) around 28th onwards.