Carole finally finished her 21 hour journey from Geneva to Koh Chang and it’s great to see her here. We obviously have very international schedules – in the last twelve months we have met up once in Vietnam, once in Swanley (less international…..) and now here in Thailand. The weather had been perfect but Carole decided to bring a bit of rain – and just as she set foot on Koh Chang soil, the Gods celebrated her arrival – either that or they were very angry with her. The storm was monumental. I have never seen so much continual lightning which appeared to circle round and round for over three hours. The road to the hotel from the ferry is very windy and hilly and due to the red soil been washed across the road in torrents, it took her an age to get here. The storm went on for three hours. But on a positive note, Carole is in a pool access room next to me so we can swim round to each other’s room from our own little pool platforms – which since the arrival of our lilo’s (more of which later) we have christened our docking stations. But Carole’s first night was a quiet one - after the thunder stopped of course! We ate in the hotel restaurant which is good, but we discover our major problem – the why why is outrageously expensive.
Thursday, 26 March 2009
Sunday, 15 March 2009
My multi vehicle border crossing (15 March 2009)
So finally (for this time at least) I leave Cambodia this morning to go to Koh Chang, the Thai island. I could have waited until after midday and picked up yesterday’s transport that I arrived in Koh Kong on, to carry on in an escorted fashion. But I decide I have got quite good at this border crossing lark on my own so decide to make my own way. Little did I realise that I would be changing transport quite so many times. It starts simply enough with a tuk tuk from Koh Kong over the Friendship bridge to the border. Much easier than the Vietnam/Cambodia crossing, with the entry to Thailand very quick and simple. Interestingly making the crossing by land you only get a 15 day visa but if you arrive by plane you get 30 days. Obviously we land crossing cheapskate backpackers are less to be trusted! But doing it on my own has another benefit of not coming on a crowded bus, you are not in a queue with the other 59 passengers. And the walk between the two crossings was not the long one as it was from Vietnam – about a hundred metres, accompanied by my tuk tuk driver – I had no choice, he was wheeling my suitcase ahead of me at a pace that would not have shamed a 100 metre sprint champion. Of course then I was asked to give “some small riels in recompense”. On the Thai side you find a shared mini bus and they leave when they have a full complement. Fortune was shining on me, I was the last to arrive so we left straight away for the 1.5 hour trip to Trat. A smart modern mini bus, we change sides of the road (unlike most other places in Asia, in Thailand they drive on the right, i.e. the “correct” side of the road, i.e. the left!). We also change environment. Within a few hundred yards, the poverty and dust if Cambodia is left far behind with proper roads, traffic lights, lines down the middle of the road – but I can’t help feeling I have also left some of that charm behind too. You forget, but when you first return to Thailand from the UK, it has the feel of a second, if not third world country. But coming back in from Laos and Cambodia, you realise that it is clearly first world. We go a few miles and then have to change into another, identical mini bus… My travelling companions were a mixed bunch of men, including two particularly unattractive German guys who were staying at the Dugout last night. Interestingly, they weren’t accompanied by their two new Cambodian girl “friends” they seemed so close to last night…. Next to me was a middle aged Thai guy with a bad BO problem, a hacking cough and a very loud mobile phone. I know the seats were a tight fit, but I did feel he was getting unnecessarily close on occasions. My best Memsahib face made him back off for a time, only to have to repeat it again a few minutes later…. But eventually, I arrive at Trat bus station in a generally unmolested state. After some discussion, with neither side understanding the conversation (even my experienced Asia speak didn’t work), I agree to get in a songthaew (one of those open backed shared truck taxi things) for 50 Baht (£1) to go to the ferry. When we get to Trat town we stop and I am directed to a chemists…. I still haven’t worked that one out but I gather I have to change transport – and also pay the first man 20 baht…. The second man charges me 150 baht to the pier - my negotiation skills failed me, he wasn’t budging. Where the original 50 baht came from I haven’t a clue, but whatever. So off we go again and it’s a surprisingly long way to the pier, about half an hour. I hate boats as you know and asked to be taken to the fast boat. Yes, yes they said. One is 25mins, the other is 45mins. But as I’m sure you’ve guessed, I end up at the 45 minute one. But again, fortune was smiling and I get on the fery just as it was about to leave. I had visions of a real sea journey, but actually it was a bit more like ferry across the Mersey – a bit further perhaps, but you felt you could almost touch the high peaks of Koh Chang before you got on. When we arrived, the guide books had failed me again, there were no crowds of tuk tuks or anything else awaiting to take me to the hotel. After about five minutes I unearth a songtheaw driver who was finishing his lunch at the small port’s café and from him I gather I need to go to the “other pier” to get to where I need to go. He wouldn’t agree a price so I decided to go anyway. Ten minutes later I arrive at said “other pier” and yes, this is the 25 minute one, and obviously the one that connects to the airport – loads of Westerners were getting off the ferry that had just docked. So I change transport yet again (and a first for Thailand, I was not charged for the first part of the journey from the original pier – result!). My bag was thrown on the roof and I did my sardine impression with the rest to make my way to the Dusit Princess.
It was quite a journey. The island seems to be one big series of mountains rising up in sheer cliffs from the beach. So there were a number of hairpin bends as we snake our way across. All in all to get from the Dugout in Koh Kong to The Dusit Princess in Koh Chang I had to take:
1 tuk tuk
1 walk
2 mini buses
2 songthhaews
1 ferry
2 more songthaews
- not bad for the princely sum of a tenner door to door!
I knew the hotel was at the end of one of the stretches of beach and it is quite a way from the main beach drag where there are loads of bars and restaurants, so I will be a bit of a hostage to fortune for eating here. There are a couple of small restaurants just outside and a little shop selling water etc, so I will be fine. I can always take a “booze run” one day to the shops if my need for cheaper alcohol overtakes me!
The hotel is beautiful, extremely stylish, lots of fountains, pale wood, gorgeous pool chairs and a lobby area that’s bigger than Asda , Swanley, all made from pale marble. It seems very quiet too, I’ve seen hardly any other guests all afternoon. I am booked in a pool access room – there are about ten rooms in a row with a long pool at the front which you can get in from your deck. Not nearly as swish as Ant and my private pool in the Nam Hai last year but still lovely. The room is gorgeous too, and a heavenly bathroom, fluffy white towels everywhere, little bottles of shampoos and things, a shower with water in an area that doesn’t spray water all over the loo, and my favourite, a loo that flushes! And so far the sun is shining, long may it continue. Back to flashpacking again – fab!
A break at the border (14 March 2009)
The last few days have been pure R ‘n R in Sihanoukville. Walking into downtown, walking along the beach and reading. There’s a tiny cinema which shows all the latest films. I’m not sure that they are through the usual legal distribution channels as Slumdog Millionaire was showing. It probably had bad Cambodian or Thai subtitles and was filmed from the back of a cinema somewhere. I assumed it would be on for a week or so, but no, it’s one day only in this town so I missed it. But like the “fake” film I was able to purchase a “fake” (i.e. photocopied) book of “Q and A” which is the book the film is based on, which I really enjoyed. I’ll probably be able to buy a “fake” (i.e. pirated ) version of the film once I reach Thailand.
So it was with regret that I leave Sihanoukville behind to move towards the Thai border. 7.30am sees me up and ready for a tuk tuk to the bus station to take the VIP bus to Koh Kong, the Cambodian town on the border. And by VIP I mean twice the price of the ordinary bus, $8 for a four hour trip. It has aircon, a loo (although you’d have to be really brave or desperate to use it, the roads were exceptionally bumpy…) a bottle of water and karaoke on the tv. But at least no chickens in the aisles and everyone gets a seat. A small seat though, probably even less than BA economy – funny, if you asked me to do a four hour flight in such cramped conditions I would be quickly booking business class, but as I was already on the business class version of the bus, there was no other way to go. Actually, that’s not quite true, there is a boat that takes about the same time as the bus that does the coastal route from Sihanoukville to Koh Kong, but bearing in mind, as the boats are river boats and not meant to be ocean going, it is locally known as the “Vomit Comet”…. You can understand why I took the bus.
The journey wasn’t too bad. The bus station in Sihanoukville was all you would expect a bus station to be. Sleepy Westerners with huge backpacks, locals with chickens and beggars everywhere. We started exactly on time and the bus was full. The start was fine, it was the Phnom Penh Road which is relatively smooth, but after about an hour, we turned north on to the Koh Kong road, and that’s when the bumps started. But I should be grateful, until a year or so ago the journey took twice as long as there were four wide rivers to cross by ferry. The Thai Government have paid for four new bridges to be built, which halves the journey time. I guess they had an ulterior motive, by making the trip to the border easier, I assume they get more tourists. We turned into the National Park of the Cardamom Mountains – “an eco – tourist paradise” the signs tell me. As well as beautiful emerald green vegetation, there were a few really poor wooden tumbledown shacks along the way. I’ve no idea how these people scrape a living, the trees had been cut back about 200 metres either side of the road and a few mangy cows grazed in the red mud from the recent rain. But no sign of organised agriculture anywhere for miles and miles. Every so often the bus came almost to a halt – it was either to get in the right gear to try and power up the hill, or to get in the right low gear to stop the bus running away with itself as it negotiated steep downhill hairpin bends – I guess the driver didn’t put too much faith in his brakes…
Arriving in Koh Kong, I was the only one who actually got off the bus, everyone else stayed on and were heading straight to the border and then all points north in Thailand, some going as far as Bangkok, a hell of a trek. But by staying on the bus, did they know something I didn’t? On first glance, yes! Koh Kong looked like a one horse town out of an old Western. But instead of the one horse, there were cows and a few chickens. I had booked the Dugout Hotel, so named as it used to be owned by Doug, but no longer (think about it!). The info I had was that it was run by a guy from New Zealand, rooms had aircon and there was a pool, so it had to be good, right? Wrong! But it was handy, only 20 metres from where the bus dropped me off. Actually getting off the bus was an experience – it was as if Posh had arrived (ok – I know there is a resemblance…..) but the hordes had no cameras. I had to really fight my way through the guys wanting me to take their tuk tuk or moto and find me a hotel. It was a shame to have to disappoint them, I know I’m lazy, but even I can manage my case 20 metres to the Dugout. And as I was the only person off the only bus that stopped there that day it can’t have been good for them.
The hotel is a bit weird. The NZ guy, Grant who runs it appears a little disillusioned with life and sits in “reception” (more like his sitting room) drinking coffee watching NZ play cricket and rugby. About five rooms at the back of the reception area surrounding a little swimming pool. But at £8 a night this all seemed too good to be true. It was, sort of. The room is not one of my favourites, a bit bare but clean if not a bit smelly. Walls a bit cracked and damp. But they have a major issue with the water – i.e. there isn’t much of it. If you want a shower you have to ask them to turn on the reserve tank (but looking at the bathroom, I think I’ll give that a miss). But they have kindly left a huge bucket of water and a pan to the side of the loo so you can actually flush it (not another of Gill’s loo stories I hear you cry… ). And not only was there no shampoo, there wasn’t even any soap. There appears to be one other European couple here, and the rest are men who seem to have made some new Cambodian young friends. Methinks it’s a bit, to use the parlance, of a “knockin’ shop” - perhaps that’s what the pool’s for….. My attached pic of the pool makes it look like a rather charming boutique hotel – let me tell you, pictures can be deceiving! There are a couple of bigger more modern hotels in town (only about $20), but when I checked online, they looked a bit “Chinese” – but today, coming from the Dugout, they looked to me like the Ritz, and I bet they had running water on tap. So next time I decide to go for character rather than corporate, I may remind myself of this! There is one really swish place a few miles out of town right on the border, catering to Thai gamblers, and some of the rooms are $2000 (yes, that is thousand) a night. So I didn’t do too bad with my eight quid. There are no windows in the room, only an open grill in the bathroom so it may be mozzie heaven.
But undaunted after checking in and waiting for the torrential lunchtime storm to abate, I went for a walk. The town is basically just the one main, rather dusty street where the hotel is. A couple of lanes down takes you to the river front where the “Friendship Bridge” takes you to the Thai border. Nothing much happening apart from some slummy shack houses, chickens and dead rats. But at least they were dead – I assume the live ones only show themselves at night…. But in the midst of this nothingness an apparition appears – the Cafe Laurent on the riverside, where I greedily consume a very good café latte in very trendy surroundings. The town is being hailed as the next big tourist destination in Cambodia, so I guess this is just a bit of forward planning. There is, however, a lot more planning needed before their tourist dream comes true, as most people still only pass through here on the way to Thailand without stopping. And of course a bit more water would help….
But the town does have charm. Fortified by my latte I enter the dark bowels of the market. The usual fruit, veg, fly blown meat and clothes. But in the centre, lit by very dim lights is a veritable gold souk…. And everyone, even more than usual, as Cambodians always have a ready smile, was really nice. Kids on bikes practising their English with their hello’s, how are you’s and what is your name.
By now it was the witching hour and I was drawn to the only place in town that advertised wine. It was called Fat Sam’s. Unsurprisingly it was run by a very fat man called Sam – a Welshman from near Aberystwyth who had married a local girl and has two small children. Not one of the cleanest places – my wine was served but the glass was a bit grubby – I asked him to change it and he did – the next one was probably worse….. Perhaps the alcohol will kill the germs. But he was interesting to talk to. He appears to keep his head above water by going back to the UK a few months each year in the rainy season to earn a few bob.
Tonight I eat fish and chips (thought it best to give the salad a miss) on the pavement at the Dugout and watch the world go by. As usual, life is lived on the street here – barefoot children clutching their bottles, parents just letting them wander about, people hunched eating on those tiny plastic kid’s chairs, and young people playing a form of badminton at the side of the road by the lights of the passing motorbikes. All in all though, even with the dodgy hotel, it was an experience I wouldn’t have missed and I am glad that I didn’t do what most others do, pass through in the rush back to Thailand.
There is some currency confusion here too – I have got used to balancing dollars and riels in Cambodia – paying in one currency and receiving change in a combination of the two. But now I have to deal with three – even though I am still in Cambodia, the baht now comes into play. So now I can pay in any one of the three currencies, dollars, bahts or riels and in change I get any combination of three – it taxes the brain without a calculator to hand!
So it was with regret that I leave Sihanoukville behind to move towards the Thai border. 7.30am sees me up and ready for a tuk tuk to the bus station to take the VIP bus to Koh Kong, the Cambodian town on the border. And by VIP I mean twice the price of the ordinary bus, $8 for a four hour trip. It has aircon, a loo (although you’d have to be really brave or desperate to use it, the roads were exceptionally bumpy…) a bottle of water and karaoke on the tv. But at least no chickens in the aisles and everyone gets a seat. A small seat though, probably even less than BA economy – funny, if you asked me to do a four hour flight in such cramped conditions I would be quickly booking business class, but as I was already on the business class version of the bus, there was no other way to go. Actually, that’s not quite true, there is a boat that takes about the same time as the bus that does the coastal route from Sihanoukville to Koh Kong, but bearing in mind, as the boats are river boats and not meant to be ocean going, it is locally known as the “Vomit Comet”…. You can understand why I took the bus.
The journey wasn’t too bad. The bus station in Sihanoukville was all you would expect a bus station to be. Sleepy Westerners with huge backpacks, locals with chickens and beggars everywhere. We started exactly on time and the bus was full. The start was fine, it was the Phnom Penh Road which is relatively smooth, but after about an hour, we turned north on to the Koh Kong road, and that’s when the bumps started. But I should be grateful, until a year or so ago the journey took twice as long as there were four wide rivers to cross by ferry. The Thai Government have paid for four new bridges to be built, which halves the journey time. I guess they had an ulterior motive, by making the trip to the border easier, I assume they get more tourists. We turned into the National Park of the Cardamom Mountains – “an eco – tourist paradise” the signs tell me. As well as beautiful emerald green vegetation, there were a few really poor wooden tumbledown shacks along the way. I’ve no idea how these people scrape a living, the trees had been cut back about 200 metres either side of the road and a few mangy cows grazed in the red mud from the recent rain. But no sign of organised agriculture anywhere for miles and miles. Every so often the bus came almost to a halt – it was either to get in the right gear to try and power up the hill, or to get in the right low gear to stop the bus running away with itself as it negotiated steep downhill hairpin bends – I guess the driver didn’t put too much faith in his brakes…
Arriving in Koh Kong, I was the only one who actually got off the bus, everyone else stayed on and were heading straight to the border and then all points north in Thailand, some going as far as Bangkok, a hell of a trek. But by staying on the bus, did they know something I didn’t? On first glance, yes! Koh Kong looked like a one horse town out of an old Western. But instead of the one horse, there were cows and a few chickens. I had booked the Dugout Hotel, so named as it used to be owned by Doug, but no longer (think about it!). The info I had was that it was run by a guy from New Zealand, rooms had aircon and there was a pool, so it had to be good, right? Wrong! But it was handy, only 20 metres from where the bus dropped me off. Actually getting off the bus was an experience – it was as if Posh had arrived (ok – I know there is a resemblance…..) but the hordes had no cameras. I had to really fight my way through the guys wanting me to take their tuk tuk or moto and find me a hotel. It was a shame to have to disappoint them, I know I’m lazy, but even I can manage my case 20 metres to the Dugout. And as I was the only person off the only bus that stopped there that day it can’t have been good for them.
The hotel is a bit weird. The NZ guy, Grant who runs it appears a little disillusioned with life and sits in “reception” (more like his sitting room) drinking coffee watching NZ play cricket and rugby. About five rooms at the back of the reception area surrounding a little swimming pool. But at £8 a night this all seemed too good to be true. It was, sort of. The room is not one of my favourites, a bit bare but clean if not a bit smelly. Walls a bit cracked and damp. But they have a major issue with the water – i.e. there isn’t much of it. If you want a shower you have to ask them to turn on the reserve tank (but looking at the bathroom, I think I’ll give that a miss). But they have kindly left a huge bucket of water and a pan to the side of the loo so you can actually flush it (not another of Gill’s loo stories I hear you cry… ). And not only was there no shampoo, there wasn’t even any soap. There appears to be one other European couple here, and the rest are men who seem to have made some new Cambodian young friends. Methinks it’s a bit, to use the parlance, of a “knockin’ shop” - perhaps that’s what the pool’s for….. My attached pic of the pool makes it look like a rather charming boutique hotel – let me tell you, pictures can be deceiving! There are a couple of bigger more modern hotels in town (only about $20), but when I checked online, they looked a bit “Chinese” – but today, coming from the Dugout, they looked to me like the Ritz, and I bet they had running water on tap. So next time I decide to go for character rather than corporate, I may remind myself of this! There is one really swish place a few miles out of town right on the border, catering to Thai gamblers, and some of the rooms are $2000 (yes, that is thousand) a night. So I didn’t do too bad with my eight quid. There are no windows in the room, only an open grill in the bathroom so it may be mozzie heaven.
But undaunted after checking in and waiting for the torrential lunchtime storm to abate, I went for a walk. The town is basically just the one main, rather dusty street where the hotel is. A couple of lanes down takes you to the river front where the “Friendship Bridge” takes you to the Thai border. Nothing much happening apart from some slummy shack houses, chickens and dead rats. But at least they were dead – I assume the live ones only show themselves at night…. But in the midst of this nothingness an apparition appears – the Cafe Laurent on the riverside, where I greedily consume a very good café latte in very trendy surroundings. The town is being hailed as the next big tourist destination in Cambodia, so I guess this is just a bit of forward planning. There is, however, a lot more planning needed before their tourist dream comes true, as most people still only pass through here on the way to Thailand without stopping. And of course a bit more water would help….
But the town does have charm. Fortified by my latte I enter the dark bowels of the market. The usual fruit, veg, fly blown meat and clothes. But in the centre, lit by very dim lights is a veritable gold souk…. And everyone, even more than usual, as Cambodians always have a ready smile, was really nice. Kids on bikes practising their English with their hello’s, how are you’s and what is your name.
By now it was the witching hour and I was drawn to the only place in town that advertised wine. It was called Fat Sam’s. Unsurprisingly it was run by a very fat man called Sam – a Welshman from near Aberystwyth who had married a local girl and has two small children. Not one of the cleanest places – my wine was served but the glass was a bit grubby – I asked him to change it and he did – the next one was probably worse….. Perhaps the alcohol will kill the germs. But he was interesting to talk to. He appears to keep his head above water by going back to the UK a few months each year in the rainy season to earn a few bob.
Tonight I eat fish and chips (thought it best to give the salad a miss) on the pavement at the Dugout and watch the world go by. As usual, life is lived on the street here – barefoot children clutching their bottles, parents just letting them wander about, people hunched eating on those tiny plastic kid’s chairs, and young people playing a form of badminton at the side of the road by the lights of the passing motorbikes. All in all though, even with the dodgy hotel, it was an experience I wouldn’t have missed and I am glad that I didn’t do what most others do, pass through in the rush back to Thailand.
There is some currency confusion here too – I have got used to balancing dollars and riels in Cambodia – paying in one currency and receiving change in a combination of the two. But now I have to deal with three – even though I am still in Cambodia, the baht now comes into play. So now I can pay in any one of the three currencies, dollars, bahts or riels and in change I get any combination of three – it taxes the brain without a calculator to hand!
Not like "The Beach" (10 - 13 March 2009)
Sihanoukville, even though I love it is not a beach to be proud of, and certainly not like the one in the the novel of the same name. There must have been a bit of a storm out at sea as the amount of flotsam and jetsam over the last few days has been worse than normal. It’s quite tough to do a long walk down the beach as the sun is so strong and it’s so hot. But I discovered that I can walk down the road where there is a bit more shade from the odd tree and the walk back along the beach. I walk right to the end of the road where it has now been closed off for development. The beach here is at the very edge of Sihanoukville town and appears to be more a local beach than a tourist one and the mess is even worse. The restaurants are large and grubby with unspeakable looking changing rooms. I also think the storm has eroded some of the beach as there is a bit of a shelf where it has been pounded by the surf. There’s also the odd abandoned boat just left to rot. There was an ad that amused me for a boat trip I assume is meant for adrenaline junkies only proudly boasting “no a relaxable boat” – I chose not to take that trip!
One day I paid a visit to the market but without success. Given the heat of the day I walk into the downtown area late in the afternoon (about half an hour walk). In every other Asian city I have been to the night market is central to the economy – but not, I discover, in Sihanoukville. Just as I arrive, the stalls were closing down. At least it saved me from buying things, but on the way back I was tempted to buy a pot or two from the man with the fantastic pot lorry (see pic).
One day I paid a visit to the market but without success. Given the heat of the day I walk into the downtown area late in the afternoon (about half an hour walk). In every other Asian city I have been to the night market is central to the economy – but not, I discover, in Sihanoukville. Just as I arrive, the stalls were closing down. At least it saved me from buying things, but on the way back I was tempted to buy a pot or two from the man with the fantastic pot lorry (see pic).
Monday, 9 March 2009
Beauty and the beach (9 March 2009)
Happily, the breakfast at the Reef Resort remains the same – so today I tuck into a full English – proper toast and joy of joys, Heinz Baked Beans – little things can mean so much! After that, I needed a walk so off down to the beach – things haven’t changed here either. The track down to the beach is still full of rubbish, odd little bars and restaurants and the hotel that was being built last year hasn’t moved on much! And the beach is the same. No idea why I like it so much – yes, it has got white powder sand and yes it has blue sea. But the white powder sand is covered in beach beds and 60’s style round cane chairs belonging to all the bars and restaurants along it so you can’t see much of it. There is a tide mark of rubbish, beer bottles, fag ends and god knows what else left over from last night’s beach parties. The beach is heaving. The sea is full of people and tyre inner tubes being used as floats. There are children, adults and dogs having a swim. There is loud music from each bar vying with the one next to it to be the loudest! There is the powerful aroma of diesel as the various small wooden boats vie with one another to take you to the outlying islands. But there is a life about it that I haven’t found anywhere else.
And it’s a veritable beauty spa brought to you beachside. Any type of massage – head, foot, body, Thai. Facials, manicures, pedicures with or without nail polish. Wooden and plastic bracelets and sunglasses on sale by kids of under five. And a first today, threading – i.e. hair removal using cotton thread. A girl of about ten was removing the leg hair of a French lady next to me this morning - lovely! I haven’t yet seen a Brazilian, but am sure that’s available too! And they also offer (albeit unwittingly) colonic irrigation…. Every type of seafood is on offer – precooked and placed in a plastic bag and carried around for hours in the heat (crab and prawn a speciality) or squid half cooked on a portable bbq that really didn’t look hot enough….. Pre prepared fruit salad and ice cream from a man on a bike with a polystyrene box and a bell. I’m sure you get the picture…..
And it’s a veritable beauty spa brought to you beachside. Any type of massage – head, foot, body, Thai. Facials, manicures, pedicures with or without nail polish. Wooden and plastic bracelets and sunglasses on sale by kids of under five. And a first today, threading – i.e. hair removal using cotton thread. A girl of about ten was removing the leg hair of a French lady next to me this morning - lovely! I haven’t yet seen a Brazilian, but am sure that’s available too! And they also offer (albeit unwittingly) colonic irrigation…. Every type of seafood is on offer – precooked and placed in a plastic bag and carried around for hours in the heat (crab and prawn a speciality) or squid half cooked on a portable bbq that really didn’t look hot enough….. Pre prepared fruit salad and ice cream from a man on a bike with a polystyrene box and a bell. I’m sure you get the picture…..
Back to "Snooky" (8 March 2009)
This time I manage to get the shared mini bus run by the Aussie outfit “G’Day Mate” ( advertised as “Western managed, no video or loud horns and careful drivers with no mad overtaking”) and arrive in Sihanoukville (“Snooky”) at lunchtime. The weather on the way was interesting – I think we must have been in a high area as we were driving through what, from a distance, looked like fog, but was actually torrential rain. The mini bus first stop was at Monkey Republic, and I recognised exactly where I was, just across the Golden Lions roundabout and a few metres from my old home, the Reef Resort. A bit like coming home as I stayed here last year. It’s still No 1 on Tripadvisor with good, clean rooms around a small pool, not far from the beach. My room is just by the pool. Lot’s of life around it – backpacker bars, backpacker hostels, travel stalls, laundry, internet and a little mini mart. And the sun is at least shining at the seaside, although the guy in the reception area who remembered me from last year tells me that there has been some unexpected rain here too. Things here look exactly the same as last year, the only significant change is that now I can buy hair conditioner and Diet Coke – both things I hunted high and low for in Cambodia last time with no success. That’s progress I guess!
Sunday, 8 March 2009
Comfy in Kampot (7/8 March 2009)

I finally arrive in Kampot probably a stone lighter (no bad thing...) from the car's sauna conditions! . I was here last year when I visited from Kep, but wasn’t here long. That was an internet trip only as there was none available in Kep, but I remember thinking then that it looked a good place to spend a day or so. I was right. It’s set on the winding Kampot River near to where it reaches the sea. I decamp at the Mea Culpa guesthouse, a lovely new four roomed place run by Ben, a young Irish guy who came here a few years ago and stayed. $20 a night so back on budget for a change…. A big garden area with an outside bar and a wood fired pizza oven. A lot of people seem to do stay on here, but whilst tempted, I am planning to come home – this time at least…. It’s a quiet place and there are guest houses and restaurants lining the river front, and the rest of the houses are old run down, faded yellow French Colonial buildings going black with mildew, including the large Governor’s House just near the Mea Culpa. If I win the lottery, I’ll buy it and transform it into the most amazing boutique hotel. I only have one full day here so in the morning I wander along the river and this afternoon I take a boat trip on the river. Not sure what it is about me and boats, but yet again, I am on my own. Two other people had apparently booked, but they decided not to go – was it something I said? The boat was a bit on the ropey side, and my request for a life jacket fell on deaf ears until I insisted – there was rather a lot of water sloshing around in the bottom. But they eventually found one and I was on my way. The fact that the boatman was wearing it (the only one….) did worry me a bit (see pic). It’s an odd arrangement with the engine mounted on one side so it lurches rather alarmingly until the boatman decides to balance it out by moving to the other side…. It was a nice trip, the further upriver we went, the nearer we got to the black Bokor Hills. There wasn’t much life along the river bank (again, so different from Vietnam) but now and again you could see the odd fishing village, with wooden shacks that, if they were your garden shed, you would have renewed years’ ago. The odd mini, rowing boat ferry crossing but not much else. But it was cooler than the town and very pleasant.
I had dinner tonight outside (the thunderstorm had finally blown over) at the guest house where wifi is available and Ant and I had a great tech exchange. From my wifi laptop and his Blackberry, he sent me pics of him and the Dyl enjoying the Spring flowers in Battersea Park whilst he was there. We had instant communication via email and Blackberry. The Dyl pic is attached. It really is amazing – from all these miles distance we can do these things instantly – I really enjoyed it.
I had dinner tonight outside (the thunderstorm had finally blown over) at the guest house where wifi is available and Ant and I had a great tech exchange. From my wifi laptop and his Blackberry, he sent me pics of him and the Dyl enjoying the Spring flowers in Battersea Park whilst he was there. We had instant communication via email and Blackberry. The Dyl pic is attached. It really is amazing – from all these miles distance we can do these things instantly – I really enjoyed it.
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