After another day of exploring Siem Reap town and enjoying some “down time” we moved onwards on a rickety old bus towards Tonle Sap Lake. We had a wooden boat transfer planned to take us across the lake towards Battambang where we would spend a night. I hadn't heard anything about these boat journeys but it turned into an 8 hour long relaxing, scenic boat journeys slowly meandering past local fishing boats, floating villages where we stopped for a drink and a toilet stop (not recommended!) and local families frolicking in the lake. It was such a memorable journey.
Battambang is a lesser known small town in Cambodia, edging the lake. For an off-the-beaten track experience in Cambodia and an opportunity to see the “true” country, it's a great place to stop when you're travelling en route to Phnom Penh which was our intended route.
Our planned itinerary was to visit a local temple but have being “templed out” in the previous few days, our whole group opted to do something a little different and after quizzing our tour guide about available options, we came up with the idea to do the local train. Having no idea what this involved, we made our way by local tuk tuk to the “train station” (AKA an opening in amongst fields that had a rickety old train track running through it) and waiting to be told what to do. This “train” it emerged, was a sheet of wood, covered with a rug, placed on to train wheels with a motorbike engine on a lever. I've never seen anything like it, and as we climbed about, 4 to a “carriage” we jokingly said our final farewells. As we took off...or so it flt...the driver on our price of wood told us if we saw one coming from the other direction to tell him...the light “carriage” has to stop, get off and carry their carriage off the track to let the other one past. Of course there is only one track! At this point I was certain it would be a train wreck, literally. But it's amazing what works and how used to this mode of transport the locals are. With a face full of mossies and insects from going at high speed into the sunset, we had the giggle of the holiday and an experience we relived for days to come.
The following day, we departed Battambang by road towards Phnom Penh. To say I was looking forward to this part of the trip would be immoral. I wanted to visit the Killing Fields ad the Genocide Museum, knowing it would be a traumatic experience and I wasn't wrong. The trip thus far has been filled with laughter and we had made good friends along the way but the Killing Fields and the stories from the very recent history of the country was horrific and everyone was left feeling a little despondent. I won't go into too much detail, but the history of Cambodia is so recent that the locals admit to seeing some of Pol Pot's senior men still walking the streets of the city, and know they will never be prosecuted for the attrocities they committed. I will admit to my ignorance of what their history actually involved and this was a real eye opener. It is a place I would encourage you to go and see.
Pnomh Penh itself is a crazy, busy, typical Asian city with traffic and mopeds and people just about everywhere you can possibly look and a market that provides a fabulous haggling opportunity to pick up just about anything you could imagine.
Our final stop on the tour was heading into Vietnam to Saigon (or Ho Chi Minh city) which we set off for the following morning, back on the bus. It's another gorgeous journey through both countries and you really don't notice the hours that pass. If I thought that the Cambodian cities were hectic, Saigon is on another level. We unfortunately hit a downpour after just a few hours of arriving and the streets were literally running rivers through the city (up to our knees) which made our night out full of laughter and hysterics. It was actually quite fun to see the city in this light!
After another night filled with dancing and a few drinks in one of the busiest clubs I've seen in a while, we were up early the next day to get to the Cu Chi Tunnels: another place I was eager to get to see. The tunnels are where the soldiers and their families hid during the war and they really do show just how tiny the people are. They are like rabbit warrens under the earth, some going very deep and if they are the size of an A4 sheets of paper, it was considered large. How they breathed down there, I'm not sure. We did have the opportunity to go into one of the tunnels that has been adapted to the Western sizes (i.e. made bigger!) and then the choice to try one of the original sizes which I did opt to do, but it really was a squeeze and I'm only 5'4” and a size 10! A fantastic experience and I was so pleased I did it, but not recommended for the claustrophobic amongst you.
The rest of the afternoon was our own which I put to good use in a nearby 5 star hotel and indulged in a spa treatment and a swim. I'm pretty sure I'd earned it after our intrepid adventure!
I flew home the next morning with a host of amazing memories, stories that I still talk about to this day and the resolve to do another trip just as soon as I possibly could.
An Explore holiday changes you, even if it's just allowing you to see countries in a way that you otherwise wouldn't. You can always extend too, so if you wanted to see more of Vietnam or go and stay on a beach for a few days before flying home, anything is possible.
It's not hard to see just how much of this beautiful part of the World stayed in my heart. If you would love to explore Indochina - either on a shoestring or on a more luxurious level, I would be delighted to help. Simply email us on info@worldwidetravelsolutions.co.uk.
Kate x
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