After our active day yesterday, it is on to some more leisurely adventures for the next couple of days.
Our friend Richard that we know from Thailand is engaged to a girl from Cambodia, and Vanna lives in Phnom Penh, so we are lucky to be able to re-connect with a friendly face and get some additional help figuring out what is worth seeing and what we should skip.
It seems like Vanna knows everyone here, but I suspect that is mostly because she is from a large family, and we are lucky enough to meet most of here sisters and her father 😉 We manage to get out for dinner with them one night, have a nice time talking with them – Vanna doing a lot of the translating because her father and cousins do not speak any English.
Our next day trip is to go out to the temple at Udong. Most of Cambodia is flat – so flat that you can see for miles and miles in most directions, and it is this flat, fertile land that allows them to produce 2 and sometimes 3 harvests per year. The countryside seems like mile after mile of rice fields, and when the rice shoots have grown it would be like a sea of bright green everywhere. Someone we were talking with from here described it as ‘a green so unique that even Crayola can’t duplicate it’ – true to form the scenery is magnificent and we are not disappointed.
But I am getting ahead of myself a bit…
Outside of Phnom Penh about 50 kilometers is one of a small number of ‘mountains’ that rises up out of the otherwise flat plains. It is not much of a mountain in our terms, but more of a hill that rises a couple of hundred meters above the plain. At the top of the mountain there is a fairly modern Buddhist temple along with some old stupas that were apparently built a couple of hundred years ago.
Like so many other temples we have been to this one also has some stairs involved 🙂 There are over 500 stairs to the top, and like so many other times we look all the way up, and then start making our way to the top.
Accompanying us to the top are a couple of teenagers from the local village, offering helpful tidbits of information as we make our way up the stairs. We had read a bit about this on the internet and how the kids would come along and then expect some money when you were done, so it does not come as a complete surprise. At one point they even mention that they will carry us up if we get tired – I should have said yes just to see the expression on their faces, as I probably could have eaten both of the little guys for breakfast!
By the time we reach the top we are a little short of breath, and I think the young guys are worried that I might expire as they grab a fan from a little girl and start to generate a breeze around my head. Little do they know that this is not my first rodeo, and while I may be sweating enough for 3 people, we have conquered far more rugged ascents than this.
All our efforts are well rewarded though as the views from the temple are awesome. We are at the highest point for miles around and it feels like we can see all the way back to Thailand.
After looking around at the temple and the Buddha statues kept there, we climb back down the stairs to jump back in our tuk-tuk. We tip the teenagers a dollar each which was less than their asking price, but I figure we did not really hire them anyway, and I certainly did not make them carry me so we are all good.
The tuk-tuk ride to and from the city was almost as entertaining as the time in Udong. The distance was only about 50 kilometers each way, but the trip takes almost 2 hours each direction. Along the way we see all sorts of interesting things including houses built on stilts, many of the weird motorcycle combinations in my previous post, and a variety of things that just made us go ‘hmmm’. All in all a great day, and quite an uplifting change after our previous day.
On our return to Phnom Penh we reconnect with Vanna to setup our arrangements for the next day. We are moving on to Kampot in the southern part of Cambodia, and Vanna knows all the right people to get us bus tickets, tips on where to stay, and what to see while we are there. Thanks Vanna for all your help, I think we owe you one!






































































