From Laos we continued to Cambodia. We have noticed that every time you cross a border in Vietnam/Laos/Cambodia you have to pay a stamp fee which is 1-2 USD depending on how rich you look :) In Laos they also charged us extra for crossing the border during the weekend.
Our stay in Cambodia didn't begin well. We had bought a bus ticket all the way to Ban Lung but our bus just left us in the middle of nowhere and told us to wait for another bus that would arrive in 3-4 hours. We were not happy! We really didn't have any other option than to wait (nobody spoke English here either) so we waited and got our first Cambodian friend, a little baby girl that was just handed over to us. This has happened many times already, as soon as you smile to a baby the parents just hand the baby over to you (and they don't even wear diapers here). Luckily after only waiting for 1,5 hours a bus showed up and there was one person who spoke English on the bus. The bus was going to the right direction but it wasn't the bus we had tickets for and we had to pay again. Apparently our bus had broken down and no one knew how long we would have to wait for it. So that's why we agreed to take this bus. The bridges that we had to
cross were really shaky but luckily it was dark so we didn't have to see all the bridges. Even the locals looked worried when we were crossing a bridge.
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Cambodian treats |
In Vietnam (beacuse of the crazy traffic and all the accidents we saw) we had decided that we would never ride a motorbike with or without a helmet. Apparently we suffered from memory loss in Ban Lung as we spent a whole day on the back of motorbikes with and without helmets. This was the only way to get to the waterfalls and we really enjoyed it a lot. We visited three different waterfalls, saw elephants and went swimming in a volcanic lake (that reminded us again of Finland and its lakes). In the morning we had our helmets on when riding on the back of the motorcycle but in the afternoon when the roads were just bumby paths we apparently didn't need our helmets anymore. Eating in Ban Lung was a bit difficult especially for Katja as she is a vegetarian as all the menus were in Khmer and nobody spoke English.
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Crossing the river |
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Swinging on a liana |
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One of the waterfalls we visited |
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Elephant |
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Our motorcycle and our little friend |
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Bridge |
From Ban Lung we took a bus to Siem Reap. The buses were once again delayed and the bus ride was extremely boring. Lili loved Siem Reap because it was an ice-cream heaven. :) She actually ate six scoops of ice-cream in one day (she hadn't gotten any ice-cream in a looong time). :) We came to Siem Reap to visit the temples of Angkor. We rented a tuk-tuk that took us around the temples. The day was really hot so we actually enjoyed the tuk-tuk ride (and the cool breeze) more than the temples (the temples were actually really nice as well but it was just too hot).
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Angkor wat |
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Angkor wat |
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We really like the heads here |
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An elephant |
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A weird tree |
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Having a very ticklish "pedicure" |
We spent Christmas in Sihanoukville, the beach capital of Cambodia. Our Christmas was very different from the one back home except for the fact that we also had the feeling you have on Christmas when you eat too much (in Finnish Jouluähky) beacuse of our breakfast buffet. :) We spent the days chilling by the pool and at the beach. One day we took a mani-pedi at the beach and had about five Cambodians around us all the time.
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Lili being pampered on the beach |
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Sihanoukville beach |
After Sihanoukville we took a minibus with locals to Kep, after about 15 minutes we noticed that there was a terrified little puppy on the floor of the minibus. It was shaking and drooling on the floor. Kep wasn't really anything we had expected. It was expensive, everything was far away from each other and even the beach was below average. The only good thing in Kep was the cute little puppies in our hotel. They didn't have names so we named one of them Coco. We visited pepper plantations in Kep and also saw a lot of mango trees. Katja was very unhappy that the mangos weren't ripe yet. :(
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Pepper plantation |
We came to Phnom Penh from Kep with a bus and decided to take a tuk-tuk to a hotel. We had decided where we wanted to stay but our tuk-tuk driver disagreed. When we asked him if he knew Spring Guesthouse he said yes just because he wanted customers. But as soon as we had driven for about 30 seconds he stopped and said Spring Guetshouse closed down a week ago. We didn't really believe him because we had heard a lot about the scams they try to do to tourists. So we just asked him to take us there anyways. He took us to a construction site on the same street where the hotel was supposed to be and told us that was the hotel. We still didn't believe him as the address was wrong. So we asked him kindly to take us to the right address. He drove around for a bit and stopped and said that we could walk to the hotel from there. We didn't agree and forced him to take us to the hotel. Then he asked us what the name of the hotel was, and with really poor actor skills told us "Oh, you meant Spring guesthouse, I heard you said King". So in the end he took us to the right place, and the hotel wasn't closed. :) He had also tried to sell us a tour to the killing fields but we thought that the price was too high. After his scam attempt the price suddenly went down from 20 USD to 10 USD. We still didn't want to take him because of his immoral nature. In the end we got the same ride for 8 USD from our hotel.
In Phom Penh we visited the killing fields where Khmer Rouge killed about 17 000 people. It was a really disturbing and yet peaceful place with a lot of skulls.
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Skulls |
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Monks in the killing fields |