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Vietnam & Surrounds Day 15

Day 15, Thursday, 3/27/25, Angkor Wat

Our room in the hotel is nice. The bed is comfortable. The view from the room is like looking into a jungle. Mangos hang ripening on the tree just out of reach. Breakfast at the hotel is another good buffet. The bus will pick us up at 8:15 AM.

We’re on the bus now. Our guide, Pisa, from yesterday is our guide again today. We go by a fun shop, The Samurai Barber Shop and it reminded me I need a haircut!

Angkor Wat is made of grey blue sandstone. It took 75,000 people 32 years to build. This is the world’s largest religious site. over 400 acres! Doorways are made in one piece. There is a 200 meter wide moat around it. Angkor Wat is the crowning jewel of Khmer architecture and the national symbol of Cambodia. It is the largest, best-preserved, and most religiously significant of the Angkor temples. We are impressed with its sheer scale and beautifully proportioned layout. As we approach the temple, we cross a vast moat, 200 meters across, and continue along a broad causeway lined with naga (snake) balustrades. We enter the main building and ascend through a series of galleries and courtyards before we reach the central sanctuary The views back over the causeway and across the surrounding countryside are beautiful. We admire the intricate stone carvings that adorn nearly every surface, with some 1,700 Apsaras or celestial dancers sculpted into the walls. The outer gallery walls feature the longest continuous bas-relief in the world, narrating stories from Hindu mythology, including the famous Churning of the Ocean of Milk.

The views are amazing from the top and all around. Every visible surface is carved in some way.

It’s 11:30 AM. The temp is 37C (98.6F) and approximately 80% humidity. Sweltering! Cambodian New Year is in April. There is scaffolding being set up for the upcoming celebrations. A flooded rain pond gives a fun view of the complex.

Some cute children pose for our cameras. Red fire ants cross our path. You might remember that I had them in my salad last night! Intentionally!

A 7 headed Naga (snake) protects Angkor Wat! There are several protective Naga’s that protect this place. They always have 5, 7, 9, or 11 heads! This is one of the best preserved that we see.

Back on the bus with AC blasting we all take a deep breath! We head for lunch. At the restaurant we are given ice cold lemon eucalyptus towels to refresh our faces! Then we have more local food favorites such as Snake Head Fish and Beef Lok Lak. Once again, lunch was a fantastic amount of food!

After lunch, we head in search of more temples. Fabulous history behind all of these temples. We drive for over an hour to this one and it was suggested we all take a nap. Not the case as the road was too rough. And besides, my camera kept nudging me and asking what was outside the window. I kept telling it to close it’s eyes and take a nap. Then the bus would hit another bump and my camera would snarl at me. Okay, okay, you win. Take a photo or 50. These temples are extraordinary examples of Khmer sculpture and architecture!

We arrive at Banteay Srei Temple, this one is built with a lot of pink sandstone. It is considered one of the jewels of the Angkor area. Water Buffalo and roosters greet us at the entrance.

We even see a man fishing in murky rain puddles and catching fish with his bare hands! A group of minstrels plays for tips. How many people can fit on a motorcycle?

Then it’s a 30 minute drive to the next temple to visit and probably the most unique temple of the day. Ta Prohm Temple is very unique in that trees, some over 400 years old are still alive and growing in and on the temples! These are Spong trees. They are spongey and fibrous and seemingly live as one with the temples! It was fabulous to see. Ta Prohm has been left relatively untouched since it was discovered and retains much of its mystery. Its appeal lies in the fact that, unlike the other monuments of Angkor, it was abandoned and swallowed by the jungle, looking very much the way most of the Angkor temples appeared when European explorers first stumbled upon them.

Pisa tells us we have only 3 more temples to visit. Takeo, Thommanon and Chau Say Tevoda. The bus erupts in a collective groan. Even the younger people in the group have seen enough today in this sweltering heat! So we go back to the city where Elee gets off at Pub Street to shop. Pisa leaves us also but the driver takes the rest of us back to the hotel. I go back to the hotel and kick back. When Elee arrives back we both relax for a while and then go to the same restaurant we visited last night and sit in the Air Conditioned section.

Our entire group comes along and even Hannah (who has come here on her own) comes to hang with us! We all begin to say goodbye to each other even though some of us will travel to the airport together in the morning. I splurge and buy dinner for the group of 9 people and the bill, with tip, comes to $90 US Dollars. 9 people! Including drinks!

So Goodnight All!

Vietnam & Surrounds Day 14

Day 14, Wednesday, 3/26/25, Fly to Cambodia

We get up at 4:00 AM to go to the airport. Our bus picks us up at five. The ride to the airport is quick in light traffic. We check our luggage and get a bite to eat and an iced Vietnamese coffee. We see what might be our plane out the window. Nope, our plane is a 15 minute bus ride across the airport’s tarmac while standing!

Our plane finally takes off 35 minutes late. Looking out the window, Saigon stretches as far as the eye can see. Today we are headed to Krong Siem Reap, Cambodia. More commonly known as Siem Reap. Goodbye Vietnam. The flight is only 30 minutes and uneventful. Welcome to Cambodia!

Only six of our original group members are still with us. Rich, Esther, Dusty, Jon and us. Our group picked up 2-4 people in the last two days, Paul and Lesley, Jose and Gloria. It turns out that Hannah is also going to Siem Reap but she is doing it on her own.

Our guide today is Pisa. The bus windows are adorned with decorated curtains. There are toll booth to get out of the airport. There are only 16 million people in Cambodia.

We drive through a cashew farm. The cows here are skinny. We arrive at Angkor Complex and get passes.

We stop at Charisma Artisans Store and enjoy the air conditioning inside that our bus doesn’t have.

We drive by the kings house. A bit more touring and we stop for lunch at Khmer Duerm Restaurant and have Amok, recommended by the guide. It is a kind of chicken curry served in a black coconut bowl. I have a small Angkor beer and our new friend, Rich, has a large one.

The air conditioner on the bus doesn’t work and it’s stifling. We check in to the hotel, La Niche d’Angkor Boutique, and take a nap. We go out to the bus at four PM and the air conditioner has been repaired! Now to tour Angkor Thom, built in 1181.

Angkor Thom is an ancient (1181) marvel. Every surface is carved! There are five gates in the outside wall. We walk and climb around the ruins entertaining our cameras. We enter through the monumental South Gate over a causeway lined on either side by statues of demons and gods, each carrying a giant naga (snake).

This is quite the place to see. Even if it’s a third world country. There are monkeys everywhere. We are warned not to get too close to them and do not attempt to feed them. They will steal anything they can grab. But they are soooo cute! The temperature is 35 C and the humidity is upwards of 80%. We continue to the Terrace of the Elephants and the Terrace of the Leper Kings, former spaces for public ceremonies, both adorned with dramatic bas reliefs.

A group of guards pose for our cameras. This place is an enormous group of dozens of individual temples. We then visit the ruined Baphuon, Royal Enclosure, and Phimeanakas before continuing to the mysterious Bayon Temple. This temple, one of the most popular and compelling in Angkor, we explore the galleries of beautifully preserved bas reliefs and ascend narrow stairs to reach the central sanctuary, where we find giant stone faces smiling enigmatically down at us from every angle. Catching bits of sunset light in some doorways. Then it’s time to drive away. We see sunset outside one gate over a river.

We’re glad the AC on the bus has been repaired. Even at dusk, it is uncomfortably hot and humid. We head back to the hotel in the dark. I even get a few shots of the hotel pool at night.

Back at the hotel for only a few minutes and we head off to find dinner. We use the guide’s recommendation and try the Urban Tree Hut near to the hotel. Note the gecko lizards on the sign! The food is excellent! I have a beef salad with Red Ants! Yes, you heard that right! Ants! Delicious! Add some Pad Thai noodles and dinner is complete. A Passion Fruit Margarita and life is good!

Now off to bed and we’ll see you in the morning.