The Afternoon After Angkor Wat

 

We finished touring Angkor Wat a little past 12.  We went back to our hotel, the Dead Fish Guest House, and took a much-needed rest.

 

Of course, all three of us fell asleep as soon as we hit our room.  It was such an early day for us waking up at 5AM to catch the sunrise at Angkor Wat. 

 

Image Source Flicker Member emu468

Image Source Flicker Member emu468

 

We woke around 4PM and the first in the agenda was lunch.  Since we’ve had enough of Khmer cuisine, we opted to go American.  We missed fastfood.  We eagerly headed to KFC.

 

 

Their chicken taste less salty than our Kentucky fried chickens in Manila but we love sinking our teeth in the “oh so familiar food”.

 

 

 

After our late lunch, we went around to look at souvenir shops.  Most stores carry wallets, belt and display items made out of crocodile or snake skin.

 

 

 

With all the walk we did that morning, our muscles were in dire need of a Khmer massage (similar to Thai massage but with gentler strokes) after at USD5 per head.

 

 

We explored the area and found the restaurant and hotel that Bev recommended, Cafe de La Paix. 

 

 

 

 

Our hotel’s restaurant, Dead Fish restaurant, has quite an intriguing dining interior.  It’s multi-leveled without borders.  It resembles an unfinished construction project, where it’s all skeletal and lofts.  It has a rustic appeal to it.

 

 

 

 

 

While checking my mail and plurking at the hotel lobby/restaurant (free Wi-Fi), Lea conveniently bumps into us for our dinner date that evening. 

 

 

 

Happy Herb Pizza is said to be pizza flavored to “excite”.  Happiness served by the slice liberally garnished by the “organic herb” that makes people laugh –ranging from Double Happiness to Ecstatic.  A row of pizzerias catches our attention and we dined at one.  There was like a 5-minute effect and that was it.  (Don’t ask us what we tried to do afterwards…)

 

 

 

 

 

 

The pizza was split into two flavors, one was Quattro Formaggi (our choice) and the other was Everything on It (Lea’s choice).  The pizza was yummy!  I especially like the Quattro Formagi because the taste is subtle yet flavorful.

 

 

We walked to the famed and now our own favorite Pub Street for some late night drinks.  We stopped by 2 travel agencies first to check the airfare cost for a flight back to Ho Chi Minh Vietnam.  It was about PHP7,000 without the terminal fee yet of USD 25.  Remembering the long uneasy drive to Siem Reap, I consider a bit.  But since we already incurred the rebooking fee for our return flight to Manila, I decided against it.  I might as well endure the ride back. 

 

 

 

 

Chris bumped into his friend Jay who was with his friends having dinner at the Mexican restaurant we dined in the night before.

 

 

 

Temple was our spot for the night.  We picked our poisons –Lea treated me to a Tomb Raider drink (the drink named after Angelina Jolie’s movie that was shot in Cambodia).  While drinking, we enjoyed a bit of Apsahara show.  Lea called Rattana and he went to meet us.  We invited him to join us for drinks.  After finishing our drinks, we asked Rattana if there are any dance clubs in Siem Reap.  He said there were and brought us there.  I said Hip-Hop and he nods his head in recognition.

 

 

 

 

 

We got to an exclusive dance club with suspicious scantily clad girls in a huddle outside.  No photo policy in the club.  The music was undeniably hip-hop but mixed with Khmer local music.  For the heck of it, we ordered drinks (this time on me) and stayed for 20 minutes before heading back to the hotel.

 

 

Since Lea was set to leave early the next day to a bus ride back to Phnom Penh where her plane touched down, we kissed Lea goodbye before turning in.

 

Albums:

 

Cambodia Trip Set 1 DSLR Photos

Cambodia Trip Set 2 DLSR Photos

Vietnam Day 1 Album

Angkor Wat Album

Siem Reap, Cambodia Album 

Cambodia – Vietnam Trip Album

 

Related Post

 

Ho Chi Minh City’s Hidden Charm

Traveling to Cambodia

My Tuk Tuk Moment

Angkor Wat: Journey to the Lost City Begins

Inside Angkor Wat and the Beauty of Rain

Moving to Angkor Thom Aboard Big Feet

The Bayon

The Elephant Terrace, The Leper King and Phimeanakas

Back to the Roots: Ta Prohm

More of Angkor Wat in Stills

Ced’s Take on Happy Herb Pizza

 

Moving to Angkor Thom Aboard Big Feet

 

 

15 minutes later, the rain has passed. 

 

Departing the ancient city of Angkor, we see some Japanese friends who were at the same bus ride to Cambodia from Vietnam.  They greet us with a warm hello and ask to have our photos taken with them. 

 

Going past the carved stone lion that stands guard near the causeway, we find our way back to where this journey started.  Before reaching the entry point again, I clutch the sight of the huge water reservoir and moat surrounding the temple of Angkor Wat.

 

 

 

 

The Khmer cosmology centers on Water, with its life-giving and purifying qualities, as the basic core of wealth.  It is also very important in Hindu religion.  The moats surrounding the temples of the ancient city epitomize a fairly convincing imitation to the big oceans that encases the earthly world.  The presence of the water reservoir represents Angkor’s enduring prosperity during its time. 

 

 

 

I still feel the remnants of rain in the air but interestingly the ground was dry again. 

 

We are aboard Rattana’s Tuk Tuk again setting out for the next stop.

 

Angkor Thom

 

At 9 square kilometers in area, Angkor Thom was one of the largest Khmer cities ever built.  The 5th gate, known as the Victory gate, leads directly to the Royal Palace.  The Victory gate was built during the reign of Jayavarman VII.  We cross the threshold of Angkor Thom via its eastern approach where an avenue of statues is lined.  The two rows of figures seem to each carry the body of a giant serpent –or a seven-headed naga –almost depicting a tug-of-war.

 

 

 

 

Jayavarman VII founded Angkor Thom that remained a capital until the 17th centuries.  During his empire, this was the center of his massive building program.  One inscription found within the last enduring city refers to Jayavarman as the groom and the city as his lovely bride.  The first site of this monumental structure is called the S Gate, with four faced towers pointing in each of the cardinal directions. 

 

 

 

Much to my delight, we penetrate the city walls through an elephant ride (USD 15 per person).  The elephant ride was in our agenda during our trip to Thailand in February but it remained unchecked until the Cambodia trip.  Riding the gentle giant alongside Bubba is a pleasant experience.  The elephant takes the road first then gradually shifts to the lane of elephant tracks amid the stretched line of trees.  The elephant ride takes 15 minutes of leisure occasion giving an elevated perspective of the road going to Angkor Thom.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Most of the constructions inside have a triple tower carved with four faces that apparently closely resembles the statues of Jayavarman VII.  Pretty much like how our city officials decorate their governed district with their faces plastered on tarpaulins screaming “A Project of…”

 

 

 

With Bayon at its center, Angkor Thom serves as good appetizer for the next destination.

 

Albums:

 

Vietnam Day 1 Album

Angkor Wat Album

Siem Reap, Cambodia Album

Cambodia – Vietnam Trip Album 

 

Related Post

 

Ho Chi Minh City’s Hidden Charm

Traveling to Cambodia

My Tuk Tuk Moment

Angkor Wat: Journey to the Lost City Begins

Inside Angkor Wat and the Beauty of Rain

 

Traveling to Cambodia

We checked in early the night before because Day 2 was quite an early day for us.  This is the day we are traveling to Cambodia.  Cambodia can be a bus ride from Thailand or Vietnam.  Bubba said that Philippines is fortuned with so many beautiful beaches but the counterbalance of that is, since we are an island of islands, it is a strain for us to travel elsewhere by land.  There is no other country connected to us.

 

We booked our Siem Reap tickets through the Sapaco bus company.  I have researched on three bus companies but it seemed from the forums that Sapaco is the optimum choice.  The bus leaves for Siem Reap everyday at 7am.  We woke up by 5am to prepare and check out of the hotel.  Cab took us to the Sapaco office in 309 Pham Ngu Lao Street.  We got there at 630AM and paid for our tickets.  We had time to spare so breakfast was a top agenda.  At the corner of the street, there was a small open-air Pho noodle house, Pho Bo Bo Kho.  Bubba had the beef stew (40,000 Dong) while I had the meatballs and flank Pho (30,000 Dong) and 2 bottles of water (5,000 Dong each).

 

It was a huge red tourist bus with A/C, LCD TV and W/C (or what they call water closet) and free water.  It took us two hours to get to Vietnam border.  There were five bus stops including immigration for both Vietnam and Cambodia borders, which took an hour total, 30 minutes for each.  It wasn’t much of a hassle since the bus conductor collates the passports and hands it to the immigration officer in bulk.  You have to bring your bags though inside since it has to go through the scanner, which felt pretty silly.

 

It was a 12-hour bus ride but I didn’t have to brace myself much since I don’t mind traveling by land.  I like long rides in fact (maybe not 12 hours long) but I’d take it any day than any 2 hours or more of boat ride. 

 

Well, I thought wrong. 

The bus stopped over for brunch at a highway carinderia, while waiting for our passports to be handed back to us (which was later on delivered via motorbike from the Cambodian Immigration office).  We were still full from breakfast but opted to take a bite since we didn’t know if this was already the lunch break and when the next stop is.  Bubba and I shared a plate of pork ribs and rice (seems like a safe bet), which cost USD 2.50.

 

The place was dingy but I didn’t want to fuss about it, so I ate with my eyes not leaving the plate and concentrated on the plate (trying to be oblivious to the guy who’s eating with his foot on the chair and another guy spitting on the ground). 

 

A brief stop at Phnom Penh took 15 minutes.  Phnom Penh is the capital and and largest city of Cambodia with more than one million of Cambodia’s 13 million population.  Rightfully so because it is the economic, industrial, commercial, cultural, tourist and historical center of Cambodia.  In the 1920s, the city was once known as the “Pearl of Asia” and was popular for its traditional Khmer tradition.  Like Ho Chi Minh, Phnom Penh has some French influenced architecture and is currently the wealthiest hub in the country.  During the stop, I took the chance to talk to a girl in front of our seat who I heard earlier spoke in Filipino on the phone. 

 

Her name is Lea and she is two years younger than me.  Gosh, I am packing on the years, everyone seems to be so much younger than me!  Lea is currently working in Singapore as an interior designer.  She’s been working there since her first job.  Her parents gave the Singapore trip as a graduation gift to her as well as an opportunity to check any openings in Singapore.  Luckily, a job landed on her feet.  Her plan was to backpack Vietnam and Cambodia, very much like our plan.  Since she is yet to book a hotel, I offered to look together when we get to Siem Reap.  A list of hotels I researched over the net trims down our hunt.

 

The Sapaco bus stopped over another side street eatery for a late lunch.  This one looked better than the first one.  Bubba and I were famished so we decided to order 2 separate meals to devour on our own.  We ordered beef with rice but we were handed fried rice with beef at USD 2.50 each.  It is a bit bland so we put a lot of fish paste on the rice.  Before going back to the bus, 2 Cambodian girls approaches and profusely convinces me to buy the fruits they are selling.  Both spoke very good English and called me “sista!”  They were really nice but one frightened me a bit with her pet spider when she put it in her mouth.

 

The bus gets on a ferry, which marks my first RORO-type of ride.  This took only 15 minutes, crossing from one side to the other side of the river.  To kill boredom, I watched the movie, “You, Me and Dupree” on my I-pod. 

 

I suddenly felt nauseous around 4pm.  I felt like throwing up and pooping.  30 minutes later, I felt claustrophobic which intensified the need to throw up.  I was mentally trying to overpower my body and thoughts.  I stopped watching and tried to sleep.  I couldn’t.  My lungs seem to gasp for air.  Bubba was asleep.  I held it in and concentrated on happy thoughts.  But not even the memory of good poker night can sway my woozy state.

 

The final bus stop was a washroom break.  Thank goodness for 10 minutes of fresh air.  It helped me with the last hour of bus distress.  We arrived in Siem Reap at 715pm, which more or less hits the 12-hour target.  

 

Lea approached a tuk-tuk driver carrying a paper with her name on it.  The driver was referred to her by her HS friend who stays in Phnom Penh and works there as a teacher in their International School.  The tuk-tuk driver recommended two hotels for us to check out.  We did and found it a little over the budget and quite a distance from the central district.  I referred to my list and suggested Dead Fish.  We saw the restaurant slash guest house and agreed to stay there.  Lea managed to get a fan room with twin beds with her 5-dollar/night budget while we got an AC room for $13/night.

 

I suggested to Lea to meet in an hour so we can both settle in and freshen up (or probably rest a bit).  40 minutes later, we meet at the restaurant lobby.  The well-lighted Pub Street lured us to having our dinner in one of the restaurants there.  From the Khmer cooking we tried from the side streets, I begged off the cuisine and pleaded to get something more familiar.  Viva Mexicano looked like the paramount choice at the time.

 

On the Table

 

Pineapple Juice USD 1.50

Strawberry Banana Smoothie USD 2.00

Big Bottle of Water USD 1.00

 

Cheese Quesadilla USD 4.00

 

Beef Burrito USD 4.50

 

Beef Enchilada USD 4.50

 

I didn’t get to eat much because I was hesitant to take in anything while the previous food is still lobbying in my stomach.  Lea and Bubba nod their approval of Viva’s good food.  I enjoyed the cold drinks.  The night was quite dry.

 

We turned in early since we were tired from the bus ride plus we need the rest to be able to wake up early the next day.  We’re doing the Angkor Wat tour before sunrise.  I hear the sun’s orange blonde glow in the morning casts a golden shadow over the Angkor Wat making it seem to be made of gold.

 

You know the harsh tribulations one goes through climbing a mountain but reaching the top of the mountain makes it all worth it?

 

Image Source Hawaii Edu

Tomorrow on Angkor Wat, Cambodia.

 

Albums:

 

Vietnam Day 1 Album

Angkor Wat Album

Siem Reap, Cambodia Album

Cambodia – Vietnam Trip Album

 

Related Post

Ho Chi Minh City’s Hidden Charm